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                  <text>8- 'i'be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pm&gt;eroy, 0 ., Tuesday, N'ov. 28, 1978

r

r--A~~-;n~;-iii;-1

Middleport's

(Continued from page I )
creased by 21 percent.
Councllmn Mullen
gr eat·
eight
called tbe· rate bike
MAYME V. HARTENBACH and
uoreasonably bigb and
Mrs. Mayme V. Hl!r· grandchildren.
council members grum·
Mrs: Hartenbach was a
tenback, 80, Kent, former
bled a bit about lbe
Meigs County resident, died member of the United
proposal admllling,
early Tuesday morning at the Methodist Church arid of
however, lballbere Is llltle
Southwest General Hospital Racine Chapter 134, Order of
that can be done locally
at Middlesburg Heights , ·Eastern Star. .She owned and
about
the proposed In·
operated
a
restaurant
in
Ohio.
Racine
for
several
years
and
crease.
A resident of Kent for the
'council voted unanimously
past several years , Mrs. was a cook for several years
to free parking meters in the
Hartenbach had become ill at Kent State University. She
town from Dec. II through
Thanksgiving Day while was still cooking at the 1\lpha
Dec. 23 at the request of the
visiting a daughter. She was X-1 Delta o;orority iniKent at
Middleport Merchants
born Nov. 6 1898 in Racine, a the time of her death.
NEW MASTER
Association. Merchants will
Funeral · services will be
daughter of the late Ebner S.
Charles James Alloway
handle covering the. meters
and Sarah E. Richardson held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
will be luslaUed Dec. 1, as
for the holiday shopping
She was also Rawlings-Coats funeral home
Beegle.
Master
of
Coolville
season
and will ·make a
with
the
Rev
.
Robert
preceded in death by her
Masonic
Bumgarner
officiating
.
Lodge
337
at
Cool·
donation
to the village for the
husband, Harry J. SimpsOn in
ville.
He
will
be
Installed
by
may
call
at
the
shown.
Friends
consideration
1931 and one son in infancy .
Russell Bailey of Coolville,
Council voted unanimously
Surviving · are
four funeral home from 10 a.m. to
who is past District Deputy
to purchase a used snow plow
daughters, Mrs. Robert 9 p.m.'Friday. On Thursday
Grand· Master. Alloway,
friend s may call at the
from the Southeastern
··-~"· ( Helen) Thle, Kent ; Mrs.
who bas been a Mason for
Equipment Co., G!illipolis,
Albert (Eva Jane ) Wolf , Rinker·Fries funeral home,
four years, Wi!" selected to
after Mayor Fred Hoffman
SOUTHERN FFA - The Meigs,
ViniDn
Obnsted Falls; Mrs. Sarah East Main St., Kent from 2 to
the Lodge's top post Nov. 7.
had reported the present
anntial parliamentary procedure contest was held at
Lengs and Mfs. Georgeann 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Burial wili
Other officers of tbe Lodge
snow plow is in bad condition .
Wellston Nov . 16 with the Southern F.F.A. winning the
Grllnm, both of Kent ; Three be in Riverview Cemetery,
are: David M. West, senior
It has been used by the
contest out of six teams. On Nov . Tl the Southern F.F .A.
sons , James Simpson , Middleport.
J.
warden ; Charles
village since before 1968. The
went tD District competition at Hannan Trace where they
Middleport ; Richard Har·
Alloway,
Jr.,
junior
cost
of
the
used
plowwhich
U&gt;ok on Symmes Valley , the winner of the Gallia,
teribach, Walnut Drive,
GUY E. LYNCII
Ronald
K.
Mayor Holiman said is in
Calif., and Robert Har·
Guy E. Lynch, 69, Rout~ I , warden;
Nickson, treasurer; James
good condition - will be
tenbach, Kent; five grand· Langsville, died unex·
E.
McComas,
secretary;
$1,400.
Councilmen Horky
daughters five grandsons, pectedly at his residence
Keonelb
Miles,
chaplain;
and
Horton
were reappointed
Monday evening following a
Gary
W.
Plummer,
senior
to
.
serve
on
the Firemen's
I
brief illness.
D.
West,
deacon
;
Steven
Dependency
Board.
By MARTIN P. HOUSEMAN surrounding leade.r Jim
Mr. Lynch was born July
Ask us abou:
Mayor Hoffman again
GEORGETOWN ,- Guyana Jones' proclaimed devotion
19, 1908 in Langsville, a son of junior deacon; Marion
Schultz,
senior
steward;
(UP!)
-Guyana today took to communism.
asked
council
to
think
about
the new
the late Emmett and Mabel
In a last glimpse of Jonesan ordinance which would up the question of whether ID
Multi-Medical'!!' Wakeley Lynch. He married Donald R. Baun, junior
empower village officials to send soldiers to harvest the town Monday, reporters saw
policy-a high on Sept. 8, !928 the former steward; Ronald L. Mcdeclare some persons fruit crop of tile Jones town the stethescope used to listen
benefit policy
Mae Tyler who survives Comas, tyler ; Eskel
Farley,
trustee;
Eskel
alcoholics so that they cannot death commune or surrender l&lt;t the hearts of the dying
along with a daughter, Mrs.
that lets you
Farley,
Is
the
outgoing
purchase alcoholic beverages . the ·3,()()(}.acre settlement ID Cllltists in the Nov. 18 mass
Carolyn Jenkins, Springfield;
select the
Master
&gt;Of
the
Lodge.
in
the town. A meeting was the tropical jungle that suicide &amp;nd , in Jones ' own
seven grandchildren, and
program you
Alloway
Is
a
mechaulc
al
quarters, pills and Np-Doz
with representatives of surrounds it.
set
several nieces, nephews and
need .
Dupont
Washlugton
Works,
tablets in a refrigeratDr and
·
New
stDries
of
visits
by
Pomeroy
for
Wednesday
cousins.
National Enquirer magazines
Washington,
W.
Va.
He
People's
Temple
cultists
ID
evening.
At
that
time
officials
Besides his parents, Mr .
lives
at
Rl.
1,
Coolville,
scattered
on the floor.
the
Soviet
Embassy
and
trips
of
the
two
towns
will
discuss
a
Lynch was preceded in death
wllh
his
wife,
Peggy
Ann.
ID the remote colony by
Sources
close to the
joint
application
for
a
J:!UD
by a son, Robert Lee on May
government
said Prime
They
have
three
chlldren.
representatives
of
Guyana's
grant.
·
15,1966, and a daughter Betty
Minister
Ford
Burnham
potluck
supper
will
be
Marxist
government
and
A
Lee in 1930.
his
Cabinet
today
would
held
preceding
the
meetlug
deepened
the
mystery
Mr. Lynch was an employe
discuss the future of the
Hospital News
of the Red Anchor Depart· at 7 p.m. An open In·
stallatlon
will
be
held
at
8
Humane society
settlement in the rain forests
ment Store in Pomeroy lor 28
Veterans Memorial Hospital
of northwestern Guyana, ISO
p.m.
All
Master
Masons
years and later worked at the
Admitted
Joelle
are
Invited
to
attend.
sponsors bazaar
miles
northwest
of
Moore's store for sev~ral
McLaughlin, Pom~ roy;
Georgetown.
years.
Eileen Swan. Syracuse;
Every year about the same
The sources said the
He was a former member
Lawrence Bush, Racine; Ida time the Mei gs County government was leaning
of the International Order of
Pooler , Pomeroy; Judy Humane Society sponsors a U&gt;waid a deciSion to s.eod the
Martin, Shade; Donald
Odd Fellows Lodge in at her residence.
Christmas bazaar. This year army tD harvest its rich crop
Funeral services will be Payne, Harrisonville.
Pomeroy and had attended
will be no exception how· of pineapples, oranges, other
Bill Quickel
the Haynesville United held Wednesday all p.m. at · . Discharged _ Franklin
ever
it will be in tropical fruits and tapioca
Jeanne Starcher
the First United Presbyterjan lhle, Earl Griffith, Ralph
Methodist Church.
n Across from the
the
newly
located Thrift plant.
Church
in
Parkersburg
.
bo
Funeral services will be Burial will be in Pine Hill Radcliffe, Carrie Os rne,
Courthouse, Pomeroy , 0."
Shoppe at the comer ot - Government officials were
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
992-6677
Rebecca Stiltner.
North Second and Walnut in
Walker Funeral Home in Cemetery, Ripley . Friends
Middleport next Friday and
HolzerMedlcalCenler
Rutland with Mr. Gene may call at the Vaughan
Saturday, the 1st and 2nd of
(Discharges, Nov. 27)
Musser officiating. Burial Funeral Home in Parkers·
Representing :
wili be in Miles Cemetery. burg today from 2 to 4 and 7to
Charles Bailey , Scott December.
FEDERAL KEMPER
'!berne this year is "County
Friends may call at the 9 p.m.
Mitch, Rebekah Mitchell and Store" , items offered for sale
INSURANCE COMPANY
funeral home anytime after 2
Ivan Potter.
and needed from county
p.m. on Wednesday. The
A suit in the amount of
Blrtbs, Nov. 27
humanitarianas are: baked
FREE CLOTHING DAY
family will receive friends
$70,497.96,
amount due on a
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
goods,
candy , crafts,
Free clothing day will be Corvin, son, Wellston.
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
promissory
note, was filed in
ceramics, walnuts, paintings,
held at the Salvation Army,
p.m. Wednesday.
Meigs
County
Common Pleas
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy Crouch, daughter, McArthur. Christmas decorations, etc. Court by AssociateS Com·
Also being offered for sale·..
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon
Mr. and Mrs. Terry
MRS. LOCKWOOD DANA
this
year are Amish made mercial Corp., Verona, Pa.,
Thursday.
All
area
residents
against Southeastern Fuel,
George,
son,
Vinton.
Mrs. Lockwood N. Dana,
items, such as jellies, jams,
in
need
of
clothing
are
Inc., Rt. I, Langsville.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
!son,
210 lith St., Parkersburg,
and canned goods.
In other actions, ' Kevin
son, Vinton.
former Velma Crow of welcome.
The organization which has
Walsh,
Albany, and Wainette
KCN 368
Ripley, W. Va. ~ died Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
several mottos , such as "our
Walsh,
Rt. 3, Albany; John
son,
Swan
Creek.
Johnson,
Victim refused
business is kindness" and
Steven
Thomas, Rt. I,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
"animals have rights too"
UIBIC '!fllll&lt;:l I&lt;:I!O:&lt;B&gt;!I!C:IIj:UI;I 1':0:&lt; Ul l'$l Ul Ul liQI Ill¥ Ul
tO hack do WD ,
Middleport,
and Bronwyn
daughter, New Haven.
has several members who
Ann
Thomas,
Middleport,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
work very hard to make the
~
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Whittington , daughter,
filed
for
dissolution
of their
annual Christmas bazaar a
marriages.
~
A series of memorial services Buffalo; W. Va.
success every year with
The marriage of Carol
both religious and secular
proceeds going to the
Jacobs
and Robert J..Jacobs
ll
• • •
ll began Monday and were ID
many vet bills, feed·
and
Agnes
Sellers and Larry
lll
ill continue through much of the
J
ing of neglected and
~ week for slain San Francisco
uvenile officer
Sellers were dissolved .
homeless animals, and of Bernice Coffey was granted a
~
~ Mayor George Moscone and
course the "Kennel Building divorce from Stephen W.
~
Supervisor Harvey Milk.
guest speaker
Fund".
Coffey.
ll
SAN FRAN CISCO (UP!) lll
1A George Moscone died
Carl f!ysell, Meigs County
~
refusing to back down from a Juvenile Officer, will speak
SQUAD CALLED
MEET WEDNESDAY .
~
~ U&gt;ugh decision, something he
on drugs and show a film
1
The
Pomeroy emergency
Members of the Racine
~
)I bad grown used to as an
when the Meigs Junior High
squad
answered
a call to the
Chapter
of
Eastern
Star
will
lll action mayor running an
School Parent-Teacher
11
Ewing
Funeral
Home
at I :56
ill
! active city.
Forum meets at 7:30 thi's meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday to
p.m.
Monday
for
Mrs.
Ida
clean
the
hall.
Practice
for
~
Last week it was answering evening at the school in
Pooler
who
had
fainted.
She
installation
will
be
held
at
2
~
reporters
wanting
an Middleport.
n
)I explanation why he had
All parents o~ seventh and p.m. on Dec. 3. All officers was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
ill
ill appointed the Rev. Jim Jones eighth graders are invited to and installing officers are
was admitted.
be
present.
asked
to
~
~ to the San Francisco Housing attend the meeting.
~ Authority, following the
The Forum is also sponreports from Guyana that soring a dance at the school
OAPSE MEETING
CHRISTMAS DINNEH
ll
n JonesledhisPeoplesTemple from 7:30 to 10 :30 p.m.
Meigs Chapter 17, OAPSE,
'The annual Christmas
lll
ill· followers tD mass suicide.
Saturday. The daMe is open Will meet this evening at
Q Moscone had calmly only to the seventh and eighth Meigs Junior High at 7:30 buffet dinner and dance of the
Pomeroy Golf Club will be
We;re as merry as Santas this holiday
respoodedthatJones, despite graders of the school. There p.m . in ROOm 110.
held
at 7:30 p.m. Friday at
n season , be cause we started a 'c hristmas )I what he later became, will be dance contests and a
·
the
Archery
Building, Royal
~ Club Account last year. So we don't have a
~ impressed
him as a door prize will be awarded.
Oak
Park.
Tickets
at $6 each
ill thing to worry about when it comes .to ill compassionate man with a Refreshments will be served.
MEET WEDNESDAY
may
be
purchased
from
Christmas g ifting . We have the money we
feeling for poor people who Providing the dance music
The Regatta committees of
by
callmg
992members
or
g ·need!
was best lor the job. He will be Ron O'Neal, WPAR the Pomeroy Chamber of
7376.
Non-members
are
11
n offered no apologies.
Radio
personality
of Commerce will meet Wed·
ill
ill
Parkersburg.
nesday at noon at Meigs Inn. welcome to attend.

Ohio Power must refund $8,468,145
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Public Utilities Commission
,of Ohio today ordered the
Ohio Power Co. to refund to
its customers $8,468,145 for
overcharges made in 1976.
The PUCO said Ohio
Power, the state's largest

said to believe the People 's
Temple fanatics who U&gt;ok
their lives in a mass cyanide
poisoning spent too much

money and energy into
clearing and planting the vast
tract of land tD let it llill back
into lbe jungle.

ELBERFELD$

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.c:

DAVIS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

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FACTORY REBATE

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l:ilitens ~atioru1lI] Bani,&lt;

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Perebnan abandons plans
PEKI NG (UPI ) - American authorS. J . Perelman, 74,
and hospitalized in Peking, today abandoned plans to become
the first person to bring a privately owned car into communist
China.
Perelman, author of 20 books, plays and fibn scripts including the Marx Brothers' "Horsefeathers" and "Monkey
Business" - arrived in China over the weekend to arrange
(Continued on page 14)

$27874

t

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Pleasant .Ridge Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.

II ERA~Cokr

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Member F. D. f. C. Deposits lnouredlo$40,000.00.

•

$299
$2121

95

.
.
.
--...
THE 5 HO.P

I

"THE FRI~NDLY BANK"

FINAL PRI.CE
TO YOU

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (UP!) - Hundreds more
Vietnamese refugees slipped past naval and police patrols and
smashed their boats on Malaysia's eastern beaches so they
wouldn't be sent back to sea, police said today.
The flood of new arrivals swelled the population of the
country; s refugee camps to more than 42,500 and Home Affairs
Minister Ghazali Shafis appealed to the United States to open
its shores tD the "boat people."

~· ,.----------·· ·---~~~~~-~~~lll!!!!!l!~~!
I

YOU MAKE 49 PROMPT •
&amp; PAYMENTS AND WE
!
I MAKE THE 50TH FREE

ill

II

RETAIL PRICE

!

1

Refugees smash boats

No

Search or Scan police radio action calls.
crystals required. Sixteen Channels,
Weather Alert, Priority, Digital Readout,
Walnut Cabinet.

I

!

DEER HUNlERS

Gives )'Ill

J
.'
'

The World Today

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) - It appears comedian George
Kirby , who once allegedly boasted that show business was a
good covedor narcotics dealing, will have a captive audience
for some years tD come.
Kirby, already appealing a Ill-year federal prison term for
selling narcotics, pleaded guilty In September to state charges
of selling cocaine and giving heroin to an undercover agent.

I

!
1

The deficit also contributes
to domestic inflation by
increasing the cost of imports
for American consumers
which also gave domestic
businessmen an opportunity
to raise their prices.
Carter has vowed tD trim
the deficit and administration
officials have optimistically
projected a substantial
reduction next year .
The
Commer c e
Department report said
imports rose by 0.1 percent
last month while exports fell
by 3.1 percent, the largest
decline since a 9 percent drop
in January.
Food exports fell by $106.9
million, mostly because of
declines in rice, . corn and
meat sales. Chemicals and
related products declined by
$108 million , the department
said .
The administration
launched
an
exportpromotion program two
months ago ID help American
businessmen find foreign
markets for their products.
On the import side, oil
purchases dropped by $125.7
mUlion from the September
level. However, several other
categories increased,
incl~ding food and machinery·
and transportation
equipment.
The main drawback to any
possible future improvement
in the trade ledger next year
is oil.

Kirby has captive audience

I

!
1

WASHINGTON (UPI ) The United States trade
deficit, one of the nation's
most trouble .s ome
international problems, grew
by $2.13 billion in October as
imports surged to a new
record, the government an·
nounced U&gt;day.
Americ.ans's sold $13.01 bil·
lion worth of products to their
trading partners last month
while buying a record $15.14
billion. The resulting $2.13
billion deficit was the largest
since July and considerably
above the average $1.65
billion deficit of the past two
months.
Oil imports, a principal
cause of the large string of
monthly deficits, totaled $3.49
billion last month, a drop
from September, but still
high by historical standards.
October w·as the 29th
· consecutive montll that the
U.S. trade ledger has ·been in
the red.
The size of the merchandise
trade deficit- $24.79 billion
during the first 10 months of
tllis year and $28.5 billion
·during 1977 - has caused the
United States some serious
problems.
It was a main reason lor the
steep decline In the·•value of ,
the American dollar abroad.
President Carter was forced
Nov. 1 to launch an
emergency, $30 billion plan to
rescue the U.S. dollar . Since
then, the dollar bas stablized.

\)

1

I

The main issue in the case into effect in 1976. Prior to
was how Ohio Power passed that, Ohio Power had billed
on fuel adjustment costs tD its
re sidentia l
and
customers.
.commercial customerS on its
The fuel adjustment law - a verage costs for fuel
which allows utilities tD pass primarily coal.
'
along their costs •lor fuel
At the . same time, it was
directly to consumers - went sellin g power to other utilities
•

·I

Sports
banquet
Dec. 6

GETS DEER - Charles Mugrage, Letart Falls , brought down a six point deer Monday
in the Letart Falls area. He is shown with his sons, John Travis, held by his father , and
Tyson, right. According ID early reports, the deer kill around the state is down slightly
compared to the harvest of 1977. Statewide , nearly 1,000 fewer deer were killed on opening
day this year. ln Meigs County, 212deer were checked Monday.

Annual parade Sunday

BY KATIE CROW
Everything is go for the
ann·ual Pomeroy Chamber of
Comm e r ce Chri st ma s
Parade slated Sunday, Dec. 3
The annual Sports Banquet at 2 p.m. ·
sponsored by the Middleport ·
All parade entries are to be
Pomeroy Rotary Club , given at the former Pomeroy
in honor of Meigs Local High Junior High School building
athletes, will be held at 7:30 no later than I : 30 p.m. in
p.m. Dec. 6 in the high school order for the parade to start
cafeteria.
at 2 p.m.
Featured speaker will be
According to Jim Frecker,
Ernie Saunders from Radio parade chairman, the parade
Station WCHS, Charleston, will proceed down Main
W. Va. Saunders was for· St reet with Santa stopping at
merly ~ssociated with WCHS- the Farmers Bank and
TV.
Savings parking lot where he
Athletes· to be honored will distribute treats to the
include football players, girls youngsters.
volleyball players and golf
Frecker also reported that
players. Tickets are $5 each the community Christmas
on advance sale at Dutton tree will be decorated Thurs·
Drugs and Citizens National day and asked for volunteers.
Bank in Middleport; Swisher·
J ohn Anderson report ed
Loh se Drugs and New York tickets fo •· the Gold Star
Clothing House in Pomeroy drawings are now being
and from Mei gs High distributed by local mer·
students.
chants.
. I.,.' ' ~ .,.' ' &lt;£) .: ' 0- -·' 0 -' 1 .· l

0

The first drawing will be
held Friday Dec. I at the
offi ce of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
There will be three $10 gift
certificates given at each
drawin g. There will . be
drawin gs each da y until
Christmas.
Merchants are to have their
ti ckets at the chamber office
by 11 a.m. each day .
.
Meeting with the chamber
was Dr. David Klahn of the
art depa rtm ent at Ohio
University.
Kl ahn discu ssed the
possibility of designin g a frog
to be placed on the old coal
tipple on Pomeroy's East
Main Street. The chamber
has discussed the erection of
the frog for sometime.
\{!a/In st aled he thought it
was a terrific idea and
definitely could be done.
He also suggested artificial
lighting and a waterfall be

Ga11ia man found dead

of self-inflicted gun wound
''

' ;z.. .; ' &lt;:&gt; - ·' -0' .J ' 0 -· ' 0- _.·.l

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

Vern e C. Blazer, 81. Eureka
Star Route, was pronounced
dead of self inflicted wounds
Tuesday by Gallia County
Coroner Donald Warehim e.
According to a report fil ed
by the Gallia County Slier iff's
Department, Blazer' s body
was discovered in the back
bedroom of his home, on
Lower Garfield Ave., at 11:40

Insurance ripoffs disc.u ssed
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A hearing Tuesday on the sale
76-year-&lt;&gt;ld niinois woman of health insurance to the
was widowed in 1976 and elderly. He said committee
.insurance salesmen started investigatDrs found abuses so
coming around. In time, she widespread
that
was talked into buying 60 unscrupulous agents even
different
life
and had their own vocabulary for
hospitalization policies, with it.
premiums of $15,000 a year.
A .prospective elderly cus·
An II().year-old woman from tomer, Peppar said, "was 'a
Pennsylvania had to get a gopher' or 'a goose .' In other
$3,000 bank loan to keep up words, 'I've found a goose
with her insurance payments. ready tD be plucked.'"
An B+year-&lt;&gt;ld woman in
Insurance agents U&gt;ld the
Texas was U&gt;ld she was committee they pressured old
buying
getting complete health people _ into
health
insurance coverage, which unnecessary
turned out to be largely insurance by using a "hearts
worthless warranties and ~d flowers" approach, then
frightening them with talk of
deeds.
Those were the horror dread diseases and a Iooely
s!Drles of a pattern Rep. death .
Claude Pepper, D-Fla., says
"The commit tee staff
amounts to a $1 billion-a-year offers the rough estimate that
"ripoff" of lbe elderly by senior citizens are being
unscrupul9us insurance · taken f&lt;r $1 billioo a year by
salellllien and companies.
these insurance companies
Pepper's House Select and lbeir agents,·' Pepper
Cm&gt;~ttee on A~in.&lt;t held a said. "It becomes clear ~t
,
~

many of the policies sold and
the premiums paid for
individual Medicare
supplement insurance are
duplicative.' '
Among Tuesday's
witnesses was a man
described only as " John
Doe," a former agent of 18
years' experience, much of it
selling older people health
insurance that professed tD
cover what Medicare did
not.
"Doe" wore a blue knit ski
mask covering all but his
eyes and chin. He told of the
agents' training.
"You were told how tD
warm up an individual. With
hearts and flowers or
whatever you want to call it .
... You were told to make a
person sick - more or less
put him in a hospita I or a bed,
in his mind. Ask him if he had
nobody to turn to, how would
he pay lor it and protect his

resources····

effect the company was
recovering the same costs
twice - from other utilites tD
whom it sold power and from
the
residential
and
co mm er cial cus tomer s .
Thus, tlle PUCO ordered the
rebate. Ohio Power has since
changed its meth od of billing.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 159

Lawsuits
expected

Oil producing nations meet
next month to set prices for
1979.
Treasury Secretary
Michael Blumentllal talked
with Arab leaders in the
Middle East last week in ·
hopes of convincing them tD
moderate their expected oil
price hike.
Officials returned home
optimistic that they had.
succeeded, and expect the oil
price increase to be between 7
percent and 8 percent.
Each 5 percent increase in
oil prices translates in to $2
billion in import increases,
administration officials have
estimated.
Once again, the Commerce
Department placed stringent
requirements on public
release of the trade figures
after officials became
suspicious that dollar
speculators were earning
profits because they received
the statistics in advance.

~

and charging them the costs
of the highest1)riced fuel they
consumed. But the company
did not deduct the money they
were taking in from the ·
average fuel costs they were
billing res identia l and
commercial customers.
So the PUCO said that in

en tine

Nation's trade
deficit surged

Lawrence county competition. The wilmer of this
competition will go ID tbe State competition on Dec. 2.
Shown are the Southern F .F.A. team members which are:
fr.;~t row, left tD right, Stanley Holter.• Pbillip Kincaid,
and Ed Roush. Bilek row, left to right, Tammy Smith,
Albert Hqiman, Bob Lee, and David Lawson.

·~

r

commiSSion, !Jut told the
PUCO ID study its figures
a'gain and come up with a
precise figure to be rebated.
The PUCO held another
hearing last September and
decided that $8.4 million was
the amotmt owed conswners.

at

Pomeroy-Middleoort.
Ohio
I
.
Wednesday, November 29, 1978

Harvest issue being decided

$70,497 suit
filed in court

decided by the PUCO in April
1977. The commissioners at
that time ruled tllat Ohio
Power customers had been
overcharged $9.5 million .
The company appealed tD
th e Ohio Supreme Court
which ruled in favor of t.,.;

•

l

-=
-

utility, overcharged Its
customers through misuse of
the fuel adjustment · clause .
The rebate would result in
each residential customer
gatting about $15.
The rebate results from a
case that was originally .

Elizabeth Dol e, a member
of the Federal Tra de
said
the
Commission,
average person over ' 65
spends more than $1,500 a
year in health care.
William Hutton, executive
director of the National
Council of Senior Citizens,
said, "Inflation, risin g
hospital coSts, skyrocketing
surgical charges, escalating
co-insurance payments have
severely wounded the
Medicare program. As with
every wound, parasites are
the first to gathef to feast .' '
The president of the Health
Insurance Association of
America, Robert Froehlke,
said, "We in no way condone
overselling or any other lessthan-prolessional sellin g
practice. It reflects badly on
the insurance business at 1
large "and it victimizes thos¢
who are the most vulnerable
- the elderly.·•

a.m. by his grandson, David
Bush.
·
Deputies report that Blazer
.22 calibre rille to
used
inflict a fatal head wound . He
had been in failing health the
past year.
Mr . Blazer was a lifelong
residen t·of Gallia County. He
was born in Green T~p . on
June 23, !897, son of the late
Arthur and Ma ry James
Blazer.
He was a retired employee
of the Farm Bureau and the
!Continued on page 14 I

a

$1,210,000
suit filed
A $1,210 ,000 damage suit
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
as a result of a traffic ac·
cident two years ago in Gallia
County.
Berchil
H.
Cogdill,
and
thr ee
Columbus,
passengers in her vehicle
brought the act ion against
Ernest C. Wright , Rt. 1,
Langsv ille , driv er of th e
other vehicle involved in theaccident.
According to the suit, the
mishap occurred on County
!load II in Gallia County.
Plaintiffs seek the damages
for injuries sustained and
ho spit al and other expen ses
in&lt;• urrrd.

placed at the site along with a
garden and seating facihties.
Kloan also recommended
that as many local people as
possible be involved in the
project.
Fred Crow requested that
as many as possible attend
the dinner at Ohio University
Inn Thursday night honoring
Robert Wingett.
It was report ed the recent
appreciation dinner was very
successful with 98 persons
attending.
Dave .Jenkins announced
that the Jaycees are spon·
soring " toys for tots" for
C.b ristmas and asked that
those who wish donate toys.
Jenkins also noted they are
are also spon sorin g the
Chris tmas foo d baskets .
Persons knowing of needy
families are to send the
names to the Jaycees, Box
603, Pomeroy, 0 . 45769.
Att ending were Paul
Simon, president, Crow, Bill
Mayer, J enkins, Phil Kelly ,
Frecker, Hank Cleland, John
Anderson, Pat O'Brien, Boyd
Ruth, Jo e Young , Bill
Grueser and Tam Bearhs,
secretary.

Woman freed
early Tuesday
A Middleport woman lay
trapped and unnoticed for
nearly six hour-s earl y
Tuesday after her car went
off Route 33 at Hartford town
limits and overturned onto its
top in a brushy area .
The woman, Nina Craddock, 26, was freed from the
wreckage by members of the
Mason Volunt ee r Fire
Department using a recently
11
~ acquired "Jaws of Llfe 1
device. Firemen report that it
took approximately 15
· minutes to gel her out of tbe
car, the top of which was
completely flattened. Trees
around the car alsp had to be
cut to gain access to the
vehicle. _
Ms. Craddock was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the Mason Rescue Squad but
has now been transferred to
St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg.
She told Mason County
Sheriff' s Deputy Scott K,ebler
that she ran off the road
around 1 :•30 a. m . The
wrecked car was discovered
at 7:25 a.m. by Ross Roush,
Mason, who was on his way to
work.
Assisting at the scene also
was Mason Police Chief
J ohn ny
Pearson
and
Patrolman Bill Kimos .
~

PITISBURGH (UPI) Failure by U.S. authorities to
perform autopsies on the
Guyana mass death victims
will result in hundreds of
lawsuits; a medical expert
predicts.
Dr. Cyril Wecht , the
Allegheny County coroner,
said Tuesday the autopsies
should have heen carried out
to determine whether the
victims committed suicide or
were murdered .
"! predict many lawsuits
will be filed ," he said. "They
will be filed again st the
federal government, the state
of California and the Peoples
Temple."
He said the litig ations
likely would be brought by
relatives of the victims who
died in the jungles of Guyana
earlier this month.
Wecht said, as far as he
knows, no autopsies have .
been done by medical
authoriti es a t Dover Air
Force Base in Delaware,

where the bodies were
transported from Guyana .
"These people, the 900 plus
members of the Peoples
Temple who died in Guyana,
represent many pot ential
lawsuit s ·through their

will be a question of life
insuran ce poli cies . Some
in surers pay nothing for
suicides. I'm not predicting
the outcome of these potential
legal battles, but you bet that
there will be lawsuits."
Wecht said it also is
necessary to know from a
moral viewpoint how the
victim died.
" Feelings of survivors
from psycholog ical and
religious standpoints must be
taken into consideration , ~~ he
said . "These people have the
right to know. I'd like to know
if I had lost a member of my
family , whether he was
murdered or committed
suicide .
"They (the federal government) ma y cha nge their
mind now. But it is too late .
Once you embalm, you
destroy tile ability to detect
cyanide. The tests are made
much more complex, much
le ss definitiv e, and less
meaningful scientifically.
"It is a disgrace."
Jones' followers were
reported t&lt;J have died by
cyanid" poisoning . Only a
handful of autopsies, chiefly
on the bodies of ambushed
Rep . Leo Ryan and the crew

sw-vivors,' ' Wecht said. ' 'The

he

Rev. Jim Jones either had
them murdered or made
them commit suicide. Th ere

repor tedly
performed.

was

.traveling

with ,

ha ve

been

Commissioners
table a[f .bids
The Meigs County com·
missioners Tu esday nig ht
opened bids fo r a dump truck
and a dump truck chassis for
the &gt;ounty highway depa1t·
ment.
Submitting bids were John
Gibson Motor City, Pomeroy
Motor - Company and Dan
Thompson Ford. All bids
were tabled for additional
study . .
Meeting with the co m·
missioners was Mrs. Mildred
Jacobs, matron of the county
infirmary discussin g an
empl oyment situation.
The board employed Ruth
Grindstaff as secretary at the
90 da y
borne on i
probationary period.
Hank Cleland, Jr., also
discussed the lease and sublease at 107 Sycamore St. in
Pomeroy which was recently
purchased by Cleland and is
occupied by the Meigs County
Bureau of Employ ment
Services.
It was mutually agreed to
continue the lease as in the
past with the commissioners

providing janitorial services.
· Commissioners will meet in
sp ecia l session Thursda y,
Nov. 30 at 11 :30 p.m. for the
purpose of opening bids on a
new heating system for the
county garage. Th ~y will not
meet on Tuesday·, Dec. 5
since members will attend
the Commissioners and
E ngin ee rs Co nvention in
Columbus.
Attendin g were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners, and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

Weather
Cloudy and windy tonight.
Rain mixed with or changing
tJ snow by morning, with low
tem~eratures between 35 and
40 .
SQUAD RUN
The Middleport emergency
squad was called to North
Second ~e., at 9:56 p.m.
Tuesd ay for Pearlie
Jewell, Pomeroy, Who had
become ill. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

NEW DEALER - Pete Simiion;-t\acine , is tbe new
dealer lor Hammond and Lowery organs. Simpson, who
will be selling for Sundins Hammond Organs, will offer
sales and service lor the Meigs-Mason.Callia area . In
addition tD the organs he will also offer for sale Leslle
Tone cabinets. Persons interested may call Simpson at
949-2118 alter 5 p.m. Simpson stressed that service of all
items he sells will be available.

.'

'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov . 29, 1978

.. .

'

COMMENTARY

•

.••

•••

Donald F. Graff

'

'

•- #

••
• •

Tragic consequences

By Martha Angle and Roben Walters

By Don Graff

TUCSON, Ariz ( NEA 1- The Han igan Case" has been a
cause celebre here m southern Anzona for more than two vears - and that notor1etv IS well deserved because It
i-epresents a disgraceful miscarnage of JUStice
The case IS virtually unknown elsewhere in the country,
but leaders o£ every maJor natwnal Htspamc orgamzallon
have mounted a detenruned carnpa1gn to focus attentiOn
on 't he sa vage. unprovoked torture of a tr10 of Mexican
fannworkers
Those who already have vmced concern about the
manner m whtch the Hamgan case has been handled
Incl ude the Bishop of Tucson, the B1shop of P hoeniX, the
Archbishop of Santa Fe m ne1ghbormg New Mexico and
other leaden of the Catholic church .
The three voung vtctuns , 21 to 2S yea rs of age, were
Mexican cillzens who Illegally entered the Umted States
nea r the southeastern corner of Artzona m the summer of
1976, headmg for work m the sm a ll community of E lfnda ,
Anz about 25 miles north of the border
Although common!} known by perJorabve terms s uch as
·wetbacks and '' tllegals, ' t hose worker s a r e heavtly
relied upon by fa rmers throughout the Southwest as a
so urce of cheap labor to harvest the regton 's crops
NEW YORK (U PI) The tr10 's trek was halted when a young white man
confronted the Mexica ns at gunpomt about eight mil es Television producers
west of the border community of Douglas, Anz. and yearning after rating points
ordered them mto a p1ckup truck
rmght take lessons from the
After the two other Anglos JOined the on gmal abductor, news team of Mike Wallace,
they returned to an Isolated s pot m the desert a nd began to Dan Rather and Morley Safer
systematically and sadistically abuse their captives
Accordmg to the Cochise Coun ty shenff's office, the of CBS-TV's "60 Minutes" Mexicans were stripped of all their clothmg and their the most-watched show in the
hands were bound w1th rope They were h1t and kicked, nation last week, accordmg to
the A.C. Nielsen Co,
then threatened wtth assassmat10n and castrat10n
After bemg beaten, the Mexicans were untied and told to
The ratmgs usually are
run . As they fled , each man was f1red upon w1th a shotgun. dominated by entertainment
One escaped '"!ury , but the second and third had a total of programs.
174 birdshot pe lets embedded m their backs.
" 60
Mmute s,"
the
One of the victims later testified about the pam he
bramchlld
of
executive
expe rienced while fleemg naked across the desert after h1s
feet had been seared by the abductors' hot poker·
" The dirt was too hot. I would s1t down and cut off the
pieces- the shreds (of flesh) that were bleedm~ The sand
could get mto them and so I cut them off so 1t wouldn't
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - A
hurt ."
Within hours of hearmg of the attack, loca l law glance at activity Tuesday in
enforcement offlc1als arrtved wtth a search warrant at the tlle Ohio General Assembly .
home of George W Hanigan, a promment rancher and HOUSE
wealt]ly businessman m the Dougla s area
Bills Introduced
Less than two weeks later, a Cochise County grand jur}
HB 1378: Kurfess. Revises
md1cted Hamgan and his two sons, aged 22 and 17, on 14
school
a1d formula
coWJts of kulnapmg , conspiring to kidnap, assault w1th a
House
Concurs in Senate '\
deadly weapon and other charges
The father died of a heart attack m March 1977, but h1s Amendments
two sons were trted at the county courthouse m Bisbee ,
Am HJR 35· Jones Creates
Anz. in September and October of 1977. While deliberating a JOint committee to
on a verdict, the Jury asked the pres1dmg JUdge 1f 1t could mvestlgate hospital and
conviCt the defendants on reduced charges of aggravated medical costs 72-3
assault.
Am HB 751: Camera.
When that request was rejected, the JUry - comprised
Elimmates
tlle requirement
exclusively of Anglos m a co unty that has a large H1spamc
that
the
Board
of Building
populatwn - acquitted the Hanigan brothers of all
Standards approve by rule
'
charges.
each
Hispanic leaders who are indignant about what passes the
plans
for
for JUStice 1n Cochise County mciude offic•!iis of the industrialized umt. 734,
National CoWJcil of La Raza, Mex1can-Amencan Legal
Am Sub HB 1127. Brooks.
Defense and Educational Fund, American G I Forum and Conforms state law to the
League of Umted Latm American Citizens.
Their Washmgton-based coalitiOn IS pressing for f~deral Internal Revenue Code on the
prosecutiOn of tbe case, but Justice Department ofi&gt;cials generation skippmg t ransfer
claim they lack JUriSdiCtiOn That conflict remams to be law. 77-1
Am HB 794 · Lehman . Proresolved, but this much 1s certain Without further actiOn ,
those who tortured the hapless Mexicans Will go unpun- VIdes for disclosure by
Ished.
fin a ncial mstitutwns of
account charges and savings
acGount mterest rates 79-ll.
Bills Passed
HB 1160: Bowers. Classifies
auto
transporters
as
commer cia l
cars
and
increases their length limit
63-20
HB 1366: Camera, Extends
to
June 30, 1979, the deadline
By KENNETH E . CLARK
for review of Industrial
United Press International
ADMIRAL HORATIO CAT: Bob Newhart's cat IS named Commission and Buruea of
Workers'
Compensation
- appropriately enough for a feline in a TV star's house reforms.
Emergency
76-76.
Morris. But he could fittingly be renamed Nelson after the oneBill
83-0.
eyed, one-armed British admiral of yore. Soon after his arrival
Am SB 94 Celebreeze
from an animal shelter, Morris developed an eye infection .
Reqwres
nonresident aliens
The eye was removed. Then he injured his right front leg who
own
real property or
apparently a battle wound. The leg went too . Says Newhart,
certain
mineral
interests of a
"Our guests 'don't believe it. They see this on~yed, threecertain
value
in
real
property
footed black apparition coming at them ... " At last report,
Morris appears to have developed an allergy and IS losing
something else -his fur .

Atop the horror of the People's Temple massacre in •
Guyana, 1t a ppeared that there might be plied a scandal.
~
Cult leader Jim Jones, the Guyanan government :;
revealed , had come to the country to establish ~IS Jungle :!
colony with a sheaf of correspondence from First Lady ·
Rosalyn Carter, Vice President Walter Mondale, the late , 'i
Sen Hubert Humphrey and many other American not- , !
abl~s.
,
t , d.
as '
:
But the letters from the most pronun~n sen ers,
made public, turned out to be somethmg . other than •
persona l endorsements. They were the political eqwva- ·•
tents of bread-andlbutter notes, pohte bu~ pro forma
acknowledgements rof routine encoWJters m the busy
course of public life.
Mrs Carter who recalled dmmg w1th Jones after his
offer of presHiential campaign help, acknowledged their
meetm g and his " helpful" suggestiOns all,l'ut Cuba m two
bnef paragraphs
.
The v1ce president noted Jones' " deep Involvement I~
the major social and conshtuhonaiissues of our country,
and Sen Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) welcomed "hearmg of·
the fine work of your church ... "
, .
Under the pohttcs-as-usual ctrcumstances, Jone~ Impressive body of correspondents cannot be faulted m any
relevant way for the course of events that led to hiS
eventual murderous Goetterdaemmerung. But neither can
the Guyanan government be faulted for acceptmg the
rec1p1ent of such 1mpressive correspondence as a personage of consequence.
. .
If there IS any point at all to the letters 1t IS that, f1rst,
they demonstrate how easy it IS for a shrewd individual to
establish and exploit contact w1th public figures. Jones
made a small place for himself on the Callforma pollh~al
scene supportmg selected causes and candtdates With
funds 'and ma npower drljwn from his following. For this he
received acknowledgement, and briefly a public post, upon
which he was later able to capitalize.
And second there is the renunder of the power of bemg a
pubhc figure' even tn seemmgly Inconsequential circwn- ·
sta nces. Such letters as Jones received may have been of
no more Importance than autographs to those who wrote
them. But for the public figure, there is always the
possibility that the consequences of even the mconsequentlai can be very serious mdeed, as m the extreme example
of the Guyanan disaster .

producer Don Hewitt, first
went on the air 10 years ago
and began raising eyebrows
among ratings-watchers
when it started appearing
last year With some
regulanty m the Nielsen top
10.
Wallace, Ratller and Safer
appear weekly, and will be
jomed this montll by Harry
Reasoner. The Nov. 26 show
featured reports on living
tngether , conductor Arthur
Fiedler, and Calcutta,

Legislation at-a-glance

Peopletalk

OOSf OF LOVING: Norman Maller's fourth wife wants
out of tbe contract, but the author 's lawyer says his client can't
afford any more divorces. Beverly Renz Maller is suing for one
111 Barnstable, Mass. - blames Mailer's "many affairs" for
destruction of the marriage. She wants $1 ,0110 a week so she
can reswne her acting career, custody of her two sons, the
couple's $135,000 home and payment of all school and medical
bills. Mailer's Boston lawyer, Monroe Inker, says Mailer will
earn about $300,0110 this year, but is being hounded by the IRS
for at least $100,000 in back taxes. He's also supportmg two
other ex-wives and faces a $100,000 lien on the house.

ALl'S AU.EY: He kept saymg It, over and over, as though
be really couldn't believe 1t- "Can you unagme? A boy from
Lou-ah-vull!" The "boy" was heavyweight champ
Mubammad AU, and Louisville, Ky ., of course, is his hometown . Ali was on hand Tuesday to see Mayor William B. Stansbury rename Walnut Street Muhammad Ali Boulevard in hiS
honor . Saisd Stansbury, "Wherever Muhammad Ali has been
throughout the world he has never failed to mention with pride
his hometown of Lowsville .. We are all proud of him." Said
the champ, uean you imagine ... ?':
DEBBIE'S DEBUT: Debbie Boone is making her acting
debut m Hollywood - as Della, the selfless wife who sells her
beautiful hair to buy a watchfob for the watch husband John
has sold to buy combs for her hair in the 0. Henry Yuletide
weeper "Gift of• the Magi." John Rubinstein costars as
husband John and Joaone Worley is cast as friend Rosa . The
NBC-TV Christmas production airs Dec, 21.
QUOTE OF TilE DAY: Henry Klastager, at a B'nai B'nth
luncheon In New York where he awarded the Hubert H.
Humphrey Freed001 AY.ard to Walter Cronldte, John
Chancellor and Barbara Walters : ''The Egyptians and IsraeliS
are trying to see how close to the edge of insamty they can
drive American diplomats."
GUMPSES, Tommy Smothers and Henry Foods were
presenters and Julie Budd sang "New York, New York"
Tueaday as Cue magazme passed out Golden Apple Awards the mtni-Oscars of Broadway - to, among others, Jack
Lemoa, Nell Simon, John Travolta and designer Haist on, with
Lemoa and Hallton the only headliners in attendance ...
Presidential aide HainUton Jordan and wife Nancy finally
have made it official, divorcing in Washington after ei~ht
years of marriage ... Ford Motor Co. has amounced appomtment of WU!tam H. Sbeeban, general public relations manager
and former president of ABC News, as executive director of
Ford's public relations staff, succeeding Walter T. Murphy
who ,retired In April ..
1
f,

.

to file with the Secretary of
State. 64-20.
Resolution Adopted
HJR 94. I. Thompson.
Advocates contmuatwn of
diplomatic relatiOns with
Chma 00.20
SENATE
Concurs
in
House
Amendments
Am. Sub SB 445· Cox.
Auth o rizes
th e
Environmental
Protection
Agency to regulate public
water systems and enforce
the federal safe ' drinking
water act. 30-0.
Am Sub 192 : Schwarzwalder:
Provides
for
expungement of records m a
case m which bail has been
• forfeited. 21.0.
Bills Passed
SB 544 . Meshel. Makes
supplemental appropriatiOns
to the industrial development
fund . 28-2.
Am HB 754 : R. James.
Permits sheriffs and de)mties
to purchase f1ve years of
military credit towards
retirement. 30-0

•
NOW YOU KNOW
Christmas gift-giving
onginated, not w1th the Magi,
but as a wmter fesllval
custom m pre-Christian
Rome and until the 4th
century, when Dec. 25 was
adopted as the birthday of
Jesus, 1t was frowned upon by
the church as a pagan nte

The Open,.Road

BY REV. HOWARD C. BLACK
After a wintry night in which the gfound had been covered
with a th1ck, fleecy blanket of snow, everyone awoke m the
morning to welcome a clear sky . The only thmg that was
dreaded was the task of shovelmg snow to open pathways.
One neighbor , after fifteen mmutes of brisk work,
shovelmg only a small walk-way, was back inside his house
enJoying the warmth of his liVIng room. There, in the warmth
of his house, he watched another man still pushing his powered
plow, clearing his front walk and driveway. When he had
fm1shed he started toward tlle garage, when, suddenly, he
turned his plow from hiS own driveway and directed it toward
another neighbor's back door.
Between the man's house and the back door of the other
neighbor lay deeply drifted snow. In short order the man had
plowed through the heavy drift, and then again, started for his
garage , m which this tune he put the plow away.
What was the significance of this neighborly act? ThiS man
had purposefully cleared a patll m the snow, connecting the
back door s of his house with that of his neighbor 's. Why d1d he
do it when !t really wasn 't his place? The drifted snow lay
mostly on the neighbor':~ property, not his own. He could not
have been faulted had he not cleared the pathway.
Perhaps , 11 was an open invitation to the neighbor, a way of
saymg, "Come on over, anytime! If you need a cup of sugar, or
JUSt want to s1t and chat over a cup of coffee - we would be
glad to have you viSit with us! " No dou?t, it was an
overflowmg neighborliness and spirit of good w1ll that warmed
this man 's heart on that cold, wmtry morning as he aimed his
plow toward h1s neighbor 's door.
•
I wonder how many other paths might be cleared by a
s1mple act of neighborliness and good will' Maybe drifts of
misunderstanding which could be blocking patllways from one
heart to another, or lines of communication cut off simply by
neglect. Perhaps, walk-ways of appreciation In homes drifted
Shut by unexpressed love . Or, paths piled high with more
formidable barriers of long-cherished grudges. How many
paths are there, once frequently traveled to the mutual
satisfaction and joy of tllose liVIng at both ends, now closed and
unused ?
Often , 1t doesn't take much to open a path. Maybe a
friendly smile, or a kind word, sometunes an admission of
fault, an applogy , And, the big results that can be realized from
such small efforts when we open tlle paths and travel them!
Why don't we keep tlle paths open?
Wouldn 't this world be an even more wonderful place in
which to hve if we all would be more careful to keep the paths
between hearts clear of anything that would clo~
cornmumcat10n 311d choke friendship"' Keep the paths open~

By Clarence
Miller
Some of the more liberally
inclined politiCal pundits
would have you believe that
the wave of tax reform and
tax cut backs set 1n motion by
California's Proposition 13 1s
beginmng to play out
Citmg this month's electiOn
results from a handful of
states
which
defeated
varymg forms of tax related
referendums, they have
attempted to play down the
unpact such proposals w1ll
have on the thmkmg of state
and natiOnal legislators .
Inst ead of talkmg about the
few that lost they should be
talking about the many that
won . In Idaho and Nevada,
voters convincmgly passed
measures
sim1lar
to
Proposit ion 13 m that they
would both liJmt property
taxes to I percent of current
market value. In Anzona,
· voters hm1ted state spendmg
to 7 percent of 1ts residents'
total personal Income.
Texans cut property taxes by
about $500 million, and
barred legislators from mcreasmg expenditures faster
than the state 1S economic
growth Even vote rs in
liberal
Massa c husett s
overwhelmingly approved a
complex measure mtended to
prevent sharp boosts in
residential property taxes.
What will the impact of
these results be here m our
Nation's Capital• One would
have to think that with all the
anti-spending rhetonc voiced
durmg th1s fall's campaign
by members of both parties
that the results' w11l be more
than symbolic.
However, as one who has
been a member of the
Congress for twelve years, I
am somewhat dubious that
many of the heretofore
Congressional advocates of
b1g government and b1g
spendmg will earnestly
pursue their born-again fiscal
co nservative reelection
po st ures once the 96th
Congress gets underway, It 1s
one thmg to prom ise
prudence but It is another
matter altogether to have the
courage to stand up and vote
against a costly budget Item
when it may impact upon
one's respecllve d1stnct
When one has been schooled
on a spendthrift philosophy as
most of the majoi'lty party
has, 11 is going to tak e more

th an a ground swell of
budgetary concern to break
tbem of the habit.
I, for one, plan to remmd
my colleagu es of the
promises they made to their
constituents when they stood
for reelecllon thiS falL I will
not let them forget their
pledges of less government
spendmg , of less taxes, of less
government regulation
To mo st the mandate
should be clear - most owe
their election day successes
to that large bloc of middle
American taxpayers who put
them back m office because
they liked what they heard. I,
for one, w1ll hold firmly to
that pledge and contmue my
efforts to trim back the siZe
and cost of government and
to restore to the mdividual
those prerogatives and
freedoms that have been
severely encroached upon by
government r egulation .
Hopefully , the large
maJority of my colleagues,
who have only recently come
to appreciate the f•ustrauon
and phght of our Nation's
taxpayers, Will join With me,
If they do, this Congress
could be a signifiCant one. It
could be the Congress that
turned the corner; that
reversed the trend of government that nver the last 45
years has grown bloated and
unresponsive to the people It
serves.

0.

JtnRF.RT HO EFU CH

Cih F.ditur

l'uhh ~llt•(J .IHil\ t ~&lt;tcpl Saturday

IJ\ I ht• Ohw Va ilt'\ Publi sh m ~
(1111lpan\·M ul\11Hl'dw Inc
111
('ourt St Punwt u~ OIHtJ 457~91
nu~lll t S~ Ofhll' Pht!I\L 992- 2Ja6
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litll \!
ates, 3101
F:ut'\ul 1\\t' , ( lt•w l.md, Otuu .t-1115
Stib~t·t tpl utn t,th•s Ochvct etl by
t.n tut whtlt' ,1\ .t ll.t lllt• Ia t c!Lts pel
"''t'k R\ Mt•lur lluul e &gt;~hclctatt\l'l
~t·l \Itt' rwt a\,Jilablt, One montiJ,
$.1 !J B~ m,u] 111 OhHJ aml W Va,

Ont· y,,u

S:l! 00

SIX munlhs

$11 iiO
I li t Ct' llWIILh:;
$1 00;
1 h·\\hl•t t• Ut•OO \t• o~ t S1x tnonUu;
$ 11 ;i tl , Th l t'l' rt wnths $7 5[\
Sui.N rt ptltln p1 11 1 1111 \mit s Sunda)

tu nts.Sl'lllml'!

~

Berry's World
I
•

1

@ 1978 byNEA , Irtc

~~

"Should we ever have to attack the United
S t~ tes , 11 should be done dunng a marathon,
whtle THEY 'RE ALL RUNN/fo.!G! "

Eastern's Dan Spencer (33) and Don Eynon ( 44), and the
Wildcats' cunnmgham (45) . Eastern won 48-45 matchmg
ItS rne VICtory recorded durmg the 1977-78 cage season.

GRAB TIIAT BALL - Waterford's Eichmiller ( 43)
goes high in tlle air for a rebound in Tuesday's non
conference opener at Eastern High School Closing mare

Southwestern dumps Bobcats
Greg Nelson, 6-2 semor pomts while John Westfall, floor attempts and just mne of 31 at the foul circle.
The Little Highlanders won
of 22 free throws
forward, dumped m 29 pomts lUnlor guard, ca nned to
According to the charts,
Southwestern connected on the reserve tilt, 27-25.
Tuesday night to lead the
Southwestern Highlanders to Kyger Creek sank 21 of 65 ' 24 of 60 from the held and 22 Dwayne Forgey topped the
winners w1th 11 pomts. Dav1d
a lopsided 70-53 VIctory over
Sands and Rob Waugh had six
VISitmg Kyger Creek. The
each to pace the Bobk1ttens
game was played as a nonThe loss left Kyger Creek
conference affair with both
with
an 0-2 slate. Southclubs sharmg the gate
western,
I-ll, plays at Coal
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Grove
Friday
mght
Highlanders broke up a close
game midway In the second
Box ScorP.
NEW YORK ( UPI I - The in the overall balloting ·With Kyger Creek 10 9 13 21- 53
penod to take a comma ndmg
12 17 15 26- 70
choice was st at lst ics or 435 pomts and running baFk S Western
29-19 lead at the half
Creek
153 1Coach Keith Carter's leadership and the vote was Charles White of Southern - Kyger
Gi lmor e, 1-0·2, WestfalL 3 4
California
,
also
a
junior,
,Wok
so
close
that,
if
It
were
Bobcats cut the margm to
10 ; Taylo r, 7. 3 17, Smot h, 2 0
eight points at one time after poht1cs, they would have fourtll with 354 points.
4 ; Mi sne r , 1 2-4 Sprmger 2
Rounding out the top 10 1 5, Thompson, 5 1 11 Totals
gomg toto a ma n-to-man demanded a recount
were
running back Charles 21· 11 ·5 3
On one s1de was the guy
press but that was as close as
Southwestern
( 70) Alexander
of l.SU , runmng
KC could get. Gene Layton. w1th the flashy stats, JUrnor
Nelson , 11 7-29 . Forgey, 1-2back
Ted
Brown
of
North
6-1- guard, finished the game Billy Suns of Oklahoma On
4, Nesberry, 4-0 B. Baker. 2 2
the other , the mspiratiOnal Carolina State, quarterback 6, Russell . J 2 8, Burleson , 0
w1th 13 points
Scott Russell and Dale semor, qua rterback Chuck Steve Fuller of Clemson, 2 2, Layton, 3 7 13 Tot a Is 24·
runnmg ba ck Eddie Lee 22-70.
Newsberry canned eight Fusma of Penn State.
Iver y of Georgia Tech,
As
1
s
usually
the
case
ln
each Von Taylor, 5-ll seniOr
quarterback
Jack Thompson
such
electwns
,
stat
istics
won
forward, paced the Bobcats
of
Washington
State and
out.
So
Sims
walked
off
or
for the second straight game
!me
backer
Jerry
R~blnson
of
more
appropriately,
ran
off
with 17 pomts. Jon ThompUCLA
with
college
football's
most
j
son, 6-6 senior center, had 11
There
were
severaL
prestigiOUS md1vidual pme
Tuesday by wmnmg th e outstanding candidates th1s
year and many of the voters
Heisman Trophy .
B y Unrted Pr ess lnter n a,to nal
felt
Fusina was more
In one of tlle closest votes m
East
Fu
sina
'act
ually
deserving
.
many yea rs, the fleet
Adelpht 89. Baruch 57
AIC 79, Lowe ll 73
ta ilback won the bronze outpolled Suns, 163-151, m
Boston U 75 , Sl Peters 7 I
place
votes,
but
Suns
first
statue by beatmg out Penn
Brdgwtr 91 , Boston Sf 76
Bryan t 106. worcstr St 80
State's held general, Fusma, won beca use of a more
Clanon 74 , Mercyhu rst 66 1
consistent showing in tlle s1x
by a slun 77 pomts
Glenv•lle 80 , Concord 73
Cor ne ll 71, N1 agara 74
The votmg by sports geographical areas of the
Frn k ln&amp;Mrsh l l 68, Jn1ata 65
wnters and broadcasters was country.
Fordham 82, Kmgs PI 55
Sims, who beat Fusma 827so close that the Downtown
Gtenvt ll e 80. Concord 73
Grove Ct l y 65, Wooster 63
Athletic Club , which sponsors 750 in the overall votmg , was
Hartw1 c:k 68. Itha ca 45
tlle
top
vote-getter
m
the
tlle award, didn't know the
tn d Pa 83. LaRoche &lt;lB
Manha t tnvl 79, Mer cy 61
wmner until 9 a.m. Tuesdsy , Southwest and Far West
Matne 0 93 Maryland 75
thereby makmg it unposs1ble regwns and f1mshed second
Mansl1 eld 73, Sc ranton 54
for them to have the "nation's m three of the other regwns.
MeSStd h 82, Gettysbg 78
N ew Hamp 72 Yale 68
outstandmg player " m Fusina led In the Northeast,
Phlla Phr m 62, Del 51 57
attendance for the awards' Mid-Atlantic and South but
Rho de Island 67 Brown 54
R I Coli 85, R Wt ll ms 66
1Wlcheon - as ts customary did not get heavy support m
Suffo lk 78 5 1 Franc1s 67
instead, they were forced the Midwest and Far West.
Trntn 51 50, Rt g rs Cmdn 44
True to the teachings of h•s
Vllno va 108, Merrt mack 65
to resort to a phone hookup
W Conn 102, New Paltz 80
w1th Suns at the Oklahoma coach , Joe Paterno, Fusma
w va Tech 59, w L1b 53
NEW EQUIPMENT campus m Norman and the expressed no regret at haVIng Wt
S 73, St Joh n s 68
Souttl
newest Hetsman wmner WI)S been beaten out for the
Appy st 84 , Ptc1ff er 71
NOW THRU
He1sman
Trophy.
downright surprised to learn
Betmn t 84 , Geotwn Ky 80
Ber ea Ky 77 Trnsylvn1a 75
" I'm really flattered abo ut
that he had been named as
SATURDAY, DEC. 2nd
Btscay ne 94 , Fla Ins! 79
the
way
tt
came
out
,"
said
the best college player in the
G Wash 103 wash Co li 52
Fusma. " I'm honored just to
Georgta SW 5 L Oglth r pe 49
land
* HUSQVARNA
Geo rget own 68 , Mary l and 65
"I really didn't expect 1!," be mentioned but to come m
Georgta 96 Rollms. 6B
second was really something .
Suns
said
.
"!
'thought
I'd
be
m
Me E 5h 79 Salsbry 72
*LAWN BOY
Mmphs 51 82, Mo Ws lrn 71
the r ace, but I thought Billy Sims is a great player.
Navy 89, Amertcan 78
(M ichiga n's Rick ) Leach What else can you say about
Pembroke 51 76, Meth 47
* BOLENS
5thr n Tec h 100 Ptedmont 71
would win 1t. He was a starter him • This is definitely one of
Sthrn M1 SS. 90, S F 51 87
!or four seasons and the happiest tunes for me."
Unton 75, Crsn Newman 70
*McCULLOCH
UNC W1lm 80, 5 C St 67
Michigan had a great record
Ya Ws l yn 70, Rndlph Men 68
(38-4-1) under him ."
.
Vorhees BL Fla Mem 80
*FRANKLIN
Sims 1s only the s1xth JUruor
W Ca 109, BapltSI 70
Mtdwe~l
to wm. Yet, his statistics
• FIREPLACES
Alma 83, J W es ley 81
were so 1mpressive that it
Anderson 66, Grace 59
Augstna 88 , 51 Ambrse 58
was hard to Ignore hun He
Bradley 92 , Knox 56
led the nation m rushmg
Coe 79, Upper Iowa 75
Columb1a Coli 92, Mryvl 76
(160 2 yards per game) and
o~na 89. Tark10 79
SMALL 'ENGINES
scormg (20 touchdowns) and
Frankli n 108, Urbana 90
averaged an incredible 7,6
llllno ts 81 , Denver 57
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Iowa 91 , W1Chtfa St 67
yards every time he carried
Kent St 80, Whtltter 76
49&amp; Locu st St.
CROWN CITY - Fairland
the ball
Kea rney 71, Doane 67
992 ·3092
Lawrence 74, Ed gewood 63
Leach, the sparkplug of placed four players m double
Mlddtegort , 0 .
Luther 93, Iowa Wslyn 79
Michigan 's offense, was third figures last mght as the
Closed All
Thursday
Mich Tec h 77, Nrthlnd 56
Dragons roared pas~ Hannan
Nebraska 58, Mtnnesota 48
NW Mo 82 , UMKC 60
Trace 8944 in the first game
Oshkosh 74, St Nrbrt 65
of the season for both teams.
Regis 60, Peru 56
St JOS lnd 111, NE Ill 77
The Dragons put the game
UN I 90, Corn ell 55
out of reach early, streaking
Soutl'lwest
Angelo Sf 69, SthWS~rn 67
to a 22-12 first quarier lead
C. 51 Okl a 63, E N M 61
and stretching it to 44-18 at
Letourneau 93 , SW Co li 76
McMurry 100, J Chr.s 78
the half.
OklahOma 78, Baylor 75
Tun Nichols led the way
Okl a Bapt U 65 , E Cent 59
with a &gt;j;ame-high 26 points
Pa n American 76, Hawau 56
St ; Mary'S 89, TeiC.aS AS. I 83
while Steve Hamlin added 14.
Sf Mry 's TeiC. 89, Tex A&amp; I 83
Joey Stuart had II pomts and
Tulane 109, Roosevelt 84
W Tex St 89 Pnhn dle St 59
Alan Burne~ 10 pomts and 10
West
rebounds.
Ar1l 51 83, Ca l 51 L A 60
Ron Pack led the Wildcats
san Diego Sf 104, Ida St 83
San Fran 77 , Chi CO St 53
with 16 pomts.
Seat tl e u 82, was~ 78

tranquilizer part.
If you are nervous, 1t might
not be a bad thing for you to
use 11, particularly durmg
th1s perwd of stress. It works
very well m some patients
w1th varwus digestive
disorders who are subject to
nervous tension . The - excessive use of tranquiliZers,
and particularly using them
in combination with an
alcohol hab1t, 1s bad. Tiiere
are good indications for them
and your case may fully
justify their use.
No, I am afraid that
vitamins aren't going to help
your condition whether you
take vitamin A, B, C, D or E. I
would suggest that you take a
good look at your diet pattern
and make sure you are getting enough bulk m your diet.
I'm sending you The Health ·
Letter number 2-l, lrntable _'
Or Spastic Colon and ConstipatiOn, to g1ve you more m- ·
fonnat10n about bowel functiOn .
Other readers who want
this issue can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, self addressed envelope for it.
Send your request to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
If you are able to improve
your bowel function, you may
stop having these pains in
your lower abdomen. LeftSided pam in the lower abdomen IS often associated
w1th improper fundion 'of the
colon. This is frequently
where the spasm is located .
There IS more to training
the bowel than just taking · :
bulk, You need to develop a . :
regular reflex pattern. This ..
requires a good breakfast · ·
with plenty of liquids. This is , ·
explamed m more detail in 1 ·
The Health Letter I'm sen- &gt;
dmgyou .

Waterford

FG FT

Cu nntn gham

9

I

E1c hmdl er

3

I

Gt nther

2
2

3
0
0

K 1tts
Hen ery

0
3
0

T Lang
M cC ut cheon
Totals

19

TP
19
7
7

'

2

0
6

0
7

4)

0

Eastern

Dan Spencer
Don E y non
Ke1th Wolfe
Joe Bowe r s
Je ll Goebel
Joe Boyle s
Bna n Btssell
Tota ls
Quarters .

7 14
1 7

6

3

0
0 0
5 13
1
3

2
0

'

'I

I
10

J
19

15 33 48

7

E

w

7
46

62030 45

award, vote close

Fairland

trounces

WILKINSON

Wildcats

NEW
CHEVROLET

4-Wheei-Drive
P-1-C-1&lt;-U-P-S

Immediate Delivery

Box Sco-re

Fair la nd
H Trace

In 1929, Lt. Cmdr. Richard :
Byrd and three crewmen · ·
became the first ptriiOIIB to :
fly over the South Pole. '
·

•

22 22 20 29- 89

12 6 14 12-44
Fairland Nic hols 26,
Stuart ll , Hamlm 14, Burnes
10, Johnso n 8, W1se 6,
Degarm o 5, Oan1el s 5,

Don't Buy Anv Chevrolet
Until You See

Conzett 2, Hutch ison 2.

Hannan Trace - Shafer 8,
Campbell 4, West 4, Pack 16,
Beaver 2, Hlte 2, Caldwell 4,
Simon 4

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

,

I

ARLINGTON, Texas I UPI)
_ Texao Rangers' utility
. player John Lowenst el~ has
been picked up by Baltunore
on a straight waiver deal,
according to a · team.
spokesman .
The Rangers received the
520 ,000 wa1ver price from the

Chevrolet
"Your Chevy Dealer"

I '

an ea rly com forta ble lead
and beat the Wildkltlens, 3934 Eastern scored JUSt two
points m the third pen od and
four m the last to falter 10 the
loss
Greg Cole and Leonard
Myers led the locals w1th
eight points ea ch Rauch led
the wmners w1th 13,
Eastern 's next game IS
Sat urda y at t:ederal Huckmg

Sims captures top

res·ults

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
havmg trouble m my stomach
anll the family doctor had colon X rays taken and said
there was nothing wrong.
Everytime I have ·a bowel
movement, I get an awful
aching pam m the lower part
of my stomach -sometunes on
the left side.
The doctor says I must
have a spastiC colon . He
prescnbed liqmd Donato!. I
took 1! fur a while but I
started to get a dry mouth
and throat and the doctor
changed me to Librax. I
understand 1,1brax IS a tranquilizer All my fmnds tell
me not to take tranquilizers
and that it is not good for you
Dr. Lamb, what do you suggest I take ? Is the tranqmlizer bad ? I'm suffermg
so, I went to the health food
store and they told me to take
vitamm B-1. I am trying it but
it is not helping either.
Do you think my case is all
nerves? I'm 72 years old and I
am nervous nght now
because my husband 1s sick.
He has a bad case of emphysema and has to take oxygen so I worry about him. I
would appreciate any suggestiOns you can mHke.
DEAR READER - You
could have a , spastic colon
and very often it is associated
with a normal colon X ray If
you dun 't see the spasm or the
eHect of it on the X ray, there
Isn't anythmg to see.
Let me say at once that nervous tenswn can aggravate a
spastic colon , even If 11 1sn 'I
the primary cause. Donatoi1s
sometimes used as It help to
block the nerves to tlle
digestive tract that 'seem to
stunulate the contractions
that !'a use the spasms. It certainly can cause a dry mouth .
Now about L•brax , It is a
c.'omhmahon mOOtcine. It contam' a substance to help
block the nerves to the
&lt;hgt•stiw tract also, and 11
' 'fll\fH!n.s J.ihrium which IS lht&gt;

gave the Eagles some breath·
1n g r oo m , but Waterford
wo uldn 't stay down One
mmute later they were tied
with the hosts
Keith Wolfe , who hadn '(
scored all night the" hlt on
two strmght short Jumpers to
g1ve Eastern the margm thel
needed
Dan Spe ncer and J eff
Goebel led the wmners w1th
H and 13 pomts, respectively
Goebel also had four steals
and ft ve asststs f or a good
naght
Don E) non cleared the
boards for the wtnners wtth 12
ca roms of the team 's 25.
Eastern had 12 turnovers
whil e they canned 10 of 23 fo ul
shots and 19 of 54 field attempts for 3!i percent
Waterford's Cumungham
Jed all sco1ers w1th 19 pomts
The b1g boy also had siK
rebounds of the team' s 25
lbe Wil dcats a lso hll JUSt 35
percent from the flour
The Eagles reserves blew

~.,:

College

HEALTH
"pasli(' &lt;'olon

OFVOTEO TO TH E
INTERES fOF
ME IGS-!\11\ SON AREA

•'

Many questions, mostly dark, are raised by the Guyanan
atrocity
Could the mass deaths in any reasonable way have been
prevented• Some cntics blame the State Department and
FBI for not havmg Investigated the Jonestown colony
adequately and warning of its murderous potential.
But another scenariO could be written whereby toozealous scrutiny of such a situation, particularly in a
locatiOn outside U.S. junsd•ct10n, could be construed as
harassment of nonconformists . American authorities
closest to it may well have seen their own as a damned if
they did, damned if they didn't situatiOn.
Were Congressman Leo Ryan and his party foolhardy?
Should they have exercised greater caution• Undoubtedly,
but it 1s a chronic failing of reasonable men - witness the
ongms of World War II - to be unable to credit the full ·
horror of which the WJreasonable are capable until it is
often too late.
If there is any basic truth to be derived from the
murderous end of the Jonestown colony, an exulting of
sadism posinl! as a religious movement, 1t is the same one
that already.,.has been revealed many times in human
history
" True religion being the greatest thmg in life and the
world, " as Indta 's Mahatma Gandhi put it, ~~ it has been
exoloited the most."

Trt•atin~
niF DAILY SENTINEl .

•

'

Meaning in the meaningless

On tllis day in history:
in 1890, the f1rst ArmyNavy football game was
played . The M1dd1es won, 24-

18 points When the buzzer
By Greg Bailey
The Eastern Eagle cagers sounded endmg the penod,
made head Coach John Eastern led 33-30 Then carne
Boston's debut a successful the firew orks.
Opcmng the fmal stanza the
one Tuesday mght as the 1978got hot and streaked out
hosts
79 Eagles downed VISitmg
to
a
39-32 lead w1th five
Waterford 4845 , m a see-saw
mmutes
to go m the game
contest. The Eagles won only
But
a
three-pomt
play and a
one game last year The wm
m thiS first 1978 contest was a two-pomler put the VISitors
back m th ere at :19-37
sweet one
Both teams were cold the Numerous Eastern turnovers
first quap er , perh a ps m that last quart er gave the
because of the first game Wtldcats some mom entum,
Jitters. The buzzer sound ed and they took advantage of 1t.
A short JUmper by Cunwith the Eagles oui on lop , 7·
mngham
w1th three rhmutes
6. By the half, the visitors had
to
go
gave
Waterford Its first
streaked out to a 20·15 lead
lead
smce
the
third penod , 41A SIZZling thn d pe11od put
'40.
Eastern ba ck into the bali
Two straight successf ul
game as the hosts ~out ed 111

-~

Justice in Arizona?

60 minutes top show

Eagles dump}Paterford

.....•

'~

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

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IN WASHINGTON

.'"

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov. 29, 1978

992 -2126
~pen

Pomeroy
Evemng, Til8:00 p.m_

r=====

Utah 84, Utah St 81

BAGS NINE POINT BUCK - Dean H1ll, 18, son of Mr
and Mr s Dallas Hill , Apple Grove, bagge~ a moe pmnt
buck deer the first day of dee1 huntmg w1th a gun TI)e
deer was shot down m the East Letart area. This wa s
Dean's first deer k1ll
Our Interest IS
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
- Despite the tight defense
apphed by Eastern 's Keith Wolfe , Waterford 's forward
Cunningham goes up to shoot a jumper m act10n durmg
Tuesday 's Eastern - Waterford game. The Eagles won 4845 making It a successful debut for coach John Boston.

Area box
score
PORTSMOUTH WEST (36 )
- Hop per 1 a 2, Davt s 41 9,
B R Eva n s. 1 6 10 Kennard
1 0 2, Geyer 0·2-2. Cole man 1
57, Kt so r 0-22 , Otll ow 022
TOTALS 8• 18 36.

WAVERLY 1841 - Ar nell
2-3 7, John son 3 2-6, Dut cher
2-0 d ,
Gordon
8 0 16 ,
Hol smger 10-0 20. Frederrck
2 0 4, Holland 1-1 3, Noble 1

0 2, Sturgel l I 0 2, Steger 7-4
18 TOTALS 37·10-84 .

By quarters:

Ports West
2 19 8 7 ~ 36
Waverly
20 21 20 23~ 64
Reserve score - Waverl y

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON , Oh1o ( UPI ) Double R Russ rallied and
won a photo hmsh w1th Mr
Pe llmre Tuesday mght m the
featured $1,200 con&lt;htloned
pa ce rac e at Lebano n
Racewa y
Double R Russ was timed
at 2·06 4-5 m the eighth race
and re1Urned $7 60, S3 60 and
$2 60
The 1-3 da1lv double of
Potatoe Bug and Wmnmg
Frost pa1d $13 20
The 1,086 harness racmg
fans bet $98,296

Those born on th1s date are
under th e sign of Sagittarius
American author

Lomsa

May Alcott was born Nov. 29,
1832.

S 75 per cent pa 1d on

and Rod s
and Reel s
e Guns and
Re loading
e Ball Glov es
Camping
Equipment
• Archery
e Indoor Gam es
• We
hav e Gilt
Cert1f1cates

90 day Certil 1cates of

.

Depos1t.
$500 00
/\fun1mum .
Interest
Pa yab le
Quarterly.
A substanttal penalty IS
invoked on all certthcate

accounts

Meigs Co. Branch
~
~~Sl

601 Main St.
Pt . Pl eas ant . W. Va.

~

w1thdrawn pnor

to the date of matunty .

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The Athens Covnty

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w Matn St
Pomeroy , Oh1o

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BLUFFTON LOSES
BLUFFTON, Oh10 ( UPI ) -,Heidelber g, headed by Chns
Reichert with 16 points and
Steve Sahle w1th 14, pushed
ahead m the first half and
held on for a 79.04 win over
Bluffton Tuesday night
Heidelberg led 34-19 at
halftime. The host Beavers,
m losmg their third straight,
were sparked by Mat Cramer
with 23 points

e FIShing Tackle

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4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 29, 1978

Major ..
,Hoople•s
'

.

I I~ ~i :i~};:/ :;: ;: : : : : : :{:}:~ ~: :{: : : : : :

Football
Forecast

'Not easiest position'-McNamara
CJN CINNATI (UPI) John McNamara admits it is
not the 1 'easiest position ~~ in
the world.
Jn fact, it figures to be one
of the hardest
McNamara , in being
named manager of the
Cincinnati Reds, inherits a
job that already has been

packed with pressure by the
front-offi ce.
Reds' Presiden t Dick
Wagner, appearing at a Tuesday
new s
conference
alongside McNamara, made
11
clear
he
expects
McNamara to guide fhe club
to a first place finish in the
National League West. next
season.

Pt·t·rlt.·ss Prul!,nu~tit·Oiftfr
f. g,HI. fn cnds, qLuckl'r tlum ;1 wmk. to - kaf+kct ff -{'Oin :-1
phrast.• , hl'rt' WP &lt;11 L' at the fmal Wl·ek of tht.·colh•g!Hlt.• !'it'etsun :
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
When·. oh whert.' 1 lhd tile tillll' go 'l
"Big Red Machine" has a
It sel'ms li kt.• on I~ ~estenla~ wt• wt.·n· gi ving you All:lbamil tu
new driver today .
tnp Nebra ska in tlw st.•Hson urwnt.·r fur lwtil duhx. A ganw. ' And he's already been told
\\hu·h im: J dt.•ntall~. t ht· r 1nnson Tull'·won rat ht•r hamill\' - ! 0-.\ that nothing Jess than a first- II&lt;II'·I'Umph '
.
place finish is expected. After
Thdt. 1ny fnl'nds, was J4St om· u£ tht' 1111lllY sti'rli ng ;uul all, it was secondiJiace that
-. tw·tlin ~ n •sul ts your Pet.• rle~s Progno;-; lll'Hlor gavt• you ttus
got the old driver fired .
fal l.
The Cincinnati Reds, who
My -ahem - mlwn·nt mutll'sly.dot.•xn 't pt:rmit mt.· to n •c ount
became the "Big Red
a ll of my colossal f.HTdJctions. but just tu nt-lllll' fl•w tu rdrt•sh Machine" with back..to-back
~ uu1 m~ m uQ Early un. Wl' pi('kcd Penn State to ddL•CJ t
world championships in 1975fav~1n·d Oh1u St&lt;-t lt' . wlurh 1t dul W-D- um·kliiOJ)h 1 And then we
76 but sputtered the last two
f..:i.IVC yu u [JttlL·· t ~gClr ded M!onu uf Flnra\e~ to kn nck 11ff til t' years, shocked the baseball
l11en-unbet-J lcn Aul.Jurn 'flgt·rs. And Wl' followed those wtth Pur- world Tuesday by firing 9dtU1':-; stunnin g VJctnry over Ohw State: HIHI Notre Dame's con·
year veteran Manager
quest of Nav~. 27-7 . aft~:r tlw Mlllslupmen had run up a seven- Sparky
Anderson
and
game win stJ eak l.atcr on , Wl' eurrcdl y fore cast tht" amazmg repla cing him with ·John
v1dunes uf underdog NeiJra~ kC::t over mighty Oklahoma for tlw McNamara.
Rig 8 title, a nd Houston's thnllmg tnumph over 1\:xas for thl'
Reds ' President Dick
SW(' L' t own.
Wagner, who personally fired
i\nd. fur a little frost1ng on tile cC::tke -· hch~he h ~we gave you
Cil•msun'!&gt;i upset of udds-un MC::tryhmtl for the Atlantic Cuet::;t
dwmpumslup -llar-rumph !
Ohio High School
Y i.L~ . dear readers. your Hoople System lti en juymg another
Basketball Results
· Untted Pr.ess International
sellsirtwmtl foref:astmg st•a sun - llak-k.aff 1
Akron Kenmore 63 Massi l lon
Now. for tilt' elosmg rnatehups ,
Perry 48
Then· are seH•ral prune attractions 011 the abhreviatt~d Ansonia
51 Bradford 42
.c.; ehedult· butnu1w more unpurlant them tlw Alabama-Auburn Baptist Ch 72 Massil lon Ch 66
Cin Aiken 84 Harrison 70
dash Ill the sr.c.
1\ .w1n fur Bea 1 Bryant 't; buys will s~ nd tht:m 1nto tht: Su~a r Cin LaSalle 67 Cin Woodward
56
l11nrl 'as till' ll'Hgm· l'l' JU 'esc nt t~t i ve against theN(). I dub 111 tlw Cle Bapt ist 72 Massillon Ch r
rwtmn . Penn State . And that 's exal'l lv what AIHbm na wHnts. 66
And t hat is exal,·tly what the Hooplt• Systt•m Sl' l'S happt•mng · Cle East 49 Cle John Haye 48
Aub11rn '"''Ill makt' 1t c~ cont est , but Alabamcr will pn•vml -- (ot)
Cle Kennedy 60 Coll inwood 49
27-18 The re an· rnany trmhtwnal d t:rs hes un tap l111 s wt-ek. Cle Lutheran E 69 fiawken
highlighted by the 85t h renewet l for Textls (I lUI Texo-~s A&amp;M : ttw School 51
7Hth repeat of the fc1 bl ~• l Ann) -Na\·y dasSI&lt;.: at Phila ~ldpluw Cle South 71 Cle Rhodes 69
till' 73rd mectwg nf l.eorgw and Georgw Tech: aml the 40th (ot l
Cle St Ignatius 65 Cle Ma x
home)':ita lc em·o1e for F lond(l il lld the Miami J-IUITlt'&lt;tll e!-i
Hayes 59
The I.ong horns-Texas A&amp;M fray will ~ &lt;t IHgh-s('HI'IJlg ctffa u· Cle Trin tty 49 Richmond Hts
39
wJtll till' forrn cr takmg et 42-28 dec!.sJon.
At Athens. the Rambhn ' wreek.s of rrt·orgta Tt•rh will make Cle W Tech 68 Cle John
Marshall 56
wn "Ck.'i of tht• host C:l•orgi e~ Bul ldogs In rrn yl'l another l!fJ!-i e1 ,
Col Har tley 65 Col Walnut
till' Hoople System tiCl' S the Yellow Ja('kt•ts wirnung , l'i-15.
R1dge 62
1\ nd JUSt a l!ttle further !-inuth. the ~Hlors of Flunda \\Ill Col St Charles 58 Col Centra l
56
·IJ\m\·" uver tlw M1a1111 Burn nmc~. 40·20.
In the "you ca nnt'\TI' tell wlmt \\'Ill happt•n" n va lry uf AIm~ Col whetstone 57 Col
~nul Navy. we runfulently predict tlH.' Middies wlllregBmlht•tr Watterson 55
Day Carro ll 80 Belmont 78
ea rly•seasun form dnd go hmne from Philadl'lplua wtth 11 t lost• (ot)
Day Jefferson 76 North 24· 18 VlclOI') :
On December iO, till' LUJ la in-dosc r Ill fe~r away Japan , t11 e western 51
Day Wilbur Wright 64 Beaver
T~ mpl e OWls will b&lt;tltlt.• the Bust un Cullt·~ l' F.a~lt•s m Tuk~ 11.
Creek 39
_
This has not been a guud year fur the Eagles and the windup Deerf ield (Mich l 61 Maumee
llot.::m 't look much IK'Iter . Mr1ke it· Temple :i:\, Ruston f'olll'gl' Valley 411 •
Elgin 48 Buckeye Valley 43
12
That's II fur now . dear readers, bul st(l v aleJ1 for m\· B&lt;m•J Elmwood 64 Van Buren 56
Fa rrmont W7J Day Cham Jul
fo recast. wluc/1 wtll be nmung your \\'CIY Ul.H few Wl't'ks ·
72
H H\'e H happy huhday season !
Fa1rvtew 65 N Royalton 59
Forest Park 91 Indian Hill 72
No -.~ go on wtth rm foreeHst ·
Franklin 57 Miamisburg 44
1 . FRIDAY De&lt;' I
Fremon t Ross 49 Fostoria 47
Texas 42 Texas A&amp;M 28 1N 1
Frontier 75 Warren Local 49
SATLRD,\ Yo,,. . 2
G~rard 59 Conneaut 45

Anderson, simply explained
that Anderson had not met
club "standards" with
second-jliace finishes the past
two seasons.
McNamara, third-base
coach for the California
Angels la st season , was 1
signed to a oneyear contract :
to try to get the "Machine"
back in high gear next year.
"The past two years have

Glenville 61 Cle John Adams

Houstun35 R1ee 6 t N J
LSU'28 Wyommg 14 1N 1
Navy 24 Army i8
Utah 24 SD1cgo St 20 •~
I ,JJg RchSt 28 S.ftfscSt '-7

51

Tt•tHJ 42 Va nd e~ · bilt :?.1

MOnroe 68

Greenv ille 59 Eaton 49
Grove City 88 Gahanna 75
Groveport 74 Col Northland

53

Ham Garfield 81 Lebanon -

Ham ilton Twp 59 Col Wehrle
53
Hamilton Taft 62 Day Stivers

SUNDAY De&lt;' 10
Templt- ·u Boston Cul 12

Pat 53

Area gridders named on team
Amon g th ose player s
named to the Associated
Press i:l ll-district teams were
players from the SEOAL and
SVAC.
They
mcluded
John
Schanzenbach, Jack
Smathers and Jim Wood,
Athens Class AAA team ; Rod
Boykin , and Robert Clay,
Ironton, first team Class AA ;
John Knight, Waverly, first
team Class AA . Chosen as

chosen to the second team
offe nsive and defensive
squads.

Jackson Center 67 Anna 65
Lake 62 Northwood 45
Ledgemont 51 Old Trail 39

Madeira 69 Norwood 58
Mansfield 63 Ashland 60
Mechani csburg 55 Fairlawn
45
Mrnford 71 Jackson 65
Mt Hea lth y 68 Fairfield 56
New Boston 73 South Webster
72
Newbury 74 Perrv 42

Northwest 54 Milford 52 (ot)

MONTREAL (UP! ) -The
Montreal Expos have signed
free -agent catcher Duffy
Dyer to a three-year coo tract
second team members were that will carry him through
Bob Seelig, Meigs ; Daryl the 1982 season, club
Womack , Dan Bryant, Terry ' president and general
Royal and Joe Fletcher, manager John McHale
announced Tuesday.
Ironton.
Dyer, 33, is a veteran of 10
In Class A circles, Jim
years
in the major. leagues,
Barnes, North Gallia ; Tim
having
spent the last four
McComas, North Galli a ;
seasons
with the Pittsburgh
Russell Starcher, Don Eynon ,
Pirat
es.
Terms of the
Eastern and Rick Clary ,
not announced.
contract
were
Hannan Trace, wer e all

Norwalk. 69 Vermillion 59
Dakwood 77 West Carrollton
65
Oregon Clay 49 Green 48
Reading 43 Cin McN icholas Al
Reynoldsburg 68 Lancaster
65
Southview 44 Medina 42 (ot )

Spr South 69 Grennon 53

Springboro 58 Waynesville 54

Strasburg 60 E Canton 50
Teays Valley 60 Hi llsboro 57

Tol Whitmer 70 Bedford 55
Toledo Whitmer 70 Bedford
(Michl 55
W Geauga 69 Mayfield 60
W~stlake 93 N Ridgeville 69
Whitehall 72 Bexley 62
Wilmington 52 Madiso n
Plains 50
Woodridge 70 Independence

54

Zanesville 60 Mar lon Frank -

lin 54

PRODUCE
While or Pink

GRAPEFRUIT
S lb.

99c

TANGERINES
5th &amp; pearl

Dozen

PHEBE'S STORE

59~

been good ones by the served us well, (but) Jet 's just
standards of most clubs, but say it's .time to make a
we are determined to set a . change," added Wagner.
Anderson, who got his first
higher standard," Wagner
said in announ,cing the major~eague managing job
appomtment of McNamara . when he came to the Reds In
"We fe.el John McNamara 1970, had huge success seven
offers outstanding ability and of his first nine years two
. world
stron g
major-league winning
championships,
four
National
experience. He is the man to
take us in a new direction ." League crowns . and five NL
"Sparky Anderson has West division titles.

It's a· 'cruel world'
CINCINNATI (UPll "Cruel world ."
That's what the little sign
tacked on Sparky Anderson's
office bulletin board says.
And, it definitely describes
Sparky's world today.
Just two years after being
hailed as 1 'hero " for
managmg the Cincinnati
Reds to their second world
championship in a row,
Anderson was fired Tuesday
in the wake of two straight
second place finishes.
Although admitting he was
"shocked" at being fired,
Anderson refused to turn
bltter.
"That 's life ," he said. "'You
never know what's around
the corner .''
"I came to Cincinnati as a
man and I leave as a man. I'll
always have great feelings
for Cincinnati. I spent pine
great years there. Nice
people. First class ballc!ub."
Even though fired by the
Reds, Anderson could still
wax
nostalgic
about
Cincy because it had been the
Reds that gave him his

CLOSED '
SUNDAYS

conAGE

CINCINNATI (UP!) Irate Cincinnati Reds fans
are threatening to boycott
and picket
Riverfront
Stadium if Pete Rose isn't
there next season.
A poll by the · Cincinnati
Post, rel eased Tuesday,
showed fans backing Rose's
contract demands of the Reds
by a nearly 2-1 margin.
Moreover, nearly half the
840 people who returned a
published questionnaire said
they won't be filling the
colorful . Riverfront Stadium
seats next season if they can't
see Rose hustling around the
bases. A few respondents
even said they would picket
the stadium if the Reds let
Rose get away .
Forty-two percent of the
respondents said they would
contmue to attend Reds
games regardless, with some
even saying they'll not attend
if Rose does stay with the
j
Reds.
The poll results were
released as the 37-year-old
Rose plunged head-first Into a
week of meetings with other
clubs. Rose was set to meet
with the Philadelphia Phillies
and the Pittsburgh Pirates
officials today, following
sessions Tuesday with the
Kansas City Royals and the
St. Louis Cardinals.
And, Rose noted he is
somewhat overwhelmed by
some of the offers he' s
getting,
including
one
Monday from Ted Turner , the
owner of the Atlanta Braves.

''His offer was tremendous ,
something you have to think
about," said an awed Rose.
"After that offer, it •s mostly
down hill from there , Hu
offered a three-, four-, or
five-yeac contract , or
anything I wanted."
Rose didn ·: disclose the
terms _of Turner's offer,
-although
a • Cincinnati
television station reported
the offer at $3 million over
three years. That would be
substantially higher than the
Reds' final offer, believed to
be $400,000 for each of two
years.
"It's amazing how some
people think so much of you
when a place, Cincinnati,
where you busied your tail for
16years, doesn't," said Rose.
"After hearing Turner 1s
· offer, I have to think aboui
playing for the Braves," said
Rose. "They have a young
team with a Jot of talent
coming up from the minors.
Three of \herr clubs won
minor league pennants. They
are only one or two players
away from being very

01.

car1on

CHEESE••••••••••••••••••••

69~

on as mstructor
CINCINNATI (UP!) Former Cincinnati star
player Ted Kluszewski will
remain on with the Reds as
''special hitting instructor.' '
Kluszewski, who was not
offered his old job as batting
coach when Sparky Anderson
was fjred as manager
Tuesday, will work with the
Reds when the club is home
and with Cincy's mmor
league teams - mainly
Indianapolis and Nashville when the Reds are on the
road, club ,officials said.

"solid ballclub" and smiled
as he ran through names like,
11 Foster,
Griffey, Driessen,
Bench, Morgan ..."
McNamara, a native of
Sacramento, Calif., has been
a major league manager or
coach the past ll years, but
he was ~ver quite able to
make it as a major league
player.
'
A ca tcher , McNamara
spent froni 1951 to 1958
playing for such minor league
teams as Fresno, Lynchburg
and Lewiston before he
turned to maoaging
league teams In 1959 at the
age of 26. He managed In the
minors nine years, part of the
time as a playing manager,
and got ¥ first managerial
job in thejlmajors late In the
1969 season with the Oakland
A's.
He also managed oakland
in 1970, was a eoach for San
Francisco the nex,t three
years and managed the San
Diego Padres from 1974 until
rnid-1977. He was third base
coach for the California
Angels last season.

minor

A party featuring the
Mickey Mouse ·theme was
g1venSunday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry R.
r.audBrmilt , Sr ., Route 2,
Racine, honoring their son,
Herbie , on his eighth birthday .
Games . were ·played and
favors were, giveri to the
guests. Refreshments were
served to Mrs. Shirley
Williams, Donnie, Chns, and
Amy, Marietta; Mr. and Mrs.
Max Boring, Valerie and
Lori, Colwnbus; Mrs . Patti
Laudennilt, Normie, Lori
and Barbie, Mrs. Vonda
Johnson, Kelly and Keith ,
Mrs. Kathy Farr, David,
Mrs. Gold ie Inge ls, his grandmother, all of Mason, W. Va.
Mrs. Marie Harris and
Dennis, Mt·s. Freda l.auder·
milt, ·a grC::tndJ:notht&gt;r, l.i .SCI
Stewart, Pomeroy; Billy Joe
and Kelly Joe Parsons, Joey
Farrell, Shannon Pierce,
M1ke, Mitch, R1 ck and Jeff
Bable, fuly Laudermilt, all of,
Route 2, Racine.

llubbard's Greenhouse
Syratuse. 0 .

99'1.·5776

Potted Poinsetlas
$1 .00 io $6.50
Hanging Poinsettias
Tubs, 30 plus blooms
$10.00
Foliage Plants
3" to 10" soc to ss.oo
HANGING BASKETS
10' '

4"

to

'1.25 to 15.00

Plli.tY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - A navy
blue polyester knit dress was
put in t!1e washmg machine
w1lh some new grt.-en towels.
Now the dress is covered with
green lint that seems to be
imbedded in the Iabrie.
Re'rashing has not helped,
nor ca n it be 1·emoved with
gwruned plasti c tape or a
brush. Do you have a solutwn
forthts'! -MRS. W.O.
DEAR MRS. W.D. - Sorry,
I have nothing furthel' to offer. I am sure 1f any of the
readers have round a solution
tu \his problem they will be
sharing it with you.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Brenda
might remove the lipstick
~ from her white clothes
hamper by rubbing on
toothpaste with a stiff brush.
This also works great on
crayon marks on ei ther flat
or gloss pamt. - MAVY
DEAR POLLY- On cleaning day I use a damp doth to
du&amp;t the padded velvet headhoard~ on my beds This is
faster than usmg the vacuwn
and it really brightens them
up .
POLLY'S NOTE - Do be

GIFT!

"I'll tell you one thing:
Turner's offer would top that
of most clubs. Now, it' s just a
question of where I want to
Play ."
The Phillies also are
co nsi dered
a
strong
contender
for
Rose's
se rvices. The
Phillies
reportedly offered Rose a
three-year pact at $600,000 a
year.

BUY
EARLY

LAY-AWAYS

CHAPMAN SHOES
"Next To Elberfelds In
Pomeroy"

'----

u

W
W
VISIT IN INDIANA
.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Nor- ;
ton visited over Thanksgiving
with T. Sgt. and Mrs. James
0 . Norton and daughters,
Chmtina and Paulette at
Grissom Air Force Base in
Indiana. i\ccompanymg them
on the trip were Mrs . Phillip
King and Carl !.oren pnd
Jason Loren. The Nortons enjoyed viewing the movies that
their son had taken dun rig h1 s
five years m Hawaii.

~

--g
f.(

i

~
If

II

THAT MEA
Great Appliances from ....
Sunbeam, General Electric &amp; Rival

*TOASTERS

*CAN OPENERS
AND MUCH MORE

Meigs County Juvenile Oflice Carl Hysell . wa s guest
speaker at a recent meeting
of the Salisbury PTO held at
the school.
Hysell had an exhibit of
drug related matenals a nd
discussed some of th~ effects
on L&gt;chavior and appeanmce
when using drugs. He also
ta lked about teenagers and
alcohol, teenage runaways.
•ami showed a film on tmu·ijuana and the d0:1ngers of using it.
•
Salisbury Cub Scout 229 led
m \he pledge and Kathv .Corbitt led 1n devotions ft \vas

A Thanksgiving pi·ogJ·am

Todd DaviS celebt·ated his
firs( birthday recently With a
party at the home of his
parents, Mt· . and Mrs. Mark
Davis. Attending were his
grandparents, George and
Ruby Nicinsky, Willie and
Dorothy Davis, and an aunt
and uncle, Corky and Jeff
Werry. A down theme was
used in the decoratwns. Gifts
were presented to Todd.

If

~

r emoved and the p~:~n t.s clean

dish cloths can be bleached in
the same solutwn for double
duty resu!L, _-G H.U
Polly will send you one of
he r sig ned thank-you
newspaper coupon dippers if
she uses your favorite
Poin ter, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Wnte POLLY 'S
POINTERS in ca re of this
l'Oiwnn .

Carl Hysell speaks to PTO

wa s pre~ent e U by Mr!:i. M a r~

Todd Davis

r~~"""""'Jj;!=~~Jj;!I!&lt;:O:~I$:!~1!0:1=~
1 ·
W
!

W
W

sure the doth is only slightly
damp anti not wet.
Putting socks on a squirming youngster can be a rcat
job. I used to lay my children
down on their stumctch.s ami
then put thei r socks on.
Smnelimes the socks go on
ee~sie1: if they do squtrm in
this positwn.- MRS. S.J .S.
DF,AR POLLY - When us·
in~ enamel cookware relea.!:it!
stuck or burned fonds by
soaking in a bakmg soda and
water solution . I.oosen with a
rubber spatula. When such
pans are slained I put in some
blea ch, several drops ·cl
ddergent and water and find
this bleaches the stains out
perfectly. Scouring powders
sCJ'atch the surface. If all
food particles have been

noted that total membership
now stands C::tt 114. Winner of
the !)l'lze for .the largest
percentage in membership
was the th1rd waue . Susan
Pullins, ways and means
cha\l'lno n, thank ed the
members for help on the fa ll
f~st1 va l which wa s a hugh
sut'ces/j. The group voted to
purchase an intere1Hn system
fo1 the schtlol. A copy of the
ne\v Meigs Cuunly history
will also be purcha sed M1·s.
Martha Hoover's f1rsl grade
\\O il
th e room count.
Ref reshment~ were served .

* COFFEE POTS

jorie Bowen when the Willing
Workers Class of the Enterprise United Methodist
Church met recently at the
home of Mrs. Agnes Weeks . .
,nPause and PrC::tisc" was
the topic of the lesson which
ooened with scripture by M1·s.
Kathy Corbitt anJI Mrs. Ruby
Fr1ck who reaJI a meditation
and a poem . There was a
discussion b&lt;::tHed on the lyrics
of the hymn, "Come, Thou
Fount", and the group sang
" Praise Him, PrC::tiSe Him ."
Prayer by Miss Freda Lievmg dosed the devotion s. The
business meeting followed
with reports given by the
members on items sold.
E lel'lion of uffil:ers WC::IS
' held and plans were made for

SOUP SUPPER
A soup supper featuring
chili, bean and vegetable
5oup, homemade pies and
cakes will be held from 4:30
to 7:30p.m. Saturday at the
Allred Untied Methodist
Church.

the annual Chnstmas party
to be held at the Bowen home .
The meelmg was hosted by
Mrs Barbara Weeks and
refreshments were served to
those named and Mrs . Mabel

nmm·r-up wcv; Huth J\nr1 Eddy wi th 01 1ot.rl los~ of ~I

mt ·mlx'l's ..

/)I'Sf ]tlst.'l' I IV(' !'iJIJ

potmd:.; and Bunni&lt;- N: lll

W! tiJ

(I

&lt;:IS

]O)'jt'

for tile year uf 71 pounds. The
poster t•onlc~l was won by
Bcl't'riy Chapter and Ute
JJ &lt;J IIlt'
ta l.! c ontest by

Although
excited
by
Turner's offer, Rose said he
still had an open mind during
negotiations with other clubs.
"I'm not going to take
Tur ner's offer to (other
teams ) and say, 'match this.'
That's not the way when
negotiating. I may settle with
a figure Jess than the best
offer if I think I can help a
team and it can help me.

5

PICKENS HARDWARE

[!]Cast iron ftl'&amp;tes with scientifically
designed,heavy duty ribbed construction
I

SLAB BACON
I

c~~~~........

'

POrTED MEAT ..................~~ ... J/'1.00
KLEENEX TISSUE.. .................~~.. 59'
FABRIC SOFTENER ................~~~!~~. 99'
MAGIC BLEACH .................. ~~!~~~ .. 69'

79e

Superior's

FRANKIES
S!~~~d ...... , ~~l9

End Cui

~~~~$:·............ ~ 129

.

$1 29

.L.!J AutomatiC t~rmost.at controls the
combustion air Intake by means of a
highly sensitive bi-metal coil. Just set
the comfort level you desire.
· [j] New, thick"' linings of high
temperature fl'lractory brick.

Center Cut

PORK

$} 39\

CHOPS................... \

DUTCH LOAF.

~l39

Lb ..........

JOWL BACON

S~i~~ ... ~ ... ~ }49

,_

·'

',•
,,

'••

...•
..
•
..••.

.
I•

,.j·
.
f

..•
I

for years of liard use.
[lJ Cast iron' rotating du1plex shaker
grates for coal burning
0 Coot innr ..h &amp; feed
are warp resistant and
airtight seal wit h
[l] Cast iron ash &amp; feed
withstand' high tem1per1
,yarp ot~l doors.
gasket m8.intains an
matching frame.
[i] c..t iron Rue collar
tem~ra~ures in stride
exteitlted flange for easy
!!] Extra large ash
anp yaoy asClhobh1et ·dOG

mFjllle~d

access to ash and

I!ID Hea\ry duty firebox
desigt)ed "wrap"
·
an emb&amp;lsed cooking surface.
[]I Contemporl'ry styled cabinet with
hatidsolne wood-gr!~ffied panel, gold
mesh grill to accent the dark brown
cabinet eolor, and a porcelain finish
lastintl beauty.
Louvered top that lifts off
emergency cooking on the
. lire x top.

rn

Ncwpor,t . Next year 's AID
wtll be hosted by TOPS
OH2383 , Cheshire, with TOPS
OHI439 Pomcrtty, co-hostess .

Tw&lt;·nt)·-two KOPS and lwo
KI WS from all chapters wen•
honnn:d. Also honored Wl'l'l'
tht'!l' biggc."t losers ;md
runners-up. The overa ll AID

Holiday activities planned by
American Legion- Auxiliary
Holiday activities wert&gt;
The Hnnuol Christmas dinplamwd when Ure Amenc&lt;:m ncr was pli:r.nned £or Det.' . 5 at
Legion Auxihtry , Lewis the Meig.s Inn with o party
Manley Post 263, Middleport, . · followmg at the home of Mrs.
met at the Meigs Inn for a Allen Ha mpton , president.
meeting hosted by Mrs. Mrs. Campbell Harper
Zuelelia Smith.
reported on the plans for the
Mrs. Charles Saunders, Christmas party.
vice presidenl, presided at
Mrs. Bowles gave a resume
the meehng which opened in of b1lls pe1·taining to veteran s
ritualistic form . Jt was in the 95th Congress. A letter
reported that the birthday was read from Mrs Shennan
party at the Chillicothe Butler, " member. now
Veterans Hospital will be J'esidmg in Findlay. Mrs .
held on Dec. 14 and a donation Sm ith served comish hens
was made to that . It was also cmd a dessert full uwmg the
decide(! to send cards to all mect mg .
veterans who are former
members of Post 263. Mrs.
BAZAAR-BAKE SALE
Ernest Bowles and Mrs.
A
Christmas bazaar and
Nellie Winston will handle
bake
sale will be held Friday
this. It was also decided to
and
Saturday
for the benefit
give a bux to the son of a
of
the
Rutland
Emergency
veterC::tn.
Medical Service at the unit 's
headquarters next to the lire
station in Rutland.
Hours of the sale both days
will be from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Mr. and Mrs. James L. wit h numerous handmade
Ebe1·ts, Route 1 Albany, an- articles including tree ornounce the birth of their first naments, artificial fl ower
child, a daughter . Jamie Lee. arrangements, Christma s
She was born on Nov. 22· at wreathes, yardstick holders
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital and bulletin hoards to be
and weighed seven pounds, featured. The event is being
four oum:es.
sponsored by the emergency
Maternal grandparent.&lt; are medical technicians of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Mc- Rutland.
Clelland, McArthur, and the
paternal grandparents a re
The moon is moving toward
Mr. and Mrs. James R.
ne;v phase.
its
Eberts, Hamden. Mr. and
The
mornlng stars are
Mrs . l.awrenee Thornton,
Circl eville and Mrs . Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
The evening stars are MerE liZabe th
l'iJ seman ,
cury
and Mars.
Hmnden, are the greatgrandparents.

HOMEMADE HAM SAL.AD••••••••••••••• ~b~.!l.09
12 oz. Packaged
FRENCH CITY WIENERS •••••••••••••••••~~- ••• 974
I

I

FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM •••••••••• ~~ .~~~.s1.29

69¢
MARGARINE .......... ~~: .
$2 79

5 lb . White

1 lb . Blue Bonnet
quarters

GRAPEFRUIT ... _....~~~ :

2 lb . KraH
Velve eta -

16 oz. Cello

89t
CARROTS ...........~~.~~~.. 19t

box

CHEESE SPREAD .... -

a

Daughter born

Willing Workers Class present
Thanksgiving program at recent -meet
·.

ASSORTED VEGETABLES ....... 3 ,3:~. 11.00
Robtn Hood
611 oz
PIZZA CRI:JST MIX .............. .'•.• : 2/49'
Jumbo roll 49'
HI-DR I TOw ELS.......................... .
~=~

Polly Cramer

OII HR, Rcverly. Nt&gt;wpurt.
and Ponwruy . TOPS Mat'll'I ta OH74R wt•rc tlw lmsl

Moore, Mrs. Beatrice Buck,
Mrs . Kay Logan, Mrs. Beulah
Utterback, Mr~. Della Curtis
and Mrs. Agnes Dixon.

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
December 1 2
Me!&amp;S County
Humane Society

INSTANT COFFEE ••••••.•••.••••••••.••••••J.a:. $3.98
20 oz. Del Monte

CHUNK PINEAPPLE............................ 634
4 roll Pk . While Cloud ·
·
in
.
TOILET TISSUE ••.•••••••••••••c.o!~~s•••••••••• ~~~~ 95'
46 oz. Hunt's

TOMATO _JUICE•••.•••••••••••••••••••• :••••••••• 734
IS ·oz .

DEL MONTE SPINACH..................... 2/794
10' ' oz . Ca mpbe ll 's

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP; ••••••••••••••••• 2/594
14'1: oz. Showboat

PORK &amp; BEANS •••••••••.••••••••••••••••••• 2/554
5 oz .

~rmour

Across from Dr. Conde in

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••.••••••••••••••••

Middleport .

16 oz. Idahoan

Hand-made

items, house plan1s, hand '
painted Ia rAps, Am1sh food ,
and much mare.

I •• I

...

Surprise party held
J oyrc Hnd Barbara ,
daughters of the late Robert
Will , Chesler, and June
Johnson, Harrisonville, were
surpnsed recently when Mrs.
l.avonnia Young entertained
w1th a birthday wiener roa;t
in thei r honor &lt;Jt Forest Acres
Park .
Attendmg were Danny ,
Leah , Roland and Anna Will,
sisters and brothers of the ·
honored guests, r..,o Johnson,
lhe1r stepfather, th eir
mother, Mrs. Johnson, and
Mrs. Young, caretaker of the
park. Hotdogs, potato chips,
candy , pop, ice creC::tm, C::tnd
cake with candle8 were enJoved and later in the evening , hot chocolate Wi:IS tmjoyed around the fire. Unable
to attend were Ernest Ray
Will in Scotland with the U. S.
Navy and . Robert Eddie,
employed in •PhoeniX,
Arizona, both brothers of the
girls.

at

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS, PLAZA

9 9-ti MIS 12-6 Sun.

•

$33995
WllH BLOWER

Chees&gt;ebtHQt~r, Regular French.
"'"""' t- r~.~., and 16 oz. Drink

20 FOR $1.00

Fresh
Tangerines ..... .
Salad
Tomatoes

.lb ...

2/954

INSTANT POTATOES ••.•.••••••••••••••••••••••• 63'

competitive.''

8-16 oz.
bottles11

•

insist~ Cincy still has a

Irate Reds fans planning boycott

POTATOES
20 ibs.

" 'Klu' will stay

managing chance in 1970.
Anderson led Cincinnati to
first place finishes three of
his first five years, but a
world championship eluded
the club. Finally, In 1975,
Anderson guided the Reds to
the1r first World Series .
triumph In 35 years. In 1976,
he made it tw o world
champwnships in a row.
But in 1977, the Reds lost
the National Leag'ue West
title to Los Angeles and when
the same thing happened this
past season, weU, that was
just too much for the "Team
of the '70s /' as the Reds'
front-office staffers like to
call their organization, to
. take.
Anderson was out, John
McNamara was in.
.
, Although Anderson said he
was unsure about his baseball
future, he figured he will get
a chance to manage another
major league team, probably
in the not too distant future.
And, he said, should it be a
National League job, he will
come back Into Clncmnati the
way he always felt with the
Reds - "proud.· ~

golden opportunity to prove
himseU.
.
For, just as shocking as
Anderson's firing Tuesday
was his hiring back on Oct. 9,
1969.
"Sparky who?" asked tb~
Cincinnati new spaper
headlines
when
his
appointment was announced .
Indeed,
George
Lee
"Sparky'' Anderson was not
exactly a household name . He
hadoneofthemost
undistinguished professional
playing careers ever. He
spent 10 of his ll playing
years in the minors. The one
year he got to the major
lea gues he hit .218 and
promptly went hack to the
minors the next season .
But at age 30, Anderson
began discovering he could
manage better than he could
play . After doing pretty well
managing minor league
teams for five y~rs, he
caught on as a coach for the
San Diego Padres for the 1969
season and then former Reds '
President Bob Howsam gave
hil;n his big major league

Thursday, Nav. JOthrough Dec . 2

We Gladly Accept Fed . ·Food Stamp&gt;
Monday thru Friday
' : OO'tll7 : 00
SaturdaY' : 00-9:00

Valley Bell

describe the kind of qualities
that he figured got him the
job, spoke in terms of
"loyalty and honesty ."
" Honesty in dealing with
players is very important /'
he said . " Sometimes it 's
difficult to tell a ballplayer
the truth . They may oot like
what you say and you may
have a tough time saying it,
but you have to level with
people."
Anderson was considered
by some players, including
Johnny Bench, as too easy·
going, which prompted
McNamara to be asked about
his philosophy on discipline.
"I ask respect and ·
discipline from the players
and that's exactly what 1·
want," he said. 11 1 am a low·
key guy, but I can gel my
lr~ up."
Even though Reds' star
Pete Rose appears headed for
a nother ,club, McNamara

think about all the pressure
on him , but he conceded, "It's
not the easiest position to step
into ."
"I realize it will be a
difficult task, but I'm sure the
people will give me the
opportunity and be fair with
me. That's all I can ask."
McNamara, asked · to

New Red Machine driver must win

Hy Major Amos n. Hm1ph•

Alabama 27 Au bum 18
/\rki:lnsa::; 35 Texas Tcc\1 17
Hol y Cross 21 Boston !Col iO
FlYU 22 Ncv·l.asVegas 201 N 1
Flonda 40 M1a1m 1F 120
Ga Tech I i Georgia 15
So Calif 45 Hawaii 7 1N 1

second 'jJJace WOO 't quite
get it. That's where Sparky
Anderson brought the club In
the past two years - and that
got him fired.
'' We are determined," de·
clared Wagner, "to set a
higher standard."
McNamara, given only a
oneyear contract by Wagner,
says he hasn't yet had time to

POLLY·s POINTERS

Mrs O''I'Hid Rought and
Mr !ot
Rubert
H C::~wk
I'&lt;'Pre.« ,nted TOP OHJ4:!9 at
the Autumn Inspiration Day
held at Marietta at lht• Huliday Inn . Nov 18.
Other chaptel':\ reprcl'i entctl
were Warner , Cheshi re .
Marietta .Om99, Ma1iett""

�.

...

.

.

..

.. :•

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov. 29, 19J8
j;~~:;:;:;:::;: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;: ::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:::;:; ::::: ;:;:;: :=:=::: :;:;:;::: ::;:;:;:::;:;:;:: :;:;:;:;:: ::: ;:::::: :j)j~

~:~

~~~

~~

-~·

i!i

7- The DilDy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1978

".

'

Susie Pullins honored by layette shower .

: : Helen Help · , ,
»

.

!
'

=·~

US ~ . . By Helen Bottei_!

,, l&lt;t ~Tttt• shower was he ld
rct'l'nth· t- tl the Roc·k Springs
Unil&lt;•d Met hodist Church
lmrwn ng Susie Pullins.
r.mm•s were play~d with
prizt•s gttilll--{ to Martha Kin){
aiul Ethel Gru cser, and Angie
Slm~n won the door· pr·ize.
C(:lkt•, punch , homemade candy [)(Julies by K• ren Sloan,
nuts and m i nl~ wen~ served '
Attendi ng were Ma rthil and
Ma1·s ha King, J ud y and Tara
Htunphreys. Clari ce Ken·

· ISTHIS ·CONSCIF.NCF:" NAGGING "!
OF.A R HF.LF.N .
Rt•t•tmlly I went sho pr,in~ for a spt'd&lt;J l itt•m in &lt;~ rnugh
rll'i~ hborhnod's department store . As I w~~ b(tckinv into a
sp&lt;:H'l', I nickt&gt;d et pnrk~l t'til' with my bmnpt•t·. It hm l su mC::~ny
&lt;ltmb and Sl'f'Htehes 1plus·a s masllt~tl rc~ r t•lul from &lt;t previous
Hl't· i d t~ nl ' that I coultb1 't tell which clatmtgL' WCl S mi nt!, but
knew it t•uu ldn 'l bt' as lmd as lim others .
.
I was afr(lid to l't'IMll1 the truubic ~l'au se yuu nt·vpr k now
how pcoph' in a Ucpn•ssl'd arcct will read . I mi~ht hctvc gut tht•
hell bcatt~n {tUt of rnc . /\&lt;; it turnt 1d out , tht• ttwnc r was tl wtnna n
.J watcht:!d he t' driv«.•!_I WHy from inside the stun• .
I think a man !-i3W Htt~ ac.·t·ident , l.mt not dust• cnou~ l1 to ille nA lhilnk offeri ng service
ti f\' mv !-itnall niek. Jf ht&gt; volunteers a~ a wit ness I t'IHtltl be wa s beld whe n the Enterprise
hlitmt•;l for hi~ th:unaf.{e I didn't t'111nmit.
r
United Melhudisl Church met
I fct•l awfully guilty. Whill &lt;"il n f dn' - CCJNSCIF.N CF. at the home of Mrs . Martha
·· s TRUCK
Husted.
()F.AR f.S .:
l'tl ~uess wha t you' re feeling is equal pet r'ls guilt c:tnd fe&lt;H'
tlwl you 'II he cctu~ht. But if yuu haven't heanl from lht• woman NAMED TOP PLAYER
hy thi s t imt&gt; , furgcl ct possi bl u damage suit- U1e man t•vidt•ntly
CLEVELAND (UP!)
:-~hruggt.'&lt;l and stc1 y t~d uninvolved .
·
The Cleveland Touchdown
As fur vuur cunsciem5e ; best l'UI'c hr-rc is to swear y~m 'll Club Tuesday night nanied
lll'Vt' J' aga'in walk i!WCI)' from Cl dent you frt US t'd .
T
Cousineau, Ohio State's
1 Rut tht.• l01w uf human nature says you may - should you a
erican linebacker, as
sp11t no witness whit shores up your lmtll'sty. 1 - H.
i national collegiate player
of thf year .
OEA R HF. f.F.N .
Cousineau will be honored
--r.unfused" wanted to know wl1y single men ~ rcat her likt at a Dec . 7 banquet along with
(liri while married men give ht•r the queen 's rush. Your p(:l l i l l·
m Da rden a nd Ozzle
fe nm&lt;.'e tt1(:1t she miJ,!I1t fect r a lal-itinK rehttiunship, therefore New
e of the Cleveland
pk ks ··safe" affa irs. isn 't enough.
. 1
Browns.
My. woma n frict~d~ and .I have 11_ften wondered why .single
l:} ml-lles we wurk wtth are so obnuxwus and rowdy. wlulc the
mC~ rr i ed fc lluws rcallv listen when wt' ta lk anU give us
In 1963, President Lyndon
strctig:ht. {'UilSidera tt~ answers and help. We've deeidcd that
Johnson
a ppointed the
lnCII'I'lagc m~st t!llmin0:1tl' the rwed fo r Ct maeho attitude a nd
Warr
en
Commission
to
s1n,art a leck put·downs that singles feel Cl neeessary pa rt uf
investigate
the
assassination
dr-aling with women . rr they unly knew h(lWsimilow they seem !
I gut•ss it t0:1kes a few ycn rs ur li vir,g with wivt•s tu make mt~ n of President J ohn Kemedy.
huma n.
and Mr. a nd Mrs . Charles
I don't blame single \\'Oin l' tl rur being attral'led to men whn
Faulkner , Wichita , Kansas.
haw all"eady been bmkl'n in.- CONFUSF. () If
Her fiance is the sori of Mr .
[)F.AR HF.f .EN.
and Mrs. Edward Voss, Spr·
· I just had to 'mswt•r one of your ·· Whyuh why'z.;" whi ch asked,
ing Ave., Pomeroy .
huw come t'iga retk makcr!-i an~ r~quircd tu put warnint.!S on
The Rev. George Oiler will
t•adl pHt' k a ~e while liquor mctnufat'Lurer.s needn 't label thei r
SYRACUSE, 0 .
officia te at the wedding.
LM1ttles ··dmJgcrouli to health ··~
My liltle girl has em e:~sthma attal'k wlwn s he is t'XJmscd tu
nther J~nple ' s smoking. Maybt! this is the reason fur the we:~rn ­
See us for t hat ha rd to
ing. Smoke is hazat·dous to others, whik drinkers only dcu ne~g e
pl"ease someone on your
li st . Lin-Dee' s speciali zes
ltwmst•lves . - .rOANN
in
handmade
item s.
OEAR JOANN .
Someth ing new everyday.
Ot·unk drivers an~ n· t haza nlous tu other:-; ? Cume now : - H.
Af ghan s, sc arves, hats ,
mit ten
sets,
ma ny

Three ·honored by recent layette shower

rwd y, Kathy Corbitt, Pam Zirkle, O..lores Long, Madhu Sally Radford, Je nny
a nti Ann Evilns , Judy Rad· Malhotr·a and Michelle, J a ne Burdette, Mildred Belzing,
fun l.. Shirley and Crysta l Abhotl, Susanne Ri dun~nd, Fll en Bell , LudUe Leifheit, .
Sisson, Becky a nd Cynthia Fay Pullins , Mary Pulhns, Frances Goeglein, Scott , !
C'nllcrill, Delores Will , Helen flari&gt;ara and Ruth Ann Fry, Pulli ns , Phyl.lis Skinner, :1
Pc:ll'tlnw, Buena Grueser, Karen and Angie Sloan, Virginia Wears, Patty Ed· ; ,
fl eulah Utteri&gt;a ck, Freda Kathy Rice a ndShawn, Helen wards Traley , Mary Shaef· i
Licving, Lottie Leona rd , Blackston, Agnes Dixon, Lisa fer, Mr. and ·Mrs. Arlee Ab- J
boll, Le lia Bailey, Carl and ' \
Ethel Grueser , Belly Conkle, Pullins.
Kay I ,o~an , Dorothy Lemon ,
Sending gifts were David Mabel Moore, Jan E blin,
Beatr ice
Buc k, Loui se a nd Ann Mattox , Ruth ci1risty Evans, Sharon, Lisa
R~a r hs , Haze l Ball , Rita
Powers, Ash, Belly Ash, and , Lonnie Darst , Paula
Elllin, Dixie and Tracy , Helen Kelley, Lomse Slater , Hall, 1 Ruby F rick, Nancy . 1
Thelma- J e ffe rs, Ja c ki e ' Lenora, Dorothy and Wilmet· Morris, Ida Mae a nd April 1
ta Lei fheit, Agnes Weeks, Clark , Ki m · and Tanuny
Louise Radford, Nancy a nd Eblin . 1

A layette shower honoring dt!&lt;:oraled in pink and blue us·
Mrs. Dan (Cathy ! Riggs, ing a Wynkin, Blynki n and
Mrs. James (Darla) Thomas, Nud theme. Two of the gill
and ~- Cooney (Marla l tables featured la rge storks
Roush was held recently at and Qne table was det:oraled
the Middleport First Baptist with a teddy bear .. The
Church.
refreslunent table carried out
The shower was given by the Wynkin, Blynkin a nd Nud
Mrs. Adell , White, Mrs. theme with a sail boat and ac·
Dreama Hudson, Mrs. Pam . cessuries. A Holly Hobbie and
Crow, BJ.!d Mrs. Ma rgaret slruller cake was served with
· Barr.
punch, cuffee, nuts a nd baby
· One of the honorees, Mrs. and bootie m ints.
Rigga was unable to attend
Games were played with
the shower and later lllal prizes going to June Kloes,
evening gave birth to a sun , JoAnn Roush, Elects Souders
David Alan.
who won the door prize .
the church baseme nt" was
Others attendi ng were

Thank offering service held

,

'

M r. and Mrs. Paul Voss

•

Open ChUrchweddtn a
'

Mrs . Frankie Hunnel was
prog r a m
lea der . Fae h
member was given a paper
leaf replica on which they
wrote words of thanks. ·These
were excha nged and then
read before being attached to
H tree. The group sang
··count Your Blessings" a nd
the thank offerings were
presented, Mrs. Husted had
the closing pr~yer-.
Following a brief business
meeting refrestunents were
served to Mrs . Hunnel, Mrs.
Ourolhy Smith , J e nnie
Wa11h, Mrs Kay Loga n, Mrs .
Dorothy Wart h, Mrs. Agnes
Dixon, a nd Mrs. Kathy Corbill.

UN-DEE'S
CRAFT BOUTIQUE

janet Russell honored
by November shower
The Syracuse Firs! Church
of God honored J anel Lee
Neal Russell with a brida l
shower un Nuv. 14. Games
were played with prizes going
t o Ali ce Lew is , Lenor a
Jenkins and Hope Harper .
Le nora Jenkins also won the
door prize .
After the honored guest

.r

Meigs
Property
Transfers

I

1

Daniel B. Fleming, Jr .,
Beverly B. Fl emin g to
Colomet, Inc., 37.011 acres,
Leban·on.
Lo well Carper, dec . t o
Helen Carper , George Car·
per , Charles C. Ca rper, Cert.
of t ra ns., Bedford.
. .
Geor ge Ca r per , Lav m_1a_
Ca rper , Charles C. Carper
aka Charles N. Carper, Ida
Alice Carper to Helen Carper,
Parcels, Bedford.
Henry Leo J ohnson, June
Opa l J ohnson to Roger
Ada m s , Rig ht of wa y,
Rutland · Scipio.
Robert W. Lewis, Isabel C.
Lewis to Roger Adams,
Parcel, Leta rt .
Dwight W. Cor bin , Deloris
J . Corbin to Roger Keller,
Rosemary Keller, . Parcels,
Letart .
Maureen S. Witney to Nigel
R. Atkins, Parcels, Colum·
bia .
E dgar Roush, de c. to
Janice Grace Thompson,
Ca r olyn Roush Rummel ,
Constance Roush Matthews,
Cert. of trans., Sutton.
Carolyn Roush Rummel.
Richard G. Rummel, Janice
Gr ace Thompson, LoweD L.
Thompson, Constance Roush
Matthews, Jack L. Matthews
to Harry E. Wyatt, Nao'!)i
Wyatt, 40 acres, Sutton.
Go ble Ha ssel Justice;
Beatrice GaNell Justice to
Be atrice GaNell Justice,
Parcel!, Salem.
Cleo Smith, fonnerly Cleo
DeTray, Affidavit, Chester.
Alma Young to Melvin

..

items, st uffed

HYMN SING
A hyDUJ sing will be held at
the Nease Settlement Church
at I :30 p.m . Sunday with the
Gospeltones as featured
singers. The public is invited.

Mr s.
Ho bar t · Young
1Evelyn Fkk l spent the past
week here visiti ng with Miss
E lizabeth Fick.She was juin·
ed Wednesday evening by her
hl1Sband and the c'O uple
returned lu Sidney Sunday.
Thanksgiving guest.&gt;' ol Mr.
and Mrs. Karl Grnt!ser and

~uu I..c::~rry were Mr. ami Mrs.

Pal Quinn and Pa trick, Mt··
Connelsville ; Mrs. Ci ndy
H a ckw·urlh and P a ul
Hackwurth, Whitehall ; Steve
Stevens, Whitehall ; Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Grueser, Kim
and Tudd, Caldwell, Mrs.
Vena Whaley , Pomeroy, and
Debbie Reitmire and Belin·
da, Harttord , W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Evans
of Portland hosted a fami ly
dinner on Thanksgiving day .
Atte nd i n g were t he ir

FLOOR
CARE AT ITS BEST
, ,A .
\ .

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""~'"'

IIOGII

co. ''"''

ANO ...

Preserves

2- 11~-sgc

SPECIALS
:~:. . . . . ;.69¢

Jor

,...
~"·

~~~~
~;ciiff\.Y

U.S. GOV 'T GRADED CHOICE \ ~ -

Boneless Top
Round Roast

CI:OVER VALLEY

Grape Jelly

2-lb.&amp;gc
,.. .

.~

~~399
,- .

I

Ji~~~

AND SAVEl

((OiJjij~~/

..

Forever
Wrth a Portrait
from ·

The Photo Place
! Bob Hoe flich l
109 High St .

Pomeroy

.

,_.......__..

lb.

WHOLE U -17 LB. AVG . '

[b .

PRE-CUT STU.DS

lb.

SALE PRICE

HOl.LVFARMS . GRADEA(REGULAR ...LB . $1.09)

Fryer Thighs ... ........

as

sALE PRICE

HOI.l.Y FARMS . GRADE~ (REGUtAR ...LB. $1.09)

Cut Fryer Legs .... ....
Tf" Yf

sALE PRICE

Campbell s
-Tomato Soup

PF

lb.

lb. 63cc
55
60 C
lb.

lb .
lb .

gsc
.

Star-Kist Chunk
· Light Tuna

I
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:

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--_,.,It
_,"_rrana-•wa

llMlT ONI COU,ON PIR FMIIL V
naU-! IIC. I. liJI

70ci
51° 3 11~

lb.

sALE PRICE

UIIT 2 NCS. WITI CWGM AND $7.50 ADtiTIONll PUICHASE
(EICUDINC THIS ITEM)

I
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I

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SAVE

sac

$

I

. Cans

I

liMIT 2CUS WITM C&amp;UI'tN UD ~7-~ ADDITIONAl PURCHASE

I

llMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILy"

I
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6Y2 · 01,

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(E CLUIIIC T IS l EM)

12
DF

•

0

-

lb. $1°
68 C
87"
87 C
3

lb.

lb. ·

"'

' ...·t

lb.

......., . /

$

3·01.

Boxes

Rinso
Det ergent ... ..
KROGER

KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs ..

49·oz.

Box
. LIMIT ONE PLEASE
.

$

Hi NU 2%
Lowfat Milk . r~,-:.·r

Gal. Ploollc

59

0

Doz.

ROUND l OP

negona tmg.

.59

1

a figure less
offer if I think
team and it can

ASSORTED VEGETABLES ••••.•. 3 c3a0Js 'U
6112 Dl 2 4
PillA CRUST MIX .. .... .. .......... ~ I
Jumbo roll
4
HI-DRI TOWELS.. .... ..... ......... ..... .. .
5 oz. 3/'1
POTTED MEAT...... .. .............
.. ·
KLEENEX TISSUE........ ......... - -~~••5
FABRIC SOFTENER ......... .. ... ..~~ 1•1 ?~. 5

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread..

ONLY·

Fruit
Cocktail ........... .

EACH

LIMIT 3 CANS !'lEASE

~~
''fF
U.S. NO I WISCONSIN

PARTICAL

Russet
Baki.
t
· Potatoes·

BOARD
.4'x8' SHEETS

49

.99

·Diet Rite
orR •• Cola

.I

•

..

.4r::S=&gt;\..

,Spetlob

........ .., llltwft Willlhli ........
hlfiHII•aW!tiiAMTi7PI

' $ 09

leMietl SHctd
S•ll.fllkl

H••

8

Family Pale

Fried Chicken

9
Ill.

20FOR $1.00

Fresh
Tangerines
......
.
Salad
Tomatoes

EACH

9
lb. $1
~~

PINT RETURNABLE
DAD'S lOOT BEER OR

KROGER

.lb.••

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On 2 Ce~n s

$

Catsup

•

HOLLY FARMS . GRADE A (REGULAR ... LB . 75' )

Jell'o·
uelatin

\ .

r:J7C

sALE PRICE

Leg Quarte,rs ..- ... .....

U.S, GOV'T GRADED CHOIC: E•

. .OG,ER

No. 1

M1xed Fryer Parts .
.Cut-Up Fryers ..... .. .

HOll.Y FARMS . GRADE A (REGU LAR .. .LB . 8.5' )

Boneless Top
Round Steak .... ..
Semi-Boneless· $
Smoked Hams .... .

5223

HO~ Y FA. RMS . U.S.D.A . INSPECTED (REGULAR .•.LB. 69')

Pick 0' Chix ..... ....

\

SHEET

SALE PRICE

sALE PRICE

Con

•

"RoasterS ... ..... ...... ..

Fryer Breasts ... ..... .

··Ol-l6c
(

sALE PRICE

HOLLY FARMS . GRADE A (REGULAR . .. LB. $1.29)

Tomato Sauce

\

HOLLy FARMS , GRADE
A (REGULAR ••• LB • $2 . 79)
.

Pkg.

I

lb.

HOLt Y FARMS . GRADE A (REGULAR ...LB . $1.19)
1
SALE PRICE

KIIOCER

I'

' SA ~E PRICE

HOLLY FARMS , GRADE A (R£GULAR .•• LB . 79')

.

Vegeta61e Oil

BUY NOW

•

Fryer Drumsticks ..

. KROGiR

,.

••

HOLLY FARMS, GRADE A (REGULAR . •• LB . $1 .29)

~c~
I

•

Breast Quarters ....

I

;...t

•

HOLLY FARMS . GRADE A (REGULAR .. . LB . 89')

$

Jor

\

0

sALE PRICE

('

OPEN DAI LY l Oto S
FRl . &amp;SAT 10to6

••

sALE PRICE

Each ol thue advlrtiNd items ia
rM~u ...d to bll rMdily l vl illblt !Of N it
in .. en KrOQer S tore, I KCitPI u
~P«ifically- notfMi m this·ed . ll we do
run out ol en edvertittd item, we will
oHel' you .,-our c hOtce of a C:GmPiflbll
itein, 11\oflen 1 111iltblo. rtflecting tMt
ume llvingt or a flincheek wl'lii:h will
entitle. vou to putchiM the ac:tvertiMd
item .t lM advtrtiMd price w ithin 30

STR.t.WIERRV .

ONLY

Keep Smiling.

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HOLLY FARMS, GRADE A (REGU"LAR •.• LB. 69' )

Boneless Breast .. .

ADVERTI SED IT EM

$

and Mrs. Be11 Grimm, Letart
Falls were Mr. a nd Mrs.
Robert Grinun, Colwnbus,
their daughter , Am y, Buwl·
ing Green Stale University;
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Grimm ,
son , Michael, Cambridge;
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Grimm,
St. Cla irsvi ll e ; David
Grimm, St. Clairsville; and
Mr . and Mrs . Ma llhew Nor·
man, Bridgeport .

FRYE
SALE
sse
Whole Fryers
'

'TODIALIIS
" HSIIVI ' " ' Ol&lt;.HI 10 ""'' QUANTITIII. NONE SOlO

,..._

MAGIC e1~iri~

~

""oo•u•o.v
"'""'w'""i
Dic.•. "'""
su
JEI . .IDGf &amp;•·o·
P'OMIIO
Y IUIOGUS

.

MUSHROOM
OR
TAN BARK

Warner , Edna
Wilson,
Pauline Hoffman ; Mary
Brewer, Kathryn Metzger ,
Freda Houd, Mary.beth
Brewer, Lynn Kloes, and Cin dy Parker.
Sending gifts were Dorothy
Anthony, Nadine Barlun,
Beulah While, Ouida Chase,
Clara Mae Darst, Helen
Budimer, Gwinnie White, Sue
Metzger . and r AJUise Thumpson.
LAWRENCE BOYD
f.awrence Boyd uf Mid·
dleport is confined to the
H ulzer Medical Center. Cards
mav be sent to him there .

Janice Gibbs, Kim Smilfi,
Isabel Winebrenner, Dorothy
Neulzling , Dianna H.lllley,l.u
Ann Ruush. Connie Waner

F ESH

'

This Week's
Dairy Valley

HICKORY

drildrcn, Alida, Cindy, Ryan
ami Matthew, ami MO ami
Mrs . J ohn Cunningham .
J ohn , Jim and Mark,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs . Phil
Ohli nger , Phil and l.aura,
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Sisson, Mr.
a nd Mrs . Don Hunnel and Ar·
tic, Mrs. Berniee Evans, Mr .
ahd Mrs . Charles Warth ,
David , Da rrin a nd Amy, Mr .
and Mr.s. Terry Evans and
Megan. Dorothy a nd .Parra
f .ynn Warth .
• Thanksgiving guests ol Mr .

HOOVER .\

woo d plaques and shelves,
man y more lovely qltts and
Chr istmas decorations.

WILDWOOD GARDE N
CLUB, 7:30 Wednesday night
a l the MOrning Star Church.
Members to take sumelhing
for refreslunents.
LONG BOTTOM Com·
munity Association Wed·
nesday 7:30 p.m. at com·
·munity building.

FRIDAY
Meigs County Humane
Society annual Christmas
bazaa r Friday and Saturday
at new location of Thrift
Shoppe, at comer of Second
and Walnut Sts., Middleport.
ME IGS COUNTY REAc:f
team meeting, 7:30 F riday at ·
Meigs Senior Citizens Center
In Pomeroy ; new members
being accepted and old
membenhlpe to be renewed.
Anyone 18 or older who Is a
c.b. radio operator Is eligible
·to join.

~~~=l

wards, I Jllian Dcmoskcy . llruny. Lilly Hubbard , f.eor·a
Corky Werry, K&lt;lthl ecn A
;," Sigman, F.liwbelh Slavin .

On All Varieties

to ys, ceram ics, decorated

be held at the fire station on
Dec. 24 at 2 p.m. for young·
sters age 12 and under.
Attending in addition to
those names were : Mary
Slater , Debbie Lyons, Enuna
Lyons, Kay Roberts, Gene 'mURSDAY
Lyons, Aretha Snider, Agnes
Boggess , Mae Cleland ,
TWIN-CITY SHRI NET·
Maxine Rose, Jean Johnson TES, 7:30 Thursday at the
and Chris Shane.
home of Mrs . Mary Stewart,
The birthday of Jean Chester Road .
J ohnson was observed, and
GALUA-MEIGS
Com·
the door prize was won by munity Action free clothing
Gene Lyons.
day Thursday from 9 a.m .
until noon, for low income
Smith , Olive Smith, I acre, families. Agency clothing
Salisbury.
bank located in old high
Melvin Smith, Olive Smith school buDding in Cheshire.
to Alma Yo11118, 3 acres,
•
Salisbury.
PARENTS WITHOUT
Kenneth C. Welsh, Aldena PARTNERS , 7:30 p.m.,
M. Welsh to Kenneth C. Community Mental Health
Welsh, Aldena M. Welsh, Center, election of officers.
Parcels, Scipio.
All area single parents in·
Wendel Frecker; Avice vited to attend.
Frecker to Don T. Beegle,
OHIO NURSES . Assn.,
Sue Ann Beegle, lots,
Southern Hills District 7:30
Pomeroy.
p.m. Thursday at geriatric
Webster Boggess Hodge, unit Athens Mental Health
dec. t&lt;rJo H. Caruzzi, Cert. of Center. Rosanne Skuly will
trans., Pomeroy.
speak on Gerontological
Phyllis E. Harris to Delton Nu~sing.
Fowler, Mary Ann Fowler,
EVANGELISTIC SER·
1.60 acres, Sutton.
VICES, 7 p.m. each evening
Mary Jane Herald to Frank
through Dec. 10 at Syracuse
Jr .,
Parcels ,
Her a ld ,
Church of the
with
Salis bury.
some of the
the Rev.
Ma ry Jane Herald to Frank
getting,
including
one
Her ald, Jr., Parcel, M~igs.
Frank - Monday from Ted Turner , the
Mary Jane Her ald to Frank
owner ol the Atlanta
Herald ,
Jr .,
Parc els,
Rutland
Rutland.
Mary Jane Herald to Frank Church,
Rev. Bill
Her ald, Jr., Parcel, Rutland.
Robin Hood
Mary J ane Herald to Frank
Hera ld,
Jr .,
P arcels,
Rutland .
Mary Jane Herald to Frank
Armo!Jr
Herald, Jr., Minerals, 26 .73
acres, Rutland .

,.

.,

Social

I Calendar

Racine. Fire Dept. ladies
auxiliary held meeting

The ladies auxiliary of the
Racine Fire Department met
recently in regular se.Sion
with the president opening
the meeting with flat salute
followe d by the Lord' s
Prayer.
The secretary's report was
given by Ruth Sha ne and the
treasurer's report by Beulah
.i • Autherson.
A Chr istmas part y at
Kinfolks was planned, and it
was decided that the com·
munity Christmas party will

,------,

ope n ed
he r
g ills ,
refreslunents were served lo
thuse na med and Lucille
Lewis, E thel Hossler , Norma
Wilson , Virginia Nease, Ethel ·
Unde r wou d , J oy Clark ,
Cherry Cadle, Mona Neal,
a nd Jan Jenkins.. Donna
Kuehler was una ble to attend WEDNESDAY
MIDDL E P O RT
but sent a gift.
LITE RARY CLUB , home of
Mrs. Dwight .)Va,llace with
Mrs . Emerson Jones to
revi ew "Fimd Payments."

crocheted

Fran Parker, Sand ~ SWisher.
Ju Ann Hayes, F reda Ed·

tOPYI1GHI

·planned Saturday
The upen church wedding
of Beverly Fa ulkner and Paul
Edwa rd Voss will be held at
2:30 p.m . Saturday at the
Syracuse Church uf Gud.
The bride-elect is the
da u ~hler uf Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Eskew, Pomeroy,

'••

DONATIONS ASKED
Mrs . Lorene . Sn yder ,
veterans affairs chainnan uf
the Eighth District , is ask'"g
all units to cooperate with
dunations and attendance al
the the birthday party to be
held O..c . 14 at the Chi llicnlhe
Veterans Hospital.

fiiiH IAKID

Pumpkin Pie ... .... .. ... .
$11
Gla1ed Donuts. ........ . Doz. • .a.
Cheese Balls ........ .. ... ~~3.19
LOIIAINI
Swiss Cheese .. .. ... ... .. lb~2.99
PIUH IAKID

9

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,.....____________________ ________ _
.....;..

•

'

By Alma Marshall
Just returned from !be Capitol City Art and daft Show
which was held in the Civic Center, Charleston, W. Va. It was
here !bat all craftsmen were invited to attend the 50th wedding
anniversary of Mr: and Mrs. Raymond Epler of South HiUs,
·Charleston. The happy event was held in the West Virginia
Room at the Civic Center. As many of you know Mr. Epler
specializes in handmade dulcimers and takes part in many,
many shows. Another craft person exhibiting besides the
Eplers and MarshaUs, was Mrs. Ruth Ryan of 934 Glen Way,
South Charleston.
Ruth, a well-known artist, came to Mason, W. Va. to take
pictures of the former Virgil A. Lewis home and from this
made reproductions which she sold at the craft show. I was
fortunate to purchase one matted and hand-painted in
watercohH"fer $6. Thepicturewith mat is 11 x 14. The artist has
gone to considerable expense reproducing this picture and
interested persons can obtain these at waft shows or by
writing. The cost is $1 per print (plain), $2.50 matted, and $6 in
color .

Mrs. Ryan began painting in 1952 and began her art study ·
at Morris Harvey College with Miss Luclna Keane. She studies
portraiture with Vella Zvarculis and watercelor with Arthur
Barbour and Henry Gasser. Her specialty Is pastel portraits
and portrait sketches in charcoal. She paints in watercolor,
acrylic and mixed media. Pen and ink reproductions, some
finished with watercolor, are a recent addition to her.displayed
work. She is p teacher of portraiture In her own studio and at
Garnet Career Center in Charleston.
Mrs. Ryan has won awards for her work In several events
including the American Awdllary of University Women Show,
The Ulllpia Art Exhibit, and the Putnam County Art Exhibit.
She is a member of Allied Artists of West Virginia, the West
Virginia arts and craft guild, The Baltimore Watercolor
Society, and the Beckley Art Group. Her paintings are In
private cOllections in this country, in London, England,
' ' Capetown, S. Africa, Rio .De Janeiro, Brazil, and Berlin,
Gennany.

By SANDRA L. LA'IThfER

United Prftos Internatloaal
As you prepare fer Christmas, you may wonder about
how
your
ancestors
celelrated the holiday, or
·how residents of other
countries do it now,
Celebrations across the
state this weekend, some of
them continuing through the
holiday season, can show you.
Lighted Christmas trees at
the Center of Science and
Industry in downtown
Columbus symbolize the
"Light of Peace throughout
the
World ."
Nations
represented by the decorated
trees include Switzerland,
Sweden, Gennany, Poland,
Old Russia , Italy, Lithuania,
Denmark, Japan, Victorian
England, and China besides
American Contemporary.
Most of the trees are
decorated through the
country's consulates, but the
German · tree was sent
directly from that country.
The lighted trees are on
display through the firm week

of January .
In addition, COS! also has
an Ohio tree, a· metal tree, a ·
calico tree, children of the
world tree decorated with
dolls and an electronic tree
with, sights and sounds.
COS! is open Monday
through Satwday 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. and Sunt1Jlys from 1 Ill
5:30 p.m. Admission is
charged .
Decorated trees and
wreatbs are on display at the
Christmas Tree Festival at
the Allen County Museum In
Lima through Sunday. The
Children's Talking Tree is a
special Saturday feature.
Mere lhan 50 Christmas
trees decorated In traditional
Old English, Welsh and
German style are on display
through Sunday at the
Christmas Tree Celebration
at the DoUghtery House in
Kenton.
An animated Christmas
fant~y'display of more than
2,000 mobile figures unfolds
in Children's Wonderland at
the Lucas County Recreation

Center in Maumee through
Jan. 1. Admission is charged .
Ohio ViUage in Columbus, a
replica of a 19th century Obio
c ommunity, · celebrat es
Christmas from Wednesday
through Dec. 23.
Experience
an
old·
fashioned Christmas with
strolling carolers, candlelight
dinners and shopping for
handcrafted g if t s
Wednesdays
t hr ough
Sundays from 12:30 to 9 p.m.
Admission is charged.
Kingwood' Center at Mansfield has Christmas Open
. House Saturday and Sunday .
Decor ated lllpiary trees and
poinsettias bedeck the
mansion , which is open 8 a.m.
Ill 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 .
a.m. Ill 6 p.m . Sunday.
ln addition, floral arrangemenu. on the theme "A
Child's Christmas" will he on
display Saturday from 2 to 6
p.m. and Sunday from 10 am:
to 6 p.m.
Throughout the holiday
season, Kingwood will he
open 8 a.m. IllS p.m. Tuesday

through Saturday.
The spirit of Christmas and
the joy of its celebration liven
up the restored canal
community of Roscoe Village
in Coshocton.
A candlelighting ceremony
kicks off the holiday
celebration Saturday at 7:30
p.m. with an open house .
There will be Christmas
carolers and bobsled rides on
weekends through
Christmas, the shops and
exhibitll are open daily until
Christmas and greeting .ea•d
decorations are on display
throughout the month.
A Christmas Open House is
planned Si!turday at the
historic Spring Hill mansion
in Massilloo from 1 to 4 p.m.
This home ·Was built by a
Quaker family froll\ New
England in 1821 and has 11
rooms of furnishings from the
original owners and the
second owners whose family
and descendants occupied the
house until 1973.
Professional craftspersons
demonstrate
and sell

Slick coatings hit highways

occupants walked out of the
United Press lnternallooal
Gale-force winds and slick wreckage, but another truck
coating of ice covered . then slid into the wreckage,
MASON - Mrs. Claudia (Roush) Kirton, Mason, highways In the Sierras and sweeping the two to their
entertained with Open House 00 Thanksgiving, when many of Rockies into death traps and "aeaths in the'r~ver 70 feet
\.
her relatives and friends came to view her home and joil) the deep freeze settled over the below.
Eight trucks and at !eat two
happy festive occasion. Mrs. Kirtoo and son, John, formerly of Northern Plaines.
Boynton Beach, Florida, recenUy purchased the former Gold
A phenomenon described cars were involved · in the
"black ice" by the wrecks that forced closure of
as
property on Second St.
, .
Those registering were Mr. and Mrs. Raymon!l Fischer, California Highway Patrol all lanes of the trans.Sierra
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nease, Chester, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Dick . caused numerous accidents route at one point.
"This freezing rain was
Nease, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thomas and children, inthemountainsandresulted
just
like glass," said a
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. William Zirkle, Mrs. Virginia in at least four deaths.
Caolifornia
Highway Patrol
Noble, Miss Christine Fruth, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
The National Weather
11
spokesman
said.
1t's a
Grinstead, Mrs. Lucille Schwarz, Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mr , and Service clocked winds of 45
condition
that
happens
ocMrs. Carl Schwarz, Mrs. Jane Morris.
mph in the Eastern Rockies.
cassionally
,
called
black
ice.
The home was beautifully decorated for the Christmas Gusts to 77 mph were
season.
recorded near Cody, Wyo., You can't even stand up on it,
· and 70 mph near Cheyenne. let alone drive in it. Putting
MASON -Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Hart, Wheeling, W. Va. Property damage was sand on it has no effect. It
are announfing the birth of a daughter, Allison Marie, on reported throughout the was sanded all night, but the
ice forms and covers the
November 14 at the Ohio Valley General Hospital in Wheeling. region.
On ice-glazed Interstate 80 sand." Near Riverton in
The mother is the former Jennifer Zerltle of Mason. The infant
In the Sierras near Truckee, wesHentral Wyoming, the
weighed 8 pounds 4 ounces.
Calif.,
Tuesday a .chain- high winds blew away an
.Mr. and Mrs. Hart are tbe parentll of another daughter,
reaction
accident on a 70..foot- addition to a trailer. home.
.Regina Lee, age 7.
high
bridge
killed four per- Christmas gifts were strewn
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. WWiam Zerkle,
over 80 acres of land, said
sons.
Mason; paternal grandparentll are Mr. and Mrs. James Hart,
Karen Blair.
The
highway
patrol
said
a
Letart,great.grandmotber, Mrs. Freda Hart, New Haven, and
11
1 saved some oil pain·
on
tanker-truck
overturned
great-grandfather is Emory Hart, Letart, W. Va.
the bridge; forcing a car over tlngs, my husband's guitar
·Mason and Area Penooals
the railing and killing the t:vo , and a bicycle," Mrs. Blair
Thanksgiving dinner guests of the .Vernon Roushes were occupants of the car. Another said. "Outside of that, it's
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Riley, Sr., Middleport, Ohio; Miss Lucy car slid into the truck and its wiped out. And my husband's
Bulmer, Hartford, W. Va. Miss Guyla Roush prepared the
meal fer her parents and guests.
Guyla Roush , who has been a patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital where she underwent surgery, Is recuperating at her
·
home in Mason. ·
Visiting the Vernon Roush family over the holidays were
their son and daughter-in.Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush,
Jr. , of Vienna, W. Va.
·
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mrs. Clara Williams
included Mrs. Sarah WiUis, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Gilkey and Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake and daughters.
An early Thanksgiving dinner was held recenUy at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James Preston at Clifton, W. Va.
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gibbs and two sons of
By Bob Hoeflich
Decatur, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibbs, Carol, Pina,
Robbie, Heather and Joey of Syracuse, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Gibbs, Middleport, Ohio; Mrs. Doris Carde~, Debbie and
There are 25 Meigs COuntlans confined to the Athens
Jack, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wilson, Circleville, Mental Health Center who will need to be remembered ·at
Ohio.
Christmas· time.
Mr. and Mrs. James Preston spent Thanksgiving with his
Of the total, 16 are men and nine are women. Residentll of
sister, Mrs. John Cannaday, at Charleston, W. Va.
the county are being asked Ill donate gifts which may be left at
Mrs. Maxine Beasley of ·Sciotoville, Ohio spent the the Davis Insurance Co. at~ corner of West Second St., and
weekend visiting Mrs. Helen Stewart and attended the Neal- Court St. in P001eroy.
Russell wedding on Saturday evening. Mrs. Helen Stewart and
Gifts are to .be left unwrapped, but you can leave paper for
Mrs. Frances Stewart also attended the wedding at the First them. This is so that gifts can be selected for a particular
patient before they are wrapped.
'Church of God, Syracuse, 0.
Gifts satisfactory fer w001en include hose, cologne, biDMr. and Mrs. Dale Rollins and children of Chesapeake,
Ohio entertained with a Thanksgiving dinner and their guests foldS, scarves, jewelry, candy, gum, combs and other similar
included Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rollins, Jt. and children of items. Those for men are socks, shaving supplies, combs, nail
Muncie, Indiana; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rollins, Sr. and clippers, stationery and so on.
children of Letart, W.Va.; Mrs. AI Coats, Pl . Pleasant; Mrs.
Mary Martin is again heading the program Ill see that the
Marge Miller and children, Long Bottom, 0 .; Mrs. Joan King 25 residents are remembered and that the gifts get to the
and Mike of New Haven; Mrs. Betty Call, Mr. and Mrs. Lester location.
Johnson, all of Clifton.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cartwright at their home
The Ohio Power Compsny's quarters on Mulberry Ave.,
in Clifton on Thanksgiving included Mrs. Donald Smith and damaged last winter by fire, are really sharp since undergoing
Teresa, Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Elaine Grogan and Chris, repair and remodeling. The Ohio Power building was the first
Greg Lewis and Chliriie Rickard.
construction project undertaken by the late Henry Ewing and
Holiday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart his wife, Beulah, a number of years ago. After that, there were
and Mr. Christy Bletner were Mr . and Mrs. Jack Troy and numerous new structures and renovations.
sons, Chris, Johnny and Tinuny of Lexington, Ky.; Mr. and ·
Mrs. Harold Fry, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson,
The new face with the pleasant personality that you wiil be
Melanie, Miriam, Marsha and Mary Alice, Mason.
seeing oo a part.time basis In the Pomeroy National Bank is
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Pierce, daughter and son o( that of Maureen Hennessy who Is winding up her studies at
Baltimore, Md. visited recenUy with Mrs. Lee Richardson in; Ohio University at the same time.
Mason. From Mason, Mrs. Richardson and guests went to
Cincinnati, Ill visit Mrs. Richardson's daughter and son-in-Jaw,
A great addition to the Junior Miss pageant in the Meigs
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Metcalf and two sons.
Junior High School auditorium recently was the jazz band
Mrs. George Carson, Mason , Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gregory, directed by Alan and Randy Hunt. The band was extremely
Leigha and John, Mrs. Edna Roush, New Haven, spent popular with tile crowd on hand - and smaU wonder. A
Thanksgiylng as dinne~ guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ehers- number of the young people wore the wide lrinuned felt hats
bach, David and Chris, Syracuse, 0.
which are enjoying popularity now as they presented a good
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alburtice Young musical program.
were Trooper and Mrs. G. R. Young and family, Grandview
Heights; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Young,Clifton.
Lin-Dee's Craft Boutique which recently opened in
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Sr ., spent Thanksgiving Syracuse had over 100 persons attending its open house.
Day with their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Randy VanMeter, Winner of the door prize was Mrs. Delores Cleland.
Matt and Josh at Clifton, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Jr. and children, Tinuny,
Where does lhe time go? ,
.
:
Misty and Erik of Lesage, W. Va. spent Thanksgiving evening
Jermy Chapman was married in a beautiful wedding
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Sr.
Saturday night at Grace Episcopal Church In Pomeroy. It
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver, seems like only yesterday that Jenny, our neighbor for a
Clifton, were Mrs. Joann Bennett, Gail and Christi of Minerva, number of years, was swinl!ing up High St. with her pony tail
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Terry Tucker, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. switching in time with her step to take a plano lesson from
Mrs. Clara Lochary. Then, there were 4-H projects. One time,
Luther Tucker, Tim, Todd and Troy of Mason,
Mark Hatcher, stationed in the Army In Hawaii, visited we alanned the neighborhood when Jenny was working on an
over the weekend with his parents, Reverend and Mrs. 0. B. outdopr cooking project and we thought she h~, set . the
Chapman home on fire . Jenny was also a "batoner. Anxtous
Hatcher.
Ill be a majorette she pr11cticed for hours to perfect the twirling
art . Another time, she and her lrother, Mitchell, were in a
hassle and 1 felt "obllgated" to intercede. I did and I thought
they were going to throttle me. They felt it only natural for a
t 'u1Uctuy. The Icqlur car hHU
HURT IN WRECK
struck a utility pole and brother and sister Ill have a misunderstanding so there I was,
The Pomeroy emergency Taylor received lacerations wrong again .
But these things are far in the past - although they seem
squad was.called to Mulberry about the head, He was taken
so
very
recent, and Jenny has finished her education at
Ave ., at 11 :' 1.5 p.m. Tuesday to Veterans Memorial
Marietta
College. Good luck, Jermy Chapman.
for
Michael ' Taylor, Hospital by the squad.

truck - it's all torn to
pieces."
Winds blew .vehicles off
roads early Tuesday, but
most had been towed out by
later In the day, said Gary
Sawyer, a Wyoming Highway
Patrol
spokesman. "One
patrolman was saying the
safest speed on these interstates was between 30 and
35 mph, "Sawyer said.
In the Northern Plains and
upper Midwest, bitter cold
temperatures hardened the
snow covering to a thick

crust. The temperature
dropped to 29 below z•ro at

~

Roseau, Minn ., and 13 below
at Devil's Lake, NO.
Lolo Pass in Idaho reported
9 inches of snow and Coeur
D' Alene, Idaho, 8 inches.
A storm that dusted portions of New England with
light snow and glazed roads
across the Northeast blew
into the Atlantic, but the NWS
said some snow squalls could
dump more snow near Lake
Erie and Ontario today.
Heavy rains doused some
portions of the Pacific Northwest with more thim half an
inch Tuesday.

contemporary crafts at the
Winterfair at the Lausche
Building on the Ohio State
Fairgrounds Thursday
thro.ugh Sunday. Hours are 11
a.m. to 9p.m. and 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. Sunday.
A Winter Wonderland of
sightll and sounds for the
holiday season are part of the
Dayton Holiday' Festival
which runs through Dec . 17.
A Centrum Fantasia is set
for Friday; a Holiday Bazaar
Sec. 4-8 and 11-15; Courthouse
Plaza Trio Around the World

""'

Dec 11-23 and 25-29; Sports
NJgbt Dec. 13 and Children's
Celelration Dec. 16-17.
· A Vic.torian Chrtstmas
Showing is the feat~e at the
Gay 90s Manston m
Barnesville .
Tours of the Gay 90s
Mansion, displaying
Victorian
Chnstmas
decorations typical of the
1880s will be available Friday
and Saturday from 11 a .m. to
9 p.m . and Sunday from 11
a .m. to 6 p.m.

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MEIGS TIRE

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CENTER, INC.

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... That \ what\ waiting for you downtown! We've s hopped high and
low to hring ~ou the best selection of Christmas gifts and the best
'a luc &gt;' ncr. You 'II find all of the popular gifts of the season , and many
Oil e-o f-a-k i rul i tern,; too! This Christmas, do all your shopping downtown!
A PUBLIC SERVICE Of

THE DAILY SENTINEL
.

111 COURT STREET

POMEROY, 0.
PHONE 992·2156

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WHOLE FRYERS•••••• ~s~..

Chicken Breasts~. 8

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FRENCH CITY.

.

WIENERS........ .!~r:79

~

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

You function best when left to
yo ur own devices today . Get
away from outside .Qist ra ctions
and do what needs robe done.

CABBAGE.......... ~,.}

Wherever you go today you 'll
' generate a stir of activity . Your
zes t for !ife stimulates those
who are complacent, and gets
every one moving .
PISCES. (Feb. 20-March 20) II
would b'e ql!ile easy for you to

County

case

Probate

Mannino C . Webster
Probate JudgeClerk ·
'
;1 11 1 22 , 29 (121 6, JIC

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) PROBATE COURT OF
&gt; MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
' ESTATE OF EVERETT
::;o. sBURY TURNER ,
OECEASED
~ ... No. 22537
. ·'
NOTICE OF

' '
APPOINTME...,T
,... i
OF FIDUCIARY
I!" LOn November 10, 1978, in
~ the Meltl County Probate'

;;.."tourl, Case No. 22537. R: •
..Mtrle Turner, 29645 Briar
Ridge Rold, Langsville, Ohio
w~s appointed Executrix of
5!!1! Estate of Everett Asbury
,. Ty·rner, dtcelsed, late of
-. 29645 lrlar Ridge Road ,
·:..-Ltngsvllle, Ohio.

·- ·,
.....,

e11 posed

to

·

sian on you and you retai n
facts quite easily. What you
learn will be put to practical

·SHEDDS SPREAD.

~

Menning 0 . Webs ter

"

Probate Judge.

~·

Clerk ·

111) 1'5, 22 , 29 , 3tc

'

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Change is in lhe oiling today,
but the re is no need to be

DUNCAN HINES

fearful. The odds against any·
thing going awry are minima l.

BROWNIE MIX ..... !!2~.9

GEMINI(Mey 21-June 20) FleKi-

NOTICE 01"
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

.

n... .•

are

. today makes a deep impres·

.,. '

•

POTATOES ...... ~~~B~ 79

lolly goa l.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) That
wh ich you

¢

U. S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE

stand in the winner's cir cle
today . All you need do is set ,
your sights on a singul ar and •

use.

Meigs

HAMS..................'!..l

lo Aslro-Graph . P.O. Bo' 469 .

Execut or of ~he
·estate of Mary s . Roush,
·deceased, tete of R . D . 2,
""Riclne , Ohio .

••
••

••

49¢

·

39

Radio City Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth sign .

' PROBATE COURT OF'
'MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF MARY S.
R\)USH , DECEASED

•

•
•
••
••
•
•

GRADE A

$

th jngs that are personally
important. Initiative should pro·
duce the most desirab le re·
suits for you today . Find out
where your talents l ie by sen"11·
ing for 1979 copy of AstraGraph Letter. Ma il 50 cents for
each and a long, se lf addressed, stamped envelope

~pOinted

Cit"'

BUTCHER BOY SEMI BONELESS

(Nov. 23-Dec.
21) There is nothing wrong with
being assertive and going after

,Rllclne, Ohio -4577\ was ap -

w

SLAB .BACON....~~79c

motion .

No . 22542,
--Marsha ll R . ROUSh, R .. 0 . 2,

g

Rib Pork Ch ops;~-

SAGITIARIUS

·,

:c Ourt,

$}39

!

you pre,iously jusl lhoughl

On November 17, 1978, In

z-

CENTER

about doing Will now be put into

'

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tht~

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----··

November 30, 1978
You ' ll beco me more actil1e this
coming year in making major
changes in your lile . Th1ngs

·CONDUCT SERVICES
Racine Chapter 134, Order
of ·Eastern Star, will conduct
services for Mrs. . Mayme
Hartenbacti at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Rawlings-Coats
F1111eral Home in Middleport.

c

-.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD THROUGH DECEMBER 1, 1978

30

~\J~(!)lJ

c•se No. 22542

"'D
0

Sunday 10 A.M. - 10· P.M

Bernice Bede Osol

'

litO

Nov .

Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M.-10 P.M.

ASTRO·GRAPH

Steven Lewis Story,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
NeJson, Union Ave., and the
late Robert Story , bas
completed graduation
requirements for the juris
doctor degree at Ohio Northern University in Ada.
Whit" attending Ohio
NOrthern, Steven was active
in Phi Alpha Qelta, American
Bar
Assn.
and
th e
American Trial Lawyers
Assn .
·
Steven is married to the
former Karen Haggy of
Steubenville and the couple is
cu:rrently living in Middleport.
. Mrs . Story is also a
grjldujlte of the university.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Story will
ta(te their bar examinations
to . become attorneys in
February.

o ~~

&lt;en
"'.a

Thursday,

Store Hours:

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) .

-,. ...

cnoo

:100

should promote themselves
rather than depend on
government handouts.
Swank said consumer
politics and agricultural
economics don't mix well but
urged Jarmers to keep after
Congress and the President.
Congress, he said, has
shown reluctance to do more
for agriculture, and Carter
has reneged on campaign
promises.
He reminded them their
farm bureau represents 3
miUion famillies nationa!J.y
and 73,000 in Ohio. He said
county or local farm bureaus
are often the strongest locally
in terms of real clout to get
"good things done and bad
things stopped."
Swank said farmers should
support creation of a new set
of corporation laws designed
. for agriculture and amend
unemployment- compensation, wor)&lt;men's
compensation, social .
security and other laws that
have excluded them from
benefits.
He said farmers need to
strengthen their cooperatives
so they can better serve the
farm and off-farm business
ventures.
Ohio State University
President Harold Enarson
· also addressed the meeting
and said !hat research budget
cuts represent a threat to·the
continuing agricultural
revolution.
Enarson emphasized the
importance of research in a
farmer's daily chores.
"There's not a thing you
grow, not a tool you use, not
an animal you raise that has
not been dramatically affected by science, technology
and research," he said.
"in our feverish desire to
cut budgets, we risk slowing
· the rate of progress in
American agriculture. Cuts
in agricultural research are a
had bargain."

Story graduates

.

.

A~D

COLUMBVS . ( UPI) America should provide
Third World nations with hils
surplus grain to relieve the
s~ctre of hunger that hangs
over poor countries, an Ohio
faim leader said Tuesday.
C.
William
Swank,
executive vice pre5ident of
the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation, said it would also
provide an incentive for
foreign farmers lo raise their
own grain and boost their
undeveloped economies. .
Swank discussed his
proj,osal Tuesday with farmets and their families attending the federation's 60th
aruiual meeting.
He said -by giving grain to
foreign farms groups; rather
than to foreign govel'Jl!llents
would
eliminate
the
possibilities of foreign
politicians taking the grain
for-their own profit.
Swanksaidhehopestowin
President Jinuny Carter's
SUJlPOrt and will take his
proposal to Carter personally
after returning from a visit
next week with farm groups
in India , Indonesia , and
Thailand.
He estimated it owuld cost
the U. S. some $1.5 billion to
$3 billion to buy the grain and
ship to poor nations where
farmers raise only enough to
support their own families.
"If they can be shown that
by raising more grain than
th~y can use and se!J.ing their
surplus, it would be a great
boon to the poorer nations,"
Swank said.
He said Congress has not
spent $1.5 billion it appropriated this year for
foreign aid which could be
usect to purchase the grain.
9e said Ohio farmers
support the proposal which
would pump money into the
Anlerican farm community
which Is just beginning to
recognize that agriculture is
no( just the art of science of
grQwing crops.
It waspartofhistheme, the
"business of agriculture," he
detailed as one of Tuesday's
featured speakers. He
reminded farmers they

bility is your second name .
Today, that is just what is
needed in your .relati onships

with olhers. Be ready lo offer
your full cooperation.

CANCER (June 21·July 22)
Take pride In all you do today
and you should find il to be .a
day . Don't be
surPrised if you have many
others copy ing your style .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) EKplore
further a venture yOu are con·

LIQUID DETERGE"T........

lemplallng. You're on lhe righl
track and, with a little more
thoug ht , you coul d remove all

of lhe risks.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S•pt. 22) Your
mind and

energ ies will

be

WELCH'S

those you love today . Your
u.nselfjshness is admirable and

opprecialed .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Get on ·
mailers foday lhal you need to ,
discuss with othe rs. You con- •
ti nUe to be able to kindle '
enthusiasm for your ideas .

loday. Personal
gain possess
Is more
.blnallon
which you
than likely .
[NEWSPAPER ENTERP~ISE A.S'- ..

j

;'

GRAPE JEUY OR JAM
480Z.

'IIIII~

99¢

.'

!'.~'~ .99 CHICKEN ........!~2~...

Lim1·t 1 p er c us t omer
Good Only at Powell's
OHer Expires Dec. 1, 1978

JIFFY

DOG FOOD

CAKE MIXES

.

$2 9~

COUPON

COUPON

HIGHLAND CHUNK ,

25 LB.

W!C

$}Sg

BA·NQUET FRIED

COUPON

COUPON

de,oted 10 doing lhings for

You'l l gel lhe appro,al you
need .
SCORPIO(bct.
23 .Nov.22) Amblflon and lmaglnallon properly
chaneled form a dynamic com-

¢

JOY

rewa rding

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
·
• 1978

9 OZ.

6/$1

.·
j

CRISCO
Wrl

Limit 1 Per tc~stomer
p
,
Good 0 n 1Y a owe 11 s
OHer Expires Dec. 1. 1978

3 LB.
CAN

$}69
!i!C

Limit 1 Per Custome1
Good Only at Powell's
res Dec . 1,1978

~;;: =~.-g~~e;~~~~~~~~.l~~~~s~~;$~~~~~~~~~~~liii:JSIIII~I.~:~==2~;;a~:.:e~~l
~ _.,;..-.
_;:.;,;.,;, • .-,;, ;;;;:
~~~~-~~~~~~M~~~~6y_
fJ',..,.
,
r

�·-

'
12 _ The Daily Sent~l. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov . 29,F1978

WANT AD
CHARGES

.

I:. " ·•I'll.'- " ' l 'll•h·t·
1·a .~ l l

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i

l ol,l,l
~· '1.1,1 '

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i till

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J·:,wt• ••••rd ,,, ,.,. til&lt;'

Notices

AI HNIION DHH HUNIH~ ~ Hov(·
yPIII li Ophtf'~ l!l0U!lll'd (Clll
I po 1 y 1!1 own 'JH~ ~i!l:l:l

~· ~)

l 7:i

111111111111111 \ ."1

HA V I
YO UR · d("l''
t. .-,phji
lllClUtl lf'd Hlt ch/Jf'lcl l nKtrlf'r &lt;J ly
Wutl(l ll d
O h tu
Ph o n l"'
td.S IJ'I./' IlH
JOHN
tlw

tloutP D11 ve J l m
rn the&gt; Che&gt;.IP&lt;
L ~''' C! Bollcun
1-'n&lt; tlnnrl CliPCl
Wl~~lf'' oil h1'- f ii ~ IOm('l!o 10
lo.nuw !hot rt hn" hN•n a l£ml
pl l"'O~ IIl f' 10 ~{'IV(' 1hi"'m but thQt
lw wo ll h £&gt; ll"'Ov ong thP rau l(' and
tQkrng onothc1 .[Ob ot thi"' rnci 0 !
N ClVI';11hl~l rh("' llPW LJnvf'r Ia•
that cu ce will bf' ~ o n ond An11
M0 1 r"
one! thl'y will 'o lOI I
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a n · :u·,·t•ptt•d 0111\) 10'1!h o ·&lt;~l&lt;&gt; li \1"1111
o•rdt•r :!;; l't'!ll dt: Lrgo· ft'l ;ub t 'OIIT~ ­
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-GOLLJ colot('rl

Lost and Found

1t"1 "1 1 1 L' t 'l"~l l 'l1

--~--

l O~r

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mttr'Lti:J\
N ol\1111'11 S&lt;tiUL "Lht)

LO~ r

young l emolc lri ~h ~ette1
Tup p er~
Plains
a r ea
b iJ ·bb7 ·b41'1 . Heward .

--

P.M .

tlw da.\ bt•f .,.-,. pulihoa \1011
.Surtd.o ••
~ P .:\(
F m!:t ~ ailt•nn~•n

In Memory
IN LOV ING memory of George
Nesselroade Sr . . who pa~ se d
away ni ne year s ag o
Nine year s ha ve passed si nce that
sad dav
'
The one we loved wa s called
away
God took hirne. hom e. it wa s Hi s
wi ll
l:lut in our hear ts he li ve th st ill
Sadly missed by wile chi ldren
' and grand children .
.
- . - - - .

Notices
NO HUNTING or liespa5sing on
my proper ty wi l hm·l permi s·
sian. Judy McGraw .
GUN SHO"OT. Hacine Gun Club
~very Sundoy l pm . Fa ctory
_ch?k_e ~ u!' s_ o':l l ~. __ _
GUN SHOOT. Raci ne Vo lunl eer
~i r e pep! . !:very Saturda y b:3(l
pm at their bu ildi ng in Ba shan .
~ oc t~r~ cho_ke_ g~ns '?n~y .
NO HUNTING or tr espa ssing -day
or night on the Charl es Yos t
an d the Ivan Well ~arm ...
PHYLliS YOU NG wi l l be work ing
l ull tim e now lhru th e Holidays
at Kay 's Beout ySal on . Col i
qr.:n .2725 lor on appointment

- -

CHRISTMA S BA lAAR , December
1. 2. Meigs County Humane
Society . across h om Dr . Conde
1n Middleport . Hand -mod e
it ems . house pl ant!., hand
pe1nted lomps . Am ish food ,
and much more .

LEGAL NOTICE

t'OAl LIMf: S fOi\1~ . '&gt; 011d g1ovrl .
( nk ourn chlo r• dc, I Ntilin~ l . dog
food. and oil !ypt' !o ol ~ol ! h
t{'l51er Salt W or ~ !&gt; . Inc f . Moon
~!. Pomeroy . '191. :.184 1
O ~,~olr ! y

mt1A run ~
l or rnOn&lt; f'
"/ 4'l 'l:J'IH

On

onrl per
'-Cllr now.

At'Plt· S. flTZPATHICK Orrh01d .
~to t e HI b!:lq . Phone Wllkr"&gt;v JIIe
66'1 3i'tt5 .
LUMP HOUSt:; r ool dol1vCI Cd . $J5
p('r ton CO!oh. Cal l cmy time
'14'2 II '26 .
~ ll~ l- WOOO

$2~

load

p•rkup

l~

YOU hovP o ..,QilJJCC to olfm
went In buji nr 'ocll ~ omt' th m9
oc1 look i11g lor work
m
who tl"'vl"'l
you II get JOM1I h
l'n ., tf'l wo!h o ~f'ntmcl Wont Acl
Co li (l'n il~

- -

-

~

NI:W If&gt;!: A twO row pull ty pe cor n·
pic k ~:&gt; J .and McCurclji
gHwi ly
ho• Alber t P m ~ F'f 1 rn1l es
nort h of C h c~ t er . Oh1o.

to Buy_ _

CHII-' WOOD . Pel es mol( .
diarnel er 10'" pn larges t end .
S1i per ton Bu ndled slob . $10
pe r ton. Oell,.ered to Ohi o
Po llet Co .. loll i . Pomeroy .
I,IQ1·2b89 .
TIM8fR . PO M~ROY f ores t Pr oduc ts. Top pr ice lor standing
·, sow tim ber. Coli 'J92-590S or
Ke nt Hanby. I -&lt;146·8570.
OLD FURNITURE ice bo.oces . bra ss
bed s. iron bed s, de.,~s . etc. ,
comp lete households. Wri te
M .D. Mill er , Rt. &lt;1 , Porn ero., or
co l1992·77b0.
OLD CO INS, poc ket w olc h~s .
class rings . wedding bondS,
diamonds. Gold or sil ve r . Co li
Hoger W~m_ s l ey . 711 2·133 I
WANr TO bu y : old 4.'i ond 78
phon ograph
r eco rd s
Call
99L -b3i'O or Con tac t Marlin ~ur ·
niture.

POMEROY

LANDMARK
Christmas

Boorclinq
oil br r&gt;O&lt;i'&gt;

J&amp;L INSULATION

WA l"EH Wn L dri lling. William 1" .
C1ont "/4i · l874
CI:Wl ii- I!:L} BABY "&gt;tiler Mon · 1-ri.
!:! om !a ? . Contac t at JlQ ', N.
:J nl A ve .. M iddlepor t
Small ·
head .

Headquarters

'
a,

____ GJ.v_e ~y;a1_ __ _
TWO MAl E pups. '19i -3Q'J1 .

\. _S~LE PRICES

CR f Al CH RI STMAS gil ts : pupp ie!o .
"I week~ old . Only 3 lef t.
61d -696 -l06i'. collect .

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-2·181

"

RI:G ISH REO Ou or l e r ho rse
~c ! ding . Con be ~ hown or ron ·
te ~ t ed. H egi s t ~ 1 ed Appaloo sa
mores t o l ool rn Aprd 11::1 mo
end e. mo . 1 e g i~tere d A p.
pol aoso co lh
GoorJ co lor
Ph one 1-593 · 73'-iO .
LOWREY C.~N i t 44 Peder t con di ·
ti On. All ex tra s. 491." 32 15.
19i'J ~ OHO PI CKUP . 50 .000 mile s
No rust 6 cyl. ~ t d . 197:J
Plymout h
Duster
sh or p .
942 -'19137.

ANTI-FREEZE
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay $3.99

OO\_o.,. o'~~ ,c."- $347
'-' 'l~gal.

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark
• • _!ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

.- ·

Will CARt: 1m the elderl y in our
ho r Tl~ Phone 'J'J'l·l31 4.

CHI LD CA ME in my home. w eek
day!&gt; . YQJ .. ~:J.ti'

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

Aiill

Auto Sales

Pllone 9'12-2181

l&lt;li'L FORO Club wogon Von. J02

- Mobile Homes for Sale
- - ~---- --- --

1'11 6 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 be dr oo m
I ', bath . underpin ning. $1500
an d as!oume loon. 449· ib83 or
843 -J31 1.
19i'O Amh er5 ! SOx I :.! '1 HR
19i'O Champion 60x I '1 '2 ~f./
1905 Genera l bO x 1'1 2 8H
1968 PM( 5'1" 11 ') l:lR
l'J ~S Pra irie ~c ho on e r i8x8 I I:IR
1913 Royal ~m bo ssy b8J: 14 3 1:1~
1 9~9 ~t or SOxlO 2 B~
1913 Star 60;-o:1 4 '1 BH
l CJI;.B ~tor b0 11 I '2 '1. 8R
19i'OSy lvotlO xl'l.18H
1'J6U Vi !loges bO x l '1 '2 I:W
1964 Wind!.or 51 x tO 'J BH
1&lt;1i'UKirkwood 1ix6U:J BR
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SAl tS
PT . Pl EASANT , W.VA .
1 '" ACRE. I') x bO mobile home
near De 11 ter . ~92 - 58 58 .
.
{
1%i' TOTA l H ~CTR I C mobile
horne. lurnished . 3 bedr ..
washer and dryer . A ir condi ·
ti oned. I lot . 210ft. lrontoQe ·
SlJ .OOU Phonei' ll2·'ll:l'lb

IY76 PACI::R AM ·~ M st ereo 8
!ro c ~ . cruise con tro l and tilt,
steeri ng wneel. S2.tUO . b ·
•ce ll enl condit ion. YC/2 -3715 or
942 -2978 .

-~

Real Estate for Sale

FOR SALE

TIRE SALE

Pom.oy Llndmalk

VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
Janice L.!1wson , Clerk

(111 22, lie

•...

I

.

"

•

"

.

W. .Coney, Mgr.
Plleole m-2111

.
II

NEW LISTING -

you like five acres w it h d ug
well , lots of firewood ,
electric available on a good
mail and school bus route .

$7,500.
COUNTRY HOME -

.

l 'h

RENOVATED

LOTS - Several locations
and pr ic es. Acreage if
wanted.

DON'T BUY BY PRICE.
BUY ON QUALITY AND
LOCATION. TRUST A
REALTOR
FOR
GUIDANCE. CALL 992 ·
3325.
.
VIRGIL B. AND GORDON
B. ARE CERTIFIED
APPRAISERS. HELEN L.
AND SUE P. MURPHY
ARE
REALTOR
AS SOC lATE S.

Housing
Headquarters

Rodney Downing-Broker
Bill Childs, Manager

Residential and cummer·
cia I. Call for . estimate. 24
Hour Service. AnY day,
- anytime.
.
Phone 985-3806

Chester, Ohio

PETE SIMPSON
SALES REP.
.
FOR
SUNDINS HAMMOND
ORQANS
· R1tine. Ohio
PhOne 949-2118
AHerS P.M.

CAPTAIN EASY

11 -26· 1 mo.

10·30 c

Mourning and

St . Rt. 1'l4·toward Ru11and,

o.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phol1e 992-5682

Co'T'!mercial 'and

Anv Type lmproveinents
To Existing Structures
All Tv pe C~crele Work

&lt;*

No Contract Too Large
Too Small
25 Years Experience

All Work Guaranteed

1tfl~Nf fe}1f ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~ ®

MOORE'S

I'll. 992·2848

Pomeroy, 0 .

ITAGUMm
I I I
I SWEHL
~t':.;,~~.::.

992-7547

Carpentry, Electrical, ·

&amp; HOME MAINTENANC

" GIVE U-S A TRY "
Reasonable Prices
References Available

Phone 742-2029
. 11 ·16·C

1'1\ 992·2114

Now arrange the circled letters lo
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Free Esti males
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
11 -17·i mo.

Print answer here:

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

J&amp;L

Your HeadquarteiS For

Blown Insulation

Armstrong Carpeting

JIM KEESEE

ElliOTT
.APPLIANCE II

.

~

J

NO USE TAKI~G
CHANCES OF SOI&lt;IE
. SNOOPER OIS COVERINQ

-~.

Oor\'1 WE MEED SOME

ROOFING &amp; HOME
MAINl]NANCE
SERVItE
Roofing, gutters, new
repair.

!&gt;tORE CASH? 1&lt;1051 BE
liME TO PAY THOSE lEN

Pomeroy , O.

Call992-7013
For Free Estimates

mo.

CAVE ···LEAVE IT
Atot!E TllllAlfR,

AGAIH~··_·.;.;,·("\~-:~' ',,,------:(!!

1

oversized
bedroom , 2
regular size . Lot 50x200.
(great for kids ) some
paneling and c arpet i ng,
basement, other features .

Just Sl 1,000.00.
GENUINE RANCH -

~

acre. 3 bedrooms, very nice
kitchen . Fireplace, family
room . Many other r~atures .

S20,SOO.OO .
MOBILE

HOME

Located on lot. Use your
own furniture, patio and
storage building . S7 ,500.00 .

WE'RE PAID TO DO
YOUR WORRYING BUYING OR SELLING
SEE US NOW, OR CALL.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Jr .
Henry E. Cleland
' Associate R@lators

Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland

992-2259, 992-6191, 992·2568

HOUSf FOR sol e in M in er sville: 4
bed room s". li ving loo m . kif·
chen. ulilily room an d bolh .
Nice full ba seme nt
Phone
992 -SCI23. Ask ing only 51 7.500
.
.
- Ht::AL f STAfE l OANS . VA
No
rn o n e .,
dow n
( el ig i bl e
Veterens). fHA · As low os 3,....down (all non-Vet erens and
general public) To purchas e
real estate or refinance. 30
YEARS T!::RM S. IHH AND M O ~ ­
TCAG~ CO .. ·i'i' 1::
Stat e St. .
At hens. Ph one b I 4-591-3051.

WILL do roofing . co nstruct ion .
plum bi ng and hetllin g . N o iob
too Iorge or too small Phone
"IAl -1.348.

HOBSIEIIER

PULL!NS !::XC AVATING . Comp lete
Se r vice Phone 991 -11178 .

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
Complete Real
Estate
service. Ca II us tor what we
have available. Listings of

all kinds wanted. Homes,
tarms, commercial. Your
satisfadion is our goal .
Give us a try .

Cheryl Lemley
Associate

FOR SAlE

~XCAVATINC. ,

dozer. loader and
beckh oe work : dump tr uck s
and to-boys l or hire: will houl
fill dirt . to soil. limestone and
grove l. Coli Sob or Roger Jel·
ler... . doy phone 997 -7009 . night
pho~e ~ 9? · ~5~5 _or.9~2 ·~ S?3~ _
Real Estate for Sale
EXC AVATING . dozer . back hoe
an d ditc- her . Charles It Hat·
~ARM !-=OH so le . House. 2 born s.
li eld . Bock
Hoe Serv ice
trai ler . Lorge pond 10 acres 01
Rutla nd . Ohi o. Phone / 42·2008
' CJ L acres . "1 4L-2566 .

REALTY

New Lima Road
Hu1chinson Suli-Div.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742·2003

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

AND MARTIN
cova ting . se pt ic sys tem s,
dozer. backhoe. dump truck
limestone , gro vel. blacktop
paving WI. 143. Phone I (614 )
6qt:l . 133 1.

HOW ~ RY

BATHROOM S ANLl K itc hen s
remodeled. ceram ic til e . plum·
bing carpen tr y. on" .. generol
mai ntenan ce . 13 year s ex·
p e ri : n ~e~ q~1: J~8~ __ . __

AUTOMOBILE INSUHA.Net: been
ccncel!ed? Los t your opero1ors
license? Phone 992 ·21 43.
~U RNAC~

C l~ANING .

Coli

9q1.55!j7 .
--~-

·

-·-- ·

rMOSTV'S CH radio equipment .
Ever.,thing in two-woy rodi o.
antenna s and occes . Phone
Portland 8o1 J.21 Bl . Open even·
ings till 8:00 : Sund ay 2:00 till

OoOO .

- - - · - ·- · - - - - ·

HONAK ~ R ' S

CB and electronic
equipment . Rt .33 506 2nd St
Mason. WV 252e.O.
. . - . . - ATTf:NT lON HOME owners . f nd
your po int ing worries. Let
Gollio Ho me Improvement in·
stall soli d vinyl siding on your
home wi lh the omoz:ing Styro
~o om Insulation . Comes with .:10
year warre nty . ~ree estimates .
Col l 3b 7-0209 . Gall ipolis. Ohio.

.

...,.

~

.

I Court

1'~~~~;~~~~~~~,;~~;~;~2

· --------

CASH FOR jun lc cars. Wrecker
serYice , !!rye's, Hutlond , Ohio .
'142.:/08 1

5 celebrity
Portents
10 Russian
•
symbol
II Piano
12 Composer
13 Greek poet
14 Baseball's
McGraw
15 Wife o[
Epimetheus
16 Hug
18 Half a
sawbuck
19 The Elis '
stronghold

BRADFORD. Auctioneer , Compl ete Service . Phone 9-4 9·2AB"I
or 949-2000. Ra cine, Ohio, Crilf
Bradford.
!::LWOOD BOW!::R S REP AIR Sweepers. toasters. ir ons. all
small app liances. la wn mower.
ne11 t to Slote Hi ghw ay Goroge
on Route 'l . Phone (b14 ) 985~
3825

~

;\ I

,.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE A LimE

&amp;.
SAVE A LOT
All carpet insttlled witll
!!_lddln~ at no ch1rge .
.upert tnst1111tlon.

GASOLINE ALLEY

Ain't we better qit
Miss Elva's pa~•i;i bc~cv,

in his box.

Fu'st
thin's fu'st.
Rufus~

Joel?

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4.88 sq;Y~,;

9' and 12' Vinyl

.

Floor Colering In Stock
.
Buy where you can cemeln
1nd - wh1t you'rt gettt,.
- Good MlttfiOnf;;.. Fully
stocked.

CIII74H211

TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Gr1tt
or Gent Smith

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

20 11 Flower
Drum - "

8:311-What's. Happe11lng!! 13; Raggedy Ann &amp; Andy
8,10,
9:DO-Oulncy 3.4.1S; Barney Miller 13; The lm·
migrants 6; ; Billy Graham Crusade 8; Here To

DOWN
I Wane
2 Antitoxin
3 Relative o[
" totter on
the brink".

Make Music 33 ; 1-lawa.ll Flve-0 10; Duchess oi Duke

~Poetic

preposition
5 Think
6 Intellect
7Atthe (hardpressed)
8 Getting
there
90dd
II Lebensrawn
translated
15 Colorless

Yesterday's Answer
17 Accelerate
20 Flank
21 Roy Rogers'
mount
22 Reticence
23 Conceal
2S Like
some
fish

BRIDGE

21 Vestige
123 Pivotal
point
2~ Network
25 Dwell
26 Ending
for self
27 California
city
30 Relevant
32 Turmeric
33 " Brighton
Rock"
author

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Fascinating notrump slam

•

how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

YGYA
GYAX

OPPQKME

UKU

JTXCEKTD

YLRVZC

OAPH

stove, refrigerator and dishwasher . Beautiful dining

MIDDLEPORT
Well buill older home that has been completely
remodeled . 2 story with full basement. 3 bedrooms

upstairs with hardwood llools and a modern bath .
Stairway , llvlnb room and dining room has rich thick
carpeting . Kllchen Is complele with built In cabinets,
range , dlshwesher. disposal and even the breakfest set
goes. For your convenience there Is a half bath off the
kitchen . And you II love the basement family room . It

room with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room , and to llnlsh lhls well -laid out home we
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage . Very low
healing bill . Red barn-like storage building. Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy lust off Rt . 7.
Asking $55.000 .
·
MIDDLE PORT- Th is well cared for newer home has
3 BRs. living room . bath, mostly carpeted, kltc~n Is
equlppod wilh refrigerator and stove, utility room,

has deep pile shag carpet and paneled walls with a

na~ural gas forced air heat, outside storage building.
Prtce S27 .000. ·

wood or coal burning Ben Frank"tln Stove. The laundry
has a washer and dryer that also goes with the house.
And this solid home Is located on over J.• acre. Shown

besement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heet, approx. 1 acre

by appolntmenl.

'35,000.00

CHESTER -

land and large slorage building. Price $21 ,500.
TWO ACRES - A beautiful• year old, 2 bedroom home
with large eal.ln kitchen. 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted. 2 balhs, full basement wilh TV room. Many
more extras, _low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All th is and two nice acres of land In a good

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

We need large and small ftrms and many types of
property.

Bill Childs, Manager

'

.'

location. Will go quick for S3S,ooo .

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE .949-2311
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATEM9-2654

MCAPTD

ZAKTRKZQY

QPAU
HYQIPVATY
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: I THINK SELF-AWARENESS IS
PROBABLY THE MOST IMPORTANT THING TOWARDS proceeds to run off the rest
BEING A CHAMPION.-BIWE JEAN KING

© IWF8 Klnf Featur111 Syadat., Int.
BARNF.Y

Good 5 bedroom house wllh full

CALL 992-2342
EVENINGS 992-2449

Rodney Downing, Broker

MPHY

11· 29

so urn

One letter simply stands f or another. In this sample A is
u sed for th e three L's , X for t he two O's, etc. Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, t he length and formati on o f th e words are all
h in ts . Each day the code letters are different.

WINNIE

of the tricks by the simple
expedient of cashing four
hearts and four lliamonds.
His last three cards are the
ace-king-10 o[ clubs while
dummy is on lead with
• 1
quee n-six of spades and
WEST
EAST
seven of cluba. Poor East
• 10 9 4
+KJ 87
has to unguard the queen• 98 76
•o
ja ck of clubs to hang on to
• 9765
• 84
the king o[ spades.
+H
+QJ 9 86
What is so interesting
about the hand ?
·
Once West holds the [ir·st
• A~
trick he can break up tbe
• AKJ ·
• QJ 3
squeeze by leading a club .
South just won' t be able to
+AK1032
get East into the meat grindVulnerable : North..South
er.
Dealer: South
Even more interesting, is
that South can't be beaten ·lf
West North East South
he grabs the first spade and
2 NT
cashes
all the red cards . He
Pass 3+
Pass 3 NT
is lert with the ace-king-10 of
Pass 4 NT P.B:ss 6 NT
clubs and five of spades.
Pass Pass Pass
East holds king of sli'des
and queen-~ack-sma 1 of
Opening lead : +10
clubs. A club ead forces him
· to s plit his honors. South
wins, throws East in with the
spade king to force him to
By Oswald Jacoby
lead a club. So East and
aad Alan Sontag
West were just dead [rom
the start aa long as South
Here Is a really interesting knew where all the cards
hand from Popular Bridge
were.
monthly. West opens the 10
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN , )
of spades against South's six
notrump. He is allowed to
(For a copy of JACOBY MOOhold the · trick and plays a
ERN . send $1 to : ·win at
second spade . Now declarer
Bridge ," care pf this newsPa takes his ace of spades and
per, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
NORTH
• Q632
• Q 10 ~ 2
t A K 102

Is

and PRICED FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500.

Slreet 20.
9o3!f-Soap 13.
10 oDO-Hall of Fame 3,4,1 S; 20·20 13; Barnaby Jones
8,10; We Ain't What We Was 33; News 20.
10 o3G-You Bet Your Ute 20.
11oDO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1S; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias
Yoaa &amp; You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;

27 Havirig
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movfe "Young
tresses
Dillinger" 10.
28 Pester
12 o30-News 8; 12 o4!f-SWAT 6,13; LDO-Tomorrow
3,4.
29 Horse
1o5()-News 13.
opera
31 Middle :
prefix
Wednesday, Nov. 29
34 Mild
oath

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

11/2 story house. mostly carpeted with 4 bedrooms,
dining room and laundry room . Also almost new 2 car
heated garage . Thls home Is nicely located In Portland

SO ACRES FREE GAS- Good 1'11 slory house with full
basement . Large pond stocked wllh fish . Priced for
quick sale . $40,000,
SPACIOUS BI · LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. It has a large kitchen with lots .of cabinets,

Graham Crusade 6,13; Frosty the Snowman 8,1 0;
Nova 20,33,

36 Rwninant

RUnAND
FURNITURE

1 Acre and up neer Pomeroy .

~

~~~----------------------~~~~~~~~~------~~----~~--~=-~-=~~~~---34Capricom
"T'HW ~s.MS To 1-tl\w II!'!N A
symbol
35
MI9T'I\IC!: Heft, Mft. IJASc:-OMJ.
~~~;:WOUI-O You HAvE A SEA,. OV!:R 36 Church part
'!"HeRe IN ,....,.,. HAND•BASI&lt;ET? 37 Tried again 1;:;-+-+--+--+--

JUST LISTED - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Good

LOTS -

20; Kanawlla County Schools On The Line 33.
7: 30-Hollywoad Squares 3; Rebel Slave 4; Very Merry
Cricket! 6; Please Stand By 8; $100,000 Name Thai
Tune 10; Nashville On The Road 13; Dolly 15;
MacNeii .Lehrer Report 20,33:.
8:QO-Projec1 ·U.F.O. 3,4; Mork &amp; Mindy 13; Billy

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ll·28·C

Only 15.
UII-Days of Our Live• 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,1 0; 2ooo-&lt;&gt;ne Ute to Live 6,13.
2 ' 311-Doctors 3,4,15; Guiding lighl 8,10.
J: DO-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Y006 &amp; You 20 .
3 o30-Mash I&gt; Joker's Wild 10; Dick Cavett 20.
4oDO-Mister Carloon 3; Battle ollhe Planets 4; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Porky 'Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St . 20.33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat JUtlctlon 15.
5:DO-Siar Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mlste
Rogers' NeighbOrhood 20,33; Gqmer Pyle, USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:30-News 6;. Sanlord &amp; Son 8; Etec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnott &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:DO-Cross.Wlts 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 1~; News 10; Love, Arrierlcan St yle 15; Horsepen s

EH?

Pomeroy, 0 .
MACH IN!:: Repoi 1 ~ , ser ·
vice . all mo~e s . 9&lt;1'1-1284 . The
Fab r i c Sh op ,· Po meroy .
Au tho rized Singer Soles nnd
Service . We sharpen Scis!oors .

ENTITY

~E

lHOUSAND ~ORKMEN

Free Estimate - all work
guaranteed
20 Yrs. Experience
Call: Tom Hoskins

949-2160

UNSEAT

shortage of-·'MATES"

and

~~~

DUMPY

Answer : What the captain of lhe ark sald he had no

Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling

220 E, Main Stree1,

11-9-l

Jumbteso KHAKI

'.-. ,..

OHIO VAUEY

(XIXIIIJ
(Answers tomorrow )

CREDIT

7o15-Weather 33; 7:30-Schoolles 10.
8 o ~apt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
9oDO-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Emergency One
6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game 10.
9o30-Brady 8)mch 8; Family Affair 10.
10 o ~ard Slloorko3,4,15 ; Edge ot Nlghl6; All In The
Family 8, 14; Citing Game 13 .
·
10 :30-Jeop.., 3.4.15; Andy Griffith 6; Price Is Righi
8,10; S20.QOO Pyramid 13.
11 oDO-High Rollers 3.4.15; Happy Days 6,13.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13 ; News
4; LoveofLIIe8,10; SesameSI . 20 ; Nova33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 oDO-Newscenter 3; Bob Braun 4; News 6.10; Midday
Magazine Q ; America Alive 15.
12 :30-Ryan ' t Hope 6,13; Search lor Tomorrow 8,1 0;
E lee. Co. '20,33.
1·DO-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13;
News B; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women

0

New Qr Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Construction
'
Maintenance

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

S~W INC.

lOo•t-""

ROOFING

.

insured
Free Est.
·calr992-2772
· l1 ·3·1mo.

oversized garage? Th i s
home has it. Also 3 nice
bedrooms . Formal dining
room . Full basement with
re.c.
room.
Lots
of
remodeling done here .

()

(

H. L WRilESR

I

Painting

~u lly

JUST LISTED- Need an

b
I

...... ~

BORN LOSER .

3-1S-Ift

mo.

·J. R. Construction
Co.

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

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

Brakes
Muffler
Tires
Shocks
Battery.
Installation Service

Phone 992-6144

.10-18-1

:~ Service
·,......, the ...... 1)wdl or ••a.&amp;.aliH•..,
to the
.
I C.r9,

Home

Building

4-J&lt;I.IIt

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
1

l~dustrial

Type

7:30-0olly 3;;&lt;1)111..,. Game 4; Match Game PM 6;
Price Is Right 1;. The Judge 10; That' s Hollywood
13; Wild Rlntclom 15; MacNeil. Lehrer ROJiiOrl 20,33.
B:DO-Dick Clll'k't live Wednesd~y 3,4,l5t Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Fat Albert 8,10; Wild Hor..,., Broken
Wings 20 .
8 : 30- Jeffersons 1, 10 ; 9 : 00- Mo\l le " Someone Is
Watching Mil" 3,4, 15; Movie ' Billy J ack" 8,10;
Great Pertormences 33; Pr isoner 20.
IOoDO-Barbara.Walttrs 6,13; Flndhorn 33; News 20.
10: 30-Turnabcil:it 20.
11 oDO-New• 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,15; Dick Cavett - 2o; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4. 15; Pollee Woman 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33 ; Movi e " Pay or Die" 10.
12: 311-News I ; 12 :-SWAT 6. 13; 1oDO-Tomorrow
3,4.
1 :SO-News 13.•
THUtHDAY, NOVEMBER30, 1m
5o45- Frarm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13.
5:S5-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6oDO-PTL Club 15; 700·
Club 6,8.
6:25-For You ... Biack Woman 10; 6:30-0octors on
Call 4.
.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:5()-Good Morning, ·West
VIrginia 13J 6:5$-Chuck White Reports 10; News
13.
.
•
7:DO-Today ~;~. 15; Good Morn ing America 6, 13: CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10.

For The Best
Price ·In Town
See
Denver Kapple.
At

Price Buildels
All

on heating cost
Experience and

N

.

Jack's Septic
.Tank Service
Box 3

3:30-Mash 8; J oker' s Wild 10; Over Easy 20.
4oDO-Misler Cartoon 3; 'Battle of the Planets 4; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Fr iends 8; Sesame S. 20,33;
Balman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15.
4o30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan 's Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Peltlcoat Junction 15.
· ·
SoDO-Siar Trek 3; ,4 ; Beverly Hillbill ies 8; Mlsler
Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20.33; Gomer Pyle, u SMC
10 ; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
S:30-News6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20.33; Mary
TYler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15;. ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News3,4 ,1S; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7oDO-Cross.WI16 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha N~ Na 8; News 10; Love, American Syle

· HAMMOND&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
(NEW&amp; USEDI

Ja ck Gi~ther JBS-38116

CeUulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save30pd.toSOpct. ,

basemen!. $27,300.00.
DIG THIS, DAD -

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

3!4 mile ott" Rt. 7 byvpass on

'

bedrooms . Carpeting ,
drapes ,
porches ,
full

CALL 992-2342
E~ENINGS 992-2449

GARAGE

NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms

BUILDING &amp; TRAJLER

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

ROGER HYSEll

bedrooms, bath , new F .A.
furnace, carpeting, LC .
water , and 1.23 acres near
town . $23 ,000.
with plenty of closet space .
Bath , nice kitchen, dining
with glass doors to the wild .
Carpeting , T.P. Water on
one acre. 535,500.
,

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29,1978

15; LOping With Kids 20; Big Green Magazine 33 .

3

Here we have 2 lots each

Ranc h s1yle 3 bedroom hom t? loca t ed one blo ck fr om
school. Nice neighborhood. Just what a young coupl e
with a small child needs. Plenty of ground - Almost an
acre . Financing available. $18,SOO Full Price.

11·3-1mo .

acres ef good garden land.
Room for farm animals,
has
T.P.
water ,
3
bedrooms, bath, gas heat,
nicely located . 516,000 .

50x152 . Close to school. 3

TUPPERS PLAINS

PHONE 992·2772

Wou ld

S23.SOO.OO.
DON'T FENCE Me IN -

-

SNOW

JIM KEESEE

bedroom older home near
stores and shopping . 8
rooms , 1 1J:~ baths , full
basement and new na t , gas
furnace . 525 ,000.

6061;; .
Real
Estate
Sale
--- - - -for
- ---

ASH~·A -h~tc-hboc-k

'

992-332$
216 E. Second Street
NEW LISTING - Large 3

1"i63 \U ~~ 51 O N~ 8f:DROOM
Windso r trailer . Gas furnace.
l ur ni shed .
Un derp inning .
"19'l -3H4l alter 5 weekd ays .
. . . . .
. .
JCHi' V INDAL~ 1d .o: i'O 2 bedroom
toto I elect ric. wi th anc hors nod
underpinni ng , furnished Cll un ·
lur nl"&gt;hed. 992 -7485 oh er Sprn .
.
.

auto .. P.S. 992 -l'd76
11/b.'i FALCON 2-dom . std . shil l.
Good work cor . Hun ~ good.
body rough . '192·'2 99':1 .
.
. . . . .
6'd t: O HD LTD, $295. 992·2429 .

...
:ck
M

INSULATION
SS.50 per bag

~~ ~l N G ~l AH Kennel ~ .

WOHK .
animo !-. and dee r
1 :JOd -J"/:1.9641 .

TELEVISION.
VIEWING
.

CEU.ULOSE

HOOt: HOlLOW H o 1 ~c~ ~uy , 5ell
It orle or lrarn N oW ond u'!oed
'&gt;addles. Hu th Hccv('!o , Albany
(a 14) 6"1!:1 · 3:,.oqu

lAXIO f: HM I ~T

Hotpoint Appliances.

- - ~-

The Village of Syracuse ,
Ohio, w il l accept bids until 12
19/5. PON TIAC
o'clock noon on December 7,
auto .. new lires and bat teries .
1978, for t he fo l low ing:
949 -nrn
One 1979 Model 4 door
1970 FORD LT D. II new t1res . New
P i llared Hardtop (Sedan)
batte ry . Good cond i t ion .
w ith 12 1" wheelbase .
i'&lt;l i · iB/4 .
Color : One sol id pa" i nt
colo r .
- Com plete w ith Guardian
_ _ For Rent
Pol ice Package to Inc l ude, or
equal to : 428 cu . in ., AV , VB
COUNTR Y MO~ Ilf Home Por k..
eng i ne with solid state
Hou te 33 , no rt h ol Pome roy.
ig ni tion; 70 amp . ltlternator ;
LOrge l o t ~ . Coll 99'1.·747q .
Calibrated
Speedomet er ,
3 AND A RM . furni shed and un·
EJttra Cooling package , 80
lurn i~ h ed
Qpt s
P,h one
amp . hr . battery ; 3.25 to 1
997-5A3 J .
High rat io rear axle ; 6.5 inch
neavy duty wheels , heavy
TWO BfDR OOM , kit chen furnh;h.
'duty power front disc brakes
• ed opt Call be fore 'd om
·.~ith organic l inings ; extra
992-11H8 .
~e avy duty front
&amp;. rear
f-II:NTfH.'i
A~ S I STA N Cf l or Senior
sPrings ; extra control shock
Citilens. You may be able to
·absorbers ; he avy duty front
li ... e in our ·apa rt ment l or less
" .&amp;rear stabilizer bars , heavy
than $50 . Village Monor .Aport ·&lt;du t y rear tra ck bar &amp;. lower
'"ents . 992· i'78i'
' arm bush ;ngs ; Hea vy duty
•fro nt sp indles &amp; heavy duty
r UHNISHfD ROOMS rented week ·
,'front upper arm bushings ;
ly M oid servic e. br ceptional
,heavy duty drag strut · in ·
ncrgh borhood 94:7-3489 al ter
sula tor ; heavy dut y front
se at ; heavy duty frame ;
TWO BHJHOOM mobile home.
'.Automatic park i ng brake
Mrm onl y . CJ9i -2.'if.J8 .
release , Sound pa ck age ,
· Coolant re c overy system ;
N~AR
POMfRO¥
Spa cious 3
'heavy duty flasher, tran .
bedroom ranch big living r oom
-.sl stor i zed v oltage regulator ;
and dining room , all newly
-power steer ing with forward
1emodeled . new corpeting . kit·mounted o i l cooler, Hel!lvy
chen , both , noturol gas heat. '•
duty Crulse -o -matic trans acre lot A vailable now. Sl""IS
mission w ith 1st gear lock
per month . Wr ite to: Mary Jane
out , a ir conditioning. vinyl
Carr . Realt y. Mary Jane Carr
"upholstery , traction lock
on d A !osociotes , 3':J4b N . High
·different!&amp; I (non sllp l, 5 · H7B
~ I Columbu s. Ohio 43102 .
·x 1S black side wa ll " Pol ice
-'s&gt;gecial " tires. 21h" th ic k .
:molded urethane pad w ith
For Sale
· ~at cover padding , o i l filter ,
-. - -- - ,a ir cleaner, w . s wash er , 2
(00fJ~ R SINGLI:: d1um ~webbin g
-speed el ect r ic w ipers ; back
1ig with IHOO lt . olthreii1'·Pigth!o
Up li Qhts , heater a nd
111 !oond line moun ted on 1YbH
defroster ; an t i -freeze , seat &amp;
f bOO f ord tr ue !. . $"1000, Coli
·shoulder belts ; roof g utters.
J!i.'i .'i638 bt! twecn 9:30 mn nnd
, - All
b i ds
i n clu~e
the
4pm
: ,.emoval of siren . spotlight,
1&lt;1i'O
FOHD PICKU P. Good (on di
. nashino
s ignals
and
lo on. Sij(){J. tJ92 -i')8J .
-protect ive shlela from the
. 1974 mode l Ford pollee
RWUO SAH onrl lo!o! wi th
cru iser owned by the VIllage
Gol::l elle Tab leh 1:1. t: ·Vop ·· water
of Syracuse and Installing
pill~ "'. Nelson Drug .
same In new vehi c le . ~
IQ/1
WW Hor!le troi ler . $~00 .
, Bids will be accepted enner
"/ 4{ 284-.tl .
With, or wit hout , trade -In
''allowance for the 197.tl model
~I( V~ R
MA CH Pr ofe ssiona l
Ford pollee cruiser , or both
tHJt npel. LPsll them 3 mo. olri.
' wavs .
A,ko11g pr ic e$~~0 . 99i·3_
15H
BidS must be In sealed
(
HH1~1MA~
T
~~
tS
.
Ma
in
S! .
en\lelopes, m arked " Bids for
Hu tlnmi
Pollee
cru i ser ,
w it h
Specifi c et lons .''
Each bid must contain the
1 narne of every person or
•. · compeny interested In same
; . and be a ccom pan ied bY a
'"- Certified check In the sum of
: ( 5 percent) five per cent to the
~, VIllage of
Syracuse , as a
SNOW TIRES
: Guarantee that If the bid IS
ON SALE AT
\ accepted a contract will be
POMEROY LANDMARK
t
entered
Into
and
duty
SERVICE STATION
~- secured .
r
~·
The ·Village of Syracuse
i reserves the right to reject
lv: "Bnv. or all bids .

••

l HWl l: HI:LJ!.!OOM l romr&gt; ho rn~&gt; m
M!ddlcpon . Colt 94'1 : l4~/

-

Services Offered

A 14"11:1 Hondo Howk d()O C( motor
(y d e 1200 1 n rle~ . 51\00 or be'o t
ofh~ 1 . Col i aft er lpm . "1"4'1 iUi8

BABVSITHH from J lo 5. Mon.
thru t: r t. in PomProy lor 8 yea r
old girl. · Co li aft er 5·JU .
49'"} T..'84

---

for "&gt;Ole I O{I C and
11p Middlvpo.r t . nf'ar ~ ut lond
Cnl l 'l'li ·1 Afi1

hoy .

.

'

DICK TRACY

Business Services

H O Mf !'! ITf:~

Pets
- for -Sale
- -

end groomrng .
Chrshorc . J6i' Uii,I'J

..

Real Estate for Sale

1.1 '-i"} "IOCIA .

MIX I- 0
CONDirtONfO
qtJt not .

_ !I~ I.e_ ~a..".~d_ - - ·

~ant~d

Yard Sale

For Sale

PAYROl l ANO invo1ci ng clerk f01
held cons tr uction site at Moun·
to lneer Pion! New Hoven . WV
~end resumes 10 Re sume . PO
!:lox 478
Po rl. ersbufg. WV
'.?OIUI .

_

. 13- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., WednesdaY , Nov. 29; 1978

. .

LOS r B t J W~I: N Gateway and l) r .
Conde·! oil ice Midd lepml. Co r
keys in br own leather kejl ce &lt;,e .
l esl or" po Jod c 44tf -16J8.
-------~-

Tut•s. lat·
tltrul-'ruial"

~mo ll

pur !oe .
~f'Cond g ~ ycom orc . Heward lor
p ur~ (' anci contcnh ond hncler
r on leO\"£' a t [)o il y Sen1tne! ol
h (e.

NOTICE

- - .

.

l owmh1p l r u :-. tc e~
rcg 11 101 mcQi tllg will be Oe( 4
o t 7 pm
f 1edcrLck}u lllf' , Cier i.. .

l'tlhli.'llt"l" II"Lll IIIII bt'
1"1 ".' \"'ll ~ l hlt• f"r 1nun· tha11,,,,,. LIH "t• r -

~

:'u•n iHI C' I

fH~ CH f-~lt:W

)1'0' \LOIIL. t l T , ,

_•
l'lillll t " ' l'l:.' -~1 :..4•

1 0~11: 1-1

or Best .R esults Use Sentinel Classifieds

-

1

MY MAN L!JKEY HAS TO
GJT UP AT FOUR O'CLOCK

15 IN STOCK
Largest Selection In The Valley

WH'f NOT ?AFTER
ALL, ~OU'RE NOT REALLL(
PERFECT, I{QU KNOW

IN TH' MORNIN'TO GO
FISHIN: LOWEEZV --

CAN I
BORRV
YORE
ALARM

CLOCK?

I.(E SHORE
CAN,
ELVINEV

Station. New York, N .Y. 10019)

�·-·•

·t

i4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middieport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Nov. 29, 1978

____

..

_._

·

Controversial pay raise bill goes to HOuse

Elderly cult members returning to America
.
. GEOJIGETOWN, Guyana
~ UPI) - Elderly members of
lhe Peoples "Temple who
Jllissed the mass suicide
ceremmy · where 909 fellow
.cultists drank a cyanidelaced potion are returning tn
the Uni(f!d States to tell their
story tn the FBI and the
wocld.
They were scheduled tn
'board Pan American Flight
228, leaving Georgetnwn for
New York, where it was due
to arrive thiS evening.
Behind them, they were
leaving a jungle settlementturned-ghost town and the
Guyanese
government
apparently was having
trouble deciding what to do
wth
the
3,000-acre,
multirnillion-dollar commune

Jail visitor
nailed Monday
A visitor to the Mason
County jail · was arrested
Monday after he allegedly
attempted to deliver narcotics to a prisoner.
Robert Crouse, 22, Hartford, was arrested by Mason
County Sheriff's Deputy Scott
Kebler after a narcotic
substance was reportedly
found in some personal
belongings Crouse had
brought to the jail the day
before to be delivered to a
prisoner.
Crouse was arrai~ned
before Magistrate Andy
Wilson and Is being held in
' the county jail in lieu of
$10,000 bond.

where the Rev. J im Jones tapioca, bananas, pineapples,
the
suicide oranges and other tropical
ordered
fruit hangin g ripe on the
communion 10 days ago.
The Cabinet met all day trees.
After they get to New York
Tuesday and when Guyanese
Prime Minister Forbes Burn- the elderly followers of Jones
ham ell)erged from the reportedly have agreed tn go
session , he would say only, ID Charleston Air Force Base,
"The Cabinet discussed the S.C., for debriefing by FBI
future of Jonestown and a
statement will be issued
shortly . Teams have already
begun an inventory of
Jonestown' s .assets .''
Government sources said
the Cabinet was expected to
commission the military to Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Gertrude
exploit the commune as an
Scarbro,
Middleport; Ruth
agricultural station and tn
Lewis,
Middleport
; Martin
harvest Ule crops of beans,
Molloha n, Bidwell ; Larry
Spencer , Racin e; Jean
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Wright, Pomeroy.
Discharged - None.
Extended forecast
Friday through Sunday.
'fair and cold Friday, with
ll1•li'.l'r 1\.kdkal f'l•ntt•r
lows In the teens or the low
OiS(·hafl..(l'!', Nm·. 2~
20s and highs in the 30s.
Mr.". Mt•lburn t\dkins ami

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Rain or snow possible

Saturday and Sunday, with
highs in 40s by Sunday and
lows .ranging from the
middle 20s to the middle
30s.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

SEEK LICENSE
A marriage license was

issued to Timothy Paul
Hazelton, 21, Pomeroy, and

Terri Sue
Pomeroy.

Robson ,

TRUSTEE MEETING
A regular meeting of the
Bedford Township Trustees
will be held on Dec. 9 at 6:30
p.m. at the home of the clerk
rather than at 6:30 p.m. on
Dec. 2.

Everyone has worked
. . . . . . e&gt;&lt;tra hard to find just the right gift ,
to create the special design,
to provide the best holiday
flowers . ... . just for
Plan to be with us for our
"Opening''
of
the

Christmas season, Sunday,
Deeember Jrd, 11:00 a.m.
to S:OO p.m.

1
•

1
-r
l

19 ,

'

Refreshments &amp;
Door Prizes

POMEROY

FlOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard VanMeter
Ph . 992-1039
991-5711
106 Butternut Ave.

Pomeroy, Ohio

son : 1\i('hard Adkin:-;: Lerma
Rakl'r : r arol R&lt;irnl'lt : Mary
Castu: f)uam• Eisnaugle:
SY hi l

Fre n('ll:

Loursc

i lank ~·y: Ruby H &lt;-~ rpt-1': Br~ian
KrH •pp : .J1dl!l J.a mbcrt :
Harky

M('Culty :

Ruse tta

Ml'llnis: Mr!'i . Paul Rullins
and s1m : Willa Spl'rret•r:
Wil liam

SWH II :

n c b bit•

Sw1slwr : T!myu Will i: F.d\\"&lt;trd

WyT ~ 11 ff.

Rirths. Nm- . 28
Mr. ann MrS. .Janws Sturgill,
S\ II L .lal'k son .
Mr. and Mr .-;·. Wcslt'y
R1 rnt't t , tlaughh·r . Pomt' roy .

agents investigatin g the
murder of Rep . Leo J . Ryan,
]).Calif., by Temple fanatics.
Only one of them - all of
whom are over 60 years of
age - was present a t
Jonestown at the time of the
mass · suicide. Hyacinth
Thrush, 76, says while her
fellow cultists poisoned
themselves with a purple
cyanide brew , she slept
peacefully in her cabin.
The
others
to
be
repatriated · have been
staying at the . suburban
Lamaha
Garden
headqtlilrters of the sect in
Georgetown.
They were Raymond Godshalk, 62; Madeline Brooks,
73 ; Carol Young, 78; Alberay
Saterwhite, 61; and Marion
Campbell , 61. Hometowns
were unavailable.
Miguel de Peana, 84, has
already returned to the
United States: He too slept
through the massacre.
· U.S. officials accounted for
• 11,0 survivors of the sect in
Guyana at the time of the
suicides as follows:
-Forty-six are under
house arrest at Lamaha
Gardens
as
potential
material witnesses in the
murder trial of Steven
Beikman, accused of slitting
the throats. of sect member
Sharon Amos and her three
children.
-Beikman and Larry
Layton were under arrest.

Mayor's Court
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES : Archie
Pierce, Middleport; Mary
Thacker , Point Pleasant;
James Napier, Ashton; Mrs.
James Fry , Pomeroy;
Patricia Dunn, Robertsburg;
Stephen Alford , Ashton ;
Sheryl Kohl, Cambridge, 0.;
Brian
Vickers,
Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. William

Six defendants were fined
- one of them on four
charges - in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night .
Fined were Bobby Vance,
27, Pomeroy, $100 and costs
on a de&amp;ruction of property
charges; $100 and costs, a
theft charge; $25 and costs,
Zuspan, Mason; Mrs. James disorderly manner charge;
Shaver, Gallipolis; Mrs . and $100 and costs on a
J ames Warrerr, Gallipolis; second destruction
of
Flossie Trout, Gallipolis; property charge; Sammy
George Mayes, Henderson; Little, 42, Middleport, $50 and
Paul McKinney, Gallipolis; costs , disorderly manner;
Eugene Barringer, Gallipolis James W. Stone, 38,
Ferry; Robert Untalan, West Oklahoma City, $50 and costs,
Columbia ; Larry Hinkle, reckless operation of a motor
Milton ; Jennifer Crites, West vehicle; Carolyn Pugh, 26,
Columbia; Mrs . Walter Lmg Bottom, $50 and costs on
Laudermilt, Racine; Lisa a bad cheek charge; Donald
Wilson, Pomeroy; Stacy Lovett, .55, Middleport, $50
Craig, Racine; Thomas and costs each on two
Kinnaird, Galtipolis Ferry; . charges of disorderly
Melvin Holley, Glenwood; manner, and George A.
Doris Lee , Clifton ; Mrs. McDaniel, 51, Middleport, $50
James Fink, Middleport; and costs, disturbing the
Mrs . . Cli:J.rence Heffner, peace, and $50 and costs,
Henderson; Lillian Perry, disorderly manner.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
Two defendants forfeited
Matney, Madisonville, Ky.; bonds of $1,000 each in the
Wanda Cox, Vinton; Jeremy court posted on a charge of
Bosley, Point Pleasant; theft and unauthorized use of
Glady s Williamson, a motor . vehicle. They were
Southside; Wiley Coleman, Jaines W. Price, 26, Uleshire,
Henderson ; Debra Halstead, and Jackson L. Icard, 23,
Point Pleasant ; · Sylvia Bidwell . Qther~ forfeiting
Toney, Ashton ; Don Mullen, bonds were Donald W. Price,
Middleport ; Rebecca Siders, 23, Cheshire, $200, obMiddleport.
structing justice; James
Whitlatch, West Columbus,
$150, destruction of property
and .disorderly manner, and
Jared Prater, 22, Chillicothe,
$29 posted on a charge of
driving 27 miles an hour in a
20 mile zone.
•

Layton was charged with five
counts of murder in the
deaths of Ryan, three
newsmen and a cult defectnr .
-De Peana was already fu
the United States.
- Two, Monica Bagby and
Tommy Bogue, were still
hospitalized with gunshot
wounds sustained in the Ryan
incident.
- The remaining 29, the
principal survivors of the
suicide,
were
in
a
Georgetown hotel.
Police also were keeping
close guard oo three young
men described as dangerous
Jones loya~ts: Tim and
Mike Carter, 28 and 20, and
Mike Prokes, 32.
They .claimed the commune
treasurer - Maria Katsaris,
who was also Jones' mistress
- sent them through the
jungle with a suitcase full of
currency destined for the
Soviet Embassy.

GaJ1ia man...
(Continued from page I )
Gallia Produce Co.
He married the former
Roxie Rader in Rodney on
April 8, 1925. She preceded
him in death on March 26,
1970.
Survivors include one
daughter, Mrs. Arlene Bush,
Gallipolls;
four
sons:
Raymond and Paul, Sandusky Ohio; Howard, Belpre,
and Bert Bodimer, .of Middleport.
One brother survives,
Ernest, 'of Rio Grande. Ten
grand and two greatgrandchildren survive.
Four brothers and three
sisters preceded him in
death.
He attended the Garfield
Ave . Church of God where
services will be held at I p.m.
Friday with Rev. Chalmer
Conley officiating. Burial will"
follow in Mina Chapel
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
McCoy - Wetherholt - Moore
Funeral Home in Gallipolis
on Thursday from 3-5 and 7-9
p.m.
The body will lie in state al
the church one hour prior to
services.

iJ. .

Gold
Florsheim Class ic s a re fo r Ihe wel l-dr esse d ma n. Time less
styling . A solid value. Co mpl ete wit h lege ndary Flors he im
quality and comfo rt.

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.,
Mon. ~:r::'r:!.=~i. S11.

h.m.-lp.m . Fri.
CtoHd Sund1y

·

"Middle oi Upper Block,
Pomeroy, 0 _,.

·

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Jose Ferrer is a great admirer of
John Wayne.
If that comes as a surprise tn ·some people, it is because
they tend to impart to Ferrer their own kind of snobbery they admire him as an intellectual actnr and assume he shares
their aversion ID mass appeal heroes.
Ferrer will reassure such fans about his own work when he
appears Nov. 30 in "Fame," Arthur Miller 's first work created
for television, which will be a Halhnark Hall of Fame
production on NBC, 1~11 p. m., Eastern time.
But Ferrer believes in stars. "John WAyne deserves to be
a star," Ferrer said in an interview, and he cited "Tall in the
Saddle," "Red River;' and "Stagecoach" as three movies that
prove his point.
"Take Wayne out and you have a very different picture. He's
something els~ . Whether he's doing commercials or whatever,
he is what he is-a great star, tremendously interesting.
"Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Jack NicolSon fllday,- they
are endlessly fascinating and completely original. Nicplson,
for example is unique, not like anybody else. There is nothing
standard about Jack Nicolson.
"There arefiveor six stars today, when there used to be 20 in
the days of the big studios:"
Ferrer blames the lack of stars on the fact that actnrs don't
make enough movies any more.
. "They don't work often enough, " he said. "Actors used to
make two or three movies a year - now it's more like one
every three years. The last picture Robert Redford made was
'All The President's Men.'
"But that was in the days when people didn't have free
movies to watch at home."
Ferrer is no workaholic. He demands a great deal of hirnseH,
particularly when acting oo the stage which he compared to
running.the four-minute mile every night, but he added:
''Henry Fonda really liv~s tn act. Bull don'tlove acting that
much. I could be happy not working. I don't understand why
very, very wealthy actnrs go on working ."
·
Instead, Ferrer would do some of the things he hasn't the
time for now - things he has wanted to do like go back to ·
school and learn more history, more langauges.

Republicans, g1ving them two for most elec ted sta te increa se for legisla tors a nd ·
BY LEE LEONARD
more than the minimum officials.
UP! ' Stateh11111e Reporter
elected public officia,ls, but
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A required for passage . .
Five Democratic senators favors giving it in "steps."'
However, the word is out voted against the measure
controversial pay raise for
"I have in mind something
state legislators, elec ted that no amendments can be and another was a bsent, but ·on the order of $1,000 to $1,500
state officials and certain made in the House. That Sen . Oakley C. Collins, R- per year, which would he
"''unty officeholders ha s been would sent the pay proposal lronlon, set up the tie by consistent
with
the
sent by the Ohio Senate to the back tn the Senate, where it crossing over in favor o[ the President 's request for all ·of
House, where it may reach · met success Wednesday by a pay ra ise. The count was 16- us to help in the fight to
margin thinner. than the 16.
the floor Friday .
1
co ntrol inflation," s &lt;:~ i d
The bill, containing pay paper it is printed m .
" Under ... the Constitution Celeste.
Outgoing Lt. Gov . Richard of Ohio ... the lieutenant
hikes of almost 30 percent for
" In the final analysis, "
legislators and more for F. Celeste had to cast a rare governor is empowered to negati ve vote would ha ve
others , wa s tb 4nderg o tiebreaking vote tn clear the break the tie ," said Celeste to killed the opportunity for any
hearings in the House biU, 17-16.
a hushed chamber. "The positive action on this ma tter
Celeste 's dramatic vote lieutenant. governor chooses for the next two years for
Finance Committee today .
House Speaker Vernal G. was cast at the end of a 90- · to break the tie and will be most public officials 1and
Riffe Jr ., D-New Boston, said minute Senate session during recorded as voting in the four years for our sta tewide
he was hopeful of a floor vote which majority Democrats affirmative. The vote is 17 officeholders )," he said. &lt;
had tn push for every bit of ayes and 16 nays. The bill
Friday.
Ce le ste ,
who
ran
support
available tn pass the therefore passes."
reports
There
were
un!iuccessfully for governor
majority Democrats can measure, which includes pay
Celeste
explai n ed
th is year , will not be
produce 52 voles for the hikes of 28.6 percent for state afterwards he supports the
receiving the extra $0,000
measure, including four legislators and 31.5 percent "basic principle" of a pay
offered the lieutenant

man said Tuesday, "The
Soviet Union has nothing tn
do with the People's Temple, .
a
purely
American
organization. The first
cmlact we had was when
they were invited to a
cultural show earlier this
year."
FUNDS RECEIVED
The three local scho ol
districts of Meigs County
received $245,921.22 from the
November State .School
Foundation program after
deductions for retirement.
· Amounts re&lt;;eived by the
districts from· the total include:
Meigs
Local,
$128,418 . 25; Eastern,
$56,694.74; and Southern,
$60,808.23.
In addition the county
board of education received a
direct allotment of $17,088.95.

OUTBREAK
THREATENED
DAYTON, Ohio (UP! )
An employees union said
today patients and employees
at the Dayton Mental Health
Center are threatened with
an outbreak of Salmonella, a
contagious bacterial infection, because of ' 'in·
tolerable" conditions at the
facility.
Elmer Carroll, state employee coordinator for Ohio
Council 8 of the American
Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees,
made the accusation in
remarks prepared for a news
conference at the center.

B.y TIM MILlER
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Power Company says it
wlll seek a rehearing of a
Wednesday order from \he
PUblic utilities Commission
' of Ohio that II refund . its
residential and commercial
customers a record $8.4
million for overcharges made
in 1976.
.
The PUCO said Ohio
Power, the state's largest
utility, overcharged its
custnmers tlirough misuse of
the fuel adjusiment clause.
The rebate , the largest ever
ot.dered by the commission,
wlll result, Ohio Power said,
in: a credit oo the average
residential customer's bill of
39 cents a month over a I~
month period .
"The fact is that we did not
then, and do not now, recover
.100 percent of our actual fuel

I ~~~!~STJ
'··~~~~ ~'®"~~~·.
Il Gi!tCerti/icate ~

Eight Crewmen killed today

.~~~~~~OS~~·•
~W&lt;a:&gt;~~~~~""®~~~®~~~

!!

.

.SUGGESTION

.

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1 ~---------~-------------~
~ . NAME ••••••••..•••.•.••.•••. ••..•••.• •• •••••• @
ADDRESS.....................................

@.

@
~

PHONE···········~··························· ~

LAS PALMAS, Grand Canary Island, Spain (UP!) -A
seaborne guerrilla unit machine gunned and dynamited a
Spanish fishing boat off the Sahara coast Tuesday night, killing
eight crewmen, Spanish Navy officials said today. The attack
took place about 4 miles off Cape Bojador.
Early this year Polisario guerrillas staged a similar
attack on another Spanish fishing boat. They tnok three
fishermen hostages but released them unharmed about two
months later.

~..&lt;;ii}.~. ®. c:ii)~~-r.i"&gt;r.?:.~ t¥).~~~- ~~~

Don nil

H t~ tlt e ld

and Brenda Roush hnve recently purchn ~c d the L&amp;R Dress Shop and they need il neW n&lt;~me
tor the•r srore . Deadline tor entries will be Dec. 21,
JIOtl. Winner w111 be announced Q('c . 23 , 1976

Former

·

I

'

L&amp;Z DRESS SHOP

---------------Main St .• f&gt;omeroy

Elberfelds In Pomeroy ·

SALE! MEN'S DRESS AND
ALL WEATHER COATS
Sizes 36 to 46 in regulars and
longs . The dress ·coats are . fur
trimmed as pictured. and make
excellent Christmas gifts. The all
weather coats are unbelted, have
zip-out I inlng, · popular length,
choice of colors.

percent for leaders in the
General Assembly.
" I think we're worthy of
this," Carney · told his colleagues. " 1 think we do the
job."
Sens . Ha rry Meshel , DYoungstown, and Anthony 0.
Calabrese, D-Cieveland, led
the debate for the bill.
"This is not a pay raise,"
said Meshel. "This is a n
attempt to get back the
money you have to spend to

it for years."

Meshel was so insistent on
the pay raise tha t he offered
an amendment stipulating
tha t a ny legislator who does
not want to collect the
increase may turn it down by
noti fying the clerk. It passed,
31-1.
Meshel said t he Ohio
Leg islature ranks behind all
other comparable states in
compensation, adding that
many other states offer $30 to
160 a day in living expenses,
plus cars, credit cards and
home offices with paid staffs
·•which we aren't asking for .''
"The take-h ome pay of the
average legislatnr is less than
$10,000 a year after taxes and
expenses," he said .
" I don't want to hear about
(Conti nued on page 10)

enttne

at

Fiftee n Ce nts
Vol. 2!1. No. 160

arrived at with .the aid of 20-20
hindsight, is grossly unfair.
"In
essence,
the
commission claims that we
should. have had a different
fuel clause regulation in
effect during that period," he
said . "Our position has been
and remains thai we were
doing only what our fuel
cla use regulation at that time
specified and there was, in
fact, no over-recovery of fuel
costs.
"We are convinced that our
fuel clause formula was fair ,
jus! and reasonable and in the
best interests of our cus- .
t.omers,'' Heller said. "The
manner in whlch it was
interpreted and applied by
the company was known to
the commission and its staff
and approved by f!lem."

SNOWFLAKE DESIGNS - These snowflake design Christ,as decorations on the
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. building in Pomeroy are attracting considerable attention
this holiday season . At night the snowflakes are effectively lighted.
•

EXTENDED FORECAST
II will he mostly fair
Saturday, with rain and
snow possibly Sunday and
Monday. Highs wlll be in
the mid 30s to lower 40s
Saturday and Sunday, and
in the 40s on Monday. Lows
will be In the 20s early
Saturday, rising to the 30s
by Monday morning.
.:::::: :;: ;:::: :::::;: ::::::::::::: :;:;::=:: ;:::;::: ::;:;:: :; :;:::;: :~.:;:;:.

'

•64.95 COATS
SALE '55.24
•79.95 COATS
SALE '67~94
. PLANS OPEN HOUSE - The annual open l)ouse .at the Pomeroy Flower Shop, on
. Butternut Ave., will be held Sunday from II a.IJl . to 5 p.m. There will be refreshments, door
.ll"lzes, and free glfta. Pictured are, left to right, Mrs. Vera Van Meter, owner, and rharlot!e
Wllford preparing for the open house.
·
;

~

OBSERVE OPEN HOUSE - Hubbard's Greenhouse in Syracuse will observe open
house Saturday and Sunday from noon until 6 p.m. Linda and Don Hubbard, owners and
operators, are shown with a few of the 8,000 poinsettias available. They also have a large
variety of other plants. They will offer door prizes on both days o! the open house and
refr eshments will be served .

Meigs County Sh e riff G ov e rnor 's wa r r ant t ain ed the Govern or's
James J . Profitt report s a uth orizin g his r et ur n to warra nt for his return.
Th e sheriff's department
Theron P. Steiniger, 27, Tex as.
At the hea ring J udge ad vises depu ties are in·
Oxford, Ohi o, was released to
Deputy Sheriff Alan Dodson , Robert E. Buck ordered his vest iga ting the theft of hand
Polter County Texas and has ret urn to Texas, but due to saws, speakers and pa ir ortin
been· returned there to an- the Thanksigiving Holiday, snips from East ern High
swer a charge of unathorized Texas officials were unc1ble to SchooL
Shenff Profitt luday issued
book a flight to Ohio until this
use of a motor vehicle.
the
following to deer hunters.
Steiniger was taken before week.
Please
obta m permission of
Ste inigcr had refused to
Meigs County Court J udge on
the
land
owner before enSaturda y, Nov. 18 on an Ohio wa ive extradition so Texas
1
ering
property
to deer hunt.
officials instituted
extradit ion procec dinJ.!s ob- Respect . the rights of the
propert y o wne r . Show him
the courtesy of askin g hi s
permi ssion, thus perventing
com
pla ints.
SQUAD CALLED
g~ven
At I ::12 a.m . Thursday the
Pume roy Emergency Squad
too k Mrs. Geraldine Young, a
medical patient, from her
.
'
home on West Ma in St. tu
Pa rtly cloudy and cold
Sheriff James J . Proffitt Holzer Medical Center.
tonight
. Lo ws in the upper 20s
today issued a reminder fo r
or lower ~Os. Mnstlv r lnnrl v
all Meigs Christmas shoppe rs
~" riday. with hi ~h s in u~~er
to be extra cautious this
' · ·~ -· ~ ...:~ -· ' ...;' -·' ·S&gt;..:' 0 - . 30s or lower 40s.
holiday season .
~~
Sh eriff Proffitt said three
things happen thi s tim e of
SQUAD RUNS
year, homes and cars a re
The
Emerge
ncy Unit of the
filled with gift s, families take
'·
Middleport
Rife
Department
extended trips to v1s it
~
was
called
to
Silver
Run at
relatives and good fr iends ?
'
c
1:
09
p.m.
Wednesday
for
and the burgla1·y rate \
Vide
Williams,
a
medical
skyrockets.
pa tient. who was taken to
"Good locks and alarms by
'·
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
no means represent tota 1
At
4:58
p.m.
the squad was
security in the home, but it 's ' . , &lt;:~ . .
ca
lled
for
Sue
Little
who was
a good start ," Proffitt stated .
fro
m
her
Middleport
taken
He said pa ckages left in cars
'DAYS TO
home to Holze r Medi cal
should be locked in the trunk .
Center.
CHRISTMAS
Accord ing to a rece nt
study, in over 60 percent of
the nation 's burglary cases,
the intruder entered tnrough
an open door dr window, or
forced an inferior lock.
Sheriff Proffitt sugg ests
that area r esidents stop at hi s
office and get some free
' OPERATION
CRIME
ALER'Jllit erature suggesting
wa ys that the citizens can
help prevent crime.

Shoppers

SALE '50.99 '

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

legisla ti\•e pay in crease,
including hikes of '30 ID 52

do your job in Columbus ."
State lawma kers are
forbidden by the Oh io
Constit ution to recover per
diem expenses, such as room
and boa rd, during the time
they spend on the job. A
constitutional amendment to
allow reimbursement fai led
six years ago.
"You stay in Columbus
three nights a week and is
costs yo u $100," said
Cala brese, adding hotel
rooms were on ly $5 a night
when he first joined the
Legislature 24 years ago.
"Don 't be fooled by the
· ne ws
med ia,"
said
Calabrese, noting editor ial
comment has been heavily
against t he pa y raise.
"They're goi ng to chop us up
any way . They 've been doing

Suspect returned to Texas

'59.95 COATS

..
•

counties would receive the
$7,000.
The same wou ld be true of
one-t hird of t he co unty
commissioners - those just
elected th is month. ·
But most of the debate
around
the
ce ntered

•

costs," said· Charles A. . PUCO to study its figures of the highest-priced fuel they
Heller, exe cutiv e vice again and to come up with a consumed. But the company
president of Ohio Power. precise figure tn be rebated . did not deduct the money they
; 'The recovery is closer to 90
The PUCO held another were taking in from t he
percent."
hearing last September and average fuel costs they were
He said, "We are being decided that $8.4 million was billing res idential and
punished for doing precisely .the amount owed conswners. commercial customers.
The main issue in the case
what the then-existing fuel
So the PUCO said that in
clause regulations required was how Ohio Power passed effe ct the company was
us tn do. We feel strongly that on fuel adjustment ·costs to reL'OVering the same costs
twice- from other utilites to
the Commission's decision, customers .
The fuel adjustment law arrived at with the.aid of W-20
whom it sold power and from
hindsight,
is
grossly which allows utilities ID pass the
residential
and
along their costs for fuel commercia l custom ers .
unfair.' '
,The rebate results from a directly to con sumers - went ThLLS, the PUCO ordered the
case that was originally . into effect in 1976. Prior tn rebate . Ohio Power has sin ce
decided by the PUCO in that, · Ohio Power had billed · changed its method of billing.
residential
and
"We are being punished for
April,
1977.
The its
commissioners at that time commercial customers on its doing precisely what the then
fuel
clause
ruled that Ohio Power average cos ts for fuel, existing
regulations required LLS to
customers
had
been primarily coal.
At the same time, it ' was do," said Heller. ·"We feel
overcharged $9.5 million.
selling
power to other utilities very strongly - that th e
The company appealed tn
and
charging
them the costs c ommi ss i o n's de cision.
the Ohio Supreme Court,
which ruled in favor of the
commission, but told the

Ohio Power Co. today asked the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission for approval to
install two generating units in a government dam
on the Ohio River near Gallipolis.
In announcing the action, Charles A. Heller,
executive vic.e president of Ohio Power, said the
company had been studying the feasibility of the
project for the past three years .
·
"We have now determined that it is a powerproducer of great significance, environmentally
pure, and being a hydro project, immune from
fuel costs", he said.
Heller said the project would be a .virtual twin
of the installation being constructed by Ohio
Power at a similar government dam at Racine. It
will consist of two 23,000 kilowatt generating units,
employing novel bulb-type turbines , a
powerhouse, and an outdoor subStation.
Once approved by FERC, construction will
require approximately 36 months and will cost
approximately $105 million including provisions
for inflation.
"This installation ~' , Heller said, "is in tune
with that part of President Carter's ·energy
program which specifically calls for new
productive use of existing government rive~
dams. "

•

•

•

Firm seeks
• •
permission

1;'0$

MIDLAND, Mich . (UP!)- A Saginaw, Mich., man is held
at the Midland County Jail for the shooting death of a Northwood Institute student during a weekend robbery.
Midland police arrested Dani~l Travis, 21, at his home. He
pleaded not guilty tn murder at his arraignment before
District Court Judge Robert Fraser. Travis, accused of killing
James Ryks , 22, Solon, Ohio, demanded a preliminary
examination and was ordered jailed without bond, ·

governor under t he bi ll
starting in J anuary .
The measure provi des for
an extra $!i,OOO_(or state legis:
la tors, who now earn $1 7,500 a
)'ear. It also raises their
travel allowances from 15 tn
20 cents a mile on weekly
trips from their hom es tn
ColumbLLS and ba ck again.
Under the bill , a uthored by
Sen. Thmn•s E. Carney , DGirard, the governor 's salary
would go from $!)0,000 tn
$60 ,000 Cu rrent $38 ,000
sa laries ror state auCiitor,
attorney ge neral, treasurer
and sec retary of state would
go to $00,000.
County auditors would rece ive increases of $5,000 to
$7,00o a year, depending on
the size of their counties.
Auditor s in the lar gest

Ohio Power seeks rehearing

r

Michigan man held in jail

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 30, 1978

"60 Minutes" was the most-watched network television
DECISION 'COSTLY
show in the country last week, the first time a scheduled news
program made the tnp of the ratings list. The 10 top network
BLOOMINGTON, INd .
television shows for the week ending Nov . 26, according tn the (UPI) - The deicsion by an
A. C. Nielsen Co . were:
·
Ohio firm to move a piece of
· I : 60 Minutes; 2: Allin The Family; 3: Alice; 4: Three's . construction equipment a
Company; 5; Laverne &amp; Shirley; 6: Charilie's Angels; 7: mile-and-one-half could
Happy Days; 8: Little House On The Prairie; 9: M-A-S-H; 10: prove to .1\e very costly.
The firm faces a possible
Eight Is ENough;
$10,000 fine because moving a
points Tuesday, was behind giant crane on one truck
PRICES WWER
1.98 to 802.14 shortly after the . violated Indiana's load limit
NEW YORK (UP!)
laws. The truck was overPrices opened broadly lower opening bell.
weight by 163,000 pounds.
today in moderate trading of
New York Stock Exchange
----·---~---issues.
The Dow Jones industrial . 1 .
NAME OUR STORE
average, which tumbled 9.70

completion of an 8,00&lt;knile journey from France, a reversal of
the famous 1907 Peking tn Paris car race.
·

investigated

THE ULTIMATE
CHRISTMAS
GIFT

TV . ~. in Review

(Continued from page I I

Four defendants were fined
in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
They were James R.
Ingels, Jr., Lawrenceburg,
Ind., speeding, $30 and costs ;
Jack Braley, Pomeroy, $200
and costs, petty theft; Keith
McDaniels, Middleport, $50
and costs and six months
'
probation, no operator's
The Gallia - Meigs Post,
license and $350 and costs and Highway Patrol, investigated
three days in jaU, driving three accidents Tuesday.
while intoxicated; Jon
Officers report at 10 :08
Pierce, Pomeroy, $100 and p.m. a deer ran into the path
costs, leaving the scene of an of a vehicle operated by
accident.
Mabei Moore, 60, Pomeroy.
Forfeiting bonds were
The Moore auto was
Ricky A. Priddy, Middleport, · traveling south on U.S. 33,
$100, leaving the . scene ; six-tenths of a mile north of
Martin A. Shuler, Langsville, Pomeroy.
$32, speeding; John F .
The
patrol
reports
$29, moderate damage to the
Young,
Racine,
speeding; Niokl Zimmerman, vehicle. The deer was killed.
Pomeroy, $31, speeding; · Officers were called to the
Ronald
E.
Collins, scene of a one-vehicle acGroveporl,$34, speeding; cident at 10:30 p.m. on Bob
Robert Glass, no address McCormick Rd., four-tenths
recorded, $50, disorderly of a mile south of U.S. 35 in
conduct; Ronald Hester, New Gallia County.
Haven, $30, speeding; Randy
According to the patrol, an
Randolph, no
address auto operated by Ernest
recorded, $50, disorderly Henbren, 25, Bidwell, passed
conduct; Dean A. Hawk, off the roadway and struck a
Hamilton, $350, driving while fence.
int dxicated ; Timohy W.
There was slight damage to
Rickard, West Columbus, $28, the Henbren vehicle. No
speeding ;
Joseph citation was issued.
Daugustlno, Albany, $34 ,
At 11 :40 p.m. a .deer ran
speeding; Danny Darst, into the path of a vehicle
Pomeroy, $50, disturbing the driven by Rodney Myers, 21,
peace: Rita McCune, Orr- Scottown, traveling west on
ville, $32, speeding; Dennis C. U.S. 35, one and five-tenths of
Butcher, Middleporl , $30, . a mile east of SR 554.
speeding; Tony M. Hutton,
The . patrol
reports
Langsville •.,$50, . sq uealln g moderate daniage to the
tires, and Nellie M. Brown, . Myers auto. The deer was
Pomeroy, $30, speeding.
killed .

.'

The money was cmfiscated
Tim Carter said he
by Guyanese police who said estimated it at $3 million.
it amounted to $500,000.
A Soviet Embasssy spota;s-

'_r_h_e_w_o_r_td_To_cJ_a_y_

Three mishaps

CLASSICS

'

.

'

Jaycee projects
discussed here
Quarterly projects were mana gem e nt , growth,
outlined at a recent meeting membership, community
and
individual
of the Meigs County Jaycees. action
Upcoming projects include development, the Meigs
a C. P.R. program, the .Jaycees were first in
charter night banquet, set for population division II and
Jan. 27; a Christmas food third in all chapters, over 400
ba sket program for the needy in the state overall judging.
(those needing help are to Membership now stands at
· write the Jaycees at Box 603 85. Any one interested in
in Pomeroy ; the toys for tots joining lhe active group may
program ; the 1979 frog contact any Jaycee.
Chairmen for the upcoming
jumping contest ; an all-star
basketball tournament ; a Christ mas programs were
leadership in action program announced, they include John
and a financial dynamics .Hunnell and Bob Haggy, cochairm en of the toys for tots,
program .
A report was given on the and Bill Young, Glenn Enawards presented at an all- slen, Ron Roharik, Richard
state banquet in Cleveland Knapp and Mike. Kelly will·
chair the food baskets [or the
for the first half of 1978.
program.
lh the population division II underprivileged
Collection points for the
area, the Meigs Jaycees won
second place in membership toys fur tots program will he
and growth out of 83 chapt,ers. announced in the near future .
In the all-population division
in the state, the Meigs unit
PRICES OFF TODAY
ranked eiRhth out of over 400
NEW
YORK ( UP!)
t.l d .'&gt; II • b ; G II ,I I &lt;..1.1 1\...1 Ji al.:u a·
Prices
opened
lower today in
bership.
fairly
active
trading
of New
In the parade of chapt ers
York
Stock
Exchange
issues.
competition
based
on
The Dow Jones industrial
average, which plummeted
14.04 points Wednesday, was
HI-LOWS
off
0.42 to 789.67. The blue
NEW YORK ·[UP! ) - The
chip
indicator has lost 23.73
highest temperature reported
points uver the past two
Wednesday to the National
Weather Service. excluding scs.si uns.
Alaska and Hawaii, was 88 r Declines led advances, 37l
degrees at Orlando, Fla . t.o 236, among i he 963 issues
Tuday's l(Jw was 29 degrees rr. r ss in ~ the tape in the ea rly
!.J ('lu " l C'' •: a! R 1,s~au , Minr. . '"!. nnl!.

.

•

reminder

Weather

"

THREE 'QUAKES' HIT
MOSCOW IUPI ) - Three
moderately stron g earthquakes struck a mountainous
region along the Soviet-China
border early today .
The official Soviet news ·
.agency Tass reported that
quakes mea ~uring between 6
and 7 points un the Soviet 12point scale hit the northern
slopes of the Tra nsal a1
mn untain ra nge. ·

,,

FLATTENED - This Is the car, which' held a Mid·
dleport woman , Nina ·Craddock, prisoner lor six hours
after it rolled over on Its top about 1:30 Tuesday morning
In a brushy area near Hartford. Mi88 Craddock was
pinned in the wreckage until 7:25 a.m. when the car was
spoU:ed by a passerby.
. 'I

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