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·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;~~~~~""®~~~®~~~

!!

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.SUGGESTION

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~ . NAME ••••••••..•••.•.••.•••. ••..•••.• •• •••••• @
ADDRESS.....................................

@.

@
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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

�l Ttw D.ttl~ :-il·ntmd . \ l itll llt&gt;Jiil l l·l 1t•l lh' l t l\

.tl .

..

..

1' 11111.. t f, 1,

' '

...• •·~p
.• ,...
...
. r..
.

Rose adds Pirates to list

~

IN WASHINGTON

~

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

du nn g a n Octobe r survev
F t1 d.he r mo r e, 56 perCent expect mflatwn to worsen
com pared With 9 pe r cent who foresee an improvement and
:n pe rce nt who a nt icipate no great change

Al thoug h budge t cuts are favored as the best means of
&lt;.o mba flllg mflat10 n , the poll mdtcafes voters are by no

mea ns r eeon(·Jierl t o contmued htgh taxes

By a 59-30

pen·ent rna Jon!} , the pubhc favors a Repubhcan plan to
l'ut fed eral taxes by one third even tf "it meant the things
) ou l1ke .tbout the federa l government would have to be cut
subst;mtla lly "
-

'

HEALTH
Lawren~e

E. Lamb, M.D.

'J';d king ahout

many people are under the

alc·o h o li ~ m

'" ong

DEAH
l iicnd of

[)1\
lrllnC

I.AM B - A
dnnks five or

s1&gt;: lndttln l s " d ..ty loaded
u Jth 1~ e. !ttrgP glasses With
flq• nr &lt;.: !X shut s per gldSS He
mnst h'l \ L' ll \'er m pa ncreas
t 1ouhle as Ill' has u pot belly .
ll.tll:,l'd 'Olnll!-i cmd ts red 111
t!Jt' ft~ r e
lit• ',1.'·ill!) us for four or fiv e
hou 1s or lungt•r (tnd never
gne::; tu lilt· ha lluou m Where
do":-; till' f\ uuJ go?
lli~AH
(ould &lt;.~Sk

Hf:i\DE H - You

h1111 J'vlcn be he's
Jll"l dt'\'L lopcd this kmd of
lwh1 l pd tt l'rn [nan; t::ase, 1t
111 !ld 1Je ct \\,1\' \ u 11 could talk
ltl !JPn .dmnt h;s etlt ohol tsm
!fin d11 nks a ll\. \\he1e near
"" JJHlC'h Lh :• ou sa~ he dues on
a dt~l l \ lla·, !~. he ts an
ak(l ilnlw
If \OU are Iu s

unpresolon

that

" !lenever you ha ve l1ver
disease, tt 's i::ISSoctalet! \\Jt h
alcuhohom. Th.tl's nut ll ue
ctthel . There ar e mHn y utile1

cam:;es of sce~ r nng ur ilve r
damage wlu ch \H~ coil t il ·

rho.s1s
Some peopl e who develop

1n

.

..••
..

BIG KILL - Judllh
Buckley, 37296 West Shade
Road, Pomeroy, was really
struck willi beginner's luck
during the deer season .
Buckley had always wanted
to try her hand with deer
hunting but dtdn't know how
to ftre a gun. So two weeks
before huntmg season .
opened
she
recetved
mstruchon
from
her
husband, Tom. Monday Mr.
and Mrs. Buckley ventured
mto the woods on the Charles
Pnce property on Mt. Ohve
m Lebanon Township and 11
wasn't long before Mrs .
Buckley shot hersel!
200
pound, 11 pomt buck deer It
took four men two and onehalf hours to carry the deer
out of the woods.

mass m ed 1 ~, c1te Mao's "errors of judgment" m conneC-

chtldren m the1r dtstnct.
Each distrtct in the 10county region has for the
'
past month, been surveymg
aU teachers, health and soctal
· servtce
agenctes
and
households Ul an attempt to
comptle a hst of aU chtldren
mthe dtstrtct with suspected
or conftrmed handicaps.
Now school staff tn each
distrt~ 1 a
re worktng lo
determltle whether special
programs should be provtded
lor the chtldren tdenttlted as
pot"entlally handtcapped

project aliiied at msurmg
that all handtcapped chtldren
m the reg10n recetve the best
posstble educatiOn lil the
program best smted for the
chtld The other two steps are
assessment and placement
The state-wtde project 1s
betng coordtnated tn the
regton by the Southeastern
Ohio Volurltary Educatton
Coo pe.attve (SEOVEC ),
which has provided special
educ8 t 1o n

program

asSistance for schools m
AthaJ!S , Gall ta, Hocktng,
Jack son , Metgs , Monroe.

htmself
It follows wholesa le rcha b1hlatwn of vtcttms of Mao's

Morgan: Perry, Vmton and
Washmglon Counttes smce

SC'hoo lers, who may have

1968.

polenttal learntng problems
-sun eyed all households

In tdenllfymg all suspected
out-of- school handtcapped
chtldren, aged 0-21 , each
school dtstrtct has ·
- surveyed thetr teachers
and other professtonal staff to
determine which children
may have learning problems
or spectal needs.
- analyzed data on chullren
currently enrolled in special
educatiOn programs.
-contacted agenci es
wtthm thetr commumt tes
(such as health departmenls
and day care centers I to
tdenttfy the chtldren they
serve, parttcularly pre-

ma tled dunng the week of
November 13 SEOVE C
Director Dr Robert Wemfurt ner urged restdents who
have or know of chtldren wJ1o
are out of school whom they
feel may be handtcapped to
retum the form to lhetr local
school or call etther thetr
lo ca l school , call SEOVEC
(toll fl ee 1~00-282-140 1 ) or a
spectal Slate Department of
Educat1on number (Collect I·
614-166~854 ) tf they have not
already done so
" We hope restdents wtll
take the tune to complete the

Th e la tt er survey

was

s urvey ," he sa1d 'Parents or
g uardians don 't have to wnte

the names of chtldrcn they
feel may be handicapped on
the survey form ttself. They
wtll be contac1ed by school
personnel and aU mformat10n
Division of Forestry of the made available to Ohto bv the they supply wtll be totally
Ohto Department of Natural Forest Service, U.- S
confidenltal.
Department of Agnculture.
Resources (ODNR ).
" If our scl10ols are lo fully
The
federal
Rural
Thts year the Forestry
respond to the educat iOn
Dtvtst on will dtstnbute Development Act authomes needs of out handt capped
$91,710
to
quahf)ing up to 50 percent fundtng to
chtldr e~' he added, "we
depa rtments from fu nds upgrade equtpment in rural nee d to td enttfy them and
ftre departments servmg
determme what educat10nal
commumttes under 10,000 m programs wtll best serve
populatton
thetr needs This survey ts the
The federal matchmg funds crucial hrst step towat d that
Wtlham Carelton of Racme may also be used to asstst end "
ftr e
newly
organ!Zlng
on Thursday.
After
compthng
all
departments
m
paymg
for returned surve y fonnS a
Wtlllam Carelton, Hacme,
and Eunte Bnnker called at ftre equtpment and related commttt ce of school perthe home of Mr. and Mrs. organizauonal costs
sonn el from each dtstr 1ct wtll
According to Ern est mee t to revtcw the tnEarl Johnson ,
Arthur
Patrtck, Sheryl and Betty Gebhart, Chief of the DlVlslon lormallon on chtldren
of Forestry, 188 rural fire
Van Meter on Thursday.
tdent1h ed as potentially
departments
in Ohto have
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Multi
handtcapped and determme
and lamtly of Mansfteld, Ohto received assistance since the whtch chtldren need to l&gt;e
and Dtxie Circle of Cleveland, program was intttated m assessed. Thts mvolves ob0. , spent the weekend at the 1975. Thts mcludes 14 new servmg and test mg the ch1ld
home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer departments organized wtth by spectally tramed school
the help of grant funds
Circle.
staff and then determmtng
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur On of
what type uf educational
Chester, Paul Orr of Bashan
program ts best smt ed for the
were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
chtld , whe th er 1l be mRobert Lee and famtly lor
tegratmg the chtld mto the
Thanksgtvmg dmner on
r egular school cl assroom or
Thursday.
famtly, Mr and Mrs Carl mto regular school act!Vlties
On Saturday evenmg, Nov. Ctrcle and family and a as much as poss tble or
25, the 45th wedding an- friend , Soma White, Long
placmg the child tn spectal
ntversary of Mr. and Mrs. Bottom, Ohio and the honored classes or other program s
Homer
Ctrcle
was guests The btrthday of DlXle
ldentlllcallon of suspected
cel ebrat ed Those present Ctrcle was also celebrated ha ndtcapped cht ldren acwere -'\Verna, Wav1e Ctrcle, and all enjoyed a turkey ttvtues beg an m October and
Mr and Mrs. Royle Mutll and dinner. Happy returns.
will conclude m December
fam1ly of Mansfteld, Ohto,
assess ment
and
Mr. and Mrs. James Ctrcle The
Mr and Mrs. Ketth Ctrcle, St
were at the home of Mary pla ce ment t omponent s
1\lbans, W Va , Mr. and Mrs. Cltcle on Sunday.
follow
Harold Circle and family ,
Mrs Robert Hardm and

Equipment grant available
COLUMBUS - Grants of
up to $4 ,000 are avatlable to
upgrade hre equtpment for
rural ftre departments tn
Ohto through the 1979 Hural
Commumty Fire ProtecUon
Program admintstered b} the

Carmel News, By the Day
Mrs W1lllam Perry and
da'ltghter , Francme Gtbson of
Holland, 0 , spent from
Thursday unUl Sunday of last
week with Mary Ctrcle They
came for the funeral of Mary
Sham Roush.
Those spending Thanksgiving day with Mary Circle
were Mr. and Mrs Melvm
Circle and famtly from
Wichtta, Kansas, Mr. and
Mrs. George C1rcle and
daughter, Cheryl, New
Haven, W. Va ., Carol Carson
of West Columbia, W. Va.,
Mr and Mrs. Donald Pierce
of Athens, Ohto , James
Ctrcle, New Haven, W. Va.
Eunte Brmker was dmner
guest of Mr. and Mrs
pcmJt~s

what 1s CJ\•atlHbl e fo1
people w1lh these dtfheulttes
It certamly wuu ldn t hu rL t o

mnmmze the pr nblem by us·
mg spee1al tnnthpC!stt• that
you euuld be

tam

t~bs ohrtt·l~

eel-

t Husc a ny
or dlffl l'Ultleo

wuuldn 'l

S) mploms

Legislature
at a glance

Berry's World

" The dream started out wrth Teddy Kennedy
chasmg me. then rt turned into a NIGHTMARE with ME chasing HIM "
~

va t wus purges, most notably present Deputy Prime
Muuste r 1\ mg Hs tao-pmg, and th e ('omplete reversal of the
Ma o's 1solatwmst pohctcs 1n fav or of today' s enthus iastic
pohllca l and economic rapprochem ent wtth the capitalis t

•
not so muc h the d tvestmg of some of

The sut pnsc 1~
Mao 's d1 vmc s ta tus - a uthorttana n r egun ~s as well
de mocracJCs arP prone to postmorte m s on leader ship -

COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
glance at activtty Wednesday
m the Ohto General
Assembly
SENATE
Bills Passed
Sub SB 545: Carney . Increases pay of legislators,
elected state offtcials, county
auditors and county comm!Sswners 17-16. (Lt . Gov
Celeste voted In affii'ITlattve.)
Am HB 847 McEwen Authonzes th purchase of
liabthty
msurance
by
chtldren services boards and
by county conumsswners on
behalf of county welfare
departments 3Z.O.
Am Sub HB 998: Baumann.
Delays until Jan . I, 1980, the
implementation of staggered
auto registration system. 311.
Conference Commlllee
Report Agreed To
Am Sub HB 835 Hartley.
Provides remedies and
procedures in case of abuse of
adults and children by a
person who restdes with the.

J

32-!1.

HOUSE
Bills Introduced
HB 13~ R. Hughes. Con-

a

but that the dtvesta tiOn has come so swiftly.
It wa s three yea rs before Ntkita Khrus hchev took aim at
the departed J osef Stalin. a nd tha t was a secret revelatiOn
to the Soviet leade r s hip It was s ever a l more years befo re
the Sov iE"l public was let m on the a wful truths In Mao's

case, the process has progressed to the next thmg to open
rcpud1a tLon wtthtn little ov e r a year of h1s death
1 he mtcr nal Imphcattons are not entir ely clear. The
ca mpaag n JS belie ved to thre aten m ost directl y a ha ndful of
rad1cals still tn postbon s of power P a rty Chatrma n .and
Pttme MllliSter Hua Kuo-feng, Ma o's nomma l s uccess or,

Artificial
surface

wo uld appca t to de mons tra te the r a p1d consohda twn of
pO\\ Cf by the tenaciOus Tc ng 1 the supertough surv 1vor of
multiple purges and te ha b1htatwns who now sees his own
pragmatic posttwns donunant m Pekmg pulley The

being used

may hnmelf be m the lm e of cnttcal f1r c. Above all , 1t

dernythologtzmg of Mao IS thu:; cl earl y a pa rt of Pekmg 's
openmg up to the world
There lS undoubtedly much st1ll to be wntten 111 the
current Pekmg s tory But e ven at th1 s pomt the re's a lesson
of sorts to be drawn from rt If tt ':; tr ue that you can't take 1l
w1th yo u, tt's also true tha t you ca n' t cont rol wha t you

leave behmd, pa rticularly your owr. reputati on
. In hts eventual JUd gmg by postenty , tl ava1ls a great
man httle to have butlt pyrarmds to hunself, even of the
tdeologJcal vari et y

The beat goes oriental
Chma 's leaders may be tnterested m a lot of thmgs
Western these da ys, but they sllll draw the lme a t one point
- r ock m ustc

8

A report from Pektng notes a recent press attack on rock
whic h m ay or m ay not be conn ected w1th th e r etu rn to
offiCial fa vor of danc mg at Chmcse s oda I ga ther tngs

Wtth out dtrectly conunentlng on the beat

C hm e~e

dancers m tght be m ovmg to - the attack was ostenstbly on

scandalous gomgs-&lt;&gt;n m Sovtel mght spots - a youth
newspaper denounced this " strange and crazed music"
whi ch 1t sa w as not only contrary to a ll worthtle values of
'hard work (a nd ) noble character " but conducive to
· ''drunkeness , brawling , outrage at decent mor als a nd

crunes like theft ... "
The words could have been taken 11ght out of the mouths
of multttudes of Western pa rents
And look where tl got them .

1

••

«) 19:78 by NEA. Inc

'

As Chm a wa tche r s see tt . the crttlc ts m amo unts to a n
uuhctment of th e e nt ire Cultura l Revol utwn, t hat convulSIVe cffott of the late 1960s to cl eanse Chma of foreig n
mflucnces an d bootstrap economiC development through
relia nce on Its• own hum,\n a nd cultural r esources Since
th e Cult ur a l Rt·volutwn was the cha irma n's parti cular
ba by, 1l 1~ also a delibe rate move to downg r a de Mao

West

Peopletalk
By KENNEm R. CLARK
United Press International
GOODBYE RHODA: Valerie Harper has been playmg
" Hhod:f' for so long her fans are startmg to call het· by that
name offstage - so alter thts season, she'll be Rhoda no more .
MISs Hat per, who broke in the character nine years ago as
Mary Tyler Moure's shghtly daft netghbor on the "Mary Tyle1·
Moore Show," then spun it off in a CBS-TV vehi cle of her own
announced the show 's demise Wednesday m Montreal durmg
an impromptu question-and-answer period with the Young
Men 's Hebrew Assoctalion. Says she, "!loved the ser1es, bul l
want to move on now to ot her things." She says the last
segment has been filmed, and no - Brenda doesn't get
marrted

CAR STARS : Mike Nichols 1s no stranger to dram a - he's
produced such hlms as " Carnal Knowlege " "Tire Graduate "
and "Who 's Afraid of Vll'g.ma Woolf'/"- but he never ftgur~
on his car st arrmg m one. New York holdup men wtlh obviously expens1ve tastes swtped hts $28,000 gray Mercedes-Benz
fr om the Carlyle Hotel garage m Mahhattan Tuesday drove 1t
into a serVIce station, and held up the attendant 'Passmg
pohce, al U'acted by the flashy car, broke up the caper.

SO mERE, CUPCAKE: Ann Landers said tt couldn't be
ltrms
la ke
lands
done
, and ~at was all Eugene Jerome Dupuis needed. Wtfe
admm1strator agreements m
Katherine
JUSt gave bll'th to another baby, so now Duputs has
F'arrfteld County.
three
boys
and three girls - all named ~u gene Jerome
HB 1380 R. Hughes ConDuputs,
and
numbered one through stx Says the proud father
11 rms
lake
lands
adrmmstrator agreements m "! love me." Dupuis - a Tampa, Fla., evangehst - says 11 ali
began when Ann Landers advised a reader there could be
Perry County
"only one 1un1or per papa" in a famtly . Dupuis set out to prove
her
wrong Says a chastened Miss Landers "Tell him he can
Bills Passed
have
stx apologies, but tell him if the ne~t one 's a gtrl he
Am Sub SB 266 · Meshel.
should
call 1t Ann Landers. Better yet, if it 's a boy , call tum
Revi ses solid waste dtsposal
Ann
Landers.
That 'll create oome excttement."
laws 87-3
Am
SB 419: Stano ._
LORD OF FLIES: Dog tramers, hon tramers - even
Increase s hunting and fishmg
trainers are household Items aroWid Hollywood
elephant
lees. 74-16.
movte
sets,
but a fly trainer? That's Jim Danaldsoo's title on
SB 476 . Nabakowskt.
the
staff
list
for American International's new psycho-ghoster
Changes membershtp of Ohio
Htstonc Site Preserva tion "The Amityville Ho~ror " He 's in charge of educating a stable
of about 10,000 ordmary black houseflies essential to flesh
Advioory Board. 74-14.
crawling m the new flick. He says he'll really need only about
5,000 of tbe ltt~e creepers. The rest? They're understudies _
Conference Committee
JUSt
m case !hell' collegues blow their lines or buzz off.
Report Agreed To
Sub HB 835 . Hartley Provtdes
remedies
and - GLIMPS~: Harry Belalvote ··· '" appear Sunday at
procedures in case of abuse of Washmgton s Kennedy Center at a "de •''"" " honormg
adults and children by a Marian AnderSiln, Fred Aotalre, George Balancl.ut• , Richard
person who restdes wtlh Rudgers and Artur Rubiostein ... Lee Strasberg will play AI
Pacmu's grandfather m Columbia's " ... And Justice for All"
them. 78-11.
now bemg filmed m Baltimore, Md ... Walter Matthau w\U ho.!t
Bills Defeated
Sub HB 1351 Begala NBC-TV's "Satuplay Night Life" on Dec. 2 ... Arthur Ashe and
Grants university law Cheryl Tiegs wtU mak_e appearances Dec. 10 at the fourth
e nf or c ement offic e rs annual Arthur Ashe Umted Negro College Fund temts benefit
additional powers of arrest at Madtson Square Garden ... John Updike promoting his new
•48-42
( Failed to get ~ovel "The ~up'," wlll tape a segment f~r Ute "Dick Cavett
Show," tor atrmg Dec. 14-15...
, majority. )

.,

I

Hardm~

Peterson satd he was
"disappomted" that Rose has
dectded to delay making a
deCISIOn .
" I c~ undermand wh y/'
Peterson satd " It's lUst that
teams mterested m Hose
can't go m too many (trade )
directions unttl he dectdes "

'

shtp " Wall posters , that umquely Chmese contnbullon to
llon w1th the dtsg raced Ga ng of Four ' '

listed several teams he would
like to join and the Pirates
were not among them .
Rose ha:; recetved several
offers from clubs m recent
days and he satd he won't be
able to stgn by Dec . 5, his selfliiiposed deadline
Pirate General Manager

Pitt Panthers defeat

'

ht s Cultural Revolutton ha s been a ttacked as hav1ng been,

11 H' IHI , oo sl11•1;ld help htm to
rcdllll' th.tl lw 1~ one and en·

ed for a long !llne I am
womlermg If thts could be
&lt; ou1 ,tgt· lm n tu seek p1 ufes- da nge rous to thetr health
: 1111\, d
help There are H along wtlh betn ~ uncomforl ltuJJ!Jl 1 11f Ol gd lllZ,I tiOIIS, In·
table' Alou. do they gel used
i-lndlng
Al&lt;.: ullu iH; s to 11 so tt duesn 'l hurt?
, \ nttll'.llltiU'i . tlut co uld help
DF:AR READE R- I'm nul
111111 .rnd h' IH·H· me . he needs s ur t' why It burned when ~~ uu
1' lp
swall uwed the toothpaste as
\ nd ~ ou c11 l' probably n ght , not eve ryone ex pertcnu's
.11 If a st. about lnm ha vmg
lhts You rmght be s urpn sc~l
In,., d! st a ~e ft 's one of the to know that the a strone~ ut s
~.~.: n on s tlH n pl! cat l on ~ from
swalluwed thetr toothpaste
.Jlcohol Cu rhos1s of lhe li ver durtn g space fhghl It was
1:.. ,i c ol 11111011 cause of death m
plann ed thai wa y; the
!111• Amencan populatwn m toothp aste was spectall y
bbth men and women, &lt;Jml 60 prepa1·ed
percent of lhe:;e dca!l" from
The dtfference was t hat the
('II rhos1s uf tl1c !J ve1 ai c tCt us- fla vor otis were token out of
ctl from l.tl t·ohol
tl The flavor m toothpa:;te 10
To g1vc you more mform t~ · really due to mlo and these
t1on al&gt;out what alcohol rea lly at e sometimes a httle luugl)
docs to the body ' I mn sen- on the dtgesll ve sy:;lem Condmg you The Health Letter sJdenng the problems ) ou
n u m b er
1 ~4.
i\lcohu l~
mt ght hH ve m pC:t llent &lt;.: a! e , 1l
WhiSkey , Gn1, Vodka , Rum . trught be a good tdea to conWme and Bee r Othet· readcrs tact Ni\Si\ and :;ee If you can
\\ tlu wmtl tim; i s~ue cart send ftnd out f1om them th••
50 cents with ::1\ ong, stamped. avatlab1l1ty of tire type of
self·:HJdre"Sed envelope fut· toothpaste used by till'
1t St ml your request to me 111 astronauts
em (• of tlmJ ilC\\ Spa per, P.O
And it 1111ght be a g ooflu kr~
Box 1551, Had to Ctll Statton. for ))CJ'SOIIJH' \ I CSpUfl !-;I!JJt !11!
Nm1 York, NY 10019
pt'Hplc 111 mstltutit~nd l ~ 1t ua ·
lll't ,msc ur th e 2 ·;uctatiOil t1nn:s lt• fmd nut frurn the
va l Juu :-: t l~•t llpe1s tt • 'um·
Of eil 'UhOI Wllh hvt 11 {IJ"l'dS t'

been a legend m hts own ttme,

m fact , 'a react tona r y ~ i gna lt o practn:e fasctst d tctator-

nen~ r

toothpa ste
I lncd t his once and It burll·

~

- ••
-. '·
....
-

somet hing less t han lllcologtca lly tnfa Jhble A work by a :::
rad i c~\J wnter once pra 1sed by Mao a s the ms t:uratton (or . '

&lt;.:hrumc liver tllsea.se have

hod a dr op of Hk uholl n
their entire life Ho\\ ever , the
60 pcrcenl of the dea ths from
Cll'l'ilOSIS of the ill cr used b1
alcohol are preveutabl c stmp1) by a1ollhng the excess u:;e
of ak uhul
DP.AH DR 1.1\MB -I work
m a sta te tnslltutwn for me n·
lalil 1etarded people All of
these res1denlo brush tl1e11
teeth lwo or three t11nes a da y
and a1ipru&lt;Hnately 90 percent
of !hem s wa ll ow the

hHve

People' s Chma ts the mcreastngly bold cnllctsm of the la te
pa rty cha trma n .and font of revolutiOn a ry truth It rs now
bethg suggesteU m 1he off1ctul press that Mao was

\ llll ough pu bhc reaction to Pres tdent Carter 's anti·
mtl ,i t!On program has been generally posabve, recent polls

liHhc.l tc wtdesprcad skepttcism about the effecttveness of
tht&gt; meas ures un rle rta ken by the admtmstratton .
An NBC-1\ssoctated Press survey conducted Nov 13-14
~l fi('r Ca rter had unve iled hts program, showed 54 perceni
of tllos c questioned expect the economy to get wOrse over
lilt' m·&lt;t yea r, compared w1th 45 percent who felt that way

~

but the way thmgs are go1ng t hat legenda ry sta tus may not

SEO schools near completion

Su rve yed skepticism

~

~

outlast by m uch h1s own de m1se
~'
One of the m or e mterestmg developments of la te

llut Ht pub lll ,l!l&lt;i :-;mel! blood For the ftrs t hme tn more
l1l 3r1 .!t) \ Cd!-. the~ s ee a n opportunity to setz e control of
th t '.., l. l 1 o~t t· Ht lht n£&gt;ar tuture A' net ga m of 10 seats would
d1 1 tt11.. ltH k .~nd O\ r r ttle next t"' o el ecuons the Dem ocrats
\~ill h.1\ t.: to dd end -\5 seats to 22 for the GOP
I lt'u ambi tiOus GO P senators are scrambling to get
, Lh CI.J r d i he k I(Jcrs hlp ladde r m hopes that 1t will count for
c;.~ ll it'thtn~ t\'&gt;~ ' to fo ur ) Cars from no" The LOntestants, as
ol t1x.Ln ,u c l1kch t o be
ron~ t"l \&lt;HI\ f..· Ha rn son Schrrutt, New Mex1co, challengln~ Ill~ n mbl·nt l~ O P Wh1p Ted Stevens of Alaska , liberal
.J ohn ( l •rt nfurt h of Mtssourt cha1leng mg conservative
PulH ' t Ol nlnl ttc c Cha irman John Towe r of Tex:as; liberal
Hl1 h.• r·t Pa(k \\o()d of Oregon versus conse rvative James
The tdenttficatlOn e!!ort,
ATHENS - All school
\T , (' lure uf Ida ho for Confe rence Cha 1nnan , hberal John
requll'ed
by the 1975 federal
II ( h. dee of Hl1ode Is land vers us conserva tive Jake Garn dtstncts m Southeastern Ohto
1 The Education For All
law
'
are
nearmg
the
completion
of
of Ut.Jt1 for Confe re nce Secretary, and liberal John Heinz
Ti l nf Pe rm -;yl\'a nt a versus cons ervat ive Ornn Hatch of their massive effort to Handtcapped Children Act" ,
ULt h fo1 GO P Senatonal Can1pa1g n Conuruttee .
tdenllfy all handicapped is the ftrst of a three-aprt

li e sllll pla 115 to st1 ck close to Washtngton unttl he has
won the mmonty leadershtp post agam , and will probably
'' dl t tntlll summe r to dectde on a 1980 bid

'.

' ~

S~r..llt'

Ila rnpc;hrre or e lse v. her e unttl he won r e-€1ectiOn to the
Scn.lte lhts yea r

...
••

•'

Mao Tsc ·tung may

h:,nll'rst up- posts for th r next sess wn
\luwnb ! ~a&lt;kr HO\lard H Baker Jr , R· Te nn , has no
Lll .tl kn ~e r r~ t th1s point a nd damlS to hav e se wed up
( \lii1!1 Utme nts fr nm e nough of the 41 GOP m e mbers to
a ~s un • his re-clclliOil to t he t op JOb
But lw. lt ed Loutl' sls fq1 h \.e other leadenihtp positions
ilPJh'.Jr t1 1 be s h o~p m g up be tween se na tors occ up)mg
oppoqtt: \\ITJgs vf thl GO P Ideolog ical s pect rum , w1th
mo&lt;it'rd tt•s &lt;n ught In t he mtddl e
U1 dlrl.lllh. the s ta kes " ouldn 't s eem "orth the strugt:::le
,\ p.u t frorn lhL· mlnorlt) lea de r , who does have a mochc um
of J HI\~ l'r . ( I{) J&gt; Iedden:&gt; get httle ror thetr titles ex cept the
L'l 1 111~ t' to .t llend b1par tisan m eetm gs a t the Whtte House
Th · rn 'JO I IL ' De motT .-t l~ . who seem qu1te content w1th
thi•tr CI H'rt' nt k ~ • d e r s hlp control t he real powe r tn the

tnp to New Ha mps hire on Dec 1 to help newly elected GOP
Gordon Humphrey ratse funds to pay off a campatgn
debt llon ald Reagan and Gerald Ford were both mvtted
but dt·c hm•d the opportumty
•'
Ba ker 1s openly we tghmg a 1980 prestdenhal btd, but
• 011ld_not u11de1ta ke any extenstv e base-butldlf!g m New

~fl

.' -....
..

By Don Graff

Repubhcans are
over nunont}

s,,,

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Pete , off er.
Rose, former AU-Star Uttrd · "I know Pittsburgh wasn 't
baseman for the Cincinnati' on my ong.nal hst, " sat~
Reds, met wtth John and Dan Hose, "but after talking to the
Galbreath , owners of the Galbreallis, I have to change
Pi t tsburgh Ptrates, mymind."
Wednesday at Darby Dan
When Rose ftrst indicated
Farm and satd he was he would break wtth the Reds
interested m what they had to and become a free agent, he

~

..
'
:-;..

Sic transit gloria Mao

• :olEA I - Although the 96th Congress

\ 11/lon ty I e~: d e r Ba ker, tnctdentally, w1ll make his fu·st

''
• •

~

Hy Ma rthn Anglt· und Rubt-rt Walters

Ba ker hangs fire

~

·~

D1onald F. Graff

GOP senators sense blood
\\ o ll' t L'O nvrnt• unttl nud · Ja nu ar~, Senate
~th L'dd,!
lnck etl 1n fu n ous s k1nn1s hes

-

COMMENTARY

~:I{Mt:;
\ [ ~

II \~ HI Ntd6:-.

...

•

CLEVELAND (UPI ) The Cleveland Browns will
practice this week on the
artifictal turf at BaldwmWallace College 's Fmme
Stadtum, unless there ts a
dramaltc change for the
worse from the normally
blustery late fall weallier in
northeastern Ohto.
Finnte Stadtum ts located
nght next to the club's
natural turf trammg stte and
headquarters on the BaldwinWallace campus, m suburban
Berea.
Browns Coach Sam Rutighano satd be has made
alternate arrangements to
use the Oberlin College
Fteldhouse, should the area
be hit by a substantial
snowfall before the season
ends.
The Browns wtll have the
luxury of playing thts Sunda y
in a dry, cozy domed
stadium, the Kingdome, m
'Seattle. Crowd noise in
domed stadiums oometimes
can present a problem for
vistting teams, but Rutigliano
said he's not concerned
"Sometliiie the crowd rioise
ts good. It makes the
adrenalin flow It 's been
awfully quiet at lliiies when
we've been losmg here m our
stadium," he added .

Rio Redmen, 107-82
WHEELING, W. Va. Sophomore Sam Clancy and
JUnior college transfer
Sammie Elliscombmed for 55
pomts Wednesday mght to
lead the Universl!y of Putsburgh to a 107~2 victory over
Hio Grande m the Panthers'
basketball season opener.
Clancy, 6-foot-ll, scored his
29 pomts and hauled .down 18
rebounds before leaving the
game for good wtth 5:44
remaining . Eilts had 26
Seniors Wayne Williams
and Terry Kmght added 15
and 14 pomts, respectively, as

the Panthers u&lt;Orl oil 15 guards and one forward.
players who made the trtp to
Desptt e t he hetghl adthe neutral court of the vantage, Rto Grande was
Wheelmg CIVIC Center for a able to take a~ 8-3 lead, and
special double header
then after the Panthers began
In the opening game , htttmg lhetr shots, was stlll
Wheelmg subdued Malone's able to remam close wllh
Pioneers 92.,114
outside shots and speed, until
Rto Grande, 2-2, had three the fmal mmute of the first
players in double figures : half
Dan Purcell, wtth 22, Mark
Then the poundin g the
S\\atn, with 20, and Dale Redmen were takmg on the
Royse, with II
boards began to take tis toll
Pttt's startmg hneup and Pttt \\ Cnt tnto the locker
averaged about six inches room, leadmg 57-10 Pttt had
taller per man over the outreboWided the Redmen ,
RerlmPn

whn

lid :.~rteci

The Panthers JUSt kept
butldmg on thetr lead m the
second half, ~omg ah ead by
as many a:; 35 pomts, 90-U5,
before Pttt coach Tom
Grgey ch began substltutmg
freely.
The Hedmen also cleared
lhetr bench as 11 became
obv10us the game wa s lost
Rto Grande conn ected on 35
of 67 held goal attempts for 52
percent. From the foul hne
the Redmen canned 12 of 18
for 66 percent Pttt sank 48 of
99 held goal attempts and 11
of 17 free throws.
The Panthers pulled down
68 rebounds, had 23 personals, 24 asststs, 21 turnovers and 10 :;teals, nut to
ment10n four blocked shots.
Hto had I~ rebounds, stx by
money generated will be used Tom Dorsey, 10 asststs and 16
to finance the safety courses turnovei s.
and preserve wtldlile in Ohio
The Redmen are scheduled
"Thts btll has the support of to take pa rt m thts weekend's
almost all sportsmen groups Wtlllamsburg Opt untst Tipm Ohio ," Boggs satd , Off Tournament m Cum"because they realtze the berland, Ky
growth in tile state threatens
Hlo Grande wtll fa ce
our wildhfe and the lincoln Memortal Umvcrs1ly
Department of Na tural m the fir st game at 7 p m. on
Resources needs the money Frtday Other teams takmg
to ftghl Utat problem."
part are Cumberland and
Rep . Eugene Branstool, D- Ttffln Umverstty
Uttca, opposed the btll,
Here's Wednesday':; box
saymg, "I fear the mcreased
score
lees wtll encourage more
people to hunt wtthout a
RIO GRANDE (821 -

four

Hunting bill approved
COLUMBUS (UPI 1- A bill
raising the fees for huntmg,
trapping and fishmg hcenses
m Ohio and requirmg flrstlliiie hunters and trappers to
take a safety educallon
course passed the Ohio House
74-16 Wednesd.ay and was
sent back to the Senate for
concurrence

m amendments

The btU aloo changes state
law to reqwre trappers to buy
an annual trapping license, in
addtllon to hunting licenses.
The House deleted a
provtswn allowtng lor the
purchase of a special l&lt;klay
f1shmg hcense and defeated
an amendment that would
have provided for a 14~ay
hunting hcense at a reduced
fee.
Under proVIsions of the bill,
hunters and trappers who
apply for a license after Sept.
I, 1979, must present a
preVIously held hccnse, or
evtdence of havmg such a
license, or a certlfJCate tssued

upon completiOn of a hunter
safety course
The btll requires the
Department of Natural
Wildlife to establish the sixhour
safety
courses
throughout the state. The
courses wtll be fmanced
through the increased fees,
which are expected to brmg
in about $3 million a year.
The bill also requtres
persons Wider 65 years of age

who "ant to trap to purchase
a trapping permtt m addilton
to a huntmg hcense . Current
law reqwres only a smgle
hunting ltcense.
The btll retams the
provtston allowmg peroons
over 65 to obtam hcenses free
of charge
The btU will • mcrease the
fee for a huntmg hcense to $7
from $4 and adds a trappmg
hcense at a fee of $5 A hshmg
license w11l aloo go up to $7
from $4
Rep Robert Boggs, DJefferson, said fees have not
been ratsed since 1967 and the

Beng{Jls facing
Atlanta Sunday
CINCINNATI (UP! )- The " compelltwn "The last stx of
stumbling Cincmnati Beugals seven games have been
gel no letup this week, when agamst that type of competlplayoff mmded Atlanta t10n "
comes to town.
The Falcons, 8-5, are
For the 1-12 Bengals, 11 will motivated by hopes of
mark the seventh battle wtlli makmg the playoffs as a wild
a playoff contender m nme card for the fll'st tliiie m the
weeks, a posttton coach club's 13-year htstory
Homer Rtce is feehng
For Rtce and the "Bad
accustomed w.
News
Bengals,"
the
"This ts the only type of mollvallon is qwte different.
team we know anything
"We want to ftlllsh as
about," satd Rice, referring

strong as we can," satd Rice,

to ·

faced wtth posstbly the worst
record m Bengal history .
"We want to wm "
Cmcmnah runnmg back
Archie Grtffin probably will
ftnd htmself sharing the
rushmg duties again Sunday,
a situation he adrmts he tsn't
happy wtth but is learning to
accept.
"I really don 't like 1t," said
Griffin, " but that's the way
tl's gomg to be, I guess."

the

playott-callber

Season for
Sweaters

w
w
w
w
w
w
w
w Set your thermostat for 65°,

~

w
~

i

pull on a sweate r and you'll

If these don 't take the ch1ll out
of winter, we don't know what
will! Take your ptck of styles,
colors

~~----~------~~

i
i

FAMOUS BRAND NAMES

I·* JANTZEN
~*PURITAN

I *McGREGOR
~- *PENDLETON
I PRICED FROM $16 TO $45
i
••

we re no spec1£ic money

ftgures diScussed Wednesday
"We d1dn 't put any dollar
stgns or pencil mar ks on the
tabl e," Satd Galbreath. "We
talked about the type of team
Pittsburgh ts and whether 1t's
a home he can be happy
With '
Rose, a 14-yeur veteran
who will be 38m Apnl , was to
meet today in Pluladelphta
with offtctal:; of the Phtlhes
and hts agent, Reuven Katz
Rose met wtth offtctals of
the Atlanta Braves, Kansas
City Royals and St Louts
Cardinals earher thts week
He plans to meet wtth the
New York Mets Frtday
Speakmg of the offers, Rose
satd , "It 's amazmg All that
work , dedical\on and shding
head first ts paymg off '
Rose would not d10cu:;s the
exact fJ.8 ure s "They' t e all so
good," he satd .

Radio offer
given Sparky
CIN CINNATI I UP i J Sparky Anderson , bred 1 uesday a s manager of th e
Cmcmnalt Reds, has been
offered the sports direct01 JOb
at

a

Cm cmnall

l ad! o

stat10n.
Larry Ktrby, general
manager of WSAI, sent
Anderson
a
te leg ram
Wednesday wtth a "hrm
offer" of the sports director
JOb
Anderson , who led the Reds
to two world champtonshtps,
mdtcatcd Tuesday he had
made no dectsmns about his

future

12 POINTEH TAKEN - John Stobart, Racme, bagged
his 12th deer tn as man) seaoons, Monday m the Hacme
area The deer had 12\arge,pomts and 8 small ones
WESTBUHY , N Y 1UPI)
-

Ro osevelt

Racewa}

1s

offe nng 'Dollar Ntght" Dec

recct ve a hot dog and soda for
$1 that mght

5 Grandstand admtss1on and

grandstand parkmg has been
reduced to $1 for the n1ght
Clubhouse admtsston wtll d1p
to $2 for that evenmg
All paymg customers also
wJII be gtven a couJxm to

WHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
C'ARPET

RECAPPED
OR

REG.
SNOW
TIRES

LEANING

IN

Get profess ional
results at a
frac t1on of the cost.

STOCK

BUY
NOW1

LEBANON RESUL1S
LEBANON , Ohto t UP I) Amenca·s No 1
Starnuglit M beat Bretter )Home Carper
Best
by
one
length C!eamng
Wednesday mght to wtn the System
$1,100 featur e pace at
Lebanon Raceway
Starmtght M covered th~ ·-- --- -- - - - ----mtle m 2: 05 1-5 to r eturn $5 .80 ,
$3.80 and $2.60. Pearl 's Son 1111
PERHOUR
came m Uurd .

Norton She Got and Slash S
Sarah won the f1 rst two r aces

for a 5-7 da tly double that was
worth $53 40
The 1,075 fa ns bel
$101,308.

BEFORE
IT
SNOWS!

11811$,00
--- -------- ---STAR ·SUPPlY CO.

.,

I4H0UR-

949-2525
0

R~cme,

and

building materials
11

GETS FIRST DEER- Bret Alan Korn, age II , son of
Mr and Mrs George Korn Jr , Wright Street, Pomeroy .
shot his ftrst deer Monday. The 100 pound doe was shot m
tile Flatwoods area

PRICED RIGHT"

PUIIll'IOY, 0 1\111
1

N.ttl unal t~ th•e rt l :ol n ~ IL'JII t~U L ·
La tttlnn A ssuti H I~s 1101
F:ut htl "' t· ('IL''&gt;'t ltt ntl . Oh1o ~ 4 1 I)
1&lt;1\1 \'~

/'lu l!stl l j &gt;LIUI\ laW~ Ot• h \~ ll'tiiJ)
L&lt;l ll WI v. Wi t' avw\ ,tblt i5 uo tlt " pt:r

\A&lt;'tk

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POMEROY, 0.

liJ

fl v M utlll Buult

wl1c1t

t ttllltr

'i tl \ 11 1' n u l a ~ a 1 h1bl c Oill l lll lll\1\.
$.1 !&lt;.~ Hv m.ul 111 Oh111 uul W, V.t ,

Ollt Yt•H I $:.!1 Ot1 Sa tnunlh"
$\I 5tl
r lnL't uln lt th .. $i IIUt
I ' IM" I1t1 1 S:.1h lkl I I HI ~IS lllHI\1\ H&gt;
:j;] li!il
! llltt
lll il\\11 ~
$ i J~
~UIJ S( II JII I&lt;•I I p• 1\ 1 11 11 hto\o ~ ~IIIH I&lt;I}

CASH &amp; CARRY
PRICES

WE
DELIVER

.... \
-------·1
r ·------ 7N#-vaiui
~+ • • t •

1969
Dodge Dart•••..•• s495
V-B, aut .
1973 Ambassador 4 Dr. s295
CLIFTON
AUTO SALES
Located on W. Va. Side o&lt; Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge ( 304) 773-5777

runt'"-.'' • • , , 1

··.

ECONOMY GR ,\OE

EACH

MEIGS·MASON ARE~

ROBERT HOEFLICH
CU) Edllur
P ullh!,hed ' J E~ Il v l'Xt.:ept &amp;\turt!oil )
lJ) The Oh1u Val!ry Pubhsl u n ~::
C:umJ&gt;ll ny Mul!unctlla, In&lt;: ,
IIi
Court St. , Pm nt&gt;roy, Ohm 457691
BU!;II\uss Ofll u. Phone !l!l:l· 2156
f.1 li\1H till Phu llt' !19"2·215i
~t't ttntl t.lu:;s pm;\,!J.!l' ~u It \ ,lt

2~'x4"x8'

ONLY

THF. DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

II
II NEW YORK·CLOTHING HOUSE
i 126 E. MAIN

Purcell, 9 4 22, Dor se y 2 1 5,
Phelps, 3 0 6, Royse, 43- 11,
McCormiC k, 0 4 4, Da vena, 1
0 2, Cla rk , 2 0 4 TOTALS 35
1282
PITTSBURGH 11071 Clancy, 13 3 29 Olmger, 3 0
6, Kntgh t, 6·2 14 , W1111 ams, 7
1 15 ,
E lli S,
11 4 26 ,
St n c kla nd , 2.0 4 , Never so n,
3 I I . E .Wall ace, I 0 2, D
0 0 0,
G1 sse n
Wa lla ce,
damn er , 0 0 0, Gr evey, 1·0 2.
Gord on, 0 0 0. F1l zgeral d, 1 o
2, Lendy, 0 aD , Un der wood,
000 TOTALS 8811-107
Halftime Pllt 57 R1o
Grande 40
Attendance - 1,700

John Ga lbreat h 10 board
chmrman of the Pirates and
hts son, ' Dan, is club
president. Dan satd there

" I never know tf I 'm
playmg or not," satd Griffm.
"I don't expect them to tell
me anymore . I Just try to stay
warm and keep m the game
(mentally 1 oo when they call
on me I'll Ire able to do the
best I can."
Although
Grifftn
emphastzed he 1S not ' 'bitter ,' 1
he added, "I just could never
be happy sitting on the bench.
Anybody who is, has got
something wrong with him."
Griffm used to be a regular,
but a couple of reaoons - a
sore toe that slightly
hampered his runrung and
Rice's fondness for jugglmg
his startmg backheld
altgnments -have relegated
_him to 11Spot" work.
Even Utough he doesn't like
the relief role, Griffin has
been pretty effective cbmlng
off the bench.

w
w never know 1t's cold outs1de .
w
w

Swa1n , 10 0 20 , B1 se. 4·0 8

license "

F""'mr:B;&lt;I!Ii:j
~~~'
~----------------~

I

34-6, tn the openmg stanza

J

"

I VALLEY LUMBER &amp; I
I SUPPLY
I
I CORPORATION I
923 S 3rd Ave .
Middleport , 0 .
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open : 7:00 to 5 Mon. thru Fri .
\
7:00to 3:00 Saturday

L----··- --·-·- --------"

�'

._,.. .

5--The [)aily Setititwl. Muhllt'}lUI"t -Pttmt•ruy, () .. Thursc.l ; t .~ · . :"t•\ . :111. i ~l;tt
4- The Daily Sentuwl . Muldh•poJ"t-Ponwn•y. 0 .. TIHII':-itla y. N( 1\' . :til . 1~1 ; 11

•
;..t'l'd(·d. I ,·up lllllli&lt;Jtlln'
lll&lt;ll'.'i h111&lt;illt J\\'S , ::: c up dwp·
&lt;til d

Pirates have good size, speed

,W.·d w;tl nuL"&lt;. ::: l'liP .o.;;d;td
dn·s~ 111 g.

Wlpt•t·kd

With ttJree retuming lettermen, good speed, good

scrimmage this evening at •&gt;schedule:
North Gallia.
PIRATE SCHEDULE
Graduation losses included Dec. 1
At Miller
Portsmouth N.D.
Calvin Minnis, Rex Justice , Dec. 9
. 12
At South Webster
Chlfc)&lt; Phillips, Henry Dec
Dec . IS
At Kyger Creek
Stewart and David Shaw.
Dec . 19
Hannan Trace
The ·Pirates open th ei r Jan. 5
At SouthweStern
South Webster
season Friday night at Miller. Jan . 6
Jan.
9
At Southern
Other non-league opponents Jan. 12
Eastern
include Portsmouth · Notre Ja n. 16
Miller
Qam e, , South r Webster, Ja n. 19
Southwestern
Kyger Creek
Wahama and Eastern of Jan. 23
Ja n. i6
AtWohoma
Pike.
n. 30
At Eastern (Pike)
Here is th e Pirate Ja
Feb. 2
Southern
Feb. 6
At Ea'slern

Lewis, 5-10, junior forward;
Jerry· Stumbo, 5-7, junior
guard and Scott Howell, 6-3

overall size and excellent

bench strength, Nort h
GaU'ia 's Pirates could be. the
team most likely to succeed
the defend ing . champion
Southern Tornadoes if
Southern falters this season.
Return ing lett ermen include Sam Smith, 5~ guard ;
Stacy Winston, 6-2 forward
and Tim McComas, 6-2

sophomore, center.

North Gallia, for the most
part, with play a 2-1-2 zone.
Thus far this season, North
Gallia defeated Southern in
the SVAC Preview, Coal
Grove, Fairland and Federal
Hocking.
The Pirates are scheduled
. to meet Hannan, W.Va. in
center. All are seniors who their
last
pre-season

Serve as tri~aptains for new

Pirates head mentor Ted
.
.
Lehew.
Fisher. Second Row rL-RJ Trevor Cardone, "Robert
·
Lehew, the
school's
McHaffie, Richard Hill, Gre&amp;puvall, Jeff DeLong, Nelson
assistant
foo
tball
coach
and
Morris, Keith Cook, Jason Hill, Troy Ward, Steve Souder,
assistant
basketball
coach
a
NICk Bosl!ck, Zane Beegle, John Porter, Jerry Wolfe
yea
r
ago,
has
been
elevated
(manager). Third Row (Standing, L-R ), Allen Tucker,
to the varsity job due to the
Dave Talbott, '1'im Patterson, Dennis Teaford, Terry
resignation oftwo-year coach
Patterson, Tyrone Brinager, Chris Bostick Tony
,
Ron
Twyman.
Imboden, Rusty Flagg, Mitch Bable, and Co~ch Bill
Others
,vying for starting
Hensler.
positions ar~ Steve Little, 6-1

SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH - The Southern Junior
High footballteam recenUy completed their 1978 schedule
. with a respectable :&gt;-3 record. Southern picked up wins
against Wahama, Kyger Creek and North Gallia. Coach
for Southern this year was Bill Hensler. Team members
were.: Front Row (L-R) Troy Arnott, Wade Connolly,
David Bryant, James Bush, Brian Allen, Robbie Gibbs,
Mark Salser, Richard Dugan, Lee Dill, Rick Sable,
Martin Andrew, Randy Armes, Richard Lyons, Steve

senior, transfer from Eastern

High School; Joe Peck, 6-3
junior center ; Tim Howell, 58 junior guard; Jim Barnes,
6-0, junior forward ; Scott

Philadelphia 76ers rebound
were both sidelined with
By MIKE TUU.Y
UPI Sports Writer
InJUries .
But
Harvey
The Philadelphia 76ers Catchings started instead and
were in an ideal situation helped Philadelphia on the
everything was againSt them. boards with 14 rebounds .
" It seems like we have to
"What can I say about the
be backed into a corner to guy," asked Cunningham.
win ," Sixer Coach Doug "He did everything. A guy
Cunningham said Wednesday comes off the bench like that
night after an overtime 120- ~ that's what it takes to win .
114 victory over the San He was called on and he did
Antonio Spurs. "This was our the job."
best performance in the .' And doing their part too,
second half. The reason we Henry Bibby, who finished
wim was our strong defense with 18 points, and Julius
and the way we moved the Erving, who ~ad· 28, scored
four points each in the final
ball."
1Playing the way they did three minutes of regulation
wasn 't easy, either. Caldwell play to tie the game after San
Jones and Darrell Dawkins Antonio took a !04-96.Iead on

North Carolina
tops Mississippi
-By MIKE TUU.Y
-

George Gervin's jwnper.
Bibby hit a jumpshot and a ·
layup to give the 76ers a 112106lead with 3:17 remaining
in overtime. Erving raised it
to 116-109 with I :35 left.
Philadelphia , led by
Harvey Catchings and Joe
Bryant with 14 rebounds each
and Bobby Jones with 13,
dominated the boards, 61-42.
Gervin, who hit 14-of-16 from
the field, led San Antonio with
35 points. James Silas added
27.
In other games, Indiana
edged New York, 101-99,
Seattle downed New Jersey,
125-111, and Golden State
defeated Houston , 109-94 .
• Pacers 101, Kuicks 99:
James Edwards hit a J().
foot jumper with less than
' two minutes left to put
Indiana ahead for good after
New York had led by 10
earlier in the half . Th e
Pacers have now won three
straight.
Sunlcs 125, Nets 111:
Wally Walker scored S1lven
· of his 19 points during an late
184 streak by the Sonics that
iced the victory .
Warriors 109, Rockets 94:
The Warriors snapped a
three-game losing streak led
by Phil Smith, who scored 23
·points, and John Lucas, who
.had 17 assists.

too much for the yoWJg
players, and the 49ers reeled
UPI Sports Writer
Mississippi Coach Bob off a 1().2 spurt to open the
' Weltlich wasn't very happy · second half, breaking a 36-36
with the performance of hi~ tie and setting ·a tone.
Kevin'King scored 24 points
veterans in the first half
Wednesday night. But the overall and James George
cure turned out to be worse · took charge in the second
half, hitting 10 of UNCC's 16
than the disease.
"The
greatest points over an eight-minute
disappointment was that the stretch as Mississippi scored
players who have been with just 6 points. •
"He was really tight in the
us didn't play the way they
should have , played ," first half, but hung in there ,"
Weltlich said after his team · said UNCC Coach Mike .Pratt
succUmbed to the University of George, who finished with
of North Carolina-Charlotte, 15 points, including 12 in the
68-07. "That's why I went to second halL Chad Kinch
the freshmen in the second added 14.
·Elston Turner led the
half."
Rebels
with 22 poinis, 16 in
The task, however, proved
the first half.
But Pratt in turn praised
his players.
" I think it's a sign of a good
THISTLEDOWN
team
when they shake off
NOKTH KANUALL, Ohio
those
opening-night
jitters. It
(UPI )- Jockey Mike Moran sure wasn't a thin
g of
guided Pretty Catherine to
beauty."
victory in Wednesday 's fea But it was a victory . .
tured eighth race at ThistIn games involving top
ledown.
teams, No. 5 Kansas ripped .
The winner covered the six
Dickinson, 91-63;
furlongs in I : 15 over a muddy Fairleigh
North Carolina pounded
track to pay $6.80, ~.80 and Northw es tern, 97-67 ;
$2.80. Turn A Hand placed
Sy~acuse bounced North
and Spicy Wind showed.
Carolina
A&amp;T , 102-77;
Sassy Miss and Say Diane Alabama clipped
Austin
returned $178.60 on the 3-4 Peay,
83-64
;
Rutgers
daily double, and there were defeated Columbia, 70-63;
380 winning tickets on the 7and Marquette beat Belmont
HI-1 grouping of Full Spin , Abbey, 70-ii6:
Fleet Papoose and Ima Coy in
Elsewhere it was: Oral
the ninth race trilecta - each Roberts over Kansas State,
worth $136.20.
61-&lt;i5; Tulane with an 80-64
Attendance was 3,340 and victory over Sou thern
the handle totaled $405,925.
Methodist, and Purdue 66-&lt;i8
over Xavier .

BOSTON ( UPI ) ~ WITS
radio, the voice of the Boston
Red
Sox,
announced
Wednesda y
ve t eran
sportscaster Ken Coleman
and former Red Sox infielder
Rico Petrocelli will handle
broadcasting duties, for the
first time, for the team next

seasons.

PITTSBURGH (UPI) The Pittsburgh Steelers held
a full workout Wednesday,
normally a day off, to make
up for a practice day lost due
to Monday night's game in
San Francisco.
Running back Franco
Harris, who is suffering from
a pinched shoulder nerve,
was listed as probable for
Sunday's match against the
Houston Oilers. Tight end
Bennie Cunningham, with a
knee injury, and tackle Larry
Brown, who has a sprained
ankle, were listed as
doubtful.

STANDINGS
United Press International

Sag.
8
Flint
8
Pt. Huron 8
Kala .
6
Musk.
3

7
10
12
9
IS

4 20 85 80
2 18 82 81
2 ·18 98 87
4 16 68 87
I
7 49 107

South
W L T Pis GF GA

Ft .

17

Way ne

3 0 34 104 63

13 3 2 28 83 58
8 10 2 18 78 80 AI
7 9 3 17 67 81

Toledo
Milwau.

North
' W l T Pis GF GA

BE A Boor
Sopl-lisricATE

At Hannan Trace

bY'

Wahama

~RISTMAS BAZAAR

December 1 2

Wednesday 's Results

Fort Wayne 7, Po rt Huron 2
To ledo 6, Muskego n 2
Grand Rapids 3, Flint 1
Thursday 's Game
Grand Rapid s at M il waukee
Friday's Games
Mu skegon at Grand Rapids
Port Huron at Flint
Saginaw at Toledo

Meigs County
BEVE~LY DONAHEY, Hock ing County Exltmsi on agent , dcmon!'lrrrtr•cl how tn make not
onl y . ~h~ast:mas t.lecOrati?ns, b~t also edu l'ational , \\'C:Jshable tu.v s for (.' hildrt~n nr every age Ht

Humane Society

the

Across from Dr. Conde in

Middleport.

Hand-made

W&lt;-l s given by Mrs . R('Vl'rl\' Onnaht'\' nt Tut'sdm ·'s " Hint s.

items , house plants, hand
painted lamps , Amish food ,

for the Hol idays ... Ht.•n• Mrs . Lind~! Ft't'l'dl or" S\'r;u · u s~·
~ i vus it a try.
·

Roke at :150 deg r'ccs, 25 to ;lO
POINSETIIA SAI.Ail

2 cups tl ieed unpct&gt;ll•d n•d

apples, I tbsp. lemon juin•. I

TV Game~ Toy~ Science Kits, Mort··

cup

sliced

celer y,

1

l' Uj)

grapes Ired or green t hal ved
Luxur ious leathers, d elicate stitch

detailing, seM y heels. Aud itions boots
have quality, sty ling and comfort. You
ca n wear them as you li ket-scar'o'es
and shawls- tai lore'd outfit s, they all

Easier l

The ShacK Makes Santa's

look

All Items Shown are Featured on National TV... Hurry for Best Selection

great with the new boot creatiolis

by Auditions. Select yours now and be
fa shionably ahead .

JUMPER

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by Radio

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w

MRS.

BUCKLES~
PlAN W
w

Open 9-S Mon ., Tues., Sat.
Friday night tiiB p.rn .

Buy now and SAVE! In etudes photo·electnc pistol .
remote control, vanable bai l
s peed and much more . Req .
6 " AA " batts. or AC adapter.
60·3061

~g

1&lt;:&lt;1'&lt;:&lt;""""""""""1!6

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it

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Reg .

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Hand . held remote
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ball speed. auto ·
mat 1c / manua l se rv&gt;ng and bounce
angle Req 6 ·· AA ..
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· TO

0PENFRIDAYTIL8 :00P .M.

ESTHER

Homemakers' Club , t his vea r celebnHing it:-; :-;iln· r i-111niversary, tlispiHyed crafl it l'llls madt• cit dub tnt'l'ling :-;
for the holidi:lys. Dei'Ul'ated hurricmH· lcunps. wa ll lwngings, a.ml wreaths were irH'huled .

i

A. .... "" llOI"" = £&lt;::&lt;1"' ... ""' "" ............ !'&lt;:&lt;~~:~: llOII'I

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

0

~

SWEATERS
Values

White Terrter 12-977

Radios Inside

.

Raccoon 12· 971

"COMPUTER-CAM" CONTROL
TOY CAR AND TRUCKS

499

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Black Poodle 12·980

ev b11t. Eat:h

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Big-Rig Truck

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Space Patrol® by An;: her (I;
Micro Sp•ct ~ltrol

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Control Direction

,,

"FIRE CHIEF" TOY HELMET
ELECTRONIC FOR EXTRA FUN
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29!~ 8

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Fire Engine

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SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY ... MOST STORES OPEN lATE NIGHTS "Tit CHiiiiSTMAS

Most stores open Sunday afternoon til Christmas

R-lrot Z ' 'C" ,_,,,

Most 1tems '

;; '

''"•:~:;·;~::.'
Oe1le's

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
A OIVJSION OF TANOY CO RPORATION

Look 101' t h1s
• 1gn m your
ae-.~•111
1 ne1ghborhood . ._ _ _ _•

PRICEs' MAV. VARY AT INOJVIOUA.l STORES
I

r--p;,;~;-1

canis, spools, milk ccuion.s,
coffer jC:trs were used in their

artful

Brown Spaniel
(shown,

• Req. Ont

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH speake rs a nd demons trators.
It was Christmas,
The room was fill ed with a
Chrislmas everywhere as variety of di splays. TI1e
Meigs County homemakers Syracuse Homemok ers Club
gathered Tuesday in the showed colorful quilts , novel
fellowship hall of St. Paul's dotH' hangings, pl ostic
Lutheran Church for a look at wre athes with poinsett ia
holiday decorations, festive decoration, and decorated
foods and gifts to be made.
hun icane lamps with Mrs.
The Meigs County Exten- Robert Harden telling how
sion Service presented "Hints some of the craft s were made
for the Holidays" in two ses- durinK the program. She
sions, both afternoon and noted thai the . club wos
evening, for the more than orgamzed 25 years ago C:t nd is
100 persons attending. In· the Meigs County's oldest active
absence of Mrs. Diana extenswn homemakers' dub.
Eberts, extension agent , who
The In-Between Hom eplanned the affair, Mrs. Jean makers' Club fin between
Spencer introduced the Pomeroy and Chester i had
an interesting display on
maki ng something from
nothing. Old Ch ri stmas

di splay . Novelty
d ec oration s
decoupage pieces, &lt;i patchThe and Mrs . David work Christmas tree skirt,
Wiseman and children, Lima, and wall and door hangings
had ' as their Thanksgiving were i::lffiong t he item~ mcuJe
guests their parents and by the members.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Pinecone etnd corn hu sk
Earl Starkey of Carpenter, crafts, including wreaths and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman trees, along with door hanl(of Harrisonville, and Mrs. ings were di splayed by Betty
Matgaret Parsons, Rutland .
Reese, Athens County ExtenThanksgiving Day guests uf sion Agent, ami Deanna.
Mrs. Anna Ogdin of near Tribe, the Vinton County
Wilkesville were Mr. and agent , had a display of stuffMrs. Herbert Jones and ed an imals, holiday banKeith, Dublin, Karen Griffith, nei'S'eo·s, and other crafty
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs. items. Yam and feat her
Charles Griffith, Pomeroy .
wreaths were included in
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton Mrs. Ebert 's display.
have returned home after
At th e afternoon program,
spending Thanksgiving with Nancy Roush of Reedsville,
Mrs. Kelton 's sister and her eave i: l demonstration on holifamily : Mr . and Mrs. George day cake decor·ating, while
Shiveler, Jr. and Jayne, and the evening demonstr;:rti on
Mr . and Mrs. George
Shiveler, Sr. While there the
Keltons and Shivelers attended the Beef 'n Boards dinner
theatre where they saw SanM~. ond Mrs. Willard
. dy Dennis perform in "Two Hines, Pomeroy Ray Hines,
for the Seesaw." Th~ 3oth Belpre, and Roger Hines.,
wedding anniversary of Mr. - Gallipolis were in Colwnbus
and Mrs. George Shiveler, Jr. for the funeral of William McCulloch, brother-in-law of the
was also observed.
Mrs. J . 0 . Roedel is confin- late Audrey Woode. He was
ed to the . Ross County an WJcle to Mr·s . Hines.
Medical Center, Hospital
Road, Chillicothe, 45601, ·
RoumB2.02.
RF.Tl JRNS HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Nelson.
Mr.s.
.Jm• Tur ~ H! I' ha :-;
Kalamazoo , and David
Nelson, Ann Arbor , Mich. r·eturncd tu her home in
wpent the weekend here Rucyrus uftct' being llel·e due
visiting Mr. W. 0 . Barmtz. tn the illness of her brothel',
They were joined by the Ver·ne r Sec, who was
Robert Barnitz family for huspitaliwl but is now 1al his
. hoine in Middlt·rmrt .
Thanksgiving.

I Personal Notes 1 p ac bge

by Radio Shack

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Men's Pullover

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chicken, and one cup uf bread
{'I'Uml&gt;s i:llld one tabl e!ipoon
ml'!ted butter or m&lt;-~rgarine is
spr inkehl over tht' c;ts:;cn•lc.

3/'1 110

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THAT WALKI NG ('HirKEN- lnstruclion on how to

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'.

sox

CJfRlStJtt.HS

Hints for the Holidays proMrom Tue'&lt;lo)· o! St .. Poul's l.ut ht•rHn f'lmrch . Mrs

Donahey IS shown here expiHining how tn lmtkt&gt; a va rn Christ rrws wrl•a t h.

PLANET

TV SCOREBOARDS

.

auditions .
"hpenence the DHierence "

and much more.

Men's Orion

Sz. 10-13

itpplc into 16 wedges lo represe nt
poinsettia
petals.
Rt:muve core. Dip .in lemon
juke to prevent discoloralion . Push wedges, red side
up, intu salatJ in a eire!~
Pl11cc walnuts in the center.

MADE IN USA.

Gra nd Rapids

International
Hockey League

w;dnul s. h&lt;t!n·.. . or dtnppcd .
Spnnkl1 · IL•Jnon j uttT uwr

r""!A~C~A~D"!'A~P!!!!T~E~R~F~O~R~--'~-__4_9_5

season.

"I'm extremely pleased to
be returning to Boston and
the Red Sox," said Coleman,
the television voice of the Red
Sox from 1966 to 1974. He has
done Cincinnati Reds games
on television for the last three

.. Feb. 9
Feb. 13 -

ll't ltJtJt•. i !&lt;:trgt•
n·d ;tpph- . &lt;tnd

I

1/11· tl1n·d &lt;tppk-,: . Cmnbim·
wi lh n· h-ry, grapes. mar:-; hrrl&lt;tllow~. wul d10pped
nut~ . Mix Jn s&lt;:~ lad dres.•·iing.
('hrll . At M!rvin~ time spoon
s;d;td 111tu &lt;.J )l·ltuce lirll'd
n 1und fl&lt;tliJowl . Cut large n 'd

1

A_tiend funeral
1

BErn OHLINGER

Casey Kasem
rAKE

DF:CO RAT!Nr.

is pnp uiHr

Wit h

WMPO
SATURDAYS
9 til Nonn

many

OVER 2112 MILLION PINTOS
SINCE ITS INTROOUCT.JNr , , ,H,!i'i',i;:; ;:

•
was g iven by Mrs. Beverly
to d_iseuss ea ndy making was
Shelia Curtis, eo-owner of the
new eandy and confettion t~ry

shop in Middleport .
.
RPverly Donahey, Hocking
Cnunty

Extension Agent,
ge~ve a highl y entertaining
and educC:ttJOn progrmn on
homemade toys, and also
demonstrated how to ma ke a
yam Chl'i stmas wreath. Mrs.
Donahey
no t
onl y
demonstrated the making of
VHrious toys, but aftcrwi::l rds

provi ded patterns for the
women who \\o'ere interested
in creating th eir own.
She showed how to create a
puzzle fr om milk CC:trtun
" brick.s". how to make sn11p

caterp ili ers, suck pup(oets,
11nd "quicV' books. (Ill gem·ed
to be fun while teachirtg a

skill . Mrs. Donahey olsu
sho wed several jackets ami
roUes which were mC:ttle from

food which cm1 b&lt;; prcpnred
ahead of ti m ~ to CJl!ow thl'
hostess to be relax ed anU
ready to enjoy her own pa rty.
p~u·ty plan - theme, guests,
food. i:lnd t.tclivities - and
shared severe~ I r·eci pcs wh ich

0

D

fit inl u tht• "prepare ahead of
time" Sf'heme

which she

l'l't'!tm me nded.

And then fol' loud, MYrtle
(1&lt;-~ r k

and Annie Moon, Mt•l g~
County's Nut rition Program
aide:-;, presented "Servl' 1t
Festive" with four foods -chtcken di van; poinse ttia
s&lt;-thu.l, cheese cone, and
Christmas rai nbow cake which were served durin g the
lm1wse a round intcnnis.siun.

Twu uf the foods particularly e n j oyed
by the
home m a ke r s
we r e
the
chicken divan· and poinsettia
sa lad , cmd Mrs. Moun and

Mrs.

Clar k

sh~red

the

re cipe~.

now being created in the

I three to fou r· pound
chi t:kcn, cooked anti n•muved
fro m the bone, 2 10 ounee
pC:tckC:tge.s of fr ozen brueculi ,

CHICKEN DIVAN

a slide presentation for her

eookcd until tender and
drained and then "rmnged in
H lung baking pan. The

commentary on ·· Happy
Ho stessing.'' She t;ilkcd
about improvising tables fur
large groups, table setti ngs
with an individual flwr, cmd

chicken is pla t:ed over the
broeculi, and two cans of condcn:;ed cream of chieken soup
cumbined \\'ith one Cup shr·eddt•d dwP .'-it' i ~ uo u r~d over th e

home eeonomist wit h the Col umbia GHs of Ohio , In e. , USl-'(1

9

M!'S . Obcrholzer li sted the
ell•ments of the s uccessful

towels and noteti that man y of
the projects she thoplayed are
ht)mernak er clubs of Hol'king
County.
Mrs. Rita Ober·hoi ze r ,

POMEROY, 0.

'-----

homemakers ami Mrs. Nrmt'y Roush of Ret•&lt;lsvil h• gHVL'
tips on how to do holiday l.'i:l kl' dl'('orat inJ.,! . Mrs . Shirl t·y
.John son. ri..:ht. looks on as Mrs. Roush fini shes up a
rJwistma .'i ln•c cake .

Long of Middl eport. Present

102 E. MAIN

'Molrlui~ Ch&gt;l t • ~ ~to!)Qt!'S W d U!'l 311 P"CI!

PINTO PONY 2 ·DOOR

T•11P

l ~ • !lSAr&gt;dt,lq!&lt;l •!! l'&lt;l! ,,

PINTO PONY-COSTS LESS

·. ·'"'

$3,199 is $593 less than Datsun 210 Hatchback
$366 less than Toyota Corolla
$1961ess than Chevy Chevette 3-door
PINTO PONY MAJOR STANDARD FEATURES
EXTERIOR

INTERIOR

FUNCTIONAL

• Bn ght alummum bumpers . front ctn d
rear with black end flaps

• Htg h back bu cket seat s tn all -v1 ny l or
cl oth and vtnyl scm tr1 m

• Front bumper guard s
• Single 1ectangu1a' headlamp s

• Color-keyed . 10-oz . cut -pile
carpelln g

U,NDER

• Argent painted gri lle a nd headlamp
doors

• Padded all ·vmyl . co lor ·keyed door
tr1m panels

• 2 3 L11re 2V 4· c:yhnder OHC engine
• Oura·Spark solid-s late 1Qnit1on
• Fully synchron1zed . floor-mounted
4 ·speed transmission
• Manual front drsc brakes

NEW OWNERSHIP

• Bnght windshield , ba ck. hte and dnp

• Br 1ght alum1num door s"cutl panels

FORMERLY

L&amp;Z DRESS SHOP
Donna Hatfield and Brenda Roush ·

FOR STYLISH
HOLIDAY
WEAR
&amp;
GIFTS
STOP
IN!

mol dings

under

• Full wheelcover s

• Mt nt·console mounted
tnst,ument p anel

• Pony emble m on front fenders

• Black tnstru men t panel wtlh

tnstrum ent cluster locat ~ d in large

· • Amber parktng lamps

rectangu lar pods

:Black ste enng wh eel and column

• Rack·and-p rnton steering
• Staggered shocks and multiple leal
spring tear suspension

• 13.0 gallon capacily tuellank
• B1as ply l1res
• 3-speed heater / defroster
• Electronic voltage regulator

• Col or· keyed v1 nyl headlin.ng

.

'79 belongs to FordSee your local dealer,
and you'll see why! 1111 ·".• vrrr" ":" "'"

FORD
r

•

�ti -- The Oaily St'ntind . Muhlkp111'1 - Punu•r(!~~· ( ). , Thur:oi4lit~ . Nm·.

:to. JH iR

Friendly Circle met, elected officers

·Birthdays

rr·iendly Circle of Trinity ' F:Vt•lvn r.1Jmun.:~. tn•asun·r .
Miss t'ick pt'csirle&lt;l at the
M·r~ . Huhl•rt Wil:-;on t·on- hu!-i im•ss meeting when the
Church
me••ling
Tuesday
~=:
{
night ciLocted new nffie&lt;•rs for llud!'d till' prugram wh idJ l'l' 4Kll'l of the noJnlnatlng l'UIO('IIII Si stt•d · uf S l'li SU ilal mittce was tml(h.•. Oonatiun!-'
till• 1978-79 year . They an•
HF:'S JUST A J.OW GIGOLO ... OR'!
Mls.' Eli7Jibelh f'kk , presi- m&lt;ltl·ri~al. pti('JI\1-i. a ud artidcs fur the food (lantry were
OEAR RAP :
•l••nt: Miss Mar·y V. R&lt;•ilx•l. indluh•d Rt•n Ha ydt•n '.s hroughl to the meeting etnd it
I needc•l mmll'Yand this ~irl 's brother offerc'li to Jli'Yme $10
vi&lt;'&lt;' president: Mrs. Norma ··'J'h§tllks~ivin~ . '' She t'loscd was noted that lht· r.hri stmets .
plus expenses if I'd take her out a&lt;'OUI&gt;I&lt;•of time- just, he said, .lt•wPII
wit h a ThonksJ.dvin.a.: pra_\'l'r.
. st•('rPiarv . and Mrs.
sot'k will provide money fur
until ulhl:'l' guys KUl the idea she wmm 't poisun. tOne othrr guy
~ifts for the shutins. Dona~
did, but hi' wasn 'tr·i~ht . i Her broth&lt;•r· dldn 't want me to ~iw up
ur· she'd get deprt'~ed again. Hl· ·~ J.!otkl fur etl least $511 dette
HIH.I that usually indudes frt•t• foud and some kind of e nlt~rtain·
ment. ~ He 's loc:H.Icd . 1
Sally doesn 'l deser·ve tulx• fciol&lt;!d . Slw's an okay person . Sill'
makes me feel eomfortabl&lt;•. We laugh at the o;amc things. I

Sherry Johnson

would never have ru&gt;li&lt;'l'd her· if I ha&lt;ln't been Iiribed, but now
-wl'll, she's ~rowrn~ on me. I'm kind of mix"! up, and I fl'cl rutl"n about connin~ her, but still! durr't want to quit. If she finds
out. I'll f&lt;•ei &lt;•ven rottener. What do I do ?- THF. I.OW GIGOLO
OEAR GJGOJ.o:
Why don't you tell Sally the l111lh and start over' If you •·ontinut.• dating ht•r· 'a.s I ~ather yuu wil11 ~lw 'll know you arrn 't
doing it fur tlu.• mum•y . A t-:irl whu make~ ~· nu ft1Cit•omfortallh~ .
cmcl hat-i a l'icnse of hwnm·, is

t:~linost

bound tn

uncler~UI.Ilcl .

Mr. and Mrs. Bissell
honored by dinner party
Mr . and Mrs. Joseph
Rissell, Long Bottom, were
honored Saturday evening
with a dinner party at _the
Mei~s Inn.

- HEIF.N
GIG :
I get a va~ue feeling that you'd still like the payola, even it
makes you feel quilty sinee you now see. Sally as ynur
gi r·lfr·iend.
r·
Stow the low urge, friend! If she finds out before vuu tell her ,
you've lo~t everything . And fun. &lt;·omfuJ1abh•-nlaking girls
aren't easy to find . - SUF.
·
·
P.S. One other way: You could tell Sally's br·other· you're off
hrs payroll and ask him to keep llw secrl'l. but tl1is is nsky. W&lt;•
both vote for honesty. - HandS

Bobby johnson
Bobby and Sherry Johnson ,
son and daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James R. Johnson of
Middleport, celebrated their
fou rth birthdays on Nov. 4. A
party was held at their home
with a Big Bird cake and ice
cream being served. Games
were played.
·Sending gifts and greetings
were Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Johnson of Mason, W. Va,
grandparents, Mrs. Sarah
Boyles and son, Eugene, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
McClure and daughters, Bobbi e Jo and Angelia of Hartford, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
Mark A. Johnson of Mason,
Kay Johnson of Mason, and
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Varian
of Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Johnson, Seth and Mandy ,
Grayson, Ky., John Bechtle,
son of Mr. and Mrs.• Darrel
Bechtel, Middleport, Danya
Gheen, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Gheen of Middleport , Willie Johnson,
brother of the honored guests.

,------,
1 Social
1 Calendar
THURSDAY
TWIN-CITY SHRINETTES, 7:30 Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Mary Stewart,
Chesler Road .
GALUA-MEIGS
Community Action free clothing
day Thursday from 9 a.m.
until noon, for low Income
families. Agency clothing
bank located in old high
school building in Cheshire.
PARENTS WITHOUT
PARTNERS, 7:30 p.m.,
Community Mental Health
Center; election of officers.
All area single parents invited to attend.
OHIO NURSES Assn.,
Southern Hills District 7:30
p.m. Thursday at geriatric
unit Athens Mental Health
Center. RosaruJe Skuly will
spea k on Gerontological
Nursing.
EV ANGEI,ISTIC SERVICES, 7,p.m. each evening
through Dec. 10 at Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene with
the Rev. Warren G. Bass
speakmg. Music by the Bass
family ; public inviled.
WEEKEND MEETING at
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church, through Dec. 2 with
Rev. Bill Beagle, Cheshire,
preaching; public invited.
POMEROY
CHAPTER,
Women's Aglow Fellowship,
seminar Thursday at .Meigs
Inn beginning at 8:3(1 a.m.
with registration; closing at
2:30 p.m. Speaker, Elaine
Keith, vice president of
Columbus Aglow Chapter.
FREE l;L()TffiNG day at
. the Salvation Army Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy from 10 a.m.
to 12 noon Thursday; all area
: residents In need of clothing
are welcome.
.' FRIDAY
: ' A variety of handmade
Christmas
holiday
decorations and gifts for sale.

11 : • ';'

HEIF.N AND SUE :
r
Dale and I went together before he left toWn. He didn 'l write.
Then he carne back: we happened to meet, and I ended up
spending the night with him.
He hasn't called since, and when I saw him at the disco last
SHturday, he hardly spoke to me.
!love him, but I never told him this. Should I? Or should I
follow my friends' advice and stop being so easy? -I.OSER
'I.QSER :
follow your friends' advice. Telling an uninterested fellow
you love him will only chase him farther away.- HF.IF.N AND
SUE

' :
RAP
This is for "Future Stiflneck" who thinks wearing a brace
ifur curvature of tile spine i will ruin her popularity.
A few years ago my neck was fradured in a high sehoul
wrestling aecident. I spent many weeks in traction , had major
surgery and then had to wear a cmnbersome hip-to-chin back
and neck brace for a year.
Yes, people will stare and some ignorant dolts will laugh.
But I can assure you that your social life will not suffer. ! bowled, danced , and yes, ··made out" in my brace;and girls did not
find me unattractive.
Things are not what you make of them, so perservere
' and
you'll get by. Keep your chin up - pardon the pun ,. and it will
be soon over. -FORMER STIFF NECK

Dinmr guests
Thi:lnksgiving dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Russell, Racine were Lt. and
Mrs. Karl R. Russell, Meliso;a
Lynn and Kenneth Roy,
Jacksonville, N. C.: Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd T. Chapman and
daughters, . Ki~nberly and
Shelley, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Afternoon callers were Mr .
mu.l Mrs. Emerson Jones,

Midleporl , and 9randson,
Matthew Finegold, Columbia, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Dean Parsons, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed VanMatre,
E. T. and Annissa Kay,
Mason, W. Va . ; Miss Melody
West and John West, Racine.
'

THE JAMFS CONKLES
Mr. and Mrs. James Con'
Ide, Cheshire, entertained
Thanksgiving Day with a
family dinner party. Their
guests were the Rev. and
Mrs. Lester Taylor and
duugl)ler, Unda, Ney; Ohio:
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hoy and
daughters, Samantha and
Ann, Springfield; M,r. and
Mrs. Ed Taylor and children,
Angeliu and Kim, Sdoloville,
and Mrs. Lottie l"'onard,
Pomeroy.

Weight loss awards given_

wen: made toward
reoair of the' churcl1 office.
Plans were completed for the
Christmas dinner to be held
at the Meigs Inn, De!:. 19. It
was nnted that tire circle still
has cookbooks for sale and
these can be' obtained from
any member.

MEETS
•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
•FHA &amp;VA
SEE OUR LOT
MODEL TODAY

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FLORIST
•

PH. 992·2644

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MODEL 5:l:l

•

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orld

... the little
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NOW
WHILE
lME

HEALTH BAZAAR
The ·annual Christmas
Awards lor weight loss Simpson, Brenda Marr , bazaar of Heath United
&lt;;hlirtes
were given at meetinqs of the Nellie Casto, with a a:; pound Methodist Church will be held
Rona Hanning, R. Ph
Slinderella Diet Classes held ribbon going to Connie Turley Tuesday from 3 to 7 p.m.
Mon. thru Sal. 8:oo a .m.lo 9p'.rri.
this week.
and \wo 50 pound ribbons, to Women .of the church will
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and s to 9 p.m.
. 110D-E. Main
At the Mason Class, 20 Diana . Juhnspn and ·Mitzi . serve soUp, sandwiches and
PRESCRIPTIONS
- PH.917-2955-,
pound ribbons went to Janel Oldaker. There was a lour- dessert during the bazaar
Friendly. Service
AT ITS'
Pomeroy, Ohio
way tie for the revolving which will feature homemade
Pomeroy,O.
E. Main
trophies between Dixie Sbort, gift items, baked goods, canOpen Nighls titl9
BEST
Darlene l,audermill, Janel dies , and novelty things.
. 992-7034
FRIDAY
. Simpson, and Brenda Marr.
The Middleport morning
Meigs County Humane
Society annual Christmas class met and Katie Miller
bazaar· Friday and Saturday · . had lost the most weight with
at new location of Thrift F.uvetta Bechtle us her
Shoppe, at corner of Second runner-up . A 20 pound ribbon
and Walnut sts., Middleport. was . presented to Vicki
MEIGS COUNTY REACT Houchins. At !he Tuesday
team meeting, 7:30 Friday at night class Mary Roush
Meigs Senior Citizens Center received her 20 pound ribbon
in Pomeroy; new members and Sarah Johnson lost the
being accepted and old most weekly we1ght and Judy
memberships to be renewed: Laudermil\ was her rll!UierAnyone 18 or older who is a up.
c. b. radio operator Ia eligible
The Point Pleao;ant morn·
to join. ing cllrss met and took in two
CHRISTMAS B ZAAR d new members. Opal Casto ·
bak
• A
an
received her 20 pound pin.
e sale, 10 a.m., to 8 p.m. Jeannie Sayre Gilda Bauer
Friday and Saturday at the Opal Casto and Lizzie Stove;
Rutl~nd Emergency Medical . tied for losing the most
Service Headquarters beside weight, and Mrs. Ooal Casto
the Rutland ltre statl?n was accepted into the slim
sponsored by Rutland EMT s. and trim program.
SATURDAY
Donna Rawson received
GOSPEL SING Saturday her 20 pound ribbon at the
7:30p.m. at House of Prayer, evening class, and she was
Liberty Ave., Pomeroy, the big loser of the week with
behind
Burger
Chef. Gertrude Holland as her
Featured will be Dan runner-up.
Hayman and the Country
HyllUltimers. The publlc is
invited.
Homebuilders class
· These five appliances cost the average
SOUP SUPPER 4:30 to 7:.&gt;;:
p.m. Saturday at the Alfred
Continua!ion of the monthly
Ohio Power customer a total of about 89¢ a
..
United Methodist Church, parties at the Athens Mental
day
to
run~
•
located five miles west of Health Center was approved
.
And, while you probably think they're worth ' ••
State Route 7 on 681; public when the Homebullde_rs pass
invited:
It, they-\-e. also where you can save if you practice
met recently at the MidSUNDAY
dleport Church of Christ.
conservatiOn.
HYMN SING, 1:30 p.m.
The class voted to purchase
If _you lower the thermostat on your electric water heater to 140° and take short
Sunday at Nease Settlement two poinsettias for the church
,Church with Gospeltones · at Christmas and named Mrs.
showers ms!ead -of _full baths, you'll use less electricity.
featured singers; public Flo Grueser, Mrs. Shirley
And 1f you f1x a leaky hot wate1· faucet that drips once a second. you 'll save 200 gallons
invited.
Bmngardner, and Mrs. Colof
hot
water
a month.
een Van Mei:er on \he planning committee for the
The oven? You'll sav~ electricity if yo~ don 't preheat. And you'll save even more if.you
Christmas· party to be held
use your counter ~op oven, mstead of your b1g oven when you warm a few hot llog buns
·
Dec. a. The class also voted to
or
cook
one
TV
dmner.
.
replace -.some c-hurch signs
Baton classes set and
to furnish coal ruck for
. . Your r~frigerator/freezer uses less electricity when you don 't hold the doors open or p t
the hall.
hot dishes ms1de to cool.
u
Mrs. Van Meter presided at
Gloria Buck Wallace's GloPartial loads and overloads in your clothes dryer use more electricity. Over drying
ette Baton Corp classes will the meeting with Fd Evans
does,
too.
.
·
start Friday night. Members giving devotions from Exof the baton or gymnastics odus 24. Mrs. Margaret KinAn~ turn y~ur TV off when _you 're not watching it.
with dance claSBes who have caid and Mrs. Van Meter
We [e WQrkmg hard ~o ~rov1de you, wi~h the most ec~nomical power possible.
not received a phone call or were hostesses and served
pumpkin
pie
and
coffel!.
Gifts
postcard are to call 992-7326.
We ask that you use tt wisely. If you d hke some more Ideas on how to conserve electricity
For this week only all were wrapped to be taken to
we have some hel~fu~ S.A.V.E. booklets that s~ow you how you can conserve and become art '
classes wlU meet together the Athens Melita! Center for
of our Save Amertcas. Jlaluable Energy Program. They're yours for the asking.
p
starting at 6 p.m. ending at the Chris\rnas party.
Attenwnl(
the
meeting
were
8i30 p.m.
Because at Ohw Power, we want you to get the most out of your ele&lt;;tric service. _
Classes are late to start Ibis Mr. and Mrs. Bud Willron; Mr.
year because the Orchid and Mrs. l.awrence Stewart,
Room where cl111aes art held Mrs. Bumgardner, Mrs.
was rented lull time to the Peggy Brickles, Mrs. Van
Democrats until after the Meter, Mrs. Murgarct KinIS
election. Students who have caid, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
•Daily cost of using these ~ppli~nc~ is ba~ed on .average usage statistics rrom Edison Electric Institute and our· avera
registered for new claues Baker, Mrs. Farje Cole, Mrs.
res1dent1al k1lowatt~hour cost For the 12 month period ending June, 1978.
ge
r.•·ut!scr,
and
Mrs.
Nora
Rice
.
wlll not start until Jan. 5.

ONLY

•5995

BA·KER FURNITURE

Hours :
9 o30 Jo 5o00

Mon . thru Sat ..
9 o30 to 8:00

11

$19995

MAYTAG HEAVY DUTY WASHERS
• Dependable heavy duty construct1on bwlt to tasl longer
and need fewer repairs • Uses less ho t· water than any

WITH

REG.

other hk8' s1ze top toad1ng wa sher • Long hfe quad coat

• CHAIN BRAKE
• AUTOMATIC OILING
ANTI -VIBRATION

1

224.95

sleet cabmet • Self-cleaning wash basket

MAYTAG BIG LOAD DRYERS
• 26~o more capacity th an prev1ous models • Exclus1ve
Stream-of·Heat"' drying • Mull!·cycte selection • Fast.
energy-efficient operation · Dura -C ush1o n ·~ drum fin1sh

MODERN SUPPLY

KIDDIE SHOPPE

VIS4'

2n d St .
POMEROY . 0 .

Friday

RUTLAND FURNITURE

399 W. Main St .
992-2164
Pomeroy
The store with All Kinds of Stull

Rutland . Ohio

Quasar
5-(,}UART CROCKER COOKER-FRYER

• Aslow cooker -a regul~r cooker
-a deep fryer
• Crockery vessel plus low heat
settings for versat ility
• Removable crock can be washed
in dishwasher

'

19" Quasars
~

dlagonar

PORTABLE COLOR TV

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
POMEROY, 0 .

Middleport, 0.

WERNER RADIO
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport. 0.

'

conn1e® '79
unmistak ably

Give him the
TIMEX®of his life!

Are these
wo
the

-

I

DAN THOMPSON

by
Give her a white Christmas, merry and bright
with the lasting beauly of an ArtCarved Dia·
"'!ond Ring. ArtCarved tak es only the finest
d1amoods and sets the m in a var iety of beaultful styles. And guarantees th eir qu al ity and
value lor a'lilethle.
Use Our -cOnvenient Lay-away Plan

Goessler's Jewelry Store

.

MUSTANG
=~\

Register For
Free Gift
Certificate
To Be Given
Av.•av Weekly!

CHRISTMAS

electricity
they use
everyday?

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2960

Gin

TIMEX®

WRAPPING

A Touch of Flash

Time will tell you it's a TIMEX ® I

heritage house

VILLAGE PHARMACY
New Haven, W.Va .

Middleport, o.

N. 2nd Ave .

Middleport. 0.

461 S. Jrd Ave .
Phone 992 -2196

· See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill , General
Manager , for a Good Deal.

Middleport. 0 .

-

THIS CHRISTMAS
SHE'S "DREAMING OF

LANDMARK OFFERS THIS
DELUXE HOTPOINT MICROWAVE
COOKS. 3 WAYS INSTEAD OF ONE

PORTABLE TV

A WHITE SEWING MACHINE"

RCA

XL-100
19"

diagonal

I
M odel 106

I

sso.oo

Gr'e at
For The
Family Room!

Discount
'

~Power~mpany

Workmg together

NOW

The perfect gift
Maytag dependability!

Great For Doing All
the Dishes or
For Quick
Alter
Snack
Clean
Up.

*CANDY

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

'"
MAYfAG

'.

By Jovan, English Leather, Canoe, Brut, Macho, Old Spice, Roman
Brio, Mennen &amp; Aqua Velva.

- l;

REMINGTON
CHAIN SAW
FOR 'CHRIST

WE
CAN
DEPEND.,
ON

~.

A

GREAT
IN
KIDS
CLOTHES
BRANDS

I

.*TIMEX WATCHES
*CAMERAS
* ZIPPO LIGHTERS
*COLOGNES &amp; AnER SHAVE LOTIONS

.• ••.

~J::!"~'"'k",f,..i2,· . /\(I) .

J51 E. Main. Pomeroy
.
Your FTD.Fiorisl •

1ft

and Anne , Gahanna; Mr. and

By_
All American

1957

en!s

Attending were Mr. and

MODlJLAR
HOMES

Florist Since

tion~

Mrs . Jose ph A. Bissell ,
Ma~un, W. Va .; Mr . and Mrs.
Timothy Bissell, Point Pie&lt;•· .
sa nl ; Mr. and Mrs. Oavid A.
Smith and Diana, Reedsville:
Mr. ami Mrs. Thomas Orake
Mrs. David G. Smith.
Caldwell ; Mr. and Mrs.
Hm·oid Holter, .Judy and
Mark , Lung Bottom : Mr. and
Mrs. Steven Holler, Columbus; Mrs. Marilyn Hayman ,
Kim, Terri and Eddie ,
Westerville: Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Gruenwald and Tommy. Worthington : Mr. and
Mrs. Miehael Bissell, Colwnbus, Kenneth .Bissell, Long
Bottom ; Mrs. Mae McPeek,
and Mrs. Leona Hensley,
Long Bottom .

.

vour " Extra Touch"

POMEROY LANDMARK

the only.way.

E. Main

INGELS FURNITURE .&amp;
JEWELRY
"TWO-IN-ONE STORE"
N. 2nd Ave.

•

Middleport, 0.

SHOP EART...Y! T.AYAWAY!

ROll
VALUE PRICED
AT ONLY
Limited Quantity

"It"~

So Easv

To Sew On
A WHITE"

ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE IIl20 E . Main

992-7113

Pomeroy . 0.

,_

.,

�•
8-~ The Dliily

St.•nt lnt•l. Mlddlt· l ~•rt · PIIInl'n ly . ( ).. Tl u1r~ cl&lt;t~ . ~, ., .. :til. l!t/ H

Loyal Bereans .Class
elects 19 79 officers

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
Cure .f or burned oil

MONKEYING AROUND - Erv's Hollywood Chimps
will be among the performers at the annual magic
Holiday Fantasy at the Meigs Junior High School in
Middle(lort at 7:30 pp .m. on Dec. 5 sponsored by the
Middleport Fire Dep~rtment .

OF:AR POLLY - I would
surely like to know what will
dissolve burned oil that ha s
accw nulated on the outside of
frying p&lt;ml:i and electrit: com
poppers. I have tried several
producls and they help a littl e
but take a lot of time and rubbing . I would like to use·
something that will cut
through it quickly.- IRMA
DEAR IRMA - I realize
that to do it quickly is what
we are all looki ng for today,
but lhat is not always possible. You might try sprinkling
l&gt;aking soda over the burned
oil, let it stand for 10 minutes
or so, rub with a damp
sponge, rinse and dry. Baking
soda emulsifie.s grease as 1t
deans . - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Ruth the easy way I clean

tmrned~n ftJod from pans·.
.Ju:-;t spr~ty the pan· with oven
cleaner and Jet it stand for a
few hours. This cleans it like
magic.- F:VELYN
DEAR POLLY - A dirty
cast imn skillet can be dean ·
ed l&gt;y turning it upside down
on the middle rack of the oven
l&gt;efore setting the oven to self
clean. It must l&gt;e the type uf
oven that cleans with high
heat. The ski llet will rome out
l&gt;eauli fully clean l&gt;ut will
tmve to be re·seasoncd .
I save the tops from cotton
Crt.:! W ~ocks when the (eel arc
worn out and use lht!m C:J s
wrist bands to wear whik
washing walls and windows.
They keep the water fmm
rUnning dnwn my anns when
I rt::ach up over my head .
Sock tups with some elastic in
them work l&gt;est . -JOAN H.
DEAR POLLY - When I
mn pfeparing to freeze

Magic Holiday Fantasy
Show set for Dec. 5
The Middleport Fire
Department will again
sponsor the Magic Holiday
Fantasy show at 7:30p.m. on
Dec. 5 at the Meigs Junior
High School auditorium in
Middleport.
circus variety
Billed as
stage show , this. year's
performance will include the
magic of Chandler and Co .,

a

the · rola pola balancing of
Billy ·-- Martin ,
Erv's
Hollywood chimps, Langs
Aero-brats, . in comedy
trampoline work the Pauline
Peerless Puppies, a juggling
of the Bobby Jane Duo and
organ music by David Miller.
Advance tickets are now
being sold.

Holitlay plans were rnade
;md offit'er.s fur 197!1 nar !ml at
thl· Tuesday ni~ht rn cctin~ of

• 4-translstor
Polar~d ' s SX-70 SONAR

OoeStep. The world' a linellt
lnataot camera now IIVilli to tall~
:•,,tom•oUtit Sonar locusing

R:eg . Slf.95

AMITY MEN'S
BILLFOLDS
• credit ca rd

circuit ry
• special " LunarComm" code
included
• ba Uery op•.,ato.!

slee ~es

FISHER PRICE
ACTIVITY
CENTER
• play item s
• fa stens to crib or
playpen .
• 3 mos.· 2 yrs

(not Included)
• 191.055

• cowhide

tht• Loyal Bercans Class of
the Mirh!l (• pn1'1 ('hnf"r•h "~
Christ.
·
The annual Christmas pal'·
tv will be held Dec. 5, and
~gain this year .the class will

• buiH·in cond enser
mike
• slide vol ume con trol

Reg . $12 .00

5

sa.99

• autolstop·ej er.t

• ln•truc:tlon •h.. t,
fabric "mjHe, extra

needle, thread
•
• battery operated (not
Included)

• 2 bristle l;lrushes
.• 2 tina of pol ish , 2
daubers
• battery operated

....

·AVIANCE
SPRAY
COLOGNE

blades
'
• ilghtwel ght

balanced
• easy to

• IIIVW·0601

• crysta l oil lamp
• burne·r and wick
• colorful gift ca rton
• 1#6001139

Reg . $8.30

Reg. $2 1.9S

• 1.4 oz.
• lf4085

Reg .

• for wet or dry
massage
n..-:~ . uses 110·120

• IIIFS-1

....

ss.oo

R:eg . $26.99

"

Treat your sav ing s roya lly and yo u ' ll be
aglow w ith high int e r est. Ca ll for m o r e
in fo rm a tion'

• ~ hollda'4s
tyle

Reg. 59c ~

~~~~~~~~W A HomFore Bank

39c

'18.95

~

BABE
SPRAY
COLOGNE

Meigs Cou11ty

• non-aerosol

• AM/FM Radio
• wake to music or

buu..

• snooze control

• fA1550L

• 20 curlers

• qui ck, lasti ng curls
• compartment lor clips

• lor boa llng, camping ,
pat io
• 5 speeds.
• seH·stan ding
• white or gold

Reg . $6.00

The Rev. William Knittel

Church attendance
takes 72 per cent leap
••
The Rev. Willian Knittel,
Pastor of United Pentecostal Church of Middleport
is pictured with an attractive
" Fastest growing Sunday
School in North America
Achievement Certificate"
present ed to the United
Pentecostal Church of
Middleport fo r having been
second place in having the
fastest growing Sunday
School in North America .
The church had a 72 percent increase in attendance
with more than 3WO more
people in attendance in
Sunday School this year than
in 1917.
The presentation was made
during the conference of the
United Pentecostal churches

FUNNY BUSINESS

in Kanas City, Mo. where the
Rev. and Mrs . William
Knittel attended.
The United Penteco stai
Church of Middleport was
also presented in the fall of
la st year the . " Merit

Achievement Award" for
having the fastest growing
Sunday School in the state of
Ohio.
Thomas Kelly of Middleport is the Sunday School
superintendant.
The Rev. William Knittel,
paster, would like to thank aU .
the congregation of the local
church who has made this
possible through their hard
Ia bor and a love for a work
and also all the peale of Meigs
county.

By Roger Bollen

8:RE" we'RE' A'Yoi.JN~

R:cg . S9.95

Reg . 5 11.99

• I C-100
Reg . 513 . 5~

• 25 asso rted colors
• wit h stick- on

Reg . Sl.45

$14.88

Reg. 95c

BUG

• 35 pre-tested

• generous size

flashing lights

compa rtments
• ho lds wallet, pe ns.
.watches

decora ted glass
• variety of Ch ris tmas
scenes and symbols

• energy saver

Re., . $2. 56

• UL li sted
· • jj1~

•lt1500 R@9 . S5 .9: .

5

Reg . S5 .J5

8

BANK
Ra c in e, Ohio
• 4-qt. poll!;pmpyl!&gt;ne'

bucket
• brown

• recipe book
• M8451 ·

Reg . $26.95

• ragula r and lripl e
magnlllcallon mirrors
• glare lree li ghting

•11 010

R:eg . $16.95

~
~, ·
GEL DOLL

• nine mch candles

Reg . $12.99

HOME NATIONAL

57.39

REG. '9.99

$9.95

GALOorr ·
FUN

DANVILLE
2-TIER VALET

15.88

• chrome
• lead penc il
• ball pomt pen
•lt350 1 Reg. $15 .00

7f!

Reg . S3 .89

5

ROBOT

• delightfu l holiday
outs

• Danish style cookies
• " Needlepoin t " design

RACINE

• GA1
R:eg . S12.9S

SPACE

CLEO JUMBO
26-INCH ROLL
WRAPPING
PAPER
• new designs

• shorter l or easier
handling
• quick 10·second cu rl s
with or without steam

• horn,
or fl ame
• dependable battery
power

Reg . S29.9S

ss.49

ss.99

3 5

··''''"''""'!..!!!!'{

• batte ry inc luded
• #175

• IIHM-26

• NC-40
R@g . S29.49

~·2~3~~3~9~··~,.-t~$18.99

People

• decorator styl ed

• 2 oz
• ~211 2

1.49

. 3

styles~\

g • tal l

:1

GEM MEN'S
TRAVEL KIT
• tw eezers, na il.

cli ppe rs, m e,
knlle

Reg . 54 . 10

Reg .

s1

8

l5.oo

• 4 shO werheads In one
• easy to Install
• d eluKe hand-held

model
• NDM210

2.59

Reg. SJ9.9S

8

2.69

22.95

~~~~~.~~

• walnut color f.an•eilll
• tull-stHmglh glass

• llameproof, larcllshC'_j
proof

• 25 fl.
• gold or sliver
R:eg . $1 .45

• co mpa ct size to1
wall or counter
•ltSAM-1

5

J

Reg . SH.25
• assorted I
• 10 oz. ol oldfasl"o''edl

2.95

ta ste

Reg. $18.95

.COOPANY~~. BOT, YCX)'LL...
BE ~ETTINca IN OJ THe.

6f&lt;OOND FLOOR !
• set contains

afl~r

shave and cologne
• each 4'.4 02.
• 113380
Reg . S6 . ~1J

• scenic background

• dark oak fiOish
• ba ttery operated

• 11138-6900-502
Reg . $1:2.95

5

4.65

• micro-twin sh.alling
head
• removab le head for
cleaning
•1176-212

n.n

$1.29

•111-2\t
Reg . SU .95

SCOTCH

7.88

• comp lete ly deem~'!
ltiumlnat ed
• 33-plece

• fo r oflice, dorru,

TREE .

• llghte&lt;l space dome
sYnchronized tQ.
'
sound

• battery operated
(not included)

• lf2000XL

Reg . 17.95

8

PIN~

ser~lce

• for ~re-cdoktd hot
dogs, bral~ , uu1age
• plug-In con¥¥'1ienee

• Jeclpu Included

2..:,_~~---:s

• 118067
Reg .

Reg.

57.99

•

• antique v•v•••• ·--'
t inplate

SYLVANIA
MAGICUBES

Reg . ! 12 .95

WOODSTOCK

••

• climbing siring

Reg . 533.45

mer•lwoome&lt;n ,

action

• Chirps, flaps Wings
• hlgh·lmpact plu tlc
• ,lf667 R:eg. S3 .39

AMITY
FRENCH
PURSE OR
CLUTCH

• fold ing arrn, swivel
reflector, high-low

• grills and warmf'
o1Mr foods

•• assorted atyles,

• walnut and braaa
• t1500

• 115366 Reg . Sl6 .9S

• top·grtln leather

• ~arlabte
temperature

con i ro ts
• non-atlck cooking

surface

$17.77

,

' Reg . Sf.99

.$16.95

colors

·:~.,:r

*
.. '

tS.99

• IIS8903

table
•lt11 -2177
Reg . $4.98

wraps
textured co~er
design

Controversial

!Con tinued from page 11
Neb rask&lt;:J &lt;:Jn d Kt•nt ul'ky
where they pass a bu'dget .
hctnd it to their gu·.'ernor and
go h,ome . That 's not
res ponsible gover nme nt .
That 's aband oning responsi bility ."
etns wering quest ions from the
But Sen. Paul E . Pfeifer, RFBI , Secret Service agents
Bul'y rus, said the pay raise
and a New York City social
"clearly means we are taking
service worker.
giant step toward being like
a
Dr. Leon Star, Kennedy
Congress
- a full-time LegisAirporl medi ca l di rector,
lature
."
examined them and said they
"People would be far
"seemed to be very stable
happier
to see us at home
and ealm" and •·are in very
good con dition, by and large , earning additional income,"
sa id ?Ieifer .
'
consi dering what they have
"This is inflationary and
been tlu·ough."
unnecessary," agreed Sen.
Then Grover Davis, 79 ;
William H. Mu ssey, RHya c inth
Thru sh,
76 ;
Batavia . "I know we could do
Raymond Godsha lk , 62;
the
job in less time. ''
Madeli ne Brooks, 73; Carol
Republicans
also objected
Yo ung,
78;
Elveray
w
th
e
fact
that
the 28.6
Sa terwhite, 61; and Marion
percent
increase
is
a
bove the
Campbell, 61, transferred to
7
perce
nt
wage
guide
line
Trans World ' Airlines flight s
by
President
recommended
to San Francisco and Los
Carter , and that the bill is
Angeles. Mrs. Thrush is from
San
Fra ncisco.
The moving through a lameduck
~
hometowns of tile oth ers were session.
Democrats argued that no
not ava ilable .
Befor e the group boarded pay raises have been granted
the flight to New York , in four years, and If this bill
au Ulurities described them as doesn' t pass. it will be
" very, ve ry uptight about another four years before
public recognition - and legislators get an increase .
said
most
Meshel
fea rful of retaliation ."
leg
islators
are
fearful
of
The seven declined general
votin
g
a
PCIY
raise
for
interviews at Kennedy. One
man said "I feel fine" as they themselves. " If you were in
were whisked to connecting private life and were in
flight s. Another, asked ii he charge of a $16 billion
was afraid , said simply " no." Corpora ti on ( like sta.te
In Ge orget ow n , curious government ) you would be
Guyanese lined the waiting making fo ur times what you
the mak e now," he said .
lo un ge to watch
Both the Sena te and House
de parture. Grimfaced, the
were
to reconvene at 1:30
seven had waited patiently"
p.m.
today.
through sea rches of their
luggage at Temehri Airport.
'" ll feels good to go home,"
Davis told reporters.
Davis fled just as Jones
ordered more than 900 of his
fanatic followers to drink a
deadly potion of cyanide a nd
fru it drink.
MEXICO CITY (UP! ) " I don 't know what I'll do
The death tnll rose to nine
today in the stronges t
when I gel back to the United
earthquake to hit Mexico in
States, but 1 am sure [ won 't
two decades and poli ce
be in vo lv ed in religious
reported prisoner s fled a
cul ts," said Davis, a longtime
penitentiary when the series
friend of Jones.
of tremors collapsed a prison
Mrs . Thrush sa id she slept
deat h wall .
through
the
communion rites.
The la test death was
reported in the sta te of
The other five survived the
Oaxaca , the area hardest hit
s uicides because they were in
by the quake Wednesday.
th e commune 's Georgetown
Police in Mexico City had
office 150 miles away - a
earlier reported eight dead
building now occupied by
and 500 treated for minor
some 34 other survivors
injuries and shock.
under heavy Guyanese
The quake rocked the ·
military guard .
Mexico City area, cracking
of
downtown
dozens
skyscrapers and showering
pedestrians with window
BUFFET SLATED
glass.
The ann ua l Ch ristma s
The govern me nt new s
buffet dinner and dance of the
agency
No timex said 15
Pomeroy Golf Club will be
students
at Oaxaca State
Friday, Dec. 8 at the archery
University
in the city of
building at Ftoyal Oa k Park .
Oaxaea
suffered
second
Reservation will close on
degree
burns
when
a
Dec. G. Reservations are to
container
of
sulfuric
acid
was
be made by ca lling 992-7376 or
knocked over by the quake .
992-7231.
A group of prisoner s
escaped when a wall
collapsed a Oaxaca s\3te
penitentiary althougH four of
the fleeing inmates were
quickly rounded up.
The epicenter of the earthquake was in the Gull of
Tehuantepec off the coast of
Oaxaca state in soutjlern
Mexico.

•

• N7235
R:eg . SJ0.9S-

• stainless steel
• dishwasher safe

• looks grea t on any

.· •• :

Now You Know

'

UNITED
CHINA 50-PC.
FLATWARE
SET
• 7 " wood

·1,

Earthquakes
rock Mexico

Nothing Beats Our
Money-Back Guarantee

SJ.99

'Reg. S2 3.9S

CAPRICE LED
CLOCK RADIO

of 80 survivors o( the mass
in
th e
sui cide-murder
Peoples Temple Jonestown
jungle commune to return
home from Guy.a'na .
Fellow passengers sa id the
seven sett et l the front, where
they ta lked quietly with ea ch
other and seemed to be in
good spirits.
One unidentified passenge r
among the 127 who left the
plane said she ove rheard one
male survivor say: ''They
were all dummies and they
kill ed them se lves because
one man said s6 ."
For 90 minutes, th e seven
rema ined on the plane,

$7.77

7.55 · m.,.

• stain less steel

• protective sliding
lens cover
' -·
• film, tlash incl uded
• IIIA1CR
'

By HENRY LOGEMAN
NEW YORK iUPJ I
Seve n elderly survi vors of the
Rev . Jim Jones' death cul t
returned home to th e United
States Wednesday, and an
airport doctor sail\ they were
in "very good c8ndition ...
oonsidering what they have
been through."
The su rvivors - two of
them in wheelchai rs arrived a'board a Pa n
American Wor ld Airways
flight at Kennedy Airport ,
apparently in good spirits and
with little public comment for
reporters.
They were among U1e first

'111423 R@g . $17.95
Reg .

VANWYCK
ELECTRIC
KNIFE
• a uto matic

·...

• fn terchahgeable
• trim , file, con tour,
shape nails
• nall dryer

• 111134

• assorted co lors

• cat,.Ying cue converts
to aewlng platform

MICKEY
MOUSE
WATCH

n 111 1 ~ dot ;.

Survivors reported
in 'good condition'

·join four other groups of the sionary chairman: Miss
church for a potluck dinner. Mildred Hawley, flower
Meml&gt;ers are to \;ike a · chairma n ; Mrs . Lena
cuvered dish and their own McKinley card 'chairman.
table service for the 6:30 din· Mrs. Flora Marie Gibson was
welcomed as a new member.
ncr.
.
Flannel coverings ' for the
Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherty
church
silver was again
· presided at the meeting with
Reported ill were
discussed.
the class agreeing to purCynthia
Gohring
and Marvin
chase a punsettia for the
Kelly.
sanctuary. Love conU;liner.s
The meeting opened with a
containing $139.62 were turned in by the members with poem, "God So Loved the
the money to l&gt;e added to the World" by Martha Childs, a
treasury . A silent auction net- reading "Christmas is a
Thousand Things" by Mrs.
ted $25.50. '
Ele c ted were Mrs. Martha Haggerty, and one,
Daugherty, president ; Mrs . "The Boy Who Hid from
Cathryn Frvin , vice presi- Christmas" by Mrs . Alice
dent ; Mrs. Lena McKinley , Robeson, who also conducted
secreta ry ; Mrs. Ruth Karr, games.
Refrestunents were served
assistant secretary ;· Mrs .
Martha Childs , treasurer; by Mrs. Louise McElhinny
Mrs. Gertrude Miller, mis- and Mrs. Haggerty.

severa l piel'e.S u£ meal such
as pork chops, or mea t I lflCIY
DINNER GUESTS
wHnt to usc as .single serv~
Thanksgiving dinner guests
ings. I put the picc.:es In my
frn•zer emnpartmcnt until of Mr. and Mrs. Roller!
thl·V arc fro~ tetl ttwough . McDaniels and daughter ,
Th~ n I wr;1 p Lhem in family- Robin, Middleport, were Mr .
size pc-H:ka ges. Tl1ey do not ami Mrs. Charles !3ealmear,
freeze together sn single Ba ltimore, Md .; Mrs .
piet '~s t'a n be removed if need Kathryn Sears, Baltimore,
Md .; Mr. and Mrs . Marvin
be. -E .O.
Polly will send you one of · Krider, Columbus; Mr. and
her · s i~nt~ d th cmk -y ·o~l Mrs. Butchie Jewell, Perry
1icwspaper coupon clippers if Everett, Mason, W.Va.; Mrs.
she us es yuul' rHvm·itc Joe Turner , Berea ; Betty
Pointer , Peeve or Problem in Frazier, and Charles Frazier,
her cvlunm. Write POLLY'S Middleport. The birthday of
POINTERS in care uf this Mrs . ~"' razier was also
celebrated .
m~ W SJ lapcr .

LUNAR COM·
MUNICATORS

Tlwi J&lt;tl l.\ Sc11 111 11 l. \Lold l··pnrl -! ' i •l!l1 'l• ·• tt

'
'

•

awltoh

••

• metal can1tructlon

Reg.

m.oo

"

•

'tonka
•TRUCKS
•TOYS
•ERTL TOYS
•TOY DISH SETS
'
• TABLE &amp; CHAIR SETS
•DOLLS
•TINKER TOYS
•ERECTOR SETS
• RACE TRACKS
BY AFX AND YCO

•TOY PIANOS
•WAGONS •BICYCLES •MORE

The Teddy Bear was first
seen in \902 in th e window of a
Brooklyn, N. Y., candy store
own ed by Morris Mie!1tom .

WINTER CARNIVAL
The Bradbury PTA will
sponsor a Winter · Carnival
from 6:30 to 8.:30 p.m.
Saturday at the school. There
will be games, a nd an arts
a nd crafts shop, a sweet shop
a nd other featur es.

,---Area-D~~th~-~

I

I

HERMAN FICK ISEN
Herman
E.
IDu t&lt;.' h J
Ficki sen, 69. Rt. t. Guysville.
died unexpect edly &lt;H his
h.ome ea rly this morning.
Mr. Fickisen was born iu
Wood County. W. Va ., the /:iOn
of I he late Adam and L(tura
Matheny Fickisen. He Wi::IS
(tlso preceded in death by une
sun. Herman Paul and one
siSier . Gladys.
He was an employe uf the
Hillt up and Snyders Sal vage
Yards and the Amer ica n
VIscose Corp., Parkersburg.
He had been a resident of the
Coolville and Guysville area
fur the past 20 years.
He is survived by his wife,
Iri s, one daughter, Mrs.
James 1Myrl) Barker.
Parkersburg; seven grand·
chi ldren,
six
greatgrandchildren and one
cousin.
Funeral services will be
held Sat urday at I p.m. at the
Whit e Funeral Home ill'
Coo lville with the Rev. Ttm
Snyder officiating. Burial will
be in Coolville Cemetery .
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral hom e after 1 p.m. on
Friday.

GLADYS L. NICHOLSON
Mrs. Gladys L. Nicholson,
80, Route I, Rutland, died
Wednesday at a Pomeroy
residen ce.
Mrs. Nicholson was born in
Gallia County Feb. 27, 1898, a
daughter of the late Charles
and Letlie Tuckerman
McHaffie. On Aug .'28, 1915,
she married Seth Nicholson
who died Feb. 15, 1977. She
was also preceded in death by
a brother and a sister.
Surviving are a sis~er , Mrs.
Bob
(Myra)
La nha m,
Columbus; a niece, Mrs.
Kathleen Norns, Columbus ;
two sisters·in·law. Mrs. Alice
Epple, Byesville, and Mrs.
Freda Pearl Nicholson.

Utica; a brolher-i n-law, Dun
1.. Wood, P11mero y, et nd
severa l nieces. nephews and
('oUsins .
Mrs . Nicholson had been a
membe r of the Dext er
Church of Christ for 35 yeCirs
and taught' Sund(ty sclwol fur
a number of years there. She
wa s
a
member
uf
Ha rri so nvi lle Gran ge 173 4
and the Star Garden Club at
Dexter .
Funeral servi ces will be
held at I p.m. Saturday at th e
Dexter Church of Chri st with
Mr. Cha rles Ftussell . Sr ..
offi ci ating . Burial will be in
Meigs Memor y Ga rd ens.
Friends may call at the
Walk er Fun eral Home
anytime after 2 p.m. Friday
unlll 11 a .m. Saturday when
the body will be taken tu th e ·
church to lie in state. Th e
family will recei ve friends at
the funera l home from 2 to 4
and 7 t o 9 p.in . on Friday.

VICTORIA OHLINGER
Services were held at I :30
p.m . today fr om the
Foglesong Funeral Home for
Victoria Lo uise Ohlinger, 62,
Letart , who died Tuesday in
Pleasan t Valley Hospit a l.
Burial fo llowed in Broad Run
Cemet ery .
She was born J an. 26, 19 16,
at Graham Station , da ughter
of the late Millard and Retta
Lleving Roush.
Surviving are her husband,
Arthur P. Ohlin ge r ; one
daughter,
Mrs .
Harry
(Frances I Kearns , Letart :
four brothers, Ivan Housh,
Letart, Leonard and Walter
Roush, Columbus, 0. , and
Jay Roush, Ca lifornia; thr ee
sisters, Mrs. Vivian Phelps,
Middleport, Mrs. Jo hn
(Frances) Kea rns, Hartfo•·d,
a nd Mrs. Da na Wyatt ,
Chesh ire; four -gra ndchildren
and two great·grandsons.

Final count
placed at 911 .
IJOVEH AIH
FOHCE
BASE , Del. - The final body
count of the. People 's Temple
ma~s suicide-murder victims
in Guya na ha.s been reduced
by une l.I S (i resuH of the
fingerprinting process.
· Maj . Robert Groom, an Air
Force information officer
said Wedn esday the numbe~
has been rev1sed from 912 to

9ll.

The State Department, Defen se Department and the
FBI are i.n agreement .about
the 911 figur e, sa id Groom .
"The Coun t ha s been
nuctuating all a long," · he
" Un til
the
sa id .
fin gerprinting was finished,
there was no positive way to
know the ri ght count. "
By 'late Wed nesday, 46
bodies had been positive ly
Ident ified, and 357 embalmed
and processed bv a team of
armed forces Pathologists.
Tech. Sgt . Paul Lardizzone
said computers were used to
ta bulate information on ihe
bodi es. a_nd X ~ra vs we re

taken of the 357 bod ies to find
distingui shin g feature s or
birth marks .
One of those identified was
the Ftev. Jim Jones, leader of
the mit.
"They 're working roundthe clock, but it 's just a
painstaking
pr oc ess, "
Lardizzone said. " A lot of
hospita ls and doctors have
ca ll ed saying they a re
for wardin·g materia l to us In
he lp ma ke the
identifications.''
One Los Angeles dentist,
who treated 15 of the victims
before they moved with the
cult to Guyana , has sent all
their dental charts · to the
base.
Doctors and medical
facilities havin g records of
People's Temple victims are
being asked to send them to
. the 436th Air Base Group in
Dover in care of the mortuary
officer ," William Courtenay .
No autopsies will be perfo rmed at Dover , offici(tls
said.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ln .O.
HOSPITAL
\1 r . and Mr:-:. r&gt;onrtld K 111 g.
ADMITTED Ta nya ~~ •11 . 1 ,t •1al'! . W. V;t.
Cundiff, Mason ; Kay Hock.'\1 r . &lt;-IIIII Mr ~. Sll·pht•n I .Jt man, . Cheshire.
tl(']l&lt;-lgt•. dauglll &lt;· t·. Pt . Pll·&lt;tDISCHARGED - Henry ~. . ,tn l . W. V;t.
Cunni~gham, Eileen Swa n.
:vtr
and Mrs. C t •t·l l
~1 &lt; t .\lwnl. s o11. Hrll' im•.
:vir. anti Mr.'i
Clw rlt·:-.
HHI Zt'r 1\'kdk;,tl Ct·ntt·r
I \·nt('k . d;tugl t!t•r. K t• rT .
Oi s(•hargl's. NuL 29
:vir ; ~rtd Mrs Dcdlct.'i Shnr[.
M&lt;tri h ·n ,\ht'&lt;trn : Bul1r
Hni stlt •r\ : I ~11\Tt'twt• Rn_u(;
.\1 ;u·\-t' lh' (';tldwl'll : P.arl

~11 1 1 . ,J;wk.o.; nr t.

( '!; 11·k: Ha rry n .a r k: Tt•n ·sa
C'id l~ · rn :

;\lin· Oil !: Charlt's

CONCORDDL.

F.ll ls:

Mildn•d Franklin :
.Tnt•\· Hall: (;o!dit• .fe4rYis.
.lnai1 King . .it'rn ld Ll'ilt'w :
l .&lt;ll"t'll I .it:•m•: Torn I ,t•m s:
l . q~ h a
l .nll )..!:
Ti mi :"wk ·

('it' llan:

l .&lt;t iHt' tH 't'

Murd•wk :

l'om·;t Mu sl(' k ; .lnll11

Pattt •r·

_-.:n11 :. F.rne,...,t . Rlll'y : Dnnnld
SiiX Oil , ('ll i-i l'l t&gt;."i SIS."illll . ()!'&lt;I

Smit h: Sh:tl'l lll Slt•ir&lt;lrt : H:1y·
IIJ HJHI Ta,vlor : l. ud lh· W01\,..,11]1

Rirths, No\·. 29
Mr .

a nd

M r s.

nl.t '\'i llS. B il'\' illS, St\1 1.

1\rl i n

Dt•.x-

WILLIAM NEASE
MARIETTA - Marietta
College se ni or William
Mitchell Nease of Racine,
played as a fullback on the
Pioneer 's 1978 foot ball squad.
The Pioneers ended their
season with a 5-3 record.
Nease, an art major at
Marietta College, has lettered for the two years
previous to the season and .
was one of t2 seniors on the
Pionee r' s team . A 1975
graduate of Southern High
School , Mitch is the son of Mr .
and Mrs. William Nease of
Box 284, Racine .

SPECIAL$1 I I I I

•2 EGGS
eSAUSAGE

AMC "I
Concord

Surprisingly
low price. *579900

This Special Sale Price Includes :
.
. .
258 Cl o, six cylinder engine, automat1~ trans~_1ss~on,
two-tone paint, white-wall radia I tires, air c?ndrtiomng,
power steering, tinted glass, heavy duty coolt~g system,
light group leather wrapped sports steerrng wheel,
styled whe~l covers, AM-FM stereo radio: _individual
reclining seats in crushed velour,_ quart~ d1g1tal clo~k,
landau vinyl roof, extra quiet msulat1on, front d1sc
brakes, front and rear bumper guards, tru_nk car~et all
transportation arid dealer' prep, rustproofmg.
Stock No. 9548
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195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
' l

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�•

••

'
S
t'
;
t;"
·
·
;
·
~
liee·
'
r
ide
shotgun
in
trucker
strike
''Your Merriest:
Christmas
d
h
d
•
Ever''
W'or coul
uctzon

YOU, TOO, CAN ENJOY
LA-Z-BOY'S BUILT-IN COMFORT.
LA-Z-BOY - THERE ·IS A DIFFERENCE.

LA-Z·BOY GIVES YOU BEAUTIFUL STYLING

By JOHN T. KADY
who had been striking last drivers are afraid to go
no:" there."
Uolted Press Intematloaal
week but voted Satlirday to throu6".
Pennsylvania State Police return when
company
'Spokesmen for both McNihave started riding shotgun officials threatened to fire cholas and Lattava , said they
for convoys of steel.IJauling them.
are losing about $30,000 a day
trucks because of sniper lire
The 22 drivers fired each, agreed about the
from mountainsides and Wednl:sday were employees situation in Pennsylvania.
bricks thrown from interstate ol Interstate Trucking
highway overpasses which Service and reportedly did
have plagued a strike by notreturntoworkthisweek ,
Le~·ol
independent steelhaulers.
Pickets were also reported
The violence has been So at the Baron Drawn steel Co.,
severe,
especially
in where a truck radiator was
By PAMELA J. HUEY
Pennsylvania, that major punctured, the Donovan Wire
URBANA,
(UP!)
haulers liilve reported losses · Co., the Lake Steel Co. and Two researchers say a legal
of more than $1.5 million in the Bleim Steel Co. in Toledo. war between the Ohio River
In addition, Pennsylvania · Valley
states
over
los\ shipments since the
strike began Nov. 10.
State Police have reported construction of power plants
Pemsylvania State ·Police over 200 incidents of violence has the potential to paralyze
said · they are escorting in that state alone since the energy production and
convoys of 10 trucks or more strike started and scattered overall economic developalong the Pennsylvania incidents have been reported ment.
Turnpike from the Ohio in Ohio, Indiana, Mi&lt;;higan ,.
Their conclusion was
border to ·near the Maryland Maryland and New York. ·
drawn from information
Bill Hill , president of th!! gathered by the Ohio River
slate lin.!!\
Strikel'!l Wednesday forced striking
Frater n a 1 Basin
Energy
Study'
the closing of the Toledo Association of Steel Haulers, mandated by Congress in
Pickling and steel Service vowed Wednesday the strike 1975.
Co. and picketed four others "is not goihg 'to break" until
C&lt;Hiirectors of tha t study
in Toledo, Ohio.
the independent owner- - University of Illinois
cOmpany President Jay operators demands are met. professors James J. Stukel
Schnackel said the closing
Three northern Ohio steel and Boyd R. Keenan - said
would idle about 100 persons. hauling firms say they have Wednesday an institutional
"W~ have 7,000 tons of lost over$1.5 million since the vehicle is needed to promote
finished goods oo the floor strike began, mainly because orderly d ev~ lopment of
and no more room," he said. their drivers won 't drive at power plant construction in
" We can't move it out."
night and are fearful of the Ohio River Valley and to
The strike also caused job d r i v i n g
t h r o u g h settle disputes between the
losses In Somerset, Pa., Pemsylvania.
states.
where at least 22 Teamsters
The three firms are
That institutional vehicle
truck drivers who · stayed Ymmgstown Carthage Co .. . could be a voluntary system
away from their jobs in with 600 trucks, McNicholas for siting plants entered iniD
sympathy with the striking Transportation Co., by the electric utilities
steel-haulers were fired Youngstown with 500 trucks themselves, an interstate
Wednesday.
and Lattava Trucking Co., compact, federal supervisioo
The truckers were among Youngstown, with 200 trucks. or creation of a new "super"
82
Somerset
County
"The state of Pennsylvania agency w police the power
Teamsters union members is really rough," saod a plant construction, they said
spokesman for Youngstown at a press briefing.
Carthage whoch says 1t IS
A decision on how to solve
losing about $50,000 a' day in
· Application No. : OHOOS9901
lost shipments. "We go in and
OEPA.. Permit No. : L007 -A O
out of that state a lot and OW'
National Pollutant

a

WITH A NEW

CAREFUL TAILORING AND

LA·Z·BOY RECLINER .,
NOW
'.
,.
SPECIALLY PRICED
j

LA·Z·BOY - THERE IS A DIFFERENCE.

"

FROM .ONLY

''

TO

'199 $399
Your choice from over 50 different models in
stock for Christmas delivery. Choose from
Rocker-Recliner and the new "Space Saving
"wall-away" Rocker Recliners in various
styles to fit every size person. We believe our
Recliners offer the most comfort, value and
quality compared to any other lpunge type
chair. Additio11al styles and colors to those
shown at left.

The diffurence that means
extra comfurt.

System (NPDESI

l

Permit Program

rv v-....,.

~
PUBLIC NOTICE
NPDES Permit to Discharge

td State VVaters
o:tl i o E n v Iron m en t a I
Pl-otection Agency
P1 Cl. Box 1049

~"6.u";~~.~·3~~. ~'!:.~·
6(4-466-4891

chosen as
ASTRO·GRAPH president

Friday, Dec . 1
·.,;.::~0:-::::--:::---::=-::--:==::

'Pub lic Not ice No . OEPA -

7'1-l l -OJA

. .

1
0ate of Is sue of Publ 1c
N Ptice: November 30, 1978
cName and Address of

EXCEllENT GIFT SUGGESTIONS

•Brass Lamps

• Scented Candles
•Pictures
•Sofas

•Ash Trays
•Curio Cabinets
•Wood Rockets

•Desk Lamps

•Lounp Chairs

•Dining
•WaA Units
•Registered Heirloom Pieces •Desks

Room Suites

r-----

Value That Foldsf

1
1 SAMSONITE FOLDING TABLES &amp;CHAIRS
The perfect gift for a
"practical"
Christmas

I

I

YOU, TOO, CAN ENJOY
LA·Z·BOY'S BUlLT ·IN COMFORT.
LA-Z·BOY - THERE IS A DIFFERENCE.

•
LA·Z·BOY GIVES YOU BEAUTIFUL STYLING
CAREFUL TAILORINGAND
A LIFE-TIME WARRANTY ON THE MECHANISM.
LA·Z·BOY- THERE IS A DIFFERENCE.

II
I
II
I
I
I
I

lHE GIFT
USED
lHROUGHOUT :
lHE. YEAR
Your
CHAIRS:

TABLES:

Choice ot Walnut or Gold Covers

padded seat ......................... '16
padded Seat and back ............. '21
'
SQUARE.. ............. .... 1

30"x30"
21
34"134" SQUARE. : ................. 127
40" ROUND. ......................... 135

ITofU
I
I

I
I

•I

FURNITURE

GAllERIES
Galipolis, Ohio

•FINE FURNITURE
•CUSTOM DRAPERY

•CARPET
'
•INTERIOR DESIGN

Hours: Startin1 Dee. 4:
1

9-8 Mon.&amp;!.

'

The fol low ing stateme·n ts
apply to any and a !l NPDES
permits tor descr i bed abov e.
On the basis of pr elimina ry
staff review and app l ication
of standards and regulations,
the D irec tor of th e Ohio
Envir on mental
Prote~tion
Agency will issue a perm1t for
the discharge sub te cl to
Certain effluent con dit ions
and special condi tions . Tile
draft permit will be issued as
a final aclion unless th e
Director revises the draft
'lfter consideration of t he
re co rd of a public meeting or
written comments. or upon
d isa pproval by the Ad ·
ministrator of the U .. S.
Env lronm enta I
Protect 10n
Agency . Any person may
submit a written statemen t
within th i rty days of the date
of the Public Notice as to w.hv
the Director should revtse
is perm it.
If signi f icant
blic interest is shown a
bile meeting may be held
on motion of the Director
prior to final issuance of the
permit. Following final at ·
tiOn by the Director , any
~gr i eved party has the ~ i ght
to appeat to th e Env1ron ·
mental Board of Review .
Interested persons are
invited to submit wr itten
comments
upon
the
discharge permit. Comments
should be submitted In per son
or by mail no later than 30
.days after the date of th Is
Public Notice. Deliver or
ma il all comments to : .
NPD'ES P'ermlt sect1on ,
OhiO
Environmental
Pr'otection Agency, Ft . 0 . Box
1049, 361 ' East Broad Street.
Columbus, Ohio 0216.
The OE PA perm It number
and Public Notice numbers
should appear next to the
·above address on the en ·
velope and on .each page of
any submitted comments . All
comments received no later
than 30 days after the date of
th is Publ ic Notice will be
considered .
The
application ,
fact
sheets
permit including
effluenf l im itations, special
c ondit i ons, comments
received
and
other
documents are available for
inspection and may be copied
at a cost of 15 cents per page
at the Ohio environmental
Protect ion Agency at the
addre-ss shown abo-ve any
time betwe-en the hours of
B:OO a.,m . and 4:30 p .m .,
Monday through Friday .
Copies of the Public Notice
are a-vailable at no charge at
the sa me addreu.
Mailing lists are maintained tor persons or groups
who desire to receive PubliC
Notice for all app!lci!ltlons In
the state or for certain
geograPhical areas. Persop!l
or groups may · also rtQuest
copies of tact sheets, ap .
pllcatlorlsor other documents
P,Frtalnlng to specific IP ·
pl'lcatlons . Persons or groups
may have their names put on
such a list by making a
written request to the Agency
at the addreu shown above .

~

I

•I•

president

and
Leadingham was

Marie
chosen

tlll 30. ltc

elfect upon your all airs. Lik e to
find out more about yourself?

Send for your 1979 copy of
Astro·Graph Letter. Ma1f 50
ce ntsforeachandalong , self·
ad
, stamped
to dressed
Astro·Graph,
P.O. envelope
Box 489,
Radio City Station , N.Y. t0019.
Besuretospecily'birth sign .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . •19)
A kindness will be repa id you
today . It .will be somet~ing
material and witt come through
a most unusual channel . or
chain of events .

were

"~~i~ J:lill

urt . p~o
I 1

Appeals in Chicago.
"Thus, for t he first time in
American history, a public
utility is seeking a federal
injunction to prevent any
other utility in the region
from being given a permit
until it - the plaintiff,
Indianapolis Power - is
given some relief, " said

economic

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

"This illustrates why we

FOR THE BEST DEALS

PAROLEE WOUNDED
NEW YORK !UPI ) - A,

TRI·STA TE AREA

paroled murderer sought in
the shooting and burning
death of a young nurse in an
abandoned tenement ,last
week was wounded in a shootout with police today and
arrested, authorities said.
Police said a bullet hit
Nat han Giles Jr ., 32, a
paroled murderer, in the
" upper mid back" to end a
chase that began with a
kidnapping Wednesday night
in Harlem. An unidentified
bystander was shot in the leg

meet

«

John

pollution standards. Power-

generating

~'uller' David Jones an
Winnie Blair.
The next board meeting
will be in January . All
members will he notified of
the tom
' e and place. Those
attending were Robert
France, Jim Cochran, Hank
Cleland, Kathy Cleland,
Leona Cleland, Henry

W
If&lt;

~f.(

U

SAJURDAY AND SUNDAY-DEC. 2·3
12 N()()N TIL 6 PM EACH DAY

Ill
U

FREE

'/1
?)

111

u

~

an d

3"

Oth er P o tte d PI an
to 10" Size

~
II!

~

W
W
W
~
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~

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If&lt;
U

'11
fl
'11

II!

111

u

W

ts ~:II l

u d~

111

f,1
~~

who are important to yo u, es-

ga~

pecially in areas of yqur. work .

)I

ment might be offered you

u

An opportunit y

or

ing

fi

fant astic proposal could come

I(

today and e-veryone Will
want to team up with you. A ~
_

'11

to bloom

Dressed ·n
1

manner you have with people '11
today, you 'l l be rewarded with '
happiness twofold . None of 71
~~~~. kind words fall on deaf

through

CANCER (June 21-July,22),V&lt;&gt;vr

U
work is recognized for ljeing · ~

-

20%

SAVE

.I

SAVE

20

''ff11

~
~

'll'll Itu
111

~ W

II!

Ill

~

'f1

U

, All parts in contact with can
remove lor easy cleaning
• Magnetic li d holder
, Hardened steel cutter bar

u:

DELUXE MIXMASTER
MIXER

5-QUART
CROCKER
COOKER/ FRYER

It!

P
111

g :

··

tU rn down any in-vitation!! and , -. tt:!

l:i!!

u

W

' 1st •25.
2nd '1.5. 3rd '10 Gift Certificates
gu II!u
.·
R fr h
t On Saturdays
t11
·~W-----~-•-,•-s_m_e_n_s__________:-_-'llu

:~ u
W

' 'lr
·
.W

!

you 'll knpw whO to
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The u
bigger the action today, the '11
better the ,chance of go~d . ·
things happening to you . Vou If )I
be In your element .when ·In· ' II!

volved with grandiose t. ~

Permanent

Poinsettia Baskets
Wreaths

priority today . Larger benefits w
than imaginable can be ob- II!

Monument

Give career or -vocation No. 1 fA:

amount of M

Saddl

,

PERMANENT
ARRANGEMENTS
.

CEMETERY
DECOR AJIQNS

schemes.
· ·
•' U
scoRPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) tl!

tained from the least

• Steam vents designed to give
all ·over, even steam coverage
• Easy to follow fabric guide
• Thumb·tip he at control - switches
to dry ironing instantly
• Convenient button nooks

111

dends. You deserve them.
·'f1
With cash 'n carry
With cash 'n carry Y1
LEO (Julysocial
23-Aug.
2~) AncOuld
,ex- ill~-----·
------------..&amp;.----------~~~
ceptlonaf
contact
be established today, so don't · 'f1
Register for Free Door Prizes.
u

f~:~~·s

u

YJ

W

%
0

Christmas trim

the holidays

'!

by all means, get out and
mingle . · ·
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. ZZ) Dame
Fortune might be in'vislbfe, but
she Is def initely there today ,
going to bat for you . When
things coil1e fro rT) unexpected

a

?lt§

«
'f1

.._

di~i· ·

~
~

DEC. 2 thru DEC. 9

yo u're exceptionally fortunate . '11
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be- ill
cause of the warm, friendly

w

TOTAL CLEAN
"POWER PIERCE"
CAN OPENER/
KNIFE SHARPENER

STEAM OR
DRY IRON

t·

A ttend :
y o'u 're 1nvited rr
~0
II!
U:
POl NSmiAS
CHRISTMAS
'lltl!
.
u
Guaranteed
TERRARIUMS It

'/l

larger-than-normal

~Orld

992-5560

TAURUS
20·May 20) Even
if you're (April
not commercial-minded, pay special heed .to any '{1
business opportunoty comong 111
your way today. In ·this area u

pay

'11

.59 N. Second St.

W

'

outstanding today . This could

nuolz.day
(

~

an ad-vance-

~~tls
(March 21-April 19) ath- ~
ers find you especially appeal- U
your way . ·

~
v"

• Automatic features se t it and forget It
• Doub'Je signal light
• See·through, amber cover

~u

iii~:;;¥ ~""" !!00 ~""" ~ !\&lt;:&gt;: ~""' ~"'::&lt; l&lt;:&lt; ""'!!00 ~ 9'01""" ~&lt;=&lt; I'&lt;:&lt;~ ~""'""" ""' 1'&lt;0&lt; ""'""" I&lt;:! ~ 11&lt;:0 ~

~;;e;~~~F~~·i~~~;ch

• Removable ceramic vessel adds
slow cooking versatility to
regular electric frypan use
• Teflon interior, porcelain ·
exterior
• Cook &amp; Clean Cradle

1$:!

i

20) You
come to the attention of people

CROCKMASTER
5-QT.
SLOW COOKER
WITH CERAMK (ROCK

ll

'/l

~~Yu~~~~~m~J~~· e~~:,:~· i~~J ~·~~~~e~~~aJz~~· ;~~~~n B. ~~~:v-v,_,_H.~:J~J~~~.!:l~'}!~~~~-~

today cou ld tur n out to be some
ol the best deals you'-ve e-ver
made. If anythIng's hang in g

CROCKER FRYPAN

~

~

REFRESHMENTS SERVED
p0 TT E D
F 0 I LAG E
F0 R
EVERYONE
REGISTER FOR DOOR PRIZES
Need not be present to win, no purchase

necessary.
111
Cl eland
Sr.,
Marie
•
ttias
.
u FEATURING: Pmnse
Leadingham • W i 11 ' s 'fl.
FOLIAGE PLA. NTS
Leadingham, Virgil Teaford 111

in

OPEN :
Mon. , Tues .• Wed . &amp; Sat. 8:30tii5 : 00
Thursday Til12 Noon
F ri day Until 8 P. M.
He rman Grate
Mas~n · W.Va .
773-5591

ll

u
111
u:

Syra.cuse, 0 .

992 . 5776

ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE

Ill

activities

lllinois Indiana and Ohio are
making Pennsylvania's air
dirty
and
restrictin g
Pennsylvania ' s economic
development, he said. ·

MASON FURNITURE

in fair
condition at St. Vincent's
Hospital in Greenwich
Village early today:

~

ttt

d

Pennsylvania 's

in the crossfire.
Giles was reported

ll

~~:

Hubbard's Greenl\ouse

'"' '1.25 to '5.00

Keenan.

! HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE

Trustees named

Leadingham,

it "

It!!&lt;:&lt; I""' EO&lt; l&lt;:&lt; 1\&lt;0 l&lt;:&lt; &gt;&lt;;:&lt; !!&lt;&gt;&lt; l!&lt;:' 1100 ~ ~ !'&lt;::&lt; ~'&gt;':! !\&lt;:&gt;: !\&lt;:&gt;: !!00 9'01 ~

of
directors were Leadingham,
Henry Cleland, Jr. and Jan

Gettles.

rlfl~i n &lt;:t

growth, pollution and public
health .
Keenan said open legal
warfare between Kentucky
and Indiana ha s already
started as the result of a
TEAMSTERS
dispute over a power plant
SUPPORT RAISE
planned , by Indianapolis
Bv UP!
The 140,000 member Ohio
Power and Light Co. The
plant was tn be built on the Conference of Teamsters
Indiana side of the Ohio River amounced today it supports a
I"JUthwest of Cincinnati.
pay raise bill for state
However, the state of Ken- legislators and elected oflucky filed an objection with ficial s · which would boost
t h e En vi or n menta I their sa laries by about 30
Protection Agency claiming percent a year.
the Indiana company had not
The Ohio Senate passed the
demonstrated it would pay raise bill Monday night
adequately control
it s by a vote of 17-16 with Lt.
pollution . On the basis of the Gov. Richard Celeste, the
Kentucky report , the EPA presiding ofiice r in the
disapproved the plant's con- Senate, casting the tiestruction .
breaking vote. The bill must
As a result, Indianapolis now be pa ssed by th e · Ohio
Power has. taken its case House and signed by Gov.
directly to the U.S. Court of James A. Rhodes.

f~~~~r~~~,-~~"h;~~~:r~!~~ ~ait h f~~~t~set~re:~~Y·board

•Grandfather Clocks-beautiful, charming and
functional additions to your home.
West German Quality.
1699 to 11299

I
•

rA 'i]rjQJ~

~ lJ~l!iJwlilwlJ

·-------------------Pillows

Willis Leadingham,
Gallipolis, formerly of
Syracuse, was elected
president when the Southeastern Ohio Board of
Realtors met recently at the
December! , 1978
Meigs Inn.
Th is- coming year you will be
Dan Shaffer, a Jackson
insti lled with the ability to ex- realtor was named vice-

Applicant : White Rock coal
CO m pan y, P . 0 . Box 306 ,
Rutla nd, Ohio 45775
on: Name and Address of
Facility where Discharge
~curs:
White Rock Coa t
(!d'mpany , M in e No. 1, State
R,.oute 148, Syracuse •. Ohio
~ecelvfno
Water : Un ·
named t r i bu t ar y to Ohio
· pand upon situation~ and make
River
Th i s
applicant
is
a
muc h from little. Your optimism
producer of coel and hf~S 1 will be grea 11 y enhanced beexisting discharge po1 nt s.
The current operations of this
discharger result is an
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
average eff luent fl oW of
25,000 gallo ns per day . Key 11) Prestig ious or infl uential
parameters t o tie limited in
people will take a seriou s inlerthe perm It are as follow s:
est in your activities today .
Tota i ·Suspended Solids, Total
They could t1ave an excellent
I ron, Total ~anganese .

·-----~-------------·
FREE DELIVERY lHE SATURDAY BEFORE CHRISTMAS

• Decorator

Bernice Bede Osol

industry,

condoning

violence and we are totally

the multitude of problems
caused by power plant
location and construction in
the Ohio River Valley could
affect the future well-being of
the entire country, said
Keenan, a political science
professor at Chicago Circle.
Keenan and Stukel, an
engineering professor at the
Urbana-Champaign campus,
have submitted a progress
report on the first two years
of the three-year project tn
th e Enviornmental
Protection Agency and
Congress. The research was
completed by researchers at
eight universities including
illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Louisvill e , Ohio State,
PittsbW'gh , Purdue and West
Virginia.
The study was ordered as
the result of plans for
accelerated power plant
construction along the Ohio
River following the Arab oil
embargo in 1973. These plans
ge nerated local concern
among
envirorunentalists,
fanners and other . citizens
and groups over the impact

L eadingh am

', Discharge Elim !nation

violence, we're not

a

on

independent s teel-haulers
conditions," said HilL
include the right for them Ill
bargain co llectively, a
national license plate and
increase the strike action m certain weight modificatioos.
99 '1 5716
Svrc.c u s.c, 0 .
the Buckeye State.
"Everybody keeps thinking
The demands of the this thing is going to break
Potted Poinsettas
and we're going to break,"
st.oo to 56.50
said Hill. " But the strike is
Hanging Poinsettias
not going to break and we're
Tubs, 30 plus blooms
not going Ill break.
$10.00
"Some of the men are
Foliage Planls
discouraged but I think the
3" to 10"
50c to $5.00
feclr a new econoQ1iC war majority will go all the way
between the Ohio River and stay out as long as it
HANGING 8ASt&lt;ETS 4" to
sta tes," he added .
takes to be in a position to
our
working
The study, Stukel said, better
indicates air quality is a more
pressing problem than water
quality.
With
the
proliferation of coal-burnmg
power plants, he said, . the
study has_ found there IS a
greater buildup of sulfur
dioxide and other pollutants
in the northeastern states of
the .Ohio Valley (Pennsylvania and West Virginia)
IN THE
than in the west (Illinois,
Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana .)
For instance, Stuke l sa od,
said air moving into Pennsylvania from Ohio does not

Hill was scheduled Ill meet
with steel-haulers nea r
Canton , Ohio , today to

Hill said he has told FASH
members not w engage in
vio lent acts.
" We 1 re not promoting

·

nt

t

A LIFE-TIME WARRANTY ON THE MECHANISM:

"Our system goes from
Chicago to the east coast and
we are off about 30 percent in
the number of shipments,"
sa id the spokesman for
McNicholas . " Pennsylvania
is the problem "

es

II!

M

~
u
~

Beautifully

111

desig,ned with

~
~

0 namentS
r
'

'f1

candles etc

'

~
~

'

Not exactly
as plcturood

~u

1

effort
at .this time.
. , Ia'
W :till r•·-·-·-·-r&lt;o&lt;r&lt;o:i&lt;:&lt;•!!Ot!llo:&lt;I""~~!!OtllllllllM!l!Ott&lt;o&lt;~lf&gt;llf&gt;l!!Ots::&lt;~"'~"""
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . f
.v~~
;K;-.

• A slow cooker -a regular cooker
- a deep fryer
• Crockery ves sel plus low heal
settings lor versatility
• Removable crock can be washed
in dishwasher

• 12 speed
Mix·Finder dial
• Dough hooks for making bread
• 225 Watts, governor controlled

SHOP EARLY AT

�..

r
~

12- The Daily Scnt mt·l , MHhlh•lk•rt-Ptllnl.' l't•y . ()., T l.m rsllay. N11\' . ;to. l ~liA

-Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES
Wur1il'lur U1U it•l'

lj

i ·us ll

1 tlfl
11111

~l:i

lidct)·s

:1.011

;1 &lt;5

1,:?:1
1.!•1

Uti

F'..ctdl

word

GU N SHOOl Roc111P Gun Club
hc• y ~undov 1 pm l octoty

l'haq.!t'

1 thn·
~ tla,·s
:ltla~·s

u v t•r Ilk' 11111\11;1111 11 15

wunls IS 4 t 't'llb jJO.'I' wun l Jlt'l' 1 l il~
Atl"l rumun).\ u\l)t·r tha n t 't • ll.'l l'&lt; ' ll\1~·,.
ti&lt;I''S wt ll ~, dlill'l!t'll at lltv I 1\it\
I'Oitt•
.

In mt•m ul-y. C'anl uf Thnnk.\ &lt;11111
Otn luary : li n nts IJt'l' wunl. S:l.!lll
11\UIIITIUIII .'tash Il l ad\'!tllt 't'

Mo obile H u lllt' set It.'S it i U.I \'ani ~ It·~
iirl' iHTt'Pl t'il IIIli)' Wtl h l&lt;l .~h Willi
t•rth·r. 25 t'Cil t dla l'l!t' fur ads \'arn··
i!l).! .Rox Numbt' r In Can•uf Till• St:i llt ul'l .

Tilt' l~ub li:dtt • r l't'St'I'Vt'S llw nl!ll\
It• t·dit ot' r t•jL't'l &lt;m Y uds dt't'll ll.'tl ull·
jct·Uu!ldl. Tht· PuUiisht•r Will llill lw
rt'S(JUIISI\.Jit' fur lllllrt' \)\i\11 IIIII' 1111'111'•
rt•d ltiSt'I'II PII
PhtJIII' ~t!ll -l\51;

ATaN TI O N DE~H HUN H io! S Hove
)'Ou r ' trop hre!&gt; mo unted . Col i
l crry Br own . 9i:J5 ·Jt:(!;j
HA VI:
YO UR
dee '
trophy
moun l ed . Bu chf \Bid Talude 11ny
Hutlonrl
o i'W o
Phone
t.;: Hl: ~T ffl f ownship lru!o l ee!&gt;
re gular m ee tin g wi ll b e Oer . 4
ot :1 pm .
h oci eric k Tuttl e, Cle rk .

lH I-

NOTICE
' WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
•

I~

YI:::Ah' Ol O boy ne eds 1ide to
f lorida week of December l
th ru 13th . Con cin ve . sho r e elf
p ensc~ an d g•ve r e feren ce!.
1 4'1 14b0 .

MtJmi&lt;IV
Noun t&gt;rl Sati1nla ~

• _

TUl':"tiUI'

thru Fmi:•:-·
~ P. M.

Su11da'
~ P . M~

Fnthty afll' l 'l li~lll

The Almanac

United Press International
Today is Thursday, Nov. 30,

to

follow .
The moon is new .
The morning stars are
Venus, Jupiter and saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury and Mars.
Those born on this date are
under the 'sign of Sagittarius.
American author Mark
Twain (Samuel Clemens )
was born Nov. 30, 11103:
On this day in history :
In 1782, preliminary peace
articles formally ending the
Revolutionary War were
signed in Paris.
In 1874, Winston Churchill
was bofn . He was destined to
become

Britain ' s

to Buy

_t:t~IE_Wanted

OlD COINS. poc ket wotc he!o ,
d O!&gt;!. ring s. wedding bond~ .
d i a mo nd ~ . Go ld or si lve r . Ca ll
1-loger Wam sle y. 74/ ·LJJ I .
WA Nl TO buy o ld 45 and '/H
phon ograph
reco rd s. Call
'IY'l ·b:J7U or ~on l ocl Mor lln Fu• ·
n il u r·e

-Lost
-·- and
·-- Found
- · -----·-

--

LOST GOlD co l ored sma ll p ur!&gt;e .
Seco nd IS Sycamore. f.le word l or
pur se anrl cont ent s and l 1nder
con lea ve at Doi ly Sent ine l ol
lice
l OST young fem al e l ri ~h Se tt er
l' u pper s
!-' loins
oreo
6 1d - 6~7 . MT/ . f.l ewa rd.

__

prime

old girl .
1.14'1 -/'18 4

---

Col i

a lt er

! 5.30

Yard Sale ----

--~- - -

U: YOU hove o service to o ff er .
w ant to buyr or sel l someth111g .
or
o(' loo k i ng for work
wha tE've r
you 'll get r esu lts
fo ster wi th o Sentin e l Wo nt Ad
Co l\ 991 -2156

A thought for the day:
British statesman Winston
Churchill said, ' ' In war:
resolution.
In
defeat :
defiance.
In
victory :
magnanimity. In peace: good

will."

LAFF- A- DAY

Pets lor Sale
HOOf HOLLOW Hor ses . Buy , se ll
!lod e or tra in . New and used
~ addle s . Huth lo! eeves, A lban y.
(614 ) b9H-3'190.
RI SING STAh' Kenn els . ~ cording
and groommg , a ll bre'e d s
C h e~ hir e 36i' ·0 29'1

Auto Sales"_ __
19{') fO RD Cl ubwo gon Von . 302
au to _, P S_ Y9'1 -l'd76

14691-'l VMOUT H RO AD Runn er . 4~ pee d . 4 bbl ., I I w h e e l ~ $800 .
492 -3J I O.
"•

OF FIDUCIARY

On November 15th , 1978 , in
the Meigs County Probate
Co urt ,
Case
No .
225 49 ,
Dorinda Nardei. 36-4 East
Main Street , Pomeroy, Ohio

457 69

was arpoin ted

Ad -

mi nis tra trix o the estate of
Nor ma E . W ilson , dece ased ,
la te of 364 East Main Street,

" The big-na me dogs in commercials go wild ove r it. "

HfNlJ::: Io! S A SSIST ANCf for Senio r
Ci li zen s. Vou may be ab l e to
li ve in out ap artm ent l or l e~s
than S!:iO. V il lage Monor .A porl ·
· m en!-, , 99'1 -77 8 7.
fUf.I N I SHfO ROOMS renled week ·
ly . Ma id service. b:cepti onol
neighborhood . 941-3ABY alter

5.
TWO Bt=DR OOM mob il e h o me .
M en on ly . ~&lt;n - 2SYB .
NfAR 1-'0MfROY : Spacious 3
bed room ranch , big livi ng room
and din ing roo m . all newly
remodeled . ne w carpeti ng . kil ·
ch en . both . n olurol gas hea t _ '~
acre lot. A va ilable n ow . Sl'lS
per mon th . Wri l e to: Mar y Jane
Co f r , Realty , Mary Jane ( orr
an d A ssoci at e!&gt; 3146 N . High
~~ -. C ol umb us . Ohio43101 .

t~J ·;o NA \HUA IJ ,. 6~

:J hf'&lt;l rno1• 1
umlNpmnlflg , St~OO
nnrl O ~'.utn£' loon '144 :lt&gt;HJ n1
HJJ :IJII

tti 70Am h cr~ t ~O!! l 'l'l BR
l'lb~G e nf'rolbUxl'l'1BH
19h i1 PM C~/)(J/') H R

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

TH HS.

M ai n

Residential and commer ci.11. call tor esti mate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Gmther 985·3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Sl ..

e0 x 3

Ru tland
flf G I SH RED
Quart e r
ho r se
Gf' ldi ng _ Con b e ~ h own c r r onte !&gt; l ed . Hegi.s tered Ap pol oO!&gt;Q
m a r e~ lo foo l in Ap 1il. 18 mo.
Ofld 6 mo . r egis ter ed
Ap
Po loo !&gt;o colf5 . G ood colo r.
Pho ne I ~1.1 3 - "/J90.

fl fC.ULA TI O N POOL tabl e . sla l e
lop Con b e ssen by a ppoin tm ent onl y I used Stok e-a·
malic Heot ro lo . 944 ·'1105 .

606 E.

All

N

Pomeroy, 0 .

JUST LISTED -

Need an

llilil

.~ · .

$23,500.00.
DON ' T FENCE ME IN -

por c~e s,

full

DIG THIS ,

~

l ' , ACR L 1"1 )I 60 mobile home
neor De)lter _4lJ::J .SBSfl
1'76/ f O TA L flfCTRI( mobile
ho me
fu rn is h ed , 3 b ecl r..
w o~her and dry er. Ai r cond i·
tion ed . I lo t, 21 0 ft . fr on toqe .
S 12.000 . Phone 742 -2826 .
11.1t&gt;J 10 &gt;~ 51 ON E BfDHOOM
Wind sor trail er . Go~ furnace ,
Und erpin nin g .
f u rn i sh ed.
f./9:J .JHI.J7 after 5 weekday s

DAD -

1

oversized bedroom, 2
regular size . Lot 50x200 .

{great for k ids ) some

Pom eroy , Ohio 4,6 769.
Manning D . Webster
Pro b ate Ju dge -Clerk
{ll l 30 (12 1 7, u , Jtc

PUBLIC AUCTION
BANKRUPTCY &amp; LIQUIDATION EQUIPMENT SALE
(ATHENS, OHIO)
SUNDAY, DEC. 3 at 12 O'CLOCK NOON
Rt. SO southwest out of Athens, Ohio for 2 miles

toward Albany -turn south on Co. Rd. 17 for 3 miles to
the Williamson Shaft &amp; Slope Co. Follow signs .
D7 AI tis Chalmers front end loader w-bucket (motor
needs repair) ; Massey Ferguson diesel (300 ) ba ckhoe
w -fron t end bucket ; Link Belt crane W·boom ; backhoe

crawler {Walkahshell gas motor) ; 1954 Ford F100
tractor tr uck - saddle tanks, winch , 2 spd.-55pd., good
rubber ; Ingersoll Rand compressor. gOOd i Detroit

diesel on rubber; 1958 International 15 ft. flatbed , 4
spd .-2' spd. axle ; 1973 Chevrolet IC60) , dump truck W·
cab protector; Rogers lowboy w-goose neck 130 ton) ;
1962 Cnterna tlonaf Model BC 170 flatbed; 600 cu . ft.
diesel Schramm compressor (needs repair) ; 1954 Ford
trac1or w-w lnch and A frame; two water pumps ;
concrete pump ; G. E. Ingersoll compressor ; Atlas
Copco air compressor for parts ; Ingersoll Rand
compressor : Atlas Copco compressor ; 2 drum hoists,

10,000 lbs . per drum Model 100 ; American 2 drum holst
Model100 for parts ; vent tubing pipe, etc .; 40ft. trall~r
field office ; p!J_stlc pipe, parts, etc. ; American single
drum holst ; fo\JY30 ton stiff leg derricks ; 40 ft. box

tra i ler, single axle ; 2 steel head frames w-derrlck ; 2
head frame hoists : Elmco rock loeder for parts ;

Elmco side rock loaders; 1967 International truck,

needs repair ; Chevrolet truck for rarts; I auto. slope

car; 1967 International flatbed ; lo misc . tools, parts,
etc .: 2 Ingersoll 600 for parts; Gunn ite DC elec.

mach ine; one 4 drum head holst ; four elec. mofors, 3

phase, 200 hp, and 75 hp .: 225 Lincoln welder : concrete
rock bucket; two 500 gal. fuel tanks; old Int. truck wwater tank (scrap); Alan Brad ley D-C Marine starter
{scrap) ; 8 ratchet lacks ; elec. switch boxes ; American
2 drum holst needs repair: 2 Atlas Copco hoists; lot
scrap iron ; set steel slope forms -

traveling forms

high mine tunnel w-adi . materia l to pour walls only,
Inc Iudes 8 ft. 10 ln . wheels .

ct..y

This Is a partial listing . Nothing shown before
of
sale. Terms - cash or certified check (persona or
company checks will only 1» accepted' wh,n
accompanied by • bank lenor guaranteeing paymant
of said check). All purchasu must be paid for day of
ule.
Lunch on premises. Not rosponolblt lor accldentJ.
R. c, Gibbs, Anornoy for tile S.nkruptcy TrustH.
Charles M. Cobbe, Anorney for Security Creditors.
Auctioneer - Bill Jones, Phont 557-3411 or 557-3133.

~- ~-~,:---------~~~----------r-----~~:-----------.J

Commercial and Home
Building
Any Type improvements
To Existing Structures
No Contract Too Large Or
25 Years Experience

All Work Guaranteed

Auction
DEAL ERS AUCT ION Sole . Publi c
i nvit ed . fr i .. l pm. l o t s o f
Chr h tmo s m erch and ise and
mi sc. at Ohio h' iver A u cti on .
537 High St ., M iddl epo rt , OH .

J. R. Construction
.
Co• .
carpentry, Electrical,
Painting

Just 511 ,000.00.
GENUINE RANCH -

Construction
Maintenance

'!•

HOME

Locpted on lot . Use your
own furniture, patio and

storage bu ilding . 57 ,'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 Relators

Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
992-2259,992-6191 , 992-2568

J

COA L. LIMtSTONE . sa nd . grovel.
calciu m chloride , fer til izer , dog
~
food , and all ty pes o f 50 it . f x
cel sior Salt Wo rk ~. Inc .. I: . Main
St ., Po :ne r ~y . 942 ·.38_91_
OHTA TIRf S. Quali ty ond per ·
O n ~ ale
now .
l o nnonce
7d2 -73::JH .
AP Pl l:S . ~ITZPATfii C K Orchard .
Stat e Rt. bf:IY . Phone W ilk e svil le
b69-37 tiS.
A t4'/8 Honda Hawk 400 cc mol ar·
cycl e. 1100 miles, 51100 o r bes t
oHer . Cal l af ter 7pm, 7_&lt;1 2-2028.

POMEROY
lANDMARK

R SALE

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

.ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE II

--~~

THR J:: E BEDROOM fr am e ho m e in
Middlepor t Coi i 491 - :J &lt;~ S7 .
~AHM rO R so l e . Hou se.

'l. barn s.
tr a iler . lar ge pond 10 O(l es o r
I:JL acres. 7&lt;11 -LSbb .

. HOU SE t-:OR sol e in Min ersv il le : 4
bedroom s, li vin g too1n . kit ch en . u t ility room on d bot h .
Ni ce lul l ba sem e n t . Ph one
4q2 .S'd13 . A sking ? nly . S I 7 . ~00 .
1-lfA l EST A TE lOANS . VA
No
1n o n e y
d ow n
(e l i gi ble
Ve teren s). fHA - A s low o s 3,,...
do wn [ al 'l no n -Ve tere ns and
gener al publ ic} To purc hm e
rea l es tate o r r ef i nan ce . JO
Y ~AH S TI::RMS. IHHANO MOf.!
T(; AGE CO ., 7i' f. . Stol e St ..
Ath ens . Phone 6 1&lt;1 -541 -305 1.

TUPPERS PLAINS ·
Ranch styl e 3 bedroom hometaca tcd one block fr om
school. Nice neighborhood. Just what a Yt oung couple
with a small child needs . Plenty of ground 1L Almost an
acre . Financing available. 518,500 FUll Pri·ce .

CALL 992-2342
EVENINGS 992-2449

MOBI Lf HOME I::J )I 55 on l ac re
an d :J buildin gs of Five Po int s.
9tn " J98d .

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

YOUR 9~COND IS POINTII&gt;I'

THAT POP ftUNAT

992-3325
216 E. Second Street .
NEW LISTING - Large 3

FOR SALE

bedroom older home near
stores · and shopping. 8
rooms , l V:l baths , full
basement and new nat . gas
furnace . $25,000.

""992-2174

Street 20 .
9:]Q--Soap 13.
10 :0Q--Hall of Fame 3, 4, 15; 20-20 13; Barnaby Jones
8,10: We Ain' t What We Was 33 ; News 20.
10:3o--You Bet Your Life 70.
11 :oo-- News 3,4,6 ,8,10,i3,15; ·Dick Cavett 20; Lili as
Y oqa &amp;

JJ l.9

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

well , lots of

Roofing, guHers, new and
repair.
Inside Paneling &amp; Ceili1Jg ·

tile

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

r:n
. .. .....

AU TO MO~ I l E

IKI SURANCf bee n
can ce lled? Lo s! your oper at o rs
li cense? Phone 992·1 143 .

f: U fo!NACI:
YYL · S587

PHONE 992-2772

Cli:ANING .

Ca l l

t-:ROSTY 'S C~

r adio equipmen t .
two-way r adio .
on l e nnos and occes . Phon e
, Po rl lon d H43-:Zl81 . Op en even in gs till 8 .00 , Sun da y 2 00 till
t&gt; :OO .
~vcr ything in

HONAKER' S CB a nd e lec tronic
eq uipm ent. RJ.-33 506 2nd St. ,
Mason , WV 25260 .

IROUGACI

I I

S!'IARTeR, AS A RULe, 'CAUSE
HAVE TO 13E TO SURVIVE '"'
·THEY KNOW TH' FACTS O' LIFE ...
"'LL 'BOUT HONESTY,
THRJFT, DECENCY'"

ANTI -FREEZE
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why PlY tU9

00\_o\11 (,'II ~&lt;.f(. $347
'-' ''9'gal.

Town &amp;·Counby
Pomeroy Landmark
W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phon• m -2111

t.

range, dishwasher, disposal and even the breakfast set
goes. For your con \lenience there is a half bath off 1he

kitchen . And you II love the basement family room . It
has deep pile sheg carpel and paneled walls with a
wood or cool burning Ben Franklin Stove. The laundry
has a washer and dryer that also goes with the house .
And thIs solid home Is located on over "" acre. Shown
by appointment.

A Tff NTION : HOME ow n er s. fnd
you r pointing worries. l e t
G ollio Hom e Improveme nt in stall so li d vi nyl sid in g on your
ho m e wit h th e anlozing Sty ro
Foom ln wl otion . Comes w i th 40
year worren ty . Free es l imotes.
Ca l l J67 -02()9 , Gallipolis . O hio .
CA SH ~ Oh' junk cars . Wrec k er
ser vice . frye ' s. lo!utl o nd , Ohio.
742· 2081 '

Y

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE
Rodney Downing, Broker
Bill Childs, Manager

ACRQSS

AI.I.EY OOP

!

11 ·30

T A XIDf ~MIST
WORK .
animal ~
and
de e r

Small
h ea d .

1· 304 -273 -96A 1_
c Hi lO ·cAR E in my home . w eek
do_y5: ~9~-S~A? . _ • . ___ .

'•

(Answers tomorrow)

WELSH UPHELD SQUALL

Answer· A very fine wood was in eYidence-

41 A*ess

4 Iota
42 Small : suffix
1 Witty saying
Carrie43 Composer
7 Tree
10 - et labors
Rorem
11 YokoDOWN
12 Neptune's
1 Quagmire
realm
2 Prophet
13 Hairpiece
3 Shred
Yesterday 's Answer
14 Peruvian
4 Sign on
29 Actress Thursday, Nov. 30
23 Of Moses'
city
5 Finally
Lasser
~rother
15 - Cruces,
6 Paid
30
Like some
24
Settlement
New Me•ico
homage to
telephone
25 Aver
16 Do the
l Listing
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
wires
eKpected
8 Rummage 26 Author
31 Region of
•
W'L_...:&gt;::_....L'---'-C:....:::....J 19 Troika
9 Celerity
Wallace
27
West
20 Right away 11 Poem
aennany
34 Place for
21 Withered
18 Blue grass 28 Football
Ain't nuthin' down ther' tall?
South bids t wo 'diamonds
22 Below,
and our hero jwnps to five
11·30..A
to a poet
NORTH
over West's two spades.
-- 23 Do sums
West doubles, North redou¥ K Q J 10
Jes'
bles and Wes t leads his
• AQ864
deuce
of hearts to East's
dot" herob,.-f---+some
+ K Q J 10
ace.
27 Liquefy
EAST
WEST
Bac k comes a h ea rt for
31
Jacket
• J '
•
All1143!
o'
West
to ruff. Had West
¥A7, 43
style
=-+-+--f-t--+--1 1 • 2
ruffed, South would win the
-t KJ 7
champions hip, but the Satan
32 Celebe s
+9!1&amp;511!
+A
coup had de veloped .
ox
SOUTH
West discarded his ace of
33 E•cited:
+ K Q 10:;
clubs . South t ried to r uff a
angry
• 986:&gt;
club to get bac k to his hand
• 109:; 3 2
35 A deer
for a t rump fin esse, but West
overruffed. Now West led his
w1fe
ace of s pades. D ummy
.-:--t---+-f----11 Vulnerable : Both
36 " Brandy
ruffed, but West who held
Dealer: West
"
the Satan hand was certa in
37 Deted i v &lt; , l n t - t - t - t - 1
Weat Norlb East .S outh
of a not her trwnp trick to
Pass H
Db\.
I+
~efeat.
Pass Pass
z• 5t Pass
38 ~
Pass
Dbl. Redbl.
s.,.rLL
of Ire.
Pass
39 Island:
· Fr .
Opening lead : • 2
40 Function
• K 43
¥ K2
DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE- Here's how. to work It: L - - - - - - -- -'
• AQ875
AXYDLBAAXR
•
73 2
By Oswald Jacoby
is LONGFELLOW
and Alan Sontag

The Satan coup explamed

C: i\SOLINC 1\LLf.Y

..

a'

Has Ljou locate
Mr. Lump.

b-+--+-

Rufus '

baqs

WILL d o roofi ng . con st ruction .
plu mbi ng and heati ng. No job
too Iorg e or l ao sma ll_ Ph one
'14L-23AH.

...

mone4'

..

HOWERV
ANO
MARTIN
fx se plic
5y s t ems ,
co voting ,
do 2er, ba ck hoe , dump truck.
lim es tone , grove l. blackt op
po vmg . Rt . 143. Phone I (6 14 )
698 -7J3 1
BATHROOMS
AND
Kit ch ens
remode led . ce rami c til e , plum bing . car pentry , and general
ma i ntenance. 13 . years c ~t:­
perience . 992-3685.
- . . . .
PUL LIN S fXCAVAT ING . Com pl ele
Se r vice . Ph one 992 -247B .

I Jumbles GAMUT

"0-[ I I I 1"

BRIDGE

J82S

f XC AVAT INC . doze r , loader ond
back hoe w ork : dump tr uck s
and lo -bo y s for h1 re: ~ i ll hau l
till dir t . to so il , ,li me sto ne ond
groveL Call Bob or ~ og e r Jef fer s. day ph one 99 2.7089 , night
phone 992-3S25 or 492 - 5232 .
- . .
fXC A VA TING , doz er , ba ckhoe
and di tcher . Charle s R. Hal held .
Bo ck
Hoe
Service .
~utlond . Ohio. Phon e 7 ~ 2 - 2000

5

Marble 33.
7:3()--Hee Haw Honeys3 : Dating Game4; 1198 Beauty
Show 6 : Family Feud 10; Bonkers 8; Pop Goes T·he
Country 15; 1100,000 Name That Tune 13; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:QO-Winnle The Pooh &amp; The Blustery Day 3,4; Donn)
&amp; Marie 13; Billy Graham Crusade 6,8,15:
Washington Week In Review 20,33; Wonder Woman
10.
8:3Q--Diff'rent Strokes 3,4; Wall Street Week 20,33 .
9:01},-The Immigrants 3; College Footba ll 6,13; Rock ·
ford Files 4,15 ; Congressional Outlook 20,33 .
9:3()--Turnabout 20; Real Peop~e 33.
10:oo-Eddle Capra Mysteries 4,15 : Flyi ng High s,iO;
News 20 ; We Ain't What We Was 33.
10 :3Q--Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4,8, 10, 15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Soundstage 33.
1i :Jo--Johnny Carson 34, 15; Gunsmoke 8; Movie
"Equinox" 10.
12 :DO-News 6,13: Monty Python 33 .
12:3Q--Baretta 13; Mod Squad 6; Juke-Box B.
1:DO-Midnight Special 3,4, 15; News 8; Movie " The
Strangler" 10.
1:4()--lronslde i3; 2:3()--News 3; 2:4Q--News 13.
J :QO-Movle "The Happening " 3: 5:0Q--Movie " No Sad
Songs for Me" 3.

gested by the above cartoon.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[~~~

HWOOD IJOWfRS REPAIR
Sweepers. toaste r s, i rons . oil
small applianc es . l awn m ower ,
n ex t to Sl ote Hi ghway Carage
on Reu l e 7. Ph on e (6 14 ) 9'd5 -

Fll 1\ NK &amp; f. RNIF:

--.

~Ki~irj~b~ylbol: fr1t--r--

BANNaNe:. AeROSoLS IS INHI\"1" PIP a"l". ·.
THesE R•oorERS 41uST woN,,. S"I"ANP
•,, FOR ~LL. .. ON
I
,
M.AGE!

L-_._..__

One lcll cr simply stands for another. In this sample A h St
Knowles probably
used for t he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
eve
· ,
apostroPhes, the length and formation of th e words are all concoctedh today s hand . ~~
hints. Each Uay I he rode lel{ers are different.
least we ave never seen 1

• SIT [XJWN , CH ILD.
S IT DOWN. I'LL
5TART BREAK-

OH ,GRANNY, YOU

YOU'RE

DON 'T KNOW HOW

WIIAT

GCOO iT 15TIJ

BE HO'·IE .

?'?'?!!

YOU HEARD ME 1

WAY IM GOIN6-

7V/JE£ WINNIE

ANP ll?Y lO&amp;eT

. MY OLP v0/3

FAST .

MCXI

© 1978 King Feah1re1 Syndiut.e,

one acre. $35,500.

BUILDING &amp; TRAILER
LOTS - Several locations
ond prices . Acreage If
waoted.
DON'T BUY BY PRIC:E,
BUY ON QUALITY AND
LOCATION. TRUST A
F 0 R
R E A L T O"R
GUIDANCE . CALL 992-

Inc: .

when he picks up

that nice

North hand.
He doubles one spade.

IT'S PLUMB

s~

':,Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126

· Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8:00p.m.

L.
A

M

THAT STUPID CHARLIE
BROWN! HE HAD THE
NERVE TO SA'&lt; TI-!AT
I'M NOT PERFECT.!

SO I SUPPOSE I{OU
HIT HIM, HUH?

RATS ! I KNE WI
FORGOT SOMETH I

you open one diamond in
third seat. Partner r es pond s .
one spade.
A Nebraska reader wants ·
to know if we bid again and if

up to now .
He calls it the Satan coup
and describes how the hero so what'? We don 't bid ~gain
so ther e is no a n swer to the
R M T B when a young m an was " what" .
QNVX
HNAX
0
ALNW B
' given the West hand by a (NEWSPAPER ENTEHPRISF: A..&lt;i..t:N .I
sinister stranger with the
L R B 0 A B:A
B T BIZ
NV
OEH
L 0 R - remark: " Beware ! You will
(Do you ha ve a question for
meet this hand some da y."
th e experts ? Write " Ask th e
0 VB
M R H
R 0 V N E
L I M T B I F Years go by . Our hero is Experts,·· care of th is newspaYester.b.y•s Cryptoquote: NOBODY EVER DID ANYTHlNG play~g the last board of the per. Individual ques tions will
VERY FOOUSH EXCEPT FROM SOME STRONG PRIN- world s pair champ.'9nsh1p. be answered if accompanied
He has a feelmg of lmpend- by stamped, self-addressed
CIPLE.-LORD MELBOURNE
ing danger, but is delighted envelopes. The most interestCRYPTOQUOTES

town . $23,000 .
NEW HOME - 3 bedrooms
with plenty of closet space.
Bath, nice kitchen, dining
with glass doors lo the wild.
Carpeting, T.P. Water on

Headq11arters

r

6, 13; Muppet Show 8; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20 : Big Blue

Now arrange the ci rcled leners to
form the surprise al'lswe r, as sug·

by THOMAS JOSEPH

COUNTRY HOME - 1'12
acres '' good garden land .

Housiny

D

~

A uct 1o n ee1, Com·
plele Servic e. Phon e 94q. 2487
0 1 949. 2000 Ra cin e . Ohio . Cri lt
Brad ford .

3325.

EVENINGS 992-2449

I I

SAWDUST

firewood ,

VIRGIL B. AND GORDON
B. ARE CERTIFIED
APPRAISERS. HELEN ~­
AND SUE P. MURPHY
ARE
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES.

3:QO-Another World 3,4,15; General ·Hosp ital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3o--Mash 8 : Joker 's Wi ld 10; You Bet Your Life 20.
4:0Q--Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4; Merv
Griffin 6 ; Porky P~g &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15 .
4:3()--Bewiltched3 ; G~lllgan ' s Is . 4,8 ; Brady Bunch 10 :
Petticoat Junction 15.
5:QO-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33;; Gomer P yle, USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3o--News6; Sanford&amp; Son 8: Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,1 0,1 3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :3Q--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News a,10; Over Easy 20 .
7:QO-Cross"Wits 3; PM Magaz ine 4; Newlywed Game

Print answer here:
.'
Yes&lt;erda

BH AlJ~O IW ,

water, and 1.23 acres near

upstairs with hardwood floors and a modern both .
Stairway, living room and dining room has rich thick
carpeting. Kitchen Is complete with built In cabinets,

8,10 .

I.ITTI.F: Oil P HAN ,\ NI;[If.

Room for farm anima ls,

$YY .Y5

1:3G-Oays of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World T urn s

I I I

11 -3-1 mo.

SEWING MACHIN!: Repa i r s. se r·
vic e , oi l mo lo. es, 992 -2284 The
Fabr i c
Shop .
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer So les ond
Serv ice . W e sharpen S, is sor s.

byHenriArnoldandBob Lee

DYKEE

CELLULOSE
INSUlATION
Sfi.50 per bag
J&amp;L INSUlATION
. JIM KEESEE

has
T . P.
water ,
3
bedrooms, both, gas heat,
nicely located. $16,000.
3
RENOVATED
bedrooms, bath, new F .A.
lurna·ce, carpeting, LC.

remodeled. 2 story with full basement. 3 bedrooms

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

'",.. ,~···""'""''
. ., '"'"'" ~ ' "'. ' '"" ""

mall and school bus route.
$7,500.

Well built older home that has !»en completely

W

2:QO-One Life to Live 6, 13; Gu iding Li ght 8, 10 .

I YAWNTI

11-3-J _mo.

11-28-c

Alive 15.
12:2s--Eiec. Co. 33; 12 :3Q-- Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search
For Tomorrow 8, 10.
1:QO-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8 : Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women
Only 15.

four ordinary words.

electric available on a good

MIDDLEPORT

\"ii)'\t

~'-2)~~ ®

TH~Y

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

3; Bob Braun 4; News 6, 10; Young
&amp; the Restless -8; M idday Magaz ine 13 : America

You 33 .

Experience a ncl

,fully insured
Free Es.t.
Caii99'J-2772

12 ; ~Newscenter

Unsc ramble these four Jumbles.
one lener to each square. to form

BO RN I.OSF:Il

NEW LISTING - Would
you like five acres with dug

'(

1967 T· BI RD . P. S.. P.8 .. A .C. , AM
rad io, Jilt stee ring. Upr ight
piano . 942 - JEU~4 .
.
.

Emergency One 6 ; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Match Game

10.
9:3Q--Brady Bunch 8; Family Atfa lr 10.
10 :00--Carrl Sharks 3,4, 15; Edae of Nicht 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13; 10: 3Q--Jeopardy
3,4, i5 : Andy Griffith 6 : Pr ice is Right 8.1 0; 520,000
Pyramid 13.
·
11 :QO-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13: Elec . Co.
20.
11 :2s-- Sesame St. 33; 11 :3()--Wheel of · F9rtune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13 ; News 4 : Love of Life 8,10;
Sesame St. 20.
i1 :55--C BS News 8; House Call 10.

8.\Q .

I'M ~~tJDI~ 4 -S\'~ S110C.I&lt;
l'RI'ATM!i-tJT FOR 'O.JR OOIM~S, ..

CeUulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on heating cost

WIL L CAIU fo r th e elde rly in our
horn e_ Ph one992 -7314 .
. . . . . . . .
WAT ER WHl dr ill in g. William T.
G r onl . 74'1 · 'ltli'9.

Rodney Downing-Broker
Bill Childs, Manager

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Pi10ne "2·2181

RUTlAND HARDWARt , 822 Ma in
~1. . i' A2 · '215~ . Modern isti c wood
~love .
demon strator mode l.
Sb5 . Used auto . wood !ilove
wi th bl ower . S189 . New electri c
hot wa te r ton k . slightly b ent ,
$121 .95 . Tool box , S-K tools . 31
pc. wilh ' tool box, 549 .9S ,
l iiE'! time w arrenty . 67 pc . drop
fo rged !i&amp;l wi th too l boM .
S49 .YS One q::J pc _ set d rop
f o rged too l5 wit h lool bo• ,

7: 1s--Weather 33; 7: 3Q--Schoolles 10.
8:oo-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
9 :00-Merv Griffin 3; P hil Dona hue 4,13, 15 ;

9:0o--Qulncy 3,4,15; Barney Miller 13; The Immigrants 6; ; Billy Graham Crusade 8 ; Here T'o

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation-

Services Offered

SALE PRICES
".
\
~ .
'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

New or Repair
Gutters and
'
Downspouts

11 ·16-C

HOME S!T f. S l or sal e . l acre and
up . Mid dlE-p Oll . nPo r Ru llond .
Coll492 -i' 481 .

'·

· 't

FOR YOUR I!JFOil.MATION,
WE'RE NOT SAILORS, SONNY
-- BUT THAT'5 JlJ5T YOU!&lt;.
FI~ST . MIST'AKE!

LOOK 5MART. SA ILOR S~

News 8 ; Jetsons 10 .

20; Kanawha County_ Schools On The Line 33 .
7 : 3Q--Hollywood SQuare• 3; Rei» I Slave 4; Verv Merrv
Cricket! 6; Please Stand ev 8; 5100,000 Name That .
Tu ne iO; Nashvi lle On The Road 13; Dolly 15;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ..
B:DO-Prolecl U.F.O. 3,4: Mork &amp; Mindy 13; Billy
.
~rah am Crusade 6,13; Frosty the Snowman 8,10;
Nova 20,33.
8:3o--What' s Happening!! 13 ; Raggedy Ann &amp; Andy

lJ\i'~

JIM KEESEE

Phone 742 -2029

- --- ---Real Estate lor Sale

Hotpoint Appliances.

•

PI CK UP THE B0 5 'N ~ AN D

4-30-1

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

Real Estate lor Sale

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

.

(',\ PTAIN EASY

""'"·

Pomeroy, 0 .
3- 15-tfc

949-2160

le ft .

For Sale

Auto &amp; Truck •·
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
PhODe 992-5682

t

ROOFING

" GIVE US A TRY "

For Free Estimates

~ 14 - 6Y6 1067 , co lle ct .

BfAUT IFUL Sll Vf R Pe r ~ian ~ poy e d
l e mole cot . decl awed . Mu st
hov e
goo d
indoor
home .
I.J4'1 ·SI:l3 4.

6, 13 ; News 10; Love, American Style 15; Horsepens

.......... t• the

-H. L WRITESB.

r

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

147'1 V INDA LE 14 )f 70 2 bedroom .
l o l ol elec tric . w 1lh anch o rs nod
u ndei'pi nning . f urni sh ed Of un ·
furni sh ed . 491 · 7 &lt;1 ~5 alte r Sprn .

_____

Only

I

RadlatorC:::!!!!::::a.
Service, _ tt. ...... Tnllll er luiW..•

MOORE'S

Reasonable Prices
References Available

- -- ·
, -- - - ·· -----'-____ Give Awa.'f__ _ _

w eek s o ld

5:3Q--News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lec. Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3Q-- NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 : CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 ,
7 :QO-Cross-WIIs 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game

EXPERIENCED

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery,
Installation Service
Ph . 992-2848

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
10"18"1 mo .

paneling and carpeting,
basement, other features .'
acre . 3 bedrooms, very nice
kitchen . Fireplace, famil y
room. Many other: features.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

hldustrial

Too SIJlall

520,500.00.
MOBILE

s lor
-·Mobile
- - --- Hom
- -.e---- Sale
-- -.

Type

room . Full basemen! with
rec .
room .
Lots
of
remodeling done here .

basement. $27,300 .00.

.... ~ck W. Coney, Mgr.
Phone "2-2181

10 ·30·C

All Type Concrete Work

drapes,

Pomeroy Landmark

Racine, OhiO

Phone 949-2118
Allers P.M.
11 -26·1 mo.

Chester, Ohio

.oversized garage? This
home has it . Also 3 nic e
bedrooms. Formal dining

50x152.

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1971

St. Rt. T24fl&gt;ward Rutland,
0.
.

SALES REP.
FOR
SUNDINS HAMMOND
ORGANS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1978
5:4s--Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13 .,
·
5:5s--Sunr lse Semester 10.
6 :00---PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,a.
6 :2s--Soc letles In Tronsltlon 10: 6:3Q--Columbus
Today 4.
·
6:4s--Mornlng Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning West
Virginia 13; 6: 5s--Chuck While Reports 10; News
13.
7:QO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning Amerlco 6,1 3; CB S

,"

¥• mile oH Rt. 1 by-pass on

PETE SIMPSON

Mourning and
Price Builders ·

Here we have 2 lots each
Close to school. 3
bedrooms . · Carpeting,

SNOW
TIRE SALE

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Make MuSi c 33 ; Hawaii Flve:o H) ; Duchess of Duke

l OWH I:::V Gl:Ni l: A4 . Pcrleci'Con di·
!ton All elf tro s. 992 -:JL I !:&gt; .
11.1'/J FORO PICK UP . jO,OOO mi les.
No ru st. 6 cyl
~ td .
1'173
Ply mo uth
Du !o l e r .
!o hmp .
44L .'J9B1 _

l1JC'K THiiCY

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

HAMMOND&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES&amp; SERVICE
I NEW&amp; USED)

11 :3Q--Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6.1 3;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Young
Dilli nger" 10.
12 :3Q--News 8; 12 :4Q--SWAT 6,13; 1:oo-Tomorrow
3,4.
1: 5Q--News 13 .

:~il' j ~ 1 ;,•1

t 4!0 Champ1 on bOlf I '} 'l i:HI

lt./~5 Pt oit-t(' Sc h oo n e • :u-t)fK 1 I:W
19'13 Ho yol bnbm !&gt; y b'dlf l4 :J H~
l tJS4 ~ tor SO~~: I() 1 BR
1'1'lJ~ tcu b0.01ld/ BH
t%H~ t a 1 bUKI/:I BH
~t:OU U
~AJ-=E
end l os t wi th I IJi'U ~y l vo 60x 1'1 '} BR
GoBe!oe fab le!'&gt; &amp; ~ · V op wai N I%H V oll oq.-. ... 60• 1'1 ') BH
pi l l!. ''_ Nel !.on Drug
14b&lt;l Wir t d~o ' ~ I ,. IU '1 BH
11./7 1 ww Hm~t'· tra i ler . $1j()U . IIJi'O Ki rkwood l 'lxt&gt;UJ lHI
i' 41 . 2a44
Bll: S M O BIa HOMf- ~ AI!- ~
'
· Pl' PltASANl W . VA
~ IL VI:: R
BA C H
Pr o l e:.~io nal
trum pet. l e5:. than J m o . old .
A !&gt; king p1ice S5SO. 99'l-315H.

C HR I~TMA~

'"

Business Seroices

t '. h ath

--~

7

OHIO ESTATE OF NORMA
E . WILSON, DECEASED
APPOINTMENT

'

TWO Ut=Dfo!OOM ; k ilchen l urnish ed . opl. Coli before B om
99L.'J'2BB .

(001-'!:R SING LI: drun1 swobb 1ng
r •q wi th 1BOO II . ol •hree cig th ~
111 . ~ ond line m nunt('d on l9bl:l
r bOO 1-' or rl lr \JCk $'!()()() , Ca ll
JflS -5b:JH he t wC"en 'i&lt;W om opd
&lt;lptn .
I li'!U ~OHD ·piCKUP Gooci concil
l ion 5800 '191·'1583 .

I ;1 -Tiw I l tuly St·nt uw I . ~ lt d dl 1 ·pt 1rl -I ,ullH'roy . ( I .. Tlntr .... '"·' . ·" • 11 ..

Mobile Hom es lor Sale

G~fAT CHRI STMAS gills: puppie s.

PROBA.TE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,

NOT ICE OF

I
i

CO UN Th'Y MOBIH Horn e Por k .
Route 33. n or th of Pom e roy .
Lo rge l ots. Coll49'2 ·74'19 .

--For Sale

.
.
N ~W IOtA l wo row pullt ypro co' r..'
j)irlo.&lt;&gt;r on d M ((UHiy g •ov1ty
ho)l Albert Por k er 2 rnile~o
nor th o f Chc -, Jer . Ohio .

TWO MAt E pups . 991 .'3441 .

Case No . 12549

I

For Rent

J AND 4 lo! M furn ished and un ·
fur nis hed
op t s.
Ph one
992 -5&lt;134 .

7d'l· 'l'd 74.

..-

LO Sl B I~D dog . A rea of Un ion
A ve . and M ulberr y. Sp r inger
Spa n iel fem a le . l iver co lored
and whi te . 99'2·347 1.

-

1965 ,.: AL CO N 'l·doo r std . !ihi lt .
minister twice and be
Good wor k ru r . Run s good .
knighted as Sir Winston. He
body ro ugh . 992 . '1495
died in 1965.
68 ~ O~D l TO. S:J9~ 991 · "14"19 .
In 1939, the Russo-Finnish •"
11.1'/ b PACl:R AM-fM !o l e reo B·
War started after the Soviet
trod. nuise con l ro l a nd t ill .
Union failed to obtain
~ leering
wn eel
SL&lt;~OO .
b ·
territorial concessions from
cell ent condi tion . 99'}.3T/S o r
1.141 29i'B .
Fiilland. ·
In 1975, Israel pulled its
forces out of a 93-mile-long
)9'/S PO N TIAC ASTRA hat chbac k .
. corridor along the Gulf of
out o , new tire s onrl ba t te ri es
949.n'dJ .
Suez as part of the Sinai
interim peace a greement
l4i'U fORD LTIJ. 4 new I ir es. N ew
b olt e r y .
G oo'd
condit i on
with Egypt.

Take St.

_ Wa_
nt_
ed

-

1-'AYROL L AND invoi cing cle rk l or
loel d (Oil'&gt;lr uclion site at Moun - l OST BI:::TWHh/ Ga teway and Or
Co nd e'!&gt; o tl ice . Middleport . Cor
tain ee r Plant , New Hove n WV .
key!. in brown leolhe r k ey co ~e
~e n d re!&gt;umes to : lo! esume , PO
Lo!&gt; l o t parade . &lt;Wn6J8 .
~o)l
478 . Pa r k er sbu rg . WV
Lt&gt;IO I .
LOST ·
l AD if S wollel ,
r ed
fl owe red . N ear M iddlepor t Pos t
BA BYSIHH tr am 3 to 5, M on .
O ft ice. 1191:'-J I OB .
thru l- r1 1n Pomero y l or 8 y ear

tht• day bt•fun• puUhcalluJI

the334thdayof ~1978with31

·

r holo. cgun!oonly
( HIP
WOOD
Pole~
mo •
GU N SHOO r Hoc1ne Volu m ee r '
rl101nel m 10 on lo1ge!o t Pnd .
l-Ire- Dept hNy Sotwday 6 :30
SJL per 1on . Bu 11 dler! !&gt; lob . 510
per ton . De li ver ed to O h1o
pm ot the1r b utl drng 11 1 ~o ~ho11
~n c lory choke gun!. only
Poll £' 1 Co .. HI · 1 Pomeroy .
!Jq'J ·'lbl:l4
NO HUNli NC. or tre&lt;&gt;pO!i!&gt;lngd o)'
0 1 n1ghl on !h e Ch ar les Yost
IIMBfH POMfHOV ~ores t Pro·
CHo d the Iv an We ll t-:orm s
rlurl&lt;, Top pri ce for stondmg
-. o w li m b ('f Coli 94'1 · 5965 or
C HHI~rMA~ BA ZAAR . Dece mber
Kont Hanby . l -Ad6 . 8S70
l 'l M ei g ~ (ounly Hu m an e
)oo(' ty . ocro!o!&gt; from Dr Cond e OlD I" URNIWRE , ice bo)le~ . bra ~~
bt.•d -, , HOil bed-, , clesb . OIL .
1r1
Mrdd l ~po rt.
Hond · mode
compiN e hou!&gt;eh ol ds Wri l e
11011\!&gt;,• house plant !;
hand
MD M dler , Rt 4 . Pom e1oy or
pam lc d lamp~. Ami sh f ood .
ca ll &lt;rn 'f7b0 .
end mu ch m ore

t&gt;t&lt;~ i' &lt;~L · £118

'

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

N O HUNTING or It C'&gt;P0"""9 D••
my p•operty w•t h ou• perm is·
\0 101'1 Judy McG raw

COLD IN TH '
HOUSE TOClAV.'
AIN'T IT,
PAW? -"'"_;:::-.,.'--...;::

IT SHORE IS- -

I BETTER GO
RAISE TH' HEAT

ing questions wf/1 be used in
th is column and will receive
copres of JACOBY MODERN.)

.,

�·.

.

~

-

-

--

-

~

- - - · -·-- --

--

.

~---------~~-~---------~---------------~-----=--------------------------=------·

ll

.

I

I
1
I.1·
tI.

&lt;

.

SALE PRICES
ON SELECTED ITEMS
FOR FRIDAY
DECEMBER lst
AND SATURDAY
DECEMBER

LBERFELDS IN POMEROY

OPEN ·

w

FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAy
NIGHTS
TIL

8

~

t

~
~

W

By EDWARD K. DeLONG
·
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Ut ility iqpustry officials say t he
average homeowner' s bill for natural gas might go up by about
$2:i a year under new federal regulations that look effect today.
A consumer activist thinks the in cr ease may be three to five
times that amount.
Industry, conswner and federal experts a like say the precise
dollar impact of the rules change is ha rd to calculate because
the regulations are so complex and individual utilities may
apply them differ ently, depending on competi tive factors and
on the details of contracts with pr oducers.
But they generally ag ree homeowners could begin to fee l the
bite of hi~er prices in Janua ry gas bills , reflecting a

relati vely steep on e-time increase in .t he w.ellhead price of
natural gas to cover the effect of inflation since April1977.
Preliminary estimates, bas~d on nation wide a verage con swnpti on and prices, showed the initia l "catch-up " inflation
adjustment might add $3.85 to home gas bills. But industry
officia ls cautioned the exact amount would va ry widely from
reg ion to r egion a nd utility to utility . ·
Af tl!r t he initia l adjustment, offi cia ls said , ther e will; be
smaller monthly increaSes r eflecting fu ture infla tion. Ther e
also will be gradua l additiona l price hikes, addin g perhaps
another 2 to 3 percent a yea r to bills, as mor e high-priced gas
from newly opened wells is produ ced a nd consumed.
111e Amer ica n Gas Associa tion. \':hi ch represents l:!as

utilities, sa id Thursday t he nationwide-average home gas bill
could go up by $25 or more a year, or about 10 percent, with
larger in creC:~ses for people who use gas for both cooking and
home heati ng.
Jim FJug of Ener gy Action, a conswner or ganization,
predicted conswner gas prices will average 30 percent tu 50
percent higher in the coming year than in 1978.
Rules on how gas producer s can cha rge the hig her prices,
adopted Wednesday by the Federa l Energy Regulatory
Commission , were issued Thurs day as an inch-thick
document. The higher prices were set by Congr ess in the
Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, part of President Ca rte r 's
energy legislation.

Maximum wellhead prices for gas already dedicated to
interstate sales go up from the present $1.52 per thousand
cubiC feet to a December level of $1.63 under the nell' rules.
So-ca lled new gas from wells drilled since Feb . 19, 1977, ca n
sell in December for a maximum $2.08 from offshore wells and
$1.96 from onshore wells. December prices for low1)roduction
"stripper" wells are set at a maximwn $2.22.
Under the inflation adjustment , December prices for most
categories of gas are about 13 percent higher than the April
1977 figures cited in the gas act. But the actual percentage
increase in December will be only about .half that m uch
because prices have climbed steadily since Aprill91.7 undec a n
earlier, less-steep inflation adjust ment rormula .

•

at y en tine
e
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

F ift t•t•n Cent s .
\ "o l . ~!1. :'lio. IIi!

Pomeroy-M iddleport, Ohio
Friday. December I, 1m

SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS

SALE

JOGGIN.G SUITS

SAUl

TABLE
COVERS

bottoms - Just 21 suits to sell. Not every size.

$26.95 JOGGING SUIT.. ..............................~15.88
$32.95 JOGGING SUIT.. .............: ............. ..'21.88

TWO DAYS ONLY SALEI

REG. '8.99 FULL BED SIZE

MEN'S 3.PIECE SUITS

CAN NON PERCALE SHEETS

Si zes 36 to 46 - Stripe s, pia ids, solid c olors
Kup pen hei m e r a nd Campus brand s .
Coat, t rousers a nd m a tc hing v est .

FULL BED SIZE
FinED OR FLAT
Twin · Queen • King Sizes and Pillow Cases - Also Reduced
For This Sale

Ru s t , Gold, Green, · Brown.
performance Tested Velvets.

-ss.OO SNOW SUITS .................... '6.39
$10.00 SNOW SUITS ................. SJ.99
s15.00 SNOW SUITS .................sn.99
S2Q.OO SNOW SUITS ................. $15.99

Other Kroehler Swivel Rockers at
s ale prices, $134 .00, $159.00 ,
$162 .00, $164 .00
Also large selections of Kroehler
and Berkline Recliners, Rock o
loungers and Walla way Recliners
at sale prices .

SALE PRICES
SALE DESKS

'7.95 TURTLE NECK SHIRTS ........I6.53
'9.95 TURTLE NECK SHIRTs ...... . '813
110.95 TU~TLE NECK SHIRTS ... ... '9.13
114.95 TURnE NECK SHIRTS..... H2.43

MEN'S DRESS FLANNEL SHIRTS
Famous b r and s s uch as Van He u sen, Campus, Golden Vee,
so lid c o lo r s and patt e rn s, s ize s m a ll. m e d ium la rg e , a nd
ex t r a la rg e .

Thre e uti l it y . cen i e r a nd loc kin g f ile
d r a we r s . F in is h e d in Bir c h , Pin e,
Walnu t .

Boys Winter Jackets
Quilted jac k e t s, nylon s, woolds .
denim s. all warmly line d . Sized 8 to 20 .

'14.95 JACKETS ............... .. .. . '11.96
'19.95 JACKETS ...•.•... •. .. ..... •. •'15.96
'22.95 JACKETS ............ ........ '18.36
'24.95 JACKETS .. .. ................'19.96

100 p e t.. cottons , 100 pe l. a c ryli c , w o ol a nd nylon bl en d s .

$14400

MEN'S 19.95 DRESS FLANNELS ...... ...... ............. '8.44
MEN'S '13.95 DRESS FLANNELS .. ......... .......... ..'11.84
MEN'S 117.95 DRESS FLANNELS.............. ....... .. '15.24
MEN'S 119.95 DRESS FLANNELS ....... ............... . '16.94

Other Larg e a nd Sm a lle r De s ks at
Sale Pric es .

MEN'S '8.95

Children's Coat Sale

Permanent Press Pajamas

Sno rke ls , hooded s t y les, dressy s t y les , fo r
bo ys a nd girl s . Sizes 6 t o 24 m o n t h s, 2 to
6 X a nd 7 t o 14 .

Cotto n P o lyeste r Blend , Sizes A, B, C, a nd D. Solid
col ors a nd ne a t patte rn s. Coat s tyle top with
no tc he d co lor , ad jus t able grippe r bo xer w a ist
botto m .

s18.00 COATS ... .. ..............$14.39
$21.00 COATS. ..................$16.79
$25.00 COATS .................. ~19.99
$28.00 COATS .. ................ s22.39
$38.00 COATS ............... .. .s30.39

1WO DAY SAL£ ............... .......... ~7 88
See our . s~l ection o f Men ' s robes , Angel Tread
s lippers : flannel "pajamas.

WOMEN'S COAT SALE
M issy s izes 6 " through 20 and e x )ra la rge
s izes 14'1• through 26 112. dress coats , c ar
coats, c asual coat s, fur trimm e d styles,
entire . s tock include d.

'58.00 COATS ........ ............ :SALE 149.95
'70.00 COATS .. .... ....... ....... SALE 159.95
'90.00 COATS .. .. ...... .. ........ SALE '75.75
1100.00 COATS .. ,................ SALE '84.95
'124.00 COATS ....... .. .. ... .... SALE '104.95
1148.00 COATS ................ ..
Reg . $435.90

JUNIOR COAT SALE

SATURDAY SALE!

WOOD AND COAL HEATERS

Ca r coa t s , lo ng dres s coats, s ki jacket s,
e x cell e n t st y le s and fai:)ri cs. Jun ior s ize s 5-6
t h rough 15-1 6 .

MEN'S SPORT COATS
to

A big selection of styles, solid colors
and wh ite, Cotton Polyester blends.
ent ire stock includ e d for this two day
s ale-!

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

Earl y Am e ri ca n , M 9 &gt;1ern Traditi o nal .
Mar r e si s tant t o p 20 x 48 .

36

MEN'S
TURTLE NECK SHIRTS

Kroehler

SALE $132.00

Famous brown duc k c o verall s , jac ke t s, bib
overall s, w or k dung a r ees , hoods , e ntire sto c.k
inthi ssp le. S izes 36to 50 . Twodayson ly.

So lid s a nd p a tte rn s , sizes
P o lye s te r s· a nd a ll woo ls .

6 to.24 month s , 2 to 4, some with permanent
fee t , some with de tachable fe e t , one and·two
piece s tyles for boy s and girls.

KROEHLER SWIVEL ROCKERS

CARHARTT
BROWN DUCK
'
WORK CLOTHES

FRIDAY~

CHILDREN'S SNOW SUITS

SALE

TWO DAY SALE

50 .

'54.00 JUN lOR COATS .. ...... ........ ,...... ~45.95
168.00 JUNIOR COATS ..... ... ...... .. ........'57.95
'74.00 JUNIOR COATS ·.. ·.......... .. ....... 162.95
'84.00 JUNIOR C9ATS ................. .... .. '71.95
'132.00 JUN lOR COATS .. ... .~ ... .. .. ...... 'lll.95

s49,95 SPORT COATS .............s37.88
. s59.95 SPORT COATS ........... s44.88
'69.95 SPORT COATS .......... ..S52.88
.

SALE PRICES!

Reg . 5435.90 - Wood burner
- Firebrick lining
- Thermostat
- 2-speed Blower
Only one to sell .

WINTUK KNITTING YARN SALE

Reg ul a r a nd ext ra la rge s izes , d e n im s ,
c ordu roys , nylons, leath er ja cket s . A bi g
se le .c tlon o f s tyl es .
$ 19.95 Lined Vests . .. .. .. .. .. .. .... . ... .. .. . 516 .94

A b ig seleCti on o f col o r s 3'12 oun ce s kei n . Coal s and Clark 's
Fa m o u s Re d Hea rt qual it y .

SALE S348,00

·- ---------------------·
Reg . $379.00

WOOD
AND COAL BURNER
- Thermostat controlled
-

2 speed blower

SALE $299.00

Only 3

SALE! WOMEN'S JEANS

FRIDAY· SATURDAY SALEl

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS AND LINED VESTS

Regular si ze s 3-4 through 20 and e x tra sizes
3 4 t hrough 40 . A new selection of styles . Buy
what you need Friday and Saturd a y fo r'
yourse lf and Chri s tmas gifts . Straight leg s
a nd flar es .
·

14.00 JEANS ...... .. ..... :.... .. : SALE 111.89
'16.00 JEANS .................... . SALE 113.59
118.00 JEANS....... .............. SALE 115.29
120.00 JEANS. ........ .. .......... SALE 116.99
1

524.95 Jackets ••••• •• , ••• •• . •• . . .••• ••••. •• • $21.24
S34. 95 Jac kets . . .... .. ..... . .... .. .. . ..... .• .. S29. 94
554.95 Jac kets ••• ••• ••. ••• ••. . • •••• .•• ••• •• • $46 .79
$79.95 Jackets •• ••• •• •••••• •••••. •• . ••••••• • $67 .94

REG.
PRICE $1.49

Also include d in thi s s al e , o ur e n t ire s toc k o f
men's d res sy and a ll wea t h e r coats .

SALE $119SKEIN

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY T,IL 8 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

• , . .I. .IMII MIIIA&gt;I IIIIIIII IIIJIIIUII!IIIII!COI~IIfjlllfjll fjlll!il~~¥1!111 il'llil'll!llllil'llil'llllllll!llllllll. . IIIIIIII_B::&lt;_ 11111111111111111111111111111«&lt;1111 -111111111111-1111111111111111 i!lllllllllllllll-11111!1111111111111111111111111111111'""'.

,.•'

.,

•••

'·

GRE ECE , N.Y. ! UP! ) An ar soni st set the fire tha t
killed 10 people a nd injured 34
others a t a crowded suburha n
Roches ter Holiday Inn over
the Thanksgiving Holiday,
offi cia ls s aid .
'' It wa s a set fire ," P olice
,
'
Chief
Ger ald P he lan said
.j
Thursday .
In vestigators, he said, had
" reac hed the unan imou s
decision that it was arson ...
jl.
The technical expertiSe , the
j technical information th at we
have has led us to th is
conclusion .' '
Authorities had " no s usf
pects," P helan added .
A 16-man inve s tig a tive
unit ,
inc luding
ar so n
Sherr ie Sta rcher , Kar en Probert, Da wn Sor den ; back ,
specialists,. from Onondaga
Rus ty Wigal, Ra ndy Keller and Lawrence Pooler .
County and New York City ,
was esta blis hed to loo k
further into th e blaze , he sa id.
Phe la n sa id the blaze
started in t he basement of the
15-year·old hotel, but added
that officia ls " were Qot at
liberty to say" what st arted
the fire.

SA LEI

G old Label No Iron Per c ale. 50 pel . polye s t e r, 50 pet .
cotton . fl oral pattern s ill decorator c olor s .

$8995 SUITS .....................$71 00
$9995 SUITS .................... ~7900

·.

SALE PRICES
STARTING AT

'

REDUCED 20%

REG. '179.00SALE

GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
Full Westmin ster Chimes. Brass Weights and
Pendulum bob.

I

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Motel
fire
arson

HOWARD MILLER

Long sleeve zipper coat top and matching ankle length

Our enti re stock of ta b le c ov ers o n
sale Friday and Saturda y .
Ovals . s quare s , oblong s , r o u nd s . · A
t r,emendous selection .

"

I

.

Average homeowner's gas bills may be raised

1

!(

SENIOR MEMBERS - Senior member s of the
National Honor Society at Eastern High Sc hool ar e, f,ront,
1-1', Debbie Spencer , Laur i Matthews, Susan Ha nnum,

Books
out on .·
suicides
NEW YORK (UP I J . Scarcely two weeks ha ve
passed since the horror of
mass suicide among cultists
of the P eoples Temple in the
jungle of Guyana hit the
headlines, but tha t's.plenty of
time for the boo k publisher s.
Two acco unt s of t he
tragedy already are on the
book s helves,
both
by·
newsmen who wer e ther e
when it happened .
On e of them, t itl e d
~~Guyana Massacre /' is by
Charles A Kra us e, the
Washington Pos t r ep orter
who accompanied California
Congressman Leo Ryan on
his fa tal trip to investigate
the Rev . Jim Jones and his
jungle temple cu lt. Krause
was wounded in the airport
- attack in which Ryan and
three newsmen wer e sla in by
cultists in the massacre that
trigger ed the suicide of Jones
and mor e than 900 of his
followers.
Assisting Krause in the
1\'l'iting are Post editors Lau·
r enee M. Stern a nd Richard
Harwood .
Ron J aver s of the San
Francisco Chronicle also was
wounded in the a irpor t
massacre . His book, "Suicide
Cul t, 11 is wr itten with
Chronicle correspondent
Marshall Kilduff who spent
two years digging into t he
Peoples Temple befor e J ones
took it to Guyana.
a c co unt
is
Kra use's
published by the Berkley
Publishing Co. , and J a vers
book is published by Banta m .

New cars, vans
tossed around
PORTSM OUT H,
Oh io
(UPI ) ..:.. A Norfolk &amp; Western
Ra ilroa d fr eigh t
train
der aile d near her,e Ia te
Thursday, tossi ng himdreds
of bra nd ne w automobiles
and vans along about a mile
of track , authorities said
today.
The Scioto County Sher iff 's
office said the derailment
occurred at the entrance to
the U.S.S . Chemical Co. pla nt
at Haverhill . .
Don Spradlin, chief of the
Green Township Fire Depar t·
ment , said 22 of t he freight
cars contained the ne w
automobiles and vans.
" Five of the automobiles on
one of the cars caught fire
(Continued on page 10 )

Shell will

ration ·gas

IN DUCTED INTO NATION AL HONOR SOCIETY - Ten students at Eastern High
School were inducted into the Nationa l Honor Society dur in g an assemb ly Thursday
afternoon at the school. New member s are, first r ow, 1-r , Cindy Pitzer , senior, Ter esa
Spencer , junior ; second ro w, Becky Edwards , junior, SheBa White, junior , Lit.a YounJ!.
· junior, Jea nnie McClur e, junior ; third r ow, Melanie Root, sophomor e, April Pa rker ,
sophom ore, Ka thy Pooler , sophomor e and Marcy Sexson , sophomore .

Gallia man dies in wreck
Cha rles Denn ey, 41, Route
1; Bidwell, was pronounced
dea d at the scene following a
one-vehicle accident Thurs·
day at 7 p.m., on Fairview ·
Evergreen Rd.
The Ga l! ia-Meigs P ost ,
Highway Pat rol, reports that
an east bound 1974 GMC
pickup tr uck operated by
Denney went out of cont rol on
the to wnshi p road, ran off the
left side of the r oadway,
striking a ma il box, crossed
the road, then went off the
right side, and stri king a tree
Offi ce r s
r eport
sev e re
da ma ge to th e Denney
pickup.
Ra y Hudso n, 57 , Racine,
was admitted to Veter ans

Memoria l Hos p ita l for
t r eat ment
of
inj ur ies
sustained du ring a one-a uto
acc ident ')'hursday on SR 124,
three-tent hs of a mile south of
Racine, in Meigs County , at
l1 :10 a .m.
The pat rol reports that a
north bound au to oper ated by

Weather
Lows tonight will be in the
mid 30s. Th e pro bability of
pr ecipitatio n is 10 percent
today and tonig ht and 20
per cent Saturday.

Hudso n, went off the left s ide
of t he roadwa y , str uck a
ditch , and overt urned.
Hu dson di sp layed i ncapacitating injuries and was
transported by the Ra cine
Volunteer Squad to Vetera ns
Memorial.
Hudson wa s l isted t h is
mor ni n g in s atisfa ctory .
condition.
Officer s r e port he avy
dam age to t he Huds on
vehicl e . Hudson was cited on
cha rges of excessive speed
for cond itions.

HOUSTON (UPI ) - Shell
Oil Co. says un precedented
dem a nd and regulatory
constraints have caused the
nee d
for
te mpor a ril y
ration ing all grades of its
gasoline to its dealer s and
jobbers nationwide .
She ll
sa id
gasoli ne
de m a nd s
t radi t io na ll y
decrease after Labor Day but ·
sa id de m a nd for Shell
gasoline "has not only fa iled
to ta per off, but has actually
increased to r ecord levels."
The com pany said it will
rat ion the gas to dealers,
wholesalers and other cus·
tamers, effective today .
"She ll is comm itte d to
minimizing the impact of this
situation a nd hopes to ha ve
the situation corrected by the
end of December or the early
part of January," a company
statem ent said .
" Th ese fac tors coupled
with essentia l maintenance
wo rk a t tw o of She ll 's
ma nuractu r ing loca t ions
have left Shell with no option
othe r
than
natio nwide
allocation to ensure equitable
distr ibution of a va ilable sup·
plies .. .' '
The company claimed the
in cre ase in dem and was ·
caused by "feder al pricing
regula tions which have held
down the price" of Shell
gaso lin e
to
" an
unr ealistically low level com ·
pared to our competitors."
1
'ln effect, current regulations pena lize Shell for
competitive efficiencies in its
gaso line business ," the
statement said .

CO·PUBUSHER HONORED - Robert Wingett, Syr ac use, co-publisher for the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company. was one of 12 persons honored Ttmrsd"Y ni ght at the a nnua l
awar ds dinner of the Southeastern Ohio Regiona l Council. Wingett was cited for his
ouL.,ta nding commllllity service. He is one of the youngest r ecip ients to be lwnored.

Syracuse man honored
Robert Win ge tt . Syracuse, C01)Ublisher of The Oh io Valley Publishing Co., was one of 12
Southeastern Ohio leade rs honored by The Southeaste rn Ohio Regiona l Co unci l at an
Awards Night held Thursday at Ohio Univer sity Inn, '.\hens.
Wingett wa s presented to the cr owd of over 200by a hwnorous introduct ion given by Bill
Childs, left, Middleport businessman .
Childs ci ted Win gett for his conununity service in Syracuse where he wa.•;; instrumental
in securing feder al monies !'or the constmr:twn ot a swlrnmtng poo 1 ' ennls court: a11ri r:t ru•rlt',
facility. Wingett served 12 years un the corrunu nity Village Courlcil.
Childs said Wingett had contributed grea tly to the lives of othefs in Me1gs Co un ty a nd
a lso poi nted out that Wingett has been honored severa l times locally as well as in Mason
County, W. Va ., for his service work . On the right is Carl Dahl burg. executive secr eta ry of
the council, who presided over the dinner meeting .
Wingett probably is the youngest r ecipient of the co uncil's awa rd not only from Meigs
County but from the 11 counties ma king up the council in the 12 years the aw&lt;-~rds l1ave been
gi ven .
· .
. . .
Awa rds a re made on the ba sis of cont ributions to southeastern Ohw by part Jcipa twn
and leadership on comm unity a ffa irs. Twenty-three persons [rom Meigs County attended .
Others honored were John E. Halliday, veteran Gallipolis a tto rney; Dan Walton .
Wellston ; Geor ge Knox, Jr. , McArthur ; Judge J ames Stilwell, Logan: Dr. R.3 lph
Herendeen , New Lexi ngton ; William A. Mechem , Nelsonville; Dwight Rutherford , Athens ;
Rober! Fuller, P ortsmouth ; Keith F . Molihan, Ironton ; Irwin G. Smith. Pike County and
Pa ul B. Mulzig, J r ., Jackson .

Charges line crossed
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Sta te
Sen . An thon y J . Celebreeze
J r . t oda y c harged tha t
Secretary of Sta te Ted Brown
has "crossed the line between
statutory duly and personal
interest " in the way he is
handling certification of the
Nov. 7 election, in which
Celebreeze beat Bro wn by
8,400 voles.
At a mo rni ng news
conference. Celebreeze sa id a
n onparti sa n t hird part y
s hou ld be a ppointed by
Br own to s uper vise a n
expected recount.
The unoffi cia l elec tion tally
shows Celebreeze winning by
about 8.400 votes. Brown's

office is now tabulating the
Wlofficial votes sent in by the
boards and is expected to
soon certify t he results.
On ce it is certified, Brown
will have five da ys in whi ch to
request a r ecount, a nd he has
said he will do so.
Celebreeze today c!Ja r ged
that Bro wn has already sent
letters to each board tell ing
them to he prepared for a
recount.
"This is unprecendented,"
said Celebreeze . "He has
cr osse d th e li ne be twee n
sta tutory duty and persona l
mteresl . The electwn must be
cert ifie d be for e he eve n

IWI')~r_h_e_W..,.o_rl_
., d _To_d_a_y_
Blue Ash girl still

miss~

CINCINNATI 1UP!) - Police toda y sought clues to the
whereabouts of a high sc hoo l senior who disappeHr ed from he r
suburban Blue Ash home .Monda y.
Police s aid 17-year-&lt;Jld Lonni e Mahone, of LaBelle Avenue
in Blue Ash , disa ppeared a ft er talki ng to her mother by
telephone from her home early Monday afternoon . When the
girl's brother returned home t wo hours later, the gir l was
gone, police said.

Yonng motorist killed

beg ins to give instru ct ions
co nce r ning a r ecount. It
raises suspicions in my mind .
" I have dou bts about the
ability of Ted Brown to
supe rvise a fair and honest
r~cuw1t of tile Secr etar y of
State's race." he said.
. Celebreeze also quest ioned
lhe need for a n.•&lt;:ount.
" It has been predicted that
a recount will cos t the ·
t~1xpa y c r s of Ohio as much as
i'l
qu a rter of a millio n
dollars," he said. " And it will
postpone
the
fi na l
certification of the e l ~ction
eve n longer . Ted Br own
knows that no race in Ohio
h istory, in whic h t he
ca ndidate s
have
bee n
separated by as many .votes
as in this race, has ever been
rever sed by a recount."
Celebreeze sai d he will
have 400 voluntee r s helping
supervise the recount.
··we will have obser ver s at
every pl ace ( hey count
votes ," he said.
Ce lebree1.e a lso s aid
Br own 's recent fi r ing of his
top assista nt , James Marsh .
"ra ises u na n swer ed
qu es ti ons . App a r en tl y .
Marsh 's fa ilur e r ested in his
rea listic and honest belief
that a r ecount would still
reveal that Ted Brown lost
this election .''

PITISBURG H (UP!) - Kimber ly Maus, 19, Steubenville ,
Ohio, died Thursday night in Presbyterian-University Hospi ta l
of injur ies suffered in a traffic accident earlier this wee k.
.
Police said Miss Mam. was inj ured ·sunday when car tn
·~-.. ,.- -v" , .... v ,.- 0 , .- 0 r ~
which she wa s r iding struck a pole along Cove Road in "
_ _ . \
Weirton, W. Va . She was taken to Weir to n General Hospital •
and the n transferred to Pittsburgh by helicopter .
'.&gt; ~~1.~1- ~ . ,4;,',;::,
CLEVELAND (UP!) This wee k's winnin g
Ohio I,ottery num be rs :
Gold number - 1.
While number - 71.
Blue number - 896.
Wlo·A·Thon
14927.

'

Autopsy perfonned today
OPEN HOUSE WILL BE OBSERVED - The fifth a nnual Christmas open house will be
observed Sunday from noon until 5 p.m . a t F r a ncis flor ists, East Ma in Str.eet, Pomer o)' .
Ther e will be a la r ge selection of Christma s gift ideas on display and all ladies aitending will
receive a fr ee gift. Door prizes will be offered and refreshments servt...t. Slwwu i-1, ct• ".
Kat hleen F rancis , Bill Fr ancis, Mrs . Bill Francis and Kathy Reo.d .
'1

AKRON , Ohio (UP! ) - An a utopsy was to be performed
today on Patr icia E. ByTd, 25, Akron, in an attempt to
determine the cause of her death.
· The woman 's body was discovered Thursday behind a
Hartford Avenue residenee, police said, noting that the woman
had been reported missi ng .

•

'

.,

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