<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15662" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15662?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T00:04:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48784">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/77ac4099d5bac9442961fc6f7ca2c421.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f378007d851d0c11b5222844acb726c2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50194">
                  <text>12-The Daily S&lt;Jntinel. Mitltllcp"rl·Pumt•ruy. n .. l'llurstla)·.lkc. H. 1978

iJ r~,~~_.world

Financial mess :Game of Monopoly

roday

(Continued from page I )
percent by the year 2000, when inflation will take the
retirement program post $30 billion yearly.
CHARLESTON, S.C.- A 55-YEAR-OLD man wh o tried to
hijack a New York-l&lt;&gt;-Miami jetliner to Cuba today was
subdued and taken iniD custody by FBI agents at an
unscheduled slop in Charleston.
There were unconfirmed reports that Gerald Edmond
Casey threatened to throw acid at crew members if his
demand for the plane, a Boeing 727, to go to Cuba were not
heeded, the FBI said.
No one aboard the plane, which stopped in Charleston to
discharge Ca~, was injured. The plane, National Airlines
Flight 97, continued on to Miami.
VATICAN CITY - The Vatican today said the printed
rep~rts that Pope John Paul II once was married or engaged
are "gossip devoid of any foundation whatsoever."
The Vatican spokesman, the Rev . Romeo Panciroli, told
reporters the rumor was first denied shortly after the pope's
election Oct. 16 but has cropped up again in various Italian
publications.

Lower Great Lakes hit
by new pre-winter stonn
'

United Press Internallonal
Snow squalls developed
IDday in western New York
State as the lower Great
Lakes states were hit by a
new pre-winter storm.
Locally heavy snow squalls
were predicted in the
snowbelts east and southeast
of Lakes Erie and Ontario.
- The National Weather
Service said snow would vary
from about 2 ID 10 inches or
more.
Snow
showers
and
occasional flurries were
scattered from western New
England across New York,
Pennsylvania , Ohio and
Michigan.
Travelers advisories have
been posted over much of
western New York Stale.
Gale warnings were up over
the lower and central Great
Lakes foc westerly winds
gusting to 50 mph and
greate r . A Jake shore
warning for flooding and
erosion was posted for
portions of the New York
lakeshore.

Pf!:l. •

.

High wind warnings were
posted over the eastern
slopes of the Montana
Rockies for strong, gusty
winds . Gale warnings were
up along portions of the
Pacific Northwest coast.
Rain fell along the Pacific
Northwest
coast
and
scattered showers occurred
along the Texas and
limisiana coasts.
Skies were clear over much
of the central and western
portions of the nation .
The Ohio River crested
more than 8 feel above flood
·stage at Louisville, Ky ., late
Wednesday. Few residents
were caught off guard
because the river had risen
over a five-day period.
A few dozen families had
moved in with rela tives ,
friends, or at hotels.
Cleanup operations were
under way upstream in
Cin c inn a ti,
where
forecaasters said the river
should be back in .its banks by
Friday mor.ning .

CLEVELAND ( UPI l ~ U
Cleveland's fina ncial mess
was a game of Monopoly and
you were about to land on
Boardwalk and Park Place,
holding the mortgaged
Electric Company and
Waterworks properties, you
would be Mayor Dennis
Kncinich.
The other playe rs are
sitling back cutting deals,
freezing you out of the action.
So you grimly clutch your
cards and hope f..- a miracle.
The only deal available is
for the Electric Company, the
property you feel you can't
give up because it got you into
l)le game. The moment of

· truth is only one move away.
In real life Kucinich is
holding the Cleveland
Municipa l Light Pl~nt
Syslem and the Cleveland
Water System. Muny Ught
has run up a big bill with the
Cleveland Electric II·
Juminating Co. and a judge
has ordered the city to place
the water division , its only
r emaining money-making
asset,
under
regional
authority.
A promise lo save Muny
Light won Kucinich the
election last year and helped
him survive a recall
campaign in August.
The real life banks are just
as cold and impersonal as the

Begin calls
cabinet meet

compromise language to a
United Press lnlemallonal
Prime Minister Menachem treaty approved by ~gyptian
Begin said today the Israeli Preside'lt. Anwar
. Sadat. .
Cabinet will meet in special
Neithet man would say
session to discuss the differ· what matters would he raised
ences in the Israeli and at the special session, called
Egyptian positions on a peace for Friday at 1:30 a.m. EST.
treaty.
Vance, who planned ID stop
The announcement in in Cait'o on his way home ,
Jerusalem came shortly after said, " I am going back to the
President Carter said he was United States because I must
"very frustrated" by Begin's be back there in connection
inflexibility on the pscl.
with other matters totally
Speaking after a 90-minule unrelated to the Middle East
meeting with Secretary of question .''
Stale Cyrus Vance, Begin
Carter's decision to cut
said, "There are certain short Vance's mission and his
differences of optn1on sharpest remarks to date on
between the Israeli and Israel's negotiating stand
Egyptian positions and we appeared to be a final
discussed it freely as attempt to pressure the
friends .
Jewish nation to seal a treaty
"Tomorrow there will be a by the Sunday deadline
special session of the cabinet specified in the Camp David
at which the decisioos will be accords.
Vance met twice with
taken. "
Vance was under orders Begin Wednesday, but failed
from Carter to return to the ID win Israeli approval of a
United States Friday, after peace plan that Sada,t had.
Begin apparently rejected finally accepted after what a
White
House
official
described as "long and
!111:1 1111 r&lt;::cl!&lt;:! I!&lt;:!:""' !111:1 s:¥11&lt;0&lt; s:o&lt;r. r. u:.&lt;m difficult" bargaining.

·

!111:1 IEQII!III:! I!&lt;:! I!&lt;:! I!&lt;:! I!&lt;:!IEQIII!d I!&lt;:! f!:l.fl;ll •

!fbr tlte BIGqti'i' tC!e~s.l i r.*1~~ff~i~~or~~
~

W

If:&lt;

We have the newest looks for all the men in ~ ~:~::: a treaty proposed by
f
"I S
~ · " President Sadat was very
your amJ y. ee us first!
w generous, 'in my opinlon, in

"

adopting basically an original

~

W Israeli position," Carter said.

W

W " My understanding from

II

WSecretary Vance.is that now

OPEN 'Dl
8 P.

11!
II
W

11! the Israelis are reluctant to

the goal
for 1979."
W accept
Although
Carter
did not.
f.(

.

II
5
I!!
f.(

II
i
II

•

now."t•lI

W

w~b~by-u

Wwas clear his irrilatioo was
directed at the Israeli prime
minister.
W "! am very frustrated at
this point," he said.
After his second meeting
with Begin, Vance went
immediately to .the U.S.
consulateileneral, where he
held a 15-minute conversation

! _____ ~

_j

II

•

.

.

.

~:~:~ao~~to~~ambler
Israeli officials said the .

~·

~NEW
II

YORK ·cLOTHING HOUSE

I 126 E. MAIN

992-2049

POMEROY, 0.

·'li!C:&lt; IEQIII!d II!&lt;=! u:.&lt; Hllll! Ill! !111:1 !!&lt;:&lt; E::l!lll:! r. ..1111 !111:1

Away to our

windows~

CHARLESTON, W.Va .
(UP! ) - A member of the
Governor's Commission oo
Willow Island said !Dday the
group is seeking information
on competent investigators to
help it in its work.
The group is studying the
federal invesiigation into the
collapse in April of a cooling
IDwer under cOnstruction at
Willow ·
Island,
a
Monongahela Power Co.
electric-generating plant,
where 51 workmen fell to
their death.
Joseph Powell, president of
the West Virginia Labor
Federation, AFT rCTO. ond a

~Last

We ~n deposit your money
or hand you some cash!

OPEN 9-3 MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
9-6 FRIDAY
9-3 SATURDAY ,

A Home Bank For
Meigs County People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

·BANK
Racine, Ohio

~~;;;;;;;.._ _...,;,;;;.;;;;;;.;;,;;;;~.........

'

the banks that the city is
fiscally sound and deserves to
have its notes refinanced. But
Forbes and his fellow councU
members insist that Kucinich
agree to sell Muny Light
befoce they will approve the·
Wid sales.
·
sO if you're Kucinich, you
hang &lt;11 foc one moce roll of
the dice. That come!i Friday
when the banks either
refinance or declare the city
in default.

TEHRAN, Iran (UP!) Prominen t Iranian
politicians today presented
Shah Mohammed Reza .
Pahlavi with a "last chance"
plan that would make the
shah a nominal figurehead
and turn all power over ID a
crown council.
The shah met to discuss the
plan with former Prime
Minlster Ali Amini, who has
been serving as a go-between
in talks between the shah and
his political opposition.
An announcement was expected from the palace on
Saturdny, political sources
said.
While the talks went on,
proshah forces continued a
wave of backlash violence
against opponents of 'the
regime that has killed at least
50 people in the last two days.
A general strike called by
Moslem leaders paralyzed
the ancient city of Isfahan
today and citizens boycotted
the ceremony at which a new
statue of the shah was
unveiled to replace one
destroyed in rioting earlier

~:~:~n~~~~~~~!

imposed by the Egyptians.
Theysaidthemajorsnagwas
an Egyptian proposal to
delay
full
diplomatic
relations until Palestinian
autonomy on the occupied
West Bank and Gaza Strip
becomes fully operational.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Timothy
Fynon, Pomeroy ; Gary
Ginther, Long Bottom; Wilda
Brogan, Rutland ; Mary
Weaver , Syracuse; Bettie
Templeton, Minersville ;
Esther Pitzer, Long Bottom.

la~e~t~~:~·total of $15.5

member o! the commission, rlimors had any basis of famllles whether they had
any lnfocmation about the
said initial contacts will be facts," said Powell.
reported back to
a
The person m081 competent · accident, but he's received no
subcommittee and then the to do the actual work. was respmse, said Powell.
full committee before an ~houg~t to be a prtvate
"It's very possible that in
investigator is hired.
mvest1gator, he said.
view of all the civil suits there
" There were a lot of
. " ll:s a very .,delicate maybeareluctance,"Powen·
rumorsgoingarotmdthatthis Sltuaho~.andwedon 1,want to said of legal actions in the
person or that person had mtrude, said Powell.
case being taken by the
some informalon on the . Panel chairman state famllles "Some attorneys
previous day's work; or some · Labor Commissioner Stephen advised ·their clients tD keep
of workmen had complained L. Cook, by letter, asked the mum."
ID families about conditions
and we felt that the
commission ought to contact
the dependents of those who
(Continued from page I )
were killed in the disaster to
see if any of these so-called Bank, Euclid Natimal Bank, Society National Bank and
•
Capital National Bank.
"We are going over it (Kucinich's plan) now to see what it
entail~." said Bruce Akers, spokesinan for Cleveland Trust,
which holds $5 mUlion In notes. "We have asked lor and have
been asking fQr more specific information like we would ask
any group. We obviouSly must approach this in a sound,
prudent, banking manner like any request for .a lOan."
The Cleveland Electric Illmnillaling Co., meanwhile,
continued seizing city property Wednesday -most of it from
1
the light system and water works- to satisfy psrt of the city's
debt to CEI. CEI said the city owes it $4.5 mUlion under a
federal court order, but Kucinich put the amount at $3 mUlion.
Kucinich accused the utility of "waging war" against the
city. "What we have here is a company that is IDtally irresponsible," showing that they. don't care about the people of
tbis city."

Holzer Medical Center
Disrharges, Dec. 13
Clarem·e Adkins, Mrs. Carl
Beabout andson, lAmella
Bolts, Susie Burt, William
Bush, Augustine Clonch, Lin·
da Cox, Earl Dabney, Mrs.
James Fields and son, Jo
E llen Fuller , Odessa
Gallaway, Connie Goodnite,
Thomas Hu ghes, Glenn
Icenhower, Karen .Johnson ,
Mrs. · Donahl Kingery and
daughter, Eric Crude! , Sandra Little, Teresa Mc Claskey, George Muoroy,
Herman Parcell , Charles
Radcliff, Belly Ragland, Bar- ·
bara Ross, Gladys Smith,
Charles Stewart, Hazt:l
StuJ'geon, Joann Swain.
Births, i&gt;~t·. 13
Mr. and Mrs. Max Coon ,

Oeveland•••

snn. .Jackson .
Mr.
Mf'. Oonal&lt;t Me·

"'"i

r cwkh•, daughter , Wellston.
Mr. ;.~ nrl Mrs. F.al'l Mallm&lt; .

daughto·r, Wes1 Cnlnmhia W.
V;;

I

CLEVELAND - Attorneys in the Kent State civil trial
haggled over introduction of exhibits and note-taking by jurors
Thursday as they prepared for opening statements in the
complex case Monday afternoon .
The suit was b!"oughl by parents of four students killed by
National Guard gunfire on ·the Kent State University campus
eight years ago and by nine wounded students.

SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SALEI

I

WASIDNGTON - The Chinese, with their latest 406,500
matrlc tnn purcbase of American wheat, surpassed their
promised·annual purchases of American grain.
During Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland's recent trip
. ID China, officials told him they would buy 5 million to 6 million
IDns of American grain mmually lor the next few years.
SALT LAKE CITY - Utah School Districts may have ID
dig up $6 mUlion tD hire more teachers as a result of a land·mark federal court ruling that Monnon Church Seminary
classes cannot be substituted for regular high school courses.
. Slate School Superintendent Dr. Walter Talbot said Thursday It would cost that amount ·if the public schools suddenly
were to assume the clasa load llandled for the past :!0 years by
the seminaries. The .Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Sainta operates the .seminaries near almost every high school
and junior high school in Utah.

·~

II

I

~

11!

R

I

11!

I
I

SEEKS DIVORCE
two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas court.
Filing for divorce were
Cora F. See, Middleport, II!
against James See, same
address; Juanita Bowles, Rt. :
4, Pomeroy against 'Elmer
Bowles, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

1

=

i

PROGRAM SUNDAY
The annual Christmas
program will be held at 7 p.m.
Sunday at the Antiquity
Baptist Church. The public is
invited.

I(

I
I
1
I
W
I1

I(

fr;, 5
the office of Gov. James R. W

~

I

WASIDNGTON - The National Farmers Union wants a
strict interpretaton of a new Jaw requiring foreign investors in
U. S. farmland to register their holdings with the federal
government.
Lobbyist Robert Mulllns, representing the farm
ocganizallon, recommended the Jaw be applied to foreign
individuals and businesses holding land shares of three
percent or larger and to agricul\ural plots 10 acres or larl(er.

dl

11!

i

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A private eye is being added to
the Governor's Cornmil!slon on Willow Island; a special panel
formed by Gov. Jay Rockefeller ID search foc answers in the
scaffold collapse that claimed 51 lives.
·
West Virginia Labor Federation President Joseph Rowell,
a member of the cOmmission, said the investigator will be
·hired to find witnesses bypassed by the federal probe.

'll

!
i

SIZES S (Fits 5-6 Shoe)
M (Fits 61h.]!h)
. l (Fits 8-9)
XL (Fits

. COLUMBUS - Stall; law enforcement officials have met
with representatives of a U. S. Justice Department Organized
Crime Strike Force to discuss land purchases made in eastern
Ohio by &amp;SIOCiates of organized crime figures, UP! has
learned.
A friend of reputed Mafia banker· Meyer Lansky had
purchased over 80 oil ahd ·gas leases in the Cambridge area in
Guernsey Cotmty and either sold or transferred lhe .titles to
other parsons.
CLEVELAND - The earnings outlook lor the lire industry
in 1979 will depend ·" first and forem011t" on the outcome of
national negotiations with the United Rubber Workers,
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. Chairman Charles J . Pilliod has
concluded.
· The tire industry's contract with the.URW expires in April.

I

I

REGULAR '4

11

50

-

'4

•

Bring the children to see Santa
6 to 8 p.m .

$5

'2"
,

Shoppers in 'Pomeroy and
Middleport will get a Christ·
mas treat Saturday thanks to
the vocal and instrumental
mustc depsrtments of J\ieigs
High School.
A group from the vocal
department's Cborallers will
present carols in Middleport
while Pomeroy shoppers will
be treated to Christmas
music played· by a brass
choir. Mrs. Paige Hunt is
vocal director and Randy
Hunt to IMtrumental director
for , . activities. ..

I
I

SAU

Clau~ Friday 6 to 8 p.~. and Saturday

get treat Saturday

I

Cpmfortable. fashionable and warm all over, Angel Tread Slippers,
machine washable, special sole as long as quantity lasts. O!oice of
sever a I styles in fashion color.
00

Area shoppers to

I

9~-IQlh)

5

w

.

which has $5 million in notes,
said it would call in its note
before
the
midnight
deadline.
Wilson M,Cllitterbuck,
Cleveland
Trust
loan
executive, l!&amp;id the bank will
have to "present our notes for
payment at the office of the
City Treasurer on Dec. 15,

::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;::
EXTENDED FORECAST
S u 0 d 8 Y t h r 0 u «h
Tuesday, snow flurries
possible In northeastern
areas
withoffair
weatherSunday,
over tbe rest
tbe

•
~ould have to approve before
lt could be put up for a vote by
tll~rPfe, thif ~~
:
.. selL' ~ S e -rl en
unK lCl~ h halg t fystsedem,. d
s re unever osello
thisUClDic
stating "I'll

he was "extremely hopeful
that the elected officials of
the city and their advisors
will develop a financial plan
satisfactory to all the psrties
involved.
."With s.uch a pWI, Central
will constder conlmumg its
present level of financial
support to the city."

stale during !be enUre
period. Highs will be In the
upper 30s to middle 40s
Sunday, cooling Into the
middle 20sto the middle 30s
by Tuesday. Overnight
lows will be In the 20s early
Sunday and Monday and in
the teens or low 20s by
Tuesdny morning.
::::;.;:::;:::;.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

the
1
conl ~gCI eel ~e E~ tr'
~s e~ ~ ~ a uld ec ~
wnma ~ 0 • wo crea
a mono~ Y•
.
.
Kucmlch sald he 1 ~
~v~~edC:,hat .~:: can ge
theta' ~ik un~l b rut"ppro~~
e x e, e a s wou
grant the city. an extens10n of
:e~~::: uu;:l the tax could

st~~!~ts~id ~~~.,!.;: ~~~~

•

e

at y

I1

L~!-~~~~~-~~-~-~!!!..1·
'

CLEVELAND (UPI) Tbls week's winning Ohio
Loiter)' numbers:
Gold nwnber - 8.
Wblle number - 18.
Blue oumber - 197.
Win-A•Thon
1199%.

The aty Council has said it
would go along with

· · •

·

1
~';'':::~= s~~~o~en
~0~~

1

my~~~~ l~

. Should the city defaultfiron
1ts loans, 1t would be tile st
major American city to do so
smce the Great Depression.
Kucinlch said there would
be massive layoffs of city
workers and a drastic
.
. basic city
reduction
m

m:lor

detii~

en tine

~~~:~e\.1~~gi~~~:ru:~:~

following
months.

in

about

two

Two major credit rating
agencies, Moody's Investor
Servicss and Standard &amp;
Poor's, have declared Cleveland's bonds unmarketable
because of the city's poor
credit.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 111

Israel rejects treaty bids,
sharply criticizes president
By JIM ANDERSON
United Press International
Israel IDday rejected the
~roposals made by the United
Stales and Egypt for
conclusion of a peace treaty
and sharply criticized the
Carter administration for
siding with the Egyptians in
the negotiations.
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance, who failed In his
shuttle at getting the two
nations to sign the pact by
Sunday as sought by
President Carter, left Cairo
for Washington today.
At Prestwick Airport in
Scotland, where Vance 's
plane made a one-hour
refueling stop on its way back
to Washlng!Dn, U.S. officials
said there would be no
comment on the Israeli
decision until they have seen
the full text of the cabinet
statement,
The Israeli cabinet decision
put Israel on a collision
course with the United States
because the White House, in

PORT MORESBY, Papua - New Guinea- Police are
questioning eight members of a cull who claim they talked to
spirits via a "telephone" line made from 400 yards of cane. The
cane ran from the cult headquarters in a remote area of
eastern Papua New Guinea loa tree trunk, a police spokesman
said.
. Police launched the investigation because of the country's
Jaw against spreading false rumors likely to cause unrest.

•• ~

ELBERFEL'DS

ea~e q~:~~~la~ll~~~l sc'::~:

1978, in accordance with the
terms of said notes."
Clutter buck sa1d if tile city
presented any proposals
" that would deal with
alternatives that have more
materiality" before the
midnight deadline, "we will
be happy to rev1ew
·
the m."

By United Press International
SAN FRANCISCO - A state Jaw prohibiting the wearing of
masks in public has ~en declared unconstitutional by the·
California Appellate Court.
The state Court of Appeals Thursday reversed the
convictions of Farza·~ Ghafari and Homan Oon Majd, two
students who were found guilty of violating the statule for
demonstrating in the masks before the Iranian Consulate
during peaceful picketing in 1976.

GREENVILLE, S. C. - A suspected . flim.flam artist,
arrested in his hometown of Toledo, Ohio, was returned here
Thursday to face charges of obtaining money under false
pretenses, authorities said.
John Grownow, according to pollee, allegedly advertised
an employment agency. When residents responded to the ads,
the suspect claimed he could find employment positions for the
job-Beekers if they paid security bonds of between $100 and
$150, poli~e said.

I11

would do nothing to
precepitate tlle situaiion,"
said Akers
The first .bank to call in its
debt was the Central National
Bank which has $3 mUlion in
notes and Society National
Bank and Capital National
Ba nk wt'th no tes of $500 ,000

j,.)~_Th_e_w_o_rl_d_T,_;o_d_ay_· _

~~mli~,w~.~~~~~ith":'~ · 1WWOM.EN'SHOUSESLIPPER'sl

~~~~~ ~~~s~~~~s;,-_

much depends &lt;11 what comes
out of the council meeting.
The issue is not closed by any
means. Presentment of lhe
notes by the other banks
doesn't mean the ball game is
o~er. The city could come up
With something else.
"If the city should default,
we would not go to court, we

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, December 15, 1978

CHICAGO
(UP!)
. Thompson, who is seeking a
Yielding
to
President simUar settieinent with Kahn
Carter's an ti·inflation in 1he face ofmotmting public
pressures, city aldermen furor about the Legislature's
have settled for a 50.5 percent 40 percent pay hikes.
pay raise spread over four
Thompson planned to meet
years instead of the 60 with legislative leaders today
percent immediate raise they to consider rolling back the
planned to approve .
pay increase. Kahn, through
The City Council voted 41-6 a spokesman, has said he will
Wednesday to approve the accept no compromise with
compromise worked out be· the legislators unless they
tween representatives of roll back salaries to faU
Mayor Michael A. Bilandic within Carter's guidelines.
an Alfred E. Kahn, Carter's ill"" ~~~l&lt;OII!OI&lt;f!:I.I!O:&lt;E::I"""Bo&lt;I!O:&lt;l!&lt;:&lt;f!:l.l!j¥""" . .~- il!llll!j¥f!:l.f!:l._. . . W""'I!O:!Iiilll
chief inflation fighter and · W
·
I

aldermen, faces the voters
early in 1979.
"It Is the view of the council
staff that the city's
(Chicago's) , management
employee unit will be in
compliance with the wage
standard of llle anli~nflalion
~~··
In Springfield, a group of
angry central Illinois
residents dumped' used

~:~~ o::.e~~ ~~. •·~

million in notes due by
midnight.
Mayor Dennis Kuclnich
met with the city councU in an
11ttempt to wrest approval for
his plan for a one.balf percent
increaSe in the city's income ·
tax.
"Frankly, It is hard to say
.what will happen," a spokes-

Chicago aldermen
yield to pressure

~~~:~:~~~tl~gtr;a~:!

man for Cleveland 'l'rust Co.·
said. "It is definitely no
longer a good situation "
The spokesman, . Bruce
·Akers, said the bank would
not go to cburt nor would it
attempt to tie up any city
property.
" F ran kl y we are stt·n

. CLEVE LAND (UP!) Three banks holding mUlions
of dollars in Short-term notes
.today demanded psyment,
pushing tile city of Cleveland
ID near bankruptcy .
A fourth banlt holding $5
mUlion in notes said it would
·
t deman d
188ue a psymen

chance'
·plan studied

w~~~i~
..St~:~~·
"The City Council has once

Drive like a flash!

I ~

, In real life the properties
include about two miles of
railroad right-of-way in the
city's Industrial Flats area
that the Chessie System
wants to buy foc $2.5 mUlion.
The other properties are city·
owned
land
outside
Cleveland's boundries that
would add another $2.5
million.
Kucinlch wanted the land
sales to balance this year's
budge l and thereby convince

Information is sought ·

00

''

Forbes, is demanding that he
agree to sell Muny l..ight to '
CEI before it will go along
with·a special eleclioo on the
tax proposal.
Back on the Monopoly
board, you have long sought
to sell off other properties,
including a railroad, to gel
the cash to keep playing. No
deal. The other players don 'l
want to touch the properties
unless yo u throw in the
Electric Company.

If:&lt;

Chr•ISIIIIGS

II

W

bank in Monopoly, operating
by set rules that boil down to ·
no specia l treatment for
anyone. They hold $14 million
of the $15.5 million in shortterm notes that come due
Friilay.
Kucinlch wants the banks
to refinance the notes 111 the
strength of his req~est for a
one-half of one percent
increase in the city income
tax . City Council , led by
Council President .George

Banks demand Cleveland pay up

·NEW OWNER- Jim Johnson is the new owner of the
Beacon service station located at intersection of Routes 33
and 7. Johnson , who formerly was employed at Eber's
Gulf in Racine, purchased the stationilrocery store from
. Mike and Eddie Young on Nov. I. The name will be
changed to Jim'~ Gull. Johl180n and his wife, Belinda,
reside in Racirte . .

Two persons are
hurt in mishap
Two persons were treated
for injuries sustained during
1wo Thursday accidents
investigated by the GaUia·
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the
scene of a mishap in Meigs
County, on Third Ave. in
Racine, at 8:15a.m.
The patrol reports that an
auto traveling west on Main
St ., operated by Anna Layne,
48, Racine, made a right tum
onto Third.
Avehicle traveling north on
Third Ave. operated by
Marvin Randolph,l7, Racine,
stopped suddenly to avoid
collision.
Randolph's head struck the
steering wheel. He was transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, where he wa s
treated and released.
· There was no contact be·
tween the vehicles.
The pstrol investigated an
accident on Neighborhood
Rd., at the junction of Klicher
Rd., at 4:05 p.m.
. Officers report that a north
bound· auto operated by

Ronald Grubb, 17, Gallipolis,
and a north bound vehicle
driven by Joe Eskew, 34,
Gallipolis, met over a hill·
crest in a curve.
The Eskew auto stopped.
To avoid collision, Grubb
applied the brakes.
The vehicJ'e went off the
right side of the roadway,
Cl'ossed the pavement , went
off the left side, and struck an
embankment.
There was no contact between the vehicles.
A psssenger in the Grubb
auto, William Dray, 21,
Gallipolis, claimed injury
and was transported to
Holzer Medical Center,
where he was treated for a
contusion of the right
shoulder and neck, and
released.
A secon d passenger,
George Dray, 18, Gallipolis,
claimed injury, but was not
inunediately treated.
Grubb was cited on charges
of excessive speed. There
was moderate damage to the
vehicle.

Fund drive reaches
mid·point in Meigs
Donations to the Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp Fund Raising
Project in Meigs County have
reached the half-way mark.
The Dec. 31 deadline is juSt
two weeks away. ln.o•der to
meet our goal of $42,000, We
are asking the help of every·
one.
If you wish to help us reach
this goal, contributions may
be sent to the Meigs County
Extension Office, Box 32,
Pomeroy. Checks should be
made psyable to Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp. Donation
pledges within the next three
years can also be accepted by
indicating the amount you
wlll be giving and when it will
be paid.
The Meigs County Ex·
tension staff would like to
thank
ihe
following
organizations and individuals
who have donated or pledged
money to the Cant~r ' s Cave 4·
II Camp Fund Raisin g
'

project during the past week:
Racine Home National
Bank, James L. Eberts, Kelly
Manufacturing Company,
Dick Owen, George Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Bailey, Tuppers Plains
School Boosters, XI Gamma
Mu Sorority, Ewing Funeral
Home, Howard Stout, Mr.
and Mrs. Gayle Price,
Chester Young Wives Club,
and Pomeroy National Bank.
BOARD TO MEET
I he Southern Local BoBrd

of Education will meet in
regular session al 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday in the high school
cafeteria .
TO MEET SATURDAY
Heml ock Grove Grange
will meet in regular session
at 6:30 p.m . Saturday at the
hall.
~

Pomeroy

statements Thursday, made
Israel responsible for the
success or failure of Vance's
shuttle rescue mission.
The cabinet, in a statement
read by · Prime Minister
Menachem Begin, blamed
Egypt for the inability ID
conclude a treaty based &lt;11
the framework of the Camp
David peace agreements
signed in September.
Begin said the Egyptians
introduced wholly new
demands and chided the
United States foc a "onesided" interpretation of
them.
Basically, the main issue
blocking agreement has been
the same that has overshadowed the negotiations from
almost the first day: the link
between the treaty and the
future progress towa rd
Palestinian self:.-qJe in the
occqpied West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
But Begin this week said
that Egypt now wants to lie
its exchange of ambassadors
with Israel following a trea ly
to a date for solving the
Palestinian problem.
He also has said Egypt
wants a looser intepretation

squad has
four runs
.

of a key article, which now
would prevent Cairo from
going to war with its Arab
allies.
"These demands," Begin

said following the five-hour
special session of the cabinet,
"are inconsistent with the
Camp David frameworks or
are not included in them and
changes s ubstantiall y
provisions
of
the
aforementioned peace treaty.
"Therefore, they are unacceptable to Israel and
rejected by it.
"The government of Israel
rejects the attitude and.interpretation of the United States
government with regard to
the Egyptian proposals."
Begin said Israel would like
Washington " to ' keep its
objectivity" and later said In
reply to a question, "The
position as expressed by the
(Carter) adminlslratlon is
one-sided. Any one-sided
decision imposes difficulties
and we hope It will change."
Carter said Thursday that
the conclusion of the treaty
was "primarily in ~~e bands
of the Israelis."
The negotations for a psct
began Oct. 12 and proceeded
in fits and starts, athough
progress was rapid initially.

But the talks hit a deadlock
about a month ago, which led
to the Vance mission.
Begin today reaffirmed
Israel's wUlingness to sign a
U.S. draft treaty as presented
to it Nov. 11 and approved
Nov. 21.
Israel's rejection of the
proposals brought from
Egypt by Vance came as no
surprise . But it meant
Sunday's deadline for
inltialing the treaty will not
be met unless there were
drastic developments in the
next two dnys .
Begin said he expected the
negotiationS will be resumed
because "we want to sign a
peace treaty with Egypt ."
He said he would attend
another sununit meeting with
President Carter, if invited in
an attempt to seal the psct,
the first ever between Israel
and an Arab state.
Carter, in stepping up the
pressure on Israel, said
Thursday: "One of the major
issues is whetller or not a-goal
should be set, not a fixed
definite requirement that the
West Bank-Gaza selfgovernment should be
established by the end of
1979."

School bus law hits ·
non-stopping drivers

The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to Mulberry
Heights. at 1:33 a.m. Friday
for Gene Mitch:
Mitch became ill at his
home and fell in the bathroom By LEE LEONARD
receiving multiple injuries UPI Statehouse Reporter
when he lost consciousness.
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
He was taken to Holzer James A. Rhodes has signed
Medical Center where he will legislation, effective March
undergo observation and 15, enabling judges ID get
treatment for several days. IDugh on motorists who pass
At 11:43 a.m. Thursday, the stopped school buses and
squad went to Landmark on requiring more visible
East Main St., Pomeroy, for warning devices.
Ura Morris, Racine, whohad
The bill was one of 20
falleJl . She was tkane to signed Thursday by Rhodes
\leterans Memorial Hospital from a batch sent to him two
where she was admitted.
weeks ago by the General
At 12:35 p.m. the squad Assembly.
went to Mulberry Heights for
Rhodes also inked a bill
Mrs. Homer Cooper who was authorizing voters ID close
taken to Holzer Medical individual taverns within
Center .
their precincts if they are
At 3:27p.m. Thursday, the violating liquor control laws
unit went to the Baum Ad·
the conditions of their
clition on ~«lute 7 for Becky oc
permits.
Broderick who was ill. She
school bus bill provides
was taken to Pleasant Valley focThe
a
fine
of up to $500 and a
Hospital.
one-year suspension of tlle
driver's license for passing a
stopped school bus. The
Oh-Kan Coin
current penalty is ~
maximum $100 fine and no
Club will
suspension.
The new Jaw will also
require
that school buses be
meet Monday
equipped
with
eight
alternately fiashihg red and
The Oh·Kan Coin Club will
lights and a "stop"
hold its Christmas meeting amber
warning
arm
which
Monday evening in the
autnmaticaUy
extends
when
Riverboat Room of the Meigs
the
bus
is
stopped.
Branch, Athens County
New school buses will have
Savings and Loan, West Main
ID
have such equipment by
St., Pomeroy.
next
July I. Existing buses
Out of town dealers will be
present to buy, sen or trade will have an extra 13 months
collector
coin
items. ID comply. The state will psy
Following the meeting a coin
auction will be held. Refresh·
ments will be served.
The club Is seeking new
PROGRAM SUNDAY
members and anyone in·
The Rutland Church of the
terested in coin collection Is
invited to attend Monday Nazarene will present a
night's mee11ng to become a Christmas program Sundny,
member or even to buy Dec. 17 at 6:45p.m.
Following the program a
C!lllector il ems for Christmas
gifts. Edward Burkett, Christmas play will be given
Middleport, is president of by the young people. The
1hr 17-year-c.ld club.
public is in~ted.

for the equipment with within Ohio, effective im·
federal highway safety funds . mediately.
Thirty-one stales have
- Exempting from the
similar warning systems and strip mine reclamation
have experienced a large requirements
non commercial mining for
reducti!ll in violations.
The bill enabling voters to minerals other than coal done
close single taverns also by the landowner on Jess than
takes effect March 15. It one acre and less tban five
provides for local option feel below the surface.
elections on individual beer
- Delaying until Jan. I,
and liquor permit holders ·1980, the implementallon of
rather
than
on
all staggered monthly motor
establislunenls in a precinct vehicle registration, and
registration by mail.
as under current law.
To be voted closed, an
-Extending until June 30,
establishment would have 1979, the deadline for
had to violate liquor Jaws or completing a review of the
Bureau
of
Workers '
regulations.
The governor signed Compensation and the Ohio
another bill requiring the Industrial Commission.
secretary of state to publish
- Establishing a staggered
system
for
instructions on how to triennial
petition for local option registering watercraft,
basing fees on lhe length of
elections.
He signed legislation watercraft and abolishing
changing the terms of county registration of outboard
court judges from four to .six motors.
- Establishing a stale
years, with half the judges in
each district running for the program for reviewing
new terms in 1980 and the institutional health services
and .medical equipment to
other half in 1982.
The bill also replaces a determine needs.
psrttime judge of Wilmlngloo
-Giving the Ohio EnvironMunlcipsl Court with a full- mental Protection Agency
primary en for c em e n t
time judge next year.'
Also signed, effective im- responsibility for public
mediately, was a bill water systems designed lor
increasing from $25 to $50 a human consumption.
day the psy ol members of
the Ohio National Guard who
are called to service during
stale emergencies.
These other bills were
signed :
.
- Creating an Office of
Criminal Justice .Services to
plan and coordlnale criminal (.c
and juvepUe justice systems ~)
HERE MONDAY
The Bloodmobile will be at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School Monday, Dec. 18 from
1:30 p.m. to 5:30p.m.
'~

s;J

.

· ~·. , .· .;&gt; , .-~, c ¢&gt;

••

' .

,r ¢&gt; ,r

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

�CHRISTMAS

Jack Kent

ST

II
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Center city salvation
By Martha An11le aad Robert Walters '
WASHINGTON (NEA ) • One brave soul finally has
mustered the coura11e to tell the awful truth about the
mega-str uctures currently being touted as the salvation of
the decaying downtown cores of the nation 's major cities.
Offering a candid, critical appraisal of those oversized
complexes is a chancy undertaking because business and
civic leaders in cities from coast to coast have staked both
their reputations and their fortunes ·on the success of the
urban behemoths.
In Detroit, the Renaissance Center is advertised as the
cornerstone of local efforta to revive a depressed central
c1ty. In Houston, a similar commercial complex is known
as the Houston Center.
In Los Angeles, another manunoth development is
supposed to provide the downtown area with vitalitr
matchinl! . that of Beverly Hills, Westwood and othe1
commumties on the city's west side.
Once inside, however, " you're not sure what city you're
an - or wh~t~er you're in a city or at an airport, " urban
planner Wilham H. Whyte Jr. explained at a recent
Washmgton convocation. sponsored by the Conservation
Foundation.
Author of "The Organization Man," still widely read 22
years after it was first published Whyte now is director of
New Yor.k City's Street Life Proiect.
Per_h aps most tJt:tportant In Whyte's catalog of distin·
g_u1shmg charactenstics - ·few of them especially attractive to people - or the sterile buildings was the fact that
their dominant architectural characteristics belie their
purported mission.
Although ':'stenslbly built to infuse a declining urban area
w1th new life, their massive concrete walls artificial
moats and limited entry portals present a highiy inhospitable facade to the "outside world."
Inside a typical complex, a visitor escapes from urban
life rather than partlclpatinB in it. " I can spend a whole
day in the Houston Center without going to Houston at all "
quipped Whyte.
'
The ov!'rsized structures have their own life-support
systems, mcludlng recycled air that even smells artificial.
Their completely closed environment and windowless
walls prevent visitors from knowing whether there's a heat
wave or snow storm outside.
. Heavy security, another hallmark cited by Whyte,
mcludes both armed guards and hidden television cameras
for electronic surveillance. Entry Is geared to auto drivers
and passengers, but not pedestrians.
Finally, the lack of respect for detail texture and scale
invariably provokea refugees from the ;lark concrete-andsteel structures to characterize their experience as
depersonalizing.
In another presentation to the Conaervation Foundation
conference, James W. Rouse, probably the country's most
imaginative and innovative real estate deve)Qper offered
a far more sensible alternative.
'
Board chairman of the Rouse 'Company, he probably is
best known as the developer of the thriving " new town" of
Columbia, Md. In recent years, however, Rouse has
devoted considerable time and thought to center city
rehabilitation.
His successes include commercial projects that have
attracted both retailers and customers to once-blighted
downtown areas or Philadelphia and Boston, with a similar
project underway in Baltimore.
Rouse relies heavily on rehabilitating old stores,
abandoned warehoUiel and other existing structures. His
shoppmg area Is integrated with the surrounding neighbor·
hood, not isolated from it. The relatively modest scale
makes people feel comfortable with their surroundings,
not threatened by them.
·
" In the 1980s and Ul90s, the transfonnation of the center
cities will be even more dramatic than the growth of the
suburbs in the 195o. and 11180a," he predicted.
But the salvation of the cities surely won't be found in the
convention center-hotel-office bulldinl!·shopping arcade
combination Whyte callltlcally deacnbed as "the last
convulsive embodiment. of an era whose time has
passed. "
I NEWSPAPER &amp;NTERP81SE ASSN.)

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

• .:Jti., .
IQ 1Nl r., lH.l.,

EPA's aim
•
lS
..

The earthquake
people of Managua
From hills overlooking the
in the San Sebastian
By ALFONSO CHARDY
city, the mtle-aquare earthMANAGUA , Nicaragua neighborhood.
quake zone now looks like a
"~ .we are not squatters
(UPI) - When Erving and
Juana Pena went looking for by choice. I don't like living real state developer's dream
a new home in Managua they here in.constant fear that the - a sea of empty, treeless
did pretty much what an wails may crumble on us. But lots covered .with weeds and
ordinary couple does - walk I don't have a job and so we crisscrossed by seldomtravelled streets.
through the buildings, check cannot pay rent."
But a closer look at the few
The garage is the only part
the wails and roof and size up
ruins
precariously standing
of the . house standing the back yard . .
reveals
fanillies living under
though
perilously
.
The
rest
They setUed on the one they
almost
cracked
roof and on
was
rocked
into
rubble
by
the
live in because its ·wails
seemed fairly sturdy, it had a colossal power of the quake. shelters built on the side of
whole city block f&lt;r a back . And so was every other many walls.
In a cracked structure that
yard, was only three blocks structure on the block. And so
from the nearest water tap were all but a handful of once was a multi-level
and above all was free and buildings in the heart of parking lot, "terremoteados''
live in the different floors like
Managua.
empty.
Overnight on Dec. 23, 1972, tenants in a crowded
The next day they moved in
and joined the hundreds of Managua changed from an ·apartment complex.
Another group crowds into
" terremoteados" - the active if somewhat seedy
what
used. to be a Texaco
Central American city of
earthquake
people
gasoline
station, the rusted
350,000
to
a
275,()00.person
squatters of a strange kind
who live in the eerie ruins left suburb ringing a flattened metal shells of discarded fuel
by the 1972 earthquake that hole seemingly devoid of pumps flattened out for
almost all human activity. makeshift doors and loose
killed 8,000 people.
New construction has gone bricks piled haphazardly to
"We are squatters in the
ruins
of
downtown up In what used to be the cover the once large glass
Managua," said ·Erving, 31, outskirts of the city - low windows.
Most of the squatters are
leaning against a table on the brick ~nd cement buildings
people
who lost their hcmes
dirt floor of his "house" - the and houses with the look of a
in
the
earthquake and
cracked-walled garage of Miami suburb - but little has
afterward
moved into any
what once was a plush house been rebuilt in the center.
structure that was left
standing, disregarding
discomforts and the danger of
collapses from quakeweakened roofs.

Special message
sent lawmakers

t.

..,

;.

•

prevent

disasters

Health Letter number 7-4,
Save A Ufe, Heart and Lung
Arrest. It includes in it a
discussion of the Heimlich
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read procedure. A modification of
about the Heimlich method It can be used in an unbut I didn 'I absorb it. Now I conscious pstient who is lying
wish I had. Yestenlayatnoon · flat . You could also use a
I was eating a hot dog on a hot modification of it on yourself.
dog bun when a piece of You did do the right t.!tlng by
something got caught In my trying to exhale, forcing the
throat. It was like the breath air out around that food cork
had been knocked out of me. 1 in the back of your throat procouldn 't inhale at all. I didn't bably helped to dislodge it.
make any choking or gagging
You can learn, though, to
noises as I couldn't ·ffiBke a press on your abdomen just
sound. I jumped up and lean- below the breast bone
ed forward and kept trying to vigorously and sharply at the
exhale the best I could. I same .time you are exhaling.
finally got it dialodged or I This pres.•ure pushes the
guess I wouldn't be sitting diaphragm up and squeezes
here writing to you today.
the lungs and makes it a little
ASHTABULA, Ohio (UPI) prize in the contest to see who
- The Ashtabula Star- could write the most unusal
The only ones wlinesslng easier to dislodge the food.
all of this were my three
There Is another method Beacon in today's edltioos Valentine.
"Congress won hands down
children, ages II, 9 and 5. I whicn has been advocated ran a nine-inch square
by
giving itself a 41 percent
was petrified •over lhill inci· recently which simply in- Christmas card depicting a
pay
raise in the late 60s at a
dent and so were my vulves getting· hold of the fat Santa Claus and meant to
time
when inflation was one
children. Could you please tongue and pulling it out be sent by readers to state
of
the
chief concerns in the
send me some information on rather far. If you can pull the legislators who recently
nation.
the Heimlich method? I want tongue out far enough, it voted themselves a 28 percent
" Never in our wildest
to learn all I can on lhillllfe- help!; to elevate the obstruc- pay raise.
dreams
did we imagine the
saving procedure and teach it lion In the back of the throat
The card's message :
state
legislators
could top the
to my children if !hey Sf!! old and may enable you to reach
" Dear state legislators :
enough.
back and pull out the food
"Almost 10 years ago many f!'deral legislators. But you
of us sent heart-5haped notes have gone an done it,
DEAR READER - I'm bolus.
afraid most people don't
The Health Letter lam sen- to members of Congress to lawmakers.
"You ~ve yot!!jl yourself a
think health information Is ding you also provides the congratulate the federal
28
percent increase in pay
very Important until they bllsic Information on how to leg~ators for winniing first
only
days after the President
need it. Often it Is too late provide ar\,iflcial respiration
of
the
United States asked
then as it could have been In and how to provide heart
TH E OAII .Y SENTINF.I.
everyone
in the nation to
OF.WYff.O
TO
THE
your case. I am continually compression tlirough the
I NT FJtF:.~ OF'
restrict
increases
to seven
impressed that health educa· chest aa an emergency proMP.Jr.S·MASON AREA
percent.
Your
timing
was
KOBF.RT
HH
f.F'
I
.ICU
lion saves lives.
cedure. Other readers who
CU
r,
F.rlilnr
.
more
imaginative
than
your
The basic principle behind want this issue can send 50
Pu hlisht.'( l {1;111 \ c•~r.c •c •pl Satunl ;~y
counlllrparis in Congress a
the Heimlich maneuver Is to · •cenll with a long, stamped,
b~- Tht• Ohlt• Va llo•,\ r nhlishinK
n
•mr)lmy-Mttltt
mc·ihtL
1111'..
111
decade ago.
consider the two lungs as seH-addressed envelope for
f.'uurl St .. Pl ~tlt ' I'U\' , Ollh' 4~76!1 ,
"Since this is not February,
large Inflated air blp eon- it. Send your request to me in
' Ru!oiiltt•~o:"' Of(i, t' rti111w OO'l· :!i:V..
a
Valentine wouldn't be
Edtl lll i&lt;~l Pho'''' '1!1'2·1 1!ti
nected to your wind pipe at care of lhill newspsper, P.O.
S!•t'llnt l diiSS puS f H~t· J»t ld at
appropriate.
That's why we
the back of your throat. If you Box 1551, Radio City Station,
Puntt·n•~. Ohtu.
.
are
sending
along
this nice,
:-.lii litllllt l ml\t•t1J!'iug l't' J ll'l'.~ t · ll ·
are able to squeeze thole In· New York, NY 10019.
1,tl! vt•, f.miti WI 1\ SstN J,th •s :HO I
big,
fat
Santa
as
first
prize.
flated lungs In 110111e WilY 10
People·who know how to do
P.n1 /u l,\ \ t'. f'lt•l t'lii ntl, fl htu HIJ :i.
''The
big
Santa
symbolizes
that It forces air out the wind these things often have the
~Uh!'!t'l ' l /l l l un 11111'&lt;.:: J&gt;1·1h't'l't•cl h\'
the fat raise you gave
• ll l'r tt•r· w ll'lt' m :•i!a hll • /:j t•t•n ls 111;r
pipe, it helpa to dlalodge opportunity to save lives. ·If
lt't•t•k h1 .\ft ~ t ll llt•l tlt• wllt'l l' l'lll'lit•r
yourseH for Christmas.
whatever is In the throaL You your friends know how to do
"''' "'' ,. nul mutl:.l.lt •, Onl' munlh 1
" By all means, keep this
1.1
~
.
1
1
.
1
lllill
l
ln
Oll!tl
aw
l
W.
Va
..
can consider the food that It, they l'lllly even have an opI 1111 ' 't't •:ll , f :'j H:'t
~IS
III Ofl !l l ~,
Christmas
card handy. It will
lodged in the back of the portunlty to save yours: Com(!.~ ~tl · Tlut ·•· nwn11 tl' ..... SA.,i ti :'
be
a
reminder
that your
r
.l'l•ltlll'l
l'
~
1
·1~1
~··
·
·"
:.'i
ts
11111(111
1'
0
;
throat BB a cork In a boUle. munlty Red Cross and Heart
constituents
have
~ \ i lltl
Tlll o'l llll'lllh ~
~'i t)u
you
in their
What you are lrying to do Ia Aaaociations often give
:-it1 h ~ 1 npti"H Jlf!o •• uwh 11 h" ,..,ur"l,o\
thoughts.
..,, ,,, .........;1.,,11 ,,.,
pop out the cork.
courses on these procedures
' 'A t.axpayer ....... signed,.
I am sending you The lor the public.

Lt•arn and
!03 w li w·s

f~~e.

Until he -lost his job as a
waiter in a Managua coffee
house earlier this year,
El"'(ing, Juana, their three
dsughters and Juana's aging
mother lived in a wooden
shack on the ouskirts of the
city where he paid $35 rent a
month.
When they moved in there
was no roof over the garage
but the Penas built one with
cardboard and wood . Without
water or electricity, ' they
must walk three blocks to the
nearest water tap in a public
park and get light at night
from a gas lamp. ·..
Their furniture consists ·of
four wooden cots - &lt;ine foo
Erving and Juana, one for the
three girls, one for
grandmother and one "for
visitors" - arranged around
a brick stove used foc cooking
the dsily diet of rice and
beans.
Thanks to Managua 's
tropical weather it never gets
very cold but the Penas
complain about abundant
mosquitos and occasional
scorpions and snakes.
Why
wasn 't central
,Managua rebuilt?
Pre s ident Anas t asio
Somoza recently said that it
was because of a "lack of
funds,'' and some officials
say that it's because no one.
wants to live there for Jear of

li

WASHINGTON (UP!) - If
the E n vironmental
Protection Agency has its
way, there will be strict
government controls over the
~imated 35 million tons of
hazardous waste produced In
the United Slates every year.
Administrator Douglas
Castle said Thursday the atm
of proposed new EPA rules is
to prevent such disasters as
the one at Niagara Fails,
N.Y. , where hazardous
chemicals dumped more than
25 years earlier oozed from
I.ove Canal into yards and
basements and drove more
than 200 families from their
homes.
.
The EPA also announced a
breakthrough in its running
battle with air pollution
caused by coal-fired utility
plants : a $1.4 billion
arrangement under which the
Tennessee Valley Autbority
will cut by 42 percent its
output of hazardous smoke
. affecting much of the. East .
It was described as the
air
pollution
biggest
settlement in history.
Under the proposed rules
for waste handling, light
controls would be imposed
from
the
point
of
manufacture to ultimate
disposal of hazardous waste.
The rules would cover
companies producing more
ll1rul 220 pounds a month of
hazardous waste , and
disposal sites would have to
meet rigid specifications,
Companies would have to
monitor them foc 20 years
after dumping to ensure none
of the chemicals leaked into
Ute soil or water - and be
liable foc any dsmage due to
leakage.
Costle said the rules also
would · prevent "midnight
dumping," in which waste
material is disposed of
illegally by roadsides, in
waterways and in fields. In
ooe case, the chemical PCB
was dumped along 200 lniles
of a North Carolina highway.
Hearings will be held next
year across the country
before the rules are issued in
final form.
EPA said the 10 states
accounting for 65 percent of
hazardous waste productioo
were Texss, Ohio, PennsyJ.
vanla, Louisiana, Michlgsn,
Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee,
West Virginia and California.
CONTRACT AWARDED
CLEVELAND (UPl)
Mayor Dennis Kucinich's
cabinet voted Thursday to
award a controversial multimillion dollar food concessloo
contract to Philadelphiabased ARA Sel-vices Inc., to
sell food at Cleveland
Hopkins
International
Airport.
.
The
Kucini c h
administration awarded a
contract to ARA last month,
blit later reversed its action
under criticism that ARA's
15-year contract proposal
.was $1.4 million less than
under the present con tract
with Sky Chefs; a subsidiary
of American Airlines.
City Law Director Jack
Shulman said Thursday more
,;money will be paid the city in
, the early years of the ARA
contract, practically making
..up the $1.4 million difference
:J:onsideringiinflation. Airport
' officials said ARA also plans
to do more remodeling at the
airport than Sky Chefs.

Peopletalk

::•.:.,..\;:;:::::::::•:;::::::T~d;;::;:·:::·:·.;.;.•:•:-:•:•:::·:·.·:·:;:;:-:-:-:;.;.;::::-:•:-:c;:;:;: •:;:;:;:;::::::::::::·:::::::;f\

~

· ~.

.=:..:,:.

~·

·r.

\\\\
}

::;:
Host Oiterbein , after came back late in the first
) holding a slim 40-33 first half half to reduce the deficit to
lead over visiting Rio Grande seven. ·
ljowevet, the Cards shot
College at Westerville ThursNEW YORK (UPI )- Bud Harrelson's baseball career is all dsy night, erupted with 88 out to a 54-37 lead, with 16
over. i'or'tbose \vith any questions about it, his uniform won't second haH points to hand the minutes rel'IUiining - In the
be retired, II nuly wind up in the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown Redmen a 108-33 non- gsme, tl)en won going away.
.though, when Pete Rose gets finished using it,
' conference setback in Wright
Otterbein placed four
"Do you think lt'Ube a little too tight for him?" laughs the Physical Education Center. players in double figures in
toothpick-thin l~ound Harrelson, who wore No. 14 with the
The victory left the scoring, led by Jeff Benson's
Phillies this year, the sam~ number uniform Rose has all "Cardinals with a 4-1 season 27 markers . .Doug Petty
picked out tO wear fof them next year.
mark. Rio dropped ~ 3-5 added, 24, Dan Brpugh and
Bud HatTelson, whcm Ute Mets called "Twiggy," was the overall.
Jeff Kessler each had 16.
kind of b&amp;llplayer who never could stay angry with anyone .
otterbein buUt up an early
Dan ·Plircell paced Rio's
And now that he'saU done playing baseball at34, even t!lough 13-point advantage over . the . attack with 20 points. Mark
he feels he cQI\ld still help some club as a back-up infielder the Redmen befoce !Uo Grande Swain added 15.
·
.•
same way he helPed the Phillie a this year, he isn 'I the least bit
"upset .that only one·team,. the Dodgers, Sllw·fit to .claim him ·
·
whenhechosetogothfoughiher4H!ntrydrafi.
.
. "Ar~r Los Angeles picked .:me," says Harrelson, ·"Tom . .
:LliS&lt;rda told me he'd liketo have me on his ballclub.
. "We never talked money bull researched Los Angeles very
well. I just had to sit back and anslyze bow baseball was going ·
forme.ltwassllding. Iwasastarofthepast, thejobwasn't
.
that gratifying because I wasn't getting much of a chance to
work and I found I didn't want to travel.so much anymore . I
,enjoy my heme, having some kind of permanent bilse, not just Hy FRED DOWN
"greatest all-around player
a place from which to send out my laundry."
UPI S[l&lt;lrts Writer
in baseball history" by Leo
· Since only one club selected him when he chose to try the
N~!:W YORK ( UPI) _ Some
Durocher, his first manager
free agency.route , Harrelson, under the rules, was allciwed·to years ago .Waite Hoyt, whO and a veteran of 50 years in
negotiate with any team l)e pleased.
. coined the phrase in the 1920s the gsme.
·
He talked witli the.MetS, thechibhe had been with 12 seasons "it's great to be young and a
" Willie .Mays combined
bef&lt;re they .tracted
to the Phillies last March. One of the Yankee," wasaskedwhafhls the . skills of fielding ,
·reasons the Mets let him go, he felt , was beca1!5e they had lost election to baseball's Hall of · throwing, rwming, hitting for
confidence in him.
Fame meant to him.
distance and hitting for
"I did offer my services back to the Mets a few weeks ago ...
"Suppose," he said, "that average better thsn anyone
I told them if they could use me, fine. If not, that was OK, too. some night after all the else in baseball history," said
They told me they couldn't fit me back in their plans."
visit&lt;rs had left the Hall the Durocher. "For my money he
Harrelson already has a new job with Adams, Browning and plaques came down from the was the best."
Bates, a commercial collection agency in Manhattan's Wall wall came back to life and
Mays ranked third on the
lltreet area.
chose sides for a game. How
Last-season with the Phillies, Harrelson spelled Larry Bowa would you like to see that
at shoctstop occasionally and played a good bit at second when game? How would you like to
Marauder frosh
Ted Sizemore was sidelined with a bad hand. He hit .214 in 71 play In it?"
gsmes.
There's a chance that
During Ills years with the Mets, Harrelson never batted modem baseball fans will act
card announced
more than .258, never drove In more than 42 runs in any one out a stmi1ar fantasy, Jan. 23,
season and never hit as many as two home runs a year, blit his when !he results of this year's
Ro•ter
brilliance in the field more than compensated foc those meager voting by members of . the
Roger Kovalchik, Randy
offensive figures and he was a key factor in the club's winning Baseball Writers Association Murray , Mike Edwards, Jim
of the world championship in 1969 ahd reaching the World of America lor new Hall of Boyer, Greg Thomas. Tony
Brien Whaley,· Rick
Series again in 1973.
Famers will be announced. Jewell,
Ebersbach, Tracy Pope, John
"It didn't bother me that much thst I never was considered a The ballots were mailed Cremeans, Rick Smith, Tom
good hitter," says Harrelson. " I put more emphasis on my today to about 400 10-year Simmons, J. R. Wamsley,
fielding and it psid off. When it came to hitting, the other guys members of the BBWAA with Terry Adk Ins .
Coacr : Mr . Michael
would tell me to save my energy for the field . I was·what you ballots returnable no later Fergus.
caU a 'gravy hitter.' Whatever I contribUted was considered than Jan . 15.
Marauder Frosh
gravy."
When the votes are counted
Boys' Bukejba II
Schedule 1971-79
it l'lllly be that lans of the
Dec. 18, Meigs at Jackson.
19~ can fantasize about an
Jan . 3, Wellston at Meigs.
outfield of Willie Mays,
Wapakoneta 31
Jan. 8, Meigs at Gallipolis.
Girls Ohio High School
Mickey ManUe and Duke
East Liverpool 64 Alliance 26
Jen . 10, Meigs at Point
Basketball
Gahanna 54 Groveport 44
.
Snider playing against any Pleasant.
United Press International
Gallaway Westland 46 other three outfielders
Jan. 17, Wahama at Meigs.
Thursday's Resulls
Jan. 22, Logan at Meigs.
Ada 70 Columbus Grove 32 VVorlhington 36
anyone might care to name.
Jan . 24, Meigs at Athens.
Avon 52 Medina Buckeye 32 Hamilton Twp 44 Fra n k li n
Mantle, f(l'lller New Y&lt;rk
Jan . 29, Jackson at Meigs.
Big Walnut 52 Northridge 20 Hts 39
Feb. 1, Meigs at Wahama.
Yankl!ll slugger, h!ts already
Canton Cen Cath 68 Sandy Hilliard 53 Whi tehall 44
Jonathan Alder 42 Dublin 38 been elected to the shrine and
Feb. 7. Mel~s at Wellston.
Valley 31
Feb. 12. Gall1pollsat Meigs.
·Canton GlenOak 35 Canton S Lancaster 65. Miam i Trace 28 Mays, ex-New Yock and San
Lancaster Fisher 87 Berne
" 34
Feb. 14, Point Pleasant at
Francisco Giants and· New · Meigs.
Cot DeSates 47 Col Wehrle 45 Union 45
Col East 94 Col Beechcroft 11 Massillon Perry 51 Massillon York Met slugger and
/
Col Hartley 65 Cot·Northtand Jackson 33
defensive standout, is the
Millersport 64 Canal Win- obvious leading candidate for
41
Col Miffl in 44 Col Brookhaven chester 56
election in this year's votl.qg.
Mt Vernon 48Westervllle N 15
41
SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI) Mays
was among 54 eligibles The San Jose Earthquakes
Nevarre
Fairless
46
louisCol Watterson 95 Cot Ready
ville Aquinas 37
20
. whose names were released have
announced
that
Danbury
Lakeside 57 North Canton 40 Alliance today by Ute BBWAA. .
Martington 21
defender Carl Christensen
Woodmere 32
Mays was called the will return to the club in 1979.
Delph os St Johns 81
Terms of his one-year
contract were not announced.
Christensen, former All
America college perf&lt;rmer
at Vennont, was obtained
last July from Dallas in a
straight cash deal and
became a starter in the
'
Quakes' final eight gsmes of
the. season . .
Coach Terry Fisher, mean. while, has returned from a
swing through South America
and Florida, where he
·watched the .NCAA.Division I '
finals won by the University
of San Francisco. He
Thursday opened a three-day
·" mini'!'camp" at Moraga,
Calif., attended by some
veteran Quakes and several
prosPects he scouted.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

Ba t·zo.
· ·t s .a re .maz
. •1e d. fior
hall•0. . -fiame hono·~
1

rum

COMMENTARY
Red'tscove r'ng
Stassen
1
By Don Graff
November 4, 1980, may still be a long way around the
comer, but the presidential campaign is already officially
underway.
We know this for sure because Harold Stassen has
announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination.
·
Again.
For those whose memories may need the refreshing, he
previously declared himself into the presidential races of
1948, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1964, 1968, 1972 and 1976.
Catapulted onto the national scene as governor of
Minnesota at a precocious 31, Harold Stassen has been
doggedly refusing to leave ,it ever since. He is living proof
that while hope may indeed. spring eternal, the Q!lds In
politics at least .remain heavily against it reaching fruit·
bearing stage.
There is, however, somewhat more to the Stassen story
than these quadrennial offerings of services to the nation
which have beccime something of a media joke, by this late
date usually redUced to a one-liner. (The New York Times
covered his latest announcement with a people-in-the-news
paragraph headed : Old Dog, Old Trick.)
As the energetic, innovative governor of Minnesota from
1938 to 1945, Stassen set something of a modem standard
for progressive, honest, serviCtH&gt;riented government. He
was widely regarded as the hope, at least by that segment
of public opinion of a forward-l&lt;!Oking persuasion, of a
ftepublican Party still largely immobilized in the concrete
of its pre-New Deal conservatism.
He was a forerunner of that remarkable dynasty of
pro~ressive Minnesotans who have been fixtures in
natiOnal politics for four decades. The fact that his most
eminent successors were Democrats is only a footnote to
the historical record of what they represented and what
they accomplished.
.
Stassen's public service did not end with his governorship. In 1946, he was a U.S. delegate to the San Francisco
conference that established the United Nations and a
.
signatory of the U.N. Charter.
During the Eisenhower admlnistra!ion, he filled a
number of posts, most significantly in the disannament
field. He was a U.S. representative to the U.N. Disarma·
ment Commission and subsequently held cabinet rank as
special assistant to the president for disarmament affairs.
He laid much of the groundwork for the still on-going
dialogue with the Soviets on the mutual effort' to restrain
mankind's impulses toward Annageddon. __
Stassen also has been active in foreign aid and, outalde
government, as president of the University of Pennsylva•
nia and with organizations such as the National Conference
of Christians and Jews.
Barring an embarrassing interlude at the 1956 Republcan convention when he was promptly nattened for
questioning Richard Nixon's autonudic ~n&lt;?mination for
the vice presidency, he has served w1th d1gmty .
.
The press may take his periodic presidential candidacy
lightly but Stassen has never. He may not have been the
candidate to most articulately delineate the great Issues of
a particular campaign, but he has always credited the
electorate intelligence. His have never been the proposals
to put $1,000 in every American pocket, or to dismantle the
bureaucratic apparatus while continuing to supply ser·
vices as usual.
Back in 1948 when ht, was a leading Republican prospect,
a lot of Americans (hought Harold Stassen should be
president. The fact that in these latter years he Is about the
only one to continue to hold this opinion in no way
diminishes what has been In fact one of the more
productive public careers of the times.

.

24 HOUR TV IS HERE!
PoinTView Cable TV is proud

to announce a Special Holiday

Treat For All Our Customers*

For The Next Two Weeks, You'D

See WTCG From Atlanta for FREE!

MOVIES AND SPORTS ALL NIGHT.

UP TO 40 MOVIES A WEEK.

\NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

9 HOURS A DAY OF YOUTH PROGRAMS

Berry's World

PLUS THESE POST SEASON
BOWL GAMES
DEC. 12 GARDEN STATE BOWL
DEC. 20 HALL OF FAME BOWL

•

DEC. 22 HOLIDAY BOWL
DEC. 23 TANGERINE BOWL

•

1~ C~SE

TOLEDO RESULTS
TOLEDO, Ohio l UP!)
Sam The Timer led from wire
Ul wire Thursday night in
posting a t I&gt; vittory over Atr
Commandore in the featured
eighth race at Raceway
Park.
The winner, driven by Jeff
Fout, covered the mile in 2:05
Da n Bise · was in foul Huntington, W. Va.
4-5 and returned $4.80, $3.40
trouble early f&lt;r the Redmen .
Acting Rio Grande Coach and $2.80. Air Commandore
Rio connected on 31of 78 field Tom Meadows announced psid $5.60 and $4.40 to pla&lt;'e
goal attempts for 36 percent. today approxi mately 80 while Nat£hez Couusel cam~
The Redmen sank 21 of 34 tickets ($3 each) rema in on in third and kicked back $4.
free throw attempts.
sale at Lyne Center for the
White Spider captured the
Rio Grande had 49 Rio-Marshall encounter one lOth race, kicking off a t•l-10
rebounds, eight by Dwayne week from today.
trifecla combination thai was
Clark. Rio had 11 assists and
Otterbein is at Wright Sta te worth $1,014.20. Majors .Gay
24 costly turnovers.
University Saturday .
Boy was second and Osprey ,.
Rio's next game is
Thursday's box score:
came in third.
Tuesday , Dec. 19 , at , RIO GRANDE 183)
A crowd of 1,801 wagered
Pikeville. On Fridsy, Dec. 22, Phelps 2 0 4; Purcell 9·2-10; $183,986.
the Redmen will battle Swain 5·5·15 ; Royse 2·4 8;
Bise 3-0·6: McCormick 2·1·5:
Ma rshall University at Wa
sh• ngton 0-3-3; Clark 3-1-7;
Memorial Field House in Dor sey 0-2-2 ; West 1-1-3;
Nida y 0·2-2; Da vena 3·0-6;

Thursday's

OHIO COLLEGE

Otterbein finishes strong,
}
: : Sport Parade· • hands Rio .Gran«le 108-83 loss

By KENNFr!IR. CLARK
United Press IntemaUoual
ODD COUPLE : Bob Hope and Red Skelton, back together
again - just like old times, right? Wroog. The two kings of
comedy have been around so long it's hard to realize they've
never appeared together, In anything. All that will change next
Friday when NBC-TV airs ''The Bob Hope Ali.Star Christmss
Show." Skelton Is a hesdliner in the production, recreating his
famed " Freddy the Freeloader" for the first time since his
own television show went off thF air. Hope and Skelton
swapped jokes f&lt;r , the first time ever Thursday during a
Hollywood taping foc the show. '
SUPER SUIT : Margo Kidder, ....ho plays Lois Lane In
"Superman," met the or~al Thursday at the Los Anseles
premiere of the film . Joann Carter Segal was a teen-ager when
Jerry Segsl first started drawing the pow famed comic strip
back in the '30s. She poSed when he · created Lois, and the
relationship paid off in more than comic books. Ten years
later, she married him. The only star who spurned the West
Coast opening was Marlon Brando ~ Superman's super father
in the film. He's suing the producers for $50 million- says he
hasn't collected any of the $3.7 million he was promised for
doing the role.
·
WAR NO MORE : President Carter, the faltering Israeli·
Egyptian peace treaty obviously much on his mind, lighted the
national Christmas tree at the White House Thursday, saying
this holiday season is "a time of great hope" for the Middle
·East and Ute world. Said Carter, to several thousand
spectators at the ceremony, ''War is no looger the brave sound
o! parades and drumnnd trumpets. We see It as It is, the loss
of the yomg ... It is my earnest prayer that the dsy wlll soon
come when all children in the Middle East can play in the
sunshine without fear ."

OF

~UCI.EAR

DEC. 29 BLUE-GRAY BOWL

I'&gt;.TTACI&lt;.

•
anothet earthquake.
But there have been aUegations that Somoza and his
•dose associates pocketed
;inost of the international
funds· that poured Into
Msnsgua in the wake .of the
earthquake to rebuild the
city.
And some cynics say
Somoza wants to keep the
liouseless, treel~ss area just
that way because it offers
little cover for anyone
attacking his bombproof
presidential offices on the
. western edge of the
earthquake zone.

.3-The Daily Sent,inel, Middlepuri·Pomeruy, 0 ., Friday, Dec. 15, i978

GET OUT .
OF 1"0WN
•

FOR WTCG TUNE TO CABLE
CHANNEL FIVE

1 e3

all time list in bomers and
total bases, fourth in at hats
and runs scoced and seventh
in hits and runs hatted in. He
also is rated among the
greatest defensive outfielders
of aU time.
Snider
was
May s '
centerfield rival in the great
battles of the 19~ between
the New York Giants and
Brooklyn Dodgers. He missed
election to the Hall of Fame
by only 31 votes last year and
baseball would indeed bask in
nostalgia were Mays and
Snider to join Mantle in the
shrme.
Mays, wbo spent 22 years
with the New York and San
Francisco Giants and New
York Mets, is given an
exceUent chance to become
Ute ninth player to be elected
to the Hall of Fame in the
first year of his eligibility .
Players who have been
elected to the Hall of Fame in
their !irs! years of eligibility
were Ted Williams, Sandy
Koufax, Mickey Mantle,
Ernie Banks, Stan Musial,
Warren Spahn, Bob Feller
and Jackie Robinson.
Eddie Mathews, former
Boston and Milwaukee Brave
and Detroit Tiger third baseman , was the only player
elected last year.
The
other
eligible
candidates this year are
Tommie Agee, Bernie Allen,
Gene Alley, lAlis Aparicio,
Richie Ashburn, Jimm
Beauchamp, Bob Bolin, Clete
Boyer, Ken Boyer, Jim
Bunning, Lew Burdette,
Johnny
Callison,
Del
Crandall, Ray Culp, Alvin
Dark, Don Drysdale, Elroy
Face, Eddie Fisher, Curt
Flood and Nelson Fox.
Also, Fred Gladding,
Harvey Haddix, Gil Hodges,
Frank Howard, Elston
Howard, Ted Kluszewski ,
Harvey Kuenn, Hal Lanier,
Don Larsen, Vernon Law,
Jim Maloney, Roger Maris,
Bill Mazeroski, Jerry May,
Denny
McLain,
Don
Newcombe, Jose Pagan, Mill
Pappss, Joe Pepitone, Ron
Perr!llloski, Rich Reese, Red
Schoendienst, Chris Short,
Enos Slaughter, Duke Snider,
Larry
Stahl,
John
Stephenson, Jimmy Stewart,
Bobby Thomson,
J eff
Torborg, Mickey Vernon,
Hoyt Wilhelm and Maury
Wills :

PRICE AND
SERVICE
PORTLAND, Maine .(UPI )
· - A Portland man, who says
he owes his life to heart
· surgery last year, hopes to
pay back part of the debt this
weekend by raising money
for heart research by playing
·a 24-hour
racquetball
marathon.
. Richard Sturtevant, 32,
wbo underwent heart surgery
after suffering severe chest
p&amp;ins
a
year
ago
Thank~ving, hopes to raise
$3,000 for the Maine Chapter
of the American Heart
Association . with
his
marathon .
Surgeoos took a portioo of
vein from Sturtevant's leg
and used it to bypass two
blocked arteries leading from
his heart. "I wouldn't be here
If it weren't for their
research," he said.

Happy.
Holidays .
.
.

A Great

Combination
For Southeastern Ohio

·'

Pointv"zew Cable ·TV ·
.. '
' .
.

.

r

.

.

* Excluding Middleport where the

. new stations bave bltn 11jected•
·~ .

...

63

Otter bein 108 Rio Grande 63
Wilm1ngton 64 Urbana 62
For all your home
Entertainment -'nd
Appliance Needs

DOXOL
SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Appl iance
. ,1

Gas Servi ce
Racine, Ohio
Chester, Ohio

Carr ington 1·0-2. Totals- 31 -

21 ·83.
OTTERBEIN ( 108) .Wolherter 1·0·2: Pelly 10·4·
24; Dill J.1.7: Brough 7·2·16;
Benson 11 -5-27; Kessler 4-8·

16 ; Mill er 1·0·2; Weaver 1.0.2;
Cochra n 1·0-2; Cave 1·0·2:
Jone s 1-1 3 ; Guanci a le 1·1-3;

"Murray 1·0·2. TOTALS 43-22108.
Halftime score-:- Otl er bein

40, Ri o 33

Meigs Junior
high card
and cage roster
Boys'
Basketball Schedule
Meigs Junior High

School
1978·1979

Dec . 18, Jackson, Home
Ja n. 1.4 , Shade, Home

Ja n. 8, Gall ipolis, Home.
Jan . 10, Southern , Home .

Jan . 15, Kyger Creek,
Away.
·

Ja n. 22, Wahama , Away .
Jan 24, Athens, Home
Jan 29 , Ja ckson, A way.
Feb. 10, Ale x ander In vitational Tournam ent

Feb. 12. Ga llipolis. Away.
Feb. 14, Alex ander In·

v itational Tou rnament
Feb . 15, Wahama, Hom e.
FP.b
17 . Ale ~~; a i nder Invitati ona l Tournament .

Roster

John Smith, Todd Fife.
Rick Chan cey, Ric k Ed·
ward s, Cli ff Icenhower , Scott
Ha r r 1son , Bril l King , Scott
Pickens, Alan Schuler , Troy
Bower, Bi l l Bl ount , Bill
Holcomb, Mike Jackson.
Coach . Dale E. Harri son.

CINCINNATI (UP[)- Cincinnati Reds Manager John
McNamara completed his
fourman coaching staff by
adding long-time friend and
veteran coach Harry Dunlop.
Dunlop , 45, who grew up
with
McNamara
in
Sacramento, Calif., was a
coach for Kansas City and the
Chicago ·cubs from 1969
through 1976. He also spent 10
years managing in the minor
leagues, including the last
two with Wichita of the
American Association.
McNamara earlier named
Bill Fischer to be his pitching
coach. Coa ches Russ Nixon
and Ron Plaza will he the
only two coaches retunung
from ex-mana ge r Sparky
Anderson's staff.

l

As low as .. .

Firestone 36
3-year warranted . quality
~~;~~~;~ucted
va lue for
•
with l1ght to nor·
mal needs (290 crank &lt;ng
amps I

9&amp;
22FM, e xch a ng e

As low as ...

Fi re st o ne 48

9&amp;

4 -year warranted . qufl hty·

co nstr uc t ed fo r veh 1c les
w tth nor ma l elec tn cal
needs in stop ·start ctt y

dnvcng (322 u ankcng
amp s 1

%

*

INTEREST
High Yield Certificate
with 11,000
Minimum Deposit
8 Year Maturity
Substantial

Interest

Penally Required lor Early
Withdrawal on Time
Deposits .

Firestone For e ver
FREE replace ment warrenly

Starcraft,
Mercury
Oufboa·rds
&amp;
Mercruiser, Johnson
Bass Hawk.

DOUG'S
MARINE
(6141992-5652
808 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH 4S7A"

to r as long as you own your

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co .

W. Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio

--·
FSIJC

--------

·$

car BUilt for ulttmate clect n· ·
cal car serv•rP. li fe
for cars w1t h abov e n0r m~1 l ·
need s. Exo 1J! tOI'C1" Y ~r-; 1 s
tant to h1gl1 undl'J I j,)(l ' I n
perat ures anc! overcharge

espPclt~lly

·· Galitpotts at .Athens

damage Our best batter y

FIRESTONE LIMITED WARRANTY
•" 36:'"48:"'60" BATTERIES If any of th ese batterie s fa ils ro
hold a charge, .and i~ not merely d isc harged , in normal passenger ~Br serv1ce w 1tht n the f1 rst mnctv [901 days after pur

Logan at Ironton

.

.

.

9

p;,y

Tonight's games
Melgs a·t Jackson
Wiverty .at Wet Is ton
Soulhe"rn at Southweste•n
. Eastern at Hannan Trate
Wllmfngt6n.· at · Washington
CH . : .
.
North Gallla at Kyger Creek
· . · ISalu r,day)
Lancaster al Athens
Trimble al Melg• ·
Pl. P)•asant at Wehama · .
:c.htlllcolhe at Por.{fmoulh

As low as . ..

chase, Ftrestone w1ll repl ace 11 FREE to the oriG in/'l l purc haser
T he~eaft er. w ithin th e WC\rrrmtv pertnrl , nu
1,lv n prnrai A
porhon o f ti'l " · 'I' .... rr ~ . 1 1""d &lt;"' ,,., •
r 1 .
, ~l-f'~t rlY
recr•1vn l D • . ,
, 1&lt;•
'I'
•FOR£:. '!EA f
f Y ~ 1\ ·
f tnl
1r
It It ever !atb 'n 11 ,Jiu ,1 ci.,,,~Jl' lo1 .,.,, 1 • tll.tl c
~·Hi "1101
me rely dtscha rged , F t r eslo n ~ will r e JJ i ac~ tl FRE E with proof
of p ur~hase, pr ovid1ng the ba t tery ha s not been da maged due
t o acc tdent or abu se Commer cial o r ma nne use exclude d

.

From. ·

Basketba II Res u11s
United Press lnternatio na 1
Cleveland St 72 NW Louisiana

60, E r.\,J

ol

t9l-1094

...

�'
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Polncrny. 0 .. Fr· i&lt;~I Y. D&lt;•c. 15, !fl78

•

It takes time to adjust--SmithsQn
By Michael Shalln
UP! Sports Writer
Gene Smithson compiled a
66-18 record in three seasons
as basketball coach at Illinois
State. This year, Smithson
has moved to Wichita State
and the record isn't that
impressive - he has already

lost four games.
The Shockers, playing their
n on-Mis so uri . Valley
Conference schedule, have
lost to Iowa, New Mexico, San
Jose State and Long Beach
State in the early going but
the first-year coach isn't
really worried.

Oeveland downs
NWLS, 72 to 63
' -~
I If •' 1:

. . . .,

•

'

•

·~••

United Press lnleruallooal
Buckeyes , conquerors of
Greg Cobb's second baH hot fo urth-ranked Louisville two
streak was all the Cleveland nights earlier, dropped an 83Vikings needed to cool the 72 decision to .the Athletes in
Demons of Northwestern Action, who made the-most of
Louisiana State.
their free throw opCobb dumped in 14 of his portunities.
game·high 20 points in the
AlA cashed in on 25 of 31
second half, sparking a rally free throw attempts, while
that lifted the Vikings from a the Buckeyes, who outshot
10-point halftime deficit to a the visitors by one basket
72.Q3 victory Thursday night
from the floor, connected un
over the visiting Demons.
11 of 18 charity shots.
The senior guard's jump
Former Oklahoma Baptist
shot from the top of the key College star Irvin Kiffin led
put the Vikings on top for AlA · with 16 points and 16
goo d with 7:30 remaining in rebounds. Former Tennessee
the game.
The shot star Mike Jackson added 14
culm inat ed a five-minute points.
stretch in which Cleveland
Guard Kelvin Ransey
) l ate outscored the Demons,
paced the Buckeyes with 27
12-3, with Cobb netting eight
points while center Herb
uf those points.
Williams chipped in with 23.
G uor d F rank Edwards
The Athletes in Action have
add&lt;'ct 11 points for the a 9·3 record this season. The
Vikings, who shot a sizzling 65 loss does not figure in the
percent from the floor in tile Buckeye statistics. They take
final stanza and S9 percent a 4-2 mark into Tuesday's
fur the game while improving game against Washington
their record to 5-2. Forward State.
Jim Hoops led Northwestern
Elsewhere in Ohio college
Louisiana, scoring 15 points . basketball action Thursday
and gathering in a team-high night, Otterbein romped past
.c;cven rebounds.
Rio Grande 108-83 , and
fn an exhibition game at Wilmington edged Urbana 64Columbus, the Ohio State 62.

STANDINGS
NFL Stahdings

By Unit ed Press International
American Conference

East ·

x Nw Engl nd
y M iami

NY Je ts
Baltimore
Buf.falo

W. L T. Pet.
11 4 0 .733
10 s 0 .667
8 7 0 .533
5 10 0 .333
4 11 0 .267

Central

)( · Piltsbrgh
Y·Hovston
Clevel and
Cincinn ati
x .Denver

Seattle

·

San Dieg o
Oak land
Ka nsas Cit y

w.

13
10
8

L T. Pet.
2 0 .867
5 0 .667
7 0 .533

3 12 0

. 200

West
W. L. T. Pet.
10 5
8 7
8 7
B 7
4 11

0
0
0
0
0

.667
.533
.533
.533
.286

National Conference ,
East
w. L. T . Pet.
11 4 0 .7Jl
li: ·Dallas
8 7 0 . 533
wash ington
Phila delph ia
~ ~ ~ : ~~
NY Giants
5 10 0 .333
St . Louis
central
W L T PC,
· · ·
·
Minneso ta
B 6 1
l ·567
Green Bay
B 6
· 567
Detroit
6 9 0
· 400
Chicago
6 9 0 · 400
Ta mpa Bay
5 10 0
333

West

w. L. T. Pet.
x -Los Ange ls
11 4 0 ·733
9 6 0 · 600
ATlanta
New Or leans
6 9 0 .400
Sa n Fr ancisc
2 13 0 .133
x-clinched division title
y. clinched playoff berth
Sa1urday•s Results
Pittsburgh 35, Balttmor e 13
Detroit 45 , M innesota 14
Sunday, December 10, Results
New England 26, Buffa lo 2.4
Da ll as 31. Philadelph i a 13
Atlanta 20. Wash ington 17
Cleveland 37 , New, York Jets
34

toll

New York Giant s 17, Sf . Louis

0

Chicago 1.4, Green Bay 0
Houston 17, New Orleans 12
Mia mi 23, Oakland 6
Denver 2.4 , Kansas Ci ty 3
san Diego 37 , Seattle 10
San Franc 1sco 6, Tampa Bay

3

I

-~

. ....
....~
'

~

·-

Monday, December 11, Result
CincinnBti 20, Los Ang eles 19
Saturday, Der:ember 16
Ch1cago at washing ton . 1
p .m
.
Pittsburgh at Denver , 4 p .m.
Sunday, December 17
San Francisco at Detroit , I
p .m
Cleveland at Cmcinnati , 1
p .m
New Orleans at Tampa Bay ,
1 p .m .
New Yor k Giants at Philadel ·
phia, 1 p .m .
Dallas at New York Jets, I
p .m
Atlan ta at 51. Lou is, 2 p.m .
Buffalo at Balt imor e. 2 p .m .
Gr een Bay at Los Angeles, 4
p .m .
Kansas Cit y at Seaft le, 4 p .m .
M innesota at Oak land , 4 p .m .
San Diego at Houst on , .4 p .m
Monday, Der:ember 18
New Eng land at Miami , 9
p .m .
NHL St .. ndings
By United Prus International
Campbell conference
Patrick Division

Today's Game
Minnesota at W&amp;shi ngton
Saturday's Games
N.Y . Rang ers at Boston, aft .
Ph iladelph 1a at At lanta
Va ncou v er al Pittsburgh
Detroit at Toronto
N Y. Islanders at St . Louis
Buffal o at Minnesota
Chicago at Colorado
Montreal at Los Angeles

.
.
"Our problems have been . with this year's Shockers. In 6-2. B9b Trogele scoced 14
"It's frustraUng to lose but
the normal ooes associated fact, the players wear those points and. Ray Shirley 12 to .we learned and improved
wit h installipg a new letters on the sides of their . give . Wichita State five each game, " adds Smithson .
system, " Smithson said uniform shirts .
double-figure scoccrs.' Jeff . "It all came together when
"The coach's MTXE wor.ks Nannen scored 27 to lead we beat DePaul 95-92 ·and
Thursday night after the
Shockers came up with their and we know it," s'ays star South Dakota, which fell to 6- outscored them 15.{) in the
second victory with a 93-7S forward Cheese Johnson, who 2. ·
last three minutes. We will be
triumph over .South Dakota. scored 16poinlsagainst South
"The difference intensity hea rd from."
" It talies time for the players . Dakota. "I love the style of · · between this year and last in
In other games, Rhode
to adjust to the way I want · play. There's a lot .of motion unbelievable," ·said Trogele; Island beat Brigham Young
things dooe. But it has .never · and activity and everybody · :a senior guard. '•Our 85-76, . Princeton nipped
been 9 lack of effort on their gets into the act."
..
pra'ctices are war and we are Fordham 33-37, Kansas Slate
part."
.
.
Senior Steve Kalocinski finaDy showing the things we defeated Southern · IllinoisSmithson has instituted scored 18 polnts and Richard have learned. I just wish I Edwardsville 91-66, . Oral
what he caDs his "MTXE" Williams added 17 to pace the had some more eligibility so I Roberts downed Tulsa 83-72,
system - ' that's "Mental Shockers over South Dakota . could play another year for Memphis · State topped
Toughness F.xtra Fiffnrt"
!he man ."

W. L Pet.

Houston
lA 12 .538
Atlanta .
14 13 .519
San Anton1
13 14 .481
· New Or lns
11 19 .367
10 19 .34 5
' Detro1t
Cleveland
9 18 333
· Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet.
Ka nss Cty
1$ 10 .600
Denver
15 13 .536
Chicago
11 16 .407
Mi lwauk e
12 20 .375
ind iana
10 17 .370
Pacific DiVISion

W. L. Pd. GB

Seattle
20
Los Angels
19
Phoeni x
19
Gol den Stt
15
Portland
14
san Diego
13
Thursday's

6 .769
11 .633 3
11 .633 J
14 .517 6 112
14 500 7
19 : 406 10
Result

Houston 126, Golden "sta te 123

Col)

Today's Games
Ka nsas City at Boston
Atlanta at New Jersey
Houston at Ph iladelphia
Washington at Detroit
New York at Ch icago
Portland at Denver
San Antonio at Indiana
Clevel end at Milwaukee
seattle at Los Angeles
Saturday's Games
Boston at wash ington
Golden State at San Anto nio
Cleveland at Chicago
New Orleans at Ka nsas City
L os Angeles at Phoeni x

WHA Standings

By United Press International
W. l. T . Pts .
Quebec
16 9 3 35
New England
1-4 9 5 33
Cinci nnati
1-4 13 3 31
Winnipeg
11 12 4 26
Birmingham
12 13 1 25

Edmonton
13 13 0 24
Indianapolis
5 18 2 12
Thursday's Results
Quebec 3, Birmmgh am 2
sov iet AII ·Stars 4, Winnipeg 3
Today •s Games
Sweden at Winnipeg (exhib. l
Soviet All -Stars at Edmonton
Saturday's Games
Birmingham at Cincinnat i
SOviet AII ·Stars at lndianapo
liS

Quebec at New England

International
Hockey League

United Press !ntemallonal

North

Seed. an~

e

"

•

•

Mlllfng

HEADQUARTERS

..

.

the camera, "Don'I block tbe
damn plate next year when I
come in! '
On the same program last
week, Bench said he didn't
lhink any player deserved to
lJ!! paid $800,000 a year - the
amount that free agent Rose
received
from
the
_
Philadelphia Phillies.
But Thursday, Rose had a
surprising reply for Bench.
"U John went through the
free agent draft , he'd
probably make more than me
because he'sa great player a Hall of Fame player," said
Rose. "But John just signed a
five-year contract and he 's
happy with it."
As foc why Rose became a
free agent, he said, "It was
obvious the Reds didn't want
to sign me to a contract for
the upcoming season and the
season after that and the
season after that."
"But," added Rose , •• if I
didn't fit in Cincinn-a ti ' s
plans, I don\ know why in the
hell not. I still can't figure

CINCINNATI (UPI) . Johnny Bench has told Pete
Rose he's sorry the two won't
he able to "play out our
careers together" .and has
sent Rose a bouquet of 16
roses - one rose for each of
his 16 years with the
Cincinnati Reds.
Rose's laughing reply to his
ex-teammate: "Don't block
home plate rtext year when I
come in against you."
Rose was a guest on a local
TV talk show Thursday when
the host told him a letter and
a bouquet of flowers had just
arrived foc him.
The letter read: "Pete,
thanks foc many years of
exciting baseball together.
It's been a privilege to have
been playing on the same
team with you all these years.
I only wish we could have
played out our careers
together. So here's a rose for
each year."
The letter was signed,
"Johnny Belich."
"Well, John," responded
Rose, grinning strai~ht into

Seeds- Bird Seeds- Oyster Shells •nd Grit·
Fertilizers - Lime- Cement &amp; Mortar· Stock
Salt . Water , Softener - Remedies - Silt •
Litters - Vaccine - Roofing • Paints - Red
Brand Fencing - Baler and Binder Twine •
Sprays - Gates.

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

992-2115

'

Pomeroy

I
II
I
1
I

~¢-·
e..~~~
_,.,..,...

~ (trt.f{"'

.. •

THE TRAINING YOU NEED
FOR THE BUSINESS WORL-D
Manths
Not Years Prepare You
To E•rnl

·

.

I

INQUIRE NOW:

9 ond 12 1111111111 Ca•ftr ,.,.0\lrom~ and 11
m011llll A11ociate' llegrH !o Speclollltd

.... ,............
~~....

Jr. Accounting .
Genarill
Office
·
.
.

Business. Adminl~tr~tlon
Executive Secretary.
. · Secrttilry
J,

G

·

.

ALUPOLIS
BUSINESS ·
COLUGE .

...

I P.O.... 1..

O.INpelis. ON. '4561? ...

NAME~~--~------1

_...zt"----t
· ADO.Riss-----~--;

· Looking fC!r just the right gift for that certain someone?
· How about a pr~sent.that will.be good at al.l seasons of the
year? A subscription to the Daily Sentinel and &amp;undey
Times Sentinel. ·
·
·
.· · ·
.·
A coupon containing subscription Information necissary
for your gift giving Is contained In thll$ ad for your
convenienc~. Fill it out and send it in together with your
check.

h.~~~~~~·i$~~.

~.

j

~~

~

m
~•

~

The Daily t;entinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

· •

•

· ·.
·

Name •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••.•••••••••• -.... •
"

,Street ..••••..•••.•.•.....•.••, ........................ .:•••••• · ·

~ City . ... ... . : . ... ~ .. State ..... . . : .. Zip~...;..... ~

~

~ ~..

Frorli ................................. ... : .... ..

.

CITY

ST

~-~--

' ·

fl'

~~~,~~i:::t.~~~---#.
.,

P140NE _

.

"' ,

'-

.

__ .J.

DEAR HELEN :
This is fur the woman whose gentleman friend won't make
any advances, s&lt;i she s\lspects he is gay.
. Pos.ll biy he IJas:\&gt;fen burned and is wary, even though he enJOys her companyl
.
My first marriage-was bad,lhe second ten times worse. As a
re~ult, I refuse to have any p~ysi cal contact with a woman until! . I feel like it; 2. I thiDk I am ready for it ; and 3. I think she
is ready i .
!i's time ~omen realized P,en are just as afraid of being hurt
as they are. Fouling around before yuu are sure of each uther
catf lead '\b acute misery. I
ralso think some of tiMI mU!!l joyful feelings between man
and woman' have nothing to do with sex. Minds should meet
fi~st.

By GAY PAULEY
UP! Senior Edltur
NEW YORK (UP!) .
Women won $Orne, lost some
in the Year 1978 in jobs,
politics , the equal rights
struggle, religion and the war
111 inflation.
They won in the job market
to the extent that they were at
work in record numbers and
in noo-traditional roles. They
won in politics with a first
woman senator ever elected
without first entering public
life as the widow of a
politician. They lost in the
congressional
elections,
however, with two fewer
1979
women
in
the
Congress.
They won or lost,
depending on your view of the
Equal Rights Amendment, in
the congressional extension
of time foc ratification of the
controversial proposed 27th
amendment.
They lost in the movement
of more women into the
priesthood when the Anglican
Church voted
against
ocdina lion.
And they lost in the day-to·
day struggle against inflation
as the conswner price index
soared ... and soared ... and
soared.
The
agriculture
department offered little
promise of an easing of this
problem in the year ahead.
Department economists said
consumers will pay an
average of 10 to 14 percent
more foc beef and about S
percent more foc pork.
Interest rates for home
mortgages hit new highs in
'78 with the average rate for
new homes nudging 10 per
cent, and more for previously
occupied homes.
Undoubtedly , the 'rising
cost of living and the need for
more income per family was
a factor in the shaping of the
labor force . As 1978 drew to a
close, the Women's Bureau of
the U.S. Labor Department
reported a record 40 million
women working, and another
2.8 million employable but
temporarily out of work.
W&lt;rnen went into jobs once
traditionally masculine by
the
thousands,
doing
everything from appliance
repair to . carpentry, to
railroad engineer to used car
salesmen.
N e x 't ?
Wo m e n
longshoremen? The New
Yock chapter of the National
Organization for Women
announced a favocable ruling
in its suit charging the
Waterfront Commission with
discriniina tory hiring
pra ctices regarding cargo
checkers.
With the rullng that the jobs
should be open to all , NOW
said more than 100 women
applied immediately. Many
were single parents in urgent
need of jobs.
Being a longshoreman invalves lifting and carrying up
to 250 pounds of cargo, but
although there was a rush of
applicants, no woman had
been hired as the year ended.
The Marine corps got its
first woman
general :
Margaret A. Brewer, who put
on hersilver star as brigadier
general at Washington 's
Marine Barracks.

,"The Christmas Star", a Kenny Bass, Art Hess, Mike
I and candlelight service, Gerlach, Wilbur Theobald,
be presented at the Mid- Russell Wilson, Ed Evans ,
rt Church uf Christ at and Jim Sheets. The choir
Sunday eve!!lng.
,
will be soing three speci al
rs. George Glaze is the numbers, "Christmas Calip· ·tur, with Mrs. Cl~rice so", "Carol uf the Irish
E):win on the organ, and Mrs. Cabin", and "A Child of
Jt)pnifer Sheets; at the giano. .Hope" with Mrs . . Shirley
Rr ders will btj Tom ~owen , · Bumgardner as solmst. There
Will be a special number by
Mrs. Sheets "I Wonder as I '
Wander" and George and
Sunday School attendance Becky Glaze will sing " Little
on pee. 10 was 46, the offering Babe" with Mr. ·Glaze doing
"0 Holy Night." There will be
$~.20.
.
Worsh.ip services were held a candlelighting servic-e and
l'Ongregalional singing of
a~·; 11:30 wlth the Rev.
Richard Thomas speaking on "Silent Night."
The choir members are
"E)mmanuel, God Wifh Us" to
Mrs.
Flo Grueser, Mrs. Bea
ari attendance ,of 24. Rev.
Stewart
, Mrs. Dorothy
Thomas gavel a ~pecial
Roach,
Mrs. Bwngardner,
number in sohg and acMrs.
Peggy
Brickles, Mrs.
cqmpanied himself on the
Kathy
Erwin,
Mrs. Lena
p~no.
.
McKinley,
Mrs
. Dorothy
!howard Flanders led
Davis,
Mrs.
Sharon
Stewart,
' gregational singirig with
McKinley,
Mac
Stewart,
Earl
renee Spencer at the
Don
Erwin
,
George
Glaze,
o.
Mike
Stewart,
and
Gene
e Soup Supper here last
urday with Janice Pullins Davis.
The publi c is invited.
·charge was very successful
th the proceeds $126.
'anks to all who helped in
a y way.
e Alfred U.M.W. will
h ve its Christmas porty ih
tlit church basement here on
D&amp;. 19 beginning at 6 p.m.
All are twelcom~. The
~istmas rogrl!ffi will be in,
the chureh nctuary on Dec.
2d at 8 p.m·." i ·
!l)ee. 31 New Year's Eve
ser:vice at Alfred wiD be at
7i;JO p.m. Slides of Holy Land,
llj1)sic, : "teStimonies, lnspirati~ moments, speelal
sil!ging, good fellowship, and
rdfTeshmerlts. Welcl&gt;me to
allj
'Several local and' nearby
unity folk attended the
r Supper and meeting of .•
MWA families, at the
r Citizens' building in
cj,pJvinA·: l.laturdny' evening.
~ att~dance was not quite
·good 's usual due to the
w, 11\ih water and slipy roaOs. but a fine time
reported.
ecerit: g~e~,s .o! J:!Qil!ll')
a 'd ~ Swartz were her
b ther; :i!:dg,r. Koebl~r al)d
e ohllinesviUe, Ohio. He
SAVE YOUR R.C., NEHI; UPPER 10,
h 's recently . u~derg~qe
s '·rgerY. ~ and
been
DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEER
'spitallied.
' . Nlta Dillinger, mother
BOTTLE CAPS FOR CHARITY
o Lloyd Dillinger whose
f 'ly •t)enda church here,
1 • reported hdspifallzed
a in.
r Mr. and Mrs. Chester
erick of
Bethel
· re recent . vi'.sitolrf of Nina
MILL STREET
binson and
FoUrod ·
Middleport, Ohio
;
a d Charles
lteien
'·
992-~')42 or 992 -334"

Navy womeq reported for rQt ification.
active duty aboard ships on
The bill gives ERA
the East and West coasts for supporters 3V4 more years
beyond
the
current
the first time Nov . I.
A couple of wom en became ratifi cation date of March 22,
the first Americans ever to 1979. Approval from 38 states
scale.the Himalayan peak of is required, whi ch means
Annapurna.
three more are needed by the
A Polish yachtswoma n, new deadline of June 30, 1982.
Krystana ChojnowskaOne of the crucial
Liskiewicz, 41, became the arguments was whether
first woman to sail single- st.a tes which a iready have
handedly around the world. ralified might vote to rescind .
An hi storical medical Congress said no.
Simply put, the amendment
breakthrough came in July
when Louise Brown, blonde, would guarantee that equal
blueeyed and weighing six rights under the law shall not
pounds, was born in a mill be denied or abridged by the
town in England. Louise was United States or by any state
the first authenticated case of on account of sex.
Both the pro and con groups
a testtube baby.
Louise's birth by Caesarian immediately renewed their
in
state
caused a furor among some campaigns
legislatures.
religious groups who saw it as
ERA or no, the United
an unlawful tampering with
God's will . But it also raised States Jaycees organization
the hopes of millions of . wants to be male-oriented
barren women who for one again. It voted at its na tional
reason or another have not convention in Atlantic City in
been able to bear the children June that women should be
excluded
from
full
they want.
There was jubilation in the membership.
The organization said the
United States too - among
support ers of the Equ al approximately ISO chapters
Rig hts Amendment . After with women membe rs had
long and heated debates, pro until Dec. I to rele ga te
to
associate
and con, Congress extended women
the period for necessary state mem bershi p without the

right to vote or hold office.
Several chapters quit the
national organization action
and went on to oper ate
independently .
Queen Elizabeth U is head
of the Church of England , but
she may not serve as one of
its priests. The matter of
ordination of women carne up
first in 1975 and the vote was
"no" although the Anglican
Church leaders agreed they
had
" no
fundamental
objection" to women priests.
At its General Synod in '78,
the vote was still against
women in the priesthood,
whi ch probably means there
will be no Anglican women
priests in Britain for another
10 years.
One argument again st
women priests came from a
bishop who said, "[ want'
women to be women."
The year prod uced a mixed
political ba g for women. In
the off~ l ection year, Kansas
sent to the 96th congress
which convenes in Janua ry
the heiress to a fa mous
political name.
Nancy Landon Kassebaum,
daughter of Alf Landon , will
become the only woman
senator in January. Mrs.
Kassebaum is the mother of

four and is separated fro m cent of the national total.
her hu sband . Her only
Connecticut's voters re·
pre•ious political experience elected Ella Grasso, the ooly
had been on a small town woman •runnin g for governor.
school board.
The nation 's other woman
The major setbacks for governor , Dixy Lee Ray of
women in the House of Washington, is serving a
Representatives carne with term that does not expire
the defe at of two Democratic until 1980.
incumbents - Martha Keys
San Francisco got its fir st
of Kansas and Helen S. woman mayor in tragic
Meyner of New Jersey. So the circumstances. On Nov . 27,
next Congress will have 16 the in cumbent mayor,
women in the 4:35-member George Moscone, and Harvey
House and the one woman Milk, a member of the city's
senator.
board of supervisors, were
Women fared better in shot to death in their office s
stale elections. They scored a by an alleged disgruntled
net g~in of 58 state legislative former member of the board
seats. and now hold 10 2 per of supervisors.

~~~ = ~~~~~= ~ ~~~~=~~= ft

~

CHRISTMAS TREES

7i.

~

CUT YOUR OWN AT

BRADFORD'S GROVE

WE WILL SENI) A CHRISTMAS
CAID
'
. . ·1
''•
WITH .EACH Gin SUisciiPTION
•

. .,

R.

"

r .

'•

C~

BOTTLING

co~

7'1NII'N "Billboard" Power Reserve
~ ®
. Electronic CLOCK RADIO
Model J46SW - Str lking new
design concept fea tu res

~

~

Located on Cherry Ridg e, turn east a t Darwin onto Rt.
681 , go 4 mi les to Milepost 13 , turn south on grave I road
J1 z miles to grove.

II

WATCH FO R SIGN S

~

W

compac t rad io base with
sllmtine "bllt -board "-style

digital clock readout. Power
Reserve feature keeps c lock
c ircuitry w orking up to 4 hours
during power tnterrupt ion .
Dlg i{al d isplay reappears wh en
power is restored. T ouch 'n
Snooze, rad io and tone alarms .
24-hr. alarm settin g . Handsome
simulaJed w alnut finish .

~

~

Hours: 10 Til Dark

~
~

~

~

W

IQ!td\:~r:;;::~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~

.7''!"H

SAVE ' 50
BLACK &amp; WHITE

lJ~III! COMPACT TV
DIAG ONAL

f

7i PRE-CUT TREES AVAILABLE ~

Me and my

'

CALIJ (614) ·446-'36)
NOW E... IOLLING
!101 NEW TERM

'

'
THIS EX:COf'
.' IS NO EX!
DEAR HELEN :
Please tell the girls who "won't tum their backs on guys in
pri~on ·• t~ before !,lley c'O~ tinue writing to cons.
f, married my "ex-con" because he swore he would go
straight.~·•lti!'ibf got 6~\ D(, P,~json fear stealing). l
vtslted hi
llll.i!l....,.&amp;:i!him alma!!! evert day. I was sure
I ~9uld re orm him, though he'd been in trouble with the law
since he was.ft: m:Q11!1fntf warned me.!I WPJlldn 't li sten.
We had a !ilfdtltiful' bilb§', b ut 1, kept qn working as my hus·
band kept on .~~ed . ~IJ.eft put him in jail for str ll
ano,ther tenn .•lfe"s due' tbme btit in April, 1979, and he pro·
mi~s, " Never again!" ut he doesn 't know any other life. If
we move from here, it~ 1be the same- he'll find the crooks
an4 join them. Yet his lellers are full o~.iove and repentance.
Ws too late for me, but not for these sta rry"eyed girls whu
think their love can change a thief. Most cons becunie
repeaters. -J.T.
DEARJ.:
When you say, " It's too late for me" does this mean yuu'll
~~ ~gain in '1979?
: ··
Why not practice what you preath? And start a new life for
you and your child.- H.
[

~lfred No(es

OHIO &amp; W. VA~ ................_;..'a2.00 Ylt.
ELSEwHERE............................ '26.00 'fl;
For DIY
Or Ev'e nlna Cluses

:·:·

c~

'

wilpls.gfgal

Saginaw 11 11 5 27 116 112
W. L T. Pts.
NY Islander s
18 4 6
.42 , Port Huron
Atl anta
17 1I 3
37
11 12 4 26 117 98
NY Range r s
16 8 4
36
Flint
11 13 2 24 111 107
Philadelph i
16 10 4
36
Kalamazoo
8 10 6 22 89 106
Smythe Division
Muskegon
3 20 2 8 67 140
W. L. T. Pts.
"
South
Vd n CO U~t e r
12 16 2
26
w I t pis. gf ga
Ch ic ag o
10 12 6
26
st . Louis
6 21 4
16 For t Way ne
Co lor ado
5 21 5
15
20 6 0 40 127 80
Wales Conference
Grand Rapids
Norris Division
w. L· T. Pts.. Milwaukee l7 • 3 37 107 75 ·. ·
Montreal
20 6 4 . 44
10 12 5 25 95 115
Los Angeles
13 11 4
30
10 13 3. 23 98 104
Pittsburg h
10 l4 6
26 Toledo
Thursd1y's Games
Detr oit
1 lA 9 · 23
Washington
. 7 19 4
18
No games scheduled
·
Adams Division
Friday ' s Games
W. L. T. Pts.
Port. Huron at Muskegon.·
.
BoMan
19 S 6
4A For t Wayne at Sa9inaw
Toronto
1.4 13 4
32
. .
Bu ffalo
11 10 8
30 Flint a t Toledo
M innesota
9 15 3
2"1 Kalamazoo a t Grand Rapids ·
Saturday's Games
Thursday's Results
N .Y . Isl anders d, Detroit 1
Muskegon al F ort Wayne
Philadelphia 2, .Pittsburgh 1
Milwaukee at Saginaw
Atlanta s, Colorado 3
Grand Rapids at Kalamazoo
e-aston 5, Wash.invton 2
Flint at Port Hu·ron
'fkA.ffalo 3, Chldgo 1

1'1)

P~OVIDES

.,_,-

,: Us~-· . . ~Y Helen

.

Middleport's Dave Diles
to describe MAC .battles .

--------G·ac ..

i Women won some, lost some
Bou~d:

I. ;Helen Help

':.The Christmas
Star'
'
planned for· this Sunday

impressive record includes
the ooly defeat handed to
Southern Cal all sea~ .
Rutgers fullback Glen
Kehler. wh&lt;m Arizona State
players have nicknamed the
"human bowling ball" foc his
:;.9, 175-pound stature, gained
796 yards this season,
including two too-yard games
- but knoWS he 'S in foc a
tough afternoon against the
large ASU front line.

COLUMBUS(UPI) - Dave
Diles, a native
of "Duffy," a biography of
Diles, nationally-known . Middleport and a graduate of focmer Michigan State Coach
network sportscaster and Ohio University, has heen a Duffy Daughi!rty; "Nobody's
author, has been named to do member of the ABC-TV Perfect," a stocy· of focmer
play-byi&gt;laY work on this . sports ieam for the past 17 Def,roit Tiger pitcher Denny
Mid-American years. The last few years he McLain; and "Archie," about
year's
Conference basketball has hosted the Sa turday former Ohio State great
network ·on the Public afternoon college football Archie Griifin.
Broadcasting System.
scoreboard show.
J a c o b y.
s a. i d
MAC C&lt;mrnissioner Fred
As an authoc, Diles -is best · announcements
of the
Jacoby, who Thursday an- known foc his "TweHth Man schedUle and the various
nounced the appointment of in the Huddle," a book which . outlets c·arring the games are
Diles, said the 10 weeks of relates
the
spiritual expected within 11 week. He
·telecasts will begin Jan. 6 and experiences of 23 NFL stars . said the -live telecasts will be
run through the conclusion of . and now in paperback after available in every market
the championship race three hardcover printings. area of the 10 MAC member
March 3.
His other works include institutions.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Friday, nee . 15, 1978
~::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;: ;::!::::;:;: ::; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;: ;:::: :::;: ;:;~:;:;: ;:::; :;:::;:;:; ::: ;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;: ::::;:::::::::::::::;::·

Your correspondent should slow down and savor fri endship
until the time is right -lONCERNED MALE
DEAR HELEty : ' .
That 's ihe trouble ith women : If the guy doesn't try
something she thinks he's gay. But if he does, she's liable to
tum him down, after preliminary smooching gets him he\ up.
.CAN'TWIN
DEAR HEI:.EN : ; I
Re the lady who worries that her !ella isn't nurmal beca use
he unly kisses her a mild guod night at the door. Seems the
phrase, " pruve yuur love" is working in reverse. Mayhe he's
iu;&gt;\ an old-fashioned boy.- M.D.
DEARM: ;·
.l
·
' ... Or maybe he thinks she's an old-fashioned girl. These two,
I 'gathered from the wuman's letter, are both middle- aged,
and a bit shy.
So what's wrong with female aggressiveness? -H.

Give A Gift
That Keeps On·Giving

Post-season bowl madness
to get underway Saturday
-.-

..

· that out, just like I can't release me or retire me.
"They said we don't want to
figure out why Sparky (fired
manager Sparky Anderson) negotiate during the season.
So, that eliminated that idea.
doesn't fit in their plans."
Rose also diselosed he and But we found out Ia ter they
his attorney Reuven Katz were negotiating with
were rebuffed in their idea of another player a week before,
a ~~career cootract" with the so there was a double
Reds last May after Rose bad standard."
gotten his 3,000\h career hit.
Rose then looked straight
Said Rose, "Reuven ap- into the camera, smiled and
proached (Reds ' President) told Wagner, "Thanks Dick,
Dick Wagner a couple of thanks . Thanks for sayirlg
weeks after that because the •no.'"
Reds ·had 5et up a 'Pete Rose
Rose also said a published
Day' on a Sunday afternoon repoct that . the Reds had
to honor me for my 3,000\h offered him as much as a $1.2
hit . And Reuven said, 'Dick, million contract fer two years
· wouldn't it be a great idea to was 11 Toro poo-po."
.. Toro means bull,'~ Rose
give Pete a Career cootract
with
Cincinnati ,
non. told the laughing studio
audience, 41 and you know
guaranteed .'
.. Now, what that means," . what the other means."
explained Rose, "is if they
want · tp give me a career
contract, I. can play three
more years and ·if they want
me to retire, they just teD me
and I'll retire. U it's four
years or whatever, if I can't
make the team, then they just

ESI'.
United Press lnteruatlonal
Meanwhile, some 90
Rutgers and Arizona State,
minutes
later, Louisiana
two unlikely opponents fer a
Tech
(6-4
)
goes up against
football bowl game, help kick
East
Carolina
(11-J) in the
off the major college post
first
renewal
of the
season football madness
Bowl
play at
Independence
Saturday at Giants' Stadium.
Shreveport,
La.
The
Garden
State
Bowl,
the
GB
Rutgers, the favorite son of
first major bowl game in the
'h
the Garden State, will be
1112 northeast in IS years, pits the
5
undermanned Scarlet anything but favcrites when ·
Sit:~
51!:~ Knights, 9-2, against the they take to the Giants
powerful Sun Devils, 11-J, with Stadium turf. The Sun Devils
GB the kickoff slated foc I p.m.
11!2
5
6'1:!
6

Fromm

Rose to Bench-'Don't block
home plate when I come m '

N BA Standings
By United Press International
l:astern Conference
Atlantic Division
L. Pet. GB
Wshng tn
20 9 .690
Philadlph
15 9 ,625 • 2 lf:~
New Jersy
17 11 .607 21! 2
New York
13 16 .4-48 7
Boston
10 18 .3.57 9'h
Central Division

w:

•

Valdosta State 89-69 and Welt wlft...steve SoiW. _ . . :12
Texas State edged North points to . lead XanRI. .
Texas State 711-78.
State.... BID PbiWpiiCONd :110 ' .
Nooe of UPI's Tqp 20 teams points to power ORU....XIYin
were in action .
.
scored· • poilU to
Sly - Williams scored . a s P a r k
M m I' h I I
game high 20 points and John State...Georp Simi lilt a
Nelson added · lei to pace . three-point · pla:r·-wltb II.
Rhode ISland .. .. Joh n Lewia . secondl remainllll to 11ft
. made four foul shots In the ·· West · Texas over · .Nortb
last minute .for Princeton's T~•'

TheVEOMAN•Jt2t Sieek , sporty port able 10
three decorator col ors .
100% so!1d-state c liassis
fo1 outstanding reliabili ty,
superb operatmg
ec onomy . Out ck:-on

Sunshine' picture tube.
Solid -stat e tu r11ng system
All the q uality you 'd
expect from Ze nt th at a
• poc ket- pleasing price.

�6-The Druly SL·nt 111l'l, i\-hddkport -Punwroy, 0 ., Friday. Ol't:. 15. Hl7R
I

CHICAGO ( UPI ) - Every
the University of Santa
Cla us looks for a few good
rnen, but portraying St. Nick
~e ar

is not as easy saying " Ho, ho,

ho! "
The Santa school IS a
traming center est ablish ed
by Western Tempor ary
services - major supplier of
the' nation's St. Nicks. Not
every cheery-faced applicant
is awarded a diploma, along
with the tradition al white
gloves, beard and red suit
(one size fits all ).
The school has a tighter
accep!Bnce rate than some
small colleges. Only one in
every 23 applicants get the
red sui t of approval, said
Barbara Allare, Western's
Santa coordinator .
"We look for the JOlly type ,
With an outgoing nature, but
we don 't want them to be too
loud." she said. "'Ho, ho, ho!'
u; out, unless they're in a

'·

~-

United Methodist Women
hold recent Christmas ·meeting

Excuse Santa--he has to 'feed reindeer '

shopping center . A 1-year-&lt;&gt;ld
would be sc reaming if he sat
on Santa 's lap and heard a big
'ho, lm, ho.'
The school places more
than 3,000 Santas annually in
shopping centers, Mrs. Allare
said . All are trai ned in
"Sa nta 's patter."
" We tell them not to
.promise children anything

because we don't want them
to be disappointed. We tell
them to say , 'We'll see what
Santa can do and to say
'young lady' and 'young man '
mstead of 'hey kid ."'
Sa niB 's patter , she sa id,
also has had to make
adjustments for changing
li fest yles. " Mommy" and
"Daddy" are out; "folks" is
the preferred terminology .
When asked for a baby
brother or sister , the
suggested response is "that's
not Sant a 's de partment ' '

And , the sta ndard si gn,
"Santa had to feed the
re indeers ,' · is set up
whenever a small customer

has an accident and St. Nick
needs to change hi s suit.
Responses to more cynical
children who question Santa 's
credibility'
" We te ll them to sa y
they're ruining Christmas for
the other children waiting in
llne," Mrs. Allare said . " We
ask them to be firm so the
children know Santa is not
fooling around ."
The school's Santas span
all age brackets. One even
has

occasional visions of

being Superman .
"Sometimes I think I'm
real myself, 'til I get out of
my suit," said Art Baldwin,

''

84 , who has played the role
for 18 y~ rs at Marshall Field
on State Street.
" Some grownups even
think I'm real. I've had two

requests from women who
wanted me to ask God to take
them in their .~eep.
"You never know what's
going to happen' nexl. I've

Golden anniversary
to be celebrated
An open house in cclebrH· Pl eJTe . J r .. Salem Center ;
lion of the 50th wcdd1ng an· H11be rt F:. Pierce, Columbuo,

mversa ry of Mr ~n t.l Mrs Dcl&lt;J r e~ J(Jhma1n, Ca rroll .
Carol R. Pierce. l ..c~ngsv i ll e, Sand ra Sue Nt!wlon, Waverwill be held Sunda y from 2 to ] ~. cu JU David W P1Crcc,

5 p m. at the home of Mr. ami
Mrs

Rusty

P1 er ce,

Jr ,

Sal em Center . The ce leiJrcttwn is being hosted by thei r
fi ve

chi ldren.

CCJ r ol

Mansfi eld
F n cn d ~

and rela tn·rcs arc

Invited to call dun ng the ooen
IH1usc huurs.

F

US. Serviceman News
GARY HAYNES
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. Staff Sergeant Gary K
Haynes, son of Basil L.
Haynes of 144 Mulberry Ave. ,
Pom eroy, ha s gr aduated
from the Air Force Systems
Command Noncommissiuned

Offi cer Leadership School at
Ktrtland AFB , N. M.
The
who was

tr ain ed
in
milita ry
ma na gement and sup ervision, is a ma intena nce
management supervisor at
Peterson AFB, Colo.
Sergeant Haynes is a 1967
gra duate of RuHand (Ohio)
High School.
His wife, Joyce, is the
daughter of Mrs. Emma J.
Wilson of Rt. I, Shade,

Leaves turn
brown
DF:AR POLLY - I have an
indoor palm tree and 1ts
l ettv~s are turmng brown .
This plant cannot he put in
the sun . I would certainly ap·
pred ate some advice concermn ~ what I could do to pre·
vent this. - MABEL
DEAR MABEL- I discuss·
ed your problem \\ith a
nuroery and they sa1d that
even though your plant cannot be put m the sun it may
need more light than it is ~et­
tlllg. Also you may he overwate rin ~ it, so let the plant
dry out. Many timeo leaves
on house plants turn brown
when the plants need plant
food. Potted plants cannot
survive on water alone.
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY -Instead of
rolling cracker crumbs on a
piece of waxed paper try roll·
ing them in a plastic food ba~.
I find the one-quart size is
best. There will be no messy
rollin~ pin or crwnbs to dean
up and the bag can be used
for s tora~e of left over
erwnbs. - MARGIE

The Nehaclima Garden
Club held its Christmas
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Larry Wiley with Mrs. John
Thorne ,
Mrs.
David
Simonton, Mrs . Harold
Moxley , and Mrs. John
Campbell as co-hostesses.
President, Mrs, Roy Jones,
presided at the meeting.
Prayer was given by Mrs.
David Simonton. Miss Carina
Roth, a Rotary Exchange
Student from Sweden, told
th e group about the
cel ebration of St . Lucia's
Day, which is Dec. 13, and
which is the beginning of the
Christmas season in Sweden.
This tradition will be enacted
in thousands of homes in
Sweden.
A short business meeting
was held, at which time a
report was given on the
Christmas bazaar. The
program for the evening was
a display of Christmas
arrangements made by the
members. The door prize was
won by Mrs. Hobie Lowe. The
members decorated their
club yearbooks and the top
fou r winners were Mrs.
Harold Moxley, Mrs. Pete
Burris, Mrs. Hob1e Lowe, and
Mrs. Earl Clarke. The group
also held their annual candy
and gift exchange.
In addition to the hostesses,
those attending· were : Mrs.
James Roush, Mrs. Michael
Merritt, Mrs. William Gibbs,
Mrs. David Fields, Jr., Mrs.
Pete Burris, Mrs. Chester
Weaver, Mrs. Earl Clarke,
Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs. Danny
Harbour, Mrs. Donald
Bumgardner, Mrs. Carroll
Adams, Jr., Mrs. Phil Batey,
Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs. Tom
Hoffman, Mrs, James
Lockhart, Mrs. Hobie Lowe,
members, and guests, Miss
Carina Roth and Deborah
Grimm.

SATURDAY
SONGFEST, the popular
Ridge F.W.B. Church, at 7:30
p.m. featured singers will be
the Sqartz Family and other.
Miles Trout, Pastor, invites
the public.
SONGFEST, Poplar Ridge
Church, 7:30p.m.
SUNOAY
r.A I.I.IA C:OUNTY Histori ca l
Soci l'ly 2 ru n

THIS THRONE CHAIR Is part of James Hampton's
"The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations
Millenlum Assembly," which one critic said " may well be
the finest work of visionary religious art produced by an
American." Hampton, a black Washington janitor who
died in !964, believed God guided his hands as he built the
tlu one by night in an unheated, poorly lit ga rage. Made of
discarded materials, Hampton's work - which also
includes pulpits, offertory tables and other pieces - will
!lOOn have a pennanent home at Washington's National
J;:olle~lion of. ,fin!\ Ar ts .
~,

Frml NeCJsc ~;~ :-;co-hostess.

~IJ NDA Y

Polly Cramer

Gardeners

Mr. and Mrs. Carol Pierce

Christmas meeting, of the
UnitL'I WoJTien of Forest Rw1
Umted Methodist C:hur.l'h was
held reeently at the home of
Mrs P.dison Hollon with Mrs.

POLLY·s POINTERS
DEAR POlLY - I tee! very
sorry for Simone who is
plagued by mice in her horne.
l suggest that ohe search all
over her home for liny places
where the "critters" can
enter. It might even be a wee
space around a water pipe.
She should then fill these
cracko tightly w1th steel wool
he in~ careful to puke it in so it
cannot he easily dislodged.
This will keep mice from
c'Ommg in the future and any
already in the house can be
killed . The searching does
take a lot of patience but it is
worth it.
My Pet Peeve is that
underwear , hose and other
appar el usually come
packaged in sets of three for a
certain price. Can anyone tell
me why ] Few stores will
break package and many of
us cannot always afford to
buy three of anything at one
time. - ALLENE
.
Polly will send you one of
her sign ed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colWTUl. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

a

Nehaclima

I,

llever done anything that I've
gotten more of a kick out of."
As Baldwin prewed for
his first Santa appearance of
the day, he turned to the
mirror and adjusted his cap.
"My God that's a good·
looking Santa," he said with a
wink. "He must be reaL"

St.

P Pt t'I'S

f:pi SL'IIflHI f'hurt'!l.
TRIEDSTONE Baptist
Church Sunday School will
pr esent its Christmas
program, 6:45 p.m.
program Fair Haven United
Methodist Church, Kanauga ,
7:30p.m.
TUESDAY
LAF AVETTE White Shrine
to meet for potluck, 6 p.m.
Meeting will follow; gift
exchange, refrl!ihments.

ASSISTANCE ASKED
MASON ""' Mrs. James
(Jo) MacKnight , worthy
matron, Mason Chapter No.
157, Mason, is requesting all
members of the chapter to
assist with the fruit basket
on
Sunday,
program
December 17. Donations of
fruit and-or money are
needed to help make the
senior citizens happy this
year. Mrs. John (Carol Jane)
Workman , chairman, will
open the doors to the Masonic
Building at I p.m. on Sunday
in order to receive the
donated goods . Donations
may be left with Mrs. Work·
man at her· home. Everyone
is asked to help. The baskets
will he filled and delivered
that same day.

POM F: ROY tJN ITP.O
Methodist Church Chrbt1nas
cantata, Sunday, 7:30. ?ubhe
mvited. MONDAY
BEND 0' THE RIVER
Ga rd en Cl ub , an nu a l
Christmas dinner, 6:30 Mon·
day night at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Bert Grimm to have the

FRIDAY
THE PROGRESSIVE Bible
Class Christmas party, 2 p.m.
at the Mabel Tawney home,
154 First Ave. Gilt exchange
not to exceed $2.
BAKE sale at Mulllhy's in
the Plaza, The Popular
Ridge youth group is spon·
·soring the sale.
PUBLIC MEETING,
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at former
Bedford Youth Center to
discuss possible sale of the
building.
,INSTALLATION of of·
ficers, 7:30 p.m. Friday,
Harrisonville Chapter OES;
members, take covered dish .
SATURDAY
SQUARE DANCE, 9 p,m. to
I a.m. Saturday at Rutland
American Legion Post Farm ;
open to public.
POTLUCK dinner,
in
fellowship room, Christ
United Methodist Church, 6
p.m. Missionary Ruth
EShenaur will show slides of
Kenya.
BAKE
SALE,
Christ
Episcopal Church, Pt.
Pleasant, 10 a.rn. • ?, Cakes,
cookies, pies, candy, canned
goods.

program ,

'' Sou nd s

MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS
FRUIT BASKETS
$5,00 • % PECK
$8.00 - 1 PECK
Delivery Will Be Dec. 22, 1978
Place your order now by contacting any
Band Member or call Pat Wood at 992·2281 .

NOTICE
On Friday, December 8 Our Pomeroy
Store was robbed. We lost a large

SEW &amp; SO Christmas dinner
at home of Carla Swain, 7:30
p.m.
UTTLE KYGER Grange,
7:30 p.m., 50 cent gilt eJC·
change .
Finger food ,
refreshments.
SUNDAY
CHRISTMAS CANTATA
"Night of Miracles" at St.
Paul United Methodist
Church, Tuppers Plaiils, 2:30
p.m. Sunday; public invited.
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS
program at Antiquity Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. Sunday ; .
public invited.
MEIGS
County
Genealogical Society meet 2
p.m.
Meigs
Museum.
Members are to bring ancestor cards. Charter
membership is still open to
those interested.

a nd M r~. Ann Wt•b:-;lt•r in
Rutlcmd rm their lnttliliorwl

number of checks. We now ask for your
cooperation. If you cashed a Payroll
Check or a Personal Check last
Wednesday, Thursday or Friday
Please Contact t~e Store -Manager
Larry Arthur.
Thank You

THE JONES BOYS STORE INC.

We'll bet you didn't know how
annoying that drippy faucet of
yours really was.
It. costs $20.00 to heat the
2400 gallons of water you lose each
year from one hot water faucet .
that drips once a second.
And maybe a 10¢ washer is all
it would take to stop it.
There are other ways you can
cut your hot water costs, too.
. Take showers instead of baths.
Use the cold water cycle on your
washing machine. Turn off your
electric water heater when you go
on vacation.
And, since your hot water
costs will go up as you raise your
water temperature, make sure your
water heater isn't set too high. You
can easily get by with 140° water in
most cases.
We have some
SA .V.E. booklets that not
only show you how to save
•
electricity all around your
home, but als&lt;&gt; how to become
part of our Save America's Valuable Energy Program.
.
___ _
Stop m your nearest Ohio Power office for yom~ free copies
.At Ohio Power, we want you to get the.most out of your ele~tric
serviCe.

a ear own
•
e 31 n e

Qhi·o Power Company

Working t?gether is the only way.

linn in thd ;,m ll'n." Silt• rt •; ul

ll w 14.-gt'nd of tlw f'lu·l,..tl lld "
c;uullt• rrorn ldt.•;ds. ](' 01 \' 111 ~~

Ch r istmtts pcar t y 1-: &lt;J\' l '
CIJri stm&lt;~s verse:-; ror roll t•a\ 1 ti lt' t/l nugllt that lt1Vt', hojw
(lfll ( &lt;" ht•('f 011'(' t'XfH't 'SSt'd I ll
tu open the mt~ctin g
A prt.~vwusly scht•dulccl di n- lhl' ('Cindlt.·s we bu m at
ncr ttl Cn1w 's Sh•ak Huust• Chnstmas Sht• clnsl'd \\'Jlh
wal'i ('iil1l'cllcd chit' to lhc () I'~ I Vt." l'
n,.xt The C:hapman hnmc Mrs . Virgil t\tk1ns lntmd ut··
wa!'i altract1vclv deeoraled Pel tht• prn ~ r.am with ·· What 1"'
lor the linlnlays 'and the pru· C'hris tmas')" hv Agnt's Plla l'll
qram t'al·ned out the Chnt bt'i ng nmd IJy. Mrs. Har vt'Y
theme of "May We Have HIS Eric wine. C:t ntl ·o ur Ff-lvonl l'
Vision of a Star Lit by the Oav" bv l.u"la Hugheo rt•wl
bv • Mr·~ James Nicholson.
C:clcstial C:hristmas Spark ."
Mrs. Rtllph Tunlt'r pn.•sid·

~ ~.n . r,.,,. ., r,lp ·ol•·

1\11 •··

~ .., ,

W••ho.. h-1 1~·;ul f1o1 11 t lw
C .i rdt'lll'l ':-. .\ll .'i\H'I Honk
\, ll loll . , point ... of 1 ullllrt · 11f
l]w f'lut ..;: lm;t ~ 1;wtuo... :vir ~
:\tk 1 11 ~ g; t\'P note -.; nf lllo.;t (,l'\'
ol !ht•
holl:
11wd a!

11•\\,ll 'd ti H· " b:tkl.·lv""

DeMOLAY OFFICERS - Taking part in the Order of DeMolay installation of officers
were: front row left to right, Greg Postel, Robert Nilsen, Scott Reuter· back Greg Bush
senior councilor;' Mark Riggs, master councilor; Steve Kinzel , jwuor co~nc11or'.
'

Demolay installs officers
Officers were installed at
the 19th semi-annual Order of

DeMolay, Saturday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Members installed were:
Mark Riggs, son of Dave and
Gloria Riggs, Harrisonville,
. Mast er councilor ; Greg
Bush, son of Celeste Bush,
Middleport, senior councilor ;
Steve Kinzel, son of Boyd and
A.udrey Jane Kinzel, junior
councllor ; Dave Reut er ,
scribe; Rob Davis. senior

deacon ; Gary Nakamoto,
junior deacon; Bob Chappa lea r , marsha ll ; Tracy
Pope, senior steward; Mark
Boyd, junior steward; Danny
Riggs, chaplain ; Dave Riggs,
sentinel; Lewis Harper, first ,
prece pt or ; Eric Sc1tes,
second preceptor ; Dave
Harper , third preceptor ;
Dave lnnarell i, fourth
preceptor ; Todd Ault, fifth
preceptor ; Mike Sibley, sixth
preceptor ; Paul Riggs,

seventh preceptor.
Th e installin g officers
Robert
Nilsen,
were:
Cleveland , state. J unior
deacon; Jon Hurst, State
Marshall, Columbus, in·
stalling senior councilor ;
Greg Postel , Canton, in·
stalling junior council or ;
Scott Reuter, Middleport,
in sta llin g marshall; Chris
Holsher, Columbus, installing
chaplain. The welcome was
given by Harry Roush,

Ladies A uxiliary
holds party , meeting

Mrs. Clarice Allen was
hostess at her home for the
· December meeting of the
Ladies Auxiliary of the fire
department. The meeting
opened with The Lord 's
Prayer, followed by roll call.
The secretary's report was
read by Clarice Allen and the
treasurer's report by Opal
Wickham. Margaret Christy,
chainnan of the Good of the
Order committee, gave a
report on plans for the annual
Christmas dinner of the
Auxiliary and the firemen to
be held on Sunday at the
By Charlene Hoeflich
firehouse . After a short
'
business meeting, a social
The scouts of.Saliobury Troop JJOO met Tuesday mght et the
TUPPERS PLAINS- Mrs. time was enjoyed. The home
Salisbury Elementary Sehoul ami fro m th ere went to the Me1gs
Ouris Koenig hosted the was decorated in keeping
County Infinnary and the Vetera no Memorial H&lt;•spital to
November meeting of the with the Christmas season,
ca rol.
Ruse Ga rden Ciub with Mrs. with a lighted tree under
Next week the meeting will be used for the il nnua l Chn stmao
.John Rice presiding and Mrs. which were placed th e
party with an exchange of gifts. The party w1ll be held at the Glen Stout giving the devt&gt; gifts
for
exchange .
regular meeting place, a rmnn at Meigs High Sehoul.
li ons. ·
Christmas carols were
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP
Fur roll call members gave sung with Clarice at the
Plans were made fo·r a Christmao party at the mectmg of t11e " T!1ankogiving verse. Each piano. Games were played
Syracuse Brownieo held Thuroday mght Hl the school.
member brought a decorated with several winning prizes.
The part)" will he held un Dec. 21 and names were th awn for
package for . the program . The door prize went to
a gift exchange . Work un the Chnstm&lt;:ts proJcd was contnmcd . The traveling pnze was won . Dorothy MyerS• The mern·
Shellie Arnold Jed in the pledge, Jcmufcr /\ mold, the g1r! by Mrs. Robert Durot and the hers were then invited to the
scout promise, and Tara Wolfe, t he Lord 's P rC~ yer Ta ra a lso
dour pri ze by Mrs. RiL-e .
dining room for refreshments
served refreshments.
The December meeting will of
Christmas
salad,
be held Tuesday mght _at the decorated cakes, punch,
home of Mro . J1mm y coffee and homemade candy,
Caldwell at 6: 15p.m. w1th a served from the decorated
co vere d di sh dinn er . table, buffet style. Blessmg
Members are alou to lake a $3 was asked by Karla
homemade gtftlor exchange. Chevalier. Members at·
A dessert cuurse was serv- tending were Margaret
cd by the hostess to the 12 Christy, Opal Wickham,
mcmbero present.
Clarice Allen, lnzy Newell,
NEW HAVEN - The New United States.
Evelyn Gaul , Pauline
The
program
was
in
charge
Haven Women of the Church
Ridenour, Dorothy Myers,
of
Delores
Taylor
with
the
of God held their annual
Christmas
activities
Clara Conroy, Betty Newell,
"Burning
and
theme
being
Christmas dinner 1n the
Erma
Cleland, Marcia
Shining."
Bonnie
Fields
read
Missionary BUilding on
Keller, Sheila Taylor, l{arla
Thursday evening. The room the scripture taken from the have already begun
Chevalier, Opal Eichinger,
was beautifully decorated in second chapter of Luke. Mrs.
Cleo DeTray and Ethel Orr.
keeping with the holi da y Taylor closed the p~ogram
NEW HAVEN - Activities
season. The invocation was with a candlelight service for the Christmas season Contributing hostesses were
with each one participating have already begun at the Erma Cleland, Sheila :.{!!Ylor
given by Thelma Grueser.
Following the dinner, a and the singing of "Because New Haven First Church of and Karla Chevalier.
The annual Christmas
short business meeting was He Lives," "This Little Light God. A Christmas dinner was .
conducted by the president , of Mine," and "Learnmg to held last Thursday by the dinner of the Ladies
Auxiliary and the firemen
Orpha Fields. She reminded Lea n on Jesus."
Women of The Church of God. was held Sunday evening at
A gift exchange was con·
members to bring Christmas
On Friday, December 15, a
gilts for a patient at Lakin du cted by Sarah Gibbs. The Christmas dinner will be held the firehouse. A covered dish
door prize was won by Orpha by the Youth Fellowship in dinner with baked ham
State Hospital.
Spiritual Life Director , Fields. Ceramtc favors were the Missionary Building at furnished by the firemen was
by
forty-two
Delores Taylor, r eminded pr esented to each one the church beginning at 6 enjoyed
members
and
guests
. A
present.
members that the Christ's
p.m.
tree
and
other
lighted
The
members
presented
Birthday offering would be
On Sunday, December 17,
held on Sunday, Dec. 24. The the president a Christmas the annual children's Christ- decorations were used in the
theme is "We Treasure These gift. She thankei:l the com· mas program will be firehouse. Santa arrived after
Things." She also announced mittees for making the dinner presented beginning at 7:30 the dinner with candy treats
for the children.
that the annual world-wide a lovely affair.
p.m.
It was announced that the
prayer vigil would begin Dec.
On Wednesday, December
13 and continue through Dec. January hostesses would he 20 - A covered dish dinner
Susie Wolfe a ~d Orpha will be held for the church
25.
Stewardship Director , Fields. It was also announced beginning at 5:30 p.m. The SUIT DISMISSED
CLEVELAND"(UPI) - A
Patty Maynard, reported that that Group Bible Study would youth and some adults wUl go
money had been sent for be can cell ed until after Christmas caroling after the federal judge has llismissed a
Cl:trlstmas gifts to the Home Christmas.
dinner and distribute fruit suit brought by convicted
Those attending were: Mrs. baskets.
bomber George J . Cicero
Mission in Scottsbluff,
Doc
F
ields,
Mrs.
George
against
Ute city of Cleveland,
Nebraska. Each year Church
On Friday, December 22 Reed,
Mrs.
Dexter
Erwin,
·
suburban
Bea c hwood ,
of God locals send Christmas
The Prayer Vigil Service will
Mrs.
William
C.
Gibbs,
Mrs.
Cuyahoga
q,unty
officials
gifts or money to the Home
be held at the church from 9David
Fields,
Jr.
,
Mrs.
and
a
television
station.
Missions throughout the
10 a.m. with Delores Taylor
Roberta Maynard, Miss Kay as leader.
Cicero, who pleaded guilty
Gru ese r, Mrs. Kenneth
to
five bombings in the
On Sunday, December 24 Historical Society
Greene,
Mrs.
Russell The Christ's · Birthday Of· Cleveland area , had asserted
Maynard, Mrs. Fay Car· · lering will be received during his rights were violated wh~
penter, Mrs, Iva Capehart, the morning worship service. WKYC-1V showed his picture
plans open house
Mrs, Thelma Grueser, Mrs. The theme. is "We Treasure after his arrest in August and
carried fllm of his
Martha Gruescr, Mrs. Rena
Christmas Open House at/ Johnson, Mrs. Wyllis Davis, These Things." The evening arraigrunent in a news caat.
the Virgil A. Lewis Home will· Jr., Mrs. Larry ·Carpenter , worship service will begin at
U.S. District Court Judge
be on Sunday, December 17 Mrs. Von Stewart, Mrs. Fred 6:30 p,m. It will be a Can· Thomas
D.
Lambros
from 2 to 5 p.m. The public is Taylor, and Mrs. Susie Wolfe. dlelight Service.
dismissed Cicero's suit oo
invited, with special in·
groWJds Cicero's claim that
vitations extended to~he
he was being denied a fair
Mason
County
C m·
trial was a moot point. The
Reminder
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) judge also said the television
missioners and the To ! of
facilities
in
Lyne
Center
_
Stanford's Bluebonnet- station broadcasts were
All
Mason offl~lals and heir
ar
Rio
G
rand~
will
be
closed
Bowl
bound football team protected under the First
famllles.
Christmas
hohday
begins
workouts Saturday for
for
the
The December 7th meeting
from
Dec.
16
through
Jan
3
"'the
first
time since its 30-10 Amendment.
of the Historical Society was
held at the Lewis Home with when classes reswne. A new romp over Callf!l'nia. \
Coach Bill Walsh's team,
Vice-President Bess ' Ingels schedule will be published on
Ja11uary
2,
1979.
which
had a 7-4 record, will
,
presiding.
SENIOR CITIZENS'
have 12 days of practice prior
)\ Christmas tree with oldBAZAAR ITEMS
to its Dec. 31 meeting with
·SALE ITEMS
fashioned hand-made or·
Bazaa1· items of the Senior
As a money-making project Georgia (!J.!-1) Dec, 31 in the Citizens Center will remain
naments will be put up on
Saturday, December 9th , members of the United Astrodome.
on sale until Christmas, 1t
Members are asked to come Methodist Women of the · "Georgia will present some was announ ced todav .
to help with the decorating of Rac in e · United Methodist problems for us," said Walsh. Nwnt1ruus cra ft it ~ms a;'t'
Church have rag rugs, cotton "We're matched with a team avctilable and ('an tx.- pu r ('}1ct S·
the tree and the house.
and
wool for sale. They may which has one of Ute finest t-'&lt;1 t.luri ng 1tw r eguh1r htnlr!-1 of
The next regular meeting
w~jl be December 21 at 10:30
be seen at the home of Mrs, records in ,the country this Uul Ct•ntt'l'.
.,
Victor
Wolfe, 949·2286. ·'
year .1'
a.lR._

~Girl&amp;o~~Diar-;'Rose Garden

I

Club meets

Star .
In s talled were Do rl na
Johnson , worthy rnalron:
Ralph Webb. worthy patron :
Jan e Wag ner , tJssoei &lt;.lt l'
ma t run : Be n Phil s on.
a ~ soc tf:l te pC:ttrnn ; Cora Webb,
secreta ry: BarbC:tra Ougan,
treasurer : Joan Wolfe. t'\111*
ductress: Lillian Wei se.

.111

(' ]t!'I S J)id tl

c\lll\'1\S \1t•nt;tl Jlealt h Ct·ntcr

g l'l'l 'll Sl',I SIHl d] it iTilllgt•meJ II

Mrs Tll l'rtt'l' th r~nk t • cl ;ti l
who p;H'tic·ipatl'd in tl11' n ·t't•nl ('(lllllty flu wt·r shm\

( 'hrhtJ na o.;

Nl r " P:111l Wmn dt:o. p!:tyt·d
t•xhi bi t of m.adlilllli:l !-i fur
rll fft·n· nt t lt 't 'i l ~ i on s ;111!1 Mrs
\V ch:o.lt· r , a rl'd . whll l' and

Wtnter ll arn 1onr " Ttw

W 11 r k1t 1~

t· lull c·n•t•d .mel t·ollt:t t wt·re

tht•sllo\\

n•pt'flh'd ill HI11ff1n rs' n·p11 rts
g JVt' ll
Mr s.
('ar l

M r s. :J tch olson Mrs. DtL•hL
Mr s Huy Srwwdctl , :11ul Mr ....
Tu r n1• r .
Con t r ib u tin g

of

Wl'I' P

J1 t' 11\S ( Itl

thiJ II kt' tl

IIH'tlt ht•Js for

tJH'

c·t •n tnhlt!Ht t\S

lnri! I'P/1'

P~tt

prt' [lil!'fl tlo n

ft1!'

1 t•frc• slnn t:' llt s

Da~ lil.

Wl' t (' !'Ylrs.
C'cuwday. M1so.;
M r s.

Dnroth~

Woud ii l d , .\1 1s. Hl' rna r d
Lnlll t', dlld Mrs Lul; t d ~ l\
P. .xh ilJI(Jilg Ill tilt' '- I ll I\\ "VIT
Miss f1 1t hl. M r s. Atkin s. ,\1J o.. .
D1vhl. M1s Tun u·r \1 1~
i.l·dl iL' and M r s. W t ltld~Jrd . &lt;II ·
r .Jngt' II H' Ill.". &lt;HHI i\:f1ss
Mr s. ~H.:h t'l sttl\,

and

D1L'lll
hoi·

\H' It' ~lvt• n \ t t

,\1rs .J.wk Hub-

son f1w !lt•lt\'l'ry . Tht• lraveiII H'. pr II(' do11att•d b~ Mrs.
D1 vl1l w;1s w ti JI b~ Mr!:i.
WPPd.ml .\1r:-. Day tun Parson. . t'IJIII'ded for thl' fl uwer
lund . ctnd Mr~ V' 'rtiOil Webe r
g;-1 \' t' l' iiL h mt.·mhL·r a 1979
n utl' p;td
i\.11 ~.

DL' Ill."un.

E rJto,, 111r, ;u1d
~\l ll " t ' J"\' L'd

111

til l'

Uw nofn::-: IH !lt'flt rH t•pa red by
tilt' hns h ·:o.."t'." · J'\11r s. Ch.aplll&lt;J tl &lt;111d Ylrs. Webster . Mrs.
T tllllt'l' [H'O\'Hkd Ci:ICh

Sl '1'• 1ll

I~

to K.111sas.
S t e wrt J! . g 1and
r cp t l's t· n l a t iV t'
to
W;1sl!Jngtnn: H nrt ll~ matruns
d!Hl
w • J rt h~
pdt t on :-; of
oc~ ~t

JD(;I trons &lt;md past p&lt;1t 1on ~ of
Ra ctnc Cha plcr , honpn·d

I ,iJI Jatl Haymi.:l n. organi st:

\'ISillrlg d 1.tplcr s

8J
t\p p (l J' Xl ll'l !ll t• l ;,
Kay Hi ll. llda h: Hel en
Pickens. Ruth: Mic haela lllt'tll bc rs i:i lld g lH.'sfs frlllll n
11 uback, Fother : Charl otte
dl &lt;tpt cr~ wer e p n·~mted .
Stcwc1rt JHcsl'nkd Mr. and
Wamsley, Martha : Marga ret
Weot, Eled a: Ada Bbsell. Mrs Bnnker . Jlllll t• r pa st

wetnler ; i:lnd Joe Bissell. SL'll-

ma tro n

cmd

JUJII(II' pa st
g1ft fr om tiH:
c ha pte r and one fro111 t he of·

pat ron, wit h

t 1\lel.

&lt;:1

In s la lh ng off l l 'CI' wa s
Louise Stewart '" ho mtroduc- fll'l'I'S of 1978
Mrs. Bl"inkl'r pn•sL·ntt•d lht.'
ed thooe ao"stmg w1th the Inlll'W
wo rthy lll&lt;~t ron w1lh lhe
s ta lla tio n: La ura Cm.:lc, lll·
vitine maroha ll ; Opal [)!( Idle, tr&lt;n dmg ga ve l w1d H m oney
Illstailing 1mrshal ; Wil ll.!m tn•t• \\'r1s prP.'w nted t11 ,\1 rs
Stewa rt, msta llmg chi:iplam . Stewcll'l from tht• nwmhL· rs
W1lma Styer. or ga mst . Ada ancl nff\1 e r s nf Rae Jill'
Neetse, eontludress; I .t•orw Chapter by Mrs Wl'IJb as (Ill
HcnSit!y, warder ; H1cllan l t'X pi't'SS IIIIl uf \ov t· and &lt;tJ l·
Ougan, sentinel. Honura ry Ill · pn·da l1 o11 for chHplt&gt;r loyal sta lhnK ofht'e rs were firl'tta l ~
Ht.frcslmw nts \\T I'l' sc·n ·cd
Sunpson , sctTet&lt;Jry, a nd Cna
lll
lht • dllllll j2 I'OOill Wil ll'h Wi.IS
Cura Webb, ma rshal.
·Honored gucsls pr·csentcd dL•&lt;·on tt cd 111 tlw col or s
wer·c Roberta K· Mtmlling . d lOst•n h ~· !he wort hy matr1111
past gnmd m a tron ; Howard hy MarOld I ,ou Bc e~lc. dlt lltlg
J. Shull , past gl'a nd a tl on : n •lHi l dwtrpt•r soll. a nd lll'r
I .ois Ptmley , deputy J,!.nmd l'l lfll!Jl i lt l'l'.

18.00 VALUE

1

Annual Christmas
dinner held Thursday

'

Go electronic.

So stop by ond sc~ o ur
selcct1 on Koro l Gold
Jewelry Gove ol on any
occ o ~ro n ond you'll mo ~e

1t 0
Stickpins

rHhlmu blr, lrl' n.J *Io# lll n ~ •lid&lt;
J' IAI for tht lon lo ul l lHh y

Thefamo us Keepsa ke Ouatantee assures )OU
of perfect clarity, corre ct cut a nd ftne white co lor,
permanenl reainration. and protectiOn aga mst loss

Keepsake
11, 1.

, " I II, """'"I H"'l:'

II JIMAC!Il T l
GO~OEN ~CC tN I

i:t

pt • l lj ll l' 11f hlanb CHi d
the '\'1•w Year

1:1PL'I II Il;..; fo1

Wt is(I JI , gl ami

!.:h_aott·r s,

With

fa \"1•1' "f &lt;-tppkhlltt l'l' ttml a

:vtr ~.

VIsit In).(

Mr s.

Wl lll i:I!TI ·
duung room

:vlrh

rcp r l'scn t al l vc

Naumi Brmker. chaplmn :
Laura Circle, marslwl :

e nndu ct r e ss:

111

"~ ' !'(' Mr s Er iL· witlt'.

Turm' J. M1 s.

lll(;I SOII S, fi ft y Y\ ' fl l lll l' Jnht •l S,
dtstn ct offt&lt;.: ers, p.t st gr; nHI
appotnf tnL' Ill s, an d past
m al ntns tmd past m\J ons 1\1

ass oei f:l t e

Mrs. Turnt'l'
\\'1111 11 se&lt;'ltlld }lhH't·. and Mrs.
,\tk lns. \1 is:-. flwhl. and Mrs

1H'IJI1nrcl'ntlws

!&gt;11·1!!. third pl&lt;ot'L'o,
t\ ~ rf1 t•xdwngt· we.~ s condtH'tl'd by Mrs WJJliarnsun
and St'''t• r&lt;tl t u hlt• ar l'.dll.!,t' Jll l'tll h hrnught fo r the

Racine Chapter Eastern Star
names worthy patron, matron
RACINF:- Installation of of·
ficers was held recently at a
meeting of Raeine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern

h.~k, •

:-.&lt;tl .. l! w,~ ,.. dt•&lt;'td t:d th;tl \rlro..
Cll;u·lt·"' Kt1lll . n -:.-~ tlt ll&lt;-tl drn•1··
1111', should hL· g1wn ;1 )',1ft ft
wa s t't'port l'd 1h.t t 1!It• tnntl wr
11f :vir ~ Hnh('l'l Camtd;t ~ J:-;
st' ltou,..ly 111 A syt np;1tl1y
t ':IJ'(] w:1 s ;.; ignt ·d for :\1ro..

Huh}

'\

ARE NOW TAKING ORDERS
MONDAY
SPECIAL MEETING,
Twin City Shrine Club, 7 p.m.
Monday with election of of·
ficers and refreshments.
CAROLING, Kanauga Youth
Fellowship, in community,
meet at the church 6 p.m. Hot
chocolate, cookies aft er
caroling at -Marcia Finley's.
OPEN GATE Garden Club,
Anita Kackley's, 7:30 p,m.

Mt•mbt•rs of ilw Hutland ~.·tl at tht• nwl't i11J,! and Mrs.
Gm·dt•n C:luh mL'&lt;'ting at lin· ~Ie u Ty Williamson usl'd for
humt• of Mrs. r. 0 . C:liapman dt•v,,!Jnu." ti lt' pot·Jn. " I F 11UIId

Mrs. Betty Blackwood and members reading parts and
Mrs. Hilda Yeau~ er opened Sl'riptures. Ann Watson read
thP meeting with th e song, " 0 '''o/hat Would they Get" and '
Little Town of B· ' hl ehem." "Christmas Gift", and the
Mrs. Yl'a u ~er ga ve devotions grQup sang "Joy to .the
u.s i nK " P r nphcl'y" f r om World."
Duri ng th e bus in ess
Isaiah 9 and a meditati on,
"Christmas Is" Julluwed by rrieefinq the love offering was
prayer. Mro. Blackwood read takef\ and officers' reports
the legne legend uf the were ·given. The new date
poinsettia , an d Mrs. Hollon books ·were distributed. Sixhad an explanation about the teen sick and shutin calls
nativity wreath which she were reoorted.
Members exchanged gifts
had made and was on displ ay .
A reading, "Chri stmas is and refrestu:nents of party
Here" was given by Mrs. sa ndwi c h es a ss ort e d
' punch and
Kathleen Scott. There wao a mokies, 'candy,,
litany okit about celebrating L'O ffee were served to the 14
Chn otmas with several members Dresen!..

of

Christmas" and Mrs. Ben
Philson'tu give the devotwns.

We.bster, Chapman host Garden Club

~ PC C IOI OCC OSIOn

�6- The Daily Sentinel , Middlepurt-Pnmemy , l!., nut"Y . l it-&lt;' . 15.

Hig.h school ADs
blast TI.tle IX

1~7R

ma the matical fa ct - five into
Minne
klandfirst
to'
three just W&lt;Kl 't go .
qu
a lif ysotaforat O•
their
Five N~·c teams will mea ningful playoff ga me
compete this weekend for the since 1960, when the Eagles
three rl'ffiaining play off spots
won the NFL championship .
and the possibili lies are In
1961 and '66, the Eagles
abnost endless.
'appeared in llle old NFL
•
If the Atlanta Falcons and playoff bowl, a much ignored
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)
Philadelphia Eagles contes t between the two - Morethanl,SOOhighschool
successfully navigate their division runnersup.
athletic directors from
United Press International
League completes its longest theme - especially for the
way through allllle con(using
If
Green
Bay
and
·aro
und the nation ccrnpleted
The National Football . season this weekend and the NFC
is a simple turns, llley will end years of
Minnesota win Sunday , the a
four -day
corivenlion
failure and enter the playoffs. Eagles can ·s till he a wild card Wednesday after criticizing
All the Falcons have to do entry if they heat llle Giants coed sport programs.
to reach post-season play for and finish in a three-way tie
T h e
N a t i 0 n a 1
llle first time in t!leir ll-year with Washington and Atlanta . Interscholastic- Athletic
histcry is beat llle St. Louis
Coach Dick Vermeil said Administrators Association
Cardinals Sunday. But it is all season he did not think the
Scoring
MISSION, Kan . (UP! ) NCAA
not necessary fer the Falcons Eagles were good enough to approved a · resolution which
g fg ft pis avg
called upon the U. S.
Division 1-A football team statistics
to win to reach lllat goal. If make lhe playoffs. After last Department of · Health,
Perry, Holy Cross
· 4 48 34 130 32.5
released Thursday:
Atlanta loses, it will still be week 's 31-13 loss to DaUas, he Education and Welfare to
6 76 35 137 31 .2
Rushing Off.
g car yds avg td ydspg Bird , Indiana St
one
of the two NFC wild card might have reason to believe
5 58 39 155 31.0
stop its ''instrusion" into high
Oklahoma
11 721 4703 6.5 51 427 .5 Gerdy, DavidsoJl
teams
unless Washington,
it
won't
matter
much
if
they
school
athletics.
150
30.0
Aguirre,
DePaul
5
64
22
Nebraska
II 699 3715 5.3 40 331.7
Philadelphia,
Green
Bay
and
3 38 13 39 29.7
Tex-Arlg'n
11664 3368 5.1 25 306.2 Drummer, Ga Tech
doVermeil is also worried
The NIAAA " urges HEW to
Minnesota aU win.
Field Goal Percentage
hall its ins trusion into
Fllrtn St
12 687 3632 5.3 28 302.7
The Falcons' chances are
g fg fga pel.
about the Giants, s-g, being inter scho lastic athletic
Houston
II 663 3306 5.0 30 300.5
thus quite encouraging. A
motivated by a desire to administration
and
Charles, Mich St
2 11 14 .786
victory would guarantee
avenge their embarrassing
Brown,
Fla
St
4
39
Sl
.765
PassiogOff.
all cmp lot yds td ydspg
loss to Philadelphia four implement and enf&lt;rce Title
lhem a playoff spot and
5 25 34 .735
SMU
391 225 23 3038 18 276.2 Hunley, Baylor
weeks ago. That was the IX wilhin the spirit and intent
home-field advantage.
·
4 20 28 .714
St nfrd
401 25117 2947 24 267.9 Montford, Temple
infamous game , caUed the of Coogress when the law was
Atlanta upped its record to
5 41 58 .707
Fla St
369 206 16 2749 23 249.9 Green, LaSt
9-9 last week with another " Miracle of the Meadow-- passed," the resolution . said.
Free
Throw
Percentage
Ca lif
345 189 24 2698 17 245.3
HEW, cttmg the provtStons
last_-second 20-17 vict_o ry, this lands" in Philadelphia, in
g fl Ita pet.
N MexSt
341 180 29 2667 18 242.5
one over Washington , It was . which the Giants fumbled of TtUe IX, has _called upon
4 34 34 1.000
. Perry, Holy Cross
away a certain victory in the schools to equalize sporting
the fourth time lhis season
6 19 19 1.000
TotaiOff.
g plays yds avg td ydspg Raker, Virginia
programs f&lt;r girls and boys.
last 30 seconds
lhe Falcons hl!d woo a game
4 17 17 1.000
Nebraska
II 897 5515 6.1 53 501.4 Mature, Yale
In
games' saturday,
The. athletic directo:s.
in
the
last
10
seconds
by
a
20.
3 10 10 1.000
Oklahoma
II 816 5382 6.6 59 489.3 Steppe, Ga Tech
Washington (8-7), hoping to cha;.gmgthal HEW has trted
17 sec.-e.
8 8 1.000
3
MichSt
II 838 5294 6.3 54 481.3 Tillman, Kent
keep its slim playoff bopes to provtde only rruxed-&lt;&gt;~x
Philadelphia, 8-7, needs a
Rebounds
C!msn
II 866 4804 5.5 44 436.7
alive, hosts Chicago and tn te rschol.~sttc athlettc
victory over the New York
avg
no
g
Stnfrd
II 886 4791 5.4 38 435.5
Pittsburgh is at Denver
programs,
satd
the
Giants and a loss by either
7
129
18.4
Cart wright, S Fran
·
provisions
of
the
.
equal'
Green Qav at Los An2eles or
5
82 16.4
Scoring Off.
g pts avg Knight, Loyola
80 16.0
5
Oklahoma
II 440 40.0 Davis, Tenn St
46 15.3
Moncrief,
Ark
3
Nebraska
II 420 38.2
15.0
7
105
Garrett
,
Southern
Mich St
II 411 37.4
Mich
II 362 32.9
Team Offense
Clmsn
11 351 31.9
g pts avg
5 495 99.0
Tota!Def.
g plays yds avg td ydspg Loyola (Ill. )
3 297 99.0
Penn Sl
II 729 2243 3.1 10 203.9 Kentucky
3 295 98.3
ECarolina
II 720 2253 3.1 10 204.8 Nev-Las Vegas
6 568 98.0
Ball St
II 719 2333 3.2 7 212.1 New Mexico
7 673 96.1
Michigan
11 665 2372 3.6 10 21o.6 Southern
Team Defense
Tenn.St
11 689 2537 3.7 18 230.6
g pis avg
Drexel
3 156 52.0
RushingDef.
g car yds avg td ydspg
Fresno
St
6
321 53.5
Penn St
II 408 599 1.5 4 54.5
Marquette
4
220 55.0
So Cal
12 471 1096 2.3 4 91.3
Montana
6
335
55.6
Ariz St
11 494 1074 2.2 13 97.6
bidiana
6
339
56 .5
UT-Cht
11 463 1098 2.4 11 99.8
Average
Scoring
Margin
BallS!
11 472 1124 2.4 4 102.2
off del mar
95.8 64.8 31.0
Passing Del.
all cmp lnl yds tel ydspg Virginia Tech
99.0 70.0 29.0
Bos Coli
15&gt; 73 10 716 a 65.1 Kentucky
84.7 59.7 25.0
ECarolina
180 70 19 837 3 76.1 Arkansas
94.8 69.8 25.0
Miami (O)
213 85 15 1039 5 94.5 Mercer
DECORATOR COMPACT TABLE TV
82.3 58.0 24.3
Ark Sl
172 70 13 1054 3 95.8 Georgia Tech
Distinc
tively styled. Beau tifully finished in
Field
Goal
Percentage
Cincinnati
207 81 14 11154 II 95.8
simulated grain ed Ameri ca n Wal nut on top and
fg fga pel.
ends with met al he Silver color trim.
163 289 .564
Scoring Del.
g pis avg Virginia Tech
Cabinet size: 16 W' H, 26Y:!" W, 19:V4" D.
101 180 .561
Ball St '
II
82
7.5 Georgia
Dimens ions exc lude controls and antenna
Duke
153 276 .554
Mich
protrUSIOnS.
11 88 8.0
212 383 .554
Penn St
II
97
8.8 VUlanova
Furman
140 253 .553
Purdue
9.9
II 109
Free
Throw
Percentage
Clemson
II 116 10.5
It fla pet.
K IY08
43 .9 .878
Pcrf or mnncP proved
featu rf's for
Net Punting
pis ave. rt yds nelavg Georgia Tech
outstctncl i ng qun lit y a nd depend&lt;'lbilit y:
107 131 .617
Texas
72 43.4 21 129 41.7 Georgetown
100 Pet. So l id ·Stnte T i t ~n 160V Chass is
68 85 .800
Auburn
67 42.6 17 91 41.3 Oklahoma
Power scntury vo lf ape r equlfltinq
98 123 .797
systrm, uses less ener gy, br illi ant
Utah St
55 43.0 18 105 41.1 Mercer
c hromolcolor p1cturc tube, sol id st nte
110 139 .791
Utah
58 42.6 22 103 40.8 Fairfield 1
s ~pPr video ri'ing e tun ir19 sys i C'm, and
Rebound Margin
S Carol
61 42.0 14 76 40.8
Pictur e control
off del mar
56'.8 31.3 25.5
Pittsburgh
Arkansas ·
50.7 34.0 16.7
MISSION, Kan. (UPI)
NCAA Texas Christian
47.5 3l.7 15.8
The quality goes in before th'e name goes
Division I individual and team basketball Louisiana St
53.8 38.6 15.2
47.0 32.4 14.6
leaders through Dec. II:
Mississippi St
•

Longest NFL Campaign
will end this weekend

NCAA grid stats

I.
'

TWO STEELERS INJURED
PITTSBURGH ()JP.I J.~;-'Two members of 1'he
Pittsburgh
Steelers
linebacker Loren Toews and
defensive back Mike Wagner
7 will miss the' final game of
lhe 1978 season against the
Bronco~ in Denver Saturday .
Toews fractured his ankle
two weeks ago while Wagner
has 'a strained knee, a team

'

opportunity law would be best
achieved with "separate and
equal programs."
The alllletic directors also
approved
a
resolution
criticizing major league
baseball f&lt;r its Friday night
game telecasts, saying such
programs conflict willl high
school football games around
the nation.
Such baseball telecasts on
· Friday night "Impose a
detrimental effect on 'attendance and gate receipts," the
conventton delegates agreed .
The NIAAA also agreed to
caD for an end to aD-&lt;&gt;tar
gaq~es during the regular
academic year, saying such
aU.,star games can disrupt an
athlete's school work and
threaten his eligibility in both
high .cbool and college.

Chicago

Cubs

:•

,•·1'.•\

LOS ANGElES (IJPI)
Adrian Dantley, the Los An·
geles Lakers' high«oring
forward who suffered a
hyperextended righti knee
Dec. 3, will miss at least three
more games, doctors _.;said
Thursday.
Dantley injured llle kne'e in
a game against llle · New
Jersey Nets. The Lakers host
Seattle tonight lhen travel to
Phoenix for a Saturday night
game. Doctors had said llley
hoped Dantley would be
ready for . Sunday's ~arne
agamst Philadelphl)l but he
complained of sorenesS in the
knee Thursday and was
ordered not to play.

inflelde: -outf ielder
Rodney
Scot1 and
Jerry White to
,MQ~_tr eal for cen terfielder Sam
Me11as .
Li vi ngston University - Ap .
pointed Frank Nortn as head
footbal l coac h .

APPLIANCES

5

A
L
E

4 cy l. , 4 speed, ga s economy pl us, sh arp, natc hba ck .

1975 HONDA CIVIC CVCC ................. 12495
4 cy l. ,

4

dr .• w.=lgon, 4 speed .

1

1974 OLDS CUTlASS ....................... 2495
4 dr .. ajr , p.s .• p.b.
1

1974 FORD TORIN0 ......................... 1495
4 dr. wagon , air, p.s ., p.b .. auto.

1973 CHEVY CHEVELLE .••••••••••••••••••••. 11495
4 dr . wagon, V-B, auto., p.s .. p.b.

1973 HORNET SPORTABOUL ••••.•••••••• 11495
4 dr . wagon , 6 cyl., auto.. p.s ., air .

1973 FORD MAVERICK .................... '1295
2 dr ., auto., p.s., vinyl roof .

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO ............... 1295
1

4 dr., air, p.s., p.b.

•'TRUCKS"
1975 FORD CUSTOM ...................... _12895 .
Custom ,

'I• ton,

V-8, auto., p.s., p .b., LWB

1975 FORD RANGER ••••••••••• :........... '2495
F-100, V-8, auto., p.s., p.b., LWB

1974 FORD RANCHERO .................. '1995
GT, V-8, auto., p.s., p.b.

1

1974 DODGE CLUB CAB •••••••••••••••••• 1995
'h ton , v .a, auto .. p.s., p.b.

1974 CHM WV........................... 11295
4 cyl., 4 speed .
1

1950 FORD .........................;•.••••••. 495
31• ton , V-8, 4 speed

Rl EBEL'S USED CARS
See Roger Riebel
985-3345 or 667-3463
St . Rt .7

1 mile north
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

•

A~ ~ FM/Stere? FM Tuner~Amplifier features,S watts

mm1mum continuous RM S power !)er channel, from

100 to 15,000 Hz into 8 ohms with 1% or Ieos total
harmon ic distortion; T.uning Me~r:. Hi Filter and
Headphone Jack. Automat ic Re co rd Changer feartures Ceramic Cartridge with Diamond Stylus and
Cue Control. S-Track Recorder-Player has Au1omatic level Control and Mic Jacks. A, 8, A+ B

0
N
L

Spe~ker

Selector. Shown with Allegro 1000 Tuned-

Port Speake.rs. Simulated wood rcabinet, grained
Walnut finish.
' · ,.

TUNER &amp; AMPLIFIER ' · '

'169'

y

5

' !·

SPEAKER EXTRA

(11~11

nudge Jackson

1978 CHEVY CHEVETTE ................... 13295

on~

IS4020 '- •

NEW1979

Meigs girls

Dodie Chapman scored 26
points ·and the Meigs
Marauders girls blew an
early lead but came back to
subdue the host Jackson team
SO to 47 last night.
·
Meigs held a comfortable
32 to 23 lead at the half but
had fallen behind 40 to 38
after the third quarter.
Chapman then scored 10 of
!he final12 points for Meigs to
notch the win.
Coach Joy Bentley praised
Andrea Riggs and April King
for their fine assists during
the game and commended
the Ash girls, Sonia and Tonia
for bottling up Jackson's
high scoring Connolly.
The Meigs team hit 10 of 22
free throws for the margin of
victory but canned only 20 of
59 field goals. They controlled
the boards with 48 rebounds
to Jackson's 35.
Big Terri Wilson led Meigs
with 20 caroms while
Chapman puUed down 16.
Wilson also added II points.
Jackson placed three girls
in double figures, Brandt with
14, Jewell with 13 and Massay
with 12. The team hit 19 of 61
shots.
The ' Meigs reserves won
their first game handily with
a 27 to 7 win. The Meigs
defense held Jackson to no
points in the flrst quarter and
by half time the Marauders
had streaked to 13 to 3 lead.
Oliver led Meigs with 12
points and !he team canned 5
of 19 free throws. Other
scorers from Meigs were
Zerkle with 5, Chapman 2,
Woo dyard and DeBord 4
each.
Jackson made S of 12 foul
shots 'and iheir only scorers
were Perry with S and Reed
with 2.
The Meigs crew will play
Tuesday at home against
· Alexander at o:JO p.m .

[,?!!""' [

SoriH I lntegroted Stereo Syottm

INTEGRATED '
STEREO SYSTEMS. .
®

25" CONSOLE TV
ELECTRONIC VIDEO
GUARD TUNING SYSTEM

(,

Zenith's new lntegrilted Ster eo Sys tems hnve the· per ·
torm.:mce, the feat ures r~ nd th e look you wan t. Compare them
witn ;mybQdy's.

I

Because the VHF and UHF tuners are

electronic, th ey have no moving parts to

corrode, wear or cause picture problems.

7#1111'!1

~

I

·

Th e quality goes m before 1he name goeso~:

t•

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

12" DIAGONAL
The MANILLA • K120C - tdeat
sonal·size compact with full

~

.;

·. . · FRIDAY. DECEMBER 15,1971
-5:GO-Ster; Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Misler
Rogera ·Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle USMC ·
10; .Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15. '
5:»-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
·
Tyler Ml&gt;ore 10; Odd Couple 15.
•;oo-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33 .
6.»-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Frlerids 6; CBS News 8, 10; Ovei- Easy 20,33.
·. 7:GO-C~ou-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13, Muppet Show 8; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Consumer Survival Ktt 20; Big Blue
Marble 33.
7:»-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game4; $1 .98 Beauty
Show6; Family Feud 10; Bonkers 8; SIOO,OOO Name
That Tune 13; Pop Goes The Country 15; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33.
· .
.I :GO-Dlff'rent Strokes 3,A,15; Donnie &amp; Marie 6 13 ·
Wonder Woman 8,10; Washington Week in· Re~le;,
20,33.
1:»-Who's Watching The Kids? 3,15; Night Before
Christmas 4; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9:GO-Eddle C•ra Mysteries 3,4, 15; Incredible Hulk
1,10; Congressional Outlook 20,33.
9:30-Turnabout 20; Real People 33.
10:GO-Flylng High 8, 10; News 20; Great Per. formances 33.
10:»-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
·ll:GO-Newo 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavell 20; Soundotage 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carlon 3,4,15; Baretta 13; McGuffy
Lane In Concert 6; Gunsmoke a: Movie "Terror In
the Jungle" 10.
12:GO-Movfe "Three Secrets" 6; Monty Python ·33.
12:30-Juke-Box 8; 12:40-lronslde 13.
1:110-Midnlght Special 3,4,15; News 8; Movie "The
Eyes of Charlas Sand" 10.
1:.10-News 13; 2:30-News 3; 3:0D-Movle "The
·
Railway Children" 3; 5:GO-Movle "E very Day's A
Holiday" 3.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16,1978
6:GO-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:3o-Saturday Report 3;
Vegetable Soup 4; TV Classroom 8; U.S. Farm
Report 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
7:110-Go USA 3; Marlo &amp; the Magic Movie Macntne •;
Matters of Life· 6; Mr. Magoo 8; Public Polley
Forums 10; Animals, Animals, Animals 13.
7:30--cllftwood Ave. Kids 3: World of Survival 4;
.Dusty's Ti-eehouse ·6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Pink
Panther 13; Vagetabfe Soup 15.
1:110-Galaxy Goofups 3,4, 15; Scooby's All -Stars 6, 13;
Popeye 8, 10.
.
1:»-Fantasttc Four 3,4, 15; 9:GO-Godzllfa 3,4, 15;
Bugs Bunny-Road Runner B, 10.
9:30-Superfrlends 6,13 .
10:30-0affy Duck 3,15; Movie "Bowery Bombshell"
·4; Tarzan-Super-7 8,10.
11 :GO-Yogi's Space Race 3, 15; Fangface 13;
Vegetabl~ Soup 6.
11 :30-Little Rascals 4; Glgglesnort Hotel 6; Action
News for kids 13.
12:GO-Fabulous Funnies 3, 15; Weekend Special 6, 13;
Movie "Hell and High Water" 4; Space Academy
1,10.
12:30-Bay City Rollers3,15; American Bandstand 13;
PolntofVlew6; NFL Today a: lnTheKnow10.
1:GO-Blg Blue Marble 3; Bewitched 6; NFL Football
8,10; PTL Club 15; Oasis In Space 33.
1:»-Stu Aberdeen : Basketball 3; Pioneer Bowl 6,13;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
2;GO-College Baoketball 3; Movie "Terror byNight"
4; When The Boat Comes In 33.
3:oo-Movle "Adveriiuures of Sherlock Holmes" 4;
·
Cliffwood Ave.Kido 15; Movie "Mar joe" 33.
3:30-NFL '78 15.
4:GO-NFL Football 3,4,15; Movie "Baffled!" 8; Nash. ville On The Road 10.
4:»-To Be Announced 13; NFL Game of the Week 6 ;
Pop Goes The Country 10; Catch-33 33.
5:GO-Wide World of Sports 6, 13; Dolly 10; The Long
Se.lrch 20; Studio See 33.
5:30-Porter Wagoner 10; Free•tyle 33.
6:110-Gong Show 8; News 10; CrockeH's Victory
Garden 20; Over Easy 33.
6:»-ABC News 13; News 6; Porter Wagoner B; CBS
News 10: Ohio Journal20; Life Around Us 33.
7:GO-News 3; Lawrence Wetk 4, 13, 15; Hee Haw 6,8;
Bugs Bunny 10; Onedln Line 20; Sugar In The
Gourd33.
7:30-Abbott &amp; Costello 3; Please Stand By 10; College
Baokotball 33.
.
8:GO-Chlps 3,4,1'5; Welcome Back, KoHer 6, 13; Dr.
Stun 8, 10; Once Upon A Classic 20.
·
1:30-Carter Country 6, 13; Tiny Tree B, 10; Flndhorn
20.
9:GO-Lifeline 3,4, 15; Love Boat 6, 13; Movie " Who' tt
Save Our Children?" 8, 10.
9:..:-Glrl With The Incredible Feeling 20; World War
Jl; G. I. Diary 33. ·
·
·
. 10:90-Weekend3,4,15; Fantasy lsland6,13; Christmas
· All Around Us 33.
tO : 11)-()r:genfom 20 .
II:GO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Greaseband 33.
11: 15-ASC News 6.
11 :30-'S aturday Night Live 3,4,15; Movie "The Curse
·of the Doll J&gt;eople" 6; Movie "The Treasure of
ll'ancho Vlfta" 8; Movie "The Long Duel" 10; Movie
"Beware! The Blob" 13.
·
. 12:GO-Ripplng .Yarns 33. ·
· . \ :DO--Movie "The Last of the Powerseekers" 3; Movie

"L•ctv h;e" ....
1:05--Movle "House on Haunted Hill " 13.
2:.» -News 3; 2:35-ABC News 13.
3:GO-Movle "Did ' You Hear the One About the
: Traveling Saleslady?" 3.
.5:90--M'&gt;vle. "Gun Fury" 3.

qUality and solid - state re lt abili
Charcoal Brown co lor.

0

TELEVISION
.·VIEWING

i

1

,.

Traded

.

·-· ~

~

P!'!l»\!11

·

-,

i

the ~c Centr al
and
Denver · has .!llqn , !j~e . AFC
West, , but both..I clill\s .are
expecte,d to go all- OQ\- to win
the game.

Baseball

·

·l~

spokesman said.
·
The· Steele~s h!!,ve c)jllched

Sports Transactions
By United Press International
Thursday

9-The [)aUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Dec. 15, Im8
·· ~

~

$88

00

SHERIFF ' S SALE
For ,fhe 2JI'd of D ecember at
l 10 :00 A .M . on the Cour 1 House
steps .
·

NOTICE OF
. FOII!CLOSURI!

In The Court of
common Pleu,
·M•it' CountvL Ohio

NOTICE
oF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND

TAXES ,

IY

ACTION

IN

REM '
BY
COUNTY
TR'54SURER OF MEtGS
COUNTY , OHIO.

Public Notice is hereby
.;J\ten 1hllt on th.e 411:\ and 6th
day o• ·octoe..-r•. f97S., t he
County Trea·«}~ M•lgs
CoVft'ty, Ohltt,; ,, ~ a com .
PII
In '"•::..•...,
Com .
monintPtt•s
of
., . ..Gounty,
, for the
Oh,o , at Po
foreci011U'~
of liens tor
d e .1-t., Q u e n t
t a x e5,
nsessments, penalties , and
charges against certain real
property situated in such
County as de,cribed in said
comp laint .
Tt'le object of the action is to
ot)1ain from the courr a
judgment foreclosing the ta x
liens against such real estate
and order ing the sale of such
real estate for the satisfac ·
tion .of the tax liens thereon .
Such action is brought
aga inst the real property only
and no personal judgment
shall bll!' ·entered tt'lerein .
The permanent parcel
number ot toech parcel In cl uded in such action, the full
street address ·of the parcel , if
ava i labl e, a description of tr"le
parcel , a statement of the
amount
of
taxes,
assessments , penalties and
.charges due and' unpalt~ on
such parcel. ·and the name
and address of the last known
owner thereof , as suer"! ap.
pear on the general tax list,
all as more fully set forth in
the complaint, are as follows :
CST -0.4, Columbia Town·
ship, Meigs County , Ohio, Lot
No . 6, 20' w side of N iJ'2 , T . G.
Clay , address unknown ;
Bertha · Clay ,
addrus
unknown ; the unknown Mlrs,
devisen ,
legatees ,
act-.
mini st rators, executors, and
or assigns of Bertha Clay , If
deceased ; the unknown heirs,

deviseu .

legatees ,

ad-

ministrators, executors; and
or assigns of T. G . C.l ay, If
deceased: $113.07, Ser . No . 78

DLT 15.

.

.

SUT -01 , Sutton Township,
Meigs County. Ohio, . 5 . .41

acreslnNV:a Sec . 2,T.2 R.ll,

Ohio Company's PurChase,
Lewis Hudson, if living,
address
unknown ;
if
(tee eased, the unknown heir$,
devi sees,
legatees ,
ad ministrators executors end or
assi~ns of Lewis HudSon ; tht
unknown spouse if any of
Lewis Hudson ; Anple Hud son, if · liv in g, address
unknown; . If deceased, the
unknown heirs , deviiees ,
legatee'- administrators,
executors, and or assigns ot
Annie Hudson ; Dave Hudson,
lf living, address unknoWn; It
decened, the unknown heirs,
devisees,
legatees,
ad ·
m lnlstr•toTs, executors and
or asiigns of Dave Hudson ,
dec .• $2&amp;.00, Ser. No . 78-DL T

16 .

.

R·"!' -02, ' Rutland
Twp .,
Meigs County, Ohio, 2 acres,
10 rods, S.3, T . 6 R. 1.4, OhiO
Company's .
Purchase;
Rutland Township, Meigs
County, Ohio, 1 .acre, S . 73, T.
6, R. U, Ohio Company's
Purchue; Fred Pinkston, If
l ivin g , addr:•ss unknown ; if
deceased, the unknown h8frl,
dev i sees,

leQatees.

8d ·

mlnistrators, eKecutors, •net
Of assigns of Fred Pinkston ,
ctec .; Haliday Hysell, If
.,lving, ICSdress ~o~nknown ; Jf
decea•ed the Un1tnown he1r.,
devisees,
legatees , aCI -

mlnlstretorsl .executors aftct

cr assigns o.f Hi lid~ Hysell,
~;_c-- ~9 . 41 1 Ser. No. 71 D~T

SUT -02 i OVT-02, Sulton ·
Twp., Metts County, OhiO",

Oil, gu and other mJnersals,
EXCEPT . coal, underlying

100 acres more or less, In 160

acre Lot 1219, T. 2, R. 12, Ohio
Com,P4tny•s Purchasi ; Olive
·T wp., Meigs • C-ounty, Ohio ;
011, oas and ·other minerals

·underlying 95 A. In 5.29, T. 3,
R. 11, Ohio- Company's
Purchate ; The mining ln-

l~resiS

in ·60:A-In s. 29, T. 3,

~

11, Ohio . Company's , Purchase; 30 A ., S. 29, T. 3, ~. 11 ,
Ohio ComiMI,ny•s Purchase ;

10 A. S. 2f~ T. 3; R. 11, OhiO
Company..,. Purchaser ·70 A..,
S. 29, T ... 3, R. 11; Ohio Company's . . Purch.,-se, COAL
underiy•no 16 A., S. ·29, T. J,
R: . H, Ohio Company's
Purc.heae ;
EDNA
D.
CORYELL, II ttvlng, 2A30
C.henning Way , Berkley ,
Ca lit .; IP deceased , the
unknown hetrs, devl,eel ,
leg·atees , adm lnistrators and
or assigns of Edna Coryell,
dec. ; the unknown spouse If
any of Edna Corytll; B. F.
Putnam, If living , whose last
known address Is M.,ietta ,
Ohio ; If deceased. the
unknown heirs , devisees,
legatees, edm lnistr•tors ,
executors and or assigns of B.
F. Putnam, dec. : RUDOLPH
W GLASNER, II living,
Unknown; · If
de•ce•ISO•d, the unknown heirs,
• legatees. adexecutors and

of Rudolph w .
JOHN D.

, dec . ;

lrliii:liiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiil~r~~~~~"-

if deceased, the

heirs, devisees,

· administrators,
living. addrtss
and or assignS of

de ., S-477.09,
DL T 1•1 ;
DL T t;n

vttta

.I

Early American styled console. Bt!autHul

Maple wood-grained finish applied to durable

• 100% Solid-State Titan• Chaools
• Power Sentry Voltage Regutattng
Syotem
• Chroma color Picture Tube

I

I

:\ • , 1. r

VHF/UHF Deluxe Spotltto Panel

.

_
....... ...__
-..... ....

eM . ronu"t A"J'~ '1E~Wiur,rov1• ... ,..,~-.c~

k

~··'61!4'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

the

d~vlsees,

· ~atees , administrators tind
Jr ISSJgns ot Reva Sm ith; tP!e
..mknown spouse, If anv , of
R~ve Smith, name and ad ·
dress unknown . HAROLD
PHILLIPS , whose last known
address Is Merion , Ohio, It
liv jng ; it dec us'e d , th e
unknown heirs, devisees,

ACROSS
l "Nor iron
bars a - "
SGerman
composer
8 Racer
of fable
9 Shoe style
13 Element
in raisins
14 Distillery

legatees, administrators and

or assigns of Harold Phillips ;
the unknown spouse, if any, of
Harold Philips. name and
address unknown .
DALE
PHELPS, whose lest known
address is At . 1, Waynesburg ,
Pa ., if living ; if deceased , the
unknown he i rs, dev i sees ,
lf9atees, adm inlstrators, and
or assigns of Dale Phelps; the
unknown spouse, If any, of
refuse
Dale Phelps , name and ad ·
IS
This
instant
dress unknown. BESSIE
SIDERS. whosr last known 16 In name only
address Is A utlend , Ohio, tf
living ; If deceased , the 17 Quayle
unknown heirs. dtvlsees,
legate-es. ldmlnlstrators end • or Quinn
or essivns of Bessie Siders, 19 Golf hall's
the unknown spouse, If any, Of
position
Beaslt Siders.. name and

adrets .unknawn ; ELVIRA 20 French
BAR A:, Wh'OM. last known
river
address Ia La
It, Qhlo, lf
llvino; If .1 ~ • d the 21 Mrs.
unknown Hefh, •
e•s,

teoeten, ad-.ttattn•.

35 Director
Fritz
36 He sat in
the corner
37 Pisa's nver
38 Actress,
- Williams
39 Coup d' DOWN
dinnerware

2 Composer

·---·. ..........

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

...~-

RIDENOUR
915-3307 .

-949-2020

-

j

'

'

!

, .. II(

Copland
3 Adhere
4 Ending for
velvet
5 Mountainous
n.
6 Plunder
21 " Rub out "
7 Armadillo
22 Sumptuous
10 Delapidated 23 Accessible

adre-s unknown . ...,.. .• LEN
BARL.ES, whoSe lasf.,.wn 24 Like some

1J, Lots 12• ond 125. Aloo lot
20 x 80 II. ROGER DAVID ·
sON, P . 0 . Box· 54, Pomeroy,
Onto,
A5769 ;
CLARA
DAVIDSON, it ltvtng , who..
last known . adctrfts Is c-o
Pauline Harless, 100 ·Maple
Clearwater, Florida
If dtc:talld, th•
unknown heirs, dtYIIttl,
I~~Qatees , admlnlstraton and
or assigns of Clare DaVIdSOn,
Strett.

J3 Ul;

EII"'I!ST
W.
DAVIDSON, o~a . RINK

doc. ;

DAVIDSON, if llvlnQ',: WhOII!

liSt known adOrell·· .Is 113
Ebene.zer Street, Pomeroy,
01\le ~5769,; If dtc.oooed, the
un.k·nown heirs. devisees,

roasts
25 Copycat
26 Bluenose
27 Fido's
friend
28 Spanish
province
31 Have
handed
down
33 With
" favor,"
senor's
" please"
31 The sound
that
surrounds

leg·a,t Hs. edminlstraors and
or nslgns of Ernest W.
Oavlda~n • . . eke
Rlrtk
Davidson, deceased; tne
unknown 'heirs, dtvlse•s ,
1119at•es, admlnlstntors, and
or assigns of CATHiiRINE

EBERSBACH, dtctnl&lt;l; the

uhkno~n

spoull, If any, ot .
Roger Davldton, whose name
and addrtH ere unknown ;
the unknown spouse, if any, of
Catherine lbnsbach, whose
name
1nd ec:tOresi Is
unknown ., 'UJ6.01.
Any person owning or
clelmln9 any r'lght, title or
interest l.n . or· lltn upon, any
parcel of real ,.roperty above
listed may fflt an 1n1w.r In
tuch ectkl&lt;n setting for'th the
nature end amount of lnterur
ownea or claimed and anv
d•fenll or objection to . the
foreclosure. Suth ·answer
must be filed in ft'le office or
the vndtrttoned Clerk of
CoUr1, eRG • copy ' ' thereof
served on 'the County
Prosecutor on or ttdOre t.ne
21st da:Y ...of N,..ember, . 1971.

t.f no·:anMtollr H;JIIod on or
bolq;.o · the ·\ late ,)peclnod "'
the .tasl .day. lOr flllno an-

answer, ·a ludoment of
toreci'&gt;A.u.r:.• wl I be ·takera by
deteuft
fQ any parcel listed .
in' th~ complalr\t•.~s to which
no anaw~~r has bftlin flied . Any
parcel · a• to . which a
torecloswre · I&amp;· t•kert

as.

-.Y

def.o •ll stooii'N -

tor' lho .
n tlsfecttol1· fSf ftlt t•xH,
'P•naltles,
charges, 1nct. ewts tncu.t"M
in tM rorectwvre rt'llt are
assessme'n1t,

au• and unr,eld.

.

At anr t m• .,..... to rt\1
1111"' o ·an Mt&lt;V el confirmation ot 'Hie, Mtr .Wner
or llenhoJ.d er of a percetllsted
In ttlt'eo~alht'mav rectHm

such ~tarctt bV tendering to
the County Tr .. surtr th•
•mount
Of
texts.
asse~smen1a, ·penaltlel, •nd
charots ct.u. •l"'d unpaid on
suc:h percel; together with all
costs which h&amp;ve ..been In ·

cLH"red In

any

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

X PH

L M K B

WDWQKWYKH
EQMT

QG

• • t-

'·

.•

~~~sz~~~~~~------,.~~~~~--BaU.ua-.• u.. ~;~;_.;_.t ..t*"t!if..l..t~IIMtBitiMIBil*"tiMIBatBatiMIIMIIMIBoiiMIIII~~;

.. '

•BILLFOLDS
•MOCCASINS
•PURSES
•SADDLES
•WESTERN FELT HATS
•LAMPS Reg. '29" Sale '24"
•WESTERN FRINGED COATS
•BELTS
•BUCKLES
•DINGO • ACME BOOTS
•BREYER ANIMAL
ACCESSORIES
•CLOCKS
•SLEDS

it :

Christmas Specials

ON ALL
SIZES
OF
AQUARIUMS

WCVFJHMX

EQXP
XL

RFX

WM
LM

HWGX

MODERN SUPPLY

BLFC

·~ J I971:1 King Features Syndicate. Inc .

399 W. Main Street 992 -2164
Pomeroy , 0 .
The Store With "All Kinds of St ulf"
For Pels - Stables - Large and Small
Animals . Lawns- Gardens.

- PUBLIC NOTICE D i ana K . We l ls. whose
r" esi den ce is unknown , but
whose last known addr"ess
was Bo x 22 , Long Bo tt om,
Ohio , wi ll take notice th ai on
the 141 h day o f November.
1978. tnat Ralph Wells.
Plaint iff , fil ed his Compl aint
against her i n tne Common
Plea s Court ot Meigs County ,
Ohio , Case No . 17024 pl'aying
for divo rce upon the gr ou nd s
o f gr"oss neg l ect q t duty , tor
cus tody o t the two m in or
ch ild ren, tor sett lement o f
pr op erty rig h ts, an d will
ful'l her tak e noti ce tha t thi S
cause c an be n ea rd at any
tim e fol low ing twenty eight
days from tM date of the la st
publ ica ti on of this notice and
that th e last publication will
be made on tne 22nd d ay of

December . 1976 .
Larr y E . Spencer,
Clerk. of Court
Meigs County , Ohio
( 11 ) 17, 74, ( 12) 1. 8, 15, 22 , 61C

AT THE

MEIGS INN

GET YOUR FREE TICKETS AT
GOLD STAR STORES. Drawing lor
gilt certificates held each day
continuing thru Saturday , Dec. 23.
Tickets are Free, no purchase
necessary .

SPONSORS
lFall&gt;ric Shop
11110
''
0 mer o v·

8 en

5tifflers
Chapman Shoes
New York Clothing
House
Meigs Inn
Pomeroy
Flower

Sat . 7:30 lit 4o00 P.M.

CHEsTER, 0.
985-3301

3 Piece Band from
Parkenburg. W. Va.

Doug's Marine Sales
&amp; Service
Walter Grueser
Ewing
Funeral
Home

Royal Crown Cola
Dale C. Warner Ins.

Cleland Realty
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
Fa rm,rs Bank
RtCHAIID
wh :) U tast

Elberlelds
Powell's Super Vatu
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy
Moores Store
krogers

Landmark
Francis Florist
Simons Pick-A-Pair
Excelsior Oil Co.
Pomerov
National

Bank
Hartley's Shoes
Kiddie Shoppe
Elliott Appliance II
Pomeroy

Pastry

Shop

CONTRIBUTORS

Teaford Realty
Reuter-Bragan
Insurance

1nd adctreu

1.25 to 15.00

ON

Shor

Hours

1

10% DISCOUNT

Marguerite's Shoes
Goess lers
Jewelry

WHkdays 7:JV-s :ov P .M .

H ANG ING BASKETS 4" fo

10''

AT BIG SAVINGS

L DHCU L WX . - S WJ HG
C.
K L E HK K
Yesterday's Cryploquote: THE FREE WORLD MUST NOW
PROVE ITSELF WORTHY OF ITS OWN PAST.-D.D.
EISENHOWER

APPEARING
WEDS., THURS.,
FRI. &amp; SAT.

Syrilcu se , 0 .

Potted Poinsettas
Sl.OO to $6 . 50
Hanging Poinsettias
Tubs, 30 plu s bloom s
$10.00
Foliag e Plants
3" to 10 "
soc to ss.oo

CRYPTOQUOTES

proceeding

inStltutiCI against such parcel
unclar .Section 5721.11 of the
Revtsed Code . Upon the f111ng
of any ~ry of confirmation

~776

One letter simply stands for another. In t his sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Sin gle letters.
apostrophes, the len gth and format ion of the wo rds are all
hints. Each dJy the code le tters are different.

with
Deltex Faucets-

BAUM TRUE VALU

RACINE, 0.

28·Von Stroheim film
29 " La - E
Mobile"
30 Patois
321rish river
35 New Gutin&lt;,al
port

K&amp; C Jewelers
Crow ' s
Family
Restaurant
G&amp;J Auto Parts

SEE US.1J'ODA Y
-\

26 Cloister

Franklin

Colo.ual white
or. Mediterranean Oak.
., I

24 Their kid

Malbin
12 Peruse anew
16 Be restless
at night
18 Yesterday :

Nelson 's Drug Store

. C!wose From
Two Styles.

_.._ . ~

II Soprano

or Ill ions ot.;..W.tre ..,.,.
unknown SP.oV.: M. ~~ vt 22 Theater
e..lra . eol-r' ~~~~· -end
boxes

address Is Hamden, Ohto. If
·living; · if dec•aHd', the
unknoWn heln, devIsees,
legate.,s, adfn~nlstrators anct
or asllgns of Helen Berles ,
the unknown spouse,lf any, of
Heten Barles, name and
addrtss unk.nown ., S11.83;
. S.r. No . 71 OLT 19 . .
P\I -G2, Villagt of Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, T. 2. R.

'Hubbard's Greenhouse
y~ ·,

Yesterday rs Answer

Robertson

d

income toward a monthly ·
ren t of $310.

I

1 Flne

.L
y

"'"•

........................
...___.... ... .. .

~~ ~--· · .\IOlTIJO"H:(JH!&gt;tH ~~(II A

.,_,
.,. ... ..... ....

TV&amp;APPLIANCE
&amp;OmEGAS '

CHESTER, O.

decund,

N

"

· ·-~-··

Choose Zenith for greater satisfaction

it

0

One-Knob VHF and UHF

Channel Selector
• Picture Control
• Automatic Fine-tuning Control

living ;

unknown Ple l rs ,

the dcparunent discovered
the housing authorit y h~d not
advertised t he housing
project in minority areas or
with falr housin g groups, as it
had promised .
Robert J . Fitzgerald,
director of the housing
authority, said minority
families in Berea will be
contacted to fulfill HUD's
order . The housing authority
has until Dec. 31 to find more
minority applicants.
HUD will subsidize r ents in
the apartment, with tenants
paying 25 percent of their

MINORITY APPLICANTS
&lt;XJLUMBUS iUP I) - The
state ))eparlment of Housing
lnterut In, or lien · upon, arrv
and Urban Development has
such parcel attall bt fort'i'W
barred and forectoatd of any ordered the Cuyahoga Metsuctt right, title, Intern. In, ·
Hen - n . and eny ."utty &lt;tf ropolit.-.n ·Housing Authority
redemption In, su~::h parcet..
to find more minority
LA.RY • • S~INC••
applicants
fo r a 180-unit
Cttrk •• Court of
c....•anPt.aa apartment building for the
ly: Ma;lellla Merrlson, elderly to open Jan. I in
Deputy Clerk
Berea.
Mtllll. CAIIJth, Oft II_
( 11) 27, (12} " · 11 , Jtc
HUD's directive came after

Vanity &amp; .Top .
Conibination

·'

The CHADWICK • K25l8M
wood products on top and ends with selec t
hardwood solids lrami ng top. Wrap-around gallery,
front and bracket laet of simulated wood m
matc hi,ng tin lsh. Concealed casters.

of Ule, ther._ Sf\1111 be no
further equltv of ractem~ttlon .
Any
9trlon
tn•rt•fter
cJ•Imlng eny right, title anQ

M.now'\ ldaress is Ga1taw1y
Oh io, f llvin~ ; It .atcusea :
the unknown he-lrs. devlsen.
le&lt;tattU, adm i nistrators and
or usi~ma of ~ ic,ara Den smore : tt'le unknown spouse,
if lf'1y , of Ri chard C~nsmore ,
n~me and address unknown .
FLOSSIE PHILLIPS , whose
last known address is Logan ,
Or"! iO, if living , it dece ased the
unknown heirs; devisees .
legaten , adminlstntors end
or assigns of Flossie Phillips ,
tl"!e unknown spouse. If any of
Flossie Ph ill ips , name and
address un.,nown . REVA
SMITH , wP!ose last known
addren Is Logan , O"lo, If

Athens
County
Savings &amp; Loan

Pomeroy Motor Co.
Kingsbury
Home

Sales
Kyle Atten
Don Mullen
J&amp;R Sport Shop
Ohio Valley Laundry
Smith Nelson Motors
V, D. Edwards
Ohio
Vall ey
Plumbing
Davis Insurance
Carter Plumbing
Jones Boys

�MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F. FuHz, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2101
Pomeroy
TRINITY CHURCH, Rev W. H
Pemn , pastor Bob Buck , Sunday
school supt Church School , q 15
o .m , worsh1p serv1ce , 10 30 o .m

Cho•r rehearsal , Tuesdov. 7 30
p.m

under d•rectlon of Ahce

Nease.
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Corner Unton and
Mulberry Rev Clyde V Hender son, pastor Su nday school , 9 30
o m G le n McClung , supt , morn mg worsh ip , 10 30 a m ., evenmg
serv•ce. 7 30: m•d-week serv•ce,
Wednesday 7 JO p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH 326 E Mo1n St , Pomeroy The
Rev Robert 8 Graves rector
Sunday serv1ces , 11 q m ITIOrr)tng
prayer (Ho ly Communton ftrsl

Sunday of each month) and ser
man . Chu rch church school end
nurse r ~ core provtded CoHee
hour '" port sh house fo llowmg
the S&amp;PIIC8
PO MEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST,

2 12 W Main St.John McArthur .
pastor 81ble school 9 30 a m
mornmg worshtp 10 30 a m
Youth meetings 6 30 p m , even
mg worsh•p 7 30 Wednesday
ntght pray er meetmg and B•ble
st udy , 7 30 p . m
THE SALVATION ARMY 115
Butternut Ave , Pomeroy Envoy
and Mrs Ray W•mng , offtcen In
charge
Sunday -holtness
n1eet.ng, lO a m Sunday School
10 30 am Sunday school leader ,
YPSM Elo1se Adams , 1 30 p.m ,
meeting , vauous
sal v atton
speakers and mus• c spec1als
Thursdoy- 10 o .m to 2 p m
Lod1eS Home League all women
mv1ted . 7 30 p m prayer meet1ng
and Bib le study, Bob Estep ,
leoder
Rev
N09l
Herman ,
teacher
BURLINGTON 50UTHERN BAP
TIS T CHAPEL Route 1 ShadePastor Bobby Elk1ns
Sunday
school S p m , Sunday worship
5 45 p m Wednesday prayer servtce 7 30 p.m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH
OF CHRIST, 200 W. Mom Sr .. Jerry
Paul. mm ts ter , phone 9fl2· 7bb6
Conservat1ve non -Instrumental
Sunday worship 10 o m , 81ble
study, 11 o .m worsh1p , 6 p .m
W9dnesday Bible study , 7 p m .
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH,
Rev . Ro lph Smtih
pastor Sunday school. 9 30 a m
Mrs Wor ley Froncts super•ntendent Preochmg servtces first &amp;
thtrd Sundays fol lowmg Sundov
School
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preachmg 9 30 a m .. f.rst and second Sundays of each mont h
th.rd and tourth Sundays each
month , worship serv1ce at 7 30
p m
Wednesday evemngs at
7 30. Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST ,
Mulberry Hetght s Rood Pomeroy
Pastor . A lbert D•ttes Sabbath
Sc hoo l Supertntendent , R1to
White Sabbath School , Saturday
afternoon at 2·00, wtth Worshtp
Service followmg at 3 15
RUTLAND
FIRST
BAPTIST
CHUR04 ~
S1ster
Har nett
Worner Supt Sunday School ,
9 30 a m
morn1ng wor shtp
10 4S o m
THE HILAND CHAPEL , George
Casto , pastor. Sunday School
9 30 a.m evemng worshtp 7 30
Thursday evenmg prayer servtce

7 30p m
POMEROY
FIR ST
BAPTIST
Do\lid Mann , mmtster W•ll1om
Watson, Sunday school supt Sunday school , 9·30 am , mornmg
worshtp 10 30 a.m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 262
Mulberry Ave., Pomer oy. Pa ul J
Whtte Pastor Gory Basham Sun
day school supt Sunday schoo l
9 30 o m , morn1 ng worshtp ,
10·30, eventng worship , 6 30 p m
Mtdweek prayer servt ce 7 30

pm.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER
Dexter Rd , longsvtlle Ohto, Rev
Clyde Ferrell , Pastor
Sunday
School
11
a m
Saturday
pre ochmg servtces 7 30 p.m
Wednesday e vemng Btble study
ot 730p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH
Ba1ley Run Rood , Rev Emm~tft
Rawson , pastor. Handley Dunn ,
sup t Sunday sc hool, 10 am Sun
du y cve nmg servtee 7 30. Btble
tef · h• g 7 30 p m Thursday
t.. ' l · VILLE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Roger C Turner, pastor
Sundav school , 9 30 am Sundav
morn tng worshtp , 10 30, Sundav
evemng se rvtce 7 30.
MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION ,
Lawrence Man ley, pastor, Mrs.
Ru $Sell Young , Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9 30 o m
Even1ng worshtp 7 30 Wednesday prayer meetmg 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
RacineRev. W H Lykins ,
pastor. Morntng worsh•p 9' ;45
o .m Sunday school 10 45 o m ..
evemng worship ,?.. Tuesday.. 7 30
p m
lodtes prayer meellng.
Wed nesday, 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST ,
Corner Stxth and Palmer, the Rev .
Mark McClung , Sunday school,
am ,
Don
Wil son ,
9 · 15
superintendent
Lacy
Borton
asst . supt. Morntng Wors h•p
10 15om Yo uth meehng, 6 p m
f"venmg worship , 7 30 p m
Wedn~tsdoy ntght Bible study and
prayer service, 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mod dlepar l , Sth and Main , George
Glaze. mtntster, Mtke Gerlach
supenntendent . Terry Yankey ,
youth m1n1ster Bible school, 9 30
om
morning wonh1p
10 30
o .m , evening w orsh1p , 7 30
prover ser vice, 7 p m Wednas ·
day.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev. Jtm Broome
pastor, Btll Whtte , Sunday sc hool
supt Sundoy sc hool 9 30 o m
morning wcnhtp, 10 30 o.m
Sunday evangeliStiC meetmg ,
7 00 p ."n . Prayer meettng
Wednudoy
7
p m
UNITED
PR ES BYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY
Dwight L Zovltz, dir&amp;etor
HARRISONVIllE
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev . Ernest
Strtc:klln , pastor Sunday church
school , 9 30 o .m . Mrs Hamer
lee, supt , morning worship

10.30.
MIDDLEPORT , Sunday school ,

9.30a .m., Richard Vaughan . supt
Morning worship , 10.30
SYRACUSE , Morning worship , 9
om , Sunday sc tiool. lOam Mr1
•
Sampson Hall , supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD,
Rev Bobbv Porter , pastor. Sun·
• doy school, 10 o .m . Suadoy war·
I

shtp, 11 a m
Sunday e'!entng
servtca, 7 p m Wednesday FofTU ·
ly Troung Hour 7 p m Wedne sday
worsh1p ser\ltCe 7 :JO p m
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH
Near l ong Boltom l:dsel Hart
pastor Sunday school 10 am
Church
7 30 p m
prayer
meet1ng, 7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAl
Th ird A11e , the Re11 W1ll tam Kntt
tel , pas tor Rona ld Dugan Sun
day School Supt Cla sses for all
ages eventng ser\1'1ce 7 30 Btble
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
vo uth serv1ces Fnday , 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BA P
TI ST , Corner Ash and Plum , Noel
Herrman pastor Saturday even
Sunday
•ng service 7 30 p m
School 10·30 am
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARI SH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robert T, Bumgarner ,
Dtrector
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev James Corb1t1
POMEROY
wors h1p serv•ce
9 1S o m Sunday sc hool . 10 30
a m , Re11
Robert McGee ,
mintster
ENTERPRISE , Worship 9 o m
Church School 10 am
ROCK SPRINGS Worshtp 10
om
Church Schoo l 9 I So m
UMYFb 30p m
fLATWOODS , Worsh1p, 11 o m
Church School10 o m
MIDDLEPORT CL USTER
Rev Rober1 Bumgarner
HEATH, Robert Bumgarner
Pa stor
Worshtp 10 30 a m
Church School 9 30 a m UMVF b

&amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

t\
v

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Complete
Automotive
Service
212 E. Main Street

Middleport, Ohio

992 -3785,

These Messages

Locust &amp;
992·9911

Of Our Religious Heritage

Attend The Church .•

of Your Choice
This Sunday
RACINE
PLANING

We Fill Doctors'
PrescrtptJons

9'12-2955
Pomeroy

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:
t

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

fri&amp;AN VOU'L~
NfVEoR SHAPE'
Uf'l HOOK· NOS&amp;;
THERE BY L.E'Tlll&gt;IG
THe 805"N BEAT

SUNO.CO
SERVICE
CENTERS

143 S. Thord
Middleport
Ph. 992-7155

Hl5

W. Main
992·9962

&amp;~AIN5 our;
CAPTAIN~

THIS SWAS'S A
Hll~l&gt; CASE-! HE
PI':IDES HIMSELF ON
HANGIN6 TOUI!&gt;H: THE
MORE YOU KNOCK HIM
PDWt.l, THE MEAN!OI&lt;:
Hf:'~~

'IOU KNOW A
&amp;ETT&amp;ft. WAY
T' l!loRE-AK
HIM""

TOO RI6HT I DO , CAPTA IN:
5E~TE~CE HIM TO Sci&lt;:VE
AS M~ fii!R~ONIIL MAII&gt;I GU ARA~TEE llL i!IReAK
~15 SPIRIT

MAKE HIM ~OUP.

PERSOt.IAL MAID,
E-Ht ,, YOU SURE
~OU KNO W WHAT
YOU'RE DOIN&lt;H

DON'T QUcS.TION

LEAVE HIM TO

M'l O I&lt;DSRS ,YQU

ME, CA PTAIN~
I ' LL SHOW YOU
IN HAT l MfiAN:

HOOK · NOSIOD
LU13BEI'l-:

5ET UP!

_P:. I. PAULEY,
AGENT

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

Nationwide Ins, Co.
of Columbus, 0.
804 W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

Ph. 949-9130

RACINE
FOOD MARKET
The Store
With A Heart
Racine

Ph, 949-2626

Ridenour
TV &amp; Appliance
Gas Service

2 Convenient
Markets

1dway Ma!k_e!

Bob's Market

pm
Rutland -Salem Center Charge
RUTLAND , W1 lbu r H1lt . Pastor
Worsh1p 10 30 o m Church School
9 30 o .m
SALEM CENTER Churc h School
9 45o m worship 9a m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Har11ey Koch , Jr
ASBURY , Worsh1p 11 o m
Church School 9 50 o.m UMW
ftrst Tu esday B•ble St'udy Th urs
7 30 p m.
FOREST RUN , Worsh1p 9 am
Church School 10 a m
MINERSVILLE , Worsh1p 10 am .
Church School9 a.m.
SYRACUSE , Church School 9·00
om . Worshtp servtce 7 30 p.m
SOUTHERN ClUSTER
Rev Dav1d Horns
Cluster leader
Rev Steven Wtlson
Fl orance Smith
Hilton Wolfe
Assoc totes
BETHANY (Dorcas) Worshtp
9 00 o m Church School 10 00

om
CARMEL Chruch School 9 30
a.m Wonh1p 10 30 am 2nd and
,.,h Sundays .
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School
9 30 o.tn Worshtp 7 30 p m 1st
and Jrd Sundays Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fellowship
supper flfsl Saturday 6 p m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m .
EAST LETART , Chruch School 9
a m . Worship servtce 10 o m
Prayer meettng 7 30 p .m
Wednesday UMW fi r st Tuesday
7 30p m
RACINE WEILEYAN - Sunday
school 10 o m ., worsh tp, II a m
Cho.r proct1ce , Thursday , B p m
LETART FALLS- Church ~hool
10 a m Worship serv1ce 9 a.m .
MORNING STAR , Worshtp 9 30
a m , Church School 10 30 om
M1d ·Week Serv1ce Wednesday 8
p m.
MORSE CHAPEL, Worshp 11
o m Church School 9 30 a m
PORTLAND . Worship 7 30 p m .
Church School9 30 o m
SU TTON . Church School 9 30
a m . Worsh•p 1st and 3rd Sundays
1030om.
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev R1chard W Thomas
Pastor
Du ane Sydenstrtcker
John W Douglas
Charles Oom•gon
Associates
JOPPA, Worship 9 00 am
Church SchoollO 00 a m
CHESTER
Worsh1p 9 a m
Church School 10 a m Bibl e
Studv . Wednesdovs . 7 30 p m
(Commumon firs t Sunday each
month)
LONG BOTTOM , Sunday School
ot 9 30 a m Even•ng Worsh tp at
7 .30 p m Thu rs day Btble Stud y,
730 p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 30
am Morning Wors h1p 10 30 a m
Evenmg Worshp 7.30 p.m B1ble
Study Wednesday s at 7 30 p m .
AlFRED , Sunday School of 9 45
o m Morning Worsh tp ol 11 o m
Wednesday
N1ght
Prayer
Meeting , 7 30 p m
ST . PAUL , (Tu ppers Plotns)
Sunday School 9 00 a m Morn tn g
Worship at 10 00 am Monday
N tght Bible Study 7 30 p m
Un tied Methodist Women second
Wednesday of each month, 1 30
p.m .
SOUTH BETHEL (Solver Rodge)
Sunday School 9 00 a m Mornmg
Woshlp 10 00 a m Wednesday Bt·
bl e Studv . 7 30p m
TUPPERS PLAINS, W ors htp 9
a m Church School10 am
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, ser vt ces each Sunday 9 30 o m
George P1ckens
pastor wtth
preachmg on lint and thtrd Sun:
day of month Oltver Swo.n , Supt
HOBSON CH RI STIAN UNION ,
Rev Keith Ebl.n , pos tor Su ndov
-5chool , 9 30 a.m
leonard
Gil more, firs t elder , evem ng ser
vtce. 7.30 p.m Wednesday prayer
meettng 7 30 p m
BEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH
OF CHRIST
Duane Worden ,
minister Btbl e class 9 30 a m .,
morning w orship, 10 30 o m .,
evening
worship , 6 30 p m .
Wednesday Btbl e study 6 30 f) m
N EW STIVERSVIllE COMMUNITY Chu rch, Sunday Schoo l ser·
vtce , 9 .. 5 a m Worsh1p serv1ce,
10:30. Evongel•st tc Ser111Ce, 7 30
p .m .
Wednesday ,
Prayer
meettng , 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Pom eroy- Horn son v lll e
Rd ,
Robert Pu r t ell, pastor. Bill
McElroy , Sunday school supt Sunday school , 9 30 a m ., morning
worship end ccmmun1on . 10:30
a.m .. Sunday worship serv tce . 7
p.m Wednesdar. evening prayer
mee ting and Bib e study , 7 p m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Pine Grove The Rev William
M1ddleawarth , Pastor
Church
service' 9 30 a m Sunday Schoof
10:30 om .
BRADBUR Y
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST Mr Donald Rol ev . pastor
'Sunday sc hool , 9 30 om . war·
ship ser11ice . 10 30 om .. Sunday

ELLlOTI
APPLIANCE II

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-PRESTO!-WHAMO!
YEAH, FUN JAB '
TUIS GU'(

DOUG'S
MARINE
SALES &amp; li;j:Al~ln

THOUGHT

PIZZA SHACK

AH "'SO 'IOU

!HOUGH! TO SHOUt.

I

THE L11 HE PRINCESS
BY f O UCHIN,G

NEfDE D A
SPA NKif'IG ,.

Eat In or
Carry OUI
126 E . Main

HER J

E H~

pomeroy

Reuter-Brogan

Insurance
Services
214 E. Main
992·S13D Pomeroy

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.
Deull Tractors, New Holland
Farm Mochlnery
Spring Ave . 9925101
Pomeroy

Wcd n esli&lt;~y

I Jnhn
I I 26
T hu rsduy

I Joh n
J 1- 10
Fn~ ·'l

I Jl,hn

] 1 1-24
S&lt;tlurday
I Joh n
4 7- 2 1

Attend The Church
of Your Choi.ce
This Sunday.

•
Baubles hangi ng from a tree . rainbow colors sbimng bright . ..
muSic wafl ing lhrough I he house, tell mg tales of Rudolf or promising that
Santa Claus will be coming to town. Frantic last mmute shopping,
sctt lmg for second best for some of the people on the li st because it is so
Ime m the day
Somet imes 1t seems a long way from Bethlehem
There' s nuthmg wrong w1th celebrating Christmas. True, the
build up is commercial, yet there' s more good than bad m the tree
ornament s and lhe Chn stmas records and even the last minute gtfts.
But , t1" a long way from Bethlehem.
Get back some of the basic spmt this Christmas. Remember lhe
Manger, the Star tn the East. and the three W1se Men who traveled by its
li ght ' to see the SaV1our &lt;;elebrate at least part of Christmas in church

VIRGII._B,
TEAFORD SR.
216 S. . second

Pomeroy
9'12-332S

1f 40u' d brouqht 1t 1n last June

r"tired Mister

when l asl&lt;.ed 40u to. you'd have
saved about

Walt! He don't. have
much t' do!

qifts
last

Don Thomoson Ford, Inc.

June

4615. Third, Middleport

l saved

992-llf&amp;

$S9.45

Cable TV Systems, Inc:

at
toda4's
prices!
"' "'"..,.
' " , . , ....

Attend The Church

Weddmgs
Chester 985-4155

ro

GIVE THE FASH ION

THE DAILY
'
SENTINEL
Bakers of

Middleport·
Pomeroy, 0.

Good Bread

,w_

MARK V STORE

Middleport
4·1~

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

Locust

992-3093

Middlepor1

This

BORRY I DIDN 'T GIVE YOU
A CHANCE ID BREAK THE

ir'"'m17 NEW5 YOUR.SELF1
BUT I WAS ElATED

BUSINESS ANOTHER
TRY!

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
Aertal -Schools-

TOLD Me YOU WANT

This Sunday

General Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

Professional Service .

Of Your Choice
WEND~ G~NDMA JUST

Groceries-

•,

ABOUT JANIE:
COMING BACK ...
AND...

IT'5 OKAY1

MOM.YOU
HAD NO
WAY OF

KNONIN6.

IT!;, JUST THAT I THOUGHT YOU'D 13E
PLEASEO THAT I fiNALLY
CAME 10 MY &amp;ENSES .
WANT TO FOLLOW IN
YOUR FOOTSTEPS ...

t

t

..... .

r:::======:q;;:;:=====Ti]"Tl'EN MY~A.UG HTER ANNOUNCES
THAT SHE WANTS ro FCLLO\o\1 IN
~~y FOCTS.TEPS ! WHAT
GREA~ER

COMPLIMENT
CAN A MOTHER

WITH ALL 11-IAT GaJP N:OWS1 I HOPE I
HI\VE PLEASANT !/REAMS INSTEAI7
OF 11-IOSE NIGH7MARES
IVE BEEN HAVING
ABOUT BILL I

•

REC i:NE "?

S~day

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

- ,-

bud;s'

• Copynght 1979 Ketsler AdvertiSing Servx:e. Strasburg, Vlrgtnia

The Amencan B•ble Society

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

se rv•ces 7 p m
youth group
Wednesday 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTI ST, Rev Ea rl
Shuler pa stor Sunday schoo l
9 30 o .m Church serv1ce 7 p m
youth m eeting 6 p m Tuesday B•
b le Study , 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE , Rev John A Cofl
ma n, po ster Franklin Imboden
chatrmon of the Boord of Chm
tt an Ltf e Sunday School 9 30
om
morm n g wors ht p 10 30
Sundov e11en mg worsh1p 7 30
p m Prayer meettng , Wednes
day , 7 30 P m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST . Don L
Wal ke r , Pastor Ronnte Salser
Sunday school supt
Sunday
schoo l 9 30 om mormng war sh1 p 10 40 om , Sunday e11entng
worsh•r. · 7 30. Wedn esday e11en
mgBib es tudy ,7 30.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN, Rev R
D Browti, pa stor Sun day School
9 30 am
mornmg wors h1p
10 45 youth se rvtce 6 45 p m
evenmg worsh1p
7 30 p m .
prayer and pro1 se, Wednesday
7 30 p m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Rev
Morv m Mork•n pastor Steve l !l
tle Sunday schoo l supt Sunday
schoo l 10 om
mormng w ar
sh•p 11 om Sunday e11enmg
wor sh1p, 7 30 Prov er meetmg
and Btble study Th ur sday 7 30
p m youth service, b p m Su n
doy.
CHEST.t:R CHURCH OF GOD
Rev Danny R Cook pastor Sun
day schoo l, 9 30 om , worsh 1p
ser vice, 11 am e11em ng servtce
7 00 youth ser111ce, Wedn esday
7 00 p m .
LANGSVILLE
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH . Rober t Musser . pas tor
Sunday school, 9 30 am
Roy
S• gmon, supt . morning worsh• p,
10 30. Sundav eventng servtce ,
7 30 mid· week s~trv• ce , Wednes
day , 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Dale . Bo ss ,
postor
Bob M oore, Sunday
School supt Sundov sc hoo l , 9 30
a m .. mornmg worship 10 45
om .. evangelistic ser vice, 7 p.m
Wedn es day servtces prayer
and pro1 se 7 P. m .; Nazarene
youth 7 p.m
Daily prayer
meeting, 8 30 am M en's prayer
mee ti ng Saturday , '/ p,m
EDEN · UNI Te D BRETHREN IN
CHRIST , Elden H Blok e , pa stor
Sunday Schoo l 10 om Hober t
Reed supt Mornt ng sermon 11
,am . Sunday ntght ~l')f 11 1 ce s Chm

Sl XtLj

RfORGANIZED CHURCH OF Evongehst1 c serv tce , 7 30 p m. terden ommoli onol full gospel
Elkins ::tunaoy scnoo r, tO o rr)
t1on Endeavor 1 :JU p m Song
servt ce B p m Preochtng H 30 JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY Wed nes day ser111ce, 7 30 p m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD mornmg wors h1p 11 , even 1ng
SA INTS Portland Roc tne Rood
p m M1dweek Prayer mee tin g
MASON COUNTY
Pastor Dennis Bales. Sundby wors l'11p 7 30 p m · Thursd~y
Wtl l tom Rou sh pas tor Phylfts
FIR ST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Cor· School , 10 am , worshtp servtce, e11en tng B1bl e study and prayf! r
Wednesday 7 p m Roy Adams
loy leade r
Stobort Sundov School Supl Sun
ne r o f Second
d
11 30 a .m. and 7:30 p m. Prayer meeh ng, 7 30 p m Affiliated w;th
day School 9 30 a m M ornmg Mason Post
Fro
meettng Wedne sday. 7 30 p m
SBC
•
CHURCH OF JESUS CHR IS T
10 30 am , Sunday Sundo v school 9 45
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
BRADFORD
CHURCH
9F
l ocated at Rutlond on New ltmo worsh1 p
evemng ser111ce 7 p m Wednes - sh1p ser111ce 11 om
OF JESU S CHRIST Elder James CHRIST- Gabriel Mroz. pas tqr
Rood, next to Fores t A cre Po r k
Week l y B1bl e
Miller Bib le study , Wednesday, Sunday sc hool 9:30 a m , mor'h·
Rev Roy Rouse, pastor Robe rt day e11enmg prayer servtces "I 30 p m
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
7 30 p .m .; Sunday School , 10 a m . tng church 10 30 a .m JunlPr
pm
Musser, Sunday School supt Su n
church program under dtrect 1en
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Sundoyntghtservice, 7 30p.m
doy school lO 30 o m wor slup
BHHlE HEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shuler postor Worsh1p serv •ce
Miller St , Mason W Vo Aunce
P 0 MER 0 Y
WESlEYAN of Karen M roz for chtldren 2 1()
7 30 p.m B1ble Study Wednes
day 7 30 p m Satur day mght q 30 a m Sunday schoo l 10 30 M1ck pastor. Sunday Htble Study HOLINESS - Homsonv tl le Rood , durin g regular church hOur ~~
pastor
Edt son church basement , Sunday even
prayer ser v tce 7 30 p m
a m B1ble Study and pr ayer ser- 10 a m Worship 11 o m and 7 Dewey King
p m B1ble Study Wednesday 7 Weaver, assistant , Henry Ebltn, mg service, 7 p m. ; Wednesday
lltce Thursday , 7 30 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN
Jr , Sunday school supt. Sunday se rvtce 7:30p.m .
CA RLETON CHURCH Ktngsbu r y p m , Vocal ffil!S IC
Roger Wat son pastor Kenneth
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GOD, school , 9·30 a .m .. morning w ar
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER L_
Rood Gary Ktng, pa stor Su nday
By er Sunday school supt Morn
Oudd tng l one, Mason, W Va. shtp, 11 o.m. Sunday eventng se r- George's Creek Rood Church
school 9 JO o m
1ng wo r sh1p 9 30 a m
Sun
Rolph Car l
Ch ester Tennant Pastor Sundov ll tCe, 7 30. prayer meettng, Thurs- schoo l, 9 30 o m , morntng wdr
dovschool , 10 30 a m , e11en m g supertnlendent e11en 1ng worsh1 p
Prayer mee ttng
Sc hool 9 45 am
Ch1ld ren s day 7:30p.m
sh1p 10 30, e11emng service, 7
serviCe, 7 30 Wednesday Btble 7 30 p m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Chu rc h 6 .. 5 p m Young People's
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF p m Prayer meeting Wedn esday
Study 7 30 p m
Serv 1 ~e 6 .45 p m
Evon~e li s t• c
GOO - Not Pentecostal , Rev. 7 p.m.
l ONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
MT
UNION BAPTIST
Don
pastor Wa llace Serv•ce 7 30 p m Women s M•s· George Oder , pastor. Worship
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CH URC~
Wtlson
Sunday
schoo l Bru ce Sm1 th
Dam ewood Supt B1ble School
Stona ry Counc tl 10 o.m ftrst and serv1ce Sunday , 9 45 a.m , Sun~ Corner of Sycamore and Second
supenn tendent Sundov schoo l
9 45 a m e11enmg worsh tp , 7 30 9 30 am Preochtng ser11ice third Tuesday s. !'rover and 81ble day school , 11 a.m ., worsh1p se r Sts . Pomeroy The Rev . William
10 4 5 o m N o evemng ser v1ce
Study Wed nesday , 7 30 p m
.
\l iCe, 7:30 p.m. Thursday prayer Middles worth
Poster
Sund~y
p m Prayer meet1ng , 7 30 p m
HVSI:ll RUN FRH MHHODIST
Wednesday
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST meetmg , 7:30p.m
School ot 9.45 a.m . and Church
MT HERMON Untied Bret hren Services 11 a.m
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN CHURCH Re11 Herbert A1 lt ng , IN CHRIS TIAN UNION, The P:e11
SACRED HEART, Rev . Fothftr
CHURCH, Eugene Underwood
pa stor Sun day School 9 30 a m , Will 1om Campbe ll , pastor Su nday Church Sunday School 9 30 am
Mor n mg serviCe, 10 30 o m , School , 9 30 o .m , James Hughes, Worship ser .... ica 10: .. 5 om. Paul D. Welton , pastor. Phone
pa stor Howard Coldwell Jr
Sundov School Supt
Sunday Evangel1 sfl c se rv1ce 7 p m Prayer supt., e11entng servtce, 7 30 p m . Preaching servicea every Sunday 992 2B25 Saturday eventng Moss
School 9 30 o m Morrung Ser
an d protse servtce Thursday 7 Wednesday event ng prayer alternating wtth C. E Wednesday 7 30 Sunday Moss, Band IOo.m
man 10 30 a m Sunday evemng pm
meehng, 7 30 p.m. Youth prayer prayer meeting 7 :30 p m Rev
Confess ton , Saturday , 7·7.30p m
serviCe, 7 p m
James leach
pastor
David
VICTORY BAPTIST On the
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al se r vic~e o c h Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , Holter , loy leader.
Route 7 bypass . James E Keesee
LETART
FALL S
UNITED Bol d Knob
Rev
l a wrence
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 1 mile pastor. Sunday school . 10 a.m
BRETHREN R:ev Freeland Norm
Gluesencomp, Sr pas tor Roger l e tart , W Vo, Rt 1 Re11 Charles
Hargra11e s, pastor. Worship ser- east of Rutland, junctton of Route mormng worship. 11 ~ a .m .. evenpas tor. Floyd Noms su pt Sunday Wt llford Sr Sunday sc hool supt
124 and Noble Summlf Rood (T- mg servtce, 7
school , 9 30 a m llf10rmng se r
Sunday sc hoo l 9•30 o eve n• ng vtces, 9 30 am ., Sunday school.
TRINITY Chri stt on Assembly ,
wor sht p
7 30 p m
Proyer 11 a.m .. even tng worsh•p 7 30 174). Sunday Blble Lectunt. 9·30
man 10 30 a m Pr ayer serv1 ce
Wednesday 'l 30 p m
rn ee tmg Wedn esda y 7 30 p m
p m
Tuesday cottage prayer a.. Watchtower stu~y . 10·30 Coolville Gilbert Spencer
CHESTE R CH URCH OF THt:: , Youth meetmg Sunday, 5 30 p m
meehng and Bible studv 9 30 o m , Tuesd&lt;J\' , Bible study 7. and paator. Sunday school , 9:30a.m. ,
NAZARENE Re11 Herbert Gro te
w tth Don and Marthe Meadows tn a m Wors htp serv1ce Wednes- 8 1S p m., Thursday, fheoc ratte morning worship , 11 a .m . Sunday
d ay, 7 30 p m .
pa stor Wor5htp se r111ce 11 o m
Schoof, 7·30 p m. ; serviCe even.ng service. 7·30 p m
charge.
and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday
CAL VARY BIBLE CHURCH, nt&gt;w mee'tlng, 8:30p.m . ~
m1dweek prayer serv ice Wednes·
WHITES CHAPEl Cool11t lle RO
HOPE BAPTIST - 57.0 Gr~mt St. , day , 7·3(} p m.
Schooi 1 q 30 o m Rtehord Borton
Rev Roy Deeter pastor Sunday located en Pomeroy Ptke, County
sc hool q 30om worsh1p serll t(e ROad 25 near Flatwoods . Rev. Middleport. Bobby Elklns, pastor.
M0UN1! Olive CommunttY
sup t Prayer meet1ng , Wed nes
day 7 30 p m
10 30om B1ble study and prayer lllockwood pastor'. Ser.vtces on Sunday Schoof. 10 am . worship ChUrcf1, ~owrerice Bush, pastor ,
BRADFO RD
CHURCH
OF se rvt ce , Wednesday , 7 30 p m
Sunday of 10 30 am and 7 30 sttrvtce , 11om., 9venlng -,ervice, Bettie'Pigqtf, Sunday school supt.
CHRIST Gobr~el Mzrs pastor B•·
p m w 1th Sunda y sChool , 9 30 7 30 p m. Thuri day prayer Sunday School and mornmg war·
RUTLAND
ble Sunday School q 30 a fTl mar·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST a m Btble st vdy , Wednesdo'f, meeftng and ' 'Bible study , 7:30 .sK,p: 9 30 O.m. Sunday evening
n1ng church 10 30 o m Sunday lorry Coleman . pa stor Co· Sun
7 30 p .m
·
p.m . .
ser'IICe, 7 p m : Youth meeting
evenmg
ser111ce
7 00 p m
INDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST ond Bible study , Wednesday , 7
day school su pts Sam M cK1nney
p m.
, •
Wednesday ser111ce, 7 30 p m
and Herb El l1tt Sunday schoo l and CHURCH INC - Peart St ., Mtd- . Chu ~ch - Lelani:l Holey , •paator
O ' Dell Manley; Suf)doy school . 10 o...m . evening
FAIT-H BAPTIST (j:hur.ch. Mason.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST co mmunton 9 30 am Worship dleport Rev
CHURCH , Re11 Flovd F Sho ok
pastor, Sonny Hudson, Sunday strvu:e 1 · 7 30 1? m, 'Prayer ~ meet. at' United Steel Workers
ond comumon 10.30 Q m
pastor, lloyd Wrtgh t Sunday
RUTLAND
COMMUNI TY schoal supt Suntloy scflool , q GO meeting Wedqesdoy, 1!30 p.tn: , Union Hall . Rallr.ood $tteef
. School .S'u pt Morntng Worsh1p CHURCH Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m , evenl,ng wors htp , 7: 30pm . ", CHURCH OF GOD of 'P.rophecy, ; .-.,o'sort PastQr,' Rev .' Joy Mltcbel i~
9 30 o m Sunday School 10 20 a m worsh1p serv tce 11 ci m
Pr ove r and pratst servt ce, .located on the 0 . J , , Whlt•·Ro~ Morr;u'n g ,worshlp 9•AS om., SunL
a m W ednesday Pra yer an d Bt
•
•
off; highway 160 Sunday ' School day S~rlool lO:!tO a .m , Praye~
WedrJesdoy prayer meellhg 7 30 Wednesdav 7 30 p (TI.
ble Study 7 30 p m , Sunday e 11 en
THE PEOPLE'S CHtJR(H OF 10 a.m . . Su'P.erlnte.r'd!tnt Johri · meet_I~WedneadQ'f., 7 :30p.m~ 1
p m youth se rvices , Sunday 7,
mg wOrsh tp 7 30 p m Chotr Proc·
POMEROY. --'- Corner Moon ond Loveday , Flrst Wedn.,doy nlght , FOA~St RUN , BAPTJST p m Su r:~day n ight worsht p, 7 30
!tee Th ursd ay J p m
RU TlAND CHURCH m
THE Court Sts , t hlfd floor over . of mo-nth CPMA. ser11ices, second . Nyt, Borqen. Pastor. :Cbrneli'fl
Dt XTE R CHUI(LH 01 r'I·IR 1'&gt;
lt'lhtho use Restouronf
Hen ry Wecfnesdoy WMB meel1ng, third bunch , supe r i11tendan1 . Si.md ~
flAlA fl i: Nt ~P· ll~:~y rl f) Gr! l'"tln
Charles Ru sse ll ~r
m nl!:o tl,
yollth service. school. 9:30 a m , •~&lt;:6nd Qrl\:1
Jr
po'&gt;lrH ~undoy .SlfiC.•u t " .JU Cook , pastor Sundoy school , 10 through f ifth
Rtck Mocombe • su p! Sunday n .,, wo r ~ h1p ser11tce 10 30 a m a rn morn1ng wors h tp, 11 a.m .; George Croyle, pot tor .
fourth Sundoyswo(ship servi ce at
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL· - 570 2 30 p m
·
school , 9 30 om , wors h1p sc •
Broodco&lt;. t i ...w over WMI' O vou ng ev enmg sen11Ce l JO Wednes ·
G~ont Sl: M!ddleP?rt. ,Rev Bobby
·
v•ce , 10 30o rn Btble Study Tul'S
peo p l es
se• v •ce ,
7
p m day evenin9 service! "/·30. In
day , 7 30 p m

"•i.

(
/

~-

:s::T MUST ~ TI-lt

~;-:''I\IEW 1\NP ·~ovep:..

~~

rr

G.OST~ MORe

ANPT'JotePI\~

IS

SMAf..l-~#t.

TheAimaoac
Ualled Press International
Today is Friday, Dec. 15,
, the 349th day of 1978 with 16 to
follow .
The moon ts between Jts full
phase and last quarter.
The mornm g star s are
Mercury , Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
The evening star is Mars.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Sagtttarms
Alexandre E1ffel, French

enginee r who bwlt tht!

PCAIL!!!

tower which bears h&gt;s name,
was born Dec. 15, 1832.
On this day m htstory
In 1791, the U.S Bill of
R1ghr,;, compn sed of the first
10 Amendments to Lhe
ConshtutlOn, went mto effect
!oilowmg ratificat10n by the
state of Vtrginia
In 1944, AmeriCan forces
led by Gen
Douglas
MacArthur
landed
at
Mindoro in the Phihppme
Islands

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and ~~n Sontag

- --

Examining expertise play
NORTH

12-15- A

+ K J 10 5 2
• 62
t K QJ
• 10 7 3

WEST
+ A864
¥ A 7 53

EAST
• Q973

• 7
• K QJ 9

• 86532
• A 865

•

.

•

M

0

0

SOUTH

¥ KQJ 109 8 4
t A 10 9 4

•
IVulnerable . East-West
42

Dealer West

1.

Wes t

Pass

North East

1+

Pass

pia ) to expletive de-

mce

leted and the nex t hand

2Pass
.

t !'i

dealt
No" let 's mo\ e So uth up

mto that cxpcrl gro up South
win S

- - --

I

Dummy's Jack hold s Lhc
tnck H.nrl South goes after
trumps West take s ht s arc
a nd lea ds a low cl ub to h1 s
partner 's ace East leads a
second dtamond . Wes t ruffs
for clown one
South says an) thtng from

th a t

dtamond

In

and asks h1mself.
Why d1d West make that
apparently soll y lead " "

dummy

Then South leads t he kmg
of spades from dunun y

Ea't foll ows and South doscards h1s r emamm g club

West can't get East on lead
There as no dtarnond ruff and

South ha ' tnumphed

Opemng lead · +K
IT
THS
CAUSE. OF A K1[;:&gt; '6
P:UNNIN6 AWA"'
FROM HOME ,

. BARNEY

·I BET LUKEY FEELS,
TERRIBLE ABOUT

FERGITTIN' 'lORE

YEP··

HE'S ALL
SHOOK UP,
EEZV

AN' f-!E'LL GIT ANOTHER
GOOD SHAKIN' IF HE
FERGITS MY BIRTHDAY

\NAMOR~

Now arrange the c•r cled ietlers to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by lhe above car1oon

Prlntanswerhere:

AN (

X XI I l ]
(Answers tomorrow)

Yeslerday s

I

Jumbles BAKED ADAPT WEDGED GARISH
Answer What ''changed'' when the snow melted? ~
" THAW"

Jumble Book No.13, containing t10puzzles, hl available t orS1.75postpald
trom Jumble, clolhlanewap1er, Box 34, Norwood, N.J 07648.1nclud t your
ntme, eddress, lip code an m1ke chtckl ptyable to Newspap11rbooks.

You pass

~s

d ealer w1th
12- 15- H

By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Sontag
Here 1s a hand that appears to be cut and dried .
South JS m a s1mple four heart contract. West opens

h1s kmg of clubs a nd contm·
ues w1th the queen and an-

other one
South ruffs , knocks out
We st's ace of trumps, gets
back in to dra w the rest of
West' s trump~ a nd wraps up
tii s cont ract.
Now let 's move West up

mto Lhe expert class. At
tnck two West s htfts to h1s

s i ng l eton

d1amon d

+

AQ643
• A85
• 32

• J 76

Yolll partner opens one
dl8mond. What do you btd 'J

Just b1d one spade You
have a max1mum or n ea r~
max. Lmwn pass Hut 1f your
pa rtner c an l btd a ga m over
one spade, you aren' t m1 ss~
mg a game

i ~.'F: W S I' i\ PFI { F " Tt Hl'\1\SE r\~'iN I

Fo r a copy of JACO BY MOO 1
ERN send $1 to
Wm at
8fldge care of fh ts newspaper p 0 Box 489 Radro Cr ly
Slalion. New York N Y 10019 I

�12

978

-The;~~:l:~MiddlePort-:o~n~~~·:~:~~~Del~ lS.I For
WA,.HEO fUEl truck rlriveor wdh
P• pP t rPnce driving
lluck i .

CHARGES
1:1 Wunl.,ur lhu lt·r
Cash

I dir\·

Lilli

:!rl:r\'ti

1,5(1

LM

:trlai·.,

11 d:r; ~

('hun.:•·
1.25
L!'W'I
1.25

:UI(l

:u5

F.ad1 wrrnl 11\ 't• r tilt' uunrullllll 15
r.s 4 t't·nts Jll'l" " 'ttrrl pt'l' day .

•••r•nt.~
At L~

r·umllll)! r•tlwr thau t'Ut~'&gt;t't'U\ I Vt;

tl&lt;r~·s

wrll l&gt;t· vh;r rj!t•rl ill till' 1_tht)&gt;

. In 11lt'llWn' , C;rrtl ri( Tll&lt;!nks &lt;lilt!
f.lt,lrtuorry : o· t1•nts pt•r wunl. S:I.OO
1111111111UIJI. 't.;;sh Ill HtiV&lt;llll'l'

Mr.•t.nll• Hmnt• sales mul Yard M~it•s

BAI:WS1TTER needed in Pomero y
oreo . 8 orn to A pm . Call
t..1Q1.:JSHO oiler 4pm .
BAR MA ID wanted . Must be
avoi lob le
evenings
ond
weekends . 1-"ive Poi nts Grill . Rt .
7.
wANTED JWo wai ter~ ~ r bar '
lenders . Apply in pe rson. (en ·
lu1y Hor.
NEED SOMEONE to do typing .
YY1·2011 .

Wanted to Buy

l llld.

Til•· Publislwr n·st.'r\'l'l! lht• r i ~ ht
tu t1 ht ur rt'Jti."L any &lt;uls tk•cml'd ob·
jt•t·tu•nal Tlw Pui.JU ....llt'r will nut bto
fl'S)X&gt;I1Si01r ftw 111llf"t' lhau u1w innf!"·
l"l'&gt;.."\IIISI'I"I I I'II .

Phont· 11!12-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Nut•n un Saturd a)'
TUl'.l;da,thru Fritiay
4 P.M.
thl.' tlay lwful'l' !)Ublt('ation
Sunday
4 P.M.
Friday ilftem ovn

Notices

..

NO HUNTING or tres passing on
my property without permis'jion. Judy McGra w.
GlJN SHOOT. Racine Gun Cl ub.
Every Sunday 1 pm. Factory
~c h.oke g un ~ l "t_. _ _
GU N SHOOT , Racine Volunteer
Fire Dept . Eve ry Saturday 6:30
pm at th eir building in Ba shon.
Fac tory choke guns only .

-- - - --........

·--::::----~·

CANDLES &amp;
THINGS

WOOD . Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on lorge!l. t erid:
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton . Uelivered to Ohio
Pall et Co . Rt . '1 . Pomeroy
f./Y'.J . '161:11./

CHIP

•CHRISTMAS CANDY

WOLFE'S MARKET

-

Yard Sale
IF YOU have a ser vice to offer ,
wont to buy or sell something ,
ae looking for worl&lt;. . . or
whatever .. . you"ll get re sulh
Imler with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coll 992-21 5b.

-~~----

~-~-

~-

~

WANTED

PUUIC NOTICE
Lebanon
Township
ReYenue Sharing date for the
f iscal year ending Dec . 31,
1977, may be viewed 7:00p .m .
Dec. 19, 1978, at the home of
the clerk .
There was no expenditures
from A.nti -Recess ion Fund for
fiscal year ending Dec . 31 ,
1977 .
Clarence Lawrence, Clerk
Lebanon Township
1121 15, ltc

Order Now for January
Delivery . Call Anytime.
For the Best Area
Fertilizer Prices

CHESTER AGRI
SERVICE
-·

985-3831

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

.it

~.

SALE PRICES

~~j .
.

•

-t

't

JACKW.
CARSEY

Mgr.

· Phone 992-2181

--

.

-·

-

-

-

P e t s for Sale

HISING ST AR Krmnel s. l:loor·ding
and gr oomi ng, oil bre e~l'o .
(hoshire . 'Jb'I ·O'lf.J'l .
AKC R~GIS J E R I::O Uoxe• puppie!l. .
b week!&gt; old A nice Chri!l.tmo!l.
1
II
_gi l , $115eo . Ca 9~'l. · 2'li6 .
CHRI ST MA S POODLES . one
chocolate mole puppy left .
older dogs hou sebro ken, one
cream mole Pomeranian . I
rnole Peltinese. b95-1'}9'/ otter
4 30 pm .

Serv i ces Off
. ered
.

~

Will CANl: 1!"1r lhr- r-Ide! ly in
ho m p Phnn£' Ql}'} 13 14 .

OUI

WAH H W~ll dn!IH'9 · William T.
Gron t /.t '} 'J!rf\l
1-' 0M~ W OY LAlJY wtll -. it with r o
1t ~r1b at honlf' nr hn ~ pitC1 t .
&lt;.Jt1'J .tJ1\l!l .
WOOM. BOARD onrl lou11rlrcy in
pr r..- ol f' homf' lor ('lrl £'1 !y lodv .
~~1 - ~An .

. G_ive ~"'!a~y _ ~ _
THNH '} rna . okl lOng ha ired
ho1r ~ C' b rok0n k1t1 en!' . I g•ay . 'J
tabby , ~ H ~ 4:l4b .
l"WO FEMA Lf flk hou ncl puppies .
/ .1'}

')J~ 'f .

SIX Wff KS old
'}llf

ro llip pup'i .

2~6 l

MI XH) H ~AG LJ: rnoth C'r ond 3 rna.
nld mo le p up . &lt;/ t,lji .J991.
~O UR PUPPI ES to goorl homes
Shnr1 hoi re d coll iE' po rt breeri
'-'~'J - 3o:J5 .

l'HHEf MA ll: puppic:. . Mother i:.
HPoqle. Hove bf'en wormed
CH Ht" all ~hot~
300 B10orlway
Middle-port. qr.n Ttl'! .

-

0
481!, ACRES - 1 97~ flolly
Park mobile home. This
has an 8 foot expando, 14' x
36' add-a-room , large deck
with built-in seats. metals.
148,000 .
JUST COMPLETED Three bedroom s, 1112 baths,
lov ely kitchen, recreat ion
room with fireplace, deck,
full basement, garage, 1
acre. $51.500.
ABOUT 7 YEARS OLD Three bedrooms, 2 boths,
equipped kitchen, dining ,
carpeted, full basement,
garage, about one acre.
$21 .000.
SYRACUSE Lovely
home { like new I three
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas forced air heating ,
storm windows and doors,
laq1e garage, porch and
paho . Asking $25,500.
SIX YEARS OLD - Three
bedrooms , nice kitchen,
dining, all electric , sforage
building . nice lot. Just
518,500.
Several business places for
sale. Work for yourself.
The reason we ~II houses
.. . is because we know who
wants what.

For Sale
UNIQUE ASSORTMENT ot . special
gi lt !&gt; .. · clothing. pottery. wo k ~ .
leat her wallet!&gt; . bog!&gt; . belh
hot s, Wes tern felt hots .
jewelry , Aladdi n. la mps, Blue
Fl ame heaters and much more.
Stop in · we" ll be glad to help
Moun to in l eather and General
Store. 104·106 W Union St ..
Athens. Ohio . 614 -591-5478 .
RU TL AND HARDWAIU . 8:tl Main
St. , "/ AL-2LS5 Modernistic wood
stove , lree standing. open
fireplace .
dernonstrot ion
model . Sb5 . K ing-0 -Heo t
stoves. wood or co ol. b room
si ze. new Sl'/9.95. Adjus table
steel basemen t post. S" Ia !f.
SlO .M
Wes l inghou!l.e ho t
wa ter ta nk, newS year w01ren·
ty, slight dent in outer jO&lt;:Ic et ,
$121 .95 . All £Jiectric small OP ·
pl iances wit h the best prices in
town will be reduced dn odd• ·
tionol 10•...- . Too l bmo: S·K tools.
31 pc. with tool box . $49.115.
lifeti me wa rr enty. 6/ pc drop
forged se t wi th tool box.
$411 .95 . One 93 pc. se t drop
forged too ls wi th tool box .
HARDWAR t . M21 Main
St. . 147·2155 . Call lor prices .
Stoves . wood and cool . Kings.
lo,ge !loire 51q5 to 5329 .&lt;15.
Cool&lt;.it'lg
applia nce
by
Sunbeam. Ri. . ol ond Mirra 1(),....
off . Grooming aid by Sun beam
an d Nor th ern 10,_..
ott .
lovo rotory ca bine t with
simu lptecl marble top 538 .
Too ls· pro fessional drop fo rged
plated and polished In rne tol
box, 21 pc. three -eigths socket
set, $1 3.95. 14 pc •, in. sockel
set. S24.9S . 10 in . proto p lier~
with your choice cutte1 or nee
die no!l.e . bolh 56 .94 . 9 pr. com·
bino tion wrenc h by S·K
liletome worr enty, Sn .9H

~U TL A N D

APPLICATIONS ARE BEING ACCEPTED
FOR THE
POSITION OF
STREET
COMMISSIONER
&amp;
WATER
SUPERINTENDENT COMBINED IN THE
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND, 0 . SALARY $180
WEEK- MUST BE ABLE TO OPERATE
MACHINERY (BACK HOE) AND . BE
FAMILIAR WITH WATER SYSTEM
OPERATION. APPLICATIONS WILL BE
CONSIOEREO DECEMBER 19, 1.978 AT
7:30. MAIL APPLICATIONS TO VERNON
WEBER, CLERK, RUTLAND, OHIO.
(An Equai,QPportunity Employer)

ROGER HYSELl

SEPTIC·TANK
CLEANING
ReSidenfiaf and commer·
c:ial . .Call for esfimite. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
· anytime .
Phone 985·1806
Jack Ginther98S-3806 ·

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

mile off Rt. 7 by-pillS on
St. Rt. l24 toward Rutland,

0.

..

Chester, Ohio
10·3D·c

l

PETE SIMPSON
SALES REP.
FOR
SUNDINS HAMMOND
ORGANS
Rac:ine, Ohio
Phone 949-2111
After 5 P.M.
11 -26-1 mo.

Realtors
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Henry E. Cleland
Associate Realtors
Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
992·2259, 992 -6191, 992-2568

r~

"G.I 'JEUSATRY"

992·3325
216 E. Second Street

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE •

Pom•oy ..Landmark

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

CENTRAL REALTY. CO.

FOR SALE

.

CALL 992-2342
EVE. 992-2449
R . Downing, Broker-W. D. Childs, Mgr.

1 '&lt;&gt;

w

~

~

ton

ft

1974 FORD VAN ........................... '1495 W
302, standard.
W
.
.
w
1967 FORD 1f2 TON PICKUP. •••••••••••••• '595 W

I,

1976 HORNET Sportabout Wgn •.••••.•.•• 2895
Automatic, p.s., p.b., radio, 6 cyl ., air cQnd ., new radial
tires, air shocks, reclining seat, luggage rack.

W
W

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation
S.ve 30 pel. to 50 pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
fully Insured
Free ~;.st. ~
'
·c:a-um-2m
11.-3.-l .mo,

1975 AMC HORNEt.. •.••••.••••••••••• '1795

W

MOORE'S
Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
lnstallati'ln Service ·
Ph. 992-2848

Station Wagon , std., oversize, low mileage.

1972 MERCURY MONTEREY.............'.1395
700· 15·6 Ply Deep Lug
$42.45
Mounted &amp; Bal•nced Free
Phone 742-2328

P.S., P.B ., air, very coean car.

4 Dr .• auto .. p.s.

1975 GR~ND TORINO ••••.•••••••••••••. •2695

Business Services
AND Kitchen s·
re modeled. ceramic til e. plum:,
bing , carpentry . ond generaL
maintena nce. 13 years eiC·'
perience : 9?2: 3~8~ . . _ ~ _ . .:
PULliNS ~ XCAVATING . Complete
Servi ce . Phone
,
. - . 992·247H.
. .· . . . - AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
cancelled? l os t your operator s
license? Phone
·
- q92-7l43.
. .
- .

Pomeroy,O.
3-15-tfc •

Business Services
HHADFORD. Au c!io neer . Com·
plete Service. Phone 9.49.?48'/ :
or 949.;.1 000. Racine. Ohio , Crill
Bradford .
H WOOD

BO WER S RE PA IR

Sweepers, looster 5, irons. oll
small oppl ionces. lawn mower,
nex t to Stole Highway Garage '
on Route 7. Phone (bl4 ) 985- I
3Hl 5.. .
,
. .
.
.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser· '
vice . all makes. 91./i-2284 . The
J-= abr ic Sh op
Pom er oy ..
Aut horized Singer Sol e!&gt; ond
Service . We '&gt; horpen Scis!l.ors.
. . . - . -. . .
I::XCAVATING, dozer. loader and
backhoe work : dump trucks
and lo·boys lor hi re: will hou l
fill di rt , to soil , limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fcrs . day phone 992-701!9, night
_p h_o~ e .'19_2-35?5 _
or_992-_ 523 ~ . _
f XCAVA TING . ·dozer. backhoe
and dii cher . Charles R. Hot ·
fi eld. Bo ck Hoe Servi ce,
Hutlon d. Ohio. Ph one /42·2008.
WILL do roof ing , construction
plumb ing an d heating . No jot
too large or too small. Phone
7.42·?348 .. . . .
. - .
HOWI::RV AN[) MARTIN EIC ·
coveting , se pti c sys tems.
do ze r. bac l&lt;.hoe. du mp truck .
lime"stone, gro vel. bloc kloJ:
paving , Ht . 143. Phone I (bU )
o9M·73J I .

1976 AMC PACER ••••.•.••••.••••••••••. •2195
2 Dr., standard. Only 33,000.

1975 FORD 'MUSTANG •••••••••••••••• ' 2395
11

2 Dr., auto., p.s.• p.b., red &amp; white, low mileage.

-

.

RUTLAND .
FURNITURE
74i-2211

· · Rutt•nd .

DAN THOMPSON FORD

W

~

Rn.Ju~

I
I

·1978 PONTIAC

·;

'!

'J

)

985~4100

I

)
)

Chester, 0. · Ray Riggs
. "! .

:

•

·~-"":""

.,..::: '!:-- ·..:-·

-~.;-

~···

~...;·

' . •-

~

~··

'•'"

•

•.

15 IN STOCK
Largest Selection In The Vallev

PRIX

2 Or ., air, radi o, V. roof,
black. red .

Needs L.F. fender. will sell
as i s or repaired .

1975 CUT. 442

1973 BUICK LS

1974 CADIUAC

CPE.

SEPAN

DEVIU£
Yellow . gold.

Air , aula., p.s., radi&lt;.. .

Sil v er , black s1ripe.

'2495

'1695
'1795 '

'

)

Equipment Co.

I

Pomeroy, 0.

I

2

I Sunday .
I International
I Harvester

1977 BUICK LESABRE

•32"

SERVICE/PARTS
GENERAL MOTORS PARTS DIVISION
"KEEP T/iiA
See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete Burris,
or George Harris.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

I
I

New Idea
Equipment '

'~ You'll like Our Quality Way of Doing_Business" GMC Financing
992-5342

Open Evenings Until &amp;:00+ Til5 p.m. Sat.

Pomeroy

....

.....................................................................................~

CUSTOM 4 DR

1977 AMC HORNET WAGON .. .......... 13995
1977 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED 2 DR ... '6795
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE 4 DR...... ... 13695
1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 2 DR ......15095
1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 2 DR ..........12695
1975 CHRYSLER .CORDOBA 2 DR •.... .. .. 13795
1975 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR..........12595
1975 FORD LTD 4 DR HT. ............... ~2695
1975 PONTIAC LEMANS 4 DR ..• ... ...• •12695
1974 FORD LTD 2 DR HT... .......... ..'.~1995
1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA ............. .. 11295
1973 MERCURY COMET ...................11695
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA ..•......... •. ..•11195
1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA,..•.•...• •. .•.. ~1495

gloomy atlltude loday . You
need to be with friends who are
expansive and oplimislic .
ARIES ~March 21·Aprll 19~ A
gesture of goodwill and h e lp~
fu lness could be e)(tended to
Sernice Bede Osol you loday . You'll put a damper
on the .whole thing il you try to
\lji tl fl i .l ·
include an oulside parly .
1
Ui.:Jl.!JU
TAURUS ~April 20-May 20) A
weallh of.good and clever Ideas
1 I i 1\ 1I will come your way today . It' s
l!J 't1 doubtful that you ' ll do a darn
.1
•
thing with any of th em, unlor.
• 1978
lunateiy.
c
December •6,
GEMINI (May 21-June 2b) The
~ou 'll possess a strong sense ) day might s·tart out as a lazy
dt intuition this com ing yea r one , but once you get going
ancf you must learn IO listen you ' ll breeze through your
C:!osely to that inner voice . If chores. The sooner you start ,
. ~au act on some of yo ur the more you'll get done.
hunches , you 'll bring many CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Afb:Sneficial things to pass.
1er receiving several social invi·
SAGITT~RIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. laiions today,thal down-in-the21)) Don t sit sheepiShly by and dumps feeling you have 1n the
wafch a friend beong· laken morning will abruptly end .
advanlage of loday. Yo&lt;&gt;ire the You'll have a fun day.
one who can come lo his LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Ignore
1escue - and you should . dislurblng gossip today. II you
Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us
before vou buy any car~ New or Used. We can save you
Qiscover t~e secrets of gett!ng_ stop long enough to consi~~r
atong with others by sendmg lhe source, you 'll realize 1t s
money . We are the Friendly Dealership: See or Call
for your 1979 Astro-Graph~ Lei- not I rue.
one of these ·Friendly Salesmen : J. D. Story , Ray
ter. Mall 50 cenls for ea~h apd a VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Avoid
Douglas or Bill Nelson.
ll)ng , self-addressed, siem~~d going out with people who like
envelope lo Astra-Graph , P.O. to "pul on the dog ." There are
Box 489, Rad io City Stalion. many more fmpromplu things
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to SPE(CiiY you ' ll be able to do today that
blr1h sign.
are not only cheaper, but more
OAPRICOR,N (Doc. 22-Ja~. 19) lun .
Aexlbllily musl be your key LI8RA {sept. 23-0ct. 23) Just
v.lord ioday. If you ' re too rigid· w~en you think you 've run into
1~ your opinions. you 1could: a bric~ wall and won't be able
pass up • great opportunlly fo to allaln your goals, someone
s~are something .
,
· will happe~ along with the
500 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0 . ·
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-F•b. 19) means lo ball you out.
Closeat6:00
P.M.
Weekdays
T~ere are tlways pessimlsis In SCORPIO ~Oct. 24-No¥. 22)
lrie world: Today . you ' ll have You'll discover how wrong ybu l'l•lBUIIUIIllr&lt;ollillllll&lt;l£&lt;:U""!&lt;o&lt;!llllllllllll&lt;l£&lt;:U!ot ~IOII!lll lllllllllfl
ope lrylng to talk you out of are about Ill feelings you've
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) _ said he would be in Wlilorm
something you know lo qe been nursing , wh.en new lnlor·
·
right. Follow your own high- matlon is presented to you The Portland Trail Blazers Friday night against Denver .
way. ·
today . Throw pride to. lhe ThurSday signed former New Terms were not disclosed,
PISCES (Feb. 10-March 20) winds . Admlt~our mistake.
York Knick forward Jim but the contract. was reported
"void pals who tend tg ~ave a
INEWSPAPER T£RPRISE ASSN.!
McMillian t o a contract and to be fbr three years.

: l.(i] WrlJ
l!J~

Air, radio , silver, black .

'1495

'3395

Friday Night Ladies
Standings
·
For R ent
Dec . 1, 1978
Kenny ' s Ang els
72 COUNTh'Y MOI:IIl t Home Po, k .
~out s 3~ . north of 1-'omero y.
Bil ls Quality Body Shop
63
Lorge lots. Call49{ lil"!'-1 .
Mine 3
57
Dan ' s Upholster in ~
50 :.l AN lJ 4 RM lur nio;; hprl oncl un ·
Parker' s A .l . Serv tce
36
fur ni :. herl opt 1o
Phone
Honaker C. B.
34
·qu').S-134 .
Individual High Game :
Don na
Kelz en berg
157; lWO l:ll::OROOM krlci1Pn f u r~u ~ h ­
od op t. Coli bel ()! e 1l a1n
Pa uline Fields 156; Efta may
~9'1 . 'J'lHH .
Norton 151
Individual High Series :
fUNH RS ASSISTANO lor Senior
Donna
Kel zen berg 416 ;
Ci ti1ens. . You rnoy be obfe to
Pauline Fields 41 2; Et.tamaY
live in our opar lmr:o nl for l e!&gt;~
Norton 392
than SSO . Vi llage Manor .ApartTeam High Games: Bill's
ments. 9U:J . Tl/37 .
Qualify Body Shop 475 and
.459 ; Mine J 453; Kenny' s Bl:AU Ti t-: Ul 4 bedroorn horne in
Pomeroy
Ooublo garage.
Angels 451
Writ e Box 72'1-E, co The [)oily
Team High Series : Bill 's
Sentinel . Pomero)' . OH 45 / b!J .
Quality Body Shop 1318;
Honaker C.B. 1325; M ine 3 l::FF APT . in Middlepor t. Su1 toblc
1254
for one . Kay Cecrl . &lt;.JY'J -5'1 62
f'VC!llrlg S.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, ·INC.

For Rent
MOBil !: HOME:J bedroom fu rni sh·
eel with wosher ond rlryer No
peh 56~ per mo plus utili ties!
Oeposit rt:qu rred . 9A9-'J'J5'J.

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., DEC. 16, 1978
11:00 A.M.
Having sold home wi II after the following items for
sale. Located at the lower end of Syracuse, Ohio, 11t
road to left {College Rd.) to Brfdgoman St .. then lei! In
Rosvalley, 1st house on left. Watch for sale signs.
"Household"
Harvest Gold refr igerator W·i ce maker, velvet rockerr ecliner, couch, end &amp; coffee tables, Harvest Gold
Maytag auto. washer &amp; dryer {less than 1 yr. ), Gibson
15 cu. tt . chest deep freeze, Kelvlnotor portable
dishwasher, love seaf, beds, chest of drawers,
dressers, bunk beds, round wood table w-4 chairs,
stands. lamps. book stands. Sony T.V. {need$ repelrl. ·
sweeper, pots, pans, dishes, rollaway bed &amp; misc.

NEW
CHEVROLET

4-WHEEL-DRIVE
P-1-C-1&lt;-U-P-S

"Your Friendly Dealership"

We need large and small farms and many types of
property.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2388
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE 949-2654

GRAND PRIX

1 hours will be 8-5 Mon .- Fri . I
1 Closed Saturday and 1

5195

',.aASTRO•GRAPH

•

2 DR

store

'6795

1

·For Satuodty, Dec. t6

'4195

1972 GRAND

OPEN TILL 7 P.M.
Except Thursday &amp;
S.furday lil5 : 00
Closed Sunday

~ Storti~:· D~~. ;~:~~ ~

TRANS AM 2 DR
)

USED CARS

A nice work car.

'""
1974

.----------..
I
MEIGS I

Station Wagon, auto.

..I

Sportv mid size .

GMQUAUTY

1973 TOYOTA ··························u'U,95
'I

1976 BUICK REGAL
CPE.

'1
1974 OLDS 88
ROYALE CPE.

'2495

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill, General Manager, for a
Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle.
992-2196
MIODLEPORT, D.

4 Dr .•. 4 cyl., sfd .

Floor Colerinll In Stock

~11742-2211
TAt.KTO
Wendell or Htrb Grtte
or Gene Smith ..

W
W

1972 PLYMOUTH .......................... '595

9' and 12' Vinyl

.........._,

·•1300°

W

Had valv e job, has some
rust .

1975 CHEV. IMPALA

TRUCKS

0

Auto., loaded .

·,

_

ft

FORD

1974 BUICK REGAL.. ................... '1995

As Low As

Buy where you ctn Cllllllt hi
ond He whtt you'rt gofllng
- Good alectlons.:;.... Fvlly
stocked.

SAVE UP TO

4 Or ., aufo., air.

..

·v:;

LS SED.

1974 FORD GALAXIE. ••••.••••...•••••••• '1495

Rubber Back, Ca~
•4.a8

W

CPE.

Happy
Holidays

1975 OLDS 98

RANGER
XLT

W

'2395

'1995

F-150

~

Dark blue, v. roof. AM-FM,
50-50 seat, air . Good tires.

1975 DATSUN 210

'4295

W

2 Dr .• 4 speed .

DRIVE A UTILE
&amp;
SAVE A LOt

Ai r, AM-FM, good tir~s &amp;
more.

Equipped for you and easy
dr iving .

1975 FORD MUSTANG •••••••••••••••.•.. '1895 11

.SAVE ON

All carpet Installed with
padding at no chtrgo. ·
Expert lnstallttlon.

RANGER LARIAT

~

2 Or., auto., p.s.. p.b., 1ow mileage. Sharp.

B ATH~OQM S

TORONADA

CUTLASS
CPE.

•1400°0

1976 FORD MAVERICK •••••••••.•.•••••• ·~~,.5 ~

CARPETIN~

..

·

'4995
11195

OLDS 88
ROYALE SEDAN

1973 OLDS

NEWPORT SEDAN
Low mileage. sharp, nice
tamil y car,

~

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

1

1977 CHRYSLER

1973

SAVE UP TO
'

W

Std .. 6 cyl. , long bed. ·

. '4295

f·lSO
RANGER
LARIAT

W

SNerando ......... •2895

AUTOS

CHESTER Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and large storage building . Price $21 ,500.
TWO ACRES - Abeautliul4 year old, 2 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen. 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted. 2 bolhs. full basement with TV room . Many
more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location . Will go quick for $35,000.

OWNER MUST SELL - The owner ot thi~
charming 2 story stone ho111e in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this line
home lor a low , low price of $20, 000. There
are ·2 bedrooms (1 is extra large). spacious
living rpom w -fireplace, formal dining, eat- .
in kilch l! n , 'bath w -shower, garage &amp; a kong
sized yard. G·ood location on Mill St. Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
446 · 3643 .

PICK~P

.
I

JUST LISTED- SYRACUSE, good 2 bedroom home,
almost new kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted,
laundry room , all insulated, natural gas heat, utility
building, 2 lots. $21,500.00.

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

·I

Referenc"" Available
Phone 742·2029
·
h -16·C' :

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

TEST DRIVE
THE TRUCK OF
YOUR CHOICE
AT DAN THOMPSON
FORD!

•1200°0

w
w

Flat bed. good condition.

J&amp;L

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

w
w

w
19711 CHEVY LUV PICKUP. .............. '2995 W
Auto., long bed, 26,000 mi . One owner .
ft
1971 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP•••••••••• '1195 W

'
Reasonable
Prices

Phone: 742·3110
Kim White, Proprietor

ILl

en
::::)

Clean. good tires. M. blue.

SAVE UP TO

Auto., P.S., P.B., long bed .

..

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

Investment Property . This attractive home
has two apartments and a trailer in rear .
Bringing
in $230.00 per
mo.
Both
apartments furnished. Only $18,000.

1975 CHEVY

Construction
Maintenance

&amp; Fireplace Flues

!92-2174

4x-t, auto., P.S., P.B., crui se con t rol. like new,
long bed .
.

carpentry, Electrica I,
Painting

THE SWEEP

.H OLIDAY

&lt;

(.)

CUSTOM

1977 CHEVROLET PICK................. '6595 ft

. .J. R. Construdion
Co.

lfth Century · Service with
20th Century Know-How.
Specializing In
Woodstove, Oil Furnace

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

She Wants and Needs
A LIKE NEW
USED CARl
TRUCKS &amp; VANS

11-9-1 mo.

Don ' t let a chimney fire put
a damper on your life Call. ..

w
w
w
w

PUZZLED?

:i20 E. Maln Street,
Pomeroy,O.
Call992-7113
l'or Free Eslimotes-

~~~:~;;f

en
a:

F.lSO

w

EWOTT
APPUANCE li

Sweeps Guild
Insured

• •

Great Selection Of New Trucks

aw

Your Headquarters For
Armsbong Carpeting

Roofing, guHers, new and
repair .
Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling
tile
Free Estimate - oil work
guaranteed
lO Yrs. Experience
· Call : Tom Hoskins
949-2160
11 -28-c

USED
CAR

w

Q.

w

11-3-1 mo.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

:$

(.)

0

w
w
w

PHONE 992-2772

4-38-lk-..

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

~

MIDDLEPORT

I

en

...J

with prices that are easy to take.

w
w

'

MIDDLEPORT - Nice 4
bedr oom brick home that
I
New or Repair
CRAI G REEL tope ICCOrder. 40
you can move right into.
Gutters and
channe l Rea li:. tk Mobi le CB.
Has equipped k itchen ,
One Real istic power mike. One
natural gas, and 2 car
Downspouts
bl ac k and whi te portable 1' ' AC RI:: I '1 x 60 mobil e horne
garage
with
large
near Dex ter 1!'-J'J .SHSH
television 13 in .1 Other new
workshop . Near stares .
Free Estimates
E" IH frol")ic item!&gt;. Co li 4 11~ · Tl7b .
Just $23,000 .
1&lt;/b'!
TOTA L . Eli:CTWIC rnobiiP
Phone 94.9-2862
Above all
STORAGE horn e, fu rni shed, 'j bedr.
SEWING MACHINf zig 109 . bl ind .
floods.
All
utilities
,
or 949-2160
washer and dryf'f . Air C(lndi
~ ! re t c h ond bull on hole ~ ! i t c h .
parking , and loading ramp .
lioned. 1 fot. 210 It lrontoqc .
·Mrs. John Hayes Ches ter .
11 -17-1 mo.
Around 3,000 sq. fl.
SI'J.OOO. 1-'honc / 4'; 2H:.!b. .
liH~ · :JS 1 5
RT. 124 EAST - Large
GIUSON MASTfR TONI:: banjo with· 1&lt;1'/ 4 HOllYI'ARK '1 bPdroom. l 'J ~
older home of 4 or 5
f~OS rv ·s CH rodio equi pment.
OS total electr ic , lu r ni ~ h c: d
Srr ugg"stuners anri plush lined
bedrooms, bath, central air
f verylhi ng in lwo·woy radio.
carpeted throughout . l •k e nf'w
rase . 5750 Fendf&gt;f ban jo. So50.
and heat, carpeting down,
antennas and acces . Phone
condition . S9HUO. Can bt&gt; seen
01 4 367 -T/2Q .
large eat-in k itchen, 2 room
Portland H4:J·1Hll . Open even·
at Ki ng~ b ury HornP Safes. 1100
ings ti ll H 00 : Sunday l :UU till
basement, and large lot .
COBRA ')Q CB with COOl&lt; and
f. Ma in. Pomproy , Ohio or coli
6.00.
Want $25.000.
ont enno. S100 (/4'J .J'It.H or
~IJ') . '/0 3 4
OPPORTUNITY - Large
4Q').5b'l l
HONAK I::H"S CB and electronic
business
room
with
equi pment . Ht .33 506 'Jnd St ..
CONOlTIONBO hoy S1 o bole .
efficiency apartment. Can
Mason WV "JSibU .
j \l,j (j 1100.
you
beat
this
..
for
only
Estate
lor Sale- - Real
--·-· -·$12,000? A real cheap
HOMESITJ:S for sole I arre ond home. Better have a look.
up . Middi Ppor t. neor Rutl and.
JUST PAINTED- Inside
_____g_eal Estate lor Sale
SNOW
C ...nlf 4 &lt;/ ] ."/,ffi j
and out. All new carpeting,
THR fE I:UDHOOM !rome home in new natural gas F.A .
Middl f&gt;port C ai i i!~ 'J . 3J5'l .
furnace, 3 bedrooms, full
basemenf for your kids ,
1-= AHM i-= OH sale. House. '1 horn !o . and out of high water zone.
.SNOWTIRES
lroi l ~ r l l'lrge ponrl 10 ocrt"s ot
Want $16,500.
ON SALE AT
H:locre~ . l4:l - 'L5b6
TRAILER LOT - All set
POMEROY LANDMARK
George 5. Hobsteller Jr.
REAl !:S TA TE LOANS . VA
readytoputyourtra iler
SERVICE STATION
Broker
rnoney
down
( elig ib'o "e ~ ''' double-wide on before
We are taking callS
Veterans). f HA As low as J,....
ristmas. Have just two.
everyday for all types of
down (all non -Ve tmen!&gt; ond
reasonable .
property . If you are
EAGE On water
gpnerol publ ic) ro purchas e
real e~ t o t 0 or ref inance . JU line in Chester Township.
thinking of selling call us
~ck W. Cor'sey, Mgr.
YJ:AHS n RMS . IRELAND MOH· You can buy 5 acres for
today and dist:uss our
· ~ Pt,.llle 992-2111
TGAGf CO .. If 1:: . Stat£' St.. $5,000.
listing contrad. We need
Athen ~ Phone 014 ·51:''1 ·305 1
listings. Merry Christmas
G. Bruce Teaford
and Happy New Year!!
Nl: W THRH bedroom home.
Helen L. Teaford
1-'l:: A HAUll::R S CB So les. !:quip·
Cheryl Lemley
f1 replac e su n dec k 1•, acre
Sue P. Murphy
men! now on sole . All in ~lock
Associate
wooded lot 614 ·60'/ 3H90. Tup·
Associates
~adi os and accp-;sa' ies through
New Lima Road
pers Pla ins.
Chns tmos Opon every day el( ·
Hutt:hinson Sub. Oiv.
Housing
•
cep t Sunday ond Monday . ~ven
Rutland, Ohio
i n g:.
by
appoin tm en t .
Phone 742-2003
Headquarters
1-'ortl and Oh1o. 1-'ho1le H43·l0b4
li!Tl IN TERN ATIONA L backhoe
WANT TO SELL ? Call us
44C/·2047 .
tor an appraisal and why
ON!: PAI R Creative n 3-way
you should list with us .
speakers $1 70. l pair GE 3
WANT TO BUY? Call us. If
.
way speakers Sl40. 4HS-J30 1 we don 't have it then we ' ll
JUST
LISTED
-IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION- Good
days and ~H5 - 4 14 U oltc1 5pm .
find it for you .
l
lf2
story
house,
mostly
carpeted
wlfh 4 bedrooms,
WHEN OPPORTUNITY
QUALITY CONDITIONW mixed
dining room and laundry room. Also almost new 2 car
KNOCKS,
yoU
slill
ha"e
to
hoy . Wi ll deliver . 9U'J "1201.
heated ga·rage . Th is home Is nicely located In Portland
get up and open the door.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE at $22.500.
·
and
POfHAHL t ROYA ltypcwrit er wit h
De jt now.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy .
corr vi ng co~e . SJO. Days
Office 991·2342
50 ACRES FREE GAS- Good 11h story house with full
1!92 2MH . l::venings 91!2 -1%1
Eve. 991-2449
basement . Large pond stocked with ~Ish . Priced for
Rodney Downing , Broker
quick sale. $40,000.
Bill
Childs
,
Manager
Real Estate lor Sale
SPACIOUS BI -LEVEL- This may be your. dream
home. It ·has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room, and to firtish fhis well-laid out home we
have five bedrOOms, utility room and garage. Very low
heating bill. Red barn, llke storage building . Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt. 7.
Asking $55 ,000.

TIRE SALE

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

Has Tough Ford Pickups.

w
w
w

INSULATION
'6.50 per bag
'
J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

~.

~

'
'

CB.UJLOSE

GARAGE

)t

-~

Iw DAN THOMPSON FORD
I

Business Services

Mobile Homes lor Sale
111"16 NASHUA 14 0.5 3 beclroorn
l , both. unrle, r innrnfl . Sl50U
oncl ossurnP loon . ~A &lt;J · it:JH3 or
H-l J 3:.1 11
1lJ"/(,l A(nherst 50x12 '1 ~R
11!"/0C ha mpion 60.1( l:l '} BR
1 ~ 65 Gcncrol bOx l '; ') Bfl
1%H I-'MC5:Jx l :l/ BR
1'-'55 Prni rie Sr:honner /thH 1 BR
1t. 1 '1:J Royol bnbos o;, y 61-h 14 3 BR
19511 Star 50,. l 0 '1 BR
1~'!J S!ar 6())( 1A 2 BR
fl.,lf-&gt;H Sta r bOx l ""J 2 SR
l'f!U Syl11o bO x 12 ') BH
1'-JbH Villages bOxl 'J. 'j tiR
1~64 Winchor 51 xlO ') lW
1~ '/UKi r l&lt;.wo od l ix60 :J BR
B&amp;S MO Hil~ HOMf SALES
Pl" . f&gt;LEASA Nr . W.VA .

-mw""ir~~~~~~~~~~-----------------.

_ The Daily Sentinel, Middlepori-Pcmeroy, o., Friday, Dec.
0

-~-------

~

13

- ....

9 ...

sq9 _ &lt;~5

UREA 46%

POMEROY
LANDMARK

~----

OPEN:

Holzer Medica.l Center
446-5105

s~.~U. us

•CHRISTMAS TREES
•FRESH FRUIT
•FRUIT BASKETS

Auto Sales
QUAliTY CONDITIONED mi xed
_h~-~~ll_d :_li~e!_. ~~-~29_1 .__
19'!5 CADILLAC ELDORADO. Full
power. Air, AM -FM rodio.
Wed., Thurs. &amp; Friday
Clean. Phone 992· 7462.
12 :00 Noon-5:00P.M.
· - --·-- --S.I.10 : 00A.M.-5:?? P.M.
1977 CADILLAC ELDORADO. Full
Sunday Dec. 17, 11:00-5 :00
power, ai r. AM ·FM radio. Fuel
P.M.
1njec ti on. Phone 992··/4b2.
--- -- -1978 FORD 2-door Futuro coup.,.
and
Candles
_1~~! ~~ e~ ~-J.~ t o n~9_9~~8~ ·accessories,
19'
15 Chevell e Mali bu wa gon
handmade Christmas
P.S., P.a.. auto .. air . Priced to
items &amp; gifts.
sell. 949-2753.
1905 FORD MU STANG . 2!i9
BA I LEY"S
STORL
33 1
automat ic. Pinto 23 B CB bo se
N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport. Ohio.
unit wi th mic stand . Old butter
Will be dosed Dec . 25 to Jan 2.
churn . Dial and se w cab inet
sewing machine . Also free
BAKER'S BUSY Bee!&gt; Ceramics will
pups to good home. Coli
dose Dec. 22 and reopen Jon .
onyti me.
22 . Thanks for your patronage --985-4229
---------·--thoughou t th e year. Pauline 1973 CHEVROLET 4-wheel dri11e
Boker .
Custom Deluxe 10. 350. oufo ..
A.C. . P.S.. P.B.. lock out hub!&gt; .
GLIN s H OOT~ Muzz le loaders ond
good tires, body ru!ity . $2000
rifl e slugs. Meat matc h. Sun·
fir m. 992·5296.
day . Dec . 17. Rutla nd Gun Club,
10 om . For more information, JCI74 CHEVROLET MALIBU 2-dr ..
excell ent !&gt; hope, vinyl toP, . 1·
__
&lt;o_ll_7_
4 ~;:_
29
:.::2:_7.:_
. __
tone green, $1400. 1973 Olds
station wagon, 4-dr, 9 pass,
Lost and Found
crui somotic . good shape .
$1 400 . 1972 Che11rolet pickup '11
LOST: TIGER cot with short toil in
tan. 6 cyl . stick !l. hift . $1000 ..
Racine . 949·2679' - - - good shape. 1972 VW . good
shape. $800. Come and try ou t.
Mason, 304 -773· 5.47 1.
Help Wanted
19b7 THUND I:: RBIRD . Rebuilt
motor . New paint. No rust.
Snow tires . 9.&lt;1 9-2042

State of Ohio License ,
rotating shill. Excellent
fringe benefits. Apply ol
Personnel OHice.

For Sal e
tiMl-~ll)N I· -.m•,f q•o.,l'&gt; l
r nil rtrm c lrlnr rdl'&gt; lf'r !rlr!l' r don
t,.nd C1nd oil ! Y P ~"'" nl o..ol! h ·
rf'lo.. r{"ll ~ni l Wa~k ~ lnr ~ Mom
St , 1-'otnPrny ~4') :JHI.Jl
APPU:S ~ll l. PATR I( K Orrhmrl
~ 1 01 ("\ Wt 0114 Phonro Wtlltf'''-&gt;iiiP
h Oll 3'1H!&gt;.
~
CHRI STMAS TRHS Mo.n ~~
h'ut loncl .
RUHAND HAHUWAIU Ill"/ Mom
51 / J'; 'J'JSS Mnrlf'rn r... tn vvnod
... t QVI'
rff' l 11 (l ll ... tro fm
IIIOrfP!.
Sb5 u ~('d ou to Wn f\c+ .. , () V ('
w11h ~ l ow&lt;&gt;• S~H4 N f\ w roiN tl I(
hot wO if"'f tonk ~ ~~~ l uly h('nl
S U:J . '-~~ fool ho.l( . ~ · K tMI:. J1
pc. w1th tool hox
5-lli.I.,IS .
li! 0111l1f' waHPn ty h/ pc. ri rop
lorgprf -.PI wi th tool ho ... .
S.:lt..1 .U5. Qnp 4:J pc ~'"' ' rl1op
l a~cwri toC1 1s wi th •oOI hox .

l::AR corn
51 bu .
TIMBER . POMEROY Forest Pro· CHOICI::
"!A:J . :J359 .
ducts . Top price for standing
sow timber . Cal l 1./92·5%5 or
.l&lt; ~n t. H_onby , 1_· 4~6:8?7?.
OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass
bed!&gt; . iron bed!&gt; . desks. etc..
complete households . Write
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
coli 992· 77b0.
•~POINSffiiAS
OlD CO INS, pocl&lt;. et wotchl&gt;s,
class rin gs . weddi ng band s, ~
diamonds . Gold or silver. Call
1258 Powell St.,
R o g p~ Wom!l. ley . 742·233 1.
Middleport
-- -- - · - - WANT TO buy: old .&lt;15 ond 78
phonograph reco rd s. Call
992-0:J'!O or Contact Martin Fur·
niture.
10-8 daily
CASH FOR junk cars. Wr ecke r
12-8 Sundays
service. f rye"s. Rutla nd, Oh io .
742·2081.
l ARGI:: 1-" ANCV op pl f' s lor
WE PICK up junk auto bodies buy·
Chri st•nos. Basket&lt;; or your own
ing junk cars , scrap iron , bot;
use . Fitzpatr ick Orchard . State
teries and metals. Rider"s
Rou te 6H9 . Phonr Ob4 ·3/ H5 .
Sal vage. SR 124, Pomeroy .
REOUCl:: SA~f and fo:.t with
992-54b8.
GobesC' Tobl e t ~ and E-Vop
30 to 50 ACRl::S OF land in the
woter pills·. Nelson Drug
Solem or Rutland Townships.
Coli alter 6pm. 742·2028.

On Route7
at Chester, 0 .

A LICENSED
BOILER OPERATOR

.

Wrrte PO 8 oJo: "/'lQ.W , c -o Thf'
l)oily Sen l im:&gt;l , Pomeroy , O H
45'l6&lt;.1 .
f("IJ\l

at·r· :H'l't•p!t'tl unly wrth t·as h w1th
un lt•l . !5 c..-nt dw r~t· rur t~tl.s rarry-·
111~ Box Num t~.. r Ill Carr u! Thr Sen·

;

Best Results Use ·Se.ntm•· el Classifieds

BLAZER

" Misc."

Immediate Delivery
Don't Buy Any Chevrolet
Until You See

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
,

Homllte chain saw, push mower, rubber fire
wheelbarrow, lumber , concrete blocks, saddle, porch
swing, misc . hand tools, electric heater. toaster oven
broiler . part Collie &amp; German Shepherd dog . Allllems
extra nice .

OWNER: IVA RA YIURN

99;1-2174

•.

Cosh
D. Smith
949-2033

.

Positive I. D.

lunch
J. Carnohan
949-2701

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992 -2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8:00p.m.

'

" Licensed &amp; Bonded in ThrM States"
" Not responsible fOr accidents or lo~s of property"

�·.
14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Dec. 1~. 197S

Soldiers fire on mourners .

River lowers,
causing relief
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (UP! )
- The level of the rainswollen Ohio River is inching
lower, providing downstream
residents living near the
riverbank with hope they
may be spared of any severe
flooding .
Forecasters with the
National Weather Service
predict .that - short of the
small prospect for rain
during the weekend - the
level of the Ohio River will
drop up tlJ two feet daily and
may reach its normal level by
early next week.
On Thursday the river level
at Louisville dropped 1-lOth of
a foot during a tw&lt;Hlour
period but remained more
than eight feet above flood
stage. At the same time the
river approached its normal
level upstream in Cincinnati.
While dozens of families in
the Louisville region whose
homes are located outside the
city's floodwall were routed

By SAJID RIZVI
TEHRAN, Iran (UPI)
Iranian troops opened fire
wday to disperse several
thousand mourners carrymg
bodies of riot victims for
by rising water earlier in the burial in the southern Iranian
week ther e was little city of Shiraz, witnesses
indication of severe flooding reported.
There were no immediate

downstream .

State police in Mayfield and
Henderson , who patrol the
region bordering on the final
IOIJ.mile stretch of the Ohio
River from Owensboro to
Cairo, Ill., reported only
minor incidents of flooding
Thursday in far western
Kentucky.
Some flooding along riverfront roads in the area near
Evansville, Ind.,
was
reported and the weather
serv ice urged area residents
tlJ watch for any surge in the
river le ve l. The weather
service predicted the river
would crest at Evansville late
Saturday at three feet above
flood stage and wouid crest
tllday in Owensboro about
four feel above flood stage.
A! Cannelton, more than
100 miles downstream from
Louisville , rive r barge

Makes A Great Gift
To a son, daughter or grandchildren
and a wonderful way to say

reports of deaths . But the
witnesses said several people
were brought to the city's
hospitals with gunshot
wounds.
The shooting occurred
ear ly today as several
cap tains

reported

some

trouble maneuvering among

driftwood. However, the
Army Corps of Engineers
said drifting materials
carried by the cresting river
didn't se riously disrupt river
traffic.
Authorities again cited the
slow rise of the river over a
week-long period for the
small number hurried
evacuations.
The pattern was similar

thousand men aiu:i women

pomeroy

nation a
bank

the bank of
the century
established 1872

FDIC

SOLVE THEM

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

! Area Deaths !

farther up the Ohio River
northeast to Cincinnati and
MYRTLE ·McBRIDE
beyond earlier in the week as
1\lyrtle
Crooks McBride, 82,
the steady pace of the water's
Syracuse,
died Thursday at
rise gave residents lime to
her
residence.
evacuate riverfront homes in
Mrs. McBride was born
an orderly fashion .
Aug. 26, !896 the daughter of
the late Alexander and
Virginia Turner Crooks. She
was a member of the
ENLISTS IN USAF
Syracuse United Methodist
Wright - Patterson AFB, Church.
Ohio - Scott A. Warner, son
Mrs, McBride is survived
of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Warner by t.wo daughters, Mrs.
of Rt . 4, Pomeroy, enlisted in Gilbert Beegle, Fairborn, and
the U. S. Air Force today, Carmaleta Williams, Unionaccording to T-Sgt. Orene ville; Mo., one sister, Mildred
Gabbard,
Air
Force Teague, Simi, Calif., II
Recruiter here.
grandchilden, six great·
Upon graduation from the grandchildren and several
Air Force's six weeks basiC. nieces and nephews.
military training, Scott will
Funeral services will be
receive training in the held Sunday at• I p.m. at
Avionic Navigation System Ewing Chapel. Burial will be
Career Field. Scott is a 1978 in Gilm 0 re Cemetery.
graduafe of Meigs High Friends may call al the
School.
funeral home alter 10 a.m. on
Scott will be earning Saturday.
credits towards an Associate
Degree through the Com·
munily College of the Air
F urce while attending basic
and other Air Force technical
WEDDING SATURDAY
training schools.
The open church wedding
of Becky Bryant, daughter of
Carl Bryimt, Bowling Green,
and Robert Delong, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
SAID SATISFACTORY
Albert (Red) Keeton, Delong, Pomeroy, will be.
Minersville, is reported in .held 6 ' 30 p.m . Saturday · in
satisfactory condition at the the Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holzer Medical Center. Cards Holiness Church located on
the Harrisonville Road.
may be sent to Room 231.
Music wiU begin at 6 p.m. and
the reception following the
wedding will be at the
NOW YOU KNOW
The highest dry-air tem- Pomeroy elementary school.
perature ever endured by a
human was 400 degrees in a
1960 U. S. Air Force experiment - considerably
FOUND SHOT
more than the 325 degrees
COLUMBUS (UPI)
required to broil a steak.
Susan A. Gatewood, 18, of
suburban Groveport , was
found shot to death Thursday
in the bedroom of her home .
Police said she was killed
' by two bullets fired from a
.25-caliber automatic pistol.
A third bullet was found in the
pillow.
The woman's body was
found by her mother, Mary
HERE!
Reedy, when Mrs. Reedy
returned home from work .

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

WITH

P»WJ#i'"*OfiAF•t•
Yo rk, Pennsylvania 17405

FEATURING:

YORKTOWN

confirmed.. And tribesmen
who tried to attac~· anti-shah
homes and shops in the holy
city of Mashad, in east Iran,
were beaten up and forced to

marched from the Pahlavi
University medical facilities Tehran went on a virtual
with bodies of several people strike and motorists drove
killed in this week's proshah through the streets with car
attacks on opponents of the ligh ts glaring in the daylight. flee, witnesses said.
The government today
The shooting climaxed a
regime.
banned
all demonstrations "The .transportation of the three-day r ampage by
both
for
and against the shah
bodies across.the town to the marauding tribesmen and
in
an
a ttempt to quell the
farmers
through
towns
burial grounds provoked the
.
systematic
arS(ID and killing
across
Iran,
killing
anti-shah
entire city into a mood of
that
spread
across the
elements
and
burning
homes
anger,'' one witness reported
country in the last UIJ'ee days.
·
and shops.
in. Shiraz.
.In the central Iranian city Politicians critiCized the
The mourners refused an
order to disperse, the of Yazd, troops fired on three-day delay .in · anwitnesses said, and the troops · demonstrators Thursday but nouncing the offiCial ban.
The final toll in the
casualties could not be
opened fire.
apparent pro,shah backlash
was still not known . .
(In Paris, exiled opposition ·
leader Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khoineini today called for a
nationwide general strike in
I
I Iran to support work
stoppages in the oil fields and
declared Monday a day of
MRS. Gf:ORGE MORRIS
MRS. CARL BILIKAM
Mrs. George G . Morris, 85, " national mourrl ing" for
Mrs. Carl (Pat ) Bilikam,
Syracuse, died unexpectedly Phneniz, Ariz. a f11rmer resi· victims of the recent
dent of Meigs Cmmty. died violence.
in Clewiston, Fla.
I "The oil industry workers
Funeral arrangements will Thun~da y murning at a
must
go on with their strike
be announced· by Ewing hospital in Phoenix .
until
the downfall of the
She and lwr lale husband
Funeral Home.
Shah,"
Khomeini said.
ope r·ated a Maylag Store in
"
Iranian
people in all
Pomcruy for mcmy years.

MERRY CHRISTMAS
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

To vrotest the at tack, the
wurist city 580 miles south of

'

LICENSE ISSUED
A marriage license was
issued to. Robert Michael
DeLong, 18, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
and Rebecca Jo Bryant, 21,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

Resides her husbaml who economic sectors must
died about two years Hgn, she support the .oil industry

was preceded in death by an
infant daughter.

Surviving

strikers by extending their
own strikes. "

·I He attributed the latest
wave
of attacks oo anti. ri s, Pnmemy, and William
government
demonstratt:s
Morris with whom she made
to
the
shah
's " menral
her. home, and a da ug hll~ l'.
disturbances."
)
Mrs. Ch.rles B. Mill er ,
are two sons, George F.. Mor-

Largo . Fla., several grandch ildre n . and
g n• &lt;J l grandchildren .
Funeral services will bl'
held at the A. 1.. Moore
·fun eral hon~e in Phucnix. Mr .
and Mrs. Morris· left Thursday aftl!rnuun fur P huenix.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Sharon Stark,
Pomeroy; Ura Morri s,
Racine ;
Racine.

Anna

Leonard ,

Discharged - Kenneth
Keesee, Tammie DeBord ,
Christina O'Donnell, Dorothy
Wright.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges , Oet~. 14
Demetria Barker, ·Delbert
Becker, Chrb1ina Boggess,
Enna Brewe r, Kenneih Cox,
De~vid Defjl , Duris Dixon,
I. e.s t e r

Dod son,

Bri a n

Fellure, Ci&gt;ra Grindley, Hazel
Hard ing, Earl Hnlbrnnk ,
Luther Holbrook , Virgini a
Hnnd , John John ~im , Ruth
Karr, Troy King , Arthur .
Lanham , Siella Lov ell ,
Ri cha rd Maier, Myrtl e
MAlnne,Susan Manley. Katie
Mays, John McGee, Richanl
McPeek, Deborah Debarah
Peed, Audrey Saunders,
Dorothy Sheets, Cliffoo·d
SLack, Marjorie Trout, Betty

Three men
injured in
accident
Three men were injured
and their cars demolished in
a head-on collision Thursday
at 4:05p.m. on Route 33 in the
vicinity of Midway Drive,
above New Haven .
Taken by the New. Haven
Rescue Squad to Pleasant
Valley Hospital following the
accident were the drivers of
the two cars, John 'Bryant,
Middleport , and Anthony R.
Hall , Huntington, and a
passenger · in the Bryan t
vehicle, Frank Ryther,
Pomeroy. All thre~ were
admitted to the hospital. Hall
and Ryther are listed in
stable condition while
Bryant 's
condition
is
described as fair .
The accident remains
under investigation by New
Haven patrolmen Ronald
Russell, Sgt . L.M. Duncan
and Greg Taylor.

Wat.sun .

Births, De&lt;·. 14
Mr. and Mrs. John .Powell ,
.sun, Cheshire.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hut-

\

Something New AI Our Drive· Thru Window

.

&gt;

•

all the national evening new_s
By KOBERT SHEPARD
programs
and newspaper
WASHINGTON (UP!) chains
as
well
as supporting
Sen.-Elect Larry Pressler, RS.D., said today he will wire services, polling grooJIIl;
introduce legislation next and related organizations.
year to break up newspaper news could easily be shade(!
and
related
media or controlled.
His legislation may.
monopolies.
"The
most
abusive attempt to JX'OIIlbit ownership
of related niedla operations'
moru:~lies in our nation are
such
as polling organizations,
chain newspapers and media
conglomera tes," Pressler he said,
Pfessler said he had.
told a Federal Trade
Commission symposium oo attempted to raise the issue
previously during his tenure ·
media concentration .
Because of this, he said the in the House, but his
independent editor and news- . colleagues showed little
man "are threatened with interest.
" Many
In
Congress
extinction.n
A House member elected to complain of oil monopolies
other
business
.the · Senate in November, and
Pressler said he is still cooglomerates, but few raise
drafting his bill and voices against the more
explained tha t a possible powerful media monopolies,"
·
lea lure will be to limit he said.
" If our · media are
newspaper groups to . owning
no more than 10 papers. Some controlled by monopolies,
of the largest newspaper how can we protect the small
or
the
groups own nearly 80 businessman
independent entrepreneur?"
publications, he charged .
Over aU, Pressler said, the he asked.
FTC chairman Michael
country needs " a Teddy
Roosevelt era of trust-busting Pertschuk was encouraged to
regarding chain newspapers bold the symposium by Rep.
and media conglomerates." Morris Udall, 0-Ariz., am!
He said news monopolies others included in their
suggestion a warning against
~ ave the potential for
slanting news stories, adding a .freedoruinhibiting backlash
powerful
that if 20 o~ 30 persons control against
concentrations.
·

JOHN RAY HUNNELL, chairman of the Meigs Jaycee
. Toys 1oc Tots program, is pictured with a number of used

VOL 13

Brothers indicted ·
on murder charges
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Two
brothers charged in six of the
.~ aliher killings in central
Ohio in the past year, were
indicted Thursday by a Franklin County grand jury.
Ten persons were killed, six
in Franklin County, three in
Licking County and one in
Fairfield County. The
brothers were charged only
with the Franklin County
slaying.
Gary Lewingdon, 38,
Kirkersville in Licking
County, was named in six
counts and his brother
Thaddeus, 41, Glenford in
Perry County, was named in
five counts.
In addition, the two were
named on eight other counts,
including theft, aggravated
robbery and aggravated burglarly.
The Franklin County
prosecutor's office said
arraigrunents would be held
next week , while triqls would
begin in "two to three

POMEROY - Meigs County Soeriff
James J . Proffitt Saturday requested the
assistance of the public regarding the rash
of boat motor thefts in the area.
Soeriff Proffitt said in recent weeks ,
motors have been taken from boats owned
by Kaiser employees who have tied up
their crafts on Old Town Creek Rd. off SR
336 at Great Bend. Two juveniles were
recently arrested for some vandalism and
theft of items from vehicles at Old Town
Creek, but the theft of boat motors bas
continued. Early Thursday morning, more
boat motors were stolen and a car was
vandalized. Sheriff Proffitt said that it is
imperative that his depariment receive
citizen coo~rallon In furnishing

YES II

inlarmaU.. .........,.

We're still taking
senior class portraits .
Traditional
and

~other

Sllyder,

scenic se!tings.

Franklin County
Prosecutor George C. Smith

,

The Photo Place
(Bob tloeftichl
109 High 51.

All of our women 's coats included

se lect ion in

jun ior - misses and women's
sizes. You'll like the selection and
the savings.

SALE PRICES

COATS and JACKETS

specially selected USDA inspected meats . The meat is
sliced thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun
There is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entir~
family needs daily .

Try Our Drive-Thru Instant Seroice!

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Crow's Family Restaurant
Pomeroy, Ohio

Markin

stolen Friday

BOYS' JACKETS
men's and bays'

department on the 1st floor.

Denims - nylons · cofton polyester

blends. All warmly tined - many
with hoods.

SALE PRICES
OPEN EVERY NIGHT nL 8
Santa Claus will be in the store Friday 6 to
P.M.- Monday 2 to 3 P.M.
.

a P.M.- Sa't urday 6 to a

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

accident.

Acrording to the r~nort, Kelly
Winebrenner, 18, Syracuse, was traveling
west on SR 124 approximately one.fourlh
mile east of Syracuse corporation limit
and struck and kUled a deer that jumped
into the path of his vehlcle . There was
slight damage. to the left side of the 1974
Olevrolet Monte"Carlo.

r 'Uied to the ·Meigs

R .e port 2 cars

SALE PRICES ..
Si zes 8 to 20 -

~t"clne,

GALLIPOUS - Two vehicles
incurred severe damage in a Saturday
morning accident investigated by the
Gallipolis City Police.
Officers report tbat an auto operated
by Ronald E. Trimble, 37, Gallipolis, was
traveling south on the 400 block of Fourth
Ave., when it went left of center and struck
a parked vehicle owned by Pam ·s.
Ehsenaur, GaUipolis, in the rear.
The Trimble vehicle pushed the
Eshenaur auto 37 feel along the curb.
Trimble displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center, where he was treated and
released.
Trbnble · was cited on charges of
faU..-e to cootrol a motor vehicle.
City pollee investigated two accidents
Friday.
.
At 5:26 p.m., an undentified auto
traveling north on Fir!l Ave. went nH the
left side of the roadway on the 900 block
and aroick the guy wire of a utility pole.
The' impact pulled the top out of the
pole, owned by Ohio Bell, and damaged
Columbus and Southern Electric, as well
as PoinTView Cable lines.
OlflC&lt;lrs investigated a two-vehicle
accident &lt;11 Second Ave . at I p.m.
Police report that a parked vehicle
owned by Wilma F. Haycraft, Gallipolis,
was struck by a north bound auto owned by
John Carroll, Gallipolis.
Officers report moderate damage to
both vehicles.
In further action, police investigated
the breaking and entering, and the
vandalization of the Mary Burnheimer

WOMEN'S COATS
a big

~\bella.

M'\.lv.l.b'....~-old

Pomeroy

JACKETS
for th is sa le -

tntintl

.

County Jail Friday evening to spend
weekend in jail in compliance to orders of
the Pomeroy Mayor's Court. When he
arrived at the jail he was heavily
intoxicated and deputies have filed charge
of disorderly conduct against him in the
Meigs County Court . Snyder will now have
tD wait until court hearing Monday before
being released.
Deputies inve stigated a deer-car

Autos damagedAn
S~turday accident

Call us for
your appointment.

AND

};;f"

perl'ent.

TEHRAN, Iran (UPI)- Hwodreds of oil the earthquake that devastated villages
workers, racing threats or dismissal, around the toYms of Masjid~ Solalm:an
resumed drilling in st rike-paralyzed and lzeh, 480 miles southwest of Tehran
Iranian oilfields Saturday. Delayed Friday.
A telephone operator in the oil town of
reports of a major earthquake in
Ma,
jid-&lt;! Solaiman said most of the
southwest Iran reported at least42 persons
casualties occurred in villages bordering
killed.
The reports, delayed by more than 24 the huge Reza Shah Kabir dam.
"No one here can remember a worse
hours by a general strike which hit
the operator said. " U was
earthquake,"
conununications, said in addition to 42
known deaths, another 200 wer~ injured in really hard.11

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1978

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 46

,..

Eduardo Se mblantes Polanco, the
minister from Ecuador .
Valent in Ge rnandez Acosta, the
Venezuelan mlnister, said he ex:pected an
average increase for 1979 of at least 10

Drilling is resumed in
strike-paralyzed fields

was proposed as a compromise between
countries wanting only a rilodest. increase
and those seeking a sizeable hike.
The moderates argued that a single
large increase ran the risk of sending
Western economies into another tailspin

toys contributed to the program by residents for the needy.
The toys are being restored by the Jaycees . (l)ee additional
picture on().! today) .

•

Help sought .to .
curb boat thefts

has said the other two
counties would handle the
cases when the Franklin
County case Is ended.
Gary was named .in the
February
slaylngs
of
Columbus tavern owner
Mickey McCann, 58, his·
mother Dorothy Marie
McCann , 77, and his
girlfriend Christine
Herdman , 26; in the May
slayings of Jerry Martin, 47, ·
and his wife Martha, 51, and
the Dec. 5 slaying of Joseph
Annick, 58.

months."

.. ......

tmts

children's snow suits.

Our Roast Beef and Roast Ham Sandwiches start with

. .... -

•

and 7 to 14. Excellent savings on
our entire stock . Included also -

VILLAGE

. ., .

informally over dinner at their tightly
guarded beachfront hotel.
The staggered pricing system, possibly
featuring increases every three months,

Children's coats and jackets on

SANDWICHES

•

sources said a decision could come late
Saturday after the oil ministers met

the 2nd floor - Sizes 1to J - J to 6•

and

' · •,

Th e formal conference adjourned

SALE PRICES
GIRLS' COATS

ROAST BEEF OR ROAST HAM

..

Saturday and was scheduled to resume
Sund ay morning . Some con fer ence

yourself.

WEAR

......

ABU DHABI (UPI) - Oil ministers of like the one that followed the quadrupling
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting of oil prices in 1973-74.
Countries met Saturday· to discuss blunt,.
''This is also a formula that would
ing the impact of a 1979 oil price hike by enable the conswning t'OWltries to absorb
spreading the increase over the lull year - the in creases without st rain ," sa id Gen .
possibly every three months .
With all 13 member countries agreed an
increase was inevitable to counter
inflation in the West and the fall of the
dollar, the main question before the
ministers was the amount of the price
hike.

Men 's size 36 to 50 In winter
ja ckets . dressy fur trimmed
coats - all weather coats. Let us
help you pick out the one· that's
right tor you to give or buy for

WOOD-

·~

.•'

COATS

MEN~S

-.

Oil min-isters ·discuss
impact of price hike

CHRISTMAS SALE

l

.

Legislation to
.
break ·mo:riopoliesl

ELBERFELDS ·

ehins, snn , Gallipolis.

FREE CLOTHING DAY
The Gallia • Meigs Community Action Program will
hold its free clothing day
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
Monday. Area residents in
need for clothing are
welcome. The agency's
clothing bank is located In the
former Cheshire High School
building.

'

•

GALUPOUS - The Gallla County
llleriff's Department inveotigated .two
reports of aolen motor vehicl"'l Friday.
Nm~a Marcum, Rt. 3, Vinton, reported
the theft of a 1970 white Pontiac, with a
bladt vinyl top. According to the report,
the auto had been taken between II p.m.
Thuraday lind 7 a.m. Friday.
The theft of a 1976 brown and gold
Maverick waa reported to;the department
by Ruth Ward, Vintm. According to the
report, the vehicle had been taken to
Zlm's Landing, where II had ·been left
disabled.
.
.
In other action, ,deputieli Investigated
the vandall,D of the GalJipolla Gun Club,
Buck Rldtie Rd.; Saturday.
OIIICen report that a door on the
northeast aide of the buDding had been
ltlcked ln. Nothing appeared to be miaalng .

residence, 2018 Eastern Ave., Saturday.
Officers report that entry was gained
to the dwelling through the garage where a
door had been kicked in.
Inside the home, vandals damaged a
stereo system and radio.
City Police issued three citations
Saturday .
John Rees, 28, Gallipolis, Rowane D.
Burdette, 18, Gallipolis, and Richard A.
Burdette, 20, Gallipolis, were cited on
charges of suspicious behavior.
' Two citations were issued Friday.
Aaron A. Peck, 25, Gallipolis, was .
cited on charges of disorderly conduct.
Cited on charges of failure to obey a
traffic control device was Mark A. Watson,
18, Gallipolis.

Carter's policy
may be scrapped
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President
Carter's national urban policy, unveiled
with much fanfare last March, will be
scrapped if his anti-inflation advisers have
their way, the U.S. Conference of Mayors
said Saturday.
Major components of the policy, such as
supplemental monetary assistance and
public works and jobs programs, will be
quietly shelved in the name of fighting
inflation, according to an analysis
prepared by the cooference staff.
The analysis was based oo information
the group has received on Carter's
proposed budget for the business year
beginning Oct. I, 1979.
"Our intelligence suggests that between
$1~ and $20 billion In cuts is being urged in
social domestic spending on the
president," said -'obn Gunther, executive
director of the Conference.
"These kind• of cuis, if carried through,
would force the burden of fighting inflation
oo the poor, the minorities and on the
problems that plague America's cities,"
Gmther said.
AI the recent Democratic party mid·
term convention liberals said they were
afraid Carter's anti-inflation campaign
would succeed at the cost of social
programs for the poor, the elderly and the
handicapped. But Carter proruiaed the
~lng an "equality" across the board in
sharing the anti-inflationary burdens.

POLICE CHIEF SHOT
BEVERLY, qhio (UP!) - Village
Pollee Clllef Charles Stewart answered a
!mock oo his door early Saturday morntng
and was shot by a man In a ski mask.
The chief was operated on at Marietta
Memorial Hospital aqd reported in fatr
condition.

''·"·'

'

II
...

.: ,,

'

roorh fr ame structure began in thJ{kitchen area of the dwelling. The department
lists the probable cause of the fire as a short irl Lhe refrigerator. Loss to the home
was valued at 130,0011, 115,0011 to the contents.

DESfROYED BY FIRE - The home of Meredith Nibert, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, was
.destroyed by fire Saturday morning. The Gallipolis City Fire Department, called
to the scene at I :49 a.m. on SR 1 at Clipper Mills, reports that tbe blaze in the six
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;::.:::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:·

Survey reveals Americans
less satisfied with jobs . . .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Munday through Wednesday, fair
Monday and Tuesday, with showers
possible on Wednesday. Highs w!ll
range from the middle 30s to the
middle 40s, with early morning low
temperatures in Ute tos.
::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::;;:::::·:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::

Meigs first to
complete recount

Fy DREW \'ON FERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) _ Many
Americans have became less satisfied
with their jobs in recent years. a new
government-financed survey shows.
The 310· a e re ort was releas ed
Saturday b:
Lat!:r Department.
ll said a decline in job satisfaction
between 1973 and 1977 was particularly

Sell..,mployed people reported hogh Henl e and Grah•m Starnes. study dorector,
levels of satisfaction. And persons under 30 told a news conference the decline
years of age , black workers, semt-sklll~d, · involved Vlrtually every demographtc and

notable among college graduates.

patterned after similar surveys m 1969 and

J!e

Labor Secretary Ray Marshall
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Board of Elections is the first in the state cautioned th at unduly pessimistic
to complete its recount in the Brown- conclusi ns should not be drawn from the
Celebrezze contest for Secretary of State findin
gs.
in Ohio.
·
Actually, the recounts were not to

°

have begun until this week. However , two

members of the local Board of Elections
were scheduled tlJ go away for periods of
time and so a waiver was secured

permitting the local board to do its recount
&lt;11 Saturday.
The recount which would have taken
endless hours before the use of the new
votomatlc l"'ulpment arid ballots waa
completed Iii only an hour and one-half
Saturday leading Board of · Elections
officials to be most enthusiastic in their
praise of the new equipment .
Also the vote of the two candidates
changed none during the recount. In the
official tally following the November
election Brown was given 3,196 votes from
Meigs Countians and Celebrezze, 1,703.
The figures remained exactly the same In
Salurday's recoWll.

LiVing Nativity scene

offered at area plaza
(;ALLIPOLIS ·- Ga llip&lt;1tis Chri&lt;tian
Churdt whil'h is ln~:&lt;Jlt•d near Rodnt&gt;v on
SH ~.' of(cred thrett showin~s ur a li~ing
NC~tivity Stene Friday night &lt;tt Lht• Silvt~ r
RritlJ,!c l•l a7.c-~ .
There was a li\'C dnnkcv. T(IO. thcl'c wns
H liv•! (.'Uif. There ahm 'weri-- ·liVl' shet·p
around a ":4a1Jk " which was M:t up on tht•
· :-&gt; p&lt;-t1· c l:lctwt't'll the Rcul\11 Shack i4nd G. C.
Mlll'phy Co.
" l.iw .. human bl•ing~ ;-dso had tlw roles
uf Mat'.\' and .To~{'ph . llw thrt'l' wi.s~: men.
;u1d &lt;IIIJ.(l'is. 1\ doll repn·sl'lllf.·ll tlw ba by
.lt•!-&gt; u ~ .

SinJ.!,ing

tlw

Wi.'"i h~· lrtpe·l:t't"llrt ling

S l (lf'~ · llf

as

or .lt '!' ll ~ . Slln\1'-

1lw hir::.
l!lf'!· Wt' l'(' :II ; 1\, :'11'! •1] .. 1!1 .
W(l!'

blu~ollar workers, ~nd ma~uf~cturmg
industry employees .hked lhetr Jobs , the

occupational group .
. " .
"We have no pat ~nsw~r [or 1t, srud

least in 1971, according tD the survel,
The $430,000 national surv.ey ~a.s
conducted by the Universoty of Moch1gan s
Institute lor Social Research and

Henle, although he toed ol to _a general
decline in feelings low~rd polltocal, socoal,
;md eeonomoc mstltutoons.
Although the 1 .~15 respondents to the
1977 survey w~re as~ed a. direct _questton
about overall Job salosfactoon, Stames said
it should not be gtven tlJo much weoght, but
considered as just one quesllon among
many asked . The answer showed 88.4

1913.
Marshall said "by and large, the
majority oF Amerir.:an wOrkers are sh.ll
quite satisfied with most aspects of theor
jobs. But the decline in job satisfaction
over the past four years is significant and
caMot be ignored .
·
" It serves as a warnin~ against
complacency and a useful remtnder that

percent saying they were "very" or
"somewhat" satisfied with their jobs,

compared to 9Q percent in 1973, and 85.~
percent in 1969.
.Among other figures, the survey showed

there is a continuing need fo r Ule Labor

27.2 percent answering "very true " when

Department tD promote energeticallr, the
improvement of conditions at work .
Deputy Assistant Labor Secretary Peter

questioned wheth er their pay was good.
That compared to a 40.7 percent figure In
1913.

Actor Qrlll Wills, 77, die&amp; Saturday
ENCINO, Calif. ( UPI) - Character
actor Chill Wills, gravel-voiced veteran of ·
mor e than 60 vears in show business, died
at his home la.te Friday of cancer. He was
77 .
WUls, a native of Seagoville, Tex., had
been ill for some time and was released
from the Motion Picture Home Hospital lo

return to hi S l!;ncmo nome only noun
before he died.
He was cast with Clark Gable and
Spencer Tracy for his motion picture debut
in " Boom Town ," in 1939, and spent the
next nine and a-half years as an MGM
contracl player.
He began making movies at tbe rate
of four or five a year.

}

·~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="810">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11453">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50196">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50195">
              <text>December 15, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6244">
      <name>bilikam</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3390">
      <name>crooks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1353">
      <name>mcbride</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="140">
      <name>morris</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
