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..
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . tl., Monday, Dec. 18, 1973

·TruCker shot three times today
United Press International
A truck driver was sh~t
three times early today at a
struck sto~ in Wood C&lt;lunty,
Ohio, as incidents of violence
picked up in the 39-&lt;1'!~ strike
by the Fraternal Association
of Steel Haulers.
Authorities said several
Shots were fired at two steel·
hauling trucks parked at the
truck stop. One driver, who
was not identified, was hit
three times in the leg.
A shooting of a truck was
also reported on the Ohio
Turnpike in Sandusky
County.
In Pennsylvania, State
Police reported 21 incidents
including two trucks hit by
gunfire.

One of the shootings was stopped in his car along the said it was believed the
weapons "might have been
reported in Westmoreland Indiana Toll Road .
A state police spokesman intended for use in thes tee!
C&lt;lunty and the other in Erie
Co unty, both in Western
Pennsylvania.
Authorities in Mahoning
County. Ohio, reported nine
tires on two tractor · trailer
trucks were punctured in a
motel parking lot overnight.
In Indiana , state police
arrested a Portage man early
Ken Kellett, 25, of Boulder
Klll DEVIL HILLS, N.C.
today, saying he may have
rode
his repoduction Wright
(UP!)Dutifully
decked
out
planned vandalism in con·
"Flyer•;
into the air at 10:51
·
in
a
tum
of
the
century
suit,
nection with the steel haulers
a.m.
Sunday,
75 years after
the
youthful
aviator
settled
strike.
Orvjlle
and
Wilbur
Wright
Carl L. Sleby, 46, was into his airplane and waited
flew
over
the
sandy
Outer
charged with carrying a for the wind to come up.
Banks
of
North
Carolina.
But Sunday, it was a young
weapon without a permit.
It .was ooly a qualified
Police said Sleby had a pistol, Colorado man who tried to fly
success
for Kellett. While hts
bricks and board with large and, by his standards, he
reproduction
Flyer ilf.ted skysucceeded.
nails in it when he was
ward with a gust of wind, the
tail appeared never to leave
the ground.
"We've made our point. We
came here to fly that airplane
and we succeeded in doing
that," said Kellett, whose
plane was virtually identical
to the Wrights',
,
With Orville at the controls,
the original Wright Flyer
made a 12,second flight
covering 120 feet on nee: 17,
1903. They followed tbat with
three more attempts that
day, the longest flight
covering 852 feet and lasting
59 seconds.
While Kellett said he
thought his flight might have
covered as much as 60 feet,
his craft appeared to become
airborne with its tail
dragging near the end of Its
120-foot takeoff rail. His
effort ende&lt;t just past the end
of the rail and the main body
of the plane was in the air
about 2'k seconds.
.
Kellett said he had been
looking for stronger winds.
"The winds could have
been better," he said. "That
last flight we had a gust at the
right time and it really
helped. The winds just were
not there again. They kept
dying down and coming up."
When the Wright brothers
flew, the winds were about 'El
mph. Kellett estimated the
winds during his takeoff roll
at 18 mph, with a 25 mph gust
that lifted him into the air.
While the town of Kitty
Hawk, 'where the Wrights
hiked to send a telegram
telling their family of the
event, generally is associated
with the first flight, the sandy
area now Is actually in the
town of Kill Devil Hills.
North Carolina may seek to
acquire the reproduction
Flyer from Kellett.
His demonstration
highlighted two days of
activities surrounding the
75th anniversary of manned,
powered flight. Moments
after his effort, a flight of F·
105 Thunderchiefs screamed
over the crowd of 6,000 who
had gathered at the liase of
the
Wright
Brothers
Memorial - aircraft far
removed fl'om the Wright
aviation era.

Wright brothers
flight reacted

REACHinG.
nEW HEIGHT/. ••

You don 't have to be an outdoorsman to appreciate the mountains of
money you can accumulate by placing your earnings in one of our
long-term savings accounts . Currently, we offer the highest interest
rates allowed by law. Depending on how long you wish to invest your
money, you can earn up to 8.75 Pet. Come in today and choose the
plan t hat suits you best, then sit back and watch your money keep on
clim bing!

(§]Farmers
~·~
Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 IIAXIIIUM INSURANCE FOR EACH DEPOSITOR
II EMBER FEllERAL DEPOSIT INSURANcE CORPORATION .

Area
Death

hauling strike."
The independent steel:
haulers went on strike to back

Veterans Memorlai Hospllal
Saturday Admissions Venedia Knight, .Portland;
Ben Davidson, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - ·
Rhonda H,annahs, liary
'Ginther, Linley Hart.
Sunday admissions Brooxie Layne, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges Mary F . Smith, Leopold
Hysell Brooxie Layne Linda
Stewart.
'

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Dec.15)
Aim'! Bailes, Rebecca
Barnett, Cad Bishop, Shawna
B~o~, Wtlham C&amp;pehart,
V1ck1e Coon, Oscar Dempsey,
Kathryn Dobbins, Jud1th
Drummond, Joh~ Hale,
William Henry, u,u1se Jones,
Ruby Mace, Lew1s Mltche~,
Avaneile Radcliff, Tw1la ·
Robmson, Tery Roush ,
Katherine · See, Charles
Smith, Leslie Taylor, Clair
~'%..~"C!J::88FHW~~~: Turner, Dolores VanMeter,
Betty White, Carlos White,
AWARD SOUGHT
Leora Wright.
COLUMBUS (UPI) Blrlhs, Dec. 15
The state COJilrolling
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Board was asked today to
Stewart, son, Londonderry.
award
$675,000
in
(Discharges, Dec.l&amp;)
damages and legal fees to
Lori Adams, Virgil Caudill,
plaintiffs In the 1970 Kent
GUEST SPEAKER - Tom Gramley, abllve, new
Roy Chamberlain, Essie
State University
director
of the Gallia.Jackaon-Meigs Community Mental
Conley, David -Crabtree,
shootings case to settle II
Center,·
and Bill Kiser, Crisislipe Coordirultor, will
Health
Robert Freeman, Michael
"once and for all."
speak
at
the
luncheon
meeting of the Meigs ijuman
Hawley, Mrs. Milford
The board began Its
Council
at
noon
Tuesday, Dec. 19, at the Meiga
Resource
Howard and . daughter,
deliberations on the
·Inn.
Gramley
will
report
on the center's new day
Charles Joseph, Edward ·
money for au out·of-court
treatment
program,
Adult
Community
Training, offered
Kapp, Kimberly Knight,
settlement of the 81&gt;·
from 10 a.m ..J p.m., four days a week. He will alao report
Walter Lambert, Jr., John
year-old case as a retrial
on the new inpatient unit of from 8-10 beds scheduled to
Long, Mrs. Ronnie McNeese
of the $46 mllllon civil suit
bpen soon. Bill Kiser will describe the daily 24-hour
and daughter , William
was about to slarl In
telephone
crisis counseling service (992-5554) and the
Morriss, Mrs. Robert Ne'al
Cleveland.
I
volunteer
training program. Next. year's Human
and daughter, Daniel Shane,
Resource Council officers will be elected during this
:·:·:::,:::::::::.:::::::-:,:::::,:::::::::::::::-:-:::::::::::-::::::::::::::· John White, Ryan Williams,
monthly forum meeting, which continues to be open to the
Scott Williams, Wanda
public.
Williams, Brant Wright.
Blrlhs, Dec. 16 .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Keller,
son, Oak Hill.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jeffers,
holidays will be !ellS spirited · son, Pudman, W. Va.
than two Columbus men bad
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
(Continued from page I)
expected it would be.
·
Pyl~. daughter, Bidwell.
other
workers
thrown
against a wall, but not injured. The keg
Nine state, federal and
Mr. and Mrs. John Lisle, w;as in a barrel of ice and sitting on a workbench when the
local agents Saturday son, Syracuse.
bottom blew out, striking Warman in the head.
arrested the men and
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Riley,
confiscated a still and 100 son, Beaver.
gallons of moonshine whiskey
(Discharges, Dec.l7)
packaged in ope-gallon
David Baker, Mrs. William
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Fighting desperately to save
·plastic · bottles wrapped in Bird and daughter, Louis
Cleveland
from bankruptcy and a state takeover of the city's
grocery bags stamped Blevins, Christal Cornell,
Mayor
Dennis Kucinich prepared plans today to lay
fmances,
"Happy Holidays."
Curtis Fulks, Ross Harding, off 3,500 municipal employees -including half the city's pollee
Clarence E. Walker, 46, Drema Harmon, Mrs.
Columbus, said by police to Thomas Hutchins and son, and firefighting forces.
City union leaders vowed, however, to seek court action to
be centr~l Ohio's largest Nancy McCorkle, Guy Me·
stop
the mayor's .emergency ;msterity program, arguing It
distributor of moonshine, was Williams, Leah Patterson,
would
endanger the public's health and safety.
· arrested on seven charges Deborah Powell, Marvel
involving firearms and Quillen, Kennie See, Cheryl
liquor . John Borden, 37, Spangler, Charles Stewart,
Columbus, was arrested on Clarence Turner.
NEW YORK (UP!) -Fill agents early IDday arrested two
one count of carrying a
men for allegedly trying to plant a bmnb at the Egyptian
Births, Dec. 7
concealed weapon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester National Tourist office in Manhattan, authorities said.
The moonshine was foun&lt;! McGowan, son, Oak Hill.
the FBI said Victor Varicier and Bruce Barry Berger were
in the trunk of a car
Mr . and Mrs. Samuel ch&amp;rged with conspiracy' in connection with the alleged
being driven by Wal" Larch, son, Letart, W. Va.
attempt to bomb the office, 630 Fifth Ave., at Rockefeller
ker when be was arMr. and Mrs. David Center. Vancier and Berger were arrested by an FBI stakeout
rested. The still, which Hammond, son, Gallipolis. team about 4 a.m., liD FBI spokesman said.
had not been used recently,
was found in the basement of
the house the two men
shared. Columbus Police Lt.
CHICAGO (UP!) -The American Civil Liberties Union
NOW YOU KNOW
Harry Dolby refused to say
has
filed suit to ban nativity scenes from govermnent
·According to Con Edison,
where Walker had obtained the first Christmas tree ever property, charging the use of public money violates
the homemade liquor, as to be adorned with electric . constitutional separation of church of slate. "We think It Is
other arrests were expected lights belonged to Edward H. _dangerous to all religioos when the government becomes
to be made before the three- Johnson of New York who set involved," said Jay A. Miller, executive directorofthe ACLU's
month investigation is closed. it up in his Manhattan illinois Division.
In another controversial case, the ACLU earlier this year
apartment in 1882.
defended the right of a neo-Nazi group to march in the heavily
Jewish suburb of Skokie.

Agents catch
moonshiners

•Lane Love Chests
•Tables • Chairs
•WaN Plaques

'

BY BOB HOt:FUCH
The Meigs Local School
District Board of Education
may be headed lor legal
action if a settlement is not
reached in a dispute resulting
from a recent car-school bus
accident in Rutland.
The possible legal action
was one of three alternatives
offered at Monday's regular
session at the Junior High
school in Middleport . The
board met with represen·
tatives of the Erie Insurance
Co.
The Erie Insurance Co.
represents the driver of the
car, Dottie Turner, which
struck the school bus in the
Rutland area several weeks
ago.
Dwight
Goins,
ad·
ministrative assi~tant, told
the board repairs on the bus
involved $15,000 while the
bus, purchased Aug. 6, 1975
bad cost $15,152. The bus had
approximately 10,000 miles
on it when the accident oc·
curred.
Goins said the Erie In·
stirance Co. had offered a
settlement of $7,277 lor the
wrecked bus. Using a black·
board, Goins showed several
different ways of figuring
depreciation on buses. None

RAISING' PAY
CINCINNATI (UP!) Teachers in two Cincinnati
area school districts are
8S8UI'ed of a starting salary of
at least $10,000 next fall.
North College Hill Board of
Education approved a
proposal Saturday .for a
$10,000 starting base pay
effecting the first of the year.
The Mt. Healthy Board of
'Education agreed Friday
night to raise the teachers'
base salary to $10,200.

' .

Must give up his throne
MASHAD, Iran (UPir- The ayatollah said quieUy that
the monarch must give up his throne, while on the street
outside his followers shook fists in the faces of armed soldiers
and screamed, "Death to the shah."
AYatollah Sayed Abdallah Sliirazi, 60, the most lnOuential
religious leader in Mashad, a holy city of the Shiite Moslems,
said in an interview with UP! Sunday that Sbah Mohammed
Reza Pahlavi had violated the principles• of Islam.

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

of his procedures placed the
bus's value at $1,277. The
amounts ranged from $9,819
to $10,652.
Goins said he bad refused
the $l,Zl7 figure in set·
tlemenl, thereby leaving
the matter to the board.
Two representatives ol the
company and the board
discussed a settlement.
The representatives made
offers which finally went to
$8,150 with the district to
keep the wrecked bus for
salvage or $10,000 with the
Insurance company to lake
the damaged bus.
The board went into
executive session with the
two insurance represen·
tatives and Edwin Davis,
Langsville, who is in the
school bus business. Davis
earlier stated he would be
happy to buy many buses at
the $7,200 figure offered by
th e insurance represen·
tatives as the value of the bus
in question. He said he could
resell them for about $11,000.
Apparently, during the
executive
session ,
no
agreement was reached .
After reopening the meeting,
the board voted four-to-one,
(with Jennifer Sheets casting
the dissenting vote), to ac·

Knife-wielding Ohioan dies
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - A policeman shot and
killed a knife-wielding attacker in a French Quarter
confrontation early loday. Police said JamesBardley,
23, of Columbus, Ohio, died soon after arrival at
Charity Hospital.
Officer George Hesni was treated at the hospital
for a cut hand and released. A police spokesman said
Bardley pulled the knife from his pocket when Hesni
and another officer sought to question him and a
companion.
.

Increase sends dollar down

OPEN TIL 8

The oil cartel's price increase sent the dollar
slightly lower in Europe today but gold shot up more
than $3.50. A West German newspaper said Arab oil
interests ·were getting into gold.
In Japan, the greenback held steady. fn London,
gold rose $4.75 ·an ounce to open at $217.625. The
precious metal opened $3.70 higher in Zurich at
$216.875.

EVERY NIGHT
BIG SELECTIONS:
You'll find very good selections at Elberfelds-:in every department- o·n every floor and· at the
Mechanic Street Warehouse. Sizes • colors ·
styles. Plenty to select from- and we're anxious
to help you with your shopping .

nr

slips or tokens fur change of
99 cents or less. the recipient

will receive cash.

For each $1 of change the
recipient will receive a $1
food stamp. Ail of the credit
slips or tokens left over after
Jan. 1 may still be used for
food.

Accordin g
to
new will be added to the kinds of
regulations , hot foods or hot food sta mp books now being
food products in retail food used - the value of these
stores which can be eaten being $2, $7, $40, $00 and $6!i .
immediately will not be The new $10 book cover will
allowable fur purchase with be blue-green and will have
food stamps. Ali other rules one $5 stamp and five $1
on how to spend food stamps stamps.
receipients are reminded
will remain the same.
that
$5 and $10 food stamps
Another new regulation will
should
be kept in their books
be a $10 food stamp book. It
until spent.

enttne
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1978

cept an offer of $10,652.95 in
settlement with the insurance
company to keep the bus or
would accept $9,500 and keep
the dama ged bus.
The motion went further to
state that unless the board
receives one of these two
offers, Goins is to contact the
Prosecuting Att orney on
legal action against the in·
sura nee company.
It also authorized Goins to

lease a bus to replace the
wrecked vehicle with the
insurance company to pay
the costs involved.
Combine Services
An innova lion this spring
came about as a result of last
night 's meeting when the
boa rd upon the recom·
mendation of high school
prin cipal James Diehl, Jr.,
voted to combine the Bacca laureate
and
com·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

mencement for this year's
senior class. The combined
service lastin g about 15
minutes lon ger than two
separate ceremonies will be
held on May 22, at 7: 30p.m.
Diehl said he was making
the recommendation after
conducting a survey among
the teachers and seniors. The
combined event is probably a
first for any high school in
Meigs Co unty.

Firm Employed
The board moved into
executive session for a
second time during the
meeting about 10 :30 p.m. to
discuss teacher negotiations
which will begin next month.
Following thRt session, It
was announced the board had
agreed to employ the services
of McDowall and Whalen of
Cuyahoga Falls to assist the
[Continued on page 10)

I
J

NATIVITY SCENE- This beautiful nativity scene is
decorating the main office at Meigs High School. The
ceramic nativity scene is th e handwork of Mrs. Mildred

Bailey, and Mrs. Harry Moore. Pictured with the scene
are from left to right, Mrs. Janet Williamson, Mrs. Rita
Hamm and Mrs. Bailey .

Special class relocation
main Eastern board topic
The
possibility
of
relocating
a
le arning
disabilities class took up most
of the discussion during a
recent meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
Several parents from the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Sch oo l
expressed
dissatisfaction with
a
proposal to move the class·
J'oom from Chester to Tuppers Plains.
A recent inspection of
special education facilities
resulted in the school district
receiving a letter from the
state
department
of
education directing that the
board move the learning
disabilities class from its
present location to a more
suitable classroom.
The state letter indicated

the best available location
would be the Tuppers Plains
building. The board received
a report from Mrs. Dorothy
Calaway, board member,
conce rning a proposed
alternative plan for housing
the class.
The
board
directed
Superintendent Clark Lees to
write a letter to the state
depa rtment of education
requesting the state to review
the new plan. The proposal
calls for the class to remain
at Chester, but in a new
location . It was pointed out
that the program is funded by
the s)ate and the provision for
special EMR and learning
disabilities classes
is
required by state and federal
law.
Added to the substitute

teachers list were Madha
Malhotra, William Robinette
and Lynne Bajec.
Paul Voss was named a
hom e

inst ru ctor

and

Margaret Ella Lewis was
employed to teach a high
school special education class
for the remajnder of the year.
Upon the recommendation
of Jam es Huff , federal
pro grams coordinator, it was
agreed to make application
for a $6,000 grant lor ad·
ditional instruction in reading
at the Riverview, Tuppers
Plains and Chester schools.
The grant would provide
additional reading materials
and special instruction for
elementary teachers in the
area of reading.
Supt. Lees reported that
another levy will be needed in
the district in 1979. The
organizational meeting was
set for 6 p.m. on Jan. 2.
A report was given on
custodial work to be done
during
the
Chri st mas
vacation at the buildings and
grounds.

Deputies probe

FREE DELIVERY:
•

SANTA CLAUS
Santa Claus- Bring the children to see Santa in the Main
Store Tues.- Wed.· Thurs. 2 to 3 p.m.

EASTERN cilom - This choir will perform at the
Christmas concerl of the vocal music department at
Eaalern lfigh School. The concel" will be held Friday at

BEGINS DUTIES - Bernard Gilkey, 1284 Powell St.,
Middleport, began his duties Monday as superintendent of
the Meigs County Garage of the Ohio Department of
Highways. Gilkey for the past two years has been
employed as a bridge inspector for the Meigs County
Highway Department and was a county commissioner for
two years prior to that. He was a Salisbury Township
Trustee for 13 years and a central committeeman in
Middleport for 10 years. Gilkey replaced Bob Clark who
retired recently from the top post at the highway
department garage.

65 units
·-~ collected

Check Sunday's newspaper for our big Christmas Sale Big savings on wallets· men's belts· women's coats· girls
coats · boys jackets · men's suits , men's shirts ·women's
sweaters· men··s sweaters- and many more excellent gift
items you'll want.

Select furniture or appliances or T.V. sets- Whatever.
and we'll deliver it for you befilr.e Christmas.

c::lir~

InstP&lt;id of receiving credit

•

SALE PRICES:

.

fo od stamp elig ibility is
determined will take effect
between March and July,
1979. These regulations are
expected to eliminate nearly
67,000 participants. The
Welfare Department also
announced ot her changes
effective Jan. 1. Regulations
provide that r rN! it

NEWARK, Ohio (UP!) - Two Newark women
died Monday in a fire that destroyed a downtown
warehouse where they worked. The victims were
identified as Doris Cunningham, 44, and Marie Fulton,
62.
Mrs. Fulton was an office manager of the Arcade
Warebouse and Mrs. Cunningham was a bookkeeper at
the firm, which stored toys and wrapping paper for a
nearby drug finn . Bodies ofthe two victims were found
at the base of a front stairway, burned beyond
recognition , fire officials said.

ELBERF·ELDS

t:

tokens will no longer be used.

Other regulations un how

Fire claims two women

Coal group

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UP!) - The President's
Commission on Coal has been
granted three more montha to
make Its report.
Scott Wldmeyer, press
secretary to Gov. Jay
LUNDY L. DEITZ
Rockefeller, confirmed
SYRAf.llliF -:- ..Lundy L" Sunday the extension to Dec.
Deitz, 73, ;syracuse, died 14, 1979 the deadline for the
Sunday at Pleasant Valley nationalcoalpanelheadedby
Hospit.al. Mr. Dietz was Rockefeller.
preceded in death by his wife,
The executive order by
two sisters and one brother. President Carter gives the
He is survived by one son, panel more time to take
Edward Deitz, Fairmont, W. testimony at public hearings
Va. and two grandsons.
and review the material gaFuneral services will be thered.
held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
The commission was due to
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. report on Sept. 29, the first
Dale Bass officiating. Burial anniversary of Its round of
will be in Gilmore Cemetery. factfinding meetings. That
Friends may call at the also Is the scheduled end of
funeral home after 10 a.m . . the slx-&lt;lay United Mine
Tuesday.
Workers convention in

stated.

...----Nation wise___...,

Wants nativity scenes banned

GET LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Johnny Alan
Johnson, 19, Camp .Lejeune,
N. C., and Colleen Christene
Persons, 19, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom.

NO. 173

Approximately 37,000
Ohioans who curr en tly
cannot afford to buy food
stamps will be able to receive
benefits throuth the Food
Stamp Program when this
change takes effect, it was
reported. Most of those en·
tering the program now will
be the elderly poor and
working poor, Mrs. Shuler

Accident may force court battle

Two men arrested today

MEET WEDNESDAY
The Meigs Girls Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at· the high
school. All parents are in·
vlted to attend.

•

VOL XXIX

Massive layoff plans begin

gets extra
three months

end. A tam11y now paying $60 ministration of the program
for $100 in food stamps, for a and redirect benefits to
$40 benefit, will simply needier persons," she added.
Although food stamp users
receive the $40 in stamps.
"Eliminating the purchase will not have to pay, they will
requirement of food stamps is be getting fewer stamps.
the first phase of the new They will probably have to
regulations designed to get use part of their income to
food stamps to persons truly purchase food during the
in need," Mrs. Shuler said. month, Mrs. Shuler pointed
"The chan ges ti ght en •d- out.

e

The World Today

The panel was established
by President carter in May to
probe labor-management
problems in the coalfields
and recommend ways to ease
the tensions.-

•Admiral
•Other Famous Brands
•MiriOIS
· •Dishwashers

Starting Jan. I, food· stamp
participants in Meigs County ·
will not have to pay cash for
their food stamps, Barbara
Shuler, director of the Meigs
County Welfare Department,
said today .
As part of the Food Stamp
Act of 1977, a requirement
. that food stamp participants
come up with lump sums of
cash to purchase stamps will

HOSPITAL NEWS

Miami.

GIFTS FOR THE HOME

New food stamp regulations effective Jan. 1

up a series of 10 demands
including the right to bargain
collectively.

7:30 in the gymnasium, after which there will be a·
reception, open to the public. At the reception the Junior
class is sponsoring an arts and crafts sale to help finance
the Junior-Senior Prom .

NEW VOCAL DIREC·
TOR- Gale Douthitt is the
oew vocal music director
at Eastern High School.
Douthitt · attended Rio
Grande College and was a
member of the Rio Grande
Chorale for four years,

being the president lor
three. He formerly taught
the floe arls class at Rio
Grande.

Firm honors
two employees

Lawrence Diddle and Bob
Roy are being honored for 25
years of service, General
hit-skip Monday
Telephone Co. of Ohio an·
Deputies of Meigs County nounced today.
Sheriff James J . Proffitt are
The psir launched their
investigating a hit-skip ac· telephone careers with the
cident that occurred Monday company on the same day
night at approximately 7 p.m . the company's Pomeroy
at Salisbury Elementary district in 1953.
School.
Diddle started as an in·
According to the sheriff's staller - repairer and is now a
report an unidentified auto switchworker in the Pomeroy
was traveling south on old U. ' offi ce. A native of Racine, he
S. 33 and turned into the lives at Syracuse with his
Salisbury elementary school wife, Helen.
parking lot. The driver lost
Roy, also a native of
control and his vehicle Racine, works in hi s
skidded in gravel and struck hometown. He sta rted as a
and broke off a gas pwnp.
lineman and is now an inThe vehicle hacked out and staller · repairer.
left the sce ne without
Roy and his wife, Hazel,
reporting the accident. The live in Racine. He is· a
ihc ident is und er in· member of the Racine Lodge
vcst igation.
461, F&amp;AM.

Sixty-five persons par·
ticipating in the American
Red Cross Bloodmobile at the
Pomeroy elementary school
Monday contributed 62 pints
of blood lor the Meigs County
Blood Program.
Of the total blood given. 24
.pints were for repla cement
and five persons were first
time donors. During the visit
Martha J . Hackett became a
three gallon donor.
Making up the medical
staff were Dr. L. D. Telle and
Dr. E. S. Villanueva with the
Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital providing
the canteen . Nurses were
Lenora Leifheit, Betty Jewell
and Ferndora Story.
Making up the clerical staff
were Mary Neas e, Jean
Nease , Juanita Sayre, Jean
Sayre, Etta Mae Hill, Joyce
Hoba ck, Lula Hampton,
Erma Roush , Emma K.
Clatworthy, Grace Rusche!,

Mary Rusche\, Robert Roush,
Vernon Nease and Mace\
Barton along with R.S.V.P.
pro gram workers, Paul
SmarC Imogene Simms,
Clarence E. St ruble and
Bernadette Meier.
Donors by communities
were :

Pomeroy
Walla ce
Hatfield, Harlan H. Wehrung.
Tina Duffy, David M. King,
Lewi s Harper , Billy J .
Spencer, Robert W. Vaughan,
William W. Radford, Patricia
imboden , Mary L. Starcher,
Patricia Vaughan, Pamela J.
Vaughan, Leo L. Vaughan,
Larry G. Fisher, Crystal
Glaze, Homer Baxter, Clyde
E. Ke nned y. Dorot hy J.
Oliver, Homer B. Smith,
Waiter R. Couch, George L.
Harris, Gerald Rought, Ola
St.
Clair, Michael Ben·
dineIlL
Minersville - Carolyn A.
(Continued on page 10 )

Council okays
garbage hike
Pomeroy residents will be
paying an additional $1 a
month for garbage collection
beginning the first of the
year.
Meeting with Pomeroy
Council Monday night was
Basil Haynes, owner of H &amp; P
Sanitation . Haynes asked
council to renew his permit
which expires Dec . 31.
Haynes also requested a rate
increase from $4 a month to
$5.
Co un cil approved both
requests. Haynes explained
that senior citizens and
people on fixed incomes will
not be affected. He also said
he will negotiate with local
business establishments.
Also meeting with council
'was Lois J . Zalupski ,
operator of the Pennzoi l
Service Station on West Main
Street in Pomeroy. She asked
council to reconsider and
approve her application for
ca rryout beer license.
The request was granted on
a 4to 1 vote with Lou Osborne
voting no. ·
The motion stated that if
there are any problems, the
license will not be renewed.
Jeannie Grueser asked
councillor permission to sell
handmade wall plaques
downtown. She was given

'

perm1ss10n as long as she
displayed and sold them !rom
her vehicle.
Osborne reported Larry
Brogan had requested per·
mission to pla ce a sign at Nye
Ave. and East Main Street.
The request was tabled.
Harold Brown reported
Pom eroy will make ap·
plication lor a HUD grant not
a joint grant with Middleport
as was previously planned.
Council approved ad·
ditional appropriations until
the annual appropriation is
made for 1979.
Appropriations included
(Continued on pa ~e 10 )

-..

•.r...~ .:' &lt;S&gt;- .J ' ~&gt; ..J '

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

'

�.

,

3- The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec.19. 1978

2- The Dally Sentinel, MlddlesM!rt-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 19, 1978

"**********************************************
.
.....

Commentary

! Editorial opinions i.
t··~******************************************t
Heads win•••so far
l
The Poet's '
By Martha An«l• and Rubert 1\'a!lrrs
Corner
l
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (NEA l - Whenever and wherever· 1

By Don Graff
If there is any good news to be found in the revolutionary

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

Democrats gather, .one tndition remains inviolate. If there is
a band in the hall, you can bet it will strike up that old rouser,
"Happy Days Are Here Again."
They played it as always last weekend at the National Party
Conference here, but the rxhilarating tune seemed oddly outof
sync with the subdued and uncertain m&lt;Nlll of the delegates ami
others attending the minH.•tmvention.
The bleak truth is that these are not particularly happy days
for the majority party, for the Democrats, like the p&lt;•or little
lambs of the ''Whiffenpoof Song, •' have lost their way .
The trails blazed by their heroes of yesteryear -Wixlllrow
Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Hubert H.
Humphrey - have largely petered out in the thickets uf such
Wlfamiliar problems llll persistent inflation, a sinking dollar,
intractible trade deficits, sky-high interest rates. They have
not yet found a safe path outofthe wilderness.
In their heads, m""l of the Democrats who came to Memphis
appeared resigned to following the t'Ourse charted by President Carter- a course marked by deep cuts in federal spen·
ilin~. a crackdown on waste and fraud, a postp&lt;memenl of new
initiatives, a demand for sacrifke.
" It is an illusion," Carter told them, "to believe we can
preserve a commi~t io compassionate, progressive
government if we fail to bring inflation under controL"
Thr public believes that bloated budgets and fat f(.'((eral
deficits are to blame for inflation, and that inflation far
outweighs all other problems facing the nation. Carter is
resp&lt;&gt;nding to that perception, and the delegates to Memphis
1
knew it.
Vel in their hearts, the were not reconciled to proposals that
smacked so horribly of Repnblican orthodoxy. In their hearts,
Democrats just can't warm up to the wonders of less government rather than more, of balanced budgets rather tllan better
health programs, of efficient management rather than
revitalized cities. ·
Time and again, Carter and others from the admini•1ration
assured them that cherished old goals like full employment
and a nation~! health insurance program were not being dropped but merely deferred. Time and again, the delegates were
promised that everyone wiD be asked to "share.the burdens
equally" when sacrifices are called for.
They are not assuaged. Tom Smltll, the mayor of Jersey City , N.J., one of the last bastions of machine politics in
America, was shoutl11g his defiance at a workshop on the
cities. "We've waited all these years to hear words like
'fairness' and •equity' and 'sharing,' and now what are we
told ' That we get to 'share In the losses." We didn't elect a
Democratic administration so the cities can 'share in the
IO&amp;iCS! ' ..

CHRISTMAS
Christma s is our Lord 's
Birthday,
He came to wash our sins
away,
Rejoice in His redeeming
love,
Increase your faith and look
above;
See His beauty everywhere,
Talk to Him in humble
prayer,
Move along and do your
share;
All you need He will supply,
Sending blessings from on
pigh.
In the gift of God's dear Son
Salvation is for everyone.
Only seek His saving grace,
Understand it's for each race,
Rely on Him and fill your
place.
Look above and humbly pray,
Our dear Lord will show the
way,
Rejoice in Him both night and
day ;
Do your best and you wUJ find
SO i ·
Salvation gives sweet peace Always do your very best,
of mind.
Yearning for that peaceful
rest.
•
Be a Christian kind true,
The first letter in each
Inner joy will come to you,
line of the above verses
Read the Bible every day,
spells, CHRISTMAS IS
Take the time to kneel and
OUR WRD'S BIRTHDAY.
pray;
Composed Nov . 27, 1978,
Help the little ones to know
by Mrs. Riley Pigott, Long
Dear Lord Jesus loves them
Bottom, Ohio 45743.

Lt 's fiam· l•ty

ce le b

Douglas Fraser, lbe respe&lt;.'led and popular head of the
United Auto Workers, rejeded the balan(.'e·Sheet philosophy.
"We are retreating from our principles," he warned, "under
attacks from people.who know the (.'OSI of everything and the
value of nothing ! "
.
In the end, of course, illook ·Sen. Edward M. Kennedv to
touch their hearts and revive the emotional fervor which
Carter's hard-headed pragmatism had so thoroughly dampened.
Kennedy was •-upposed to play it cool in Memphis, supposed
to avoid open splits with Carter lest the speculation start again
that he might challe11ge the president in 1980. Bul Kennedy , for
whatever reason, rewrote the script.
·•we are not the party of McKinley or Harding ," he jibed.·
"We are not tlle party of Coolidge or Hoover ...
"I supori the fight against inflation. But no fight against inflation can be effe&lt;.1ive or successful unless it is fair ... There
could be few more divisive Issues fur America and for our party than a Democratic policy of drastic slashes in the federal
· budget at the eXJl!!nlle of the elderly, the poor, the black, the
sick, the cities and the unemployed."
Fighting words, under the circwnstan(.'eS, and they drew a
frenzied re~ponse. Delegates who had accorded Carter no
more than polite applause the night before leaped to their fee[
cheering and stomping for the Democrat who spoke lo their
hearts, not their heads.
They will follow Carter for the moment, for they have no
other choit'e. He is the only president they've got. But if he
stwnbles, or if his chosen patll proves too rocky, the
Democrats may yet de&lt;.'ide to heed their hearts instead of their
heads .

Peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLABit

United Press Inten1111111ul
BEAR FAm: When Prelldent '111eodore R001evelt rescued a
bear cub 75 years ago &lt;Ill well publicized Mississippi hunting
trip, the "Teddy Bear" wu born. In London, Pani and Llada
McCartney, Delllly Lalae, LMmsl~ Jaber and Steve Holly of
the rock band Wings decided to mart the anniversary tllis
Christmas season. &lt;11 behllf of underprivileged children who
never have had one of !be cuddly aoeatures to pack off to bed .
Response to their aAJ881 wu overwhelming. Fans sent in
more than 1,000 Teddy Bears far Wlrlga to distribute.
ALLIN THE FAMILY: Frrthe first time ever, showbiz will

bec!me a family affair far Academy Award-winner Sir John
MIUs. He'D be wrrking on his !1St one with daughters Hayley
and JaUet aboard the Pacific Prlnc:eaa out of Los Angeles in
filming an episode of "The Love Boat." Mills won an Oscar for
his performance in "Ryan's Daughter," and Juliet took a
television Emmy frr her performance in "QB VU ."
JON AND JANE: .b VolPI and Jane Fonda are tbe
favorites of the Los ~- Film Critics Association. They
were named Monday rqbt • bell actor and actress of tbe
year, and their movie ''C!II!q H&lt;me" took hanOI'S as tbe best
film of 1978. Ingrid llerpiiDIIICII!'Jiea Bantyll were runnersup frr best actress honon and Robert Morley was named best
supp&lt;rting actor for his perfarmance in "Who Is Killing tbe
Great Chefs of Europe." Belt aupprrtlng actress honors went
jointly to Maureea Stapletaa for "Interiors" and Mona
Wubboume frr "Stevie."

•

-·

~otton

. • ·O

By SANDRA L. LATIMER

United Press InternatlonBI
It's the holiday season, a
time of year when organized
events give ivay to family
celebrations.
Most of the Christmas celebrations and open houses
\hroughout the Buckeye State
are drawing to a close this
week with- Christmas being
Monday.
' With children home from
school, the nearest zoo may
be tbe place to visit.
Tbe Cincinnati Zoological
Gardens, for example, boasts
one of the highest birthrates
of endangered species .
Lowland gorilla and white
Bengal tigers are featured at
the Zoo, open during the
winter from 9 a.m: to 5 p.m.
and weekends until 6 p.m.
The Cleveland Aquarium
features more than 100
species of exotic aquatic life
and is open Tuesdays through
Saturdays from 10 am. to 5
p.m., noo11 to 6 p.m. Sundays.
The Cleveland Zoological
Park houses more than 400
speces of animals and is open
dally 9:30 a .m. to 5 p.m. and
Sundays until 7 p.m.·
The Columbus Municipal
Zoo includes an aquarium
and the famous gorilla family
of Colo, the first gorilla born
in captivity. It is open dally 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Toledo Zoo maintains a
Museum of Science and
Natural History among its
exhibits. This zoo is open
October through March from
10 a.m.to 4 p.m. and until 5
p.m. the rest of the year.
A Christmas Open House
begins the day after
Christmas and runs through
New Year 's Eve at the
President Rutherford B.
Hayes Memorial in Fremont.
Old fashioned decor allons
will be displayed Tuesday
and Sunday 1:301o5p.m. and
Wednesday through Saturday
·9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Toys
that delighted
children more than a century
ago are on display at the
Campus Martlus Museum in
Marietta through Feb. 4.
This display includes a
teddy bear collection In honor
of tlle stuffed animal's 75th
anniversary . The teddy

GLIMPSES: Gilda Radler of NBC-TV's "Saturday Night
live," Broadway star ~- Fladd of "On the Twentietll
Century," Joel Crothen ri ABC-TV's "Edge of Night," Ken
Page of Broadway's "AID'I Mllbel!avln'" and a fiock of other
show biz luminaries IMmed ~ In a Chrlltmas show for
patients at New York Uni-.tty Medical Center's Institute of
RehabWtatlon Medicine ... lal'l')'llullow was In the audience
for once, and his mother, ldiiiiJifdtllow, was in tbe spotllght,
performing Monday In Jerry Berma'l new musical revue,
''Tune tbe Grand Upl" 11 New York's Lincoln Center ...
George Stebllmillller, princlpel owner of tlle New York
Yankees, received the Public Relatl- Society of America 's
"Big Apple Award" on bebllf of hll ~ Monday ... J-.,h P.
KeDRdy III, oldest D1 of the lite Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, will
marry SbeOa llr'ewller Rucb, dlllllbter of a prominent
· Philadelphia badler....
1

•

I

;~~:.

oct;t&lt;lol\

1e. EifUCK

FA'f:&gt;1!

.,.,..,,
,.,...

......

Library
Letters

" ,.. ,.

hmBDear
·

·

bear's history began with a
gift for President Theodore
Roosevelt's children.
The museum, which also
presents exhibits on the
earliest settlement of Ohio :s
open from 9:30a.m. to 5 p:m.
Monday thrugh Saturday and
I to ~p.m. Sund8ys.
The Big House,"the home of
Pulitzer Prize winning author
Louis Bromfield, is decorated
for the holiday season and
open for tours. His Malabar
Farm In Richland County
also lea tures a nativity scene
with live farm animals
through Saturday.
lighted Christmas trees at
the Center of Science and
Industry in downtown
Columbus represent several
nations, Ohio and industries.
They are on display through
the first week of January.
The animated Christmas
fantasy display of more than
2,000 mobile figures in
Children's Wonderland at the
Lucas County Recreation
Center in Maumee is open
through Jan. 1. An admission
is charged.
Ohio Village in Columbus
highlights a 19th century
Christmas in Ohio through
Saturday, complete with
strolling carolers to entertain
visitors during dinner or
shopping.
Christmas Around the
Wocld is observed at tbe
Toledo Zoological Gardens
Sunday through Dec . 30,
except Christmas Day.
Christmas trees, decorated

in native decor, are on
display daily 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Ethnic entertainment and
ipternatlonal hake sales are
added to Sunday's program.
Ohio's ski resorts, open for
the winter, are Alpine Valley
at Chesterland; Boston Mills
at Peninsula; Brandywine at
Northfield; Clear Frrk at
Butler; Mad River Mountain
at Bellefontaine; Snow Trails
at Mansfield; Sugar Creek at
Bellbrook; and Echo Hills at
Logan.
· Punderson State Park's
winter sports area, open
Monday through Friday 5 to 9
p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays noon to 10 p.m., features
facilities for both sledding
and skating. Skaters have a

QUOTE OF TilE DAY: Aemmy Davll Jr., BBked at session
witll Congregation B'Dil Jellhurun'a "Dialogue 78" in New
Yrrk what be'd most like ID be remembered for: "I want to be
WHY CHRISTMAS ALMOST WASN'T
remembered as a man who cared about life."
tT5 '-10 u~:

e

furn of events in Iran, it is not in the reports out of that turbulent land itself but in Washington.
The crisis has brought the return of George Ball to U.S.
policy-rnaking councils. The fonner undersecretary of State
and present New York investment banker has been called in
by. the Carter administration to undertake a policy review,
which t~e plight of the American-supported ""gime of Shah
Mohartuned Reza Pahlavi thoroughly justifies.
·
1
Ball, let it be remembered, performed the self-assumed ami
at the lime largely thankless role of great dissenter on Vietnam during his stint with the Johnson administration. His was •
ahnost the sole vok'e in the inner·drcle wilderness urging de· '
escalation of the (.~mfiict . And while he did not carry any of the
crucial policy-shaping arguments, he pressed his ~ase with
persistence and intelligence and was heard with respect even
by the chief warlord himself.
Ball gained the reputation during that trying time ior indepe!l(lent thinking and frank speaking, qualities that are now
sought by the Carter administration in reshaping U.S. policy
on the strategic and increasingly chaotic Persian Gulf region.
It is scarcely to be expected that Ball singlebandedly will be
able to put the situation to rights, but his expertise (.'ertainly
can't make things worse .
Welcome back.
State of the United Nations
Andrew Young (remember him ?) has been rather softspoken since his headline-making remarks on political
prisoners and assorted other toUchy topics of some months
back. But the other day the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations spoke out in the General Assembly in complaint against
the lack of support forthcoming from tllat body's majority for
Mideast peace efforts.
·
Young noted with distress a series of anti-Israeli resolutions
that did not place the· United Nations where he thought it
should be- in the forefront of peace efforts.
" It should nul allow itself,'' he said, "to be swayed by
political doctrines which claim to advance peace but only
hinder it."
Certainly true enough, but it is to be hoped that the am·
bassador was speaking for the re&lt;'Ord and not in revelation of
any sudden realization on the part of his government of the
true. state of U.N. affairs. The organization is not only swayed
but controlled by the political doctrines of its dominant facLI ,...v..P"'
L
tions.
I
By and large, member states have always sought to use it as
II~
8
a
vehicle for forwarding their own polides, an attitude to
....
ft
A
·•
which
the United States contributed massively back in the first
A
.......
postwar
years when, with a preponderanee of the world's
R
yR ,...."""' .... . military and
economic power and a pack of allies ready to
y
follow its lead anywhere, it made most U.N. policy in
· 1 Washington.
A number of balances since have shifted, and whateyer cutting edge U.N. actions have in these latter days is largely
December 18, 1978 detennined by the axes the multitudinous Third World stales
Mrs. Grace Pratt
and the single-minded Arab bloc have to grind.
N. Third Ave.
The United Nations still has its uses as a world forum, and as
Middleport, OH 45760
an occasional gendarme of last resort in keeping small-power
combatants at arms length. But it Is not and has never been the
Grace:
'
force for peal'e and international cooperation it was initially
1 hope you and.the Oilier ladles of the Middleport Amateur presented as.
Gardeners Club will be able to stop In at the Middleport Public
Which may be a pity, but no surprise.
Library to see the lovely tree and decorations your club has
provided for tbe library. Ruth, Margaret, Tina, and Brian
worked hard to put the decorations on just right and do your
present justice.
Middleport Library had some other attractions this Christ·
mas season, too. Jim Crisp performed genuine magic feats for
a delighted audience of elementary school children (plus Brian
and ~garet, who also couldn't flture out how he escaped).
•
The Show was top~ oil by treats provided by Margaret,
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
Ruth, and a very generous person ·Wbo provided money for
Christmas parties for the school children and the preschool
storyhour children.
cleHn, and wear gloves if yoL
Please tllank all the ladies In the Middleport Amateur Cold~&lt; ~&lt;prl'acl
are out A hHnd that picks up
Gardeners Club frr the tree and trlmminga. The libraries will
genru; from a door.knob and
h,·
hand!'
be closed on December 23, 2t and 25 and on December 31 and
then touches the face may inJanuary 1. But we will be OPEN all the other days of the
noculate you with cold germs.
holiday. season -and we hope all the members (){ tbe club will
DEAR DR. LAMB - Every
DEAR DR. LAMB - Two
winter we have lots of colds. I
stop in to see the tree (and ua).
months
ago I had a •
Sincerely yours, EDen Bell, Director, Servblg All of Meigs do my best to keep the family
pulmonary
embolism. What
bundled up and keep· their
County.
causes
an
embolism?
How
feet dry, but no matter how
can I prevent it from occurrmuch effort I make there
ing again? Will I have a good
seems to be one cold after
chance
to live a normal life
another. Do you have any
and
will
I be restricted from
suggestions ?
anything?
Would laking
DEAR READER- There is
Coumadin
for
a long period of
such a thing as natural
lime
hurt
me
in
any way or is
resistance. In some children
it
good
for
me?
there is a deficiency of gamma globulin, a blood protein, DEAR READER - A
that makes \hem more pulmonary embolism usually
refers to a blood clot that has
susceptible to colds.
gone
to the lungs. The blood
You need to realize that
clot
commonly
forms in the
colds are contagious
\\"" ~
-; ( ......
legs
or
in
the
deep
veins in the
diseases. Children, by exlower body. The clot moves
c ~'
posure to lots of other
,,.. I pf~
"• ) \
~
children at school, and their with the circulation to return
_..._,
' . . ...
parents have more colds than to the right side of the heart.
;; ••\ Z::= ' ......
the adults without school age From here it fiows through
,,
., t~
the heart to the lungs with the
children.
,..\. -.. -=....
•
• Any one who is exposed to blood that goes tllere to pick
' • I,
•• • II ~lots of other people is more up oxygen.
J\
' .,. •
•
Because the arteries to the
likely to get a cold. I am senlung
get smaller and more
ding you The Health Letter
smaller
as they branch out to
number 3-2, Cold And Flu
the
tiny
air sacks, the blood
Group , Prevention And
clot
lodges
and obstrul'ls the
Treatment. Others who want
arterial
flow
to a portion of
this issue can send 50 cents
the
lung.
If
the
clot is small
with a long , blood that goes
and
the
area
of
the lung is
there to pick up oxygen.
small,
the
effects
are limited
Because the arteries to the
but
if
it
is
a
very
large clot
lung get smaller and
a
main
artery, it •
and
blocks
more stamped , se lfcan
be
more
dangerous.
addressed envelope for it.
© 1978 by NEA, tnc.
\/""' • .-'17{~ Send your request to me in The actual attack
·care of this newspaper, P.O. resembles a heart attack and
Box 1551, Radio City Station, often doctors have trouble in"Seen any wild wall posters today? "
New York, NY 10019. II will itially deciding which a pa'
.give you some useful in- tient has.
The Coumadin you asked
formation.
about
is to prevent formation
Meanwhile, t would suggest
of
blood
clots. You didn't say
L _ - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - t h a l you keep in mind that
what
your
age Is but, of
County, illuminating the colds are often spread by course, birth (.'Onlrol pills are
20,000 square foot Ice rink.
your hands. Keep your hands
Some 60,000 lights are gorge and falla beneath the
sometimes suspe&lt;.'ted 1as a :: ,
bridge
over
Ludlow
Creek.
strung beneath a bridge at
factor in forming clots. Bed ;:
niEDAILYSENTINEI.
Ludlow Falls In Miami These Ught.s are Ut !lightly
rest and inactivity sometimes
OEVrrrF:DTO'niE
through Jan. 1.
JNTF..REST OF
contribute to formation of .,.
MEIC'.&amp;!MASON ARF...\,
clots,
too. Sitting with the :;
ROBF.RT HOEFI.ICH
Jaclc. Kent
_
Clly F.dlt.r
back of the thighs under · "
.Pui.Jiillhtd dally t'Xl~pl Salunl.ly
pressure to the, polnt of oc- ~
by nw Ohi o Valle}' PublishlnK
eluding thP. veins along the ;
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Ill
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back of t :~e thighs may also :
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~:ood l'l~ss post.a~e paid atl
Your outlook depends a lot :
Pumeroy,Ohlu.
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on what caused the clot. If it ,.
N~:~llonal ~dvertlsilr~ ft!pft'lttm:
Uttivt·. l..~:~mlun 1\~ochl\l's, :not
was an isolated event and you ~
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avoiding prolonged sitting ,(;
$.1.25. ~y mail in Ohio and W. VH .:
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and move around at least "
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HEALTH

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=

Ohio University edges
Cleveland State, 76-74
clinched the win on Tim
Joyce's two free throws with
three seconds showing on the
clock.
OU's Steve Skaggs and the
Vikings• Greg Cobb tied for
game-high scoring honors
with 26 points apiece:
The win improved the
r:f,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,T~d'~';,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,:.rl.
Bobcats' record to 4-2 while
Cleveland State feU to 5-4.
Elsewhere Monday night,
.•.•
·:·:
:::: Kent State whipped Akron 6957 and Toledo blasted
Catholic University 9U2.
AI Kent, center Trent
Grooms tossed in 19 points to
pace the Golden Flashes to
their come-from - behind
:-:
-·
ii , victory over Akron.
NEW YORK (UPI) - You'd never guess it by looking at~
Grooms, a &amp;-foot-8 junior,
because he's always so serious and seldom cracks a smile but hlt on seven of 10 shots from
'
Freddie Shero was a kid once himself.
the floor and led the Golden
He's 54. n~w a~ hardly resembles any kid you might know, Flashes with nine rebounds.
yet deep ms1de him that's what he still really is and it's rather
Akron, now h'l, jumped out
startling ~ow well he relates to them. Especially if they wear to an 6-0 lead, and held a 27-23
New York Rangers' jerseys, the .team he I'UI1S as general halftime advantage. But a
manager and bead coach.
Kent State, 4-4, press In the
On tlle ice, Sbero knows from ·only one thing : discipline second half triggered three
~ipline and more discipline. That's what he keeps hammer: Zip turnovers and 12 straight
mghome to the Ranger players all the time and that's the style Kent State points. Kent built
of hockey he insists they play .
·
a 43-30 lead with 12 minutes to
Off the ice, all the discipline disappears with Shero's pater- go, and the Zips were never
nal approval because he was a kid once himself, he knows kids closer than seven points.
are the ones who have the most fun·and also knows that happy
hockey players frequently are the moat successful ones.
That being the case, Shero, putting in his first season as bead
man of tbe Rangers after having led the Philadelphia Flyers to
College Basketball Results
Stanley Cup championships twice, has seen to it that the
By United Press International
Monday
Ranger players have beer in their dressing room after each
Indiana Classic
game. For the Rangers, it marks a historic first.
Bloomington, Ind.
first Round
Maybe a couple of beers after a game doesn't sound like that
Ind . 101 , Davidson 64
much to you, but hockey players and beer are no less closely
Wash . 68, Army 67
related than ham and eggs. Where you see one, you're likely to
East
Elmira 90, Hunter 81
find the other.
Pitt-Jhnstn 93, Stubnvl74
In okaying the beer in the Rangers' dressing room for the
Pt . Park 73, BldWn-Wllce 64
Pra tt 78, Adelphi 70
first time, Shero looked atit this way:
Sthamptn 61, Dowling 60
"They're going to go drinking, a!1YWay, so maybe this will
South
Ala .- 8irm . 75, S. Ala . 72
save them some time and they'll just get in a little earlier."
Chaff 6&amp;, E . Tenn . 67
Shero, a player with the Rangers himself once, pretty much
Fla . St. 106, F la. Sthrn 75
allows his players to do what they like once the games are
Ill. St. 75, Western Ky . 74
Livngstn 97 , Columbs 73
over.
LSU 99 , Montana 89
Another thing he's doing for his players is easing the
Mercer 96, Baptist 57
Mid Tenn. 67, McNese St . 61
commuting problems from their homes to the airport as much
Miss. St. 80, Iowa St..70
as he can. The way he does that is by having them reimbursed
N. Ala . 71, Otterbein 63
N .C.-Wi l m 71, S. Fla. 55
by the club for tbe cabs they take to the airport or for the
Radford 88 , Lib Bapt 66
parking charges they incur by leaving tllelr cars there.
.
Tenn. Tech 78, E . Mich . 66
To an athlete, even tllose making six-figure salaries, that's
Midwest
Alabama 65, Missouri .sa
like found money, an unexpected bonus that he can keep from
Detroit 92; Marshal l 61
his wife and spend on himself like some kid on a spree in a
111. Coli 74, M llll kn 71
Kent St . 69, Akron 57
.
candy strre.
N. Mi ch . 95 , Concrdia 60
It's funny about the values athletes have. ! recall one general
Nor'thwd 91 , Siena Hts 68
Ohio U. 76, Cleve St. 74
manager in baseball telling how he and a pJ,ayer of his got bung
Oshkosh 81 , M ilton 65
up over $1,500, which Willi to be inCluded in the player's
St. Johns 58, St . Cloud 57
CCI'IIract as part of a raise. The general manager was offering · Superior 83, R iver Fils 76
Toledo 98 , Cathol ic u. 62
$1,200 and the player was insisting on $1,500.
·
·
Tri-State 74. Olivet 53
"Suppose I give you a thousand dollars, cash,".said the GM.
Valpraiso 66, Ark.-l.R . 64
Wchifo~t Sf . 104, Te)(.-Arl 72
"You got a deal!" replied the player, thrusting his hand out
Wilfenbg 86, Urbana 63
for the money .
· · ·
Wis.-Stout '68, Ha}lllirie 64
SouthWest
Getting back to Shero, he's uriique iii so many ways.
La : Tech 75, N. ·Texas 65
Professional in every sense of the word when it
to
New Mex . 117. E . Wash . 94
coaching, be sometimes overlooks tlle iniportaiit papefwork
S. F ..Austin 65, La . COil. 64
.
.
West
that is part of his dual job. He's lucky, tllough, that he has some
Drexel 74, Denver 12
good people to help him there in Mickey Keating, the Rangers'
Grt Fils 91, St. Mry's Min . 81
Utah St . 94, Portlnd St. 68
assistant GM, Mike Nykoluk, assistant coach, and John
W . Wa sh. 66, Chico St. 65
Halligan, the club's extraordinarily capable business manager
and public relations director.
Shero is known by some as "The Fog" for his habit of closing
his eyes and thinking befrre answering a question - "I'm
trying to tell you tbe trutll and not B.S. you like some other
Girls
Ohio High School
people do In sports" - and for .doing such other things like
Basketball
· walking over to Bobby Gleason's gym during his lunch hour
United Press International
Mondily's Results
and watching the fighters lrain. He doesn't go there and say his
58 Skyvue 38
name is Fred Sbero; he pays his buck admission like any other Beallsville
Bridgeport 58 Buckeye S 30
fight buff. .
.
.
Campbel.l e.- canfield 44
Hartley 66 Col Wehrle 40
Whatever he's doing must be right because .the Rangers are Col
Col Northland 71 Col Whet .
off to their best start in 10 years with 16 v1ctories and four lies Stone 45 .
·
·
East Palest i ne · 41 Colum ·
In 30 games. That still leaves them no better thai!' fourth in the
blana 13
·
Patrick Division but it is the sixth.best showing ainong ~the 17 Grandview 60 Col Beechcroft
.
NHL clubs and generally augurs weD for their ·future · even 20
Jefferson
union
so Buc ke ye
though !bey have been In a slump of late, havirig lost six of w 36
. .
Jonathan Alder 60 Madison
their last nine.
Plains 41
Freddie Shero isn't too worried about tllat. Tbe Ranger Lakeview
66 L iberty 44
players are happy players, and that's what It takes to win, be London 55 Clark North eastern 26
feels . Could be the man is right.
Lordstown 39 M c Dona ld 19
United Presslnternatloul
The luckless Cl~veland
State Vikings were without
good fortune again Monday
night.
The Vikings suffered their
third two-point loss of the
season, dropping a 76-74

decision to visiting Ohio
University.
Cleveland .S tate battled
back from an eight-point
deficit with 10: 13 remaining
in. the game to take a 71-66
lead with 2:30 left, but the
Bobcats pulled even and

I Sport Parade j
By~~:r::~c.u~N

Joel Price, a 6-foot·8
sophomore center, led the
Zips with 23 points.
At Toledo, center Dick
Miller, hitting for 19 markers,
paced the hot-shooting
Rockets' easy victory over
Catholic University of
Washington, D. C.
Toledo, which made good
on fiT percent of its shots from
floor , broke out to a 2tH; lead
·with 8:32 left in the first half,
making 20 out of 30 shots, and
we,re out front 47-23 at intennission .
Four other players also
scored in double figures for
the Rockets, who improved
their record to 4-2.
In other Ohio college
basketball action Monday .
night, Wittenberg zapped
Urbana 86-63 ; Northern
Alabama defeated Otterbein
71-63 ; Point Park (Pa. ),
outpointed Baldwin-Wallace
73-64; Wilmington got by
Cedarville 80-76; Pitt- Johnstown
(Pa.)
dumped
Steubenville 93-74; Dyke
bested West Uberty (W.Va.)
87-72; and Salem (W. Va.)
tripped Mount Vernon
Nazarene 92-75.

Sullivan suspends Fairbanks
ByLES KJOS
MIAMI ( UP!) - A series of
bitter confrontations between
New England Patriot owner
Bllly Sullivan and Coach
Chuck Fairbanks have left
the playoffbound club without
a head coach.
Fairbanks is accepting a
lucrative offer to coach at the
University of Colorado and
his hope of continuing with
New England until after the
playoffs was scotched by
Sullivan. The announcement
was made shortly before the
Patriots' 23.,'! loss to Miami
Monday night.
Fairbanks said tlle players
were understanding of his
plight wben he told them.
" They were great. They
understood my decision," he
said. "They knew it was a
personal decision on my
part."
"It was a very difficult,
frustra ling and agonizing

day," said Sullivan, who was
released 10 days ago from a
hospital where he was treated
for a stomach aihnent.
He said Fairbanks asked to
be released from his contract
in meetings Sunday night and
Monday morning, but
indica ted he wanted to get
going on the Colorado
program while he got the
Patriots ready for the
playoffs.
Sullivan said he asked
Fairbanks if Colorado could
wait unW after the Super
Bowl, but Fairbanks said,
'No,' because they wanted
him to get started with
recruiting .
Fairbanks met witll tlle
team to tell them he was
leaving at 3:30p.m. Monday,
then 45 minutes later met
witll Sullivan again and was
told he Willi under suspension
without pay until things were
ironed out.

"! couldn' t fire him, he'd
already resigned . If I'd fired
him he'd probably ask for
some extra dough,'' Sullivan
said.
Fairbanks showed up at tbe
Orange Bowl, apparently intending to make anotller plea
to stay on, and Sullivan later
asked him to leave.
Sullivan
said
after
Fairbanks announced his
intentions, a half dozen
players approached the
owner and asked him to
relent and allow Fairbanks to ·
rel)lllin with the team .

"They said it might be in
the best interests for him to
continue · through
the
playoffs," Sullivan said. " I
said the coach talked a lot
about himself and ru., family .
I'm concerned about my
family too, and that's the
Patriot family. We aU shook
hands and they said tlley
appreciated being able to talk
to me."
In tbe locker room after the

Dolphin game, virtually aU
the players Said they hated to
see Fairbanks leave.

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Duke retains top ranking
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tbe
Duke Blue Devils received 32
fiistiJiace votes to hold on to
the No. 1 ranking among
major college basketball
teams in the second weekly
college basketball ratings.
Thirty-five of the 42
coaches on tlle UP! major
college basketball ratings
board responded to this
week's balloting.
Duke, 6-0, collected 522
points from tbe coaches to
post a 20iJolnt margin over
No. 2 Notre Dame, which
registered the otller. three
flrstiJiace votes. The Irish
remained in their position of ·
a week ago.

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Martins Ferry 65 Bella ir e 30
River 52 Woodsfield 51
Shadyside 61 Barnesv ille 39
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North ·Carolina made tbe Struthers 54 Poland 19_
tica 58 Hamilton Township
biggest jump in tlle poD, U
54
moving into tlle No. 6 spot Warren Harding 64 How land
with 245 points after 51
Warren Western Rsv . 54
defeating Michigan State, Cham pi on 50
which feU one spot to No. 4
witll 318 points. UCLA, North
Carolina State, Michigan and •
Syracuse each moved up two
iHIS WEEK'S SPECIA.L
notches, to Nos. 3, 5, 7 and 9
respectively. Kansas and
Syracuse retained their No. 8
and 10 rankings.
The following teams are
probation frr the full season :
Hawaii, Grambling, NevadaLas Vegas and Alaska-Anchrrage. University of Idaho
is on pro!lation unW midJanuary.

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Dolphins assured of
home field advantage
"The concentration wasn't Sunday ," Shula said.
there," said light end Don
Griese suffe red bruised
Hasselbeck . " For as lillie ribs and was expected to be
concentration as we had we ready . Little banged up a
did · pretty well."
knee, and will undergo rests
But Moore was still Tuesday. Williams' sore knee
continued to bother him and
impressed.
"It's a tribute til the class he was kept out of action after
that New England has - that the first quarll!r.
For New England, which
they had something like that
hanging over their head and · hegins the playoffs in two
were able to come out and weeks , quarterback Steve
play as well as they dill," he Grogan sprained a knee, but
said it wasn 't serious.
said.
The Dolphins were stopped
The Pats had first downs on
the 5, the 10 and the 2 yard oo a fourth and one at the
line and failed to score each New England 35 the first time
time. Twice they were held on they got the ball, but then
downs and once they were they begaq to move.
Griese threw touchdown
stopped by cornerback
Gerald Small's interception passes of six yards to Nat
Moore and 17 til Durie! Harris
of a Steve Grogan pass.
That was one of three and running back Gary Davis
interceptions that raised the punched over from the I.
Griese and Harris had a big
Dolphins season total to 32,
the most in the NFL.
day together, connecting on
"It was an outstanding three passes fer 95 yards,
defensive performance with including a 4G-yarder that set
the goal line stands and the up Harris' score.
Garo Yepremian finished
big inll!rceptions," Dolphin
off the scoring with five
Coach Don Shula said.
" We're just keeping our seconds to go by kicking his
fin gers
crossed
that 16th straight field goal, this
(quarterback Bob) Griese, ooe coming from 35 yards
(guard Larry) Little and out. The streak ties him with
(running back Delvin) Jan Stenerud and Don
Williams can line up and play Cockroft for the NFL record.

ByLES KJOS
MIAMI (UP[) - Miami
Dolphin wide receiver Nat
Moore said it was surprising
the New England Patriots
played as well as they did
Monday night considering the
circwnstances.
The club was rocked at
midafternoon when Coach
Chuck Fairbanks tllld the
players he was accepting an
offer to coach at the
University of Colorado and
would be leaving the Patriots.
It late r developed that
Fairbanks wanted til stay on
until afll!r the playoffs, but
owner Billy Sullivan said no.
The two men later confronted
each other in the dressing
room , and a bitrer Sullivan
ordered Fairbanks out .
On t he field, the Dolphins
scored once in each quarter
and held off three deep
Patriot threats for a 23-3 win ,
assuring Miami the home
field advantage in next
Sunday 's AFC wild card
game against Houston .
The
Patriots
looked
disorga ni zed under the
direction of two assistant
coaches , Ron Erhardt and
Hank Bullough. At one point
they were penalized for
h&gt;lving 12 men on the field .

Hoosiers continue
to win, 101 to 64
and Scott Eells each chipped
United Press International
Undaun ll!d by the strife of in 18 and Landon Turner
last week's disciplinary prob- added 10.
The Hoosiers, 5-3, came out
lems, the Hoosiers of Indiana
continued their winning ways swinging and hit four of their
in U1e opening of the fifth first five shot s til take· an S.O
annual Indiana Classic and lead. They went on to shoot 60
Coach Bobby Knight seems til per cent from the field during
be pleased with his boys once the first baH, which ended
with the Hoosiers ahead, 50.
aga in .
.
" I thought for the most part 26.
Davidson Coach Eddie Biewe
played
pretty
denbach
also had kind W(ll'ds
consistently, especially in the
for
the
Indiana
team.
first haH," said Knight, afrer
"They're
a
good
defensive
the Hoosiers coasted to an
team,"
he said.
.
basketball
easy 101-64 victory over
"
They
play
defense
the best
Davidson Monday night in
of
any
team
we
have
~aced.
Bloomington, Ind.
" Ours is a team where North Carolina State is
leadership is an exercise in quicker but Indiana execures
it better."
Wiison."
AJ,so Monday night, lOth·
Considering the fact three
ranked
Louisiana State
players were suspended and
extended
its
unbearen streak
five others were put on
to
six
games
with a ~
probation after breaking
victory
over
Montana
Stare.
training rules last week,
Dewayne
Scales
scored
34
leadership might well have
been expected to be a points for LSU and AI Green
added 20 as the Bengals took
problem.
But all 10 Indiana players an early eight-point lead and
scor ed, led by Mike Woodson, held previoliSiy undefeated
who hit for 23. Butch Carter

Montana Stare scoreless for
the first 2:45.
The Tigers, ~. built a ~
haHtime lead, and Montana
State,
despite
Craig
Finberg's 31 points, never
. came closer than nine points
the rest of the game.
LSU Coach Dale Brown
saw the game as a learning
experience.
"There are very few undefeated teams around the
country and there are only
two in the Southeastern
Con(erence,
LSU
and
Mississippi State," he
explain~. "We played an
Wldeleated team tonight and
I think it woke the guys up
when they saw we weren't
leading by 20 points. "
In
other
games,
Washington edged Army, 6867, in the second game of the
Indiana Classic, Alabama
heat Missouri, 61Hi8, Florida
State trounced Florida
Southern,
106-75,
and
Mississippi State downed
Iowa State, ~70.

STANDINGS Giants fire Me Vay .
By 'TONY FAVIA
UP! Spurts Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
New York Giants left litUe
time for speculation. Just one
day after the season ended
·
'
John McVay was fired as
head coach and the search
ha s he gun for a rep Iacement .
The Giants finished their 610 season Sunday, losing to
th e Ph '.la de 1Ph'•a E ag1es, ""•
'""""·
Less th an 24 hours late r,
Andy Robus·telli ' the club's
director of operations
NEW YORK (UP I ) T he
announced McVay would not
u n i 1 e d press International
be rehired after his tw()oyear
Board of Coa c hes top 20 second
weekly college basketball ra ·
· . Apr.
i1
tr . t
conacexp~resm
ting s. with fir-st -place votes and
Robustelli also announced he
records th rough Sunday, De c.
17 i n parentheses :
would step down from the
Team
Points post he has held since
1. Duke (6-0l (32)
522
December, 1973, when a new
2. No ire Dame (4 -0) (3)
502
3. UCLA (4 -l l
376
head coach is selected.
4. Mich igan St . (3.1)
318
there was any doubt abOut
s. No . carotin a st. (7 -ll
283
6. North Carolina (5 .1)
245 whether McVay's job was at
7 . Michi gan ( 4 -ll
235
8. K ansas (5 -1J
222 stake, it was quickly ended.
9. Syracuse ( 6-0l
212
Robustelli said a new coach
10. LSU 15·01
211
would be chosen by the club's
11 . Lou isville (6 -2)
198
12. (tiel Kentucky {3-11
162 hoard of directors.
12. (tiel Marquetre (5 -0l
162
Penn State Coach Joe
14. Georgetown {6-0l
llJ
15. Indiana St. (8i -0)
90 Paterno, who was rumored to
16. Illinois P -Ol
81 be high on the (}!ants' priority
17 . Long Beach St. ( 6-0)
39
18 . Texas A&amp;M (8-0
30 list. has indicated publicly
19. Texas (5 -2.l
2B that he is not interested.
20. Arkansas (4 -0l
19
Note: Bv agreement with the Other names mentioned
American Basketball Coaches prominently are former
Association, l earns on probation
by the NCAA are inelig ible tor Kansas City and New Orleans
top 20 and national champion - Coach Hank Stram and
ship cons ideration by t he UPI George Allen, the former
Board ot Coaches . Those team s
cu r ren tly on Rrobat ion for 1977 Washingtpn coach who was
are : Hawa ii. Gramblin g, dismissed by the Los Angeles
Neva da .L as Vegas an d Alask a Anchorage . Univers ity of IdahO Rams in training camp.
is on probation ' until mid ·
Ostensibly, the reason for
January .
the firing could be that
McVay failed in his two full
years as head coach to direct ,
the Giants to a winning
record, which they have not
Monday's
had since 1972. But although
Ohio College
•·
Basketball Results
nothing was said about it
United Press International
Monday at the Giants'. news
Kent State 69 Akron 57
Ohio Un i versity 76 Cleve land
conference, one of the most
St 74
important factors probably
Toledo 98 Catholic Univers ity
was a single play that will
62
Wi ttenberg 86 Urbana 63
Northern Alabama 71 Ot - live in Giants fans' minds
Monday's R es ult
Mi l wilukee 7, To led o 5
Todav ' s Gttmes
No gam es -sched ul ed
Wednesday 's Game s
No games sc heduled

Fini1l NFL Standings

8y United Preu lnter.naTionat

American conference
~ast

W. L.
11 5
11 s
8 8
5 11
5 ll
Central
W. L.
14 2
Pittsburgh
10 6
y -Houston
a e
Cleveland
4 12
Cincinnati

New Englnd
-, .Miam i
NY Jets
Buffa lo
Balt imore

T. Pet.
0
0
0
0

0

a .soo
0

W. L- T.
Denver
10 6 0
Oakland
9 7 0
Seattle
9 7 0
San D iego
9 7 0
Kansas City
4 12 0
National Conference
East
W. L. T.
12 4 0
Dallas
9 7 0
v -Phil a
8 8 0
washington
6 10 0
St. Lou is
6 10 0
NY Giants
Central
x -Min nesotll
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago
Tampa Blly

. 313

.313

T. Pet.
0 .875
0 .625

West

w.

.688
.688
.500

.250

Pet.
.625
.563
.563
.563
.250
Pet .

.750
.563
.500
.375
.375

u

L T. Pet .
7 1
7 1

8
8

9 0
9 0
5 11 0
7
7

.531
.531
.438
438
,313

west
W. L T Pet.
12 4 0 .750
L os Angeles
y. Atlanta
9 7 0 .563
New Orleans
7 9 0 .438
san Francisc
2 14 o .125
x-clinched division title
v·clinched .Playoff berth
Monday's Result
Miami 23, New England 3
( e·nd of Regular Season)
Sunday, Dec. 24

PIIVOff Games
NFC .
Phila at Alia , 12 :30 p.m.
AFC .
.
·
Houst.on at Miami, 4 p .m .

International
Hockey League .
United Press Interna tional
North
w I t pts. gf ga
Saginaw
13 11 6 32 129 122
Port Huron
13 12 4 30 125 119
Fl int
11 16 2 24 119 122
Muskegon
3 23 2 8 76 163
South
·
w I t pts. gf ga
F t. Wayne 21 7 1 43 143 95
Gr1md Rapids
19 5 3 41 123 86
Toledo
12 14 3 27 117 115
Milwaukee
11 14 5 27 104 129

8-5 to repeat

72

RENO, Nev. (UPl) - The
defending champion Dallas
Cowboys are lh'i favorites to
emerge as Super Bowl champions again this year,
Harrah's Race a~d Sports
Book said Monday.
The Pittsburgh Sreelers are
listed at 9-5, the race hook
said. The remaining Super
Bowl odds included: New
England, l:h'i; Los Angeles,
14-5; Denver, 6-1; Mlnilesota,
6-1; Miami, 7-1; Houston, 10.
I; Philadelphia and AUanta,
both 20-1.

C11D-20

C12&amp;-20

C135-24

Save so• Save 1'"' Save 1'"'
wllh coupon IIlii roll II or campatlblt
color print Ill"\ brGUQht In tor iltVIIGpiiiiJ.

•••••
Redeem coupon when you
drop oll your deYelopmg order

I
I
I

Kodacolor Film

C111l-20 • C126-20 • C135-24

8
=

I

~,::',~':':.":/ootocotor

C or

cornp1U1tle color
prfftl 111m broutht In
for d"elolfl"l-

I
I
I

(One roll Prf coupon per customer.)

-

•

Vltld December t9 - 30. 1978.

I PHOTO COBPJJ; I

I

•
•
•

Silver Bridge Regional Plaza
Gallipolis, OH .

I

....... -.

Will Be Given By
H. WiUiam Matting~

RIO GRANDE CAKE SHOW FIRST PLACE WINNERS - Front row, left to right:
Roberta SaWlders, Jessica Saunders, Janet Thomas, Margie Calvert. Back row, I to r,
Ncnna Potts, Mary Sayre, Betty Carpenter. Absent were: Nancy Roush, Teresa Knowlson,
Lois Lilmb and Linda Vaughn .
HEARING AID
SPECIALIST

The fourth annual Rio
Grande cake show was held
;.saturday, Dec. 2, at the
' Rodney United Methodist
Church. The show was a
great success with 45 people
"entering 66 cakes. Fifteen
·:first-place trophies were
given for dHferent categories
with each one entering In his
. own division according to his
:s kill, and the children en-

MEIGS INN, POMEROY OHIO
THURS.DAY, DEC. 21,9 A.M. to 12 NOON
Anyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a

.I

hearing test using the lat.est electronic equipment to
determine It his loss.is one which mey be helped. Som~
of the causes of hearing loss ~Ill be e)(plalned an
diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.

We tso Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Baneries and Supplies For All Makos for S.le.
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN - CALL THE 'HOTEL
FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 992-3629

Miss
Anna
tering by ages.
Clark,
The highlight of the show Gallipolis, was awarded a
was a beautiful cake done . rosette ribbon for the "Public
with a wafer paper design Choice" award for her
made by Nancy Roush , shaggy dog cake.
Miss Jessica Saunders, age
Reedsville. The cake won top
honors in the show and was 5, of Gallipolis won "Best of
named "Best of Show." Show" in the children's
Nancy was also awarded a division for her color-flo
rosette
ribbon
for method of Rudolph the red"Decorator's Choice" for her nosed reindeer cake. Jessica
is ·the daughter of Mr. and
Ohio state seal cake.

Potted Poinsettas
$1.00 to $6.50
Hanging Poinsettias
Tubs, 30 plus blooms
$10.00
Foliage Plants
3" to 10' ' SOc to $5.00
HANGING BASKETS 4" to

'o"

1.25 to SS.OO

1

SALE
LOW

On Route 7

at Chester, 0 .

SALE
Wed .• Thurs . &amp;
Friday
12 : 00 Noon -5:00P.M.
Sat.lO:OOA.M.-5: 00
P . M.
Sunday 1:00-5: 00
P . M.

CHRISTMAS AFTER CHRISTMAS
•••TO CHERISH

m

m
mu - - - a
m

CLOSING 5:00 P.M. CHRISTMAS EVE

~

m

SUPERIORS

s

SUPERIORS

~

~
~
~

~

For Christmas

'9700 ~

Bulova
Accutron·

m

I

Bulova
and
Accutron

12 oz.
pkg.

1978.

wlttlln a minute 1 month. •

ClEMER'
Ql :;Irk

ArtCarvect

Clln.tnu. Sel«lloil

BANANAS LARGE

for Her
for Him

4 LBS.

""'

W/tiiNI
Mmlssaa

PLUS

• "I a.ls,AI h Sw jll, As It Cleans"
•AttadlootetrlsConnectln A~iffy
•JnNnt Ali Pile Adjustment
• Jlill:lilposllbtt Bog
•T.,.TopSwildt
~

SO. GREAT A DEAL
THAT WE'LL SAY
IT AGAIN

FOR ONLY

OOZEN69~

Prince

&amp;

'DIAMOND .

VALVOLINE

·

QUART

MOTOR OIL •••••••••••••

$239
EACH

VALLEY BELL

Large Selection

PLAIN GOOD

Turkeys

FACIAL
TISSUES

&amp; Hams

200 Ct. Box

quart

EGGNOG ••••••••••

89~

quart 89~

BROUGHTON'S

GALLON

49~

KiNG SIZE

HOLSUM
BREAD
LOAF

39~

PEPSI COLA .......... 8 :&amp;: s1 DOG FOOD ..•......•••.••• 310
1

29

ALPO

MAXWELL HOUSE

99~

cans
OL

jar

INSTANT COFFEE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

'.'

Protectors,

Speidel
Walch
Bands, Ladles' &amp;
Ladies'

.,

Diamond Pendants &amp;
Ear Rings, B. David

·''

Gen1s' ,

&amp;

Ear

Cultur~d

Rings,

Earrings,

Necklaces,
Decorative

Pearl

Krome•

.''
I

..

'.,.•

and

,•

Gift Items.

ALSO, SPIEDEL DIGITAL WAtCHES

Goessler's ·Jewelry Store
COURT ST.

POMEROY

Use Our Lay-Away Plan! I I

'

ALL WffK SPECIAL

FRIDAY ONLY

Clocks,

Silverplate

$}39

1% MILK •••••••••••••••••••••••

of

VALLEY BELL

.

Princess

lacs, Tie Bars and

Pin

ICE
CREAM
CAKE

SUPERIORS

PIECE
LB.

1-LB.
PKG.

8-16 OL
bottles

Gardner
Billfolds.
Gents' Anson , TieKey

SLICED
BACON

$1 09
.
BOLOGNA
99¢ 99~

EGGNOG ••••••••••

Delightful
To Give
Wonderful
To Get

Pierced

BOlli a.EANERS

EGGS

Coitume
Jewelry

In Beautiful
Selections

~

VALLEY BELL

GRADE B

LB.

BOYER RIVER

GALLON
Sl49
2% LOW FAT MILK••••••••••••••• -••~

e,.ryono wontoa ButO.a

........ on your gilt !tot. e..,
lui0¥1 Accutron h11 the
tomouo tloctronlc:aiiY·&lt;bf_,
tuning tork mOHmont.
GUIIranteed .c:curatw to

Conference Ali.Star team for

POLISH
SAUSAGE

FRANKIES

~

now and ChOOM forth.

..

CANDLES &amp;
THINGS

.'

m
m

Accuuon watch. Come lr

.... .

1 Calendar

•

Syracuse, 0 .

912 . 517 6

CHRISTMAS

...
..

Chester Church of the
Nazarene 7:30 p.m. Thursday; public invited.
FIRST CHURCH of God ,
Syracuse,
Chr is tQl aS
program, 7:30 p.m . Thursda}'; public invited.
TUESDAY
MAGNOLIA CLUB annual
LADIES AUXILIARY of Christmas dinner and party
Pomeroy Eagles Club will Thursday 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. Inn .
rather than 8 p.m. as planMIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 Thursday 6:30 p.m.
ned.
at
Middleport
Unit ed
HARRISONVILLE Senior Presbyterian Church.
Cilizens Christmas dinner
FRIDAy
Tuesday 6 p.m. at town t THE CHESTER PTO will
house. Gift exchange and present
a
Christmas
birthdays observed.
assembly
at
Chester
Elementary School Friday at
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS-GALLIA·MASON 12 : 15 p.m. Parents and
Life
Underwriters friends are welcome .
RUTLAND
FIRE
Association Wednesday at
noon at Holiday Inn, Department Ladies Auxiliary
Gallipolis. Representative of pary,
1 6.: 30 p.m . F nay;
'd
Huntington Trust Bank, potluck dinner and $3 gift
Columbus , guest speaker. exchange.
Board of directors will meet
at 11 :15 a.m.
POSTPONEMENT
MEIGS GIRLS Athletic
A meeting of the Meigs
Boosters meeting, 7 p.m. County History Book ComWednesday at high school; aU mittee scheduled for Wedparents invited . .
nesday ev.ening at the co unty
TITLE I parent - teacher museum has been postponed
meeting 2:30 p.m . Wed- until J an. 14 at th e museum .
nesday
at
Salisbury
Elementary School for
PROGRAM SLATED
parents and interested in·
The Salisbury Element ary
dividuals who want to find out School Christmas program
more about Title I reading will he held at the school
program.
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m , All
THURSDAY
parents and friends are in·
CHRISTMAS program at vited .

- Linda Vaughn , a white
Lambeth cake.
Open Christmas Cake
Division - First place, Betty
Carpenter, Santa ca ke .
Second place, Brenda Burnette . Third place, Adda
Baker . fourth place tie ,
Gretchen Connolly and Lois
Lamb.
Open Religious Cake
Division - First pl ace,
Margie Calvert, World cake.
Second pla ce, Piccona
Bloomingdale.
Open - Ohio State Cake,
First place, Nancy Roush,
State Sea l ca ke. Secon d
place , Piccona Bloomingdale. Third place, Mary
Sayre.
Open Fantasies Division First place, Mary Sayr e,
Nativity scene made from
candy. Second place, Janet
Thomas. Third place, Johna
Crump. Fourth place tie, Lois
Lamb and Laura Sayre.
Open - Wedding Cake
Division - First pla ce. Mary
Sayre, two tiered wedding
cake.

I

m

..

,-------,
1 Social

Division - First pla ce,
Nancy Roush . Second place
tie, Mary Sayre and Piccona
Bloomingdale. Professional ·
Foreign Technique Division

llubbard's GreenhOuse

.

PBDTDCD~
PIIIITD IIIVUIII·IVI'O smLIIS

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

Second place, Betty Ca r·
penter. Third place, Mary
Sayre.
Advance, Song
Cake

.

TWO FOR LOW

Campbell, the sensational
rookie who led the NFL in
rushing and helped the
Houston Oilers to the playoffs
for the first time in 10 years,
Monday
was
selected
Wlanimously to UPI's AFC
All-Star team.
Campbell is the first rookie
ever named wumimously to
the AFC All-Star team and
the first unanimous selection
since O.J. Sim~J~Dn, following
his recordsmashing 2,003yard performance in I973.
Campbell, who set a rookie
rushing record and became
the first rookie since
Cleveland's Jim Brown to
lead the league in rushing,
was named on every ballot
cast by UPI 's selection
committee of 56 writers, four
from each conference city.
But It was the Steelers who
domlnared the AFC team.
Pittsburgh had five players
selected to the rarst unit and
an astoWlding seven more to
the second team .
Joining Campbell In the
backfield are Pittsburgh's
Terry
Bradshaw
at
quarterback and Miami's
Delvln Williams at running
back . Lynn Swann of
Pittsburgh and Wesley
Walker of the New York Jets
were named at wide receiver
and Oakland's Dave Casper
was picked at Ugbt end.
The Interior offensive line
has New England's Leoo
Gray and Oakland's Art Shell
at tackle, New England's
John Hannah and Buffalo's
Joe DeLamielleure at guard
and Pittsburgh's Mike
Webster at cenrer. Pat Leahy
of the Jets was chosen as the
kicker .

for Meigs County, -Ohio

Poin t Par k (Pa) 73 Baldw in ·
Wal lace 64
Wilmington 80 Ce dar ville 76
PiH - Johnstown
(Pal
93
Steubenv il le 74
Dyke 87 West Liberty (W Va)

•

honors but it was the Pittsburgh Steelers who were the
dominant team oo UPI's
American Football

Hearing Tests Set

BELTONE Consultant
Who Will Be At:

Children 1ages 9 - 12) First place, Tresa Knowlson,
Santa cake. Second place,
Katrina Bloomingdale. Third
place tie, Paula Carpenter
and Becky Thomas. Fourth
companies.
place tie, Paige Milstead, and
The cake show was spon- Tina Jones.
sored by Dl 's Candy and Cake
Beginners : Animal Cake
Supply, Spring Valley Plaza, . Division - t 'irst place ,
Rt . 35, Gallipolis. The Norma Potts, a Bugs Bunny
owners, Diana and Lonnie cake. Second pla ce tie,
Boggs, supplied trophies, Carolyn White and Anna
rosette ribbons and ribbons tu Clark. Third place tie, Carol
everyone who entered.
Adkins and Cindy Sayre.
Mrs. Sue Evans, owner of F ourth place tie, June Sayre
Sue's Sugar Shack in Vienna, and Johna Crump.
W. Va., served as the show
Beginners, Holiday Cake
judge. She is a professional divisi on - First pla ce,
cake decorator and is very Roberta
Saunders,
a
well-known in the cake Valentine heart cake. Second
decorating field.
place tie, Dena Beckner and
The committee serving as Betty Edwards. Third place
show hostess were: Mrs. tie, Janet Daily and Odean
Mary Sayre, Mrs. Roberta Legg. F ourth place tie, Jobna
Shriver, Mrs. Janet Thomas ·Crump and Tony Morabito .
Special award, Carol Atkins,
and Mrs. Margie Calvert.
Mr.s. Sue Evans did a Jean Gregory and Joyce
demonstration on royal iGing Cleveland.
flowers on wite stems, and
Intermediate Birthday or
Mrs. Linda Vaughn did a Shower Cakes Division demonstration on cake flower First place, Margie Calvert,
arranging.
Dumho cake. Second place,
The youth group of the Adda Baker. Third place, Lee
Rodney United Methodist Fetterly.
Intermediate, Teenagers
Church served refreshments.
Winners in each category Cake Division - First place
were as follows:
tie, Janet Thomas, Spider
Children : (ages 8 and Man cake and Margie
under) - First place, Jessica .Calvert , . basket of flowers
cake. Second place, Roberta
Saunders, Rudolph cake.
Second place tio, Chris Shirver. Third place tie,
Burnette and Laura Sayre. Gretchen Connolly and
Third place tie, Krista! Brenda Burnette. Fourth
Bloomingdale and Bethany place lie, Lee F etterly and
Joan Siders.
Milstead. Fourth place tie,
Advance , Nursery Rhymes
Lori Skidmore and Karla
Bloomingdale.
Special or Fairy Tales Division award, Lindsay Legg, Resa First place, Lois Lamb,
Pack and Janet Stiltner.
Hansel and Gretel cake.

Mrs. Richard Saunders.
Mrs. Betty Carpenter, show
chairperson, estimated !50
people viewed the cakes and
registered for door prizes
Honated by cake and candy

terbein 63

Dallas favored ·

·Steelers dominate
UPI's 'dream team '
BY JOE CARNICELU
UPI E•eculive Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Earl
Campbell took the individual

Annual Rio .Grande Cake .Show success

trying moments thl~ year,
McVay
expresse
no
b!tterness
about
his
disrmssal. •
to
k •
"! came uere
wor .or
the Glanis and 1did what they
ed
d ,. M V
.d
ask meta o
c aysat
h" h '
1 Lak
from ts om.~ n
e
Mohawk, N.J. I was fair
"th th
The
f 1r
w~
em.
Y were a
w•.th me. There are things I
rrught have done dllferenUy
but 1·1 doesn 'I make any sense
to 100 k b k
ac nowGI. ts
"I think the an are a
much better team than when
I sta~te_d . The whole
orgamzatton
Is improved.
,
bed
ch '
I ve been ~I ~llc: II m
professions ?"I
r ve _
years (two m the ;.vorld ~·
Football Le~gue) and I mas. ...
30. The 38 wms we'7, terrific,
the 30 losses awful.

forever .
That was the fumble in the
Nov. l9gamewiththeEagles
when quarterback . Joe
·
· bo
Pisamk
tched a handoff
with less than 30 seconds left
dth a·
1 din 1712
an
e lants ea g, • ·
Eagles cornerback Herman
Edwards returned the loose
ball 26 yards for a tlluchdown
and the Eagles won, 19-17.
Philadelphia had no timeouts
remaining and all Pisarcik
u··
had to do was fall on the ba .
·
The next day the Gtants
fired McVay's close friend,
offensive coordinator Bob .
Gibson • who had ordered
Pisarcik to hand · off to
fullback Larry Csonka .
Typical of the dignity he
displayed
through
the
Pisa~cik fumble and other

DBuy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 19, 1978

R.C. COLA

DR. PEPPER
8-16 oz.
bottles

79f;

OR

DIET RITE COLA
SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 m10 P.M.
,SUNDAY 10 TO 10 ·

We Accept Federal Food Stamps - We ReseJVe The Right To Urn~ Oua1ntitiEY

8-16 oz.
bottles

99~

�6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 1'Uestay, Dec. 1Y, ma

Philathea Women host program,
participate in gift exchange

Grange gathers for holiday potluck
Members of the Ruck Sprin~s Grange ~athered at the
l~o ll Thursday evening for a

hnliday

poliu&lt;·k

an d

d1angc we~.s ht!ld and gift~
Wl'l'e prl':-;t•ntcd to all ttw

t.•x-

jHvt-.•nih•s aUt&gt;rHiing from
benertlh a tn•t.•donah•d bv Rill

C.hrishnas program .

A while elephant

~ift

Radford .
Cl•rJtrJbutinras Wt'l'l'

Santa 's coming
to the.firehouse
Final plans for the arrival
of Santa Claus at the fire
house in fuicine

Wt:!re

made

when the Firemen's Auxiliary met recently in the annt•x. The meetmg followong a
dinner at the Kin Folks
Restaurant in Point Pleasant.
Santa will arrive at the
firehuu.se on Dec. 24 at 2 p.m.
Treats will be given to the
children ages 12 and under
who live in the area served by
the Racine Fire Department.
The Auxiliary is acceptmg
dunaiions to help fur the proj&lt;'cl.
Mrs. Chris Shain presided
at the meeting with Mrs. Emma Lyons leading in the flag
s;olute and Mrs. Mae Cleland
l11the Lord's Prayer.
Officer!'i

((lr

l,.Q7Q

wt&gt;r P

·
mt-~cle lt1

the .Jayt't.'e." Christma.!' pro~

jc'Ct mul to the SalvatiOn Army, and it wm; n11Led that twu
buxt:!s of gift~ had bcl'n sent tu

the Athens Mental Health
Cent er.
Pattv Parker was welcom·
"I inio memberslup. Bill
Radford gave tlw legislative

elected and are, Mrs. Shain,
president : Oretha Smder,
first vic-e president; M!le

repurt l'nm:erni ng a new drug

!")lll palhy c·.1nl \HI !" !"l'lll 111

.John Stahl and the Ht•rlx•rt
ni xtlll fmnily .
Fnr lht• pn,~r: nn. Mr~ .
Etlll·l ffruest•r. kdun·r indtHIPd a ecmdlc li~hti ng
l't'rt•munv in whieh the t•ntir't'
gnmgt• J~art i dpated t•ntitlt..'&lt; l

:\ ~: tft L'XL' h&lt;-tn J,!t• an&lt;l a pr(l- " Mar~hllll'lluw World" r:tnd a
gn nn by st•veral l'hilll rcn nf Strauss waltz, by Amy Er·

th&lt;• dnll'!'h hi ghl oghted the wi n. Chris Stewart sang
Chn ~t rnas mel•tin~ nf the .. Rudolph, the Red Nosed
PlulO:tthca Women of till' Mtd- H&lt;•indeer", and Darrin Wolle
dlPpm1 Club of' Chnst hl'id "' the pian11 playe'!i " It Came
Thur sday night at the dmn:h Upon a Midnight Clear" and
Mrs Carnl Wnlft• was in "San ta Claus is Coming to

"The l.oght of the World ...
Mt•mber s
Night" Ht

Tht•n• \\'i:IS

sa ng
r1

'' St l cnt

the eonclus iun .
reading by Rar-

bara Fry, and a &lt;k it by
Harnl d · Blal'kslnn

Frances

Shaeffer.

charge of the pmgl'a m whieh
opcnt.•d w1th piano solos,

and

Mrs .

servil'e which is available to

arwther

· Tr"y and Clint11n Glaze
by their father, san~
" Away in a Manger" and

ass i stc~l

r.rueser was narrator fnr

dent ; Ruth Sham , secretary; grange members. One appeal ceremony in which Nancy ,-------~
Gene I.yons, treasurer: Max~ for a id was an!:i wered. Mvrris, Susie Pullms and
ine Ruse, reporter .
Members reported ill were Helen Bla cks ton par The Auxiliary voted to pur- Rollin Radfm·d , Marcia tit.•ir&gt;atcd . Forty-six persnns
chase a rube fur Mrs. Grace Hobstetter, Barbara Fry. A attended the holiday pao·ty.
Roush who is confined to a
nursing home. The birthday
TUESDAY
of Mrs. Snider was ubserved i/·'·'' ;:.:;:;:::.:;:;:::;:::;:·:;:;::: .:,: ;:.:;:.:,: :,:,:;: :::.::..:::::::.;:·:·:::.::,: ,: :; .:.: '::.:,:,:.:;:;·;:.:,:,:,: :,.;:;: ''"; :..;{
and there was a gift exchange
X!
C:AMMA
' MU
and the drawing of new secret
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Pht
sisters.
:;:;
::;: S"r"rity, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
Christmas cake and ice :;:;
/ at the hom e of Mrs . Annie
cream were served to those
Cloapman , High St. Gift exnamed and Mrs. Beulah ·:·:
·,:, ehange part y wi th co·.· hostesses, Car ol Adams and
Autherson, Aggoe Boggess,
A
VERY
MODERN
PROBLEM
Beverly Cummons, Jean
Martloa McPhail. Cultural
Johnson, Debboe Lyons, Kay RAP :
pmg ram by Sue Zir kle and
I want my wife to have a good career and I agree her work is Libby Sayre .
Roberts, and Mary Sinter.
as important as nune. But who gives if one is offered a better
GROUP !!. Middlepoot
job somewhere else and the other has a great job at home?
Forst Umted Presbyteria n
My fiancee. Vanessa, is aiming for television. I'm an Church , home of Mrs. Donald
engineering major. Both lines of work u.sually mean lots of rJIWery wrt h co-hostess, Mrs _
moves.
Ri ch Karr. , Mrs. Moldred
..How do career couples work this out? - MARK
Baoley tu have the Christmas
program .
a Columbus hospital. A gilt MARK :
With much discussion and often a great deal of difficulty.
OH IO
ETA
PHI
was also presented to the
Some t'OUples face this modern problem by asking, "Which CHAPTEfl, Bela Sogma Phi
Rev. and Mrs. Mark Me·
job promises the most]" but there could be differences of opi- Sorority. Clm stma.s gift exClung.
nion
here.
11 was decided that there
dli:mgc party home of Lynn
Others (usually women I see a move as a challenge. Fur ex- Cr ow , Synte usc , College
will be no meetings tn
January and February. AI· ample, if you gut a btg-dty engineering offer you couldn't Road, G 30 p.m. Tuesday
tending were the Rev. Mr. refuse, Vanessa might apply at nearby TV stations and ad- ou ght.
and Mrs. McClung , Mr. and vance her career. I But it should work the other way too, with
THURBDAY
Mrs. Edison Baker, Mr. and you applying at larger companies, if she "makes network ." I
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Understanding, fl exibility, empat11y, and compromise are ConservHtion League. 6 p.m.
Mrs. Willis Anthony, Mr. and
Mrs. David Darst, Mr. and main ingredients in a successful two-career marri age. Good Chri ;tmas party at th e Meigs
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mr. luck ' - HELEN
Inn. Exchange of Christmas
ornaments. Gift wr·appings to
and Mrs. Allen Hughes, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Smart, Mr. MARK :
be judged. Devotoons by
Then there's the 'j weeke nd marriage," with each partner .Janet Duffy.
and Mrs. Robert Campbell,
Mr. and Mrs. John Warner, working where he or she fun,ctiuns best, then meeting at heo·
FRIDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chase, place or his Fridays through Sundays.
OHIO
ETA
PHI
A few affluent couples say this makes a very special partner- CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Pho
and Mr. and Mrs. Milton
'ship. I wouldn 'I be lou fund of it myself'
Hood.
Sororit y, 7: 30 p.m. dmner
Let's hear from people who have faced this problem ; or, like party at U1e Sportsman INn ,
Vanessa and Mark, expect to face it when they marry . Okay 1 Athens.
SUE
Qeland, second vice presi-

T{lWil."

ca ndl eli ghtin g

··we Three Kings'\ while

Erwin and · Jennifer
Social II Matt
McKinley as Ragge'!ly Ann
and Andy sang "Me My Ears
11n Straight ." There was a
I Calendar I pian11
solo by Beth Wolfe, a
recitation by Jared Stewart,

I
I

·n. Generati•on R ap ·}.
::

By H. elen and Sue Bottel

and a reading "Old Fashion·
e d Chri st " by Scott
McKinley._Mrs. Wolfe concluded with a Christmas

story and there was gruup
hospital. Members exchangsinging of "Joy to the Wulrol" ed gifts.
acwrnpanied at the piano by
Hostesses were Martha
Mrs. Claritoe Erwin.
Childs, Sharon · Stewart,
Mrs. Betty McKinley had Mabel Walburn, Evelyn Murchar~e 11f the meeting which
ray, Bea Stewart, Clara
opened with the Philathea Gilkey , and Nina Bland with
song. Officers' reports were ·Pearl Reynolds, Grae'e Pratt
gi ven by Mrs. Roach and and Becky Glaze conFarie Cole, with Mrs. Grce tributing.
Hawley reporting 11n the
Others attending were
flower fund .
Clyda Allensworth, Ella Mae
Reporte-d ill were Marvin Daugherty, Gertrude Miller,
Kelly , Jim Butcher, Jack Lorraine Neff, Dorothy
Bachner, Nina Russell, Ruth Jenkinson, Lena McKinley,
Powers, Kay Rail, Gladys Margaret Butcher, Lula Mae
Mowery , Mr s. Ad olph Quivey, Mary Bailey, Beulah
Saelens, Bea Robson, Steve · Ruu.sh, Audrey Swett, Helen
Fife, Bill Vaughan, and Edna Reynolds, Frances Roush,
Russell.
Mildred Hawhiy, Kathy ErA thank you note was read win, Louise McElhinny, Nora
from the Women's Auxiliary Rice , Regina Swift, and
for toys donated to the Melissa Woods.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Dec. 19, 1978

Union leaders discuss general alternatives
By ROBERT SANGEORGE
CLE VE LAND (U P!) With
mass
layoffs
threatenin g
Cleveland's

announced he had persuaded
local businesses w make
advance payment on their
taxes to help Cleveland
m~ni cipa l workers, angry. through its current fiscal
wuon leaders were set to crisis.
meet tnday in an effort to
But
Kucinich , after
consider their alternatives - announcing details of his
including a general strike - proposed mass layoffs to Mayor Dennis Kuclnich's which included 875 police
proposed layoffs or wpercent officers and 450 firefighters
of Ure city's work force.
- said he didn 'I believe
Kucin ich, scrambling to Forbes'
advance
tax
save his city from complete payment plan would work.
bankruptcy, said Monday he The plan also included
will be forced to lay off 2 000 pledges from six local banks
. workers by Jan. 2. At 'the holding $15.5 million in notes
ctty
same time, City Council not to seek payment of the
President George Forbes loans for several weeks.

The $15.5 million in banks
notes came due Friday, but
Kucinich and City Council
leaders were unable to agree
on a solution to Cleveland's
financial problems and the
city went into default on the
notes.
Kucinich's plan to fight
default - saving $3 million a
month by laying off 2,000 city
workers - brought outcrys
from municipal worker union
leaders who vowed to strike if
the order is carried out. But
the mayor warned he would
not tolerate walkouts. "My
administration will not
pennit any strike to dictate

policy.''

The city defaulted on the
bank notes Friday, leaving
Cleveland .in jeopardy of
going bankrupt in •about six
weeks, when existing general
revenue funds run out.
Kucinich also said he would
take his proposal directly to
the people to raise the city
income tax by 0.5 percent and
side step City Council , which
has refused wcall a specoal
referendum for the money .
In addition to the safety
forces , Kucinich sai d he
would trim from the city
payroll
250
garbage
collectors, all 225 recreation

employees and 200 ot her
workers from t he city's
engineering,

construction,

enVIronmental health, water
poll uti on control departments
and from office staffs.
The mayor said recreation
centers would close, street
repairs would be neglected,
and trash pickups, now
weekly, would come every
two weeks. But he insisted
that even with the layoffs, the
police department could
maintain nearly the same
patrol shifts it does now : 480
officers working in four shifts
of 120 each.
Kuciruch admttted there

would oe problems in
February protecting as many
as .m,ooostudents who may be
deseg r ega tio n

for

bu sed

purposes for the first tome .
"Th ere will be a significant
eff ec1.on the city's ability w
provode safe passage lo r
schoolchildren ."
Firef ig hting offi c ials
contend ed the layoffs would
allow only 112 men to be on
duly at any one time and
noted that lightin g just one
major
fire
r ece ntly
demanded 90 fir efighters.
"I've asked that there be no
strikes," Kucinich said. "The
contracts provide for a no-

strike clause. A strike would
be wrong not only because it
would be illegal but because
the union leaders would be
making the1r contracts void.

"Strikes are for contract
negotoations, not lor mob
rule," he added .
Imm ed iately a ft er the
mayor 's

an nou ncement,

F'ore!ighters Union Presodent
Ja ck Gannon announced that
union leaders had formed a
committee to st udy the layoff
plan and to recommend
action tnday .
Asked about the possibility
of a general strike by city
workers, many of the union

Don 't play Santa to thieves

Christmas shopping often
Assuming that personal
entails driving from one belongings - and Christmas
shopping area to another, gifts would fall into this
.making purchases at each category - are stolen from
stop. Since a car loaded with your car, your loss may be
packages in the front' or back covered If you carry a per·
seatS Ia in effect an open sonal property Ooater ininvitatloo to roving thieves, surance policy or lf you have
the Insurance lnlonnation a homeowners "package"
Institute offers these hints to policy.
insure thai the right person
But keep in mind that
gets your Christmas gifts.
depending on the type of
Always lock your door even insurance purchased, thefts
If you'll only be away from . of pel'liOnal property from a
the car for a few minutes.
motor vehicle or trailer Be sure all windows are other than a public con·
closed.
veyance such as a bus ur a
When you leave the car, put taxicab - may be covered
packages in the trunk and be only If the thief forces the
sure it is locked. Don't tempt vehicle open while all the
thieves by putting your doors, windows and other
parcels 011 display inside the openings in the car are closed
.car.
and locked.

Missionary Society held program, party ,
The Missionary Society of presented a gift and
the Pomeroy First Baptist refreshments of punch and
Church held a Christmas pro- cookie!i were served during a
gram and party Thursday social hour.
The group then returned to
evening fur the residents of
the
church for a bu.siness
the Me ·~s ~ounty Infirmary.
meeting
conduded by Mrs.
There \. ere stories and
Phyllis
Skinner.
Members
poems, and carol singing with
sang
carols
and
Margaret
Mrs. Margretta Wise at the
piano. Each person was Bailey handled the love gift
dedication. Mrs. Betty Wiles
reported that the box had
been sent to the Dayton Christian Center. Agift will be sent
to the scholarship students.
A donation to the Canters Refreshment were served.
Cave 4-H Camp projed was Members turned in their
made by the Laurel Cliff Bet- Christmas suck offerings.
Attending were Mrs. Wise,
. ter Health Club at the
Mrs.
Bailey, Mrs. Haroett
Christmas meetin g held
Sterrett,
Mrs. Maria Foster,
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Mrs.
Audrey
Young , Mrs.
Marjorie Goett.
Georgia
Watson,
Mrs. Ellen
The meeting followed a
Couch,
Mrs.
Ruth
Mann,
Mrs.
poUuck dinner. Members exNettie
Barnhart,
Mrs.
Burton
chanqed Christmas gifts and
arranged to send gifts to the Smith, Mrs. Phyllis Skinner,
Caryl Cook and Mrs.
shutm members of the club. A Mrs.
Wiles.
new members, Pearl Knapp ,
was welcomed into the club.
She won the door prize.
Readings, games and carols
were enjoyed by the group.
Attending were Mildred
Jambs, Ann Mash, Polly
Eichinger, Jean Wright and
Tammy, Robin Campbell,
Della Curtis, Ruby Frick,
Bertha Parker, Amber Lohn ,
l va Powell, Mildred Bowen,
Pearl Knapp, Donn•
Gilmore, and Leona Karr.

Donation made

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My fiance is a truck driver. When we're alone, he 's wonder·
lui to me but when we're with his friends, he ignores me.
Recently I went with him on the road . He talked much more
to his driving partner than he did to me When we stopped, they
would remark on other women passing by as if I weren 't there.
I mentioned this hurt me and he gut mad and said I'm nut used to his ways.
_
Lately he's been "forgetting" to call me more and more
often. I think he'd rather be on a run. If I try talking it over
with him, he turns it into an argument and yells at me. Am f
wrung ons he? - J. T.
DEARJ.:
I'd be leery of a man who only fllakes ni ce when no one else os
around : it might mean he considers women infenor, to be ignored in public, or among his friends. This especially if he yells
when you try talking about your hurt. Marriage to thi s truck
driver mi ght be less than a joy ride. - HELEN

:':

The home det·urating eontest to be judged tonight
beginning at 6 p.m. was noted
during the annual Christmas
meeting of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners held at
the home of Mrs. Arthur
Strauss.
Judges will be taken on a
tour of the town to view the
decorations and then will go
to the home of Mrs. Walter
Crooks for a rec'eption. Mrs.
Elizabeth Burkett presided at
the meeting and welcomed
the members. New yearbooks
were distributed and for the
program, Mrs. Harry Moore
read the " Hunchback." Mrs.
Harry Davts gave the verse
of the month, and fur roll call
members gave childhood

Harold Lohse and Mrs.
Charles Gaskill served as
judges lor the decorated
packages which were exchanged by the members.
Co- hos t esses for th e
meeting were Mrs. Everett
Taylor and Miss Bermce Ann
Durst. A lighted tree
decorated with red balls was
u.sed in the hall of the Strauss
home, and in the living room
a miniature village scene was
featured along with an ar·
tificial tree covered with ponk
and white poinsettias.
Salad, nut bread, candy and

memories of Chi-1stmets. Mrs.

service.

10% DISOOUNT

Wiener roast held
Turtle Ridge neighbors gut
together Sunday for a wiener
roast held in the garden plot
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Myron Miller. The roast was
hosted by Mr. and Mrs. David
Robinette and son, Nathan.
Besides the Rubineltes and
the Millers, others attending.
were Mrs. Karl Grueser and
Larry, Anita and Tom Ball.

CHRISTMAS
CANDY

nuts were served from the

dining room table which was
covered with red linen and
centered wtth candles. Mrs.
Burkett presided at the coffee

See Bill Childs -

SEVERAL MEIGS COUNTY organizations received
gifts of $50 each from the Pomeroy National Bank Monday
afternoon . In addition gifts of $5 each were presented for
residents of the Meigs County Infirmary and children of
the Meigs County Children's Services. Receivin g the
checks were from the left - Goldi e Dill, Dorothy Davis,
Meigs County Humane Society; Ray Wimng , the Sol v;~ ti on

He Works For You!

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

Middleport, o.

.REPRESENTATIVES FROM the county's five emergency units were at the Pomeroy
Nattonal Bank Monday afternoon to r.eceive gifts of $100 for each of the units. Making the
presentations on the left IS Mrs. Maxme Griffith, bank cashier. Representatives from the
left are Judy Hart, Rutland; Donna Aleshire, Syracuse; Kenny Byer , Middleport· Charles
• Legar, Pomeroy, and Randall Roberts, Racine.
'

GIFTS FOR HER

REG •

GeriC:tch.

Babe Spray ~ ..•....... .. .•................ :. . ... . .. .. .... .. 2 oz. '5.00
Cachet Spray ColoRrle.•..••• .•••.••.•••.••••••...•••.••••••...••.1.6 oz. '5.50
West Bend Pizza Baker .••••• "; •••••..•••••••••••. •.. .
• • • • 131.95 119.95

.,,

.,

would strike ''the day one
person is laid off "
C l eve l and
Police

,.

Patrolmen 's

.,

Assoctation

He said 5,000 signatures on
petotions would require the
City Co un ctl to consider
calling a special election and
10,000 sig.natures wo uld
San Fernando Valley.
compel
them to put the tssue
Heavy snow forced closure
w
the
voters.
of interstate 5 from Castaoc to
The may or said the
Bakersfield, th e main
relationship
between CEI and
highway connecting northern
Cleveland
Trust,
one of the
and Southern Ca liforma
The
wmter
stor m six banks holdi ng not es
weakened when 1t reached agatnst the cit y, "crys out for
the Rockies. Snowshowers a .Ju sti ce Depar t ment
were scattered thougl1out the in vestigati on .'' Cleve land
tntennounta in region. The Trust - the city's largest
heaviest snowfall wa s at the bank - and three of ti&gt;e other
hogher elevat ions. A fe w banks have seven CEI

Heavy rains flood Southwest
riff 's deputies estim ated they
United Press International
Heavy
rains
sent rescued more th an 100
floodwaters racing through straDcted motonsts.
Gov . Bruce Babbitt ca lled
Southwest . deserts today ,
forcing evacuations of at out National Guard units In
least 2,500 resident s of help la w en forcement
Arizona and New Mexico . per sonnel Monday night
Heavy snow fell over the evacuate threatened areas.
Ab out 430 persons we re
western Rockies.
Three inches of rain fell at evacuated fr om homes in
Fla gstaff in northern Arizona Allenville and Holly Acres,
and the water spilled down west of Phoenix; at least 100
the state's central mountains, famili es from homes on
causing dangerous flooding Tucson; 100 people at
and
two
near Phoenix and through Williams
subdivisions
at
Safford.
much of southern Arizona.
Most ltved in low~yin g
Two bridges over the Agua
Fria River on Interstate 17 areas that were threatened
between
Phoenix and with innundation by fastFlagstaff were washed out rising waters in rivers and
early today . A car was on one washes
Water was being released
of the !ridges and was swept
downstream. The fate of the from retention dams min
occupant or occupants was normally dry Salt River and
unknown , a Department of authorities expected only
Publi c Safety spokesman three bridges in Phoenix to be
above water toda y.
said.
Floodwaters created by
Many other highways were
snow
and ram in New Mexico
blocked by water streaming
across them. In Tucson , she- washed away two houses in

th e Gi la Nationa l Monument
area . 1\vo oth er houses wer e

th rea tened by the ns1ng
waters. the Natoonal Forest
Service satd

1b e same storm se nt a
tornado through Oceansode,
Ca lif .. roppong the roof off a
shopping cente r. overturning
trai le rs
and

several

sha ttering

hu ndred s

of

wmdow s. No sen ous mjunes

OCC WTed.
"There was a huge noise,
we didn't really know what

was going

w happen ,"

said

inches of snow was reaching
populated areas ot Utah ,

Nevada
and
western
Wyom ing and lighter snow
broker in the Alert Realty Co . fe ll in Nebraska nd the
office. " And suddenly the Dakotas.
buolding practically exploded
The storm system pushed
with the windows breaking ." cloudy skies over much of the
In th e los An geles suburb nation east of the Rockies.
of La Puente, a 20-by-20 fool
Strong winds blasted New
section of roof on a Gernco England. Mount Washington
Department Store building Ul Vermont had wtnds gusting
collapsed under UJC weight of w over 100 mph with a
accumulated rain water. No te mperature well below
IDJtrries were reported.
fr eezing for an almost
Waist-d eep water filled tncalculable wi nd -c hill
lowl ying intersections in the fa ctnr.
Lou Stevens, a real

e~1ate

FiJSt Alert Smoke Alarm.·,· ••• ·; •••••. ;............ ' ........... '29.95 119.95

Travel KiL •••••..•.•••.••••••••••••..•••...••.•• ~ .•..••••••••••••• 15:00- '3.59Zelko Multi Purpose Lantern ................................. , 134.95 '17.99
Pollonex Dial Massage Shower Head .......................... 139.95 28.68
Brite Watch Bands.......................................
f10111
'

British Ste~ing Gift Set.· ··· · · ··· ···•··· ··· ······ ··· · · ·· . ... ...... ... ...• '7 .00
Amity Leather BiiHolds •• ,•• •... •.. ••.. •.. ••••.. ••·••••••••......... from 13.95

HOLIDAY
SHOPPING
HOURS
1

REG. SALE
fiSher ~rice Activity Cente~ .................................... 112.39 '9.49
Battery PoWered Toy Sewing Machine......................... 115.95 '9.99
Woodstock Climbing Toy......................................... '2.39 11.99
Walla Koala Stuffed Toy ......................... ,................ '9.29 '5.88
fiSher Prk:e Lol~ Doll •..•• ~ ••••••.•..•.. ••.••..••••.• ••• ••.••.•••'5.95 14.88
Presto Mac Presto Magic Show ................................. '2.50 '1.33
Ar1gel 1)011 ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••.•.•••••••••••••••• 14.10 '1.88
Space Ship Radio...•......•.•.........•. ~······················si7.§S '11.88
Mickey Mouse Watch ...................................... ,•••• 118.95 116.95

r.rrt.t

•BEER
•WINE
•CHAMPAGNE
.eLIQUOR

CARRYING OUT AN ANNUAL tradition, the Pomeroy National Bank presented checks
of $100 to each of the Meigs County fire departments Monday afternoon. Receiving the
checks were: Front, I In r, Chris Jacks, Syracuse; Jeff Darst , Middleport; Harold Newell,
Chester ; Robert Jackson, Racine; back, I to r , Mrs. Maxine Griffith, bank cashier who
made the presentations; George Cullins, Orange Township ; Charles Legar, Pomeroy; Duke
Kennedy, Rutland . Checks will be sent to the Bashan and Olive Township Departments
which wer e not represented.

I '

, '"''fff
~•'

\I

•

'

rilE VOCAL MUSIC OFFICERS this year at Eastern
High School are: left to right, Kay Balderson, secretary;

Cindy Pitzer, treasurer ; Susan Hannum, president; Dawn
Sorden, librarian; and Karen Probert, vice president .

Two coffee firms
cut prices Monday
By
Un ited
Press
lnternaltonal
Fol ger Coffee Co. and Hills
Bros. Coffee Inc . Monday
reduced wholesale prices on
ground coffee by 10 cents w
$2.53 a pound in a move that
will make the morning coffee
mystique cheaper by the cup .The fates\ round of price
cuts should be reflected on
supermarket shelves within
three to four weeks, the
current lag period before
changes at the wholesale
level are-passed along to the
consumer .

I ,

"I continue w demand that
th e Justice Department get
into this city to see wbat is
happenin g. What Cleveland
Trust is trying to do os replace

our Democratic system or
government with one that is

'.
"
": .

.'

controlled by the roch .
"The people of Cleveland
don't want a mayor who 's
going to sell out In a bunch of
crooks,"

Kucini ch

argued .

Innocent
plea made

·'

2.00 to '6.95

FOR THE I&lt;IDS

bank

.- .

1

Kodak Ektra I •••.•. •••. ...••••. .•.•••.•••.••••.•••••••••••••••.•••••••• '23.99
Noreko Rotary Razors •••••••••••• ,.,· ...... ••• ......... •....... ·'49.95 144.95
_Polaroid One Step··············· .. •••••••••••·•·• .... •••• ...... -139.95 134.95
Poloroid Electric Zip Cam era ................... ,....................... '25.00
Timex Watches ..••••••.••••••••••••••.••••.••••.• •••••••••• ••• •••• from '15.95
Old Spice Gift Set ..•...•.......•... ~........~~............. .......•..• '6.50

directors on their
boards of director s.

.'

Keepin g
an
earlier .,
promise, Kuctnoch went to the
main branch of that bank
Monday In close his personal
accoun t. He ur ge d cit y
residents to do the same .
Probably before Cleveland
could sink inln bankruptcy
with the drainin g of its
general revenue funds in midFebruary, the state would
• step in.

REG. NOW

COAD HOLIDAY
DINNER SET
The COAD Senior Nutrition
Program Satellite Site wiU
have its Christmas Dinner on
Wednesday, December 20, at
the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints located on the Old
Town Flats Road. The menu
will be the same as the
Pomeroy Senior Nutrition
Program · Site Christmas
Dinner which will be served
on Thursdii,Y·
For Racme Satellite Site
rese rvations call 843-3364 .
For Pomeroy Site call 992·
7886.
The Racine 'Satellite Site
will be closed on Thursday
and Friday .

The Council has refused to
call a spectal election unto!
Kucinich agrees to sell the
Muncipal Light System to
Cleve l a n d El ec tric
lllummating CD., something
the mayor flatly refuse s w
do ."

.'

presented under t he directiun

"

"
,.,

I' I '

petition drive. "

Army ; Cynthia Molls, Meigs County Children's Services ;
Mrs. Maxine Grifftth , Pomeroy National Bank cash ier
who made U1e presentations; Mary Borchfield, Meigs
County Ch ildren's Services, Mt ldr ed Ja co bs ,
supertnlendent of the Meogs C&lt;Junty Infirmary, ar1d Da Vld
Jenkins of the Meigs County Jaycees.

GIFTS FOR HIM

of Mrs. Debbie Gerlach.

Saturday, December 23, 9 to 6

He satd union audowrs from
Washington would arrive to
study the financial situation
and
probably dispute
Kucinich's cl81m that the
layoffs would save $3 million
a month .
Paul Wells, president of
local 1099 of the Laborers

was leader and spokesmen
for Cleveland pohce when
they staged a chaotic, 19-hour
strike in July that left the city
of 650,000 defenseless.
Kucinich saod at his conference that the layoffs and
cutbacks could end after six
months if the 0.5 percent tax
hike were enacted. Toward
that end he said, he would
spearhead a n " initiative

Teachers of th e promary
department of the Middleport
Church of Chrost Sunday
School held a party recently
at the home of Mrs. Debbie

9 to 8 P.M.

unnecessary."

commented, "The city is
giving our men one heck of a
Olristmas present." McNea

Teachers held
holiday party

OPEN: Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur. &amp; Fri.

leaders acknowledged it • ' '
could happen , but refused to
elaborate.
Gannon, speaking for the
committee, said "It 's about
time responsible people in the
co mmunity said
what
responsible people know the mayor os acting
irresponsibly . Th e layoff
proposals
are
totally

President William McNea

Games were playe-d with
po·izes going to Kathy Cooper
and Mrs. Phylhs Baker. A
gtft exchange was held, and
the group presented Mrs.
Dorothy Roach with a 'gift.
Mrs. Roach is the superinten·
dent .
Refrestunents were served
J .:
to those named and Miss
On the other hand maybe you're too possessive (or sensitive 1 Frances Roush, Miss Thelma
to be the wife of a truck driver. They're a free breed, and they Boyer, Mrs. Lorraine Neff,
seldom change. If you can 't talk about your probl ems, do you Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs. Betty
really think you'll be happy living silenUy with them? -SUE
McKinley , Mrs Kathy Erwin, Debboe Honaker .
Sunday the children's party
was held with 38 boys and
girls attending, and at 10 :30
a.m. Sunday the annual
Christm as program will be

Home decorating contest
to be judged tonight

..

.,

Union , said h1s members

Hearthstone Class meets
Officers were elected at the
annual Christmas dinner
meeting of the Hearthstone
Class of the Middleport Forst
Baptist Church.
Elel.'\ed were Mrs' Edison
Raker, president; John
Werner, vtce president ; Mrs.
Mary Hughes, secretary ;
Harold Chase, treasurer, and
Mrs. Paul Smart, flowers and
cards.
Mrs. Willis Anthony opened
the meeting with a Christmas
poem. Paul Smart had devotions using Luke 2 and a
reading, "At Christmas the
Heart Goes Home. " A gift of
money was given for Steve
Fife who remains c'Onfined in

..

'·~

' Since many stores sell
coffee as a lost leader to
attract customers, the retail
pricetag on a one-pound ca n
of ground coffee is as low as
$1.99 in many parts of the
country.
Folger Coff ee Co., th e
nat:on's No . 2 roaster and a
;

division of Procter &amp; Gamble
·Co . in Cincinnati, also
lowered its wholesale price
on a 13-&lt;Junce can of flaked
coffee by 8 cents to $2.04 and
its instant by 1.5 cents an
ounce w $4.10 for a 10-ounce
jar.
In San Francisco, Hills
Bros., the No. 3 roaster ,

slashed the Ust price for Its
high-yield coffee by 8 cents to
$2.04 for a t3-ounce can and
cut its instant coffee by 1.5
cents an ounce to $3.42 for a
1tklunce jar.
Both Folger's and Hills
Bros
attributed
th e
reductions, which are
effective immediately, to
declining green coffee prices
on world markets.
In White Plains, N.Y.,
General Foods Corp., the No.
I roaster, held the line on its
coffee prices. The li so price

for

a one-pound can

of

ILS

Maxwell House ground
coffee. leading U.S. brand, is
$2.63.
A devastating frost in
Brazil, the largest mffeeproducing nation, damaged
7~.5 percent of its 1976 coffee
crop and drove the shelf price
of ground coffee above $4 a
pound in the United States.
American coffee drinkers
retrenched in the lace of
record high prices, however,
and U.S. coffee consumption
plummeted 26 percent last
year from 1976 levels.
Since January , both Folger
and Hills Bros. have cut
wholesale prices on ground
coffee by a total of 65 centa a
pound. General Foods has·•
reduced the list price on Its
Maxwell House ground coffee
by 58 cents a pound so far this
year.

\

I
ASPECIAL SELECT GROUP of young singers will be
performing at a vocal music concert Friday at 7: 30p .m.
in the gym at Eastern High School. These students
include : first row left In right, Cindy Pitzer, Karon
Probert, Mike Gibbs, Kay Balderson, Beth Teaford.

Second row left to right,'Brenda R1 ffe. Tom Scyoc, Dawn
Sord!lll , Jim Bauman , Judy Mora. third row left to right,
Connie Stout, Jeff Smith, Alisha Bissell, Rocky Pitzer.
Fourtb row left w right. Donna Persons, Rick long,
Teresa Rt·ed.

/

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) Thaddeus C. lewingdon, 41 ,
pleaded innocent today to five
counts of murder in the .22
caliber killing s in which nine
persons were killed between
December, 1977 and May,
1978.

Hos
brother,
Gary
Lewingdon , 38, plea ded
innocent Monday to six
counts of murder in the
slayings.
Bond of $600,000 was set for
Thaddeus Lewingdon . A bond
of $200,000 was set Monday
for the brother .
Both were charged in five
slayings and an additional
charge of murder was filed
against Gary in the Dec. 4
killing of Joseph Annick, 56,
Columbus.
The case was broken when
Gary Lewingdon allegedly
attem pted to make a
purchase with a credit card
stolen from Annick.

WIN AWARDS
Mond ay 's awardees in the
Gold Star Promotion sponsored by th e Pomeroy
Cha mber of C
erce were
J une Ashle
acine, $10 gift
cert' '

[rom Hartl i' V

Shoes; Chr is J ohns"''·
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate · •
from Stifflers; Joyce Ritchie,
Coolville, $10 gift certificate
!roll) Landmark.

�'

. ..

•.

,.

9- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 19, 1978

8 - The DaUy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Dec. 19, 1978
Wednesday , Dee. 20

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A lll!JflJI]
'VJ lDnl!Uw~w\J

Industrial
production
up 0.7 pet.

By JAMES ffiLDRE'l'H
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
lndWitrial production rose 0.7
percent last month, the
Federal Reserve Board satd
today, a strong performance
Utat contradicted focecasts
Ute nation could be headed for
a mUd recession next year.
When coupled with the
latest goverrunent reports on
retaU sales and employment
gains,
the
industrial
production report could
prompt forecasters to revise
Uteir economic projections
upward.
Most believe the economy
will expand between 2 and 3
percent next year. But some
private economists have said
a mild recession is a
likelihood.
Industrial production is the
output of the nation's mines,
factories and utilities. It is
considered to be a key
economic barometer because
when production slows, jobs
are lost and coosumers have
less products to purchase.
The 0.7 percent November
increase was the largest
since an identical increase in
August and was healthier
than the 0.4 percent gain of
September and October's 0.5
percent rise .
There was one gloomy note
to the latest report. The
1Federal Reserve said the
output of conswner durable
goods other than automotive
products actuaUy declined.
But overall, it said, produc·
lion
"gains
were
widespread' '
and
the
November advance was

90mewbat

stron~r"

than

112 ) 12, 19, 26, 31c
- LEGAL NOTICENot 1ce 1S hereby g 1ven that
OhiO Valley P !u mb1ng and
Heat 1ng . Inc , a corporet1on ,
232 East Broed Street,
Pomer oy , Oh10, has been
voluntar t l y d tss ol ved, ef
te c t 1ve Januar y 2, 1979
Edward Baer
Ruby Bller
D1rectors

112 ) 19, 26, 21

TAl -COUNTY
Dec. 5, 1978
Roach Gun Shop
Columbia National Llle
Eagles Club

80
69
59

Pomeroy Cement Block
H &amp; R Firestone

58
42

Smt1h Bodv Shop

30

H1gh

Individual

Game:

Bill lladford 208; Dale Davis
207 ; Ron Toler 202
Ffiah

Ind ividual

H) MV

LIT1 l f- tM ' ' '" Y Unrl t' l
(nvN lovP• Happy Uuthdoy
Hutly

15 w,,.,l., m trmlt•t
Ci! Sh

I d.n
! d.u ~

100

ld,u ~
!. d.!I~

IIMl
100

C'lhlr~.tt'

115

I.,

150

'""'

F..tdl wnrd 11\l'r tiM• tniiiiiTIUifl 15
"UHL"' IS .j \ t• n l~ ptr V~unl pt'l da)
,\ds lUll IIIII~ 1•tlwt thrm tlli\St'( u t1v~
tl,n s will lx dial ~u l Ht lht• l day

l itit

In nwnwly, Ci! td uf Th11nks ami
Obltmu) .6 u·nb ~~ wu1 d S:l 00
m1mlllUIIl Ci!~h 111 adVi!lllt'

M1•btlt Humr ~ lr~ ami Ya td sail:'s
,tH ,ltU..'p\t'{] Ol! ly Wllh t•as h Wllh
m dt•l 25 t't'lll t IU~ rgt• Cur ;.ulo; uu ry- •
Ill).! Rw&lt; Nu mbt.•1 In Ci1 tt' of Tilt' &amp;11·
llllt'l
Tht•

Pubh !i h~l l'l'~ t·rvcs !ht.

rll(ht

tu c•tll! ut ll'JI:'l Lan~· atl.s th'l!t rwd u~
Jt'l lllllll:ll Thl:' Pubhsht•l Wi ll not ~
n'SI.IIImli.J/t' f01 llltllt' than Ulll' IIU'tJ f ·
!1'1 \ lll~t'lfloHI

3-Gam~:

Bill Radford 556; Dole Dav1s
568; Dave Jenkins 547
Htgh
Team
Game ·
Firestone 906 ; Firestone 905 ,

Roach Gun Shop 859
High Team 3-Game· H &amp;
R. Firestone 2S91 , Columbia
Na11onal Life 2481 ; Roach
Gun Shop 24S5
earlier to the fall.
The November index was
7.3 percent above the level of
a year earher, the the
Federal Reserve said.
The report said the produc·
tion of consumer goods rose
0.5 percent, " due to a further
sizable increase in the output
of autmotive products and a
fairly strong gain in the
production of consumer non·
durable goods. "
Production of home goods,
such as apphances and fur·
nitw-e, fell for the second
straight month , but business
equipment output rose 0.7
percent, reflecting continued
gains in commercial, transit
and fann equtpment.
The output of construction
and business supplies al&lt;a
advanced sharply, the report
said.

RACINf G UN Club muet1nq 04&gt;c
IH I :.10 pm f lectio n Cl l of
!.r cl 'i Our!&gt; SLO mu st be pa1d
ht~ I OI P Jon I
~

-----

. · L~s}and F:o~n_d _ _
fOUND MALE crov. bPtween
Bc oql c nnrl BOS!&gt;Ptl Houncl
B! own ond whll('
teo du1 g
Creek orea Coil 'ltr.l :J/~1 oliN

.

'

__ !:l~lp Wa!ll_ed_
WANTI::D fUrL hurk r!flvf!r w1lh
e,.pen e11c e dn.,.1ng trucks
Wn l e PO Ho ~t 11'1 W c o The
Oa dy Senl 1nel PomPr oy OH
45/09
BAR MAID won ted Musl be
f&gt;.,.Onlng..
an d
a .... odable&gt;
w€'ek ends F1 . . c Pomt s Gr1 ll ~~

PI\UIIt' !rJ~ 2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mollliii V
NOim unSa!Ui t.lay
l'u e~1 la y

Utru Frn.lay

&lt;PM
the day bl'fun• publu·aiiiNI

LICENSE BOILER
OPERATOR
State of Ohio

license,

rotating shift, excellent

fringe benefits.
Apply Personnel Office

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-5105

Suml&lt;~~

4 PM
F'ntl&lt;~; aftcrnoor!

_ _ ~a_n!_e!llo_l!uy __ _
- · ___ _ l'!_~emol}'__ _
IN

lOVING men10ry o f our
mo ther Opoll McDo mel who
po!&gt;sed away Dec 19 1962
Pe acefu lly sll?epmg res hng ot
los t
The wo rl ds we ary troubles and
!rods or e po sl
In .. dence&gt; she suffered tn pa
11ence she bore
T1ll God calle d her h ome 10 su ll er
no more
Sadly mt .,sed by L h tldren and
Grand children M1ldred Hod
s on

-

---------

( HlP
WOOD
Poles
mo,.
d1ometer 10 on larges t end
Sl1 per ton Bundled sl ob SIO
p er ton Oe ltve red to Oh10
Palle t Co
Rl '1 , Pomeroy
t~•n :.!oH~,t

TIMS ~ R

POME~OV

Fot es t Pro
d urts Top pnce for slondmg
sow l 1mber Ca ll t~•n ~%5 or
Kenl Hanby I AdO H ~ 7U

O LD FURNITURE 1c e bm(es brass
beds 11 on bed!&gt; desk!&gt; etc
co mple te hou~ehold s
Wnte
M l) M dle r HI A Pomeroy or
coli 99') TIIJO

O LD CO INS pocket wolche:r.
Notices
rloss nngs weddmg bonds
- - -·--- -- -

NO HUNTING or lrespo ss tng an
~ny pr oper ly w1 1hout perm1s
~ 1011 Judy McG ra w
GUN SHOOT Honne Gun Club
E. . ery Sunday I pm f= oclo ry
choke guns only

TELEVISION
VIEWING

WAN T TO buy o ld 45 ond lij
ph ono graph reco r d:r.
Call
9'-n b.T/0 or Co nlocl Marl1n Fur
n1ture

NOTICE TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DEALERS

In accordance with Section
307 86 of the Ohio Rev1sed
Cod e. sealed bids will be
rec e 1ved by the Meigs County
Board of CommiS510ners, in
the 1r Off1ce . located In the
cour t house. Pomeroy, Oh 1o ,
45769 , until 4:00 PM . on
January 9, 1979 The bidS w1ll
be opened at 6 30 PM on
Januuy 9 , 1979, and read
aloud tor the following
vehicle Each b!d to meet the
cond 1t1ons and spec ifications
as follows

OFF FLOOR PURCHASE
VEHICLE

SHERIFF 'S DEPT

FOR

1979 Model 4-door full s1ze
automobtle
Pa1nt : white top, black
bottom
350cu . in engine or larger,
4 B carburetor
Auk&gt;matic
tr~tnsmission
Heavy Duty Battery
Dtsk Brakes
Power Steenng
Heater Air Cond i tioner
Antifreeze Oil Filter
Vinyl Seat Covenng
Bench Type Front Seat
15" Radial T1res Size· C-78

OPTIONAL:

IN

Electric Door Locks
No Slip Traction
Bids should state ,
1) Price W1fh NO TRADE ·

The front of the envelo pe
enclostng the b 1d must be
m arked "S ea led Bid , Pol1ce
Veh icle ." Bidder to turn 1sh
their own bid form .
The
Board of County
Commissioners ma y acc ept
the lowest bid , or select the
best btd tor the tntended
ouroose. and reserve the
r1ght to reject any or all bids,
and or any part thereof .

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS

Mary Hobstetter,
Clerk
( 12) 19 , 26, 2tc

30 to 50 ACRfS OF land tn 1he
Sole m or Rutlan d Townshtps
Coil ott er bpm 14'1 2 0 2~
WO ULD l/Kf lo bu y 4 cyl Jeep
motor 304 IIJ 5b~H
WANHD TO buy o ld rewelry
Coli 99'J. 5'lb:/ or wn le Kay
Ceet l Hi' S Lnrl M1ddlepor1
OH

Yard Sale
- -- --- - - ----IF YOU ho"'e o ser... 1ce to o ffer
wonl lo buy or se!l somelh•ng
or
ae lookmg lor wor'k
whote ... er
you II get results
Iosi er w 1th o Senhnel Wont Ad
l oll 992 '1 150

HISI NG STAR Kennels Soordmg
and groom tn g
al l breeds
Ches h1re :.lbi' 0'1.111
AKC RI::GI SH RfD Hoxer pupp1es .
b wee k s did A mce Chm lma s
g•lt 51'1 5eo Co1199'1 '11'10
MAlE OOUENMAN H m o old ears
anrl
I o il
cl1pp ed
51 i'5
~') 3'110

Auto Sales
-----------

19/5 Che .... elle Malibu wagon
fl 5 P U ou lo o n flnced lo
.. oil &lt;w., '1153

ril flon
Goo d
YA5 39'/ 9

l tres

1914 MUSTANG II 4 cyi
l:!e~l o ff er '1'1'1 lbH5

1rro rs
4 spee d

- - --- -For
- · - --:Rent
- - - - - - - - -----

COUNTRY MOSilf Home Por k
Route 33 nort h of PomeToy
large lots Call 99'1-'1 479 ·

3 AND 4 RM lurn1s hed and un
furn1 s h erl
opls
Ph one
W'l 5.43 4

(I H?ISlMAS

Mo111

T ~t::fS

St

J&amp;L

hu

Blown Insulation

~ " llon d

t HO in

t::AH
141135'1

corn

UN IQUI:: ASSORTMI::N T of sp~no l
~11i s
r lolhm g poiiPrv wok&lt;.
le&gt;alher wa llets, ba qs helt!&gt;
ho t.,
Wcslcrn fpl! hot!&gt;
jf'welry Alorl rlm lamps l:!luP
flam e hcnlf' r&lt;, an d much morP.
Slo p I" wt• l l b(&gt; qlorl to help
Mnuntom l eothN onrl General
~to r e
104 106 W Un1on Sl
Athen !. Oh1o b14 5 ~'1 S4fll
fA NCY
apples f o r
l AKGE
Chnslmos Uoskets or your own
II"C' f1lrpo lrt ck O rcha rd Stole
Haute bH!J 1-'honr b()C/ J7H5
MASH RT ONI:: bonr o w1th
~r r ugg ~ tun ers ond plush lmed
rose S/50 f ender bon1 o Sb50
td-4 361 n'J~

COBRA . 19 C8 wtth coo){ and
o r, IC"rma SHX.I 99'1 l'lbfl or
UtJ1 50/1
CON DITION BD hay 5 I o bale
449 'liUH
JU /1 INTt:RNATIONAl

ba ck hoe

-r-----------,

Of ANNA DUHHIN mo.,.1e star doll
:.10 1n tol l Sl5 Hfock lur cope
nP.w 11 m long su e 14 SIO
l od•e'i long block coo l l.ke
new s11e 14 S5 Nurses new
un1l orms s1ze 1'114 S3 Anti
que dt :r. h e~ an d o ther 1lme:r.
~30 4 "J?'J S'llb

Armstrong Carpeting

BOOK COlLECT ORS 11:15'1 to 19'1'1
HI"IOrt e!&gt; ond School books
A lso glo ss and pollery

220 E. Main S1ree1,

SNOW
TIRE SALE
SNOWTIR~S

DNSALEAT
POMEROY LANDIYIARK- •
SERVICE STATION·

Pomeroy !~Ad mart
9..,-!!ck W.

-

Cariey, Mgr.
~ Phdne m-21a1

\YeS
fOfW MUSTANG
28'1
oulornoltC P1 nl o 23 U CB bose
lH11 1 wdh mtc :r. tonrl O ld bulle r
churn 01 ol and sew co btn el
o.;pwmq machtn e Al so free
pup s l o good home
Coli
lJH5 4 TJ~ nnyltme
RUltAND HAHDWARI:: H21 Mom
St 141 1155 We ho .... e to mak e
100m l or !&gt;pn ng merchond1 se so
all ~ t o e~ m store lU p er cent
off Th1s me ans !&gt;e lhng !&gt;Ome
merchand1se ol cosl So get
you r Chm tm as g1f h now Open
H 'l thr u Chnstm os No parktng
probl em s

tile

Free Estimate - all work

guaranteed

,
20 Yrs. Experience

Call: Tom Hoskins
949-2160
11-28-c

POMEROY
lANDMARK
Christm1s

Headquarters 1

for •II your G. E. T.V.'s &amp;
Ho1polnt Appliances.

\.

SALE PRICES

.(~"'
' ~·~. ~!i~:'v
,

'\

Mgr

J Phont99l·21B1

Mobile Homes for Sale

~- ·------

1116HPMC51x i7 2 BR

11,155 Pra tt le Schoon er 'lf:bfl I ~R
1 '1~3 Royo l t:mba ssy e8){ 1-4 3 BR
1959 St ar 50x 10 ~ 8H
I '-11:.1 Star bOx 14 2 HH
HF AI-'T 1n M1ddlepo t1 Sulloblc l i.Jt&gt;H Sl or b(h I '1 '1 SR
fnr on(' Kay Cr-ol '-191 ·S'1.tl1 I I.J'I(J Sylva 00:.:11 '1 HR
I !J(IH V)llogf')o bQ,. I '1 2 BR
I'IJt'n Hlq~
1'164 W1ndsor 5 I x 10 'lHR
I I " bO mohtle home neor !for me 1970 K.rkwoo d 1'ld&gt;O 3 UR
tt•n 5H5H
B8S MOBIU HOME &gt;Al ES
1-'T PLEASANT W VA

'

Real Estate for Sale

f=ARM f=OR sol e House '1 barns
!I ader large pond 10 acres or
HL ocr eo:. 741 1Sbb

HOMI::SITE S for :r.o le 1 ocre and
up Middl eport near Rut land
Co ll\.19'1 '141:11

RfA l t:STATE lOAN S VA
No
d own
(e l 1g1b le
m o n ey
Ve teren s) fHA · A s low os 3,,...
down (oil non Vete ren s ond
generol publ1 c) To purcha se
reo/ es tate o r rcf1 nonce 30
Vt:ARS li::RMS IRElAND MOR
TGAGt: CO
li' E Stole St
Ath ens t'honebl-4 5'1'13051
NfW THREI:: bedroo m hom e
h repl oce su n deck 1 ~ • acre
wooded lo t 014 bbf :m9o Tup
pers 1-'la1n!.

'

home.

large

kllchen
and
dining.
Fireplace. S1orms. 2 car
garage.

Owners

have

moved. 532,000. Make offer .
MIDDLEPORT - 2 slory
frame, excellent netghborhood, 3 bedrooms, lV:z
balhs, N.G. forced air heat.
Ulillly R Asking $20,000.
IN THE COUNTRY Several lo1s, 1 floor plan , 3
bedrooms, forced air heat,
garden , barn, fruit trees .

$17,700.
70 ACRES- Newer home,
bam, corn

crib, storage

bldg . Overlooks Ihe river.
S33,SOO.
NEW A FRAME - Close
in, 1112 baths, 3 bedrooms,
rec . room, wood burner,
heat pump, storage bldg.
Ullllty R. 2'h acres S37,SOO.
WHEN'S THE BEST TIME
TO SELL? Any time is the
riqh1 time if you can gel the
pnt:e your house deserves.
CALL TODAY AND LET
US
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY.
Real1ors
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Associates

0

0

I

tNORRECj

J

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNm-BLOCK BUSTER

' . .'

..

r

1

Answer. HIS "[

·

Member of
Chimney
Sweeps Guild

Yesoecday 5

I Jumbles
An swer

Don't let a chimney fire put
a dam per on your life

I

-

Call .. .

..

with
Know-How.
Specl•lltln' in
Woodstove, 011 urn•ce
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone: 74:1-3110
Kim White, Proprietor

COMF'ORTABLE, OSCA~
PERHAP-S ~l!Y
COULD .JUST GIVE
U~ A HiNT AS TO
WHAT ~E-Y DID...

MOORE'S

Ph . 992-2848

we don't have tt then we'll
fmd it for you.

WHEN OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKS, VOU still have IO

'

~-

~fA=*~

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-1S-Ife

tiqhtwad!
Too cheap to
pa4fora
stamp!

Business Services
BRAD~ORO

Au&lt;f1 oneer Complet e Serv1c e Phone Cl49 :2487
or 949 2000 RaCin e Oh1o Cntt
Bradf ord

Wr1tten 1n
pencil, too!

~-

..

Will do rooltng conslrud10n ,
plumbmg and heotmg No iob
too Iorge or loa small. Phone
14'1 2:J 4ij

COUNTRY HOME - 4
bedrooms, balh, 10 rooms
and level • lot lor lhe
children . $27,500
7 ROOMS - In town . All
conveniences, bath, furnace and large lol $9,SOO.
OVER 4 ACRES- 8 room
counlry home wllh 3
bedrooms, carpeting and

~ouND

DID "n-11:
.SAI\IOMAN Gll'I"CH
UP Wl1'"1i MJ:

:
"'•

THIS 'T'1ME?

~.

•

~,.

@l9181!yN[A

-··---·---·

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens •
remode led eerOITIIC Ide, pi1Jmb1n g carpentry , and general '
mo1 nl enance
13 years ex·
pen ence 9'1 2 Jb85

-·

nat. gas furnace. $280 a

A swing gamble paid
12-19-A
NORTH
• K 10 9 54

'I'AK3

• Q
+A K 86
EAST

Ire II# Af9 US

I'l l 011

...

• 97
• 1871512
• Q J 10 2
SOUTH
• AQJ7 3!

• J 52
t A

• 9 53
Vulnerable Both
Deale r : South
North East

daughter
39 Jewtsh
festival
40 "Sparush

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

"

3+
4 NT
S NT
6•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

-- ---·---

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
conceited? lost your operaton
license? rhone992 2143

pened and he was down one .
At the other table South
wanted a swmg. He felt that
his side was well down com·
ong to thts board and he
wanted to find a way to
make six spades whtle his
oppostte number would go
down
Do you see how he solved
the problem ?
Here is what he did. He
drew trumps, cashed Ute ace
of diamonds, ace and king of
clubs and ace and king of
hearts. Then he played a
thtrd heart West won and
was dead. He had to give
South a ruff, a discard, the
slam and and what turned
out to be the match.
Not a good ptay , but a
lucky wmner.

You hold :

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

it :

Opemng lead : • 6

12·111-8

• K J 98
'I' A 2

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alao Sontag

• A Q65

+ KQ7

One letter simply stands for another. In thos sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters.
Here is a hand from a
apostrophes, the length and formali on of the words are all recent Swtss team match At
hints. Each day the code lett ers are different.
ta ble one, South used the
best percentage play at his
CRVPTOQUOTES
six-spade contract He
played a few rounds of
KDVIWKC
WK
ZWYH
WM
VD trumps, cashed hts ace of
dtamonds and ducked a club
JH
YHQUH A .
WM
DKZG
VD to East East returned a club
whereupon South cashed
dununy's
ace and king of
EKAHUMVDDA
X X H
hearts and ran off the rest of
the trumps . His play was
XQUWH
PEUWH
going to work if clubs broke
Saturd•y's Cryploquote: REVENGE IS OFTEN LIKE BITING or if the man with long clubs
A DOG BECAUSE THE DOG BIT YOU.- AUSTIN O'MAlLEY held the queen of hearts, but
neither of those things hap© 191'8 Kiag Fe&amp;,UNI Syndleat.e, Inc.

wv

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Scrv tce Phone 992 2478

year heat bill. $27,500.
MAKE YOUR DEDUCTIONS NOW BEFORE
THE NEW YEAR BY
BUYING PROPERTY.

· decree
31 French city
33 Imitated
36 Catch on

nver

weL.L,.., wHM-

HQWI::RY AND MARTIN Ex ~·
co . . o11ng
septt c sys tems '!
do:ze r backhoe , dump truck , •
l1mestone, gra ....el
blacktop po v1 ng, Rl 14 3 Phone 1 (b14)
e9H 7331

gas furnace $17,000.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

30 Sultan's

I~--;;~~;~;~;,;;;;;:~~;;;;;,;----------------- 3138 nCylindrical
Duce's

f XCAVATING dozer backhoe
and dttcher Charles R. Hat·
!tcld
Hack Hoe Servtce,
Rutla nd Oh1o Phone 742-2006 •

-

BRIDGE

rooms

32 Attack
"""~ 34 Be mistaken
-:rliW
i='=== 35 Senseless
_.G.._~~:l:'&lt;!d!Jll=t!l.L...'-'- 36 European

l

-

-

8 Dewey's
process
order
ra's son
17 Nearest
to Gridley
24 Ingrid
planet to
9 Fix deeply
Bergman 's
the sun
12 Eqwpped
daughter
19 Tolstoi
16 Wine barrel
26 Dancer,
subject
18 Kitterush
Geoffrey 20 Shetland ,e.g .r.--T.""'-r.---r.:--

Tuesday, Du. 19

• 14

EXC AVATING dozer loader ond ;,
backhoe work dump lrucks
and lo boys lo r h1re will haul
ftll dtrl to sotl ltmestone and
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef.
l ers day phone 992-'1009, n1ght ,
phone '192 :.1525 or 992 5232
"

--.

I can use
envelope aqain ~

Yesterday's Answer
22 Meal
27 Porker
23 Clytemnest- 29 Ritzy

29Sun rooms

MACHINE Repo1rs ser.
vtce, all makes 992 221:J.4 The
fob r t c Shop , Pomeroy
Aulhortzed Singer Soles and
Ser ....! &lt;e We s~o r pen S~is~o~s _

.

INDOOR

WEST
• 86
• Q 10 8 6 4
• K 10 9 3

S~W I NG

BUSINESS BLDG- Main
Street location with 4
rooms and half ba1h up.
$25,000.
PRIVATE YARD-7 roam
frame, llf2 baths, all city
ullll11es. 3 large bedrooms.
$15,000.
3 A PTS. - Income 5265 a
mon1h $2S,OOO
CITY LOCATION - All
ulilllles . Newly overhauled
Inside and oul. Bath and

NOODLE

2:00--0ne Life to Live 6,13; 2· 3D-Doctors 3,4,15;
Guiding Ugh I 8,10
3:DO-Another World 3,4, 15; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Place of Dreams 33.
3·3D-Mash 8, Joker's Wild 10; Over Easy 20.
4:DO-Mister Car1oon 3; BeHle of the Planets 4;
Hollywood Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:3D-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is. 4; ,8; Petticoat
Junc11on 1S.
s ·oo-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
10, Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
S·3D-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8, Elec. Co 20,33; Odd
Couple 1S.
6 DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
S1udlo See 33.
6:3D-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8,10, Over Easy 20,33.
7:00-Cross.WI1s 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Sha Na Na 8, News 10; love, American Style
1S, , Big Green Magazine 33.
7:3D-Dolly 3; Dating Game 4; Match Game PM 6;
Price Is Right 8; The Judge 10; That's Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 1S; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:DO-Dick Clark's Live Wednesday 3,4,_15; Elqht Is
Enough 6,13; ·Jeffersons 8, 10; Oral Roberts 1S;
Holiday ~es1tval 20; Africans 33.
8:3D-Gaod Times 8,10.
9.0D-Movle "lshl : The Last of His Tribe" 3,4,15;
Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie "A Christmas to
Remember" 8, 10; Great Performances 33 ;
Pnsoner 20
10:00-Vegas 6, 13; News 20; Simple Glf1s: Six
Episodes for Chrlslmas 33.
1o 3()-Turnobou1 20
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Olck Cavett 20; Ll\\u,
Yoga 1!. You 33.
11 ·3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Woman 6.13;
Gunsmoke 8, ABC News 33
12 :3D-News 8; 12:4()-.-SWAT 6,13; 1.00-Tomorrow
3,4; I. ~News 13.

~~:li ~! Hasten
;::¢:= ;; Callioun

ELWOOD HOWERS REPAIR ·Sweepers loosler:r. 1rons, oil
small oppl.onces lawn mower,
next to Sl ote H1ghwav Goroge
on Route l Phone (bi4 ) 985·
3815

VIRGI.LB. SR. ~~
992-3325
216 E. Second Street

BELIE

ntiju.l!Ji~~;!-J 16 Painting

·'

Muffler
·Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

MURKY

/

At

WANT TO BUY? Call us. If

r 11 X]"

The egotist's favor1te figure - NUMBER ONE

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
... LOOKS L. li&lt;l: '!OU'U..
I Potato
I Oregon city
HAVE- "TO WAIT UNTIL
5 lrrttate
2 Demonstrate
~M~~~N~I~N~~:::_/~c-1 10 Noted
3 Being
cartoonist
compeUed
11 Dragging 4 Deer
away
5 Uke Mary
13 Deposit
Poppins
14 Appear
6 Uke a
15 Night
bad actor
before
7 Syrian city

NOw ~Pir 'lrlEY'RE

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple

WANT TO SELL-?- Call us
for an appMisal and why
you should hst w1th us.

IIIIII

~-~-.. rl

19th CentUrY
20th Century

OOWNING.cHILDS
REAL ESTATE

0

Jumble Book No. t3, contalnlnu 1tOpuulta,laavallabltlorS1 .75pottpald
tromJumble, c/o thla newap:ftr, Box 3-', Norwood, N J 07M8 tnclude your
name, addrtss, zip code an make check a payable to Newapaperbooks

·~

lliE SWEEP
Strvlce

THRf t: UI::DROO M !rome home m
M1dd leporl Co li 9'12 345'1

Now arrange the circled loners to
form the surprtse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

(Answers to morrow)

Insured

A Vermont reader w•nta
to know what we bid as
dealer.
We make the normal cor·
rect opening bid of one diamond.
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A!IN )

(Do you have a quesllon for
the experts? Wnte "Ask the

EKperts, '· care of this

new1~

per IndiVIdual quest1on~ will
be answered 1f accompanied

by stamped, self-•ddressed

envelopes. rhe most lntere&amp;f..
mg queStiOns wfll be used In
th1s column and will receive

coptes of JACOBY MODERN.)

-

1

- --

0 °o

I

. ·----·--Kathy Cleland
Clifford Adams, Judy
HONAKER S CB and electroniC
G.
Bruce
Teaford
leona Cleland
equ tpmen l Rl 33 506 2nd St ,
Adams to Donald G. Jones,
Helen ls1eaford
992-2259, 992-6191, 992·2561
• Mason , WV 25260 - - - .
Sue P. Murphy
Ella E . Jones, .387 acre,
Sue P. Murphy
M &amp; M Horne Improvement serv·
Olive .
Realtor Associates
tng Go lhpolrs and area We
Gladys V. Dillon to Donald
sp ec 10I 1ze
tn
v1ny l and
Housing ....
G. Jones, EUa E. Jones, l.!Mi6
olum mum sidmg
For free
acres, Olive.
es ltmofe!&gt;, call 614 3b7 0128
Headquarters
G o!lipolls.
Gladys V. Dillon to Donald
_ __G_iv_e Away _ .. __
G. Jones, Ella E. Jones, .387
1' AC R~ I L ){ ()() mob1l e home
ll&lt;: ff 1&lt;) goorl h om o m1 11crl
r-~--- --------~
· ------------~~~, ··
nea r Oo1 l er '19'J 5H!)H
acre, Olive. •
hOS!-1'11 pupp1r.5 9H5 4'111
u•
TOTAl
mCTHIC
mob
•le
OWNER
MUST
SELL
- The owner of lhts
1 1
Paul Allison, Mattie R.
PART
COCKf ~ Spot'IOI poppl e!.
home
lu"'"
"•"
b•d
c
charming
2
story
stone
home in Middleport
3
Allison to William Morris,
7411 545
wo., her and drye1 Au co nd1
must
sell
now
SO
She
iS
offering thiS fine
Parcels, Sutton.
- -s=-e_ r_v-:-ic-e-s-:0
=-f:-:
fe_r
_e...,
d~.honen I lot 710 II lconloge
home for a low, low price of $20,000. There '
Household of Faith Mission - ---· --- s11 uoo Phone"''"'"
are 2 bedrool'ls (1 is e~tra large), spacious
Will CARl: for the eldt~rly in our
For Sale
of Rutland to Rutland
J&lt;~to.~ HO! I YPARK 2 hf'til omn 12,.
livmg room w-fireplace, formal dining, eat, home Phone 992-7314
Community Church, Parcel, CA ROUSH CONFECTIONfPY Wo
. - -------- - t,•,
loto l rkrlllr
l unmhf'd
'" kttchen, bath w-shower, garage '&amp; a king
WATER WELl dnlllng William T
h o .... r• Ch!l'&gt; l11111 ~ ro1•• ly ltlnlrl •,
, n•pPird ll lt (•ughn tll l 1k{• ,, l"'w
Rutland.
Grant 742-2879
, l•nrnlotro ,l if'bt" l lc r hocnlotl"'
., .,d 1',."' ~u 1 ux 1 cu ., h(' C.l•E&gt;n
sued yard. Good loca.tion on Mill St. Call the
Wtlliam W. Harrill, Vickie
(hfi&lt;.IIT,(I~ ~ ole rncmy 1IC'1n• ,&gt;{)
n• KHlQ!huty HnPI(' Sol('t. t\ 00'
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
ROOM BOARD and laundrey ,.
Harris to Juanita WUkinson,
(, 11
OpPII CVPIHnq!&gt; !t il
I Mmn Pnmo•! r.y Oh t&lt;"! nr coli
446·3643 .
. _
I ·
pnvale home for elderly lod, 1
l&lt;lts, Pomeroy.
·
f l u t' l 'l•Ct
'l'• /1 I () j .l,
l:r--------------~---~----..U
. i ~~1- 5422

"

I POCUR I
I tiJ [j

0

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

'

~

E.

bedroom

0

Relerencu.Avoilabte
Phone 742-2029 •
ii -16·C 1

get up and open the door
Dc1tnow.
OffiCe 992·2342
Eve. 992 -2449
Rodney oown1ng , Broker
Bill Childs, Manager

MAIN Will
POMEROY, 0.
5 ACRES wl1h very nice 3

8, 10.

OF A l.OAD.

o--..._...___.~_..A-d

0

Reasonable Prices

Repair
-A"Iso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4........

Real Estate for Sale

I

HURRY, ~UTUS

"GiVE U5 A TI&lt;Y"

a.

AUfD llo Truck

AL.WA'{~ Fl&lt;WI&lt;W fiEl
WA~ ~ BRIGK SHY

Y1G:Oi IJ I

'
I
'

Construction
Maintenance

'I• mile oH Rl. 7 by.poss on
St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,

Roofing, gutters, new and
repair.
1ns1de Paneling &amp; Ceiling

USI:D 1,10 000 STU gun type otl fur
nare QO 000 BTU l P go!&gt; floor
fu1noce w1th con trols 30 gal
cob 1net electnc wa ter hea ter
Carl Barn ht/1 Tupper s Plom ..
Phone Obi' 3400
Pt:A HAUlERS CM Sa l£-s EqUip
mE&gt;nl now on sole oil 1n sl ack
HadiO!&gt; an d OCCE'SSOfiE!S through
Chr1 stmos Open every dov e){
cep l Sunday ond Monday
EVe n~ n gs
by oppo1n lment
Po r l lo nd ,
Oh1o
Ph one
H43 2004

.

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE
••

W\\!1Rfl

itJ~HA

carpentry, Electrical,
Painting

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

11·9·1 mo.

BORN LOSER

11 -3·1 mo .

10·30·c

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Call992-7113
.-:or Free Estimates·

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp;HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

·.

PHONE 992-2772

&amp;HOME MAINTENANCE

Pomeroy,O.

SIAM!-' COlLECT OR S and Ueo lers
J40J 1QUb 1 Sto mps '} Sto mp
m1nt
1903
slo rtlp
rar e
141 '1155

•

J&amp;L INSULAnON
JIM KEESEE

Chester, Ohio

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER20, 1971
S:-15-Farm Report 13; 5 : ~PTL Club 13; 5 : 5~
Sunrise Semester 10
6:D0-700 Club 6,8; PTLCiub 1S; 6:25-ChrlstapMr
Closeup 10.
6 . ~News Conference 4; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3;
6 : ~oad Morning, WHt VIrginia 13; 6:.5.SChuck While Reports 10; News 13.
7·DO-Today 3,4,15, Goad Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10.
7:1s-Weather 33; 7:»--Schoalles1D. Feallng Frea 33.
8:00-Cap1 Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame S1. 33.
9:00-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15:
Emergency One 6, Hogan's Heron 8; Match Game
10
9 : ~Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10; 10 :00-Cerd
Sharks 3,4, 1S; Edge of Night 6; All In The Family
8, 10; Dating Game 13.
10:3D-Jeopardy 3,4,15; Andy Griffith 6; Price Is Right
8, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 3()-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; News
4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 OD-Newscenter 3, Bob Braun 4; News 6, 10; Young
&amp; 1he Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; America
Alive 1S.
12 3()-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec. Co 33.
t. OD-Hollvwoad Squares 3; All Mv Children 6.1~·
News 8; Younq &amp; the Res11ess 10, No1 for Women
Only 1S.
~Days of Our Lives 3,4, 1S, As The World Turns

..•••'·

H. L WHITESEL I . I.J. R. Construdion
ROOFING
·'
Co.

EWOTT
APPUANCE li

2'155

CHR ISTMAS GIFT S
S1fk sc reen
prmt s ol old 11me Pom eroy
M1rldleporl H' ' ,. 14 SUI Ioble
l or lram1ng S 15 Co li Y~'l 2304
M e1gs Museum

aoK 3

CA~ I I&gt;J !

CELLllOSE
INSulAtiON
SG.50 per bag

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Phone 949-2111
AHer5 P.M.
11 -26-1 mo.

COME' ALON (; THEI&lt;J ,
E'A~Y- SELL!&lt;:
CAN START
DU5TING MY

"

'

Recine, Ohio

n.L Sl&lt; HER.
MAID!

I'LHW74

Phone 985·3106
Jack Ginlhor 985-3806

SALES REP.
FOR
SUN DINS HAMMOND
ORGANS

OKAY, OKAY-·

..

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ReSidential and commercial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime.

PETE SIMPSON

Your HeadquarteiS FOI'

c...

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

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

QUALITY CO NDITIO N!:D mtxed
hoy W1 ll dcl1.,.er '192 7101

! 4'}

_
... _
.............

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Therma I insulation
save 30 pet. to 50 pet.
.., heating cost
Experi&lt;lnce and
fully insured
Free Est.
·call99i-2m
11-3-11!!2.·

ES
700-15-6 Ply Hwg.
$37.36
700-15·6 Ply Deep Lug
$42.4S
Mounted &amp; Balanced Free
Phone 742-2328

ONt:: PAI R Creot1 .... e n J way
&lt;i peoker:r. SILO I po1t GE J
w ay speak er s $1 40 9HS 330i
days and 985 4140 after 5pm

TWO BtDROOM k1tchen furn 1sh ed opt Call be fore fl om 14'10 NASHUA I 4 ,. OS 3 bedroom
1', bo!h underp1nn111g S1500
'1'1'1 L'JHH
and OS'iume loon 94'1 'lbH3 or
t( t::NHH S ASSISTANCE lor Sen •o r
H43 3311
Ctllzen s You may be able to
ft.,.e 1n ou r oparlmenl lor less 1'1'10 Am hent SOx1 '1 1 HH
thon $50 V1llage Manor Aport 1'1'10 Chomp1on 00,. 12 '1 UR
l%5 General bQ,.12 'J. ~H
mP.nh 992 U RI
i:l t::AUT ifU t 4 bedroom home 1n
Pomeroy
DoubiP. garage
Wnle 8o..- r19 t: c o The Dotly
Sen t1n el Pomeroy OH 45/e'l

..

Service

JIM KEESEE

Q4',1 £042

~ - ---

Meigs
Property
Transfers

.

f= 1Tl'PA THICK Orchard
~1(1 1 f' ~I bll'l f-l holl(' Wl ll&lt; f'""'I IIC'
,,1,4 :.HH5

ll./1'1 DA TSUN PICkUP w1th 1n·
t opper
$1200
suloted
f.lli'J 50l:t7
1'1 15 DATSUN PICKUP Good con

Business Services

TUESDAY, DECEMIIER 19, 1978
s OO-S1ar Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33, Gomer Pyle, USMC
10, Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch IS.
5:3()-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 1S.
6 OO-News 3,4,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Feeling Free
33,20 .
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33
7:oo-0ral Roberts 3; ; Pm Magazine 4; Newlywed
Game 6,1 3, Pop Goes The Coun1ry 8; News 10;
Love, American Style 15; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
Economically Speaking 33
' 3D--Let's Go To The Races 8; Dating Game 4; Candid
Camera 6; Price Is Right 10; Donna Fargo 13, TV
Honor Society 1S; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 oo-Bear Who Slep1 Through Christmas 3,4, 15;
Happy Days 6. 13; Paper Chase 8, College
Basketball 10, Cl1y Notebook 33.
8 31)-{)nce Upon A Starry Night 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Have Yourself A Merry Llt11e .
Christmas 4, When the Boat Comes In 33.
9:00-Carpenters 6, 13; Rod McKuen's Christmas In
New England 4, Movie "The Millionaire" 8;

APPL~S

dtomonds Gold or sl l.,.er Coil
Hoger Wa msley 'fA'l1:.13 1

GUN SHOOT Ro{" 1ne Vo lunlePr CA SH FOR runk cor s Wreck er
ser vtee Frye s Rutl and Oh1o
h re Dep t t:....ery Soturdoy 0 30
/ 42 :.!OHl
prn ol lhe .r bu tldtng 1n Hoshon
factory ch oke gun s on ly
WI: PI CK up 1unk auto bo dtes buy
~AILEY S
STOIH
331
tng Junk cars scrap tr on bot
N 1nd A ve , M1ddleport Oh10
h:~ne s
and •nelols
H1der !&gt;
W1ll be clo!&gt;ed De c 25 Ia Jon 'l
Solvoge
SR 124
Pomeroy
99'1 540H

OF

ll)Al l1Mf- 3T0Nf , !'~OIIfi q.avpl
r olr •wn c!\l(lndC' fr 111l11er cit•g
lnn rl , ond oi l lypP" o f .. ott h
cr-l" nr Soh Work~ Inc f Mo1"
~I
PnmNoy UU1 JHU\

G IB ~ON

21 Prtce W1lh Trade ·m of
1976 Ford (less th e po11c e
equipment)

Local Bowling

Sentinel Classifieds

For Sale

Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES

estate

James J Proffitt
Sher Iff of
Me1 gs County , Oh10

DICK TRACY

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S1tuate in Sect ton 4, Town '1,
Range 12 , Sutton Townshtp ,
M e1gs County, Oh 10. and
bemg part of 160 Acre Lot No
December ZO, 1!78
1204 , an'd be ing more fully
as
fo l lows
Success m your endeavors •s descrtbed
Co mmencmo at ll nntnt ;..
hkely th1s commg year pro- th
e N
E cor ner of sa td
vided you can keep your Impa- Sect1on 4, thence S along the
E line of sat d Sect1o n 4, Town
tience 1n check Be content
2, Range 12, Sutton Township
wilh s teady progress Don I try
to get to the top of the ladder 1n and theW Line of Sect ton 34.
Town 2, Range 11 , Lebanon
one oound•ng leap
Townshtp , 1320 teet more o r
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. Z3·Dec. less to an 1ron p1 n In th e
21) This sho uld be a success ful grantor 's N E . prop er t y
day 1f you don't do thmgs cor n er and t h e N E corn er of
sa 1d 160 Acre Lot No 1204
piecemea l Coord mate yo ur ef- and the re a I point of beg in
lort s so that your forces won't nmg tor th e land herein
0
be spread too th 1n Fmd ou t d escrt bed , thence S
your romanhc tra1ts and how to degrees 00' 00" W contmumg
._J on g s a 1d l 1ne and the
deal w1th o th ers 1n your 1979 gran
to r 's e. Puperty line and
Astr a-Graph Lett e r Matl 50 the E lin e of 160 Acre Lot
cents for each and a long self- No 1204 and theW line of 160
addressed stamped envelope Ac re Lot No 1181 and passmg
1ron pm at 782.83 teet a
to Astro-Graph . P 0 Box 489. an
to tal 'distance of 813.78 teet to
Rad1 0 C1ty Statt on, N Y 10019
a railroad spike In the
Be sure to spec 1fy btrlh s1gn
extsting centerline of St-ate
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Ro u te No 124; t hence nor Say no thmg about anothe r to- th w es twardl y al ong 't he
day tha t you would n t say di- ex 1st1 ng center11ne of State
Route No 124 and with the
rec tl y to th1s pe r son Mak mg
arc of a curve to the left
unk1nd co mments abo ut one hav ing a radius of 636 62 teet
who ISn't presen t doesn't be- fore d1stance of 193 84 feet to
a railroad sp 1ke, the long
co me Y:Ou
chord of sa1d arc bear mg N .
AQUARIUS "(Jan . 20-Fob 19) 84 degrees 07' 41 " W 193.09
Make 11 a pomt today no t to feet to said point , thence S 87
degrees 08 ' 57 " W contlnuinQ
offer unsohctted advtce to
fnends , partiCularl y regard 1ng along said line 166.62 feet to a
railroad sp1ke then ce south ·
th tngs about whtch you know westwardly coQt1nu1ng along
ve ry little
sa1d !1ne and wfth the arc of a
PISCES (Feb. ZO-March 20) curve to the left havmg a
Oth e r 's opm1ons are Important , rad 1us of 460 . 1.5 f~t for a
dtstance of 17 1 93 feet to a
bu t so are yo u r own vtew s
rellroad spike, the long cho rd
Don t try to please ano ther of satd ar c bear1ng S 76
today agamst your better )U dg
degrees 26' 44 " w , 170 93 feet
to sa1d pomt , thence south
men!
w es twardly continu ing along
ARIES (March 21·April 19) sa1d
l 1ne and wtfh the ar c of a
Cowork e r s or helpers w111 draw curve to the le ft hav tng a
away fro m yo u today tf you ' r e rad1us of 286 48 feet for a
too cnt tc at It s b est to say dtstance of 134 47 teet to a
nothmg rather than nsk o ffend- ra ilroad sptke m the gran tor ' s W proper t y I me and the
Ing them
ex 1sftng centerl 1ne of County
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Roa d No 35, the long chord of
Fmanclally you II keep th ings sa 1d arc beerina S S2 deorees
under co ntrol w here larger ex- 47 ' 4f" w 128.37 teet to sald
pe ndi tu re s are concerne d po 1nt ; thence N 6 degrees 25 '
17' ' E along the grantor 's W
today It w1 11 be the small dollar- property ltne and t he existing
and-di me stuff that could do centerline of County Road
your budget tn
No 35 , .49 88 feet to a railroad
the nce
north
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) To- spike.
cont 1Mu1ng along
day yo u cou ld expenence a eastwardly
sa1d I me and w1th the arc ot a
mu ltitude of mmor fr us traftons curve to the left having a
and unfortunate ly , bnng your radius of 700 56 feet for a
troubles home and take them d1stance of 99 83 feet to 1t
railroad sptke, the long chord
out on the lam1ly
of sa1d arc be ar1ng N
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Us- degrees 20 ' 20" e . 99 75 fee t to2
Ing a double standard can said pomf, then ce N 1 degree
cause you problems today
44 ' 36" W contmumg along
Do n't tell another not to do said line 652 74 feet to .!1
somethmg a certa1n way and railroad sp1ke, thence nor
thwestwardly
c ont1nu1ng
than go ahead and do tt your- along sa1d lme and W1th the
sell
arc of a curve to the left
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Are you having a radius of 639 23 feet
always the f~rst to grab for the tor a dis tance of 99 80 feet to a
ra ilroad spike, the !ong chord
check? Today , why don ' t you of sa1d arc bearmg N
6
let a free loader you know be degrees 12' 57 " w 99 10 feet
the one who makes the ges- to sa1d pomt. thence N . 10
ture?
degrees 41 ' 18" W . continuing
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Even alono said line 13.5'2 teet to a
railroad sp1ke In the gran
though the fa m 1ly w1ll be trymg , tor 's north property tme and
yo u may prove to be a dtfflcult the north li ne of sa 1d 160 Acre
person to please today Shau l ~ Lot No 1204 and the south l ine
they lose pat1e nce they may of 160 Acre Lot No 1203 ,
the nce N 89 degrees 28 ' 29"
take a r everse tack
E along th e grantor ' s n or th
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0et . 23) Your propert
y lme and the north
sales ma nship will suffer today I me of said 160 Acre Lot No .
1f you tend to belabor your 1204 and the south I me of 160
po1nts Don 't beat about the Acre Lot No 1203 and rasstng
bush Make yo ur statements an Iron p in a t 25 40 fee a total
d1stance of 650 44 fe et to the
s1 mple , clear and conc ise
pomt of begmnmg and can·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) t ammg 11721 acres . Sub1ect
Schedule your outstde activi - to all legal highways and
tieS sens1bl y today, or they ' ll easem enfs ot record.
Deed Reference
Vo lum e
prove to be b oth tt me-and 253 , Page 731. Me1gs County
money-wa sters Gtve 1mportant Deed Records
matters too orloritv
Terms of sate· Cash 1n
(N EWSPAPER ENTER'PRISE ASSN )
h and on day of sate tor not
less than two thirds of the
appraised value
The a p
pra1sed value of the rea l
es tate 1S S61 ,000 oo

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For Best Results Use

NOTICE OF SALE

Pursuant to an Order of
Sa le, tSsued by the Court of
com mon Pl eas ot Me igs
Coun t y, OhiO, 1 Wtll offer for
sale at oubllc auct1on. on the
20th da.v of Ja nuarv . 1979,
at 10 00 O' Clock A M , l'lt the
front door o f the Me1gs
coun t y
courfho use .
at
Pomeroy , Ohto . 4S769, the
followtng de sc ibed real

Hanukkah 20
9:»--EIIzabethan Chrls1mas Celobra11on 20; Film
.
Makers 33.
10:DO-Mac Oavts 3,4,15; S1orsky &amp; flutch 6, 13; Jeckle
Gleason 10; News 20; Percussion Noel 33.
10:30-- Like 11 Is 20; Area Showcase 33.
ll ·OD-News 3,4,8, 10, 13,1S; Dick Cevett.20; Over Easy
33.
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie "11 HarrowhouM"
6, 13; Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie " The
Delphi Bureau" 10.
12.3D-News 8; 1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:3()-News 13

1

BALLS 0'-fiRE~~
THIS 15 M'l CHRISTMAS
STOI~I{ ... '' SANTA AND
HIS RAIN GEAR"

11

WHEN SANTA LEFT
THE NORTH POLE THAT
EVENiNG, A GENTLE
MIST WAS FALLING"

11

1N HIS 4'ElLOW SLICKEI(
AND BIG RUBBER BOOTS,
l-IE SET OUT ON H15
ANNVAL JOURNE'( "

NOTHIN' BUT
SUGAR COOKIES

WHV IN THUNDER WOULD
MAW BE HIDIN' SUGAR

COOKIES?

�Accident

righi, Kathy Parker, receiving third in District 17, and a
Gold rating ; Patty Dyer, receiving second in the district
and a gold ratillg, and Carol Wilkes, receiving third in
district and a gold rating.

MEIGS PARTICIPANTS - The Meigs High School
Future Farmers of America reCently had three students
entered in the District public speaking contest held at
Meigs High School on Dec. 5. These students were, left to
EVENT SET DEC. 30
Weigh· in for FF A and 4-H
Steers in the Junior Fair
Program will be held on
Saturday, Dec. 30, and not
Dec. 20, as reported earlier;
John C. Rice, extension
agent, agriculture, said
today .
The. weigh-in will take
place at the Royal Oak Farm
near Five Points. All steers
must be there to be freeze
branded.

Attend funeral

Past Councilors hold yule dinner
CHESTER--Cou ncilors·
Club of Chester Council 323.
fJcwghtcrs nf AmericH, held
their annual Christmas supper Cit Crmv's Ster~ k House
Wednesday night and th en
went to the lodge hall for the
meding .
Mrs. Ada Bissell presided
at the meeting attt·mled by 25
persons. She read scripture

frmn St. Luke. Cl1apter 2.
\\'hiciJ was fullowetl by the
piL•dge to the fla g ami the
Lord's prklyer in uni ~un . The

Funeral services for RCeLI
R Cra1·v were held at the Ewing Fun'Cral Home with burial
in t11e Chester Cemetery on
~ccretary's rcp(l!'t was given Saturday, Dee. 9.
by Mac McPeck and Leona
The R~v. Robert McGee ofHen ~ l ey gave the tr ee~s ure r'!-i
ficiated with Gerald Wilderrcuurl.
muth, Dunald .Mora, Thomas
The Christmas program Fisher. Joe Clark, Elton and
was condudt:•d by Mrs. Ada Ronald Ritchie as . the
Van Melt.•r and Mrs. Adct pallbearers.
Neutzli ng. There WL' I'e
Out-of-town relatives an~i

!H.'Vcra l ClwistJnti!-i readirt{l.S
by the members . M&lt;1rgaret

were SRMJohn M. Cra ry,
Wi ch ite~, K ansas; Mr. and
sang Christma s l'arnls with Mrs. No rm e:t n Fisher,
the members joining in the Senecaville; Mr. and Mrs.
si nging.
Thomas Fisher and family,
Dnur prizes wen· won by Ca mbridge; Mr. and Mrs.
MtH'
McPeck,
Mary Alvin Ritchie and grandson,
Showa rlter. Belly Roush. and Michael, Wayn e Ritchie,
Mary K. Holter. A gift ex- .Jack and Jnc Clark , Mr. and
change was held by the by Mrs. Ronald Ritchie, all of
the mem bers aro und et Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
li~hted tree.
James Smith a111l · son ,
Punch and cookic)o; were Baltimore; Mr. ami Mrs. Ca1·J
served by Erma Cleland , Kuhn, Canton. ami Mr. and
Opal r..aslt•, Mary Hayes, and Mrs. Pete Niberl, Gallipolis.
Margaret Tuttle. Others attending were Dorothy Myer~.
NO CLINIC
Thelma White, Marcia
THIS
MONTH
Keller, Mae Spencer, Pauline
·
Harrisonville
Senior
Ridenour, Letlut Wood , Ada
Citizens
will
not
hold
a blood
Morris, Mabel Van Meter.
pressure
clinic
this
month.
Leda Me~c Kracutcr, Laura
Mac Nice, Inzy Newell , The next clinic will be held on
Goldie Frederick, and Ethel Tuesday ,' Jan. 16, from 10
a.m. to I p.m.
Orr.
Tuttle played her guitar

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f ri ends her t' for the .services

~-tnil

(Continued from page I)
board with the negotiations.
Sheets again voted against
the action.
The annual organizational
meeting was set for 7:30p.m.
on Jan . 4:
The board took steps to
transfer securllles of the
Catherine F. Sefton Trust
from California lo Meigs
Coualy. There is about
$31.000 in securities set up
In the trust but ad·
mlnlstrative costs have
been eallng away at In·
teres! and ollvldeuds,
lherelote, the transfer is
being made.
Income from the securities
will be used for improving the
former Middleport High
School. The board reappointed Wanda Eblin to
another seven year term on
the Pomeroy - Middleport
Library Board and added
Lynne M. Bajec, Robert
Roush, Et)lel L. Werry, Alice
Brauer
and
William
Robinette to the substitute
teacher list. ·
Treasurer Jane Wagner
reported the district will
finish the calendar year with
a balance of about $100,000.
However, it was pointed out
the first payroll of the yeartotaling about $96,000 - due
Jan. 5.
Connie Queen who will
graduate from Glenville
State on Dec. 20, was employed as a typing and
business teacher at the high
school beginning Jan. 2 and
will be teaching for the
remainder of the year.
The board agreed to pay an
additional $18 a day for transI'Ortation of handicappetl
students to Rio Grande and
Jackson.
Harold White was em·
ployed as a substitute bus
driver and resignations
accepted included those of
Ralph Butcher, substitute
custodian; Beth Vaughan,
who was to have coached
eighth grade girls' basketball
and Becky Glaze, Junior High
school secretary.
Members of the high school
Guidance Department were
given permission to visit for
one day a pre-vocational
training center in Ritchie
County, W. Va., and a
proposal to purchase drapes
for the Middleport elementary school was turned down.
Goins gave a report on the
work of the Meigs High
School Athletic Facilities
Committee and Dan Morris,
director of Curriculum,
outlined phases of the Title

•~~------------------... programs.
Board members

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GETA
NEW SLEIGH
(OR CAR)

Greatly Reduced

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GOEGI.EINS HAVE
EARLY CHRISTMAS
Christmas was celebrated
at the hmnc ul Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Goeglein Sunday with a
familv gathering. Mr. and
Mrs.-Phillip Stolp of Plain·
field , Ind. cmne Satur~ay and
were joined 1111 Sunday by Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Karr ,
Tot hi . and Aaron, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Karr and family,
Millerspnrt; Mr. and Mrs.
Delton Hughes and sun, Bill,
Mr. and Mrs . Larry Reid , Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Baurmm, 1::111d

$799 1
95

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TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS!

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attending
the meeting were Sheets,
Carol Pierce, Virgil King,
Wendell Hoover, Dr. Keith
Riggs ; administrators, Supt.
Charles Dowler, Goins, Dan
Morris, Bob Morris, Pomeroy
- Middleport Elementary
Principal, Diehl, the high
school
principal,
and
treasurer Jane Wagner.

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HURRY! ~
HURRY! ~
ONLY ~

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the traditinnal family dinner.

MEETING SET
The Meigs - Gallia - Mason
Life
Underwriters
Association will hold its
regular meeting Wednesday
at noon at the Holiday Inn,
Gallipolis.
Guest speaker will be a
representative from the
Huntington Trust Bank,
Columbus. The board of
directors will meet at II: 15
a.m.

Even santa needs our help
these days. If you're In his
situation, slide on down
here and apply for a low
cost car loan. convenient
repayment plans.

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LEFT

m Record

J ,i1-&gt;CI Kinnard, Lancaster, fur

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"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

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Walk Up Teller and Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m .

S
e Record the TV piogram you're watching
ne Record one program while y·au watch another
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~ e Produce your own home V&amp;W sound movies , .....p.P
Monitor any room in your home

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MtlkEPORT .

INGELS FURNITURE ~
&amp;
JEWELRY
~
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0. !

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

~ ...
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Member F.D.I.t
Deposits Insured
to $40,000

····•

GENEVIEVE
GUTHRIE
Genevieve Guthrie of
Alfred was honored on her
80th birthday Sunday by her
tlau ~ htel', Maxine and her
sun-in-law , n. R. Ynst. Others
aftemlin~ were her gl·anddau~ht er. Beth Cavinec and
husband . .John, daughter,
Kathil' and grandson, Russell
and his wife, Martha and
their Llaugllt"r, Ami, Charles
r~nd CUJII1it.' Vo!-il,, Richard
Yust, and Mr&lt;. Ella Ynst, all
of Lc.mc·a~tn.
DISMISSED FRIDAY
Students of .the Eastern
Local School District wtll be
dismissed for Christmas
b··~ak at 2:30p.m. on Friday.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. Classes will resume on Jan. 2.

Larry Smith, business
manager, of Local 23!i9, In·
ternational Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, which
represents the striking
employees of Buckeye Rural
Electric, accused Buckeye
today of misleadin g the
public regarding the strike.
Smith, in a prepared
statement iook issue with
recent news articles, which
quoted Clyde Ramsay ,
manager of Buckeye, as
stating that four employees of
Buckeye made over $31,000 in
19]7. Smith stated that
several of the employees,
represented by Local 23!i9,
made approximately $22,000
in 1977 which included pay for
between 600 and 700 hours of
overtime.
Smith also took exceptions
to statements by Ramsay
that the striking employees
were
responsible
for
damaging the powerlines of
Buckeye.
Smith states that outages
had occurred every day for
years, which required
overtime work. He also
stated that it was common
during the hunting season for
insulators and lines to be
damaged by unknown persons.
Smith also noted that many
of the striking employees and
their
families,
unlike
Manager Ramsay, were
customers of Buckeye and
would be depriving themselves of service if they were
doing the damage. Smith
stated that Local 2359 did not
sanction or condone acts of
violence.
Smith stated that he
regretted that the employees
who had worked from Sept. I,
1978, without a contact, had to
strike on Dec. I, Smith
charged Buckeye, which is
represented in negotiations
by Attorney Michael Ward of
Kalamazoo,
Mich ., of
bargaining in bad faith, by

65 units
(Continued from page I)
Charles, Clara Mcintyre,
Stacy Arnold, Bill Nease.
Middleport - Marta Black·
wood, Robert V. King,. James
R. Dailey, George Harris,
Jr., Edward M. Durst, Sarah
J . Fowler, Debra J. Carder,
Martha Hackett.
Racine - Mark Matson,
William H. Hoback, Ernest
E. Spencer, Rev. David C.
Harris.
Long Bottom - Henry
Bahr .
·
Syracuse
Millard L.
Roush, Donna J . Aleshire,
Chris Jacks, Hollie D.
Stewart, Lorraine M. Cundiff,
Kathy M. Cummings, Bob
Crow and Virginia L. Davis.
Reedsville - Linda L.
Wilson, Macel Barton,
Richard Barton.
Rutland - Rosella Birchfield, Shorty Wright.
Cheshire - Joseph White . .
New Haven - Ethel Drake.
Athens - Roger Gihnore,
Virginia Gilmore.
Hemlock Grove - Sharon
Welker.
Langsville - Ellis E.
Myers.
Gallipolis - Mary Jones.

refusing to modify or change
its position on any of the
issues during the eight
negotiating sessions held
since August 1978.
Buckeye, according to
submitted
Smith, has
proposals, that would ef·
fectively eliminate the,
present contract classes
relating to the principle of
seniority for promotions,

Dinner party held
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hedrick 133 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy entertained with
their annual brother and
sister dinner party Saturday
evening." Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. otis Bailey,
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Bailcy,.Shade, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl'oll Teaford, Racine ; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bailey,
Portland. Unable to attend
were Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Matheney.

at y enttne
Israeli plaD.es strike Arab bases

: Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
: Wednesday, December 20, 1978

recalls;
layoffs
and
limitations on contracting of
bargaining unit work to Pike
Electric of North Carolina
and other non-union con·
tractors; ·and, limitations on
requirements that employees
would not have to work in
inclement weather, except in
emergencies or to maintain
nonnal service.
Smith stated that Buckeye
has rejected the latest union
proposal to extend the
present contract for two
years with an eight percent
wage increase each year; one
additional holiday; and, a
change in sick pay benefits.
The negotiating session
.held with Buckeye on Dec. 18,
1978Iasted less than one hour,
according to Smith, and no
dates are scheduled at the
present
for
future
negotiations.

. WASIDNGTON (UPI) .The U. S. Environmental Pro,tection Agency today paved
·the way for President Carter
to order Ohio utilities to burn
Ohio's high-sulfur coal.
· The federal EPA reported
that if Ohio utilities switch to
Jow sulfur coal it would mean
the ''economic disruption' ' of
Ohio's coal mining area.
: The EPA earlier this year
conducted hearings into the
switch to low sulfur coal and
)\'hat tbe . economic impact
would be on eastern Ohio
where the state's l'Oal fields

"Across from the
Courthouse, PomeroY, 0 ."
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Dec. 22. 1978
Friday

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While you are here
pick up a 1979 year
calendar, free .

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• Re~resentins :
FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

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individuals and groups.
The recommended 400
meter track will cost $4,600.
According to plans, this will
be financed by 115 persons
donating $40 each and one
Middleport businessman, it is
reported, is ready to secure
those 115 contributors. The
committee feels that the
project can be started in
February, 1979.
Cost of the baseball dugouts
and fencing would be ($1,140)
$840 for dugouts and $300 for
the fence. The committee is
asking the board of education
to set aside $1,300 for the
project.
Water to the high school
field involves installation of
48() feet of plastic pipe. The
project would cost $173.85.
The committee is recom·
mending that a ditch be dug
for the line at the same time
the curbing for the track is
that pipe·be
being done,
laid before the curbing is

'and

Ohio firm submits low bid ·

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A newly formed Meigs High
School Athletic Facilities
Committee named only in
)~~ .November is "movin'
ligbt·alo!W." aceotdlllg to a
report of the committee
activities given by Dwight
Goins,
administrative
assistant of the Meigs Local
District.
The group met twice and
chose projects which need
Immediate attention. Items
Include: establishment of a
high school trac~; dugouts
and fencing at the baseball
field; water to the field at the
high school site; lights for the
Pomeroy football field;
tennis courts at the high
school; fence aroWid the
baseball and softball fields on
top of the hill; a concession
stand and storage area at the
high school baseball site.
Of course, financing the
projects Is another matter
but it appears , some of the
projects may be handled by

Nation wise

,~-~~~-~-~~~~~~~-~~~~~~--~~-~~

! ELBERFELDS .
! CHRISTMAS
I SALE

are located.
The EPA, under an amend·
men! to the Clean Air Act
sponsored by Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, can
decide whether the switch to
high sulfur coal would be a
blow to the economy of the
region.
Under \be amendment,
when this ruling is made,
President Carter can order
·Ohio's coal-burning electric
utilities to burn the state's
high-sulfur coal which means
they will probably have to install expensive anti·

Ill

ALL WEEK

I

•I

OPEN TIL 8
EVERY NIGHT
Special sale prices this week on chairs· G. E. and RCA color TVssavings on women's and chi,dren's winter coats- !ittle girls dresses
• little boys shirts and sweaters- men's and women's St. Thomas
wallets. Boys winter jackets- entire stock of men's dress· spo~t ·
knit- western shirts on sale.-Girls sportswear reduced -- WQmen's
sweaters sale priced. Men's Wembley ties and Paris belts are pn
sale. Men's sweaters · men's dress slacks- And save too, on men's
three-piece suits.
It pays to take advant~ge df the sales at Elberfelds.
SANTACLAUS-BRINGTHE CHILDREN TO SEE SANTA WED.·
THURS.-FRI.-2 To 3 P.M.

.

1 Elberfelds In Pomeroy

=------~-----~~----·--·----"""'*

there is no reason to take out
the materiel and there will be
a ha)t to the pullout until the
situation clarifies," the
spokesman said.
The Knesset (parliament )
Tuesday rejected "new and
st ubb orn" Egyptian
proposals to amend the draft
treaty and stood united
against what it said was onesided pressure from the
United States. It repeated its
readiness to work for peace .
In Jerusalem, meanwhile,

Ute "Peace Now" movement
that mustered thousands of
demonstrators before the
Camp David summit said it
would take to the streets
again to push for Israeli
concessions to reach an
agreement with Egypt.
Elsewhere, Egypt said it is
reacty to resume negotiations,
but Jocdan 's King Hussein
said the Camp David
agreements should be
scrapped and a new peace
conference called.

switch to low sulfur coal.
pollutione quipment.
Fuel switching would also
''The announcement is a
victory for consumers cost the slate's economy $400
thurughout the state of Ohio million a yea r. the EPA said.
"The utilities want people
and a special victory for coal
miners in the southeastern to beli eve t hat this law will
pm1 of the ·stole," said hurt con.sum ers, Uut noting
could be furth er from the
Metzenboum.
"Ohio is the nation 's fifth tr1,1th ,' ' .sa id Metzenba wn .
largest coal producing state, "Thi s EPA ruling is the first
and this order is the first step step to prevent an economic
towards stabilizing that great depression in southeaster
resource," said Metzenbawn. Ohio.
" It mean s !hot Ohio
According to the EPA, Opiu
would lose more than 15,000 utilities now must consider
jobs, including over 5,270 coal burning Ohio coal, which is
minin~ iobs if Ohio utilities chea per than coal from Central Appalachia and from the
west. It means that Ohio
(Continued on page 14 )

Meigs athletic committee
'busy on variouS projects

12 : 00To?

(Continued from page 1)
general fund, $9,000; fire,
$4,000; street, $9,900.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Osborne. Attending
were Mayor Clarence Andrews, Mrs. Walton, Larry
Wehrung, Larry Powell,
Betty Baronlck, Osborne and
Brown, council members.

Weizman issued his order
Monday and it was leaked to
the Israeli media today , Jess
tha n 24
hours after
parliament endorsed the
government's rejection of the
proposals,
The defense ministry
spokesman said Weizman
acted on a suggestion by
Foreign Minister Moshe
Dayan. Both men led the
Israeli negotiating team in
the peace talks.
" With the situation frozen ,

•

Bill Quick~!
Jeanne Starcher

Council

vehicles, fencing and buUding
equipment began about a
month ago. It was started
then to meet the deadline for
·the first phase of withdrawal ,
from the Sinai nine months
after the signing ofthe trea 1y .
The deadline for the
initialing of the treaty passed
Sunday with Israel rejectiM .
U.S .-backed
Egyptian
proposals
designed to
conclude a treaty by that
date.
Defense Minister Ezer

•

DAVIS
INSURANCE
AGENCY
992-6677

the Sinai because of the
It was the first military freeze in the peace treaty
strike by Israel since the negotiations with Egypt.
Camp David summi.t meeting
The move was announced
in September.
in Jerusalem by the Defense ·
In Beirut, initial reports Ministry after Israel's parliasaid the Israeli raids ranged ment voted to back Prime
over a wide area north and Minister Menachem Begin's
south of Saraland, which is rejection
of Egyptian
roughly halfway between the changes in a draft trealy and
two south Lebanese ports of called Washin gton "oneSidon and Tyre.
sided" in favor of Cairo.
Israel said today it has
The pullout from the Sinai
ordered a halt to withdrawal of Israeli
non-combat
of military equipment from materiel such as heavy duty

Ohio coal consumers
•
•
:score maJor vrctory

Give us a call.

Veterans Meuioriai Hospital
Admitted - Brady Knopp,
New Haven; Jessie Cottrill,
Syracuse; Lucille Cundiff,
Mason;
Roy
Betzing,
Pomeroy; Charlotte Conley,
Portland;
.
Discharged - Juamta
Ferrell, Belva Groce, Nellie
Hendrix, Timothy Eynon,
Paul Dodson, Wilda Brogan.

Vol. 29, No. 174

The command said the air
TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI)was carried out to
IBrae!l warplanes struck sus- strike
retaliate for 14 attacks in
Pected Arab guerrilla bases Israel since November that
ill IDUthern Lebanon IDday · killed
four Israelis and
for the first time in four
wounded
67 others.
months to retaliate for
The military reporter for
\I!ITOrlst boolbing attacks In the state-run Israeli radio
Israel.
said lhere were 10 to 20
: The military command guerrillas in each base.
said the IS-minute strike
It marked the first Israeli
ligalnllt three bases, two of air strike into Lebanon since
!,hem .along the southern
Aug. 21 when a reprisal raid
Lebanese coast, produced
was carried out for an attack
?very good resulta."
agalnllt an El AI airliner.

KEN HAYS
Sgt. Kenneth D. Hays of
Route 1, Racine , former Mid·
dleport resident, recently .
relurned from a one year
remote lour in Korea .
Sgt. Hays while stationed at
Kunsan Air Base was assigned to the Wing Intelligence
Division, and his job cunsi•ted of frequent trips to
Japan , the Philippines,
Hawaii , Thailand, along with
all parts of Korea. His wife ,'
Mary E. Hays, and children,
Jacqueline and Franklin
have joined Sgt. Hays who is
now currently assigned to the
91stSecurity Police Squadron We'll protect almost
at Minot Air Force Base in anyth;ng YO'! own or rent home, apartment,
North Dakota.
condominium, and
possessions.

Hospital News

Fifteen Cents

lly Jlllll~RD C. GROSS

CALL OUT
THE TROOPS
FOR
PROPERlY
PROTECTION

OPAL BARR
Mrs. Arthur (Opal) Barr,
Middleport, underwent open
heart surgery · at University
Hospital, Columbus. Her
address is Ohio State
University Hospital, Room
806, East Wing, loth Ave.,
Columbus for those who wish
to send cards.

•

•

.S mith accuses Buckeye
of 'misleading public'

II

1
1

1
I
11

M

W
I

1

I
.ft
I

1

....

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) - An Ohio firm
Tuesday submitted the apparent low bid of nearly $9
millim for cmstrucUon of a railroad bridge over a
Misaillllippl portioo of the proposed Tennessee •
T&lt;mblgbee Waterway.
A spokesman for the U. S. Army Corps of
Engineers said the bid - $8,876,962 - by Tom Peter
Kiewit Sons Co, of Cleveland, Ohio, was tbe lowest of
!leVel' •ubmltted oo the project.

poured .
Regarding the lights for the .
football field in Pomeroy,
Goins reports he has contacted George Graham.
Portsmouth office, Ohio
Power Co., who consented to
doing a lighting layout for the
district. It will detennine
what fixtures are going to be
needed. A rough estimate on.
the cost is $20,000, but any
new fixtures are to be
designed so that they could be
used at a facility near the new
high school.
Goins reports goal posts for
the high school practice field
are being made by the
athletic boosters. Cost of the
two tennis courts recommended is $17,000. The
committee
offers
no
suggestion on fmancing at
this time.
There has been no cost
figure secured for the
recommended fence around
the baseball and softball
fields at the top of the hill at
the high school. The concession stand and storage
area recommended at the
high school baseball field will
cost an estimated $2,000 and
the committee hopes that
this, too, will become a
booster project.

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

EXPANDED COVERAGE
Veterans Memorial Hospital Administrator Scott

Lucas

has

announced

the expanded emergency
room coverage from the
upcoming
hollday
weekend.
There wiU be a physicia n
on duty in tbe emergency
room beginning at 6 p.m.
on Friday, Dec. 22 and will
remain on duly until 6 a.m.
on Tuesday, Dec. 26. The
following weekend a
physician will be on duty
from 6 p.ni. Friday, Dec. 29
through 6 a.m. on Tuesday,
Jan. 2.

QUEEN OF CHRISTMAS BALL AND COURT Jeannie Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Johnson, Portland, was crowned queen at the annual
Christmas Ball held Saturday night at U1e schoo l. Shown,
l.r are , front, Julie Gibbs, junior attendant, Bonnie Boso,
sophomore attendant, Kris Johnson , freshman attendant,

•

State revenue collections 1n
November total $299 million

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Treasurer Gertrude W. Do·
nahey reported today that
state revenue collections for
November totaled $299
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::·:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::,:,:,:,:,: million, bringing the total for
the fiscal year to $1.6 billion

Weather
Highs tod3y in upper 50s or
lower 60s. Low tonight in the
mid 30s. Cloudy Thursday,
Snow flurries with ternperatures cooling to near 30
by evening.

or 10 percent ahead of last
year's figure.
Mrs. Donahey reported
that
co ll ection s
were
outpacing those for the same
five months of 1977 by $153.8
million.

Program effective Jan. I

Effective January I, 1979,
Holzer ~ed1cal Ce~ter w1ll
assume delegated revtew
of its claims to Medicare and
to · the MediCaid programs.
"This is a voluntary effort
:::::::::::;::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :,:, of the hospital and is to be
EXTENDED FORECAST
definitely commended,"
Friday through Sunday, announced Jack T. Kindig,
fair Friday, with a chance Executive Director of Peer
of rain or snow Saturday Review Systems (PRS) with
and Sunday. Highs will be offices in Portsmouth.
In the 30s or the lower 40s,
PRS is a not-for-profit
with low temperatures 1n orga ni zation representing
the 20s early Friday and
physicians of eight southern
near 30 early Saturday and
Ohio co unties. It contracts
Sunday.
with the Federal government
: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,::,:,:::::::::::::::::::: .!9. assess the quality and

appropriateness of services
rendered to Medicar and
Medtc a 1d
rec1p1ents .
" Because of rigidly accepted
sta ndards, it ha s be en
possible for PRS to delegate
to Holzer Medical Center
many review functions for
which PRS is ultim ately
responsi.ble," Kindig continued.
Local physicans elected to
the board of PRH are Joseph
P. Brady, M.D. and James A.
Kemp , M.D. Trustees and
officers serve without
compensation.

·Plan has' guarded optimism
CLEVELAND (UPi) -Mayor Dennis Kuclnlch's
compromise plan for saving the clly from possible
bankruptcy and ma!lsive city worker layoffs has been
received with guarded optimism in the banking
cunmunily, which holds the debts that led Cleveland
Into default last week.

Opposition stiffens .
- WASHINGTON (UPI) -Conservative opposition
to President Carter's plan to cancel the U. S. defense
trealy with Taiwan has stiffened with the
announcement by three Republican congressmen they
wlllgotocourt to try and halt the move.
Meanwhile, Nationalist Chinese Ambassador
J81Jl1!11 Slen and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., scbeduled a
news conference today about Carter's declaim toabrot~ate the treaty, sever ties with Taiwan and
exchange ambassadors with Peldng.

The sales tax was running
strongest, bringing in $71.8
million, or 12 percent, more
than for the same period of

::~~~·~~~0~~ ::~~n~~

$3 7.9 million , or 13.2 percent.

Otherbiggainerswerethe

INVITE PUBIJC - Employes of the Meigs County
Cornm11nily Mental Health Center invite tbe public to
attend a "bollday open house" on Friday, Dec. 22 at the
health center located oo Pomeroy's Second Street
between the hour!l of 3 and 5 p.m. There will be
~~

refreshments, entertainment and trinuning of tl1c tree.
Shown are the employes, ieft, l.r, Jell Paddock, John
Brammer, and Mary Skinner; front, Dr. Nan Mykel ,
Nancy Kohlrieser, Tera Lane and Helen Bailey; right,
Jan Cundiff, Waneta Bowman and Joann McLaughin.
,b

intangible excise tax on businesses, up $13.6 million or 11 .6 1
percent; and public utilities
and insurance taxes, both up
$9 million or IB percent.
The corporation franchise
tax continued to lag behind
last year's collections by $2.3
million or 5. 7 percent.

Ramsay responds
to Smi"th's 'statement
Clyde Ramsay, manager of
Buckeye Rural Electric Co.,
in response to a statement
issued Tuesday by Larry
Smith. president of International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers, Local
2359, today in a press release
said :
"I would have to agree with
Larl'y Smith, President of
International Brotherhood of
Electrical Workers , Loca l
2359, now on strik e at
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, in that someone
is attempting to mislead the
public, but I would prefer to
allow the public to judge who .
"He stated in his article in
the local paper on Tuesday
that outages were common
and inferred that they were
due to deer hunters and
unknown persons.
"Some 24 acts of deliberate
sabotage or vandalism have
occurred startin g at 12
midnight on Dec. 2, one and
one-half ho urs after the start
NO MEETING
The Democrat Central
Committee will not meet this
meet this month due to the
holidays.

Haldeman released TuesdJJy
WSANGELES (UPI) - Six years, six months and
three days after a banct ol burglars was nabbed In a
Wllllhington office building, me ol ~last chapters of
the Watergate story, which topp)i!\:1 an American
prellldency, moved toward a con~ today.
Harry Robbins Haldeman, the .No. ·2 man in
Richard Nixon's White House, preJIBI'«&lt; to walk out of
a federal prilon camp near the Callfornla coast, about
110 mUee northwest of San Clemente, where Nixon
Uves.

queen Jeannie, Marie Pickens, Pam Spencer and Julie
Nance , queen candidates; ba ck, escorts, Johnnie Davis,
Eric Hill, Robert Brown, Bill Harris, Tim Brinager, Jeff
Thornton and Todd Cummins. The event was sponsored
by the Tri-M Club.

of the strike, these acts occur
during the dark hours of the
day when deer hunters were
not, we hope, hunting. They
have occurred only on lines
on which no striking em·
ployee or his family live and
have not affected Mr . Smith's
home in Laurelville, Ohio.
"They have included
sawing or chopping down
powe r poles , c uttin g guy
wires, cutting trees over the
lines, throwing material over
t he lines , opening sect ionalizers or disconnects.
Only six of the 23 strikers live
on Buckeye lines.
" We stand
by our
statement as to the amount of
money, regular time, over· ,
time, and fringe benefits the
employees receive and are
ready at any time to
negotiate. We have made it
plain that we will not consider
continuing the existing
contract which has resulted
in nothin g but grieva nce
meetings over the past
years."
NOW YOU KNOW
The
first
woman
presidential candidate was
Vi ctoria Clafin Woodhull,
who was nominated by the
Equal Rights Party on May
10, 1872, in New York City,
with Frederick Douglass as
her running mate.

F1JNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
.•
Ferguson reported the
-'J· /
·di,tribution of $7,181,851.73 in
( ' \ .·.
. .... " local government fund money
--~'-&gt; -' ' '-'' c'&lt;i&gt;-&gt;'&lt;i&gt; .) ' &lt;i&gt;-~ to Ohio's sa counties and to
400 cities and villages levying
local income tax. Meigs
DAYS TO
Co WilY received $12,500 of the
CHRISTMAS total.

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