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                  <text>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

~

TREMENDOUS
SAVINGS!

~

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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YOU FINANCE IT:

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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.

~

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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programs while you're away·
~ 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. !

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

~ ...
' '-'.•

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 ."
•

Dec. 22. 1978
Friday

I

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

I

• 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 ·

•II

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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

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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.

•

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.S mith accuses Buckeye
of 'misleading public'

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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.

�r

3-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-P&lt;111er0y, 0., Wednesday, Dec. 20, 19'18

'

BY JACK ROGERS
For the first ten minutes
the Southern Tornado fro~
Racine, Ohio, blew through
the whiskers of the Point
Pleasant Big Blacks and built
up a seven-point lead. But the
locals did some huffing and
puflipg on their own and
lmally blew the visitors house
in, 59-48.
· It happened in the home
rifle pit last night, before a
turnout that filled the
bleachers about · four-fifths
full, and got Coach Lennie
Barnette's Red-and-Black
cagers winging in their
opener.
For Coach Carl Wolfe's
Class A Southerns, the defeat
was their first after three
straight SVAC victories.
Mark Vaughn, 6-0 senior;
led the hit parade with ten
buckets for 20 points, and Jed
both teams In rebounding
with 11.
Twelve of Vaughn 's
counters came in the second
period and helped wipe out a
.19-12 lead the Tornado had
built up after the first
quarter.
Other twin-figure scorers
for PPHS were senior John
Bibbee with 16 and senior Ron
Barnett 12. Bibbee's ability to
slip inside, reboun&lt;!, or lay up
a·ccurate passes, almost
· drove visiting Coach Wolfe to
distraction and forced time
outs to regroup.

ARMS EVERYWHERE - Practically everyone got
into the scrap for a rebound here in the second quarter of
action of the PPHS-Southern cage tilt tuesday night.
Shown, are Point Pleasant's Jeff Hlpes (32) Brian Stepp
(44) and Mark Vaughan (40) battling Southern's Jack
Duffy (13), DwightHlll (15) and JimO' Brien (45).
WHA Standings
By Uni1ed Press International

W. L T. Pts.
Quebec
New England
Cin cinna t i
Edm onton
W innipeg
Birmi ngham

16 11

15

4

36

9 6
4

36

0

30

4
3

28
27

1.d
15 lJ
12 12
12 l4
14

32

x -lnd ianapol ls
x -team disbanded

5 18 2

.•.·

f
.•.·

.·.·

t

Dave Findley
Dwight Hlll
Tim Brinegar
Dave Foreman
Jim O'Brien
Jack Duffey
EdRoush
Dale Teaford
John Davis
Jonathan Ree8
steve Fitch
John Pape

4
5
3
3

0
0
0
0
0

Totals

'

'
•'
'

2

READY TO PASS OR SHOOT - Eastern's Brian
BisseUt (14) appears to be getting ready to either pass or
go up &lt;r a jump shot in action Tuesday night against the

o
o

•(•

17 14-22 4i

•

~

BIG BLACKS (59)
Player
FG FT
John Bibbee
7 2-4
Ron Barnett
6 1).2
Brian stepp
1 ~
Mark Vaughn
10 0-3
David Ralke
1 ~
Do
Doug Workman
I~
Jay Minton
0~
John Chambers
0 ~

16
12

2
20
2

0~

.....
'I

·'
BATI'LE FOR REBOUND - Southern's Jack Duffy
(13) and Point Pleasant's Ron Barnett's (24) are shown
going high Into the alr for a rebound during second half
actlm of Tuesday night's game ,that was won by the Blg
Blacks. At left is Point Pleasant's Doug Workman (14).

2
0
0
5
0

19 8 13 8-48
12 :a) 15 12-69

Personal Fouts: PPHS 17
~ersonal Fouts: PPHS 17,
Southern 9.
Scorer: Jack RogerOfficials: Dave Smith,
Gene Carpenter.

::
)
·.·.

Sport Parade !

::::

· With eve~ybody guessing how soon 'it'll he before he's
managing again, SparkY Anderson is busier now than he ever
was, doing film editing and taping at his home in Thousand
Oaks, Calif. Anderson Is editing 2,000feet of film he took oo the
Cincinnati Reds' recent trip to Japan ~s well as six hours of
tape recording each night in preparation for a new book he
plans to call "! Weathered It All." ....
-0!
I;
I ~

TemadoJV

UUieBiaeb

18 17 . 9 19-li3
18 18 16 20-72

Scorer: Lana Deal .
Officials: Ed Cromley,
Paul Casto.

i-----------,
I Pro I

IStandings I
NHL Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division

PUTTING IT INTO GEAR- Southern's talented Dwight Hlll ( 15) a 6-0 senior focward is
shown about to drive to the bucket against Point··Pleasant's deternrined Ron Barnett a 6.1
sentor.
'

NY R"l!lngers

W.
19
18
17
16

Chicago ·

W. L. T. PIS.
10 13 7
21

NY Islanders

Atlanta

~hlladelphl

L.
4
12
11
10

T. PIS.

Smythe Division

1

3
5
4.

12 19 2
7 22 s
6 21 6
Wain Conference
Norris Division

Vancouver
St . Louis
Colorado

Pikeville defeats

45
J9

39
36

:26
19
18

W. L. ·T. PIS.
Montreal
Los Anaeles
Pittsburgh
Detroit

R.io Grande, 97-80
Host Pikeville built up a
comfortable 4!&gt;-30 halftime
lead, then went on to hand
visiting Rio Grande College a
97-80 conference setback
Tuesday night.
The loss left Rio Grande
with a 3~ season mark. The
victory avenged an earlier
season Joss to the Redmen
(Rio downed the Bears 86-78
on Nov. 26 for the Uons Invitational title at Lyne
Center ) and left Pikeville
with a 4-3 season mark.
Four Redmen finished in
double figures , led by Dan
Purcell's 21 markers. Dale
Royse added 18, Mark Swain
14 and Vince Phelps 12.
For ·the winners D. Rowe
and B. Tilford each tallied 14
points. V. O.ambers added

11.
Rio Grande connected on 31
of 58 field goal attempts for
53.4 percent. The Redmen
had 31 rebounds, four assists,
21 turnovers and sank 18 of 29
charity tosses for 62 percent.
Next Rio Grande game is
Friday, against Marshall
University in Memorial Field
House, Huntington, W. Va.
Tip-off time for that game
is 7:30 p.m. Acting Rio
Grande Coach Tom Meadows
said today 40 tickets remain
on sale at Lyne-Center for.the
Big Green-Redman encounter. Tickets are $3 per
person.
Tuesday's box :

21 6 •
1J 12 5

-'6
J1

11 14 7

29

1 16 9
Washington
8 20 5
Adams Division

:23

:21

W. L. T. Pll.

:21 5 6
RIO GRANDE (801 - 9: Newshoe 2-0-4; George 7·2· Boston
13 10 8
Swain 7· 0-14 : Blse 2·0-4: 16 ; Chambers 4-3·11; Tilford Buffalo
Toronto
15 ,,. ..
Purcell 6-9-21 ; Dorsey 2-0·4: 6·2 · 14: Gullel' 0-2-2 ; S. Minnesota
11 16 3
Phelps 5-2· 12 ; Royse 6·6-18; Newshoe 4· 1-9; Thomas 2-2-6; •
Results
Nid.ay 0· 1-1; Washington 2·0· D. Thomas 2-3·7. TOTALS 41- · PhllaTuesday's
4, Washngtn .-, tie
4; Davena 1.0.2. TOTALS 31- 15-97.
.
Minnesota 5, vancouver 3
18·80.
St. LOUIS 7, lit tanto 4
HALFTIME SCORE
Loa Ang 2, Colo :2; tie
PIKEVILLE (97) - Rowe Pikeville 45, Rio 30.
-Wednesday's Games
7-0·'14: Henley 3·0-6 ; West 4-1-

Southem eighth grade
,
posts 35-29 victory
By Greg llalley
The Southern eighth grade
came from behind in the last
quarter to capture a 35-29
victory over visiting Eastern
last week. The game was
close all the way with
Eastern out in front most of
the second half.
With two minutes to go,
Southern was down by four
points. Terry Patterson and
John Porter made key
baskets to enable the hosts to
pick up their . second win
against one loss. Southern
shot only 28 percent from the
floor, making 14 of 50. From
the free throw line they were
7 of 14.
Tyrone Brlnager led
Southern with 10 points while
Patterson added 8. Patterson
also
led in rebounds with 5.
·
Brian Well led Eastern wlth
16 points and controlled the
boards. The Eagles con· '
,trolled the rebounding game
l!_l!d_made just S of 14 foul
shots. Southern's ne&lt;t game

,

is Thursday at Federal
Hocking.
·
By lfaal'ten:
E

s

81tZ121
5 15 17 35

Buffalo at N. V. Rangers

Montreal at Chicago

Vancouver at Detroit
MlnnHOta at Toronto

Tl\urldly's Games

SI.L at N.Y . latnars
Wash 11 Phlladotphlo
Atlanta at 8uffllo
Chicago at Montreal

Colorecto at Boston

Pittsburgh at Los Ang

Cage
!

J!:

o-2.

I"

-

,.,

The reserve conteSt was a ·~
The Meigs girts ra1sed their
record to 3-1last night with a thrllling seesaw hattie with · '
convincing 43-23 win over Meigs fmally coming ou~ on
visiting Alexander. That was top 17-16. With 40 seconds to ' u
Alexander's first loss of the go, Alexander sneaked ahead 'on two free throws. Meigs'
year after six wins.
Susan
Zerkle then sank a free ".,1
Meigs' Terri Wilson
dominated the inside game throw to narrow the margin ''
by collecting 18 rebounds and to one a'nd with just' five '•'
pouring in 12 points. Coachs seconds to go in the game b
Joy Bentley and Roger Zerkle hit a field goal for the '"
Brauer praised Wilson and" margin of victory.
Debbie Woodyard led the ";
Dodie O.apman for playing
fine
defensive . games Meigs rebounder with 14 '"•
especially on the boards caroms while Lynn Oliver led
where Chapman collected 13 the scorers with six points.
rebounda. O.apman also had Meigs led 4-2 after the first .
six steals. Sonia Ash also 'quarter and 8-6 at the half. ~
played a fine game as she But they sc~ed no points in '
netted 10 points. April King the third period and fell ''
behind 10-8.
{'
has 7 assists on the night.
That
is
the
fourth
one-point
,
Meigs started off slow but
ballgame
the
Meigs
reserves
•
edged out to a 1~ lead at the
have been in. They have won
end of the first period.
two
.and lost two.
''
At the half It was lll-10, but
in the third quarter the
Meigs
defense allowed Alexander
S. Ash 5·0-10 ; T. Ash 1-0-2; '"
just four points while the Chapman 0·2-2: King 2·0-4;
offense poured in 16 to ice the Riggs 3·1·7: Wilson 6-0·12: 11·,
Barlrum 2-0-4; Anderson 1"-0game.
2. Totals 20-3-h
·Everyone on the .. Meigs
AleKander
squad saw action. The team
Llewellyn 3·0-6; Th~lss 0-1· •·
hit 20 of 78 shots, for a poor 26 1; Lighlfritz 2-0-4; Clark 4-0- ,,
percent. They made three of 8: Wallace 2-0·4 ; Perry 0·0-0;
0-0·0. Totals 11-1-23.
eightfree throws. Ale1811der Harper
Quarters:
camed just 11 of 52 shots for A
6101423
10 18 34 43
21 percent and marte 1. of 6 M
foul shots. The next Meigs
,
game Is Thursday at Waverly ·
..
with only the varsity playing: Meigs freshmen
Game time Is 6:30 p.m.

'

beaten Monday

-48
3"
3"
25

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) Tampa Bay Coach John
McKay cmflrmed Tuesday
two assistant coaches had
told blm they intend to resign,
. but said he had asked both to
reconsider. The two were
Identified by Buca' publicity
director Bob Best as
offensive line coach Skip
Husbands and receivers
coach WW!e Brown.
Beat quoted McKay as
saying both coaches are
Wlder contract WlW the end
of January and that he had
~ed botb to stay with the
club.

Southern team members
are as follows: Rusty
Cummins, Zane Beegle,
Tyrone Brlnager, John
ALL GAMES
Porter, Nick Bostick, Terry TEAM
W L P OP
Patterson, Chris Bostick, Jim Port1mouth
4 0 26'1 202
~urr, T~dd Mugrlge, Jerry . .::~:a~~~t
~~~
o e, Richard Dugan, Steve Waverly
4 1 342 243
Souder,
·
Logan
3 1 292 2l'l
The aeventh ~de made a W8shlntton
5 2 373 334
clen sweep of the evening u Ironton
4 2 3n 311
Southern
·
Jackton
2 3 315 384
roared to a 60-12 Gelllpalls
1' 3 190 119
win. AD players on both Wellston
1 4 311 383
teams got to see actloll.
,...gs
1 4 311 395
Although no statiBtlcs were t&lt;avenawaad
0 0 0 0
kept, Dennis Teaford, Kevin tr!.~~:.,~~
Curfman, and Wald Connolly Vlntoo 70 W.llaton 51
led the winners with 11 points Pl .. PlHient 59 Southern 48 ,
each. Tony Deem and Steve Frlday'a pmn:
Fisher each had I. Eleven ~"::,1 .,t
Melgs at Wawrly
Southern Jllayers scored.
Brian Bowers led Eastern Gelnpolls at W.,llaton
with lour points. Southern Ia Barboursville at Pl. PIHsant
now 2~ while Eastern fell to Po~~~r~·.r8:ilpalls

standings

...'

..

.·.·
;:;:

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI SportS Editor
,.

. J

Marauder gjrls
win third game

28 3-10 59

S.UIIIem
BlgBiacb

Thursday's Games
(No games schedu led)

Southwestern Highlander. The Highlanders' Gene Layton
is behind Bissell and teanunaw Keith Wolfe is setting a
screen.

The sleigh's all packed up and Santa and his elves are
ready to make a last delivery. Better hurry in for all
those .last minute gifts!

Eastern. defeats SWHS

TP

2 1-1

Totals

Wednesday's Game
Sovie t All -Stars at Cinci

points. Getting 4 points were:
Stewart, HaUey and L. Edwards ; and getting 2 points
were Salisbury, B. Edwards
and M. Jordan.
Eastern Is 2-1 overall and
their next contest Is January
4 against rival Southern.
E
6 14 22 37
4102024
SW

'•••

'
0
0
0
0

~
~
~
~
~

rebounds..
Freshman Sarah Goebel
collected 13 of those caroms
and scored 8 points. Teammate Lita Young led in
rebounds with 17 and tossed
in 6 points. Jeannie McClure
led all scorers with 11. Other
Eastern scorers were:
Milhoan 8 and Ohlinger 4.
Southwestern made 4 of 9
free throws and also led · in

.

6-7 14
o-2 10
1-3 7
U 10

0 S-2
2 1-2
0 ~

Southwestern stayed in the
game mostly due to the cold
shooting of Eastern. The
Meigs County girls made just
mne of 26 free throws and
cashed in on just 14 of 55 floor
attempts for 26 percent.
Eastern also had 39 turnovers.
Some ·bright spots for
Eastern made up lor that cold
shooting as the team con-

·'

SOUTHERN (tl)
Player
FG n' TP

12

. NEW. YORK (UP!)- Pete Rose already has paid back his
f1rst year's salary to the Phillies, who keep looking smarter
and .:;marter all the time. Along with the $600,000 they'll
rece1ve next season in additional television revenue as a direct
result of signing Rose, the Phils also have sold $300,000 worth
of new season tickets since taking on the hustling 37-year-old
switch-hitter.
That's $900,000rightthere,morethan coverinl( Rose's salary
lor next year. His four-year contract generally has he en
reported as $3.2 million but actually it's a )lit over $3.3 million
that little extra carrying charge being tied in with Rose's ego:
Hearing that David Thompson of the Denver Nuggets was
generally regarded the highest paid athlete at $800,000 a year,
Ro_se decided he wanted the distinction of being the highest
pa1d even 1f 11 had to be for only a very brief period. When Jim
Rice, looking for a $5.3 million multi-year contract from the
Red Sox, ran into Rose on an airplane a couple of weeks ago,
they talked about the kind of money they were shooting for.
"I'm gonna take your crown away from you," Rice said to
Rose, laughing over how he · figured to pass him in salary
before long. "I don 't care if you do," Rose answered. "I would
just like to have worn the crown at least once ." And now he can
say he did, but both Rice and Rose in all likelihood will run no
better than second and third to Dave Parker when the National
League 's MVP ultimately signs wlth the Pirates ....
How come the NHL basn't thought of hiring the recently
retired Bobby Orr as a goodwill ambassador to represent the
league at any number of various functions? It seems to me that
nobody turned American kids on to hockey more than Orr did
he!ore finally realizing his five knee operations wouldn't allow
him to play anymore with the Black Hawks three weeks
ago ....
Every time I've talked to Penn State's Joe Paterno about his
going into professional football, he has said the same thing.
What do 1need it for? I'm perfectly happy where lam ....
Arnold Pahner, 49, feels it's never too late to learn. He owns
a license to drive a car and fly a plane and now has taken out
another one to drive harness horses . Palmer will spend some
of the upcoming holidays learning how to drive at Pompano
Park in Florida ....
Neither the Indian.• nor the Rangers let it be known, but the
Buddy Bell-lor-Toby Harrah swap made a week and a half ago
actually was agreed upm way back on Oct. 3 when Bobby
Bonds went to Cleveland from Texas with Len Barker for Jim
Kern and Larvell Blanks ....
Tony Dorsett refused to go along with all those who felt Tom
Landry was exposin~ him to unnnecessary injury by having
him run the ball 29 times during last Sunday's onesided 3().7
victory over the Jets. "I'm a running back, right?" Dorsett
reminded. "! love to run. I can get hurt carrying the ball two
times just as easily as I can carrying it 29 times." ....
For many f~ple, the ideal Christmas gift is a good book,
and you won t ftnd many better ones on the subject than "The
World Series," written and put together by Joe Reichler the
AP'~ former top baseball reporter now doing an equally' fine
JOb m the commiSSIOOer's office .....
Dean Chance, the American League's 1964 Cy Young Award
winner, bounced this one off me the other day asking me
whether I could answer it. I couldn't, but maybe you can. Who
was the pitcher who threw a no.bitter in a game where none of
the hitters he faced lost even a single point on their batting
averages? Give up? The answer is Bob Feller, who pitched the
no-hitter in question against the White Sox - on opening day of
1940 ....
Out of the game for years, Walt Masterson, with Washington
and Boston in the '40s and '5011, Is coming back· in again as
baseball coach for Ge«ge Mason University in Fairfax, Va.

....

Then, with Troy Krebs
notching 13 and John Hlpea
II, the !ocala pulled away for
their first victory. Other
Uttle Blacks scorers: Jeff
Chambers 91 Greg Thomas 6,
David Nott f, Jimmy Stewart
2.
A lad named Kent Wolfe
whangeci borne 23 to pace
Coach Caldwell's losing
youngsters. Bryan Wolfe bad
8. Richard Wolle 7, and Mark
Wolfe 6, which would indicate
there is a pack of wolves up
the river.

rJoyKrebs
Greg Thomas

f:/:&gt;:::;:; :;: ;:·:;:;:;:-:;:·: ;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:-:·:-:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:\~

r

vlsltlnc youngsters, 311-35.

final period as both coaches
finally emptied their benches, with PPHS pulling
away at the end to win by
eleven.
llie Big Blacks held a slight
margin ,from the floor,
sinking 28 goals in 60 pops for
47 percent. Southern was 44
percent on 17 for 39, but
Coach Wolfe was disappointed that his boys didn't
shoot more. Perhaps there
were two many Big Blacks
breathing down Tornado
jersey collars.
Anyhow, the Southern
quintet ls pretty qufck and
will win its share of games in
Its own league. And already
!hey are looking forward to
the PPHS visit up there on
Feb. 9.
But, of course, one win does
not a season make and the
Blg Blacks must clear the
decks for Friday's invasion
by the Barboursville Pitates.
Last night Coafch Bill Dan
Ray's Bucs were hosting the
Ripley Vlkings, score not in
at this writing ...
And, oh yes, there was a
reserve game, too, wiih
Coach Larry Markham's
Little Blacks,
behind
sophomore Ron Cremeans 27
points, turning back the Uttle
Tornado, 72-li:l.
·
It was an extremely close
first half and it took 25 points
in those sixteen minutes by
Cremeans to hold off the

Tuesday's Result
- Edmonton 5, Birmnghm 2

Today

The Eastern girl cagers
pulled away in the last
quarter last night for a solid
37-24 win over host Southwestern.
Eastern led the entire
game. In the last period,
some clutch shooting and fine
team defense allowed the
girls of Coach Susan Thompson to record their second
SVAC victory against no

'

Senior Dave Findley paced
Southern with !4, including 6of-7 free throws. Dwight Hill
connected for 10, and 6-4
junior Dave Foreman
swished 10.
Coach Wolfe said the plan
called for his boys to run and
shoot but the Big Blacks beat
them to the punch, canning 28
fielders to only 17. The locals
also crashed the boards and
picked oil 33 rebounds to 19.
Bibbee was second high in
retrieves with 8, while Dave
Foreman was best for the
Tornado with 6.
Also , the Blg Blacks
seemed to have deeper depth
on the bench in Jay Minton,
Doug Workman, Troy Krebs,
Greg Thomas, and John
Chambers. Krebs contributed
5 points, Workman 2, David
Ralke 2 and Brian Stepp 2.
But Raike's and Stepp's ball
hawking were important
contributing factors.
That big Vaughn-inspired
second quarter wherein the
Red-and-Black cagers outscored Southern 20-8 to take a
32-27 halftime le"~In the third stanza Troy
Kreb's ~ree-point play
opened the spread to ten, 3929, and they later built lt to
twelve at 45-33. Southern
charg~d back and on Findley's shooting trlnuned it to
seven, 47-40 at the third pole.
Bibbee's three buckets and
two by Barnett paced a 12~

take J!!fl.~!fi.'!.c!.l!r.!. ....

E!'H.!~ g'!!.s

Defending champs
beaten ·by Big Blacks

111E DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTmfl!TOF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
CllyEdik&lt;•

Publ!stv!d dll.lly exl-epl Slllurdlly
by The otiu VwUe)' Publishing
Cumplny-MulllnM!dia, Inc.,
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Cuurt St., Pomeroy, Otdo 4S769l
1
Businet~~

Ofrke Phone

m-

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FAitbrial Ptwn~ 192-21~7 .
~ chw pusb!Ke paid al
Pom•roy,Ohlo.
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Nation~! .Hdvertisinf( represeoL
· tatlvc, l.andnn As£oclates. 3101
F.Ul'lidAve .. Cklvelwml, Ohiu44115. .
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Wl't!k. By Motor Rolllc wt"lcr..: c11rrici'
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Onu , Ve1:1t, 127.05: Sit monlhll,
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117 .00; Three months, $9.00:
Suh.'14·ripl\on prkt• lndudt!s Sund.Hy
Tnnt.·~ ...~·nt i m•l .

Meigs freshmen are still "
looking for their first wb) ~
after giving up a fourth ~
quarter lead and falling to ·
host Jackson 44-36, Monday
night.
·
Meigs led 29-28 after three •
periods, but a Jackson press
in the fourth quarter forced
many Meigs turnovers
Meigs made only one field
goal in that final period
compared to six by Jackaon.
Meigs led at the end of the
first quarter 12-11 and .at the
half 21·18. Roger Kovalchik
led Meigs and took scoring
honors for the night with 22
points. Tracy Pope netted
eight for the loaers. Meigs
made 12 of 22 foul shots as
they fell to 0-3 on ' the year.
For the winners Fenlk had
14 as the lronboys picked up ·
their first win of the year.
They made 8 of 23 charity
tosses,
Girls
Olllo High School
Basketball
United Press lntor... tional
Tuosdoy's Results
. Canton GlenOek 52 AIUance
. Marllngtoil 45
· Massillon Jackson 51 Louis. ville 46
Massillon Perry 41 Canton
Cent Cath 38
..

Northvlew

Fremont Ross

~2

12, and Russell had 10. The
visitors had 36 rebounds with
Nelson getting 10. They aiso
sank 9 of 16 foul shots.
The Eastern reserves
came from behind to take a
50-31 victory. Eastern's
defense did not allow a
second period field goal. The
Little Eagles of Coach Dennis
Eichinger went into the
locker room with a 26-16
halftime lead after trailing
12~ after one quarter.
The winners iced the game
when the defense held the
visitors to just four more
points in the third quarter.

Leonard Myers led the
winners with 17 points, Gene
Cole had 13, and Greg Wigal
netted 10. Sherman Potter led
the losers with 9 points.
Eastern (57) '- Dan
Spencer 10-1 ·21 ; Don Eynon 11-3; Joe Bowers 1·1·3: Joe
Boyles 7-6·20 ; Brian Bissell 5·
0-10. Totals 24-9-57 .
Southwestern (531 - Greg
Nelson

7- 1· 15.;

MIDDLEPORT
MERCHANTS
ASSOCIATION

Dave

Newberry 5·2·12 ; Todd Baker
Scott Russell 5·0-10 ;
Gene Layton 1· 1-3; Jay
Burleson 1· 1· 3: Dwayne
Forgey 1·0-2. Tota Is 22-9-53.

2-4·8 :

Quarters:

sw
E

10 16 17 1()-53
14 1! 15 11-57

WRAP UP CHRISTMAS
THE ARROW

WAY~

SHOP
EVENINGS
Tlll8:00
-

--~

·'

WITH SHIRTS 8Y

--Arrow•
nan
Cluett

ARIOW FRENCH .CUF.F
Whito only •17

Tuesday
Indiana Classic
Bloomington, Ind .
Final Round
lndlenlll 73, wash 56
Army 80, Davidson 76
East
Bluefld 87, M. Harvey 84
Clarkson 82, Hunter 79
Hofstra 68, Florida 67
Holy Cross 81, Frdhm 54
J. Jay 17, Livingston 76
Mlllrsvt 98, Sthea!trn 77
New Paltz 73, Queens 70
Penn St, 82, Colgate 80
Waynesbg 110, Mercyhst 93
South
Arkanus 67, Miss. 66
A .Peay 68, Old Dom 65
Furman 90, Wofford 71
Mrehed 88, Belirmne 97
Plkevi97, .Rto Grande 80
Midwest
Bowing Grn 85, Defiance 83
Brlarclff 11:2, Mrnngsde BO
Chic. St. 80, Spring Hll 66
DePaul 90, Nrthwstrn 83
Mich . St. 63. Clncl 52
Mlch . Tech 103, Wnona Sf . 69
Wash. St. 7-4, Ohio St . 67
. ·
Southwest
Okla. 1110, cat. Sf .. Bkrsfld 15
West .
Colo. 72, San Jose Sf . 71
Nk&gt;nt _U, No. ColorllldO "2

AllOW PITTID SHIRTS - $1 8

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White, w.,. ond ten- $15

Tuesday's

..

Navarre " Fairless
,_
Massillon 26
North Canton &lt;40 Canton South o&lt;l
14

the Highlanders got cold and
didn't score again for three
minutes. Meanwhile Eastern
moved into a 51-45 lead.
Twice Southwestern pulled
~o within two points. Both
times the Eagles held on.
Spencer finished the night
with 21 points while Goebel
netted 20. Bissell also hit
double figures with 10.
Spencer had 11 of his team's
'XI rebounds. Goebel had 7
assists. The team hii 24 of 60
shots for 40 percent and ·sank
9 of 16 foul shots.
Greg Nelson led S.W.H.S.
with 15 points, Newberry had

College Basketball Results
By United Press International

Ohio College

N
~~
43 ~r.

Sylvania

By Greg Halley
For the third game in a
row, Dan Spencer and Jeff'
Goebel scored 20-plus points
as the host Eastern Eagles
held on for a 57-53 win over
Southwestern Tuesday night.
That SVAC win raised
Eastern's overall record to 32 for new Head Coach John ·
Boston.
Southwestern led during
the first six minutes of the
ballgame antll Spencer
knotted t!)e score at U with a
bucket at the 1:55 mark of the
first quarter. Joe Bowers put
Eastern ahead for good ten
seconds later at 10-8. The first
quarter ended with Easter on
top 14-10.
The Eagles controlled most
of the second quarter, and at
one time, streaked to a 24-15
lead. But Southwestern kept
picking away trailing by only
live points the rest of that
quarter and most of the rest
of the game. The half ended
at 31-26 in favor of the Eagles.
The Highlanders high
scoring Gene Layton was
held to just three points the
entire game, ~U of them the
first half.
Eagle Brian Bissell was
given the asSignment of
controlling Layton and Coach
Boston praised Bi:;sell for his
fine defensive effort. Layton
still played some fine basketball by making some key
assists and getting some
important rebounds.
The third quarter saw the
same :&gt;-point lead until Southwestern's Scott Russell hlt a
jumper with 1:25 showing on
the clock to narrow the
margin to 42-40.
Bissell hit for two but a twoshot foul and a technical on
the Eastern bench gave the
visitors an opportunity with
six seconds to go.
Todd Baker sank two of the
foul shots and Jay Burleson
sank another to make lt a on~
point ballgame 44-43. Goebel
hit for two at the buzzer.
Dave' Newberry of Southwestern scored the first two
points of the fourth quarter to
make It another one-point
hallgame, 46-45. However,

w

67 M

·,q;

• Buketba 11 Results .
United Press International
Washington State 74 Ohio
State 67
·
.
Michigan State 63 Cincinnati
52

Bowling Green 85 Defiance 83

Washington B. Lee 56
MUsk lngum 55
Pikeville (Ky) 97 Rio Grande
80

y

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Gallipolis

New York Clothing House
Pomeroy

·Carters Menswear
PI. Pleasant

�4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Dec. 20, 1978

Rice to coach Bengals in '79
By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Hooter Rice will .have the
opportunity In 1979 to try to
finish what he stsrted at the
end of 1978 - turn the
Cincinnati Bengals around.
Rice, who replaced Bill
Johnson as Bengals' head
coaCh at mldseason 1n the
wake of the team's disastrous
start and managed to boost
morale by winning the final ·
three games of the year,
Tuesday was named the
club's head coaCh for 1979.
Bengal _general manager
Paul Brown said Rice signed
a contract "to continue" as ,
head coach but both Brown
and Rice refused to disclose if
the contract went beyond the
1979 season.
"I'm totally satisfied with
my new coiltract," said Rice,
the club's quarterback coaCh
befoce he was promoted to
head coach after the team
went 0-5 under Jdmson.
"My goal when I was
named head coach was to pull
it together, finish strong and
put our_program in _the right
·

SP,orts Transactions

By Un1ted Press International
Tuesday
Football
Cinc innati - Named interim
Coach Homer Rice as coach tor

1979.

Atlanta

•

team .

Buffalo (NHLl Recalled
goaltender Randy Ireland from
Hershey .

College

Colorado Confirmed the
appointment of Chuck Fair banks as hellld footbell coach
and announced the hiring of
two assistants, Jerry Pettibone
and Gene Hochevar .
North Texas State Univers ity
- . Appointed Andy Everes t as
athletic director .

15 15 .500 1

Cle"elnd
11 20 .355
New Orlns
11 21 .344
Detroi t
10 20 .333
Western conference
Midwest Oi't'ision
W. L. Pet.
Kan City
17 10 .630
Denver
1.5 15 .500

5112

6

6
GB

J'h

Milwauke

13 18 ,,19 6
14 21 .•00 7

Ind iana

10 19 .3.45

Ch icago

was"a

0

Hockey
National Hockey league
Announced the appointment of
Montrea l Coach Scotty Bowman
a's coach of the NHL All -Star

ATTEMPTED BLOCK - Southwestern's Gene
Laytoo goes up foc an attempted block of Jeff Goebel's
jump shot in Tuesday's SV AC game at Eastern. Don
Eynon is closing in for the Eagles. Eastern posted its third
win in five outings this season.

atmOl!phere," added Rice. "I disciplined training camp" succocssor, Jotmson's record
declined in the two-plus years
think we have momentum before next season. .
"I'm low key but 1 beUeve he was at the helm. Inheriting
going foc us now."
After Johnson couldn't win · in discipline and I know my basically the same team that
any of the first five games, players will accept it because Brown had coached to 11-.'l in
the learn also lost its first they know that's what it lakes 1975, Johnson went 10-4 in
three games under Rice, but to win ," he said. " I think the . 1976, but that wasn't quite
then came a convincing 23-13 attitude going into training good enough to make the
upset of playoff-bound camp will be that we can be a playoffs and then In 1977 the
Houston and enthusiasm winner. But I'm not about to club finished a mediocre ~ After Cincy lost its first five
began picking up.
make any Super Bowl predicAlthough the le_am lost tions. That's very .dangerous games this year, Johnson
offered his resignation, it was
several more close games, It for a coach.
finished the seaSQn in rousing
"My philosophy is you must immediately accepted and
fashion, humiliating playoff- take care of the little things. Rice was promoted to try to
boWld Atlanta 37-7, beating You must have the self- boost morale and gel the club
the playoff~und Rams in discipline to do it. And you ready for 1979.
Heading the Bengals the
Los Angeles 20-19 and must believe. I'm a believer
last
11 games of the season
·climalling the . season this In the power of positive
was Rice's first taste of pro
past Sunday with an thinking aU the way."
Rice will have the option of football ~ead coaching and
enthusiastic 48-16 romp over
making any assistant 1978 also was his first year in
arclH'ival Cleveland.
Rice said he fully expects to coaching changes that he pro football in any capacity.
The 51-year old native. of
continue "improving the wants, noted Brown, although
team and 'make it a winner none were immediately nearby Ft. Tboml!S, Ky., was
only hired last April as
annoWlCed.
next yesr."
''The team was really down
"We feel Homer has done Bengals' quarterba ck
earlier this year, but :we an exceUent job of bringing coach.
For tbe two years before
fought it, stayed with it, and the team back together, " said
went out a winner," he said. 'Brown. "He has earned the that he had been athletic
"A strong finish was really right to · start from the director · and head football
important becal,ISe it's the beginning and get his philoso- coaCh at Rice University. He
stsrting point for next season . phy and discipline installed. was athletic director at'North
"When I came in at
"It's difficult for a coach to Carolina from 1969-75 and
mldseason I had to work take over as a head coaCh bead coach at the University
quickly to try to tum things once the season is well under of Cincinnati in 1967-li8. He
aroWJd. It was prpbably the way. He can't do his real job previously was an assistant
biggest challenge of my unless he starts from the at Oklahoma and KentuCky.
After graduating from
career. My new contract is beginning."
Kentucky_
's Centre College,
also a Challenge, but it's the
Rice is only the third head
Little Alltype of situation I really like coaCh in the history of the where he
because now I have the time Bengals. Brown coached the American quarterback, Rice
and opportunity to plan each team from its 1968 start coaChed high school football
step of the way."
through 1975, when the club 11 years, wlnuing 101 games,
Rice, who imposed tough compiled its best ever record, losing only nine and tying
seven. At one point his high
conditioning .drills on his 11-.'l.
players the last half of this
Although Brown hand- school teams won 50 games in
year, also promised a "highly picked Jobnson to be his a row . ·

N BA SYIRdings
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel. GB
Wash
22 9 . 710
Ph i la
18 .9 .667 2
New Jrsey
17 12 .586 "'
New York
16 16 .500 61/:z
Boston
10 20 .333 ll'h
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
San Anton
16 14 .533
Houston
14 13 .519
liz

8

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 20,197B

Pacific Division .
· w. L. Pet.
Se! tlle
'20 f .690 '
Phoenix '1 I 20 12 .62S 111.1 ·

o•

San Di ego
ltf 20 ,.t12 IVJ
.
Tuesd1y'1 RHUits
New York IJQ, lndiWll 102
San Anton 113, Cleve 106
ChlcC!go 101, _Atlenta 95
Mi lw 128. seattle 99
Ph ila 124, San Diego 113
Wednesday's Gamtl
Indiana at Boston
Houston at New Jersey
New York at Atlanta
Chicl!lgo at .San Antonio
seattle at Kansas City
New Orleans ar, Denver
washington at Phoenix
Ph ila ~t Golde!'! State
Thursday's Games
Houston at Cleveland
Indiana· at Detroit

WINTERIZE

.,

MEIGS nR_ECENTER, INC.
John ·F. Fultz, Mgr.
Pomeroy,O.

992-2101

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CHARLESTON - With
three players hitting double
figures Tuesday night, Coach
Keith Carter's Kyger Creek
BGbcats tolled to their first
victory this season, 78-57 over
host Ellt Valley.
Von Taylor, 5-11 senior
forward, continued to he the
big sparkplug in the Bobcat
offense with 2T points on 11
baskets and five free throws!
Big Jon Thompson, 6-li
senior center, enjoyed his
best night this season wlth121
points and 14 rebounds. Gteg
Smith, junior guard, d~
' d
in 16 points. Kyger
eek
jumped into a 23-13 lead and
were ahead 36-32 at the ,half.
During the first period,
Taylor had 12 points Sj!oring
on a hot hand from tljt corner. Thompson had nlnf of his
21 points that stanza.
Kyger Creek bad 36 team
rebounds and hit 34 of 81 fro.m

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( olJpon r&gt;xpirf's IJf'rPmhl'r 31, IQ71J

SAVMIIIISTANl

..
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qut,ts

of -Taxation for 1978

In pursuance of Law, I, George M. Collins, Treasurer of Meigs Coun ty, Ohio, in compUanee with revised Code No. 323.08 of State of Ohio, do hereby give notice of the Ratos or Taxation for the Tax
Year of 1978. Rates expressed in dollars and eents on each Pne thousand dollars tax . valuation,

TOWNSHIPS
SCHOOL DISTRICTS

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AND CORPORATIONS

0

· u
BEDFORD
Meigs LocalS. D. ____ 4.30
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COLUI\ffiiA
Alexander S. D. -- ---- 4.30
LEBANON
Eastern Local S. D. ___ 4.30
Southern Local S. D. __ 4.30

1.70 24.00 .10 .40
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Rutland Village __ ____ 4.30 1.00 24.00
SALEM
Meigs LocalS. D. ____ _ 4.30 · 1.70 24.00
SALISBURY
Meigs LocalS. D. _____ 4.30 1.70 2400
Middleport Village __ .. .4.30 .20 24.00
Pomeroy Village ___ __ _ 4.30 .20 24.00
SCIPIO
Meigs Local S. D. ~--- 4.30 2.40 24.00
SUTTON
Southern Loca l S. D. __ 4.30 2.10 30.90
Racine Village __ __ ___ 4.30 .60 30.90
S'y racuse Village _____ 4.30
.60 30.90
SUTTON
Meigs LocalS. D. ____ _ 4.30 2.10 24.00

.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00
.10 .40

.10

..

. t

_5th &amp; Peart
PHEBE 'S STORE
Thursday, Dec. 21.1hrOUllh Dec. 23
Ne Gladly Accept Fed. ·Food Stamp•
Monday thru Friday
9:0CIIil7:00
~alurday 9:00-9:01'
CLOSED
~UN DAYS

Phebe, Betty, Rose Mary, Loyal
&amp; John wish you a Very Merry

Christmas. Be sure and register
for Free Groceries, Drawing
4 P.M. Saturday, December 23.

Each

Sliced

..
69
JOWL......~.~~:.~ 1 ..'

.20 1.00
.20 1.00
.20 LOO

1.00
6.20 1.00
5.80 1.00

32.80 .01391242
37.50 .02419414
37.10 .02376285

.10 .40 .10 .20 1.00

1.00

33.50 .01868874

1.00
10.10 1.00
5.30 1.00

40.10 .09556673
48.70 .09751088
43.90 .09807414

.10 .40
.10 .40
10 .40

.10
.10
.10

.20 1.00
.20 1.00
.20 1.00

.10 .40

.10

.20 1.00

S~OKED

PEARS
3 lb • • ,

PICNICS

7 oz.

00

•••••••••••••••••• _1.3. ~:~

85(
BISCUITS ... 39'

ONIONS

3 lb.

We Have the
· Fruit Needs
For
Christmas

39*

LB.

NOG....... :~~~.~!. 89'

5 P.M. SAT.,
DECEMBER 23RD

,
MARGMINE .........~~~-~~~~~-·49
Parkay

SIDE ......... ~: ·9r

0

Valley Bell

EGG

Fresh

. 1 lb.

R.C. COLA .....B.:-:-..~~.~~- SJ29 :~~~~t

..'·

; f .......

. .•.

BUY NOW

AND SAVEl

MUSHROOM
OR
TAN BARK
HICKIORY

$

•
O.NLY

PRiql) AT ONLY '12.95

STfAK
. $}31 \(

Lb ..

SHEET

No. 1

PRE-CUT STUDS
2"x4"x8'

ONLY

·,PARTICAL
-· BOARD
.

Complete :
·_ line· of. . ·
hunting
equiplTient .

1.00 33.20 .01576502

Always examine your tax receipt to see that it covers all your property. Office Hours 9:00 A.M.
to 4:00 P.M. daily except Saturday when office closes at Noon. Tax Books will open Deeember 20,
to January 20, 1979.

.

. Is p-~ased 'to ~niiounce !hal they now have an
' ekcluslve llne' ot hunting and tlshlng BELT
BUCKLES. The .famous "~a!n Tr"". group.
, THESE ' ''ARE '. NOT .. ORDINARY BELT
. BUCKLES. they aro made ot pure Zinc and uch
mount i! 24 Kl.goldoverlay, hand painted to give
ucJ1 one Its own personality ..Thay are durable
· bucklu with brass tlnlshes which gives II Its
unusua 1 luster comtNrtd to lhe average lead
·· bu.ckle. This buckle Is hand antiqued and hand ·
burnished lo bring o.ul _lis-luster In brass. Ilion
appllod fs -a huvy .coaling ot baked enamel to
insur-. lOng lasting . -•r and continued good
tookVThese ·make a buulltul and long lastl,lll
Chrlslmos gill..
·
. . .·

1.00 33.40 .01800563
5.50 1.00 37.60 .02700915

Real Estate taxes which liave not been paid at the close of each collection carry a penalty of ten
· per cent. Taxes may be paid at the offic e of the county treasurer or by maiL P·l ease bring your ·
last tax receipt ilnd if you pay by mail be sure to locate your property by taxing district and en-.
close stamped self addressed envelope.

EDWARD'S GUN SHOP --.

19~

41.60 .08997838

32.80 .01391242

Red Oelicious
'

40.20 .21375707

1.00

THE INN PLACE
APPLES

32.80 .01391230
40.80 .0880507.6

1.00

.10 .4 0 .10
.10 .40 .10
.10 .40 .10

.20

MEIGS INN

YOOOms~.:~ooz. . . _
..•50;.
________
Y
I ~

Lutz

R~tes

WEDS., THURS., FRI.
&amp; SAT. NIGHTS AT THE

Mr. Grocer1 Each coupon entitles your
customer to soc oil towards the pur·
chase of Sllvari n Coffee. For each cou·
pon

basketball game - 31,6113 _ stars - forwards Earvin
turned out at Pontiac, Mich ., Johnson and Gregory Keiser
to watch as the Spartans had - for what he called
to shake a tenacious llearcat lethargic play .
defense to win.
"I came very close to
" We were not quick jerking all five kids out and
tonight , we're just not pulling five new ooes in ,"
sharp," said MIChigan State Heathcote said of his starting
CoaCh Jud Heathcote. "We squad.
have had one good game of
Cincinnati, 2-3, built a 31-24
basketball In the last five halftime lead on the strength
games. We're too good a of their stern zone defense
team to be playing the way which forc ed numerous ,
we have been."
· Spartan turnovers. With 9:42
Heathcote was forced in the left to play in the game,
first' half to bench .his two Michigan State finally pulled
ahead once and for aU on
hack-to-back field goals by
Jotmson and Mike BrkoviCh.
Led by Keiser 's six points,
Mjchigan State, 4-1, then
.
.
scored 12 straight points in
the last siX minutes to Ice the
victory . Keiser and Ron
Charles each scored 12 points
while Brkovich and Jay
Vincent chipped in 10 apiece.
Pat Cummings had 26 points
for Cincinnati.
"I felt we had a really good
Chance to win · the game,"
Bob Lutz, most successful said Bearcat coach Ed
footbaU coaCh in the 53 years Badger. "Our guys were
history of the Southeastern almost afraid we were going
Ohio Athletic League, an- to win it."
AI Bowling Green, senior
nounced his resignation at
Duane
Gray hit. a 22-foot
Ironton Tuesday according to
jump
shot
a 1. the buzzer to
a story which appeared in
give
the
Falcons
their win
Ieday's Huntington Heraldover
Defiance.
Dispatch. ·
'
The Falcons who led by as
Lutz compiled an overall
much
as 12 points with nine
62-9 record at Ironton during
minutes
to go fought off a late
the past seven years. His
Fighting Tiger teams com- Yellow Jacket rally for the
piled a fantastic 39-2-0 win. Buckets by Larry Flynn
the Door for 42 percent. Smith SEOAL mark, losing only to and Jir'n Arnzen pulled
ha'd flve assists. Pacin~ Elk GaUipolls, 18-14, in 1976 and Defiance to within two with 41
seconds left.
Valley's attack was ho.l · 20-14 to Logan in 1977.
shooting Mike Tucci with 29
Ironton established an aUpoints. Mike White dumped in 'time league winning streak
11. Elk Valley sank 24 of 67 under Lutz, picking up 34
attempts for 36 percent
triumphs in a row from 1971
In the reserve contest, . through 1976 before losing to
1fubbard's Green~oilseCoach Gary Minton's Little Gallipolis two years ago.
Syracuse , 0 .
Bobcats posted an easy 58-18
The Huntington paper 992 -5776
win. Ed Moore l~d the way added:
Potted Poinsettas
with 15 p&lt;lints.
"It's true, " Lutz said last
$1.00 to $6.50
Kyger Creek 1-4 travels to night :· His letter
of
Hanging Poinsettias
Zane Trace Friday night
resign~tion reaChed the desk
Tubs, JO..plus blooms
Box Score
of Ironton school. imperin$10 .00
.
momiml:
tendent
yesterday
Foliage
Plants ·
Kyger Creek (78)
3" to 10" soc to $5.00
Gilmore1 -1·3; Taylor 11 ·5-27; He told members of the
Thompson 10·1-21; Smith B-0· footbaU team of his decision
16; Springer 3-1-7; Misner 1-1- before . their first cl:iss. HANGING ·BASKETS 4" lo
3; Porter 0-1-1. Totals 34-10- yesterday.
10
78.
"
'1.25 to 15.00
&lt;~I'v.e been here seven
Elk Valley (571 - White 4·
3-11 ; Tucci 12-5-29; Conner 4- years and I'd like to move
0-8; Chandler 1'0-2 ; Evans 3- along," -said Lutz, who has
0-6 and Curtis 0-1- L Totals 24- expl0 reiJ chances in the past
9·57.
to leave. In 1974 he was one of
By· Quarters:
,
Kyger Creek 23 15 19 21 - 78 the top·. candidates for · the
Elk Valley
13 19 10 15-57 head coach's position at
Massillon, Ohio.
"I just don't know exactly
what direction I'm going in .
I'm just playing it by ear," he
said after being asked if he
would hke to coach above the
high school leveL
Lutz, self-characterized
"conservative" coach, came
to Ironton High School
in
1972.
His
teams,
recognized as well
coached
and
hard.ffitters by other coaches in
the so·utheast Ohio Athletic
League, never lost more than
two games in a season. The
1978 squad was undefeated,
finishipg 9-G.
Ironton teams won four
SEOAL championships outright and shared the title
twice. Ironton was second in
1977. Duiing his stint, Lutz
coaChed 41 SEOAL games
and went home a winner 39
times.
Lutz rated his 1972, which
went 11-1 and wa• runner-up
in the state playoffs as
probably the best overall that
he coaChed. The 1978 team
was the best offensively, he
. added.
:'I : wanted to tell .my
. cOaches· and players first ," .
· Lutz said of his early meeting
yesterday .In the · scho!ll's
·auditorium. " Anytime a
.person leaves . a good
situation and program, it's
difficult to move,' ' said. Lutz,
whose emotions never
seemed to break through .his
Stoic expression:
·
0

I .

coach

McDougal from New Haven .

tough."
OSU junior guard Kelvin
Ransey, who missed three
free throw attempts after the
Buckeyes had grabbed the
lead, took game-high scoring
honors with 24, while
sophomore center Herb
Williams Chipped in with 20.
"There can't be two better
players In the country than
Williams and Ransey ," said
Washington State Coach
George Raveling. "Our idea
was to stop the other players
because Williams and
Ransey can't beat you by
· themselves.''
And that strategy wocked
as six other Buckeyes
Cllllbined foc only 23 points,
with forward Jim Smith's 7
markers topping the list.
Perry Kelly added 19 points
for the Cougars and Donald
Collins, who tallied 8 points in
the flnal four . minutes,
Chipped in with 14.
Elaewhere Tuesday night,
Michigan State came from
behind to down Cincinnati 6352 and Bowling Green edged
Defiance 85-83.
The second largest crowd
ever to watch a college

-

.

concerns

..

· UDited PresaiD&amp;eptlooal
"Impatient" Ia a !'!d Ohio
State Coach Eldon ~fUller has
used frequently th~season to
describe the perf~e of
his young BuckeyH aquad and TUesday nigJt was no
exception.
,/
''When we had 1he lead, we ·
got impatient and(u-led to win
it too quickly," ~ld Miller in
assessing the Buqkeyes' 7~7
loss to unbeaten/Washington
St~e. " But yo~ teams will
do.&gt;that and asi1Blong as we
pl~y hard; I C!llll't ask for
anYthing moce ••
~e visiting ~ugars, now
7-G, led most of the way
except mldwa through the
sebond half w en Buckeyes
grabbed a 57-64 advantage .
But James l)onaldson, a 7-2
28Q-pound center
who
pulliped in 20 points on the
night, hit two free throws to
M Washln~on State ahead
to stay at 64!Q9 with 5:05 left
In the contest.
'~WashinQton Stale is the
best &amp;earn we've played thiS
year," saidIMiller. '"They are
much impa;c?ved over last
year. I thopgnt they showed a
lot :of poise wl)en things got

Bobcats cop
first victo.r y

Regular Tread

Defense

·

'

'"

Pirates bombard HTHS
CoaCh Ted Leheiv's North 52-17lead at the half and 79-.'ll
Gallia Pirates pulled out all lead going into the final Jim Barnes, 18 and Tim
McComas, 17.
stops Tuesday night enroute stanza.
Mike Webb led Hannan
to a very lopsided, 105-36
Coach· · Don Saunders'
SV AC victory over visiting Wildcats scored just five Trace with 12 points. Paul
Shaffer, sen.ior forward, who
Haman Trace.
points in the fourth period
The big margin of victory while North GaUia got 26 has been the team's leading
, scorer was held to eight
resembled two games played points.
points.
by the Pirates during the
Pacing the Pirates were
North GaUia sank 47 of 83
1971-72 campaign against Stacey Winston with 23
floor
attempts and grabbed 50
Southwestern.
points; Sam Smith had 20; rebounds with Winston
North Gallia jumped into a
getting 12.
34).10 lead at the end of the
The Little Bucs won the
first period. After that, it was
reserve contest, 60-33. North
a question of what the score
Gallia is 2-2 this seaaon ·while
would be. The Pirates held a
Haman Trace js 0-5.
The Pirates will play Ji&gt;ortsmouth Notre Dame in a
make-up game Dec. 30.
Haman Trace will host
Southwestern Dec. 28.
Box Score
Hannan Trace (36)
The Ohio Valley Christian
3-2-8; Campbell 2-1·5;
School Defenders won their Shaffer
Webb 4-4-12; Pack 0-0-0;
second game in as many Beaver 2·0-4; Hineman 1·0-2;
outings last Friday night Hite 1·0-2 and Jones 0·1·1.
• · Fishing Tackle
against . Gallia Christian Totals 14·8-36.
and Rods
North Gallla (105)-Smllh
SchooL
and Reels
10-0-20 ; Winston 11 ·1-23;
The Defenders opened the McComas 8-1·17 ; Peck 3-0-6;
• Guns and
game with a quick outburst Little 4-0-8; Glassburn 3-0-6;
Reloading
on offense to establish a 12-2 Barnes 6-6-18; Stumbo 1-0·2
Lewis 2-1-5. Totals ·48-9•Ball Gloves
first quarter lead. As the and
105.
' 'Camping
secop d quarter got un•
By Quarters:
Equipment
10 7 14 5- 36
derway,their shooting turned HT
30 22 27 26--105
• •Archery
cold and the turnovers NG
started to mount up.
• Indoor Games
Aggressive defense staked
•·We
have Gih
SP.orts TranSictlons
them to a 16-4 halftime lead.
By Umted Press International
Certificates
Mondly
The cold shooting continued
FOOl
Dill
into the second half with Ohio
New York Giants Fired
601 Main St.
Valley maintaining a 12 point Head coach John McVay and
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
Andy Robustel1i said he would
lead into the fourth quarter. resign
as director of operations
At this time the . Defenders when "new coech is named .
New England Suspended
cleared their bench. GaUia Head
Coach Chuck Fairbanks
Christian School outscored and named Ron Erhardt as
coordinator and Hank
the Ohio VaUey reserves 12to offensive
-"j~f.li~m Ct •rthouse
Bullough as defensive coor I
in
the
last
stanza
to
make
a
dinator
.
·
PHONE
Hockey
game
of
it
at
the
end.
675-2988
(NHLJ - Announced
Ohio Valley was led in Bi Buffalo
lly Inglis will serve as coach
Open )unoay ,. p .m .·Dp .m .
scoring by Terry VanMeter, for the rest of the season.
· Monday thru Saturday
New York Rangers CNHL ) John VanMeter, and Jotm Called
9;~ . ,..._. ap.m. .
up · defenseman Dan
Elardo.
Clark and left wing . Mike

MUler calls Bucks 'impatient' in loss

Los Ang
\ 20 13 .606 2 •
Portland
, 16 14 .533 ~~~~ \
Golden St.
16 15 .516 5 ·~

Meigs Tire Center
Still
• Is Studding Tires
• Has :Recapped
Tires. Both
Rough-and

In
other
games,
Washington &amp; Lee edged
Muskingum 56-55 and
Pikeville (Ky.) bested Rio
Grande 97-80.

.

.59
EACH

�6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Dec. ~. 1978

Mr. and Mrs. fohn Pape entertains with
Mr. HtHl Mrs .•hunt•:-; PrtjM.'.

Syntt·u s t.·,
t•ntt•rt:lim•d
n•ltttivcs and frit•ml'i with H
Chrlstmcts dimwr ptu1.y a1
tht.•ir htHne.

DuvHf

Wt~ Ji nt.•r,

mu l 'Mrs. Charl ~s Muf.{rttgc,

Shawn 1ctnd

Mi&lt;·kt.•y cmd Todd, · Racine ;

Shww. mul Mr. :md Mr!-i. Tfm
Wttgm·r· und TinimY, Watt.•rfnr·d: Mr. and Mr~ . Everett.

sor1 .. F.rk. Mr. and

Cf,Jristmas tree ..

lighting held

CHRISTMAS GIVING-Providing·Christmas ~ifts for veterans has long been a project
of the American Legion Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, Middleport. This year each of
the 12 veterans at the Arcadia Nursing Home at Coolville will receive a gift as will the 26
veterans at ti)e Athens Mental Health Center. A bushel of oranges was also taken to Ar·
cadia, and two bushel were taken to the Guiding Hand School for the Mentally Retarded.
Gifts fo•· the residents of the infinnary and the Gallia County Children's Home will also be
deliv.ered this week. Fruit will also be taken to these two places. r.frs. Albert Roush, left, a
past president of the Auxiliary, and her daughter-in-law, Lisa Roush, are pictured with
some of the Christm. 1lems.

MAKE VISIT

phrey, Gifts were pre~ted
to ead! resident at the home.
Also a fruit basket. Attending
besides the above named ·
were Mrs. Mamie Buckley,
Mrs. May Hwnphrey, Mrs.
Connie Rucker, Mrs. Vema
Rose, Mrs Dolly Reed, Mrs.
Marlene Putman, Mrs Violet
Satte.;field, Mrs. Sue Reed,
Angle Reed, and Mrs. Lillian
Pickens.

REEDSVILLE PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs Roger Chaney
attended the J.C . Penny
Christmas Party held at the
Y.M.C.A. at Parkersburg,
va. Sunday evening.
Mrs. Stevee Cowdery and
sons of Chillicothe spenta few
days with Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Brown and Da'l'id.
David who attends Ohio State
UniversitY. is spending his
holiday vacation at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Sams recently at their
new home at Weston, W.Va.
Julia Whitehead, Michael
Smith and Mike Hall all
students at Ohio Univer~ty,
Athens are spendig the
holiday break with their
parents Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Mr . • and r.trs.
Grant Smith, and Mr. and
Mrs.' Charles Hill.
Mr. and Mrs Milton Tuttle
of Texas Rd. visited wlth
Mrs. Helen Archer Saturday.

Santa at
Legion

Mu~rage \

Jr.,

Tyson and

and Amy,
Mrs.
and Matt, LOJ'UI(Il'"" ;
and Mrs.
. Alan and Usa.

· ~Q.

I
I
I.·I
I
I
I G
~-

~Ct.t

.
PROVIDES
THE TRAINING YOU NEED
F.OR THE BUSINESS WoRL.D

.IL'
.,;
"•

·.·
1.
I..,.
1
I
I
""
r;::
f •

~·

~ ;

.

. 'i ~.:

. ,.
'.
. ...'
~

.

MOnths
Not Years Priep•r• You
To Etrnl

Annual · Christmas tree
Santa will be at the
lighting at the Belleville Ainerican Legion hall in Mid·
&lt;Deport' Sunday from 5 to 7
Locks and Dam •Park was · p.m. to distribute treats to the
held . Thursday evening was children.
sponored by the Riverview
Graden Club. · Santa
Friday evening the legion·
presented treats to ap· niaires
of Feeney-Bennett
proximately 150 children. Post 128 and the Auxiliary
Mrs.
Donald
Putman will meet at 6 p.m. fur a
president of the garden club,
supper. The junior
vielcomed all who attended, potluck
and senior auxiliary ·
and thanked all who had members will have a gift ex·
helped this annual affair a ohange and the evening will
success in the community. be spent sacking candy for
The Rev . Elden Blake had tbe
Invocation and Mrs. Ernest Santa's treat.
Whitehead
led
the
Santa will also visit the
congregation in group singing Meigs County Infirmary with
of Christmas songs. Mrs. a treat and a dollar for each
Gene Young, vice president,
resident, along with li bushel
turned the ll~ts on the of fruit and candy for the ·
Christmas tree. Hugh Martin, holidays. The Auxiliary will ·
Fire Chief for Oliver also provide a bushel of
Township! F.ire Dept. drove oranges and there will be a
the fire truck to deliver Santa gift from that group for each
to the tree Ughing.
man and woman there.

f,

;~'

'.
..' '
~

.

.

.

Grand Opening Sale was such a ''Smash Hit" were holding it over 1More

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

' .'

.' .' .

,.M,. INQUIRE NCM: . ~r E~:~'"' aasses
CALLa (614) 446-t367
NOW EN,R OLLING
rOR NEW TERM
' onel tJ months CorHr ' Pr01r1m1 ond 11
month1 A11ociotl D.grH In Speclollaod
IUIIMSI Pr09r1m1.

Jr. Accounting

.Business Administration
E •ecutive Secretary
Secretary

Gener11 Offi.ce

100 Columbus 'Road
Athens, Ohio
Telephone .

ALLIPOLIS
IUSlNESS
(OLLEGE

I

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

..

~.t

._;&amp;._,~ · GBC

. · q ~ The.Delly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.. Wednesday, Dec. 20,1978

.....,

___ ....

r_.lf&lt;'&lt;', Cleveland; Mr. and

M r~ .

Kirk, ·Mr. and · Mrs 1 . Charles

Mr. ·and. Mrs. David Reaver Travis, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
and Abram, New Matamoris; JOhn Hill, Racine ; Mr. and
M·rs. Unda Turley and 'son, Mrs. Robert. Wood, charlie

A buffet &lt;Iinne•· was served M1K Randy Williams, Kathy
and later Santa arriv"l. At- and Re&lt;:ky, l.,ngsville; Mr.
tending were Mrs. · Heiun
Railey; Racil1&lt;!; Mr. and.Mrs.
Willard Wagner, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wagner and

The Reedsville U1 •. ,. '
Methodist Women made a
Christmas visit to the county
infirmary.
A candlelight
program entitled "Jesus The
Light of The World" was led
by Mrs. Sandy Cowdery,
devotional leader. Readings
and singing of Christmas
carols were by all. The
program dosed with prayer
led by Mrs. . Vivian Hum·

..,.,

P.O. . . . 7&lt;ff

Touch-Down
Storm Windows

AODR !ISS~---..---t

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This unit combines ventilation and Insulation. In seconds,

you can convert It from a ventilating screened window to
an Insulating storm window. All panels remove for easy
cleaning. Available in all standard stock sizes. No . 13040

w.

r-;:: . ~)a.
'

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~

. ..

r----:':'~..,..--::-....,.---r-----~. """':2 ,.(.(_. ~:; ~-}. x:::, ....:.-.~
· ~.· r.o....C-~...
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-~

-";":'f: '
~
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~:- -.

. · '

J":-

\,'~

- -

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~jfr 5~

codes do not apply. Build utility
shelves ... pet house ... etc. Actual

89'.

size 1'/z" x 3 1f:~". Bl , 96992,
Lowe's Low Price

I' ..

1

Dale Bunyan "2X4" Studs
Ideal for those weekend do-lt. hourself projects, where building

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\

£, ~.-::-,..,.

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lnch,·:~ ~~~nch x 8 Ft.

PARTICLE BOARD SHELVING
These are blem ish.free, sturdy boards that
nail, saw, and paint well. Use wherever

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2 00

Lowe's low price • ,

PIECE

.

Yard and Garden

· .and~aping Timben
These versatile landscaping t imbers ha ve many uses
around the home or commercial buildings. They 're
treated to resist rot , decay; and insects, yet with no
creosote smell . They measure 8ft . long .. . 5 inches wide .. .
and J¥8 inch thick . Use them as walkway borders .. .
planter enclosures ... terracing . No. 05202

'349

"LAST
It's the week before Christmas, how long can you
wait? To buy all of your gifts and not come home
late! Right now before Christmas throughout our
fine stores, the she.lves still are bulging with gift
items galore!
·

•

.t.
FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM •••••••••• ~;}~~.s1.29
6-8 lb. average

FRENCH CITY SMOKED CALA HAMS•••• ~~~89'
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD. ................1~}1.09
BROUGHTON 2% GALlON MILK
Broughton 8 oz .

t

CHIP 'N DIP. .............. ~~~.?~.. 49'
2 lb. Kraft Ve lveeta

CHEESE SPREAD ........... ~-~~ •.12.49

CAii'FORNIA caERYch 59~

wiNGaPoTAm~

SPONSORS .

.. )f.

Fabric Shop
Pomeroy Ben Fr•klln
Nelson's Drug St"'o.
K&amp;C Jewelers .
·
· crow's Family .Retiaurant ·
G&amp;J Auto Porto
StiHters
Chopman Shoe•

. GET FREE t1CKETS
.Af GOLD STAR StoRES

.

Now York Clollling House

$1.39

2 LB. BANQUET FRIED CHICKEN DINNER .......... !2.69
12 oz. Baker's

CHOCOLATE FLAVORED CHIPS........... }1.25
17 oz. Del Monte

FRUIT COCKTAIL. ......................... 2fS1.09

1978
GOLD STAR
CHRISTMAS
· •GIVE-AWAY.

30 .Gal. Electric
Water Heater
97
.

Meigs Inn
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mal:'guerite't Shots
Goesslers Jewelry
Elberlelds
Powoll's Super Vatu
Swisher &amp; Lohst Pharmacy
Landmark.
Froncls ·Florist
Simons Pick-A- Pair
Excelsior 011 Co.
Pomeroy Natlonol Bank
Hortloy'l Shoos
Kiddie Shoppe
Elliott Appliance II
Pomeroy Pulry Shop

No rnore chilly . showers with
quick-recovery heat elements. T
&amp; P valve. No. 58810
4 ft. x 8 ft. x 5/32" Thick
Autumn Oak Paneling

4 r ~ ll While Cloud

TOILET TISSUE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99c
pink or green

lO

oz. Folger's

INSTANT COFFEE.....................~ •• 1:~ .. '3.98
101h oz. Hi lion

OYSTER STEW.......................~ ••••• 2fS1.29

' .

. •if

..
..

ATHENS. OHIO

Instead of pa inting or papering your
walls again, give them an al l·new
look with Autumn Oak paneling . lt's
an oak print design simulated. on
wood composition board . #13867

Lowe' s Low Price

... · . · ·. '·· *.

.•

..

'79

1
GET YOUR FREE TICKETS NOW
AT GOLD .STAR STORES. FINALWILL BE HElD
.SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23. nCKETS ARE FREE, NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY AND YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

Moores Store
Krogors

'

CONTRIBUTORS

•349 .
Panel

~a

-

~

'JIIIIIIIIIIIf
.

11::1

'

~"

All Cast Iron
Frankiln Fireplace
Combines the cheeriness of a
fireplace with the practicality of a
stove. With doors open, It's a cozy
fire. W~h doors closed. It radiates

heat. #37250

·

15858

5

100 N. COWMBUS ROAD

6' X 6'8,.
Insulating Sli.ding Patio Door ·

ATHENS, OHIO

'129"

Lowe's Low
- Price .

PHONE 594-2244

Double·paned safety glass seals out cold
weather and lets the view come through! With
thumb latch . No. 13017.

29 oz.

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ..... ~ ...................... 49'
26 oz. Campbell'$

TOMATO SOUP....................~ .. ~ ••• ~.~ ... . 49'

Athens COunty ~vlngs
~~IOuir'• Marine Sileo &amp;
&amp; Loon .
. Slrvlco
. Pom:aroy Malar Co. .
WaHar Grue..r
Ktnglbury ·Homo Salol
Ewt-· Funerol · Hom• · Kylo Allen
•,
Don Mullen
.
THiord RHIIY
J&amp;R Sport Shop
Reutar
Br01a Olllo Valley Llundry ·
lnsuronce
Smith Nal10n Malon
Royol Crewn Cole
v. D. Edward•
Dale C. Wamer Ina.
t:IIJio Valley Plumblfll
Cleland RH?.ndt
Davis lnouranCI
Karr &amp; Van
·
Carttr Plumbing
Farmer• link
Jones loy1

Athens Store Open:' Monday thru Thursday 7: 30 to 5:30. Friday 7:30
to 8:00 and Saturday 8:00 to 4:00. 100 Columbus Road, Athens, Ohio
594-2244.
Belpre Store o,ieii: Monday thru Thursday 7:30 to 5:30. Friday 7:30
to7:00and Saturday7:30to2:00. Putnam Howe Drive. Belpre, Ohio
423-9533.

..

�-. ~

·~

1-'1'111 Dilly Seatlnel, MlddleJI()rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec . 20, 1978 ·

Mrs. and Mrs. Reibel celebrate anniversary
The 85th wedding anniver·
sary &lt;:J Mr. am! Mrs. Henry
Reibel was ob8erved Sunday
will\ an open house in the
Riverboat Room of the Meigs

Office of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Co.,
Ptmeroy.
A Christmas theme was

·Carried out for t he obSer·

REMINGTON
CHAIN SAW
CHRI .T

into Christmas Here
GREAT
· IN
KIDS
CLOTHES
BRANDS
WE
CAN
DEPEND
ON

1o:FF
~

SLANT NEEDLE
AND

TOUCH
TRONIC
MACHINE

THE FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd. Pomero-..:,

•

o.

Hours:
9:30 to 5: 00

Mon . thru .Sat.
9: 30 to 8: 00

~
KIDDIE SHOPPE

tht· tlct·ur:r-

Uoutonnicn.•. Doris Ha wk
i'CJ..!:i!'itercd
the
guests.

Ntuncruus gifts. cards and
nnwcrs were prcsentt~d to t lw
h&lt;1nnrcd couple·.
Out-&lt;lf·town guests at the
rel'eption were Mr. and Mrs.

Br;H!ford ,
Mr. ;.md Mrs .
Crt•ntld Rradfurd and ~o n ,
f'ulurnhus: M.r. aiHI Mrs.

IInhart Swa rtz , /\!fred ; Mr .
and Ml"!&gt;:. J vor~' Shumway ,
SpringficJd : Mr . Hnd Mrs.
PrHJl Jnncs , F:lyria: Mr . and
Mrs. HaroJd Swartz, Wil rn -

ingtnn , W. Va .: Mrs. Ora Hig-

gws :1 1HI Mllurcd hall. P oi nt
P!4•rt sant : Mr. and Mrs.

f'n •dt•J'kk RPiiJl•l. rohunbus:

\.a llipnli s: CurCI Hceglc ,
lladne : Mrs. Nl'ttlc Hayes,
Middl&lt;-pm'l ; Mr.&lt;. Althea

Mi ss Kctlhy Ruscheny, Strong. Rillv and Oonlev and
.Ja!'kson; Stella Atki ns. daughlt-r, . Diane , D~nny
Mildred Alkire, H•rrison- .Saunders.
Mrs. Althea
vi ll u; Mr . a nd Mrs. Jim Shalo .Strong. Rilly and Donley , and
and dcmghtcr, Mrs . Rosali n da ughter, Diane . Danny
Lug-an, Mrs . Wand1::1 Heaver, Saunders. F.velyn l)evault.
Shelley Wri~ht , all of

CUT s25111
NOW

$19995

WITH

REG.
224.95

• CHA IN BRAKE
• AUTOMATIC OILING ·
ANTI-VIBRATION

1

MAYTAG HEAVY DUTY

~~149~
· 1

WHOLE 8·10-LB. AVG.

$219
Boneless
Smoked
Ham
.
.
.
.
.
.
lb.
PEAR SHAPED OR PULLMAN
3 $649
Country Club Canned Hams ~=~
AVG.
Whole Fresh Ham .. .. . . .. .......
· lb. $149
HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D .A. INSPECTED
c
Mixed Fryer Parts .............. ..
59

+

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK
'

diagonal

PORTABLE COLOR TV .

WERNER RADIO
N. 2nd Ave .

$

Butterball

·3 9

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, BONE IN

Loin Strip Steak.................... lb.
COUNTRY OVEN
Potato Chips ..... ... .................. ~ico;:

MUSTANG
'79
~\;

Grade A Large Eggs .............. Do• .
Kroger Sweet Potatoes ....... 2~::·
Kroger Cranberry Sauce .... 3 1l~~~· Sl
Kroger Applesauce ........... _. 4 ~~~!· SJ

GIFT
WRAPPING

14K white gold
Diamonds total'/2 ct.

Pillsbury Plus Cake Mix ....... 2 1 :~~·::·$1

DAN THOMPSON 1'

A Touch of Flash

,.--I --

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

~

tun!'

Hawaiian Punch Drinks ..... . 2~~~~· SJ

-

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

Time will tell you it's a TIMEX ®!

I

heritage house

VILLAGE PHARMACY

Goessler's Jewelry Store

New Haven , W.Va.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport, 0.

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, o.

461 S. Jrd Ave .

Middleport,

o.

Phone 992-2196

California
Navel

·lb
ca~

THIS CHRISTMAS
SHE'S "DREAMING OF

LANDMARK OFFERS THIS
DELUXE HOTPOI~T MICROWAVE
COOKS 3 WAYS INSTEAD OF ONE

3
SJ
Kroger Corn .............. ,._.. 1{~~~. Shorten1ng
• ... .. ..·.. .3 SJ&amp;9
criSCO
. .... .. ........ 6
$1
I roger GeIat 1n..
3
SJ
Kroger White Bread.. ..... r~~~VACPAK

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

'

.

LIMIT ONE CAN PLEASE

3·01.
Pkgs.

A WHITE SEWI ... G MACHINE;' . .

RCA

ROUND TOP 2D·OZ.

XL-100

2

~,__

19''

diagonal

r.;;;:••·RETURNABLE Rt'\OTI
DAD'S ROOT BEER ,

ROll
'50.00·
Discount

• Ughted side tuning di81 . • Full s i1ed BSA re cord
Ughted signal moter
changer with dust cover
• FM stereo indicator light • Head phone tacks
•Automatic-manual 8-tr•ck •Reasonable in 5ize

1

E. Main

Pomeroy, 0 .

SHOP EARL.Yi LAYAWAY!

VALUE PRICED
· AT !JNLY

'149.00
INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELRY
· "Two in One Store"
N 106 N. 2nd Ave . . .

"II'" So Easy

To

sew On.

A WHITE'"

o. ·

$388

Limited Quantity

Channel selector

Now Only

POMEROY LANDMARK

Model101

6205 - Deluxe AM-FMStereo Receiver with
S-track tape player built in record changer.

00 .

220 E. Main

992-7113

Diet Rite or
R.C. Cola

.•

tJ
" 'l

Each$

_____.._
99

Florida Tangerines ......EAcH
- - California Broccolf ...........

'j'

Pcimeroy·, o.

~

PoHed
PoinseHias

125 SIZE FLORID.O. TANGELOS OR 1tOSIZE

. .{
..

ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE II

-

\

Bunch

',,

ld~h~· a~ii;;;;~toes. J5~:9

~

•'

.
. ','..

131 SIZE , EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON RED
O.R GOLDEN

'

•
'

18 $1

~

Delicious Apples
. ................
.

Each

For

49 c

1

S1 79
14e

SAVE'
70(

$ 29

1-lb.
Pkg.

LIMIT 2 PKCS. WITH COUPON ~KD 57.50 ~DDITION~l PURCH~SE
(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM)
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMilY

i

COIPH ~~ Slf!OAY OIC. 17 Tlln SUIDAI DEC. 24. U71

IIIJICT IG II'PtiC.IIll lllrlllOCII lUll

VACPAK

Maxwell House
Coffee

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

a$
-lb.
Can

KROGER

LIMIT • PLEASE

FIRE-LITE

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

lb.

Boneless
Pot Roast ........... .. lb. '

SWIFT'S PREMIUM GRADE
FROZEN 16-LBS. AND UP

Middleport, 0.

.YOUR BEST DIAMOND
BUYS ARE HERE

Gwaltney
Sliced Bacon

Smoked Ham ~~--­
Portions

19" Quasar.

Register For
Free Gi ft ·
Certificate
To Be Given
Away Weekly!

850.00 set

•n&lt;i Mrs. W. I..

Taylor, Covingtorr. Va .

. Rutland. Ohio
SEMI -IONELESS

Give him the
TIMEX®of his life!

5

""" Mr

! Bob Hoef lich )
109 High St.
Pomeroy

RUTlAND FURNITURE'

1~ · 17-ll .

POMEROY, 0 .

The Photo Place

MAYTAG BIG LOAD DRYERS

Young Turkeys

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

Kl'llnedy,

• 26%, more ca ~acity th an previous models • Exclusive
Stream-of-Heat " drying • Mul~ -o ycfe selection • Fast.
energy-effiC:ie:nt operation • DUra -Cushion"' drum finish

5-QUART CROCKER COOKER-fRYER

in dishwasher

Ja ck

Clwster : E r mH Bradford,
Marysville, Ma•·y Rowles,
F.ulH Odegard , Oavid and
NOrrmr Goodwin, Pomeroy ,

; Dependable heavy duty construction built to last lon!l"r
end need fewer repairs • Uses less hot water than any .
other like size top loading washer • Long life quad coat
• steel cabinet • Sell-cleaning washbasket

Quasar

• Aslow cooker - a regular cooker
- 8 deep fryer
• Crockery vessel plus low heat
settings for versatility
• Removable crock can be washed

Mr~ .

(llld

Call us lor

your appointment.

FROM YOUR FRIENDLY ·KROGER STORE

WASHE~S

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FROZEN
10·1A·LB. AVG.

Starting
As Low
As

Wilkesville. Others prrscn·
~ifts to llw co up !~ hut
wwhlc tu a ltt•nd \\'ere Mr.

t ing

'

The perfeCt gift '
M~ytag dependability?

'+

GIVE HER THE GIFT
THAT BEST SAYS
"I LOVE YOU •.."

992-2960

Mctkulm
Marysvilll•;

..

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

l nd St.
POMERO Y, O.

Friday

111

U(Ins. Mrs. Rt'ibcl wnrc a cnrsagl' :md hL•r husband. a

'"

MODERN SUPPLY
VISA'

mints and nuLc.; . Poinsettia~

wc.•rt' featm·t·tl

We're sti ll ta king
seniGr class po rh'a its.
Trad itiona l
an d
sce nic setti ng s .

MAYIAG

s/11&gt;

SINGER

vance which WHS hosted bv
Mr. and Mrs. Reilx•l's smi.
Donley, and his wtfe, Betty.
and their daughter, Mrs.
Althea Strong, and the grandchildren.
The four tier·ed cake was
decnrl:lted In red and white.
and was served with punch,

YES II

1

e:
I

~-··
SAVE II
$)80

I
I

'--"'I

49!
I
I
I

LIMIT ONE caN WITH COUPON AND 57.50 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
OF
(EXCLUDING THIS ITEM )
12

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FA Mit Y
11a IIINI DIC. !1. lt!l
SUfi I LDCil lUES

••
.

I
I

1
1

�r-.........-,

-· -~--

CHRISTMAS AT THE CHILDREN'S HOME - Shown
are the lfo childr en who are residents of the Gallia-Meigs

None of the residents of the
Home, with the exception of
the Reynolds' two children,
are under five year!Hll-age,
since small children go to
foster homes in the county (of
which, Ms. Starcher notes,
there are too few in the area.)
Ail the inhabitants of the
Home at this time are hetween the ages of 12 and 17.
"We're just like a big
family," laughed Charles
Reynolds. "Sure, we have our
'ups and downs' like any
superv tSlon of Teresa other family does, but,
Reynolds, matron, and her basically, we aU get along
husband , Charles Reynolds, well . My girls consider these
Superintendent , who reside kids as they would brothers
WEDNESDAY
on the premises with their and sisters."
MEIGS- GALI.JA- MASON
" They function really Well Life
two children, Cheryl and
Underwriters
together," broke in Mrs. Association Wednesday at
Vonda.
"This provides a family Reynolds, proudly. "They noon at Holiday Inn,
ntmosphere for the children stick up for each other and Gallipolis. Representative of
to model ," says Beth Star- work together as a group." Huntington Trust Bank,
From the Reynolds' con- Columbus, guest speaker.
cher, Director of Children's
Services in Gallia . County. versation, it seems many of Board of directors will meet
" We try to establish thls as the public don't realize that at 11: I~ a.m.
'home' in the children's the Home covers both the
MEIGS GIRLS Athletic
Gallia and the Meigs areas. Boosters meeting, 7 p.m.
minds.' '
The Home shelters children At this time, three of the 16 Wednesday at high school; aU
which the court s deem children are from Meigs.
parents invited.
·
"One thing I'd like to point
" unruly," those who do not
TITLE I parent - teacher
get along well at home, out while I have the chance," meeting 2:30 p .m. Wedp hysically and-or stated Ms. Starcher, "is that nesday
at
Salisbury
emotionally abused children, we're not getting a new Elementary School for
runaways, orphans, and Children's Home. Several parents and interested inthose who are habitually people have approached me dividuals who want to find out
and asked about this. The more about Title I reading
tr uant .
program.
THURSDAY .
CHRISTMAS program at
Chester Church of the
Nazarene . 7:30 p.'m: Thursday ; public invited.
. FIRST CHURCH of God,
Syracuse,
Christmas
program, 7:30 · p.m: Thursday ; public invited.
MAGNOI.JA CLUB annual
Christmas dinner and party
Thursday 6:30 p.m . at Meigs
Inn .
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 Thursday 6:30p.m.
at
Middleport
United
Presbyterian Church.
FRIDAY
TilE CHESTER PTO will
present
a
Christmas
assembly
at
Chester
Elementary School Friday at
12 : 15 p.m. Parents and
friends are welcome.
RUTLAND
FIRE
Department Ladies Auxiliary
GUEST SPEAKERS - The Middleport United
party , 6: 30 p.m . Friday;
Pentecostal Church recently ,had as guests for their
potluck diliner and $3 gift
Sunday morning worship service, the Rev. and Mrs.
exchange.
Donald Howard, pastor of the First Apostolic Church in

------··--I
1
1 Soct•al 1
I
I Cale
· ndar·,
1

f

Fun With Food

I

By Charlene Hoeflich

I
l So •a1
Cl
I
1I Calendar

·.

model cars, games, basketAM ERICAN LEGION AND
balls, softballs, crafts of all Auxilia ry, both jw1ior and
kinds, pool sticks, race cars senior, of Feeney-Bennett .
with tracks, stuffed animals, Post 128 potluck dinner, i;
night gowns, ·robes, and p.m. at the Middleport ha ll.
baseball shoes.
Auxiliary members will have ·
"They atso love parties," a gift exchange. Candy will
smiled Mrs. Reynolds. "I've be s11cked lor the Santa treat.
never seen kids love pizza
parties as much as ours do."
It is possible to give parties
for the children by making
PLAN YULE PROGRAM
arrangements with Mr. a nd
Mercerville Baptist Church
Mrs. Reynolds.
will conduct a Christmas
"They're better of if they program on Friday, Dec. 22,
keep busy ," said Ms. Starbeginning at 7:30 p.m. The
cher. "It keeps their minds public is invited .
off their troubles."
The children by name are
CORRECTION
Rachel, Rose, Evelyn, Kristi,
Elizabeth, Mike w:, Mike P .,
d
stanley, Kevin, Steve, Doug,
Fourtee n grandchil reo
Robert, Russell, James, and not four grandchildren
survive
Naomi
Ruth
Bobby, and Tony . .
.
"Yes, we certainly ·have a Williams, whose death notiee
holiselul," laughed Reynolds ..·· appeared. in · : Monday's
Tribtine.
·

!·
~

M .---

z:
~
W

I

i

I·.
W

~

··Arll i\! hvpl"c.. wili1
•IH' l! dpho( ll• odwm M,,., ·

992-3662
!1-8 M/F 12-6

tS" ~~
\l)\)\O

~ -· .r.rf..
~9. ~\lV~9.
\~~ .

;::uS

;}: :

Am'....,11 0 '"'1 "''et'/

Recetves
•

Aonatz"on

Ui

Amy O'Neil received $100
from members of the Modern
Woodmen of America , Camp
10000 for her father, Jimmy
M. O'Neil, Route 1, Coolville,
a cancer patient. Prior to his
illness he was a maintenance
'employee at Grand Central
Mali and a substitute bus
driver for the Federal Hocking Local School , Stewart.

COMMUNION SERVICE
The Christmas communion
services of the Syracuse First
United Presbyterian Church
will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday.
Those for the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church will be at 10 :30 a.m .
Sunday. The Rev. Mr. Conley
will conduct the serVices.

·

THE CHRISTMAS TURKEY
WINNING NUMBER
.

I

'

IS

F616418
PLEASE COME 10 STORE WITH
WINNING STUB
AND
TAKE HOME A TURKEY

I

"Y()ur Chri,strnas Gift
·. Headqruirters" ·

• sewell. . . . .
·. •eHart Sc:~ffner-Mari

ll

w

~ll

...

...''

eWembley

'

e Levis For Feet
SPORT COATS BYz

I

~

i
I

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

·W
W

~w

• Sewell

OUTERWEAR BY:
e McGregor .

i5QGi;

--

.

'

----

tllcn walked uut.

SKATING PARTY
Th e Pomeroy United
Methodist youth will have a
skating party from 7 to 9 p.m.
Thu"day night at lhe Skatea-Way Rink un Route 7.
On Saturday evening a
sil ent communi on will be held
at the church from 2 to 8 p.m.
with the public being invited .

'

CHRISTMAS
PROGRAM
There will be a Christmas
program at the Hemlock
Grove Church, Sunday,
Dec. 24, at 9:30 a .m. The
!public is invited.

It

~

•••

• Harness House
• Levis .

..

• Samsoniti

JEANS
BY: ..
,_

SLACKS BY:

.

eHagpr
• Dickie
• Hubbard

·~

•Lee

OUR HOLIDAY SHOPPERS SPECIAL, ,THE 2-PIECE DINNER

e.Leas

BOX INCLUDES MASHED POTATOES AND GRAVY, COLE

.·.• Arrow . ------

. • Manhattan .
W • Van Heusen

SLAW AND A DINNER ROLL

..

ONLY $1.45

eMI·~
. · :,.
_ 1P

WEffiAKE

PAJAMASiYz

· .e Manhattan ·

..'

.

~mber

24 ·

·

Take some free advice: Shoplifting pays ... dearly. The fact is
shoplifting is a serious crime that is treated as..such. This
kind of portrait might be free, but it will still cost you
..
a.permanent blot on your record ... possibly a term
in jail ... and that's nothing to smile about!

The Daily Sentinel

. .

N~ Y~k Clothing =

REGULAR PRICE 11.70

·Good Through Sunday,

.

•,

LET US HELP COOK DURING THE BUSY HOLIDAY SEASON,
AND SAVE YOU MONEY AT THE SAME TIME. SAVE 25' ON ·

.• li.I.S.
SPORT- SHIRTS

•Arrow

126 E. .MAIN ST.

Holiday Shoppers Special

BELTS BY1

et...i

eDob~ . ·

992 -2126
· Pom e r oy
Op en Evenings Til H: OO p . m.

Tookie's Fashions in New Haven has
that special gift for that special
someone for Xmas. Tookie's
Fashions are open on Friday nights ·
til 7:30 for you working gals.
·

• Studio One

HATS BYz
"Your Chevy Dealer'' .. ·

Tookies Fashions

• Puritan

W DRESS· SHIRTS IIIYz
Of qther New Chevy
Cars &amp; Trucks

~......:....___)

• Jantzen

LUGGAG~BY:
.

M

Good Inventory

just sitling and wailing praying someone would
cancel and I could get a
standby seat."
After some hitchhiking and

SWEATERS BY:

~ .eRolf

~

W
W

DEAR HELEN :
People living in our area have fonned a "Neighborhood
Watch" which was origina lly to keep down burglaries and
Hllwr cr imes.
llul the leade" a re trying to turn us into racists . They want
us to pledge we WIIIIJever sel1 our homes to "LUtdesirables,"
and ~ou can guel:is what color they mean! J stood up in a
1nectmg ami told them what I think about this illegal pressure

Our Two-Piece Dinner-Box!

·•

RAINWEAR. BY:
' e London Fog

~

w
~

first ; Pat Thoma, second,
and Jo Wiles, third .
Atlending were Mrs. Faye
Pratt, Mrs. Berniee Riffle,
Mrs. Addalou Lewis, Mrs .
Cora Beegle, Mrs. Wilma
Terrell, Miss Patty Parker,
Mrs . Margaret Parker
Jackie Brickles, Mrs. Ruth
Moore, Mrs. Alice Thompson ,
Mrs. Wiles , Mrs. Marjorie
Walburn, Mrs. Mitchell and
Laura, and Mrs . Thoma .

a~.,

;· .

w • Lakeland
w • r~eld ·&amp; stream
w • London Fog

W

~

Annual Christmas party of
the Winding Trail Garden
Club was held at the home of
Mrs. Dollie Hayes. A potluck
dinner was served with Mrs.
Hayes giving the blessing as
the members joined in a
friendship circle.
Gift' were exchanged
around a lighted tree.
Membe" wore homemade
corsage, which were judged
w1th Mary Mitchell receiving

:lfa.H

·.• Palm. Beach •

Carsan
~ •eJohn.ny
Palm Beach
ll

w

Winding Trail Garden
Club held annual dinner

uHI/Ie~
Friday, December 22
and
Monday, December 25
for
Christmas Day ·

• JOhnny carson .,

w
w

ll

bookings have ·increased · The National Weather
from 10 to 20 ...........,! and ' Service says travelers will
likewise ar~ .~-irlghts. · not have to w91TY about
Some of the privileged wm major storms anywhere in
be spending Christmas In the the nation but It has not yet
Canibean. Brltlah West India !!sued a Christmas forecast.
Airlines reports allll of Its
Motorists can expect busy
flights were booked aoUd and highways, will find gasoline

~~,. ~

SUITS BY:

ll

CHRISTMAS

•

than a few smde r emarks and snubs from the ~&gt;Watchers . "
Til en I sta rted rece iving magazines I didn't order- everything
!rum " E bony" t u " Oui." As my husband is a minister this last
on e is quite cmbarrHssing.
'
I 've written to the publishers telling t hem someone else must
h~ v e sent orde1·s in om· name as a hoax, but I keep right getting
In lis- and magazines The charges now add up to nearly $100
a nd the third notices are pretty strong.
'
How can we slop .this when my lette rs evidently are eaten by
a eumputer ? ~ MRS . REV. T.R.O .
DEAR MRS . 0 .:
Your letters will eventua lly reach the right departments.
Meanwhile, If b1lls aren't paid, computers will soon eliminate
your name from s ubscription lists.
· To protect your good credit ralin~, write a letter explaining
the hoa x to Special Serv1ces, Publishers Clearing House , 382
Channel Drive, Port Washington, N. Y. 11050. And keep a caroon copy. This company is pl edged to help with troubles like
yours. - H.

.

W

· For

•

;: :
y Helen Botteh:

Since several other famili es sided with me, we got no more

I SHOES
BY:
Florsheim

Arrived
Just lp Time ·

•

B

·

to he more expensive than
last year and may encounter
shortages of certain brands ,
especially unleaded grades.
The American Automobile
Association said the average
ll'ice of gasoline was 67.8
cents a gallon for regular, an
increase of 4.7 cents from last
year, imd 71.9 cents for
unleaded , up 5.3 cents from
last year.
The crowded holiday highways atso will be dangerous.
The National Safety .Council
predicts 400 to 500 people will
be killed in traffic accidents
during the Chrlstmas holiday
weekend .

~ MH~ uoullun. fJ/.u.

frustration/' she said. "I was

W e RegaL .

-··

;::

.

four more were added.
. Airlines In Colorado are
gearing for the annual crush
of people wanllng to spend
Christmas on the slopes ;
Trallways Inc. Bus Service in
. Denver alao is expanding Its
operation
with
a

bi;·~:~~/sr":::r:~~~J!·. carriers
~~s report
~··adva!tce
= · =~t~~·~~::s::e~!io~
resorts.

::!

:;:; real crush will start tOOay,"
said Gil Perlroth,
a
spokesman in New York for
· Eastern Airlines.
·· ·
:;:; Reduced
lares
have
resu)ted
in
the
busiest
year
IS FOOTBALL HOMOSEXUAL?
ever
for
airlineS.
Advanced
DEAR HELEN :
. A California psychologist said in a newspaper interview that bookingshavebeencaningin
lor mooths and airlines have
Ius resear ch show' football is linked to homosexuality.
resorted to adding more
He pomted out that the game allows men to grab and tackle
carh other, ~ lso to hug and pat fannies . Words associated with flights to handle the crush.
Going over the hill and
footba ll have' gay connotations, he believes : touchdown jock
through
the woods to
scure, end zone, huddl e, pass, punt...
'
•
grandmother's house isn't
. If m y hus band suspects he is watching a homosexual
&lt;hsplay , maybe I can get him unglued from the 1V set on what it used to be.
For instance, iast year ·
wc.,kends. Do you think there's a nything to this theory• Sh~ron
McCarty 'thought sbe
F'OOTBAJ.lED OUT ·
had
planned
the ideal ChristDEA RF .O.:
mas
vacation:
a little loafing,
Theori es, sme11ries. Some people would label badminton a
some skiing and then a
'"" ga me because the bird is call ed ... uh well, forget it.- H.
traditional Christmas with
her parents in Houston.
DEA R HELF.N :
However, on Dec. 23, tbe
I 1~ent to visit the daughte r of a friend who i' allending colday
she was to go to Houston,
lege mmy c1ty and living in an apa rtment . In her closet 1 saw
she had lost her
she
realized
a ma n's shirt and pants, and there were birth control pills in
airline
ticket
and
the batlll'oom medicine cabinet, plus wme other pills that look
coincidentally the airline had
"'" Jli Cious. Maybe they're uppers ur downers• She al so had
lost track of her reservation.
wme m l he refrigerator and she 's onl y 19!
She spent Christnlas Eve in
Do I have a moral obligation lo tell my friend what her
the
lobby of Stapleton Airport
daught er IS up to?- ALARMED
in
Denver,
sitting with ber
IJEAT\ ALARME D:
skis and a bag full of
You have a moral obligation not to snoop in other people 's presents.
·
clutlles closet ~. medicine eabi ncts and refrigerators. For
was
tbe
ultmate
"
That
shame ! - H.

NEW YORK.
CLOTHING. HOUSE
.

w

~

~w~~;
,!t
lh~ekl
. , ••q .
.
Ul
~
L--···---~~------~Q~~~~-~;
.

.: Helen Help

:::.

.

~ BILLFOLOS BY:

ANNOUNCES

-

FROM .

Christmas crunch begins
today.
The travel jam will . be
evident first in airports and
bus stations , which soon will

be stuffed tighter than a rich a bus ride, Ms. McCarty
kid 's stocking, and by.the end arr.lved . ln. Houston late
of the week it will have Christmas Day much wiser.
spread to ·the nation's .. ~ year, American's prehighways mak.i ng holiday dieted pauenger load _ 811
trips the only thing that can percent of capacity and 490
::;::.:,:,:,:,:;:.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::·.: rival Christinas sbopjling as a flights added natlon'Wlde to
:,:,
·
·
:::: seasooal hassle.
·
~die It - Ia tYPical of the

.TIES BY:

· ·

jE. ..· ACE HARDWARE

~[
~
HARDWARE

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
Unlled Press lalernalloaal
U you hoped to avoid the
hordes in your holiday travel
too· late . The
you' re

tapes, cameras, jewelry, At hens.

~~~-~~~~~~~~--~~----~--------·

I .·

You may be 'crushed' for Christmas

I

Miamisb~rg .l'he Re v. Mr. 'HO)IIard·was,g'uest speaker for

the mormng·service.

11 - The Da ily Sent!!Jel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0.- Wednesdav. Dec. 20. 197ft

-.,...~

A17END PARTY
Mr . and Mrs . Harry Davis
were at Orient Saturday for a
pre-Chri~1.mas party with
Mrs . Davis' sister, Dorothy
Leifheit. They were joined
there by Mrs. Alma Johnson
and her grandson , Curt
Tryin g 11t Jca.st . uiJC new llit•d i·Jwrries a long with a Le.ifheh. Sunday dinner
n •&lt;•itxo shnuld IJe a p11 rt nf a ll tx•und of &lt;"hopped English guests of Mr. and Mrs. Davis
hollda v :-;t,•w;omi mH I here we Wrtlnuts or hickory nuts.
were Mr. ·and Mrs. Bob
Pour into a pan lined with Lehew, daughters, Charlotte
ha vt• · nne from Maxine
Gm•g le in. It's ca ll an waxed pa per. Maxine says and Robin, Colwnbus.
.. F.C1st cr " limf fur some that like fruit cake, the longer
·{ .s t ran ~-:e reason. but never· you keep it, the better it gets.
UMWA MEETING
,i. made a t Ea ster , just at
UMWA will meet Friday,
PREPARING oven foods
Christma~ .
The n•ei pe hetH been in seem simpler than on-the-top Dec. 22 at I p.m. at 674 Plum
Max ine's family for as long ones when guests arc on the St ., Middleport. Ail members
a:-; she l:CI Il remember ami scene. Being an avid reader are urged to attend.
cwr y year she pul l.&lt; it out ami of . recipe~ we came across
one lor sweet potatpes in apmakes up a bateh .
LEGION DANCE
We say d " batch" because ple sau ce which sounds .
Therewillbe'aNewYear's'
it is candy ami nut a luaf delicious and will probably
cake. Three pi eces made make .its way to our Eve dance Friday, Dec. 29 at
their way to our house from Chri stmas dinner table . the Racine American Legion
the GneKleins.
While trying a new dish on P081 from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. .
guests is never the recom- Music will be provided by
And the r ecipe:
Mix three cups of s ugar mended thing to do, we just Guy Thoma and the County
Ramblers. Tickets may be
with a c up an d one-half of might anyway.
Sweet potatoes and ap- , PRaUrcm~aesed.
·
at Star. Supply,
cream a nd one eup of Karu.
Boil ten minult!.s, stirTing cun - plesauce, )lie like, maybe not
stantiy. Check to be s ure that together, but you never know
a soft ball forms when some wdess you try . So join us in
PROGRAM SE'I
'
doing something different.
is dropped into cold water .
The recipe calls lor a one
The United Pentecostal '
Remove from the stove
beat with an el ectric mixer pound can of sweet potatoes, Church will present a Christ- .
fur 10 minutes , then add one well drained along with onO: mas program Friday, Dec. 22
teas poon of vanilla , two rings fourth teaspoon · of salt, an at 7:30p.m. The youth of the
Children's Home, with members of the Alpha Mu Beta
of ca ndi ed pinea pple, a nd eight ounce jar of applesauce, church will present the
sorority, Rio Grande College, who gave the children a
three or fou r ounces of can - one-fourth of a cup of brown program. The church is
'
party last Thursday night.
sugar , a tablespoon of butter, located on South Third Ave.,
and one-fourth teaspoon of . Ml«ldleport.
- - - - - - - - - groWld nutmeg.
·
The potatoes are to be plac- ·
REOPENED TODAY
edina shallow baking dish
TAIPEI, Taiwan (UP!) ~
and the salt is to. be sprinkled The American Embassy and
over them. Ti1en spoon !be con.s ulate reopened for
new home that is being built
applesauce over the potatoes, business today and about 100
donations ,"
said
Mrs .
on the road below us is by the
sprinkle with the brown Taiwanese lined up for visas
"
Once
in
Reynolds
sadly.
Mental Health Center and is
. -sugar, dot with butler, and to enter the United States
awhile, a family member
TIIURSDAY
for emotionally disturbed
sprinkle with nutmeg. Bake
will send a gift, but that's
MIDDLEPOR T CHILD . for 30 to 35 minutes in a 350 before diplomatic ties. bechildren .' '
unusual. ·
tween the two are severed'
Conservation I..eQgue, 6 p.m . degree oven.
And' what about Christ- .
If anyone would like to Christmas party at the Meig'
next month.
mas?
donate a gift, or take a child Inn . Exchange of Christmas
" About the orily way these in lor a Christmas visit,
kids get any gifts is by contact Beth Starcher at ornaments. Gift wrappings to
be j udl(etl. Devotions by
Children's Services, or call Janet Duffy.
·
.....
the Home directly.
FRIDAY
Some of the items the
OHIO
ETA
PHI
children have reQuested from CHAPTER, Bela Sigma Phi
•
01' Saint Nick this year in- Soi'Ority, 7: 30 p.m . dinner
clude: sleeping bags, posters, pa rt y at the Sportsman INn,

Christmas at the Children 's H Ome
liY SALLYANNE HOLTZ
" There's plenty of room at
the inn " may seem like an
unusual way to begin a
Cbristmas story, but, in this
case, it would be inaccurate
l o start any otber way.
Gall i a-Meigs
T he
Cbildren's Home is located on
Stat e Route 160 near
Gallipolis and is, indeed,
" home" to the children - 11
boys and five girls - who live
there.
The Home is under the

...

.\

POMUtOY, 0.

'

''

."

�12 - The Daily Sentin~l . Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Dec. 20, 1978
NEW CHARGES
MANSFIELD, Ohio ( UP!)
- Richland County Slleriff ·
Thomas Weik el and four
current or former members
l :'1\\u n l ~ Ill 11uth •i'
of his department will be ari 'i!~h
\IMI
raigned Friday on additional
l dol~
I ·i11
l ~lil
,!1 \o i l '
charges of brutality and
I. !Ill
.lt\, 1~ ..
corruption.
Already having returned 32
l 'w •JJ l~t&gt;ld ~'ll' l tiH' 111111111HUII J;j
indictments with 62 counts in
wutth • ~ ~ n•u t ~ 1'~ '1 " 'ull l t&gt;t'l' 1lav .
Ad• l'UI IIllllg t•IIH'r t iL.illll " 11" 1'1'1111\'l'
its investigation of the
tl.t~' tt'ill U..· • h. u )!t~l .tl tlw I ol;ty
s heriff's deparment ; a
. l . tk
special county grand jury
IWIIlt'llltil'\, l;ud uf Thank.:- .tnd
Monday .came out with new
Otmuar~ . ,;· t't'll l ~ l"'r " rurl ~.tl\1
indiCtments.
llillJII U\ Itll f'a,.lt lll ot!h iUl tt'
Weike r this · ·time was .
Mt•lwlt Urunt• :-;, rlt· ~ .md Ya1 t! ~.t it· .~
. c h ~rg~d ·. with .: ·felonious ~ -·;rt ~~ ,1( t '('Jl lt'iJ t&gt;ll[\ Wltll l&lt;i,.JI Wt\h
ut·rl\•t .!i t'\'11 1 drar).:t' ft•t ,uls t·.u r~· ·
assault anc( with two cciunts of.
u1~ nt•:t Ntur'tbt·r In r".n l' ,f Tho ~·n·
theft ill office; ·aUeging . he · lll
it•l .
stol.e a por.tabie . teleVision
Ptibl i:~ht,'l l't'Sl' l'\' l'!oi t h t• rt gi tl
from the evidenCe room al : ' ti•' •ftlt'
t•tJiLt•r't't'iL'\ ( &lt;l ll l pd ~ tll-ct ut•d ub·
the department aild a lliWti · jt•t:ljOJI,tl Tlk P t rbl r.o;l~ t will nul bt•
rt •,.ptHL~ Ilr]lo f111 1
11\Wl' tiUIII IIIII' 1111'\11 ·
tractor from t he county •
n •t·t m.-.crtr• •n
garage .
!'hum•99l-l15ti

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

WANT AD
CHARGES

Notice s
GU N ~ HOOl !-lor 11w G"r ' ( luh
~ v C' ry ~11n doy I pm
ln(tnry
I hC'I k(' (lUll " r- nly
GU N ~ H 00l Ro(IIIP Vol,,n tf'r r
l1 11' UC'p! ~ "" 'Y ~o turd ay b :10
pn1 or thf'll ht~ ll rl inrt In Bo&lt;.ho11
) O(tOr y I hoke• fJIIII~ ("lf'[y
HA I ( ~ Y ~
~IOH~
:r:11
N i'~&gt;d Avr Mrrtrll('r(1 rt Ohto
Wtll ht•r l n~r rl D&lt;'r :·) IC'I j(l n i
llA ( l N ~ (.'U N ( lui"! !T'I ('&lt;'tlll('] l&gt;N
'JH "/ :10 rrn Hf"&gt;rl1(11l n f ol
f1ct•r., [)u f'5 S'IO mu~ t h£&gt; pmrl
h0for(' Jon I
.

-

.

P e t s tor Sale
1-:I~INC. ~ tAll ~f'' "'j ' l~ Hoorrlr"CI
01•d Ql noll\11\Q nil hr"''rl:
(h('.,htH'

Ak.C

:If',! {l')~ )

kf' GI~T HO

0

Ho~f'r

med1caJ reasons.
SAVE•A.JOBPLAN

'

LIMA,Ohio(UPI)-Resta$3,000W'a'ngteurift toDelbnn
.eycl.\ylrwm
. ,·ast's

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Muntla\
Ntl\111 t tr l Satunl.t~
Ttu•stl.n
tln·uFltda•

I

~ p

tilt' tJ,t\

M

[)t.'(UJ(' j&gt;Ubitl'O I\I(Jfl
Sttwl.n

4 r M.

Fntl:ty aftt•ttll"'ll
Thursday Dec. 21

ASTRO·GRAPH

nld A r HCt • Clul ~ llll Cl\
(l tft S 1'/ 'l C'fl (nll l.IU] l"f'U.J
AKr R~ C. I ~ 1~R f[) r•Hn•oh•r&lt;&gt; ·
rlrHh " ht~nd p1rpp1 r&lt;'.
(o il
4"'') ~I I '/ nllf'r )prn

9~
,

~
-

,

\Yl 11ifl l1
Ul..:Jt.:JU
r'•)il - 11,1 1.

• _ _ _ ~W t d t

B

-~~ ane ~ o , uy _~

I:H t&gt;Pt'IO~.".

QUALITY (Q NUI110NW sns.cd
.. hoy Wrll riPit vf' l f.IC!f '001
BOOK COLU:C10RS H:l~i' to l'ni'
H"lo" "' o"d S&lt;hool hook'
Ah a g l o"~ ~1nd pott e1y

rr or!, 1 lnr~r P"'' d
or • 0" 7. 1') 'J)N:l

IU

oro0.,

~ulfVwL!JW\'UI

no

J&amp;L

HAMMOND&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
!NEW&amp; US EDt

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
9'12 3325
216 E. Second Street
BUSINESS BLDG- Main
St ree t location with 4
rooms and half ba1h up
$25 ,000.
PRIVATE YARD - 7 rDOIT)
frame , 1'12 baths, all city
utilities . 3 large bedrooms.
$15,000 .
J A PTS. - Income $265 a
monlh $25,000.
CITY LOCATION - All
utilities. Newly overhauled
inside and out. Bath and
gas furnace . $17,000.
COUNTRY HOME 4
bedrooms, ba lh, 10 rooms
and level · lot for 1he
children $27 ,500.
7 ROOMS - In lown. All
conven iences, bath, fur nace a nd large lot . $9,500.
OVER 4 ACRES- a room
country home with 3
bedrooms, ca rpeting and
nat. gas furnace. $280 a
year heal bill. $27 ,500.
MAKE YOUR DEDUC·
TIONS NOW BEFORE
THE NEW YEAR . BY
BUYING PROPERTY .
G. Bruce Teafor.d
Helen ls1eaford
Sue P. Murphy
Sue P. Murphy
Rea Iter Associates

Cellulosic (wood · fiberi
Thermal insulation .
Save 30 pet. to 50 pel.
on heating coSt
Experience and
fully insured
Free Est.
call9n2n2
11·3: t f!JO.,

PETE SIMPSON
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Plo.lt2·Zl14

CEU.ULOSE
INSULATION
'6.50 per bag

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
ReSidential and c;ommercial. Call tor estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day ,
anvtimt!'.
Phone 98S·3806
Jack Gtnther 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Servke
BoX 3

Chestc , Ohio
10·30·C

J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

'

PHONE 992-2772

H. L WRITESB.
ROOFING

J. R. Construction
Co.

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

Carpentry, Electrical,
Painting

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Construction
Maintenance
"GIVE US A TRY"

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 742-2029
11 16 c

~~~::~:·
Sweeps Gutld
Insured
Don't let a chimney f1re pu f
a damper on your life
Call .. .

ntE SWEEP
19th Century Service with

20th Century Know-How.
Specializing in
Wood stove , Oil Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone: 742-3110
Kim White, Proprietor

~

r

POMEROY
LANDMARK

he

~
"

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

•'

...

'·

'·'
o'
•

. ·'

.,

, lrllrut IDft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
t::J.l-9 ~ ~~ ® by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

EWOlT
APPLIANCE II

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one tetter to each square , to form
four ordmary words.

220 E, Main Street,
Pomeroy,O.
Call 992-7113
t-or Free Estimates

BORN LOS:-:R

1J.9·1 mo.

YJAL!Tts. l.llE'a. M'f'

~ SIIM»rrBII.t:!

WTT6R lD~A

I CAI-I'T .

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

/

)

AF~DA

I MAILIT?

l'T"TH-~-QU-~S-TI-0~---,.---

I I

~ ~~':.';, ,';'~~-·. '

oow 1~, 00 '1$

I []

AI-IV~~

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-OPEN AND SHU1

For The Best
Price In Town
See
·
Denver Kapple
At

THEY SORT 0'

THERE ,,,· WHERE

DROPPED OUT

ARE THE TREES
1HA1 WERE 00
THE 10P?

0' SIGHT--BUi t1 QW ?

ON LY NOW THERE l51'1 T AN'(

Yesterday's

CAVE .. ,SMART OPERATOHS,

Jumbles FLORA CROU P TIPTOE CORNEA
Answer What an aggress1ve businessman stou tly
pushed forward-HIS '·CORPORATION"

lromJI.Imble,clothlsnawspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J.Il7648 Include your
name, addr..a. zip code and malte checks payable to Newspaparbooks.

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

~.'t!Jtrr
by· THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEYOOP

Pomeroy, 0.
3·15·11C .

ACROSS
I Buddha's
mother
5 Freezing
11 James Bond's
school

GASOLINE ALLE Y

DRIVE A LimE
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

This is
a.qood

morninq, Wilmerr
Here's 4our Christmas
cardr

1dea ..

deliverinq
m4own
cards!
The
personal
touch!

All carpel inslolled with
paddln' at no chorge.
Expert 1nst1llation.

Rubber Back Carpet
As low As

DOWN
13 Tipster
1 Measurong
14 Tooth
device
substance
2 Expiate
9 Repeat
15 Put in a crate 3 Positovely! 10 Held up
17 Swim-suit
4 Theater
16 Thres~old
part
group
22 Comparative
Turmeric
5 stabilize ,
s uffix
19 Verbal
as prices
23- jour
~-~-=--'--;-~
suffix
6 type of type 24 Least
20 Secular
7 Give a!hount
21 African
whirl
25 Foolish
river
8 Casino
26 Wild pig
23 Morsel
·~~'tllj 24 Normand of
-'
the silents 1,--+- +--++-t+- 26 Studied,
with "up "
27 Czech river b--t-+-11 ,..., t u 28 Unending

9' and 12' Vinyl

throw

30 Struck,
old style
32 Word of
surrender
33 Cheapska~
36

ir:;~!~!!n

•

--~

'

•

'

TALKTO
,
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

..,•'

•

•

•
•,,

Expert use of signal
NORTH
• 96 2

• K 10 4
• J3
+ AQ964

WEST

EAST

• A 2
t A4 2

+A 7
• 8 7 53
• 10 976

+ QJI0 843

---·

+ K82
SOUTH

+K5
• QJ 9 6
t AKQ 5

+J

LO 3

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer : East
West North East South
Pass 1 NT
Pass 3 NT Pass Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

..

AND I TH OUGHT
"THAT ~MEN '1A
FEW WEEKS AGO
CONVINCED YOU
IHAT BI LL WAS

MAKES A
BED FOR

.

lead ba ck a red card and will
be a hero or a bum
If that red card is a dia mond East ts a bum . South
makes hls contract.
In expert circles East will
a lways be a hero because he
won't have any problem .
West will use a gadget
known as the suit preference
signal to tell him which red
suit to lead.
West will drop hos jac k of
spades on that second s pade
lea d - his highest card to
ca ll for a lead of the higher
SU it.

If West wanted a diamond
he would drop hi~ 10 of
spades . Since he could have
dropped the jack, h e would
be as kong for the lower suit.

Pa ss

Opening lead:

+Q

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :

WINNIE

•'·

_ _O
_s_wald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

• 75

juristneedtedl4f"t-t--t-t--f39 Lady
in 8 Down

'
'

BRIDGE

38 Siamese

call
34 Daughter
of Cadmus
35 Wireless
wizard
37 American

Buy where yOu can comt in

and see what vou'ngenlna
- Good seftctlonJ .;.. Fully
stocked.

742·1211

Wednesday, Uec. 20

r-F_R_A_N_K_&amp;_E_.R_N_IE_'------------------------------------------------------------~31Marching

•

Cioll74~·2211

2. 00-{)ne Life fo Live 6,13; 2:3D--Doclors 3,4, 15;
Guiding Light a, 10.
3:0G--Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Studio See 33.
3 · 3D-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Dick Cavett 20.
4:OG--M isler Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4;
Hollywood Squa r es 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends a; Sesame St. 20,33 ; Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4 3D- Bewitc hed 3, Gilligan's Is. 4,a ; Peftlcoal June·
tion 15.
5 .DO-Siar Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies S; Mister ·
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5: 3D-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son a; E lee, Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:0D-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Mime Dreaming of a While Christmas 33.
6:3G--NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News a,10; Over Easy 20,33.
7: 0D-Cross.WIIs 3; Fam ily Feud 8; PM Magazine 4;
Newlywed Game 6, 13; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Horsepens·40 20; Wild, Wild World ot
Animals 33.
7 .3D-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4!1'onker.6;
Waltons 8; 5100,000 Name Thet Tune 10; Nashville
On The Road 13; Dol ly 15; MacNeff .Lehrer Report
20,33
B:OD-Liffle Drummer Boy Book II 3,4,1 5; Mark &amp;
Mi ndy 6, 13; Wallons 10; Simple Gifts : Six Episodes
for Christ mas 20; Christmas Theme 33.
a :JG--Gift oflhe Magl3,4,15 ; Whal's Happening I 13;
Big Ear 6 ; Please Sland By a, Christmas Snows,
Christmas Winds 33.
9:0G--Barney Miller 6,13 ; Hawaii Flve·O a; Christmas
Heri1age 33; Oral Roberts 10; Duchess of Duke
Street 20.
9 .3D--Soap 6,13; 10: 0D-Davld Cassidy Man Un·
dercover 3,4,15; Family 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8,10;
News 20.
10 :30-Sing We Noel33 ; You Bet Your Life 20.
11 :DO--News M,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias
l'oga &amp; You 33.
11:3G--Johnny C•rson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie "Robin &amp; the 7
Hoods" 10.
12 ·3D--News a; 12 :40--SWAT 6,13; I:OD-Tomorrow
3,4; L SG-News 13.

28 Horseshoe

1~~)tl 29 Insect
)I
30 Last word of
"America
the
Beautiful"

sqi:y:P

Floor Covering In Stcq

40 Eastern
Christian
41 Man or
Pines, e.g.
42 Forte
43 Nobleman

"' .J'-"'- .. ""'\1--1~1J!'ml 12 Spin

CARPETING

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

I

EH~

MOORE'S

'4.88

D rI I )
(Answers tomorrow)

Junlble Book No 12, containing 110p1.1zzlea,ls avallabletor$175 postpaid

SAVE ON
- Busif!e~s_S(!rvice~ _ .
BRA DfORD . Aucl1oneer. Co mplete Service Phone 9.:1Y-'J 4f:!'l
or 4-49 2000 . Rocrne. Ohto. ( nil
Bradlord.
ELWOOD BOWERS WEI-'AIR
~wee p e rs toasters rrons. all
smal l appliances Lawn mower,
ne)' t to Slate Hrghwov Carage
an f! oute 7 Phone {614 ) 9853!t'J5
SfWI NG MA CHIN !: Hcro trs. ser
vrr e all rnok es 99111!::14 The
t-: ob rt c Sho p. Pom ero v
Author i1ed 'iinger Sol es and
Service We sharpen Scis sors
EX CAVA TIN C. , doze r loader and
ba,ck hoc work du mp trucks
and lo-boys lor htre . wtll hau l
lrll dt rl to sotl hmesfone and
grovel Col i Bob or Roger Jef .
lers , day phone 991."/089 , ni ght
phone 99'} 35'J5 or 991- 5232
EXCAVATING. dozer, back hoe
and ditcher. Charles H. Hoi·
lteld , Bock Hoe Servi ce.
Rutland, Ohio. PhonP '/4:J.JI008
WI Ll do roolmg. construclr on
plumbmg and heoting No job
too Iorge or too small . Phon e
74'J 2348.
HOWERY AND MAWTIN t:xcavoting
septic systems .
do1er backhoe. du mp truck .
lt mP.5 Ione, grovP.I. blacktop
paving , IlL 143 Phon e I (bl4 )
098 i'33 1

eoxe:Ft.

Print answer here:

WELL, THEY KNOCKED OFF
THE S ECR ET DOOR , ALL1 RIGHT ·

·....,--·---

- -- · - -- --

A DOEriHAT
50UNC'6 LIKE A

Now arrange the ctrcled loners to
form lhe surpnse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

LITTLE ORPHA N ANNIE

Charl ie's Angels 6,13; Movie " A Christmas to
Remember " a, 10; Greal Performances 33;
Prisoner 20.
IO :OD-Vegas 6,13; News 20; Simple Gifts: Six
Episodes for Chr lslmas 33.
10 ·3G--Turnabout 20.
11 :0D-News 3,4,6,a,1 0,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias.
Yoga a; You 33
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Woman 6, t3;
Gunsmoke a; ABC News 33.
12 :3!f-News 8; 12 :4D-SWAT 6,13; 1:1)()-Tomorrow
3,4; 1. SG-News 13.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11,1971
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:5G-PTL Club 13; 5:5SSunrlse Semester 10.
6 :0D-700Ciub6,a; PTL Club 15; 6:25-For You ... Biack
Woman 10.
6: 3D-Doctors on Call 4; 6 .45-Mornlng Report 3;
6:5o--Good Morn ing, West VIrginia 13
7:0D-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning Amerlr• 6,13; CBS
News 8, Jelsons 10; 7:15-Wealher 33.
7:3D--Schoolles 10; Studio See 33.
a OD-Capf . Kangaroo a,10; Sesame Sl . 33.
9·0D-9 ·0D-Merv Gritll n 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15;
Emergency One6 ; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game
10. .
9:3G--Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10
o
IO :OD-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10 :3G--Jeopardy 3,4,1 5; Andy Grlffllh 6; Price Is Right
s, 10, 120,000 Pyramid 13.
11 : oo-H igh Rollers 3,4,1 5; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 : 3D-Wheel of Fortune 3, IS; Family Feud 6, 13; News
4; LoveofLife8,10; SesameSt . 20; Nova33.
11 :55-C BS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :0G--Newscenter 3; Bob Braun 4; Young &amp; the
Restless 8; News 6,10; Midday Magazine 13;
America Alive 15.
12 :30--Ryan' s hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1:OD--Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6.13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10

BIBAR ,.

i&lt;e!W f\IS ~U 17F

Services Offered
· - - - -· WILL CAHt lor the elderly in ou1
horne Phone 997 .73 14.
WAHR WHL drrllrng . Will rom T
Gron l i' 41 2879
ROOM . BOARD and lou ndrey tn
pnvote home lor el derly lady
99i-'i4'12 .

- - -- --

J

.....I

il GANNIA I I I

Roofing, gutters, new and
repair.
Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling
tile
Free Estimate - all work
guaranteed
20 Vrs. Experience
Calk Tom Hoskins
949·2160
1J.2a.c

Ph. 992·284a

.,._, .,

"r;, - , - - - - - ,

You hold :
12-20-B
8 10 X

• QX X

By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Sontag
One letter simply stands for an other. In this sample A is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single tell ers.
South 's three-n otrump
apostrophes, t he length and formation of the words are all
contract
is a very normal
hmts. Each day the code let ters are differe nt.
one. He has a balanced 16
MAYBE I MISINT£RPR£TEP
CRYPTOQUOTES
poonts and North has a balTHAT 110 MEN'; MAW. WHEN I:&gt;ILL!S
anced 10 points to raose hom
PICTURE FELL OFF Tl-IE MAN TLE , FLCAWJBGW
three.
0 K T • J
M V to West
has a very normal
MAYP.;&gt;E HE WAS CALLI NG FOR
queen
of
spades opene r and
H~E.£~NTHEN I
FLCAWJBGW
OAJLKNJ
GTP
E C V W- East woll take hts ace a nd
return the suit.
~c-.,· VTJW .- XKNAWG
BGP
GXFKJJ
South will take the club
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: NOTHING IN UFE IS TO BE fin esse at trick three . East
FEARED. IT IS ONLY TO BE UNDERSTOOD - MME may win that firsl club or
MARIE CURIE
.
. hold off a nd win the second
one , but in either ca ~~&gt; h"' w ill
© UrT8 Kinr Fe1turee Syndicate, Inc.

t xx:xx

•xx xx

You are on lead against
three notrump reached on a
bidding sequence one-twothree in notrump. A Florida
reader asks what we lead.
We lead our lowest heart.
Partner has some cards . We
attack in the one suit where
we can help him.
!NF. WSPAPE R ENTERPRISE ASSN . J

!For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send 11 to. "Wsn at
Bridge . " c;ue of this newsp.per. P 0 Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York , N Y. 10019.)

BARNEY

.

BECKY LOU'S

15 IN STOCK

'' SUDDENLl( HE HEARD
THE SOUND 0~ SOMEONE
WALKING ON THE ROOF!
IT WAS A MAN IN A
l{ELLOW SLICKER AND
BIG RUBBER BOOTS! "

Largest Selection In The V•lley

)f

1.'--

TH EIJ MAY13E
'/O U'D LIKE A
L.ITTLE PRACTICE
FfR5T-PAINTIIJ6
YOUR OWN NAIL5
$HOCK IIJ G
PINI&lt; ,EH

Your HeadquarteiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

AHD LOOK UP

Pomero,

A [B

Racine, Ohio

Be~t;.

7&lt;Um

--

CAPTAI N EASY
HOL.D Tt-lE MIRROR A LITTL E
LISTE N,~/R! I 'M NO
Hili HER. EASY· SEL.LE !.,. MM,
i'&gt;LANKETY·BLAIJK
FilL! E ... AND NOW YOLJJ~C~A~ILI~I--i MANICURI$T--!
MY 1-JAILf; ~
WOULDN'T KNOW
NAil- POLI SH
FROM RU5T

Phone 949·2118
AHerS P.M.
11·26·1 mo.

11·3·1 mo.

·smiJUJs··

-

SALES REP.
FOR
SUN DINS HAMMOND
ORGANS

REMOVE'R!

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

-------~

WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 20, 1978
C 10- Bewllched 3; Gi lligan' s Is. 4; ,8; Petticoat
Junction 15.
l :llO-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbi llies a; Mlsler
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle , USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3D-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son a; Elec . Co 20,33; Odd
Couple 15.
6:1l0-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Studio See 33.
6:30-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett a.
Friends 6; CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20,33.
7:oo-cross·Wlts 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
1
6,13 ; Sha Net Na 8; News 10; Love, American Style
15; ; Big Green Magazi ne 33.
7.3D-Dolly 3; Dat ing Game 4; Match Game PM 6;
Price Is Right 8; The Judge 10; That's ·Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeil· Lehrer Reporl20,33 .
a:oo-Oick Clark's live Wednesday 3,4,15; Eight Is
Eoough 6,13; Jeffersons 8, 10; Oral Roberts 15;
Holiday Festival 20; Africans 33.
8:30-Good Times 8, 10.
9:1l0-Movle "lshl : The Last of Hi s Tribe" 3,4,15;

f'J')

Housing
Free Estimates
CH IP WOOD
Pole-s mo• STAMP COLt fCTO RS Olld D(la iN s
d1 ometer IU' on lorsest. ~ nd . . 11103 11.106. 'J Stomps l' Stomp
Phone 949-2862 ·
tfeadquarters
week has promp''"" ·ol~·r·
S1'J p-er· ton kundled slob. $'10
rnrnJ
1403 !' lo rnp 101 f'
or 949-2160: ·
. .
. :
~--_ . I."? .·. .
Oecember 21 1978 . . . .
per ton Oeltvered to: ·Qhto.
! 4'1 nss.
busmessmen . to. ~.~ · pledge T , . . .
'
. · ·
Pa llE-t Co . Rt ') Pbmeroy
11 ·F ·11'no .
mooey to save ·the job~ ··of- ' hts.comtng ye~ r you are ltkely.
4411064 •· ·..
.
:140o. fOR O MU&gt;IANG ·&lt; H4
' i.J · '. li . 'ff' ·. , ·. (l · ·10.. becp me. t("llerested' In· SeV· .
·
' .
mtlornntrC Prnlo n B CB bose
, .m!i ,po _ce . D . .r~.e-~ s . .'.~I) . · &amp;rlltl ~il4sua 1 proJec ts .'YoU have · -~~~ ~~l!. ~OMJ~ ~&lt;.W : ~or~~ 1 Pro.-· urill w1th mii .slo r1rl Old bu ll er
f1ref1gh~rs.
· , ·. · ·. . · ,· • ; lh.e ·potehtlal to deVelop theril
· c;lur rs. Top .rme tor .st onr;f•~'~9 . rh(Jfn · Dtal and !oe w ro brnc l
·Last .wt!E!k~ : Mayat - ~rrY . , i i."tto·s~? n"l!:'l~ing B&gt;&lt;tr~m'El l y SuC- · o;~w - ttn:b-er· Con .9~1 S%5 ~ir · :ot-W.n&lt;i mach.r n('- . Also fr ee
'pups to good hom e Coli
·Moyer . said that city_ ·.safetY . ce-~sfu ! a.nd l mpo~tant if'l your . · Ke-n t Han b.v J-446 ~? 70
forCeS would have 'ttQ'· be .,life · '
.'.
· . O t O I' Uf.INITUHl: · jcebo~&lt;e_s . b ro ss
9H542'Jl} ony tr rne
trirruned in order t0 balanCe SAGITTARIUS (Nov . . 23-Dec.
bed'. " ~" .bed ' desb . et&lt; .. c HUTLANU HAHUWARl Bn Mo ;,;
.
.,
· 21, Y-ou have a ~een aware ness · -complete houset"lolds Wrrfe
St 74') . 'n55 Wn hove to rnoke'I• mile off Rl. 7 by .pass on
MAIN LJ:~I;,U,.J
th e bu.dget m 1979.
· · lor lli11&gt;Qs !hal hap pe·n around
M·Iu M~ II er. Rt • Pom eo
r Yoc
room !o1 spr ing !llerchondb&lt;&gt; so
St . Rl. T24toward Rutlond,
lrw m, owner of tw 0 i_oca1 you today, . .You'll get. some
POMEROY, O.
co 199~ TtbO · ·
all stork rn sfore _10 per -cent
Q.
Burger King's, Friday made. ~ le .. er· ideas on how to apply OLI.) COINS pocket ;,.,otches
off Jh1 s means scll rng some
5 ACRES with very nice 3
Auto &amp; Truck
OUt a $3,000 check to furid a lh~sep l answhi C h ~th er ;;a ren ' t
clo$s nngs , w'eelrfing hands
merchandi se at c o~ !' ~o ge t
bedroom home. Large
police
officer
and
a U$ 1nQ . fmd out .more about
rf1omonds Gold or stiVe r Call
your ( hrt stmos gdts nn w Ope n
kitchen
and
dining
Repair
firefighter through JanUary yourself by , Se~dtng for your
l-l'ager.Wamsley . i'4'J 2331
It- ~ thr u Chr'islmos No por ~ inq
Fireplace Storms 2 car
·Also
Transmission
.
1979 copy of As tro-Graph Letproblems
garage . Owners have
and he began a campaign to ·lei. Mail 50 cent s for each and a WANT TO buy olct 4!) and "/It
Repair
moved . $32,000. Make offer .
:long , self-addressed , stamped. , 491
ph'onogroP.h
,re_cords. Co.ll
raise $12,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
Phone 992-5682
b~"/. 0 0 1" Cbn l ~;~c t '~odrn fu r
frame, excel lent neigh .
Monday
four
more . etlve tope to As tro-Grap h, P.O
SNOW
11 , 1ur e
4-:Jt.lt
borhood, 3 bedrooms, 1 1f~
businessmen pledg~d ·.ar:- . Box 489 , Rad to City StatiOn, CASH .~OR lui,J.. t or~ Wrec.ker
baths, N.G. forced air heat.
TIRE
SALE
additional
$1500.
.
·
N.Y.
10019.
Be
s
ure
lo
spec
tfy
1
· ·
•
•
btrth stgn .
·
sei' vtce f rye's. ~u tlo n d . Ohio
Ulili ly R. Asking $20,000.
1 411(181
.
IN THE COUNTRY CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191
Business Services
Several lots, 1 floor plan , 3
-----------:SNOW TIRES .
· . ·. .
. .
' there's· little . that' you can't ~f. PICl&lt;.·up ju lllk auto bodi ~!' buy ·
bedrooms, forced a ir heat,
. ing Junk cor !.. ,scrap iror' . bo!
. DNSALEAT
.T AW NOT
l! gure put loda y, whe.lher ·trs
BA
1HROOMS
ANU Ktlche ns
garden , barn, fruit trees .
,leri lls and . me t~ Is · Rider s
POMEROY LANDMARK
·
:·
. · understa nding people o r CQm-.
r e •n o d P I ~?d re rom1 c t1l e plum$17' 700.
SERVICE STATION
CINCINNATI(UPI ).-:-~•IY prehending a complicated s itu- • Sql11pge · SH · 424 , Pomeroy
hlnq , corpe nlry ond general
70 ACRE 5 - Newer home,
·99'1-54.66 ' .. .
.
eontrac ~
Wlib · ·- pollee~ ·atlon· You should have.• ~
rnoi n t c noC~ c e
13 years 'ex·
barn, corn cr ib, storage
firefighters ·..: ·an.d .. ' riorr." chance lo prove il.
.
. :.io' fo: '50 "ACRt: s ·a~ ~~~d rn ttie
re rrcnce 9&lt;12 -Jbl:JS .
bldg . Overlooks the river .
~~ I C' ;~ Or 1-lu tlo nd townsh1ps
u.nlfor.ined· · city w.orkers AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
..Landmark
$33,500.
PU lLIN S fXCAVATINC.. COmplete
Coli alter 6pm "/ol1-10LH
NEW A FRAME - Close
expife s.iturday • and even The way you hand le people
~c r v r ce Phone 99'J '/4"18.
·-~ck W. Corsey, Mgr.
1n, 1112 baths, 3 bedrooms,
liK E to buy 4 cyl Jeep
though nOagreements on new ~~~f~~:;~h~~~g~~~ ~~~ew~~~ WOULD
AUTOMOBILI:
INSUilANCI: bee n
wood
burner,
rec
.
room
,
. Pllllile99H181
rna lor, 304-Tl3 5btl8
_.
,_
cancell ed? los t your opP.mtors
·contracts are "'!I""' ted by cutly ope ning up will be voluble
heal pump, storage bldg .
l1c£&gt;nse? Phone QII1.J'1 -43
WAN TfD TO buy old 1ewel rv
Ulll lly R. 2112 acres. S37,500.
then , no strtkes
are around you
Coli qrn.5'lb'J or wnte Ko v
WHEN ' S THE BEST TIME
anticipated.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201
HONAKI:R
S CH and elerlronir
(e(l l 8"1 S 'lnd Middleport . USI:O 90 000 BTU gun ty pe oil fu t
TO SELL? Any time is the
Pqu rpmen! Rt :1:3 50b 'Jnd St. ,
Negotiator s for the city and Dare oo be . dilfe ren l Put that
noce
.
90
000
BTU
l
P
~o
s
floor
OH
right time if you can get the
Ma !&gt;o n. WV 15160
the unions that represent the super 1magt nat1oo of yo urs to
lurnoce with controls JO gal
pri(;e your house deserves.
••
ed led
work today . Great lh tng s can
fob•ne l Plertnc wafer hea ler
M
&amp; M Home lrn provernenf se rvCALL TODAY AND LET
~.uree groups sch u. meet- be accompli shed through creYard Sale
Carl
B
orn
hrll
Tuppe-rs
Plo
1n'
&gt;
tnq
Gollrpolrs and oreo ' We
US
SELL
YOUR
- - - - -- - -- --- ·rngs throughout this week , alive melhods.
Phone b bi' :.1400
:.pef rOI11e m ymy l an d
PROPERTY.
It-:
YOU
ho11e
o
servt
fe
to
otter.
but Deputy City Managaer ARIES !March 21-Aprll191 Pro;ol umrn um s1 dmg. t-:or free
Realtors
wont to buy or sell somethu1g PtA HAUl i: RS C8 So l e~ fqutp
Martin Walsh said Monday eels involvtng the social as·
f"sti malf'S co li 61 4-36"/ 0118 .
Henry
E.
Cleland
Jr.
oe l o o ~tn g lor work
or
men! r1ow 0 11 sole all in stock
1the city doesn't expect any
Go llipolts
pec ~ s of. your l1fe are the o ~es
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
wherever
you II get results
Rodros ond accessories th tou gh
settlements this week.
you If w1sh to spend your t1me
Associates
foster wrth a ~ c nt1n e l Want Ad
Chrr stmos . Open e'very day ex
on today As a result , th ese
Kathy Cleland
Colt&lt;NJI -21Sb
cep t Sunday and Monr!oy
d
, ' Talks are expecte
to lhtngs wtll be done besl.
Leona Cleland .
EVt? n r ng~
by oppo1nlrnenl
continue next week . Although TAURUS (April 20-May 201 You
992 ·2259, 992·619 1, 9'12 ·256a
f-F o r tlo nci , Ohr o
Ph one
three unions are cou ld meet some unus ual p eo~
H-43 -'lOM .
1 811
Auto Sales
Real Estate for Sale
negotiating separately with pi e today who' ll s larl you think- ·- - - - -- -·
1:.
0
•
10 IQi'S ~chult1 mobile hC'I tn£&gt;
the city, the key Issue in all ing abouo a venlure lhat could 1'-17/ OAT ~UN PICK UP wllh inHOMt: SITES lor sa le I acre a nd
Two bedroom, two lull bath s
'.
three talks Is the same_ the be qutle profslable . Fqllo w
S 1&lt;00 .
sulo tc ct 1opper
up Mtddl epor 1 ncor Ru tlor1d.
E• lro nrre on msrcte. Call
•
.
through on yo ur thoughts.
q111 SOl::I'J
Cal l t/9'1 !4Hl .
66/ .:J901 0 1 ~eP on HI "/South
REAl TO
· amount of pay ~aoses GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Work
Tupper s Plo ns
L_:=._____::;.::.:;;:::;;_
on a ho use project with the 1475 DATSUN PIC KUP Good ron·
' "employees are to rece1ve.
drtron Good ttres irrors OINING TABU four r h o u ~ h ·
enttre fam ily today You 'll fmd
W:l5-:J{/i'll
c£&gt;11 e"' cnn diti on Sl 00 Co li . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the more you give of yourself
4"'J /5.:10
OWNER MUST SELL- The owner of this
.
the.greater th e return to you
14"/.:1 M !J~ T ANG; 11 .:1 cyl . 4 speed
AGENT· RETIRES :·.... , .. C(iNCER (June 21-July..231.You . ""'toile• 497·1bus
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
· DENvER · ( UP}~ '·. ...i .Ted .see clearly how lo wrn: ·mp$1 .' . · .... ;
.. :···. ,
R · k
i ,.. ·
· . · aryt htng y.ou undertake toda,y : .- '--';- .__. _,_ _ ~ -.---'- :..· ___
home tor a low. low price ol 520,000. There
.. o~ a c ' · spec a • . agent-tn,- ·. tnto ·a 16rtu nate. gaintur si lua- · . ·· ... ·. For Rent ·
ar e 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
·charge of the .Denver FBI !son. Thts could even s pill over · ·. ·- ~ ~·c ~ · - -~~ · - - - - living room w -tireplace. formal dining, eat.offiee', said Mopday
was · into yow social world .
COUNTRY. MOBilf · Horne Park
0
A
C
Rou te 33 . north of Pomeroy .
in kitchen, bath w -shower, garage &amp; a king
22
2
Chris1mas Hudquarlers .
·retiting after 28 years with LE (July 3- ug. ) e roatn
Losge lots Col0.91-7474.
sized yard . Good loca.tion on Mill St. Call the
the agency rather ·tban be things you .want wi!l .come to
tor all your G.E. T.V.'s &amp;
transferred to Cin .
t'
yo u today Wllh s urprt stng e ase, . 3 AND .:1 f.IM fu rn1shed and un- Hotpoint Applionces.
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
fur ni shed op ts . Phon e
.,
cmna 1.
and under some unu s ual ctr446-3643.
'QY'
l
5434
·~ . . Rosac~ . whose retirement cums lances . Keep all chan nels
~. SALE PRICES
IS effective Feh. 23, has open
TWO Bt OHOOM, l..r tchen furn ished opl Ca ll belore f:! om
headed the Denver FBI office VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Go
~'~\ JACK W.
qn t1SB
since Augustl975. Previously along wtlh spur·of-lhe·momenl
1
" CARSEY
he was in charge of the lhtngs loday You wsll makelhe f.I~NHR S A ~S I ~T AN C I: for Senior
I
Mgr.
.
trans1t10ns eas 1ly and mtght
Cr
frzen
s
Y
ou
mov.
be
able
to
Okl ahom~ C1ty bure~u and even expenence a pleasant
Phone
992·1181
ltvr Hl ou1 apartment lor less
worked m FBI offiCeS in encoun ter
than $50 Vil lage Mo11o r Aport
JUST LISTED - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Gocd
Chicago, New York and LIBRA (Sepo. 23-0co. 291 Your
mcnts 94'1 -TIB"/
1112 story house , mostly carpeted with 4 bedrooms,
Sacramen!(J , Calif .
ltrsllhoughls are for the needs
dining
room and laundry room . Also almost new 2 car
-~
of others today However , thts Et-:f. APT in Mrddlepor t. Sui table .
heated garage. This home Is nicely located In Portland
one
Kay
Cecil
9CI2-S2t/l
lor
wilt haiJe a boomerang effect
and PRICED FOR QUICK SALE at $22.500.
('VE'nlllQS
Real Estate for Sale
STRIKE ENDS
and yoli 'll benefit even more
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy .
11 x bO mob rle home near Roet nC&gt;
50 ACRES FREE GAS-Good Jlh story house with full
DAYTON - Robbins &amp; than they wtll
~~~'J 58 58
basemen!. Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
f.I ~ Al ESTAH: LOANS. VA · No
Myers, Inc., announced today SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov . 221
quick sale. $40,000.
monPy down (el tg1bl c
Somel hmg unusual will happen
. that the strike which began today that will gtve you greater
SPACIOUS BI · LEVEL- This may be your dream
Vf'teren s) I·HA As low os :J ,.'·Sept. 21 at its Salisbury, Pa., presllge and also add lo your _ ~o_bi!e_H~e_!.!O~ Sal_!!.
home. II has a large kitchen with lots of cablnels,
rfown (al l 11 0 11 Veterens onrl
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
g£&gt;nerol public ) To pUi chose
'·plant has ended. A new three- material well-bema .
111'/6 NASHU A 14 ,- b5 3 bedroom
room with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
rPol cc;tor n or refrnonre . 30
!NEWSPAPER ENTEFn:IRISE ASS N.I
year contract covering
l' 1 bath , un derp1nnmg .!il SUO
family room, and fo finish lhls weO.fald out home we
Yl AHS IfHMS IR ~ L A ND MOH
approximately 60 production
ond assume loon q4Q 'Jo83 or
haveflv~ bedrooms, utility room and garage. Very low
TG AGf CO Tl I: StolP. St .
643 33 11.
.employees, members of
heating bill. Red barn·llke storage building. Located
Athens Phone blJ 59/ -305 1
aboul le n minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rl . 7.
: Local 7348of the United Steell \j:70 Amhe 1sf 5(),-1 'J 'l BR
N~W
THREI:: herl10orn home
Asking $55,000.
1970
Chompr
on
O
O
,.
I'J
'J
~R
. workers of America , was
!-=il"cplocc sun dPrk 1 ', acre
146~ General 60x 11 'J B~
wooded
lol
614
bOi'
:.1~110
Tup•
1
'ratified Saturday, Dec. 16.
JUST LISTED- SYRACUSE, good 2 bedroom home,
PROBATE COURT OF
14b8 PMC !l1x1'/2 BH
p(l rs PI oms.
almost new kitchen cabinets. all nicely carpeted ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
1455 Proir1e Sc hooner 'JBxH 1 BR
ESTATE OF Grace Wlt liams ,
laundry room. all Insulated, natural gas heat, utility
111"/:l Royal ~m b o ss v b/;h 14 :.1 BR
PROBATE COURT OF
DECJ;:ASEO
building, 2 lots. $21,500.00.
14!)4
Star
50)C
10
7
8R
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
Case No . 22,4 15
14"f'J Star bOx 14 2 BR
t' ESTATE
OF
LY'bi A
NOTICE OF
r' EBERSBACH , DE CEASED
ltlo~Sto rbO•l'l78R
Af&gt;POINTMENT
.
/; Case No . 22553
OF FIOUCIA~Y
Icno Syl va 60• 11 ') 81-l
NOTICE 01'
•
•
On December 7, 1978, in the
1
It/btj V1jloges b0x 12 1 OR
•s
APOIN·TMENT
Me igs Counfy Probate Courr ,
1464 WmdSor t&gt;l xHJ ') 8R
case No . 22 ,475, Av a -Zo
OF FIDUCIARY
""·
JCrtUk irkwC'locl1:/1(()(1 3 BR
11 · On December 7, 1978, In fhe
Sis son and John P . Will ia ms,
B8 S M0 81lE·HOMI: SA LtS
11 Meigs County Probate Court , co-Adm lni sfra fo rs with the
•' Case No . 22.553 , Marion F: Will annexed , Syracuse , Ohio . 1-'T PLEASANT W.VA
'' Ebersbach , Mulberry was
appointed
co ' · Height s, Pomeroy, Oh io Adm inlsfrators with the Will
t' &lt; AC,Rf 1:.0 00 mobt1&lt;&gt; homo ,
:. 45769 .
was
appointed · annexed , of the estate of
nr•or Oex ter 4U'J 5HS6.
t ' EKecutrlx of the rsfate of
Grace Williams , deceased ,
1J Lvd ra Ebersbach , deceased ,
late of Syrac use , Ohio .
1%7
TOT Al HKTPJ( ' •nnbJI,-.
•· late of Pomeroy, Ohio .
1'
homf'.
furn tc;hr fi 3 lwrl•
Manning D. Webster
Mann ing D. Web! fer
wo&lt;.her u"d dtyPr Art ronrti
~;.
Probate Judge Probate Judge t1011C'd I lot, 'J1 (1 It lrnnlog,...
Clerk
~--Clerk
(12) 13,·20, 27 , Jlc
Sl'( O()O Pho•rt' ':/ 1') /fi ~ t ·
;."(12) 13,·20, 27 •. 31&lt;
~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Business Services

frm1w h(1 1,,. "'

(n lll! Cl') :M•,-,

Auction
lA~1 C HW1 ~1 MA\ A1•r l1nt• ~ niP
1-r' '/ I'"' Drow1n~ ontl rlnnr
pr 110 at l)hl o l-l lv('r Al•rllflil '.&gt;:.1"/
H,(lh ~ ~ 'Mrdrl l(1 r C'I P OhrC'I

Lost and Found
fOU ND MAlt: rross bPiwePII
For Sale
~" o9 lr ~ or1(i 8oss&lt;' tt Hound
!1Jnwn and whdc l r oding COAl LlM fSION ~ . , onrl qrov0 l,
C 1rof'k orf'o Colt IIII'J 3"/'il otter
rokrtl/11 ch lorlrlC' it"r trli1f'! ci ~ q
IC'Iml nnd all ty pl"·· nf ..ol t ~ I&lt;
cf"f., ror Soft Work~ lnr ~ Mo1n
~~ Ponw roy ~Y'l J H~ I
f:l e.lll Wanted _
APPL~.,
HH PAH'ICK Drrh mrl
~AR
MAIL&gt; won ted Mus t bP
~t oto Rl t&gt;HII l-' ho11 0 Wd~ro.v r ll(l
0\IO IIOb le 0VPI11!l!=jS an d
oo~ 'J7HS
.wf'l'
, i.. e nrl ~ ~ ivp Poin ts C. nil Rt . CHRI SlMA \ 1RHS Mo l" S t ,
Rullonrl
LARGf ~ AN CV nppl(l!&gt; for
( hnstrnos Basket&lt;; or yout own
LICENSE BOILER
u..,&lt;' ht rpalt trk Or&lt;"ho rci Stat&lt;'
HAute Ott~ !-'hom 1;:,64 31H5
OPERATOR
G H~ ~ON MASH RTONI: bo111 0 wt !h
Sn ugg ... tuner!'! onrf plush lrncci
State ot Ohio license ,
cnse&gt; . S/50 ~ P nde r hon1o. SOSU
rotating shill, excellent
()).:1 3b1 "11'1~
fringe benefits.
CONOITIONBD hoy Sl o bole
Apply Personnel Office
Q.'IU.'J 10H
1Y7i lNlff(NAIIONA t hockho0
HOUER MEDICAL
4.:1" '10.:1'/ .
CENTER
ONf PAtH Creallv&lt;&gt; fi' 3 way
5f1P.Okcr ... Sl'JO I ra rr Gi: J
Gallipolis, Ohio
way &lt;.pr okcrs $1 .:1 0. 485 3301
446·510$
rloys nnrl'ltl'i 4140 allc- r Spn1

Bermce Bede Osol

1tlfo'll

p u pp1 f'~

h wPf' ~ ..

DICK TRACY

R e al Estat e for Sale
M1ddh •1" r!

'

FORCED RETIREMENT
MANSFIELD, Ohio ( UP!)
- The 1!1-year judicial career
of Richland County Common
Pleas Court Judge James
Mayer appears over .
The Ohio Supreme Court
Monday advised Richland
County Auditor Freeman
Swank to terminate Mayer's
pay. in the wake of the U.S.
Supreme Court's refusal last
week to bear Mayer's appeal
of a retirement order from
the Ohio Supreme Court.
The order was the result of
a complaint by the Ohio State
Bar Association, which
suggested Mayer, who Is
being treated for cancer and
manic depression, retire for

13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec . 20, 1978

. ·,'

'•

1

DON'T SQUIRM MA AM

THERE'S MORETO COME I

SETTIN'ON
TH ' FLOOR!!

�. ,'

.I,

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Dec. 20, 1978

· Former Pomeroy banker, resident .recuperating
. ApproJdmately two and one-half years ago, Dennis Keney,
a v1ce president of the Pomeroy National Bank and a resident
of near P(llleroy, was seriously injured in a motorcycle
accident. Keney, who was talented and personable, had a
bright future before him. Then carne the accident. He hovered
between lile and death f&lt;r weeks.
Keney is now in California and is making tremendous
strides through a rehabilitation program of the Kentfield
Hospital at Kentfield, Calif. Following is an article which has
been published by the hospital :
"There is often a tendency to view rehabilitation as a short

term process. In some cases the patient requires Intensive
rehabilita lion over a long period of time. Outpatient therapy at
Kentfield Medical Hospital fulfills the needs of the person with
loog range rehabilitation goals. An individual who had
benefited from this program is Dennis Keney .
"On June 23, 1976, Dennis was critically injured in a
motorcycle accident. The resulting head injury left him
comatose and there was little optimism among doctors that
Dennis would live. Even when he regained consciousness two
months later, it was felt he would remain completely
dependent .
,
"But almost remarkably his condition improved and there
was hope of continued gains. A decision was made for him to
live with his sister in Marin County (California). It was
apparent that Dennis had rehabilitation potential which

reqliired,developmentin an appropriate ~Jetting . His sister and
his physician arranged for Dennis to receive outpatient
therapy at Kentfield Medical Hospital and this treatment
began on March 2, 1!117.
"Dennis was scheduled into a heavy therapy regime which
included physical and occupational therapy and speech
pathology. Eventually, his progress dictated that only physical
therapy was necessary and the other therapies were
discmtinued. But during this Ume Dennis had developed the
confidence and ability to control his own We .
"The one person cited as llelping him the most was Tova
Bauer, PhYsical therapist at Kentfield Hospital. Sbe was
objective about his progress yet offered encouragement.
Dennis felt this approach was invaluable in allowing him to
realistically assess his progress and his problems.

"At present, Dennis is able to walk with the assistance of
Canadian crutches, speaks with confidence and clar!tv and
even drives his own car. His great prosress in rn!nlmizlnJ his
handicap is reflective of the KMH staff, but a greater tribute to
Dennis' singular devotim to his rebabllltatioo.
"Dennis understands how other patienta become
diScouraged with long range rehabilitation. He reallzes his
case is special and with the support of devoted family
members, KMH staff and other friends he has been fortunate.
Dennis is justifiably proud of his accomplishmenta and in the
future would like to use liis experience to encourage and
motivate other handicapped individuals.
"Dennis' more immediate goal Is to walk without
mechanical assistance. Those who have witnelllled his past .
determination feel itis ooly a matter of time."

Secretary ofState Brown concedes defeat
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
, COLUMBUS (UPI)
: veteran Rep·ublican .
; ~cretary of State Ted W.
lll'own, who held the office for
28 years in a row, today
conceded defeat in a recount
. of last November's election
, contest with Democratic
· state Sen. . Anthony J .
Celelrezze Jr. of Cleveland.
Brown announced final fig-

$38,400 action filed

The
Perfect Christmas. Gift

u~sttwvu
~CANDIES

superimposed on a preexisting injury.
The · plaintiff's choice of
vocation is severely limited
and she experiences pain
which limits her ability to
work. It is necessary for her
to incur further expenses for
medical · care
and
hospitalization according to
the entry.
An injunction was filed by
the Board of Health, Meigs
County, Pomeroy, against
Leon Putman and Bonnie
Putman, Rt. 1, Reedsville.

A $38,400 damage suit has
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court as a
result of a traffic accident
Dec. 19, 1976 on East Main St.
in Pomeroy. Betty J. Young,
Rt, 1, Minersville, filed the
action against Beverly Pooler
of Mason.
According to the court
entry, the plaintiff suffered
acute injuries to her back
resulting in a severe
disabling and painful type of
injury,
which
was

Mayor's Court

®

Six defendants were fined
and six others forfeited bonds
in the court of Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were George J.
Beaver, 19, Middleport,
speeding, 40 miles in a 2$ mile
zone, $15 and costs; Kathy S.
/ Darst, 2$, Cheshire, speeding
,/
40 in a 25 mile zone, $15 and
costs; Donald Lovett, 55,
Middleport, $25 and costs,
disorderly
manner; Hubert
l'
J
•
H. Stewart, 32, Middleport,
QUEEN OF CHRIST· $25 and costs, disorderly
ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
MAS BALL - Jeannie manner; George A . McAlways a Christmas Favorite ... creams, nuts,
Jbbnson, a senior at Daniel, 51, Middleport, $25
Southern High School aud and costs, disorderly manfruits, caramels, nougats, toffeescotch,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ner, and Buddy McKinney,
crunches and chewy centers, dipped in the
Clyde Johnson, Portland, 61, Middleport, $25 and costs,
finest dark and milk chocolate
was crowned queen of the disorderly manner.
1 lb. $3.50 2 lb. ~6. 95 3 lb. $10.40
Christmas Bali held at
Forfeiting bonds were
Hospital News
51b. $17.25 8 oz. $1.85
.
Southern High Saturday G09rge H. Welch, 54, Mt.
night. The event was Airy, N. C., $50, posted on a Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
sponsored by the Tri-M disorderly manner charge;
ADMITTED
John
Club. J eaonie was chosen Jay P. Warner, 22, Mid- Fisher, Racine; Gertrude
THE GIFT BOX
by vote of the student body. dleport, $25, spinning tires; Woods, Middleport.
... an exquisite gift
DISCHARGED - Leola
Major W. Walker, 61, Langspackage filled with
ville, $25, assured clear Keck, Lela &amp;binson, Birdie
a variety of chocodistance; John A. Belche, 31, Conger, Charles Neece, Ben
lates and butter
no address listed, $300, Davidson.
bons ... creams,
disorderly manner and
resisting arrest; Wayne L.
crisp and chewy
Holzer Medical Center
Adams, 'P, Middleport, $150,
centers.
Discharges, Dec. 18
reckless operation and
Eva
Allison , Kristina
1'h lbs. $5.25
passing in a no-passing zone,
Berkich,
Darlene Callicohe,
and Melvin B. Freeman, 40,
Mary
Channell,.
High Yield Certificate Grove City, $32, speeding 45 Dulaney, Gladys · Bonita
Ellsis,
miles in a 25 mile zone.
Elmer Finch, Jeffrey Fowler,
1
with 1,000
Fourteen defendants Lawana Hanunond, Marion
'
forfeited bonds and two Hoover, Mrs. Bill Jeffers and
Minimum Deposit
others were fined in the court son, Inex Kilburn, Shawn
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Leach, Brian McClinton,
8 Year Maturity
Neda Mink, Roberta Myers,
Andrews Tuesday night.
~
Substantial
Interest
Forfeiting were Ronnie Nina Russell, Jinuny Salyer,
Penalty
Required
for
Early
ruDI"
Richards, Pomeroy, $200 Ollie Saunders, Bradley
Withdrawal on Time
posted on a negligent assault Sheppard, Edward Spears,
Deposits.
charge; Robert Arnott, Jenvieve Starcher, Evelyn
Racine, $30, speeding; Williams.
Discharges, Dec. 19
Elmont Bosworth, Dexter,
Robert
Adkins, Ossier Aux$30, failure to yield the right
ier,
Mary
Baldwin, William
of way; Timothy Reese,
Bowman,
Christopher
Cline,
Cheshire, $31, speeding;
Randall Lutz, Columbus, $31, Vernon Duhl, John Evans,
The Athens County
speeding; Brian Knopp, Tracey Grueser , Brandi .
Savings &amp; loan Co.
!kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Pn.
Syracuse, $30, running a red Hollvack , Thelma Holtz,
W. Main St.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
light; Tony Hutton, Langs- Charles Howard William
Pomeroy, Ohio
Mon . thru Sat. 8:00a.m. tot P.m.
ville, $30, speeding; Ronald Jenkins, Mrs. Larry Keller
Sundav 10:30 to 12 : 3D.and S to q p.m.
Deem, Hartford, W. Va., $350, and son , Dora Larson,
PRESCR I ~T ION'
PH. 992·29SS
driving while intoxicated; Geraldine Lee, Mrs. John LiFriendly. Service
Pomeroy,O.
Andy Doczi, Middleport, $39, sle and son, Gail McClaskey,
E. Main
speeding; Douglas Medlin, Clara McMAster, Clara Pyle,
Open Nights till9
Lewisburg, N. C., $100, in- MRs. Charles Pyles and
toxication; Anita Ball, daughter, Ressie Roach,
$30, running a Beatrice Robson, Scott
I !1\jlll ll• ll"'""' """ ~"' ~"" ~"" ~= ~'"'~"'&lt;~~ !'.&lt;::&lt; B:~ """'""" ~&lt;~~&lt; ~&lt;~~&lt;!!~~:!~""&lt;""'!'&lt;II! ~&lt;~~&lt; ~to:~~ ~ ~ to:~ f. Middleport,
red light; Earl Phelps, Saunders, Glenn Simpkins,
Narie Slone, Mrs. Edwin
~ Pomeroy, $50, disorderly Stewart
and son, Benjamin
Tom Quillen,
I conduct;
Upton,
Henry
Walters, Judy
Middleport, $50, disorderly
Williams
,
Margaret ·
conduct; Marlene Padgett,
Winebrenner,
Todd
Syracuse, $200, petty theft.
Wiseman,
Douglass
Wright,
I Fined were Terry McCune, Tanuny Wright.
Rutland, $50 and costs,
Births, Dec. 19
disorderly conduct, and Carl
Mr.
and
Mrs. Brice Gilpin,
Hendricks, Jr., Pomeroy, $50
son,
Point
Pleasant,
W.Va.
and costs, squealing tires.
Mr. and Mrs . James
Wooldridge Ill, son, Bidwell.
I
SQUAD CALLED
~ The emergency unit of the
~ Middleport Fire Department Wi nd.nam 72 Lords town 71
was called to the Middleport
ss J. Marshall
Hill area at 11:27 p.m. · Wlnlersville
WVa. 44
Tuesday for Geraldine Woodridge BS Rootstown 70
Yards &amp; Yards ol New Garland
Sexson who was ill. She was Wynford 80 Ontario 57
Christmas Arrangements (Live.
Young North 131 Vincentian
taken to Holzer Medical 47
Permanent &amp; Silk)
Center.
Youngs Rayen 76 Mercer Pa
Door Wreaths
52
Swags
Zanesville Rosecrans 71
Candles &amp; Candle Rings
Miller 56
PUBLIC INVITED
Poinsettias
~ A Christmas program will
Potted Pia nts
be held at 7:30p.m. Saturday
'TI&gt;rrariums
at the Freedom Gospel
PROGRAM SET
CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR THAT '
Mission Church, Bald Knob.
A
Christmas
Program will
HARD T'O BUY FOR PERSON
Th~ public Is invited.
be held Sunday at 10 a.m. at
the Racine United Methodist
.
.
Church.
HOSPITALIZED
~ Bill Vaughan, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Vaughan, S.
SEEK LICENSE
Third Ave., Middleport, is
Mn. Millard VanMeter
A marriage ilcense was
11
again
hospitalized.
Cards
. .Phone 992-2039
1116 Butternut Ave.
II may be sent to him at the issued to James E. Holman,
Wo accept all major credit canlaana
wlrt flowll'l
Racine and Denise Lynn
I ·Jewish Hospital, Kings High- 21,
•••ywllor•;
Roberts,
19, Rt. 1, Portland
i'm&amp;f&lt;:lll!t way, St. Louis, Mo.
'
.

J
&lt;

*

INTEREST

10% DISCOUNT ON ALL
RUSSELL STOVER AND WHITMAN
c . CANDY ORDERS OVER 'JOOI
UNTIL

i

--·
FSIJC

---------

I

a

•~

••!
a
!
!
!

.POMEROY

.FLOWER SHOP
we

,.

•

•I
!

a

I
1

secretary of state 's race
outpolled the governor's
race. But the recount showed
wrhis amoWlts to a net Celelrezze gaining as much
change in votes from the in those counties , where
official count of .0069 computer punchcard · ballots
percent,' ' said the secretary. are used, as Brown .
In Cuyahoga County, where
Celebrezze ended up with
50.15 percent of the vote and\ Celebrezze piled up a margin
big enough to win the
Brown with 49.85 percent.
Brown had been suspicious election, Brown fared worse
of returns from a dozen in the recount, which was
counties in which the made at taxpayer expense
recount over which he
presided , to Celebrezze' s
objection.

•

at

be cause the margin of victory
was less than one-half
percent.
To the end , lll'own maintained the results verified
the
integrity of hi s
administration of the Ohio
election system, since the
final figures varied little
from the offi cia l written
results received from county
boards of election last month.
"During my tenure I have

tned ver y hard to give the
people of Ohio their value
received and with the help of
our fine election family and
an exceptionally good staff, I
beli eve th is has been
accomplished," said Brown.
Brown claimed Ohio's election system is the finest in the
country, an d "it is the people
who work in Ohio's election
system that have made it
great/' he said .

Brown , a native of
Springfield , learned politics
at the side of his fath er , who
sold legal forms and office
supplies
in .
county
courthouses and city halls
across Ohio.
He attended Wittenberg
University and was later a
professional football player
for the Springfield Bulldogs.
Brown began his political
(Continued on page 101

•

ent1ne

FiftPen Ce nts
Vol. 29, No . 175

Nation wise---., Meigs to get $200,000
for title programs

United Press International
TEHRAN, Iran - Troops fired to disperse several
hundred student demonstrators at the Tehran
University campus today and intervened in a funeral in
the western city of Tabriz where mourners shouted
anti-shah slogans. On the political front, the shah's
opponents stymied the monarch's attempts to form a
"National reconciliation" government claiming they
had been told to do so by the Ayatollim Khomeini in
Paris.

••

(Continued from page I)
utilities must think about
helping the consumers and
the Ohio miners, instead of
just thinking about
themselves.
" If the utilities will
cooperate, we can keep con·
swner bills down, save the
mining jobs, and clean up the
air all at the same time.
"The ball is in the utilities
court .''
Ohio's ut.ilities have claimed that if they are forced to
install expensive scrubbers
the rust would have to be
passed on to their customers
which would raise electric
bills all over the Buckeye
State.
"I urge the utilities to act in
.goud faith by sitting down
with the EPA as soon as
possible to prevent serious
economic disruption in the
state of Ohio," Metzenbawn
said.

now · a federal judge in
Cincinnati, will take office
Jan. 8 for a four-year term. A
state senator for four years,
he administered Brown's
first election defeat in 30
years.
"Final tabulations show
Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr.
with 1,365,207 votes and Ted
W. Brown with 1,356,946
votes," said Brown in
announcing the end of the

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, Dec. 21, 1978

The defendants since
Jan. 3, 1978 have failed to
comply with solid waste
disposal regulations and is a
nuisance and is ·detrimental
to the public health and
welfare of the citizens of
Meigs County according to
the entry.

Ohio.

ures from the recount showed
he gained only 189 votes
giving Celebrezze a victory
margin of 8,261 votes - less
than one vote per precinct.
''The people of Ohio have
been very gracious and kind
in keeping me here for these
past 28 years," said the 72year old Brown.
- Celebrezze, 37, son of
Anthony J . ceJebrezze Sr.,
former Cleveland mayor and

WASIDNGTON - About 5,200 ounces of gold
valued at $1.1 million ·has mysteriously disappeared
from the Treasury Department's assay ·office in New
York City, ljlld the government says it may never be
found.
It was the second time in history that United States
has lost track of some of its gold stockpile.
The gold probably vanished between 1973 and 1977,
a spokesman said Wednesday, although faulty
management and accounting procedures made it
impossible to determine exactly when the losses
began.

NEW OWNERS - Mr. and Mrs. Paul Simon are the new owners of
the Pomeroy Wine Store having purchased the business from Mr. and Mrs. Shirley
Guinther. The Simons now own three business establishments all located in the same block
and just doors apart. The wine store is located on Pomeroy's West Main Street. The wine
store has been at its present location for ovf.'r 40 years. Simon, pictured, will offer imported
and domestic wine and beer.
·

r---A;;ean;;athsl
.

.

PITTSBURGH - The United Mine Workers are
gearing up for a year-long organization drive aimed at
surface coal mines in seven western Pennsylvania
counties.
Union spokesmen said ~e organizing drive was
approved by 120 delegates to the UMW's District 5
convention. The delegates represent 14,000 miners . .
District 5 Jresident Lou Antal said $200,000 was
being set aside for the campaign, and a Uknan
organizing staff was being put together to plug for
unionism at non-union mines. Presently, bewteen 10
and 20 percent of the coal coming out of the District 5
area is non-union.

ALBERT E. HAWK
Albert E. Hawk, 79, Rt. 1,
Guysville (Shade area) died
this morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Hughes-Van
Fossen Funeral Home in .
Athens.

and Juanita Reynolds, .ByesALMA L. DAVIS
RICHMOND, Ind. - AIIila ville. Two sisters, Mary
L.. Davis, 92, died Monday Tippie and Clara Wilson and
evening at Heritage House a brother, Charles Leslie,
Nursing Home, Richmond preceded her in death in
to her parents.
following an extended illness. addition
Private funeral services
Mrs. Davis, a native of will be held at 10:30 a.m.
CARL WICKS
Meigs County, formerly Thursday at the Hughes-Van
LANCASTER- Carl Wicks,
resided in Newcastle, Ind. Fossan Funeral Home in
54, Lancaster, died unexShe was a member of the Athens with Monsignor
pectedly Tuesday morning.
United Church of Christ, Donald Horak officiating. His wife, who survives, is the
HagerstoWn, Ind., Order of Burial will be in Stewart former Betty Martin of
Eastern Star, 116, Newcastle, Cemetery. There will be no Syracuse. Funeral services
Ruth. Shrine No. 17, Order of calling hours.
will be anncunced later.
White Shrine of Jerusalem,
Past Matrons Club, Garden
Club of Newcastle and Royal if'ilom:H,lll'l'~~:"""'l~ljO::&lt;ij:~~~f&gt;'O&lt;I:Ol!g;t·g;tl~l•!fll:llj•-.
Neighbors of Newcastle,
three clubs . in Athens, The
Rebeccas, the Grange and
the Progressive Club.
She is survived by one
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Worl,
Hagerstown, one granddaughter, one grandson, six
great grandchildren, one
brother, Harry E. Davis, .
Arlington Hts., Ill., and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will he
held this evening at 8 p.m. at
the Main and Frame Funeral
Home in Newcastle. Friends
are being received today
from 3-4 and 6-8. Eastern
Star services will he held this
evening at 7:30p.m. Burial
will be in Salem Center,•
Meigs County, Thursday at 1
p.m.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio chapter of the U. s.
Harness Writer 's Association will establish an Ohio
Harness Racing Hall of Fame to honor Ohioans who
have made major contributions to the sport.
The first persons to be inducted into the hall will be
the four Ohioans already a part of tbe U. S. Harness
Writer's National Living Hall of Fame in Goshen, N. Y.
They are Stephen G. Phillips, Xenia, inventor of
the mobile starting gate; Walter Michael, Bucyrus,
harness breeder and former president of the U. S.
Trotting Association; Wayne "Curly" Smart,
Delaware, famed harness driver; and Howard
Beissinger, Hamilton, trainer-driver of Speedy Somoli,
1978 trotter of the year. ·

ELBERFELDS
OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TIL 8

GOLD STAR
AWARDEES
Tuesday's awardees in the
Gold Star promotion sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chambers of Commerce were
Clarice Callicoat, Gallipolis,
$10 gift certificate from G &amp; J
Auto; Delores Will, Pomeroy,
$10 gift certificate from
Hartley Shoes; DoUie Hayes,
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate
from Elliott Appliance;
Donna Koehler, Syracuse, $10
·gift
certificate
from
Marguerite Shoe Store.
Wednesday's awardees
were Willie Edwards, Hartford, $10 gift certlficater from
Grow's Family Restaurant;
Mildred Morris, Pomeroy,
$10 gift certificate from
Kroger Store; Margaret
Ellis, Pomeroy, $10 gift
cert'lflcate from · Simon'
Pick-A-Pair; Connie Warner,
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate
from Francis Florist.

I

Eleven vocational
education teachers of Meigs
High School attended an inservice meeting held Wednesday at the Meigs High
School Library.
The in-service meeting was
a "trlal run" with just a
portion of the faculty present
to discuss the topic, "Pupil
Personnel Services at Meigs
High School."
The major thrust of the
meeting dealt with the county
and Meigs Local School
District testing program in
conjunction with a request by
high school principal, James
Diehl, that the guidance

After the verdict was announced, Stover's wife,
Kathryn, 36, a registered nurse, shook hands with him
and embraced him briefly. Her lover, Ann Adams, 34,
also a nurse, joined her in the front of the courtroom
and they walked out together with their attorney.

Contracts

CLEVELAND - Cleveland City Council members
prepared for a special meeting later today or Friday to
act on Mayor Dennis Kucinich's compromise plan to
resolve the fiscal crisis that has swamped the city
since its default last week on $15.5 million in bank
loans.
Council President George Forbes, the mayor's
chief political antagonist, said late Wednesday that the
Council would vote to call a special election to let city·
residents decide whether to sell the city-owned
Municipal Light Plant and whether to approve ·the
mayor's 0.5 percent city income tax hike proposal.

Sapel'fkal'
SOund I
Model
6857

discussed
Me~ting with the Meigs
County Commissioners
Wednesday night, Judge
Manning Webster discussed
the contract of the architect
for the school for the mentally retarded and to request
transfers in the juvenile court
budget.
Wesley Buehl presented the
board with the engineer's
year end report. A lengthy
discussion was held pertaining to the 1979 appropriations for the highway
department.
Henry
Wells,
commissioner, reported on the
construction of the multipurpose health center. All
contractors are progressing
as scheduled but there may
be a delay in obtaining steel it
was reported.
Attending were Wells,
Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners, and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

CLEVELAND - Tcm Grace, one of the nine
students wounded in the 1970 shootings at Kent State
University, faced questioning today as the federal
retrial of a civil damage lawsuit based on the shootings
entered day three.
Grace, Buffalo, N. Y., was a 20-year-old
sophomore at the time of the shootings. He was shot in
the foot.
Meanwhile, Howard Ruffner, whose eyewitness
photographs of the shootings appeared in a national
magazine, faced additional questioning before Grace
was to take the stand.

• Fca iUrtS highly s~n ~ itiv e AM!FM
n::cc i\·er. Reaches out to pull in dist.:mt
stations wlrh minimum noise.
• Pbyer/ Recorder le ts you make professional·
qu ali ty tapc' from phon o or radio.
• BSR ll.u tomatic record changer with cer :1mlc
cartndgc, and diamond stylu s.
• Bass rcfl e){ ported spcakn system.
SOLID QUALITV, SOUND PF.AFORMANCEl

___

___

-- -...
Be sure to see all !he other itom5, Music Department,

NEW DELHI, India - Two students today
released the 129 passengers and crew of an Indian
Airlinea jet they hijacked - apparently with toy guns
- to J:I'Otest the imprisonment of former Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi.
Across India, 20,000 JI'O.Qindbl demonstrators .
were arrested in violent protests against her expulsion
from Parliament and arrest· this week.
Police said they had arrested the two men, who
Wednesday conunandeered a Boeing 737 jet on Its way
from Calcutta to New Delhi, diverted it to Benares, and
held It for 14 hours, demanding that Mrs. Gandhi be
freed from jall.
.
They were Identified as Devendra Nath ·Pandey
and Bholanath Pandey, both students. It was not
known If l)ley were related.

2nd Floor. Table rldlos, portable. radios, I track and
cassette recorder, car radios, Clr spuktrs. Bate and
mobUe CB's, CB antennas, tape c•us, children's
record players.
Special sale prices now on many last mlnutogltt !toms

- Men's shirts, ties, belts, slacks-, jackets, sweaters,

women's coats, sportswear, swuters, wallets, girls'
cuts, aportswear, dresses. You'll really IIYI on tlwH
and many other items.

Santa Claus will be in the store on the 1st floor Thursday 2 to 3 p.m. Friday and Saturday 6to Bp.m.

'

~lberfelds

In Pomeroy ·

.

'

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy E!llergency
Squad was called to Wipple
Road near Five Points at 7:46
a.m. Thursday to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Russell for
Mrs. Clara McMaster. Mrs.
McMaster who has been in
failing health for sometime
was dead upon the unit's
arrival.

-·

.

;

•

teachers to all of the
elementary schools. The staff
of the unit has access to
thousands of dollars worth of
materials through an Athens
source. Two aides on the unit
work closely with the
teachers, Morri s stat ed.
Under
the
program
elementary libraries are
being started and improved
and half-time library aides
are provided. Others are
being secured through other
agencies at no cost to the
district.
The district has another
grant under Title 4-C which
provides for 10 teachers to
receive training and two
trainers in a program to
provide improved readin g
teaching. Good reports are
coming from the program,
Morris reports.
The district has an $8,285
grant under Title 4-B which is
designed
to
provid e
elementary library materials
and equipment and $8245 in
flow through money in a
prpgram for handicapped
students.

WOr:JTI~~ ffil~®Or:J~)

THE SALVATION ARMY is hard at work again this Christmas season but always with a
smile, as Shll'ley Landers demonstrates in front of the Kroger Store in Pomeroy. The money
m the kettle g1ven by area res idents is used in the Army 's Christmas program to help the
underpriviligcd .

VMHto
•

revrew
claims

Effective January 1,
Veteran Memorial Hospital
will assume " dele ga ted"
review of its claims to
Medicare and to the Medicaid
programs. "This is a
department look into an involuntary effort of the
service meeting centered
hospital and is to be definitely
around testing. The meeting
commended
,' ' announ ced
was funded by a $400
_____ J
Jack T. Kindig, Executive
vocational education planning district grant. Tlie Tr
'
· II ' 'I Director of Peer Review
money was used to buy ulh,tr ·· · ~·;~J.. lEA~ ~&amp;ra Ul ·":.,tl r~,'u Systems (PR.S ) with offices
in Portsmouth.
materials such as the Oc·
NEW YORK (UP!) PRS is a not ·fo r·profit
cupational Guidance Library. Winter makes its official
organization
representing
During the meeting teachers debut tonight at 21 minutes
physicians
of
eight
southern
were instructed on how to use past midnight to begin an 89the library and how to better day reign of long nights and Ohio counties. It contracts
with the Federal government
und erstand their students short days .
to
assess the qu ality and
through effective test inThe
event,
known
appropriateness
of services
terpretation and usage.
astronomically as the winter
During the meeting several solstice, means the sun at rendered to Medicare and
speakers were featured and that point is exactly over the Medi c aid r ec ipi ent s .
included :
Tropic of Capricorn, south of "Because of rigidly accepted
Russell Moore, Meigs the equator, and ready to standards, it has bee n
County secondary school begin its slow return possible for PR.S to delegate
to Veterans Memori a l
supervisor, who used the northward in the sky.
Iowa tests of basic skills as
The sun will terminate that Hospital many review funchis topic pointing out the journey with the spring equi· tions for which PRS is
purpose, aspects of in- nox, at 12:22 a.m . on March ultimat ely respon Sible,"
terpretation and use of 21, when it stands directly Kindig continued.
Local physicians elected to
results ; James Rodgers, above the Tropic of Cancer on
the board of PRS are Lewis
county school psychologist, the first day of spring.
D. Telle. M.D. and Esberdado
who spoke on the purpose,
referral procedures, in·
S. Villaneuva, M.D. Trustees
terpretation and use of Unit answers
and officers serve without
results in psychological three alarms
compensation .
testing, and Tim . Flesher,
The emergency unit of the
Meigs
High
guidance Middleport Fire Department
counselor, who spoke on the answered three calls We~­
Organizational
Interpretation of the general nesday.
aptitude test battery and the
At 12 :08 p.m., the squad meeting Jan. 2
Ohio vocational interest went to the Middleport
The annual organizational
survey and the use of results. Elementary ·School for Mrs.
He outlined how to use the Judy Crow, a faculty mem her meeting was set for 7: 30p.m.
occupational guidance who was ill. She was taken to on Jan . 2 in the high school
cafeteria when the Southern
library.
Holzer Medical Center. At Local School Boa rd met
At the conclusion of the 1:54 p.m. , the unit went to
meeting, teachers were North Second Ave. for Mrs. Tuesday night.
The board a pprove d
requested to evaluate the Gertrude Kloes, also a
financial
and acti vity
effectiveness of the tin- medical patient, who was
statements
and
em ployed
service meeting. The session taken to Holzer Medical
Ruth
Smith
as
a
full time
received a very positive Center. A short time later,
custodian
at
th
e
Racin e
evaluations
from
the the squad went to 695 Oliver
Elementary School and the
vocational teachers at- St. for Jason
Amos, 15
tending . An in-service. months, who had gotten hold leave of absence of Debora
meeting with the same topics of an insect killer can. He was Harris as an elementary
teacher was termined.
will be presented to the non- treated on the scene.
William Robinette was
vocational faculty in the
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
.
added
to the substitute
spring or at the beginning of
teacher
list.
Necessary fund
the 1979~ school year.
EXTENDED FORCAST
transfers
and
a girls' athletic
Saturday through Monday
fund
were
approved.
County
Snow flurries possible
Auditor
Howard
Frank
Saturday and Sunday, with
discussed
House
Bill
1285
fair weather on Monday.
with
the
board.
Highs will range from lbe
mid
30s lo the mid 108
TO PRESENT PROGRAM
Saturday and Sunday and
Youth of the United Pen- in the 30. Monday. Lows
tecostal Church will present a will be In the 21&amp; early
Party cloudy tonight, with
Christmas program at 7:30 Saturday and In tbe mid·
a
low in the mid 20s. Partly
p.m. Friday at the church teens or ' the low 208 by
cloudy
again Friday, with
located on S. Third Ave. The early Monday.
high
temperatures
in the mid
public is invited.
:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:·:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::

attend session

best we can."

Stereo
·System

Pointing to the success of
the program, Morris reports
that at the beginning of the
school year last year, 28
pupils needed to take part in
the program. After the
testing at the end of the year
only two tested to remain in
the program. Morris credited
the situation to the class
teacher, a special program in
reading and the Title I
Program . . Morris said that
there are indications that
next year the district will
rece jve an ev en higher
amount of funds for the
program.
Another program is Title
IV-B for which the district
receives $48,984 in strate
funds. This is the Disadvantaged Pupils Program
and provides such services as
a school nurse and improved
library and instructional
services. The Apple Crate is
operated through this
program.
Morris points out that the
Apple Crate - a large van sat unused for two years but
now has been put into use to
transport instructional
materials and aids for the

Eleven teachers

DENVER- Harold Stover, a 41-year-old realtor
whose wife left him for a lesbian lover nine months
ago, cried briefly, then broke into a big smile when a
judge's ruling gave him custory of his two young
children.
"It was the best Christmas present I ever got ,"
Stover said Wednesday at the end of the week-long
court hearing, much of which was testimony about his
wife's lesbian relationship with another woman.
"I'm going to try to raise the children as best I
can," Stover said. "That's the important thing now.
We've got to just put all of this behind us and do the

C!Jannel
Master

DOROTHY WILSON
Miss Dorothy Wilson, 59,
Columbus, died unexpectedly
Tuesday at the home of her
twin sister, Mrs. Dorothea
Koehler near Guysville.
Miss Wilson was born at
Stewart, a daughter of the
late Charles and Raldie
Longstreth Wilson.
Besides her twin sister, she
is survived by four sisters,
Pearl Lee, Athens; Elsie
Keaton, Columbus; Jessie
Dodderer, Tuppers Plains,

The Meigs Local School
District is receiving over
$200,000 this year for "Title
Programs" according to a
report giveri by Dan Morris,
director of curriculum of the
district.
The district has the
greatest involvement in the
Title I program receiving
$153,170 for this program
which primarily involves
remedial reading. Under the
program, 10 full time
teachers are employed to aid
some 429 students. The
students are given remedial
reading instruction away
from their routine reading
classes in grades one through
six. The funds provide onefourth of the salary paid
Morris and provides for a
half-time secretary. Thirty
percent of the students must
be in a low income bracket to
qualify . Progress in the
reading of students involved
is checked through testing
and particular guidelines
must be followed in carrying
out the program. The
program is evaluated by the
Ohio
Department
of
Education.

\

\

Weath• r

Plenty of gas
ih pipelines
By BRUCE NICHOLS.
every one of the nation 's
HOUSTON (UP!) - This inter&amp;iate pipelmes, where
winter, for the first time in posted curtailments ·- the
nearly a decade, there is bureaucratic term for supply
plenty of natural gas.
shortages - still reach as
In fa ct there 's a glut of it high as 40 percent. But some
that may last for several experts say the federally
years .
But
indu•try reg ulated number s have
•'JlOkesmen say the glut has become almost academic.
nothing to do with the recent
" While
curt ai l ments
deregulation bill that raised re main in eff ect at the
prices.
pipelin e level, I don 't think
The natural gas spokesmen you'll find many at the retail
say pipelines are.full because level," said one ' industry
they are producing more and so urce . "The customers are
storing more, and people and getting all tl1e gas they
companies are using less need .''
because of previous winter
But one of the few industry
service cutoffs, conservation supporte rs
of
the
compromise law , Geor ge
and higher prices.
One industry spokesman, Mit chell , president of
who asked that his name not Mitchell Energy Corp., is
be used, said, "The supplies blunt about it.
that yo u're seeing right now
" I would say this year all
are the result of long-term curtailments could end if they
in vestment. Our company let intrastate people furnish
alone has spent $1 billion all the gas they could to
interstate people;• Mitchell
since 1970."
The natural gas law, said.
Intrastate to int erstate ·
providing an imm edia te
increase from $1.50 to $2 per transfers - uncommon under
thousand cubic feet, phases old energy rules because of
out price controls on newly price
different ials
produced gas by 1985 and supposedly will grow under
extends controls for the first the new Natural Gas Policy
time to gas sales within the Act , although th ere is
state of production .
confusion as to just how or
The effect of the new Jaw when tlley will begin .
ca nnot
be
estim ated :-:;.;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::&gt;:::::::::·:·:·:::·:·::::::::::
accurately, but experts say
ATHENS, Obio I UPI ) that at most, th e price of an
Brjan
Burke, 43, offensh. e
average home gas bill would
coordinator
at
tbe
increase by a few dollars per
University
of
VIrginia,
month .
today wa s named head
The glut doesn 't affect
foolball coach at Ohio
University.
Burke, a native of
Cleveland and a 1958
graduate of Kent State
NO PAPER MONDAY
In order to permit em· . University, succeeds inploye es to •observe the ; teri m couch Bob Kappes,
Chri stma s holiday, the who held the job last season
Sentinel will not be published following the death of long
time coach Bill Hess lasl
on Monday, Dec. 25.
spring.
:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::

LIMITED SERVICES
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Cent er will have limited
services on Monday , Dec. 25
in observance · of th e
Christmas Holiday. Services
are alw ays avai labl e for
anyone In need of services by
call in g · ' he
Crisislin c.
Crisisline telephone numbers
in the three counties are
Galli a County 446 -5554 ;
Jackson County 286-5554 and
Meigs County 992.,)554.

40s.

.

tf! ~

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