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                  <text>16-1be Daily Senltnel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday , Nov . 19, 1979

Careful shopping pays off
Associated Press
The government has predicted
that food prices could go up by as
much as 11 percent in 1980, but you
don 't have to pay the higher prices if
you shop carefully .
Economists at Citibank , the
country's second - bi gges t
ccmmercial bank, recentl y priced a
randm~ marketbasket of 36 food a nd
non-lood items at a New York City
supennarket .
They lound that a careful shopper
rang up a bill of $51.08. A careless
shopper, who picked haphazardly.
without paying much attention lu
price, paid $83 .39 lor the same
products. The careful shopper saved
39 percent - more than three times

as much as the maximwn price
boost predicted for next year .
Shopping to save takes time and
eff&lt;r . But the trouble may be worth
it . Suppose you spend $60 a week on
food . Assume you can save Just IS
percent by spending an extra hour
oo shopping - clipping coupon s,
comparing prices, planning m enus
around specials . That comes out to
$9 a week . That 's more than $450 a
year . How many hour s would you

LEGAL NO TIC E
The Pu bhc Ulllt!les Comm•s
s10n at Oh•o has set lor pub
1 ~ hea r~ n g Case No 79 234
EL·FAC. to re'"'•ew the tue t
procurement pracll \:e s and
pollc1es or rh e Oh10 Power
Company tne ooerat1on of
•ts Fuel Cost A01u stmerJt
Clause and reidled ma tte •s

ft11 s heanng

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport EH Squad was
called Saturday at 1:57 p .m . t o JJ6
Broadway for Herb Gtlkey who was
taken to Veterans !\1 e morial
Hospital whe r e be was admitted .
At S II p.m . Saturday the squad
was ca lled to North Sc&lt;?ond Ave ., for
Vernon Grant who had sustatned a
head tnjur y in a fall .
Sunda y at 8:29a .m . the squad was
called for Nora Cambron who was
ta ken to Holzer Medi cal Cent er .

15 sc lleOulell

lrom I 30 10 2 30 p m on
NovemOer 26 . 1919 at the
Crly Councrl Ol lrce 218
Cleveland Ave S W Can
ron . Oh10. 44 702 An even1ng
sess•on w•ll be conductec
lrom 5 00 to 6 00 p m
AU mrerested persons w11l be
gt1.1en an opportumtv ro be
heard Further mtormat1on
may be obtamed by contact
1ng the Comm1ss•on
THE PUBLIC UT iliTIES

DATE CHANGED
Mary Shnne 37 Wlll meet Tuesday,
Nov . 27, not Nov. 20 as was reported .
Potluc k refreshments Wlll be ser ·
ved .

CO MMISSIO N QC OH0
By DaVId M Pu'"
Secretary

r---

hav e to wor k to earn enoug h to save
$450'
Some of th e savings reported by
t he Citl ban k sho p per s were
drama tic . One brand of vinegar , for
example, cost m or e than twice a s
muc h as another - 34 cents a quart
ve r su.-; 79 cents . Three p ounds of
ontons, purchased loose , Mst 69
cents . The same amount , pa ckaged
tn a bag, ca rried a price tag of $1.77.
Here are some of the things you
can do lo save money : -Check
ne wspa per a ds befor e you shop.
Cl n : le spt'na ls and b u y tho se
produds at Lhe store tha t offers the
best deal.
-Compare pr ices on non-sale
good s. A Jll-&lt;:ent savtng on an
advertised specta1 is no barga m Lf a
~1or e's regular prices are tugher
than the com petition
- Try to plan yo ur spending and
shop less ofte n. Eac h time you enter
th e superma rket, you're vulnera ble
to impulse buying ; fewer trip s mean
fewer pot ential temptation s .
- Look for unit prices so you can
compare d tfferent si zes. The larger
Size is usuall y
but not a lways cheaper
Inspect store di splays carefull y.
A spec ia l dJsplay doesn 't always
m ean a special pric(&gt; .
,'iu1 t quality to use :\a-fr ills

-------------------------,

t N. ~ COMPTON. O.D. 1
t
OPTOMETRIST
to
to 5
:L?N~~~::~:_:_~s2 _:~':_R_:.:.:·.:.':_o_M_e~~~--- --... ~
1

I

OFFICE HOURS: 9 : 30

12, 2

(CLOSE AT NOOI\

cheap!
our special purchase of
better bedding means
lowest prices ever for you
When th e fam o u s rr.aker o' lh PSt· &lt;, !' •·: c.,&lt;"· l c,
off ered the m t o us a t such h q s.1. · ·--:" .-..
boug ht a ll w P r.ould get N rJ w w P '" 1 .~ · ..,,,. :
the sav 1ngs to y:Ju Al l a re tor·tld .t l1 1, .,,. "
w1 th rem tar ced edges we 1g ht oa t 1ncPr1 SL. :
por t a nd many more lu,.ury tea t u 't ·'i r r·u•';
of f1r mn esses m several dewra rvr cuv 1·r ~

twin-size
Take your p• ck of any f 1rm
matlress a nd box spr1ng set

Extra-frrm set

'119

£A.

regular-size
Select any f1r m co nstruct• :Jn
mattress an d box spnng set
Extra-lirm set
'149

bra nds in platn packag•· c often offer
equal nutrition a t much lower
prtces .

110~1'1'1

HY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday ntght
voted three to two to accept the
engmeertng contract of Burgess and
Niple to extend the sewage system
from the Kroger Store to Kerrs
Run .However , the issue wa s
deadlocked .
A vote of four for acceptance is
necessary in order for the motion to
pass , according to Mrs . Jane
Walton , clerk . Mrs . Walton explained that a full body of council
must be present for passage of the
motion .
Meeting wtth co unci I was a

\ L 'E\\ ~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-Herbert
Gilkey , Middleport; Elizabeth Martin, Parkersburg ; Vernon Grant,
Spartansburg, S. C.
Saturday Discharges-Deborah
Gates , Wilbur Whaley, Fred Roush,
Emma Douglas, Brenda Moomaw,
Florence Thornton, LindH Bailey.
Sunday
Admisstons--.Ceorge
Nesselroad, Pomeroy; Bradley
Markin , Albany; Brian Markin,
Albany ; John Dean, Pomeroy;
Margaret Parker, Pomeroy ; Lula
Toban, Pomeroy; Roger Brown,
Pomeroy .
Sunday Discharges-Martha Burns, Betty Willis, Kathryn Evans.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV.16
Marjone
Bane,
Orville
Bloomfield,
Jessie
Burdette,
Jacqueltne Collins, Amy Colvin,
David
Bailey, Janis Beam,
rosemary Flick, Paul Fraley,
william Grueser, Francis Hatfield,
Reba Hill, Fred Hixon, Herold Hood,
Chris Lambert, Orville Lavendar,
Marie Legar, Garnet MAce, Michael
McDaniel. Myrtle Miller, Helen
Mulford, Iva Neal , Steve Nolan,
Lena Ord, Mary Parsons, Beverly
Plants, Belinda Roush, Johnnie
Russell, Ruth Shaffer, Anita
Shepherd, Darrel Shwnaker, Dennis
VIars, Jeanette Walter, Ralph
Warner , Betty Wares, Dorothy
Wilds.
BIRTI-IS NOV. 16
Mr and Mrs . Terry Hopps , son,
Point Pleasant; Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Coon, son , Jackson; Mr . and
Mrs . Paul Rice, son, Rutland; Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Craig, son,
SCottown ; Mrs. and Mrs . El&gt;&lt;m
Dailey , son, Portland .
DISCAHRGES NOV. 11
Mrrs. Grorge Allen and daughter.
Allen Ball , Alma Clark, Perry Doty,
Harold Embleton, Alen Fulks,
Araka Grate, EMma Grimm.

STEAM POWER ENGINE - Ura Swisher, forn1er
resident of Meigs County and the Clleshire area, was
recently pictured in the Dally Herald-News, Port

Pedestrians injured Saturday night
Woodrow HAle , Alex Halley, Ordel
Halstead , Richard Henderson ,
George Hemsley, Virginia Hi ll ,
Roxie Justice, Sara Lawless , Julia
Leimartn, Cindl! Mink, Mrs . barry
Pittenger and daughter, Vernon
Potts, Eileen Roush. Stephanie
Sampson, Velva Tomlinson. Berdie
White, F1orence Workman, Charles
Wright.
BIRTIJS NOV . Il
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Goheen,
daughter, Ray; Mr . and ,rs . Dwayne
Phlegar, daughter, Bidwell .
DISIICARGES NOV . 18
Mrs . Howard Caldwell a nd
dl!uthter , Robert Clark, Thelina
Dowell , Lenora Glenn , Hester
Hulshorst , Earl Jerrell Jr .,
Frederick Lanier, Virginia Michael ,
Ernest Ward .
BIRTIJS NOV. 18
Mr . and Mrs. Ricky Hill ,
daughter, Apple grove.

Area deaths
"TTiudder of Mesquite, Texas ; Mrs .
Wll..J...ARD F1TlP ATRICK
Sherry Buchanan of Rockwall,
Willard Fitzpatrick, 64, Jackson,
Texas and Mrs . Melvyn (Willa)
died Friday in Hoimes Hospital, CinCarroll of Florence , Kentucky and
cinnati, following a lengthy illness .
three grandchildren .
Known throughout southern Ohio
Funeral services were held 1 p.m .
as " Voice of the lronmen," Fitzat the Mayhew Funeral Horne .
today
patrick broadcast Jackson High
was in Jackson .
Burial
School athletic contests more than 25
years, and was instrumental in getEMMA ALICE EUI.ER
ting the broadcast media in the
Emma
Alice Euler, 71, MidSoutheastern Ohio Sportswriter'!!
dleport,
died
Sunday at her residenAssociation back in the early 1950s .
ce
.
Fitzpatrick was a native Jackson
Miss Euler was born July 11 , 1008
counlian, born in Jackson townshtp ,
in Iowa the daughter of the late
a graduate of Jackson high school
Henry and Sarah Jane Terrell
and spent his life in this Munty.
She was also preceded in
Euler.
He received a bachelor's degree in
death
by
one brother, Henry R.
education from Rio Grande College
Euler
.
and a master's degree from Ohio
She was a member of Rock
University .
Springs
United Methodist Church
" Fitz" was very active and well and
attended
Heath
United
known in the Jackson Mmmunity .
Methodist
Olurch
.
For many years he was in the inShe is survived by a brother and
surance business in Jackson, and he
sister-in~aw,
James D. and Ruth
owned and operated a grocery store
Euler,
Middleport;
one niece, Mrs .
for several years . He was qualified
Don (Mary Euler) Hill, Letart
tn the education field and was a
Falls; two nephews, Daniel Euler,
teacher and school administrator in
Mt. Vernon and Robert Euler of
Jackson , Athens, Ross and Pike
Charleston
.
counties . He was also a member of
Funeral
services will be held
the Jackson city school board , clerk
Tuesday
at
2 p.m . at the Rawlings
of that board for several years as
Coats
Funeral
Home wtth the Rev .
Jackson county elections director .
Rnbert
Rnbinson
and the Rev .
During most of this time he also
James
Corbett
officiating
. Burial
worked as a newsman, sports direcwiJI
be
in
Riverview
Cemetery
.
tor and staff announcer for both
may
call
at
the
fWleral
Friends
Jackson county radio stations on a
home anytime
part time and sometimes full tune
basts . He also worked for out-ofcounty radio stations as an anMEET TONIGHT
nouncer .
Past Matorns Club of Harrison For many years he was play-byville Chapter OES will meet this
play artnouncer for Jackson high
evening at 7:30 p m . at the horne of
Stella Atkins. All past matrons and
school athletic teams, conducted
past patrons are invited and may
sports commentary and interview
programs and was widely -!mown as
bring a guest.
the " Voice of the lronmen . "
He was a longtime member and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
past president of the Southeastern
Wednesday lbrougb Friday, a
Ohio Sportswriters and Sports
cbance ol raiD Wednesday and
Broadcasters Association . He was a
Thunday, wllb a clearlog trend
very thorough, very professional
Friday. Coollng throughout lbe
and highly-&lt;egarded sports anperiod. Hlgbll Wednesday lo !be
nouncer .
5Go and lows lo lbe 401. By
He ts survived by his wtfe, Opal, at
Friday, hlgbll maloly lo the 40JJ
home on West Street tn Jackson and
and
lows lo the 30s .
three daughters , Mrs Don ITami l

THE RACINE PLANING MILL

Choose a ny qua l 1t y fi rm mat ·

RACINE, OHIO

lress and bo .. spr. ng set

'289

Cltarlotte-Punta Gorda, Florida . Swisher was showing
a young man how they ran engines in the old daya.
Swisher is the owner of a 1922model "Baker Special ."

Two female pedestrians, Leona M.
Allen, 36, and Edna B. Patterson, 46,
both of Pt . Pleasant, were injured
late Saturday during an auto
accident on SR 7, just south of U.S.
35 .
Called lD the scene at II :43 p .m ,
th e Gallia-Meigs Post , Highway
Patr ol , re ports that Allen and
Patterson walked west bound into
\.he path of a south bound vehic le
driven by Odis Walker, 31, Pt .
Pleasant.
Both
women
displayed
incapacitating signs of injury and
were transported to Holzer Medical
Center by the county EMS .
Allen was admitted to the
intensive care Wlit fcx treabnent of a
fra ctured skull, and was listed this
morning tn guarded cwditioo .
Patterson was treated for
contusion s and abrasions of the
forehead and Ute lo wer left leg and
an injury to the back. She has ,
reportedly, been transferred to
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pt
Pleasant, for additional treatment
No citation was issued . There was
moderate dama ge to Ute vehicle .
A c;allipolts man , Ray C. Ellis, 57,
Gallipolis, was cited on a charge of
failure to maintain an assured clear
distance foll owing a two-vehicle
accident Saturday on SR 160, just
west of the Gallipolis Ctty Limits .
Called to the scene at 1. ~ p .m .,
\.he patrol reports a north bound auto
opera ted by James Evans, 48,
Bidwell, had slowed in traffic. A

vehicle driven by Ellis failed to stop
and struck Ute Evans auto..•in the
rear .
u
There was moderate damage to
the Ellis vehicle, slight damage to
the Evans auto .

Iranian ...

1C:onlinuf'd from oa~e l l
were put &lt;IJ display at a news
c'Qflference at the embassy Sunday
and she told several hundred
reporters :
" We haven't had any problema .
We've been fed more than fairly .
There haven't been any problema
physically . Maybe people have been
mentally upset, but other than that
we haven't had any problems. The
most difficult p8TI was having to sit
on hard chairs 16 hours a day with
my hands tied "
Their captors said earlier that
they would deliver a total of eight
black men and five w&lt;rnen to the
Iranian Foreign Minlstry today for
expulsion from the country. Tehran
Radio said the 13 had been absolved
of espionage activities following
Kh omeini ' s instructions to free
wo m e n and bla c ks who were
cleared . But two w&lt;rnen and two
bla ck men apparently were not
being released, aloog with 4S white
American men and eight nonAmericans held in the embowy for
two weeks .
NOMEEIING
The regular meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Educatioo will not be
~ld this evening.

ELBERFELD$

£A.

WILL BE CLOSED THE WEEK
OF THANKSGIVING,
NOV. 19th - 24th

VAN HEUSEN '

lr~tfr
/l///1&amp;/lb

)~lr)

For -Eastern Elegance .. ... . The wrap of luxury
v an Heusen) ptusn k1m o .t o r(t)e IS Cl sort marr 1nt~ w· a~n a r, d d ry fObfiC ot 80't ArMI ' h•oc elo te
Jii'b r 1'o'I On :_-me 51/e f1!5 Oil
Vdn Hc u5-E:n Robes make e xcell ent Chri stma s. gifts . Be sure
to 5-ee itll the o th er s tyl es plus our fine selec tion of v an
H eus(' n hroi'idc lo t h an d flannel pajama s for men

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

represePtatJve of Burgess and N1 ple
and a represe ntative o f the
engineering rirm of F:vans, Ham bleton and Tilton , Inc .
The contract with Burgess and
Niple would cost approximate ly
$43,000 if Burgess and Niple would
provide a res ident engineer for the
entire project . The contract with
Evans, Hambleton and Tilton would
cost $31,350 which mcludes a
resident engineer on the e ntire
project.
CoWlcd tndicated it would meet in
special session this evenmg to vot e
on the issue again .

Followm g &lt;::t dlSClL'&gt;Ston w1th boU1
representati ves t.'O Wlt'il went mto
executi ve session after whH.'h it took
the vote .
Due to the v1lJages' flnanCJal c:on ·
dition CO Wl r il heard a resolution
whe re by the village would charge
rental for office space now occup1ed
by the water and sewage depart ments in the amount of $6 ,000 a year .
$3 ,000 for each department rctroa c·
live to Jan . 1, of this year .
This Issue too was deadlocked by a
three to two vote. Mrs Walton ex ·
plained thai stnce council did not
pass on th r issue she wo uld nnt ht•

(USPS 145-960)

VOL XXVIII NO !54

a ble to pay any payroll or bill ; out of
the street or ce1netery fw1ds since
both fun d.&lt; are in fmaneJa) diffic ult y .
At tha t point Larr y WehrWJg,
t'U unc1lman, stated " ever smt:e I
have been on coWlcil W t" have Jll.&amp;
passed the buck . We can\ a fford not
to have the stree t de partment
worktng and all members should be
present to conduct business . "
Followmg Wehrung 's ;tatemcnt
the motion on the charge of rent was
rescinded and put up for vote the
second time with all members
voting yes fo r r a ss::t g.:&gt;

•

e

Rod Karr, councilman, who voted
no the flrst tune the resoulti on was
read , said he felt the lloa rd of Public
Affairs s hould be notified of the action of COWlcil before council put the
L"\sue up for vote .
John Arnott , Pomeroy , told coun cil that an old sewer in hi5 driveway
had caved 1!1 . Council agreed that
unmedtate attentiOn should be gtven
the m atter . Counc il Will not ify the
Board of Affatrs at once .
At the suggestion of Harold
Brown , council went on record
deplor tng the a ctton ta ken by the

Irantan government in seizing U. S.
Q tizens . They ask all governmental
bodies to join them in denouncing
s uch actions .
The Mayor 's report for the month
of October showing receipts in the
amoWlt of $3,1146.30 was approved .
The meeting was opened by prayer
by Mayor Andrews.
Attending were Mayor Andrews,
Jane Walton, clerk, Betty Baronick,
Larry WehrWlg, Rod Karr, Bill
Young and Harold Brown, council
members, Donnie Ward and Jack
Krautter .

•

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUES DAY. NOVEMBER 20. 1979

Twin City Machine Shop now observing 25th anniversary
The Twin City Machine Shop at 17
Cole St ., Pomeroy, is observing its
2fth anniversary .
The shop was opened in 19M by the
late ll&gt;uis RA,ibel of Pomeroy and
Arthur Strauss of Middleport.
Both of the foWJders had been ern played by the New York Central
Railroad . Mr . Reibel was a
machinist employed as a foreman
and Strauss was a skilled machinist
having served a five year apprenticeship with the New York Central as a machinist, welder and
mechanical drawer . Mr . Ret bel was
employed by the New York Cenlral
for 40 years .
The partnership was Mntinued Wl ·w 1971 when Mr . IU,ibel retired. At
that time, Strauss bought Riebel's
share and became the sole owner .
Strauss - known as "Art" by his
many friends in the Big Bend area has been a practicing machinist for
49 years .
In 1973, Willard E . Miller became
a part-time employe with the firm
and then moved into full time employment. The last three years ,
Miller has leased the shop and has
an option to purchase.
The machine shop is in its original
quarters . it was 1!1 1954 known as the
Davis bam and Willi a structure
which had to be completely done
over to accorrunodl!te the needs of
the machine shop .
The first machinery tn the shop
WBS purchased from the Hobson
shops of the New York Central and
additional eqwpment was bought
later.
Miller is a skilled welder and has
been in that field since 1961. He was
trained in pipe, structural steel and
underwater welding . He Mmpleted
a 100 hour course in Columbus tn
orygen, acetylene, arc and helium
alwninum welding He also Mm ·
pleted a ~ur CQurse tn heliarc
welding . Under the Manpower
Program, Miller taught welding in
Colwnbus and for over three years
he was welding mstructor at Meigs
High School .
Twin City Machine Shop IS equipped to do any machine work,
welding or fabrica!ton . In addition to
repatr work and welding, the shop
has a complete line of all sizes of
steel, nuts and bolts , welding sup plies including oxygen and a cetylene
and medical oxygen and suppli es
are stock item• .

Losing ground

£A.

queen-size
Extra-firm se 1

Pomeroy Council deadlocked over contract

WASHINGTON I AP I
American incomes continued to
lose groWld to rising prices la•t
month , whtle homebuilding
began what may be a long, steep
slide due to rising tnterest rates .
The Commerce - Department
reported Monday that personal,
pretax income rose 0.8percent in
October to a seasonally adjusted
annual rate of $1.975trillion That
means that every American
received, at an annual rate, an
average of $7,495. The figure in cludes all tncome, ranging from
wages to welfare to dividends

BUSINF-'iS PARTNEH - Art Strauss , left, is one of the two founders

of Ute Pomeroy Machtne Shop in Pomeroy which is observtng its 20th an ·
nivers.ary . On the right Is Willa rd Mill er who has leased the establc•hment fo r the past three years with an opt1on to purchase .

Deputies checking complaints
The Metgs County Sheriff's Depa rtment w&amp; notified Monday at 11 : 47
p.m. that a car had struck a g uar drail but no one was at the scene .
The department reported a 1980
station wagon was demolished and
deputies are atternptiiig to locat e the
driver of the vehlcle
Deputies received two accident
reports, one on Sunday and one un
Monday .
At S 07 Sunday the de pam1ent was
notifted that a deer was kille-d when
it ran tnto the path of a vehi cle
driven by Harry C. Wheeler , 71.
Gallipolis . The accident occurred on
SR 7. There was heavy damage to
the Wheeler vetucle .
At .1 :40 Monday a deer ran ml o the
side of vetu cle driven by James E .
McKnabb, 39 , Athens Th e deer apparently was not senously mjured
as it kept on running . There was
moderate property damage The
second accide nt also occ urrrd on SR

Bruce Fleming, Rt . l , ll&gt;ng Bot tom reported that sometime Monday
evening, between 6 p .m . and Bp.m a
windshled he had removed from a
car had been smashed and also a
dusk to dawn light was damaged .
'Ille mc1dent 1s under i.nvest1gation .

CLOSED FRIDAY
The Leadin~ Creek O m servancy
lltstnct Rural Water Office m
J{ulland Wlll close at the end of the
business da y Wednesday and wtll
reopen for business on Mondc:ty. Nov
26

remodeling to be shaped into a building sultablelor the
ma c hing shop. It is located at 17 Cole St., Pomeroy.

······· ·.·.·.··:-:.:-:···

NO PAPER
The Thursday edltloo of the
Daily Sentlnel will not be prtoted
lo order tbat employeeo may observe lbe Tbaobglvlog Hollday .
Publlcatlon will reoume Friday .

Weather

HeMming cloudy tonig ht. with
lows from 40 to 50. Cloudy Wed nesday, with a chance of showers .
Highs from 60 to 65 . The chan ce of
rain is 20 percent tomghl and 40 per cent Wednesday .

Solid waste study approval on agenda
Approval of a final report on solid
wast e studies for Washing wn and
Meigs CoWl ties is one of four major
item s up for considera tion ut th e
~ov 27 meetUlg of the executJve
com rm ttee of the Buc ke y ~ Htlls-

known as the Davis barn and underwent complete

Hocking
Valley
Regi onal
Development District.
The session will be he ld a t 7 p.m
a t th e BH-HVRDD Co nfe rence
Boom Ul Marietta .
Geor ge Collin s, chairma n of the
audit-budge! committee has called a
comm ttlH- meeting foc 6 p .m . that
C\" ening
Other tt em s sc he du le d for
disrus sion will be the allocation of
agin g funds fO!' 1960 , audit reports
fo r a gtn g progr ams. and a
di scuss ion of ARC co nti nu ati on
bur der and poli cies .

Nothing happening in
Meigs' school strike
·' No news is good news ."
No doubt patrons and s tudents of
the Meigs Local School District are
hoping that this old adage rings true
insofar as a settlement m the nme
week old teachers strik e 111 the
dtstrict 1s concerned .
~e ither the adrrumstration nor the
teacher s assoctation
today
acknowledged receiv1ng any word at
al l f r om Co l umbus wh e r e
negotiatiOns are underwa y between
the board of education a nd the
teachers group .
The negotiations bet ween the two
groups started at 2 p .m Friday 1!1
Columbus Wlder t he auspices of the
Ohio Department of Educatio n and
hope was expressed when the
sessiOns began that a settlement
woul d be reached by 6 p.m . Sunday
Howeve r , 6p.m . Sunday came and
went with no settlement. It was an IW'.Ulced Sw1day t&gt;vening. howev er ,
that neg ot1ation.s were st1ll un -

Chamber honoring Dr. Ralston Russell
Dr Ralston Russell , Jr , Co lumbus, a native of Pomeroy, Will be
honored by the Pomeroy Olan1ber of
Commerce on Wednesday, Nov . 28 ,
at a dinne r to be held at the Meigs
Inn
Russell "111 be presented WJth an
award of dtstmction at the dinne r .
Russell is the son of tht· latl'

Dollar dips again
NEW YORK IAP l - The dollar
fell against major currenctes
around the world Monday in ner vous trading after connicting
reports on whether Iran will still
accept dollars for tis oil .
Gold pri ces held steady 1n
Europe but drtfted lower in New
York . Dealers said bulli on
traders were hesitant lo take
major positions because of Wl certainties in the confronltttion
between Iran and the Umted
States .

7.

OBSEHVES 25TH ANNIVERSARY - This ts the
Twin City Mac hine Shop which is observtng its 20th anniversary The bwlding housing the bu.-;iness was once

OR . RAlSTON RUSSEll

Rlllston Russell and Helen I •ndsey
Russe ll. His home was loc ated
where the Meigs Football fi eld In
Pome roy is presently situated .
He was an outstandtng athlete a\
Pomeroy High School tn basketball
and track . He was also a f1 rst stnng
basketball and tr ack playe r at Ohw
State UniverSity
His s is ters a re Mrs . 1\ay
1Durothy 1 ~'arnham , Mrs . Ttppy
rMary 1 Dye and Mrs . Walte r
1Helen 1Brown Mitchell .
Dr . Ralston Russell , Jr . has been a
professor of ceramic: eng-ineenng at
Oh io Stat e Uruve rsily s tnce 1946. He
was also chairman of the depart ment 's graduate program fr om 196068. He was designated Professor
Eme ntus tn July, 1979. He hold.&gt; four
deg re es fr om Ohw sta te . He was
awarded the Bat'helor of Ceramic
Enginee ring degree tn 19J2, the
Master of Sc1ence tn I9:'33. the [)(xJor
of Philosophy tn 1939, and the
professiOnal degree of Ce ramic
FJ1g tn rer 111 1948 .
Dr . Russell had exte nsi ve ex·
pen cnee m industry before jouung
the OhiO Stale facult y . He was a
research and development engineer
for AC Spark Plug Di vision of
( ~e nt.&gt;r al Motors Corpora t ion , Flmt,

re~e ar c h and
fur Gt1 neral
Ce ramics and Steat ite Cu ., Keasby,
New J e rsey 1!1 1937. r esearch
engineer in Ohw State's En~met~ rmg
Experiment Station from 1937 40 ;
and director of cerarn1c r esearch
and sectwn manager fo r the
Wes tmghouse Electrie Co'l' . East
Pitts burgh , Pa . from 1940-46
He ts also a ceramt c consultant to
Uldustry . lie orga mzed and se rved
as director from 1964-67 of lhc
Refra ctories Research Cente r .
In \945 he toured German y as a
sc·tenttfle M ns ultanl Wlder the JO IOI
Cb tefs of Staff . European Theater .
011 a spectal rru ss10n for the U S.
Gove rnment and prepared a report
on the electrical and tec hnical
cerami c industry of that nation . For
this servi&lt;.:e he rec etved the U. S. Ar my Award of Ment
Dr Russell has been actIve 111
van ous professiOn a l organizations.
He served as Preside nt uf the
Na twnal Ins titute of Ceram1c
F..ngmcers tn 1950.,)1, th e Ceramic
F~lucational Co uncil In J!J511,59 , and
Keramos from 1968-70. He was also
President of the American Cerami c
Soctety for 1975-16, a member of the
Board of Trustees for 1952-M "'"'

M1 ch , fr um 1933-J7; a

c~ rarm c

en~ine~r

1974-78 a nd wa s made a Fell ow lll
1941. He 1s a member of nun1t"ruus
other technical and professiOnal
soctettes , tncluding the National
Soctety of Professional Enginee rs,
the American Socte ty for Tc sttng
and Materials, the Amer ican
AssociatiOn for the Advancement of
Science , The American Soct et y for
fo: ngmeeri.ng Educatwn, and Sigm a
Xi .

He has also served on various
governmental

adv1sory

eoWlcils,

and as a member of visiting com -

mittees of The Engineers CoWlcil for
Professional Development, 1968-77.
He was elected Fellow, Institute of
Cerarrucs, Ltd . in 1968, the first nonBnttsh subject so honored . Or.
Hussell was designated " Out ;tanding Ceramic Engineer" on
ref eiving the Arthur F . Greaves Walker Award of the National ln ' tttute of Cerami c F.ngineers in 1970.
Hr received the Erlw~ rrt Cramer
Award of the Amen can Ce ramic
Societ y in 1974, was the recipient of
the Greaves-Walker Role of Honor
Award from Keramos in 1975, and
was honored as a Knight of St .
Patrick by the New York State
College of Ceramics at Alfred
University in 1976.

derway and were to be c-ontinued at 1
p.m . on Monday .
Ills asswned since neither side in
the dispute acknowledges receiving
any word from their negotiating
team today that negotiatiOns are
still underway in Columbus .
Today marked the second day of
the mnth week tn the strike which
began Sept. 24. Schools have been
offictally closed stnce Oct . 16.

Opening lhly
•
pnces
up
RIPLEY , Ohio ! AP I - Prices
were up $10.20 per hundred pounds
at the opening Monday of Ohio 's only
burley iDba= market .
Growers sold for a reMrd average
price of $144.49 per hundred pounds,
up from last year' s $132.28.
Howeve r ,
summer
rains
.:ra stJcally reduced this year's crop,
officials said .
Monday 's sales were 384,602
poWlds for $055 ,699 .60 . Last year's
first day offerings were 492,000
poWldS
Fede ral support prtces this year
are Si 33.70 . up from $124 .70 in 197~
79 .
Th e ma rket will close Thursday
for Thanksgiving but open on
Friday . Sales will be held on Monday
through Thursday starting next
week , officials said .

/Jirt&gt;ctors reelet·ted
All five incwnbents on the Meigs
County Fatr Board were reelected to
three year tenn.s at the annual election held at the secretary's office on
the Rock Springs FBirgrounds Monda y night .
Reelected were Bill Downie, Benny Slawter, Ajldl!lou Lewis, Jim Carnahan and John Rose . There was
only one other candidate for a post
on the board . The election was held
from 5 to 9 p.m.
NO PICKUP TIIURSDAY
Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland
subscribers to the H. and H.
Sanitation Co. , are advised ths'
there will be no pickup service on
Thursday due to Thanksgiving. The
finn will make up the lack of the -holiday service on Friday and Saturday.

••

)

�3 -1 'he Dally Sentuwl, Middleport·P tJineru). (), Tuc!:&gt;Llet}, ;\o\.· 20, 1979

Today~s

Thepolltieso!Cambodia
By Don Graff
Suddenly almost everyone, wn],
the notable exceptiOn of the Soviets.
wants to get Into the rescue act
A st·ore of International agenctes
are concert •ng efforts rn an alr.,;ea
lift of emergency food .
Fifty-one of the Umted Natwns
have pledged more than $200 million
for relief suppli es
The Amencan dep uty president _
Rosa lynn Carter - IS personally on
the scene
Even the previously lffiplacable
regime tn Phnom Penh has yielded
to the extent of opentng the port of
Kompong Som and the Mekong
River to relief shipments
Thi s burst of activtty is not only
welcome , It may well be essential If
Gambodians ar e not for all practical
effort to be extmgw shed as a people .

Wt' QE
GEf

jli'i\MI'

CAQTER GOT
REALTOU6H
AIJ TOLD J RA~
TO KEEl' Tl-IEIR
O LD O IL"

commentary The politic~

GC ~~A

GAS LINES
AN
~16HER

I'RICES.

r ------------

L_----------------------------------------------------------~----------- ' ~~~~~~~~~~---

llw rnagmtude of the disastrr that
ha overtaken them IS matched un
recent history only by the Je"1sh
liolocaust. By some estimates , up to
half of Cambodia's pre-conflict
population may a lready have
penshed and many or most of the
survivors may already be beyond
savmg .
Who IS to blrune for this tragedy ?
Must Immedi at ely Cambodians
themselves- the lwo regimes, beth
pledged w the Manus! cause,
savagmg each other for control of a
colllltry that could well end up
Without people
Beyond these, the VIetnamese who
are th e real power m Cambedia,
graduall y extendin g thm own 1mpenum over all that had once been a
chOice portiOn of the French Emp1re .
The Soviets , fo r supporting and en -

-------------,

Lrttns of opinion an· "rlcomt·d. Tht•y should be less
than300 ""rds lung lor suhjel'lto n ·du1·tion by the editor 1
and must ht· signed with lht· signet•'s address. ~ames may
IX' \loithheld upon publt('atiun . Howewr . on request,
namt•s \\ill be disdosed. L!'ltt·rs shuuld IX' in goud taste.
addressing tssut•s. not pt•rsnnalitit•s.

Two-year cycle can boost savings
By Ray O.Craoe
There are two ways of looking at
the mcrease m the standard deduction that Will be availa ble on this
year's federal tncome tax return
One person can vtew the mcrease tu
$3,400 from the old $3,200 on the jomt
return of a marned couple and say,
"That 's fine, I won~ bether Iteffilz.
mg anymore ."
The second looks at the $200 in crease and says to himself. 'I
wonder 1f I cant use that to my ad vantage and get even more?" Tha t 's
the attitude I favor .
In this second of a three -part
senes on year-&lt;!nd tax planmng , I 'm
gomg to suggest ways m whi ch you
can take advantage of this situation
and get even more out of 1t
Admittedi y, this strategy ts not fo r
everyone . It cannot be used by smgle
persons who ha ve few rla1mable

deductiOns and who are better off
se ttling for the optiOnal standard
deductiOn of $2,200 Married persons
Wi th no mortgage on a home, or with
a rrummum of medical expenses
probably are excl uded , too
That still leaves us gOO&lt;! prospect.&lt;
a cons idera ble number of the 94
rrul10n people who Will be flung In come tax returns this year The
strateg&gt; ts a model of sirnplicily.,
but, properly employed, 11 ca n produce substanllal tax savmgs . It asks
that yo u do just two things .
I. - Don\ waste valuable deductiOns . Time them to take maxunum
advantage of them
2 - Thmk of tax plannmg m twoyear cycles . One yea r take the standard deductiOn . The next year
1terruu your deduct1ons Asswne
U1at yo u ha ve abeut $3,300 in

In Washington
GOP plans riftless campaign
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON INEA 1 - Even as
they battle one another in the
pnmar1es. the maJOr RepubiJcan
presidential contenders are qwetly
cooperatmg to insure that whoever
wins the GOP norrunatwn has a
wuted party behmd him
All the GOP candidates are
anXIous to avoid the kind of nasi)
schism that lmgered on between
follower s of Ronald Reagan and
Gerald Ford after the 1976 conventiOn. a split that may well have
contnbuted to Ford's defeat by Jtmmy Carter
Therefore, they are already
work ing toget her
through
designated to p~ evel campaign rudes
-to minuru?B_ fri ctions and plan for
a wufied assall)t on the Democrats
after the July !'iJ80 Republican con -

vention m Detroit .
The infonnal plaruung umt. which
Is known as 'Group '80, .. was for med at the urgmg of GOP Natwnal
Ola1nnan Bill Brock and meets
penodically llllder h1s directiOn
Participants are concentrating on
the so r t of nuts-and-bolts
preparat to n reg . vo ter bl oc
targetmg , reg istration lln ves, etc 1
which can pay dividends for any
nominee regardless of Ideology
Even without th e kllld of
spadework Brock is overseemg. the
Republicans are likely to ha ve a b1g
organizatiOnal jump on the
Democrats next year because thelf
conventiOn comes first, thereby
givmg them an entire extra month to
gear up for the general electton and
Wheal any intra -party breaches.
: In 1976, the Carter-Mondale cam jlaign used a Slfllilar head start to
enonnous advantage while Ford and
Bob Dole, forced to hit the grolllld
rWllling, Initiall y stumbled badly
over various logistical hurdles .
GlllllliDg for
Kennedy defeat
Handgllll Control Inc , a "CitiZen
lobby" group that 1s one of the most
forceful advocates of gllll-control
legislation, last month hailed the
"courage and leadership· displa yed
by Sen . Edward M. Kennedy in m troducing new handgllll-control
legislation .
Which is interesting, , smce Ken .
nedy's own office- nonnally fast off
the blocks with a press release abeut
his every achievement -didn't say a
peep abeut that particular bill Nor
has the senator mdicated as yet
whether he plans to stress his
longstanding support for stricter
gun controls during his presidential
carnpalgn.
Downplaying the subject certainly
won't spare him the wrath of the socalled gun lobby _The National Rifle
Association and other pro.gw1
groups are already campaigning
t
~

furiously for Kennedy ·s defeat
Slo,.;og progress
Although blacks compnse II percent of the U. S. populatiOn, the) ac cOllllt for Jess than I percent of all
the elected officials m the country,
accortling to newly published figures
from the J01nt Center for Political
Studies here m Was hin~ on
Furthennore, black progress •n
attammg electiVe offi ce seems to be
sloWing Between Jul y 1978 and Jul y
1979 , the nwnber of black elected officials Increased by just 2 percen t to
a total of 4,607, the smalles' JUm p
smcc the center started Its annual
survey 1n 1970
l11e South , which has !&gt;4 percent of
the black population, accollllts for 60
percent of black elect ed offi cials. 11
IS followed by the North Cent ral
states, the Northeast and the We;t
Nea rly ha lf of a ll elected blacks
148 percent 1 hold offi ce at tht•
InWlll'lpaJ level , ano ther 26 per cent
an~ serYing m educatiOn posit! OilS
A word to the " ·isf'
The Carter White Ha ll')€ recent!\

dl;&lt;rtb uted a handy litt le pac ket ~~

"fact sheets .. on women m govern ment that mcluded a none-too.,;ubtl e
remander that 21 percent of
President Carter 's appomtments
hc:IVe gone to women compa r ed \\.1lh
JUsl 12pe r cent nf ?rt&gt;~ldent Ford's
l11e d1 g was dJreded not just a l
the GOP but also no doubt at Sen
f..dwa rd M Kenned) . who has never
been noted fo r h1r1ng women for top level pchc) JObs

Today in Histor y
B) The Assor1ated Press
Today IS Tuesday. NO\" 20. the
324th day of 1979 The re are 41 da) s
left un the year
Toda) 's highlight un lustory .
On this date m 1945. 24 Nall war
lea ders went to trial m Nuremberg,
German y .
On this date
In 1616, Cardtna l Hichel1eu
became the Frend1 mm tster uf stat~
for fore1gn affair s and wa r .
In 1818. Simon Bolivar formal ly
declared Venezuela Independent of
Spain
In 194 7, Eng la nd 's Princess
E li za be th
and
Lt.
P hilip
Mo untbatt en were marned m
I oodon ·s Westminster Abbey .
In 1970, Native American
demon strator s occupied Alcatraz,
the dese rted pnson 1n San F'ranc1sco
Bay .
In 1977, Egypt· , President Sadat
told the Israeh parliament U.a t
Cairo seeks peace with justice . The
Palestuie Liberation Organlzallou
a ccu sed him o f a humll iat mg
surr~nder .

allowable deductiOns each year You
can settle for the $3 ,400 standard
deductiOn each year If you want to.
Or Maybe , With good plannmg , you
can spend $2,000 m deductible items
m one yea r and in that year take the
$3,400 standard deductiOn . Without
spending any more in the two -vear
pen od - rut "'th better planni~g that would leave you $4,600 miienuzed deductions. Instead of havmg
$6.800 m deductiOns for two years 12
x $3,400) you would have $11,000
1$3 ,400 plus $4,600 ). Even at a verv
lo w 20 percent rate, that would be
savmgs of $240 on that $1 ,200 m extra
deductions over the two-year penod
If you are senous abeut this
busmess of savmg money on your m come lax, take an mventory now to
see where you stand on yo ur deductiOns . Go through the lis t of deducllons . startmg With medi cal expenses, a nd work your wa&gt; throug h

a

taxes,

mterest,

cunt 1ru bt!ons,

cas ualty and theft losses, and fmal ly , miscellaneous deductiOns .
Are you now anywhere near the
$3, 400 s tandard ded u ctiOns
allowance' If you a re and you still
ha ve llllpald bills that would be
deducllble, pay off everything yo u
can by Dec . 31 and then itemize . IF
yo u are nowhere near your standard
allowance and can hold off on makmg payment W11il Jan uary, do so
You would waste a deduction by paymg now . Next year the deductiOn
may do you some good .
Now, tf you are looking for ways to
pack In extra deductiOns this year.
cons ider these
- Are you making Installment
payments on orthodonllc work or
other maJOr dental or medical procedures' Accelerate the payments.
tf yo u call, to get m o re Ul for thts
year

- JJo you have esllffiatcd pa)TIIents
on state and local mco me taxes that
are payable In January' Move up
th e payment to thiS month and get
the credit this year. Some areas
have half -year real esta te tax
payments that ca n be paid m either
December or January Pay It thts
month If you con afford Jt a nd tf 1t LS
~rnusstb le 111 your area - tl IS tn
most places - make a doubl e pay ment on the Dccember real estate
tax bill ThiS way you Will avotd
mctkmg the p&lt;~yment thot utherwtse
would be due next summer
- Planmng on buymg a new car
soon ') Buy tl this month Instead of 1n
January That way the sa les tax on
that big purchase would be an a ddi tiOna l ded uet10n th iS year
- Don\ dela} the payment of
deducllble Interest unlll January If
you could get an a dditiOnal tax
deductiOn by paymg 11 now Do the
same thtng w1th your chanta ble L0/1-

tnbutw ns Advance these or s low
them down. depending on your tax
need .
The b1g tdea ts to thmk m two-year
periods We 're not suggest ing that
you spend more JUSt to get ded uc lions Spend exactly the same - JUSt
watch ynur tunmg
1NEXT Do 's and don't &gt; f11 r Investors
1

Tilt: II All\'
I USPS

SJ-:NTT"'IEI

14&gt;9&amp;01

l&gt;t~ VOTJi"_.D

TO TilE

INTERF..sT 01'
AREA

MEIGS-MA..~~·

ROBERT HOF..F l.JOI
City Editor
PublJibftl diUy nr~pt S.CW"day by Tlwo ObJo
Yall~y Publbhtq Company- Mullim~ lJM'
Ill Cnurt St . Pom,.roy, ObJo 45719 ~~
OffiN" Pbollt' 19!· '!lSI. Edltort;.J Pbobe
M-US7
SHoad clau PDfllal~ p.klal Pomeroy. Ohio
NaUoaaladv~rt:bln&amp; rr prr.e11LaUn, LaDdnn
A!lsutlak-11. llOI ElM-lid Avr . Cltvf'lilod Otllo
44115

•

Sublll'rlption ratf's · l.leU\· ~rtd by urrlcr
wher~ avalllble Ill N" ntl JH'' w«-.11. By Mo&amp;or

Rouk

wile~ e.rrlt'r

monlb , SUO.

tr.n-lce ootava llablr . Ooe

11k D11Jiy St-aUor.l, by mall in Ohio a rut WH I
VlriJnia, 011e year 132.00 ; SIJ: mootbJ sn so ·
lhr~ mootb1 SIO M. Ellew!M'u• w .oo , sl~
month1 QUO ; thrH moath1 111 .00
Tbe AIIIK'i.akit Prrlli Is ex:d1111n l) ea.U dc-d
to lhe Wit' fr.r publlutlrn:1 of a ll Df'lU iliftpo~~Ldt"
(r~ lkd lo tht' orw :t~pyprr and alsu ttw Jura l
1M'" ~ vuhh~h rd tlt'n·•n

Thanks firemen
Dear Sir:
I would like to take th1s oppcrtumty to extend my thanks and
congratulations to the Rutland Fire
Department for a job well done. I
fee l that not enough people give
thanks to these fine individuals.
Many llffies these people are
ca lled upon a t all hours of the da y
and rught, sometlffies un the worst
weather conditiOns to answer f1re
ca lls and they are always there
Also let us not forget to look behind
the scenes at all the other functiOns
these people perfonn . In the sum mers they work endless hours to
prepare the ir annual ox roast which
malty of us enjoy This helps them to
earn money for much needed equipment
In the fall they undertake the task
of their turke y s upper . 1Except10n
thts year, due to school stnke 1 This
must be planned at least a month rn
advance The ladies aUXIliary works
many hard hours . The results being
some tasty and deliciou.&lt; suppers
Now we com e to Chnslmas tune
and the Christmas decoratiOns must
be put up , new ones made , and old
ones repaired Also lel us not forget
the Chnstmas treats given t o the
childre n by the Fire department .
Mu ch effort must be put forth and
the result bemg a little something
extra for a ll to en joy .
Rutland village IS small · we
haven't very m uch , and if 11 w;ren'l
for the cooperatiOn of our Council
f1re De pa rtment and Ladl e~
1\ux iii ary. we wo uldn't ha ve
anythmg
Hutland VIllagers, It certamly
would be mce lo let these people
know how much we appreciate their
efforts for a job well done '
Sin cere!) . J ohn D J acobs,
Hutland. Ohw 45775

Dear Parents and Taxpayers of
Meigs Co llllly .
I thmk the people who are
cnt1ciz mg the teachers and blammg
them for thiS mess that we'r e in, had
better open thelf eyes and wake up
to U1e truth
The teachers worked for awhile on
an extended contra ct. when they
chdn l have to They want a fair and
good contract to work under , no one
else would settle for less
Supenntendent Gleason has what
you could say. ts an outstanding contract. He ts an o utsider, he was
brought mto this county agamst the
people's Wishes, by the beard members while most of the teachers hav e
l&gt;een here for a long whil e Supl
r.Jeason and the beard members
have spent . and are spending enough
money to more than gtve the
teacher s a raase
We don 1 need the g uards. the
S('hool buildmgs have been closed all
sunm1er. and we didn't have g uards
aro W1d them then , and that 's $7 an
hour all these week.' for nothmg , and
they a r e payhmg a lawyer 170 an
hour. and when they had school open
durmg the stri ke, they were paymg
the substitute teacher s $52 a day .
They are usmg our money for
thmgs like that . when they co uld
have st!ttled the stnke and saved our
mo ney . Those of yo u who voted for
Dr. Keith Riggs and Larr y Powell.
and got them back Ill offi ce to carry
on Wllh wasting our mone y and
plllliStung our children and leading
u.' to believe that they want to get
this stnke settled . when most of us
can see that, it ts not so
If I were !host! who voted to keep
U1e m m, I would Qwl mt iCIZlng the

teac her s and blame myself for what
rrught be ahead of us.
I know that the teachers don\ enjoy going without paydays, and sitting out in all kinds of weather on
picket lines . I'm sure they would
muc h rather be doing their Jobs and
going home of evenings. - Doris
Richinond , RD. I, Middleport

of Cambodlll
courag mg the Vietnamese. Jess for
what IS to be gamed in the (am.
bodian confli ct itself than to stnke at
the Olmese And the Qtinese, supporters of the losin g Cambodian
side , for s imilar reasons of
maneuver against the Soviets
Also, for that matter, the French
and the Americans . The fonner for
their vain post -World War II effort to
re-&lt;!slablish themselves m Indochina
and, as a conseq uence, launching
the entire region on a :!&amp;year war
The latter, inheritors of the losing
French cause, lor having drawn
Gambedia mlo fuJ I.,;cale warfare m
the last spasms of the effort to hold
on m South Vietnam .
The real VIIlam, however, IS
politics, the politics of power that
have mollvated and marupulated all
the parties to this disaster And
al though reli ef IS on the way although 11 may ye t prove beth too
little and too la te - we are not done
Wllh them .
The Umled States and Soviet
Umon together might mollllt an effccti vc relief operation that would
a&lt;;sist beth Cambodian camps, but
are llllable to coordinate eflorta
because of contwwng divergent tn·
terests .
The qwckes t an d most effectiVe
mea ns of movmg relief supplies in
large volwne ml o Cam bodia would
be by truc k across the Thai berder.
but Phnom Penh will not agree to
th 1s because of the ltkely greater
benefits to 1ts opponents whose
s1ronghold the border reg1on 1s
The Umted Stat"' IS rel uctant to
channel all atd throug h channels
controlled by Phnom Penh beca use
of the benefit thJs might represent to
V1etnamese.SOvtet Pxpanstontsm
And SO ll g0€S
Politics. as Cambodia Is so
trag ically demonslratmg , can be not
only hal&lt;! rdous but potenllally fatal

Business mirror
NEW YORK I AP 1 - The family
farm, in whi c h th e dutiful
contr tbution s of mother, father and
ma ny children a dd up to a
whol esome. hea rth -ce ntered and
somehow profitable way of life. IS a
m&gt;th , says Walter Russell
Soap operas depict il as fact
Politicians rapturously defend 11.
Many millions believe religwusly
tha t 1l IS a fortress of basi c
Amen can values . The Agnculture
Department giVes 1l offic ial

recogn 1tion
" It IS my opinton ," says Russell ,
" that the 'family !a nn · - that whole
lffiage - has neve r exiSted. and
ce rtaml y not sm ce the Great
Depression ." II's a myth, he says
agam . " It' s a perception.' '
Is such talk mere braymg ' Who IS
this man Russell '
He was born on an Iowa fann tha t
ha s been m his family for more than
a hundred years lie holds a
doctorate m agronomy a nd once was
a U.S . Agriculture Department
SCienU;&lt;
No w
vice
president
of
Oppenheimer Industries , he helps
manage hundreds of thousands of
!ann ac reage for the Kansas Cit yba se d
a g n c ultu ra l
se rvi ces
com pa ny .
There do eXIst farrulies seekmg to
operate acreage m the manner
many peop le perceive as traditiOnal.
says Russell But thetr life 1s hardly
Idylli c and the ir efforts are
llllprohtable, he says .
" The system doesn't len d Itself to
acceptmg modem te chnology, " he
ex plams . " To be competJt1ve today
yo u must accept more technology
and capital and ma nagement... "
" The type of fanning envisiOn ed
as the traditional farnil&gt; farm 1s

LA Rams rally to defeat Falcons, 20-14

Todsy's

done for tradition. not for good
eco nom ic reasons The~ mtghl gro w
t·otton , for rnstanre , because tbe
land alwa ys wa s m cot ton ..
Tlffie marches on . and In fannmg
It ma rched sw1fti) ~lurh of U S
agncultur e, S&lt;:~ys Russell ts made
up of three categones of farms
first, he lists the uneconomic
fa m 1ly operat ion 1n wh tch the
hus band and wile nught hold parttune JObs elsewhere They ope rate
littl e acreage They farm because of
tradit iO n
a nd
perhaps
for
enJO)ment
Nex t IS the family team . perhaps
made up of two brothers or a father
and son or a father, son and unc Je
who manage perhaps 600 to 1,000
acres. half of which rrught be rented
Th ey'r e a busm ess
And U1 en there 1s U1e tJgh tly help
group , perhaps made up of fam ily
members. that ope rates thousa nds
of acres It 1s htghly le\"er aged and
very econorn1c· It 1s a buswess, and
good busme ss pracu ces govern
"They usc all the fi scal tools. "
sa1d Russell Th e) study markets
and tll e) know how to market their
goods They r a1se cro ps. th ey sell
and buy land. they buy and sell
cattl e. they run rustom feed lots
That IS the realit;. sa) s Russell
"The r e IS nothing wr ong with
preserv mg tradition. but )OU ca nnot
have econ om~ mung the tradltJOnal
methods You can't do wha t your
grandfather did ·
The decltne of mefflcient , smaller
farms IS documented by the
numbers In 1964 about 2Q5 ,000 fanns
accollll ted for o ne-ha lf of all farm
product sa les. 1\ decade later half of
a ll fann sa les came from 100 ()()()
llllllS

.

Sports
World
Crim~ln

By Will

To rnos t p&lt;' upl l:', tht'

P a ll a~

( {1 \-\bo} S C' Drl JUrt· up \ ISIUil S of a

whJrnng rnadnn e - c·old steel , nul"i
and bulls , na, hmg lights, operallng
wttll th(_• un errmg preciSIOn of a
computer .
· Don ' t lw lH·H· tt, " said th e
Co wbo)s' ~te~ r quart r rbe~ l' k H.og er
Staubal' h " We fl' flesh and bon es
hke everybody e ls e We make
mistakes We r a} for It and we hurt
" Hight no w, we 're tn troub le We
can 'llook back on what we' ve done
m the pa st We ' vr got tu ~f' t 1t
toge ther !\io computer IS gmng to
save us
We have to do It
phys1eall) ..
After a 7-1 ~;t.lrt In the Nationa l
Football League. the Cowbo) s have
fa ll en tntD a late season sl ump The)
have lost three of thetr last four
games - and tlmarted a fourth by a
last gasp miracle finiSh agamst the
:-&lt;ew York Giants c;ow they face the
dtsqu1rl1ng specter of po ss tbl)
fai lmg to make the pla)off s foc the
fir st um e "' 13 )ears
Five tlffies the) ha ve mad e It tu
tlw Super Ro~l. \\Jn nmg twwe 'Ine
PitL-;burgh Stet•lers t~~t them tn
Super Bowl XIll
Once bel~t·n· d he aded fo r a
run away\ tctur y m the ~FC Eas tern
DIVIsion, the Cowbeys no" fmd
il1einsclves lied with Philadelphia
and Wa s hin gton al 8-4, th e ir
('OO ftd ence shaken and &lt;1 rocky r o ad
ahead
We have come to realize that
s uct·ess most tlmr s IS bao;ed on the
fm al moments of the season ,"
Stauhach said, pnor tD startmg
'"' 1' rk out s fo r T h ur sda r·s game
rt grun st Hou s t on ' ' Wt• a re no t

, -~~

--

~o

With £o ur returmng !t&gt;ttennc n ,
Cftac·h Wayne Bergdoll 's South western Highlanders prepare for the
upcoming basketball season With ex pectatwns of bettenn~ last season 's
IIJ.9 record
Inside the SV AC. the Highlanders
posted a 7-J mark. good enou~h for a
second place tJe w1th Ea stern
Heturn1n~ lettennen tnclude Dale
Newbery, 6-2 Jumor and Dwayne
Forgey, 6-2 seni or . the squad's
tallest players . Todd Baker, 6~
JlllliOr and Scott Russell , 5- 10 JuniOr
Other members arc Jay Burl eson . :r
10 JLUllOr . Wayne Sizemo re . ~
JWliOr, Ketth Stzemore, ~ I I semur ,
Hon Hammon , !i-9 jlllliOr . Shennan
Potter , :rto seniOr and Ill!! Woolum .
IH JlllltOr .
C!Jach Bergdoll , entenng hiB four til season at Southwestern feels his
dub has some qwckness for Jt !'i bas ic
nwn -to-1nan pressmg def t•ns e
The Hi ghlanders Will Ill' strong In
the nuddlc 0 11 offense and defense
and have more depth on the benc h
Weaknesses are the team 's overall
SJJ.c and shooting . Coach Bergdoll
says hiS squad mll.'o1 work harder on
re bo un dt n ~
and overcome tt!'i
shootmg def1c 1ency
lnst v1a graduatiOn were the
team 's top offensive perfonners.
Gene Layton and Greg Nelson They
provided between 31).35 poun~' a

South,. estern has added Oak Hill .
Wahama, and Hannan, W Va to tls
sched ul e this year In additw n,
SWJ-lS plays Eastem of Pike 11Jld
Coal Grove Lll non -league games .

HIGHLANDER SC HEDULE
Nov JOat E a ster n ( P1ke )
De&lt; 7 K 1nger Creek
Dec 11 a t Coa l Grove
Dec \.4 at Southern

Dec 18 at Oak Hill
De c 1 1 at N o r th Gall!a
Jan 4 at Hannan Tra ce
Jan 8 Hanna n , W V a
Ji'1n 11 Ea~ t ern ( MC IQSJ

JM 15 E a ~ tern ( P1ke J
JM 18 at K)l'ge r c r eek
Jan 22 at Wall ama

Jan 25 Souther n
Jan } 9 at Sy mme'&gt;V a ll e y
F r·n 1 a t North Ga l l 1a
f'•
OakH III

F L'f;
F1·u
Fco
Feb

" rl a n non Trac e
t,. at Hannan . W Va
17 wanama
15 atEastern (Me1gsJ

Bengals interested
in LB Henderson ••.
CI~ C I :--&lt;~IITI

The
l'I ncl nnatl
Beng~ls
app ear
Inter es ted In Dallas line ba cker
'11wm"s " liolly" ood .. Henderson,
but r lub off tna ls sa) the) doubt he'll
be available to the team
Henderson. 26. was wa ived by th e
GJwixJys Monday but e lected to
retJre tead If he dectdes to take th e
wcnv er ro ute. he would have to clear
Uw c; •llonal Football Conference
lol'fC&lt;"l' the Bengals. m the Amencan
F{)(J tbe~ll Con fe r ence, could cons tder
hun . said" Mike Brown , assistant
1

AP I

~tneretl rn.ana~er

·If there were a Hen der son m the
AF C. we' d be mterested . But I doubt
tf the re'l l be anot her player waived
"t th"t poSitiOn of hiS ability ,"
Bro wn satd
The llengals, who at 2-10 have the
worst record m the con fe r ence .
s uHer e d injunes to linebackers
Heggt e Williams and Glenn
Comeron m Sunda y' s 42-2 1 loss at
llouston
·J probably won't go to a
conte nder," said Hender~n m a
te lephon e Interview Monday night
"But I don't want to go to a learn
that doesn't have the potenllal to
Wlf I want to go somewhere where I
can help get somethmg get gmng
" Does Cincinnati lik e me '
" Hight now It 's a matter of who
!hunks I'm worth what I thunk I'm
worth," Hende rson said
" I won't go for what Dallas was
paymg me But I'm wiltmg to play
rllllning back and line ba cker and I
thtnk I ca n sell so me tic kets"

THE RACINE PLANING MILL
RACINE, OHIO

OF THANKSGIVING,

Monday ' s Sports Tran sact ton s.
Bv The Ass.ociat~ Press
BASEBALL

Amencan League
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Added
Lar r y Jones and Tom Rowe . p11
chen•. Oat las Wdt1am s and D r ungo
Harewood, outf1elders , Dave H up
pert. ca t c her , and Dan Logan , fir st
baseman. to the team ' s 40 man
ro ster Ass1gned Jose 8ast1an , 011
cher , Kev1n Kennedy, cat cher , T om
Chism , f•rsr ba seman , and (Mios
Lopez . ovtf •e ld er . to Rochester 's
roster Released ElrOd He n dr ,c k~
c atcher , and announced he w•tl
rema1n as a coach

Nattona I league
contract
LOS

ANGELES

DOD GER S

S•gned Don Stanhouse , P•tcher , to a
flve year contra ct
PITT SB URGH
PIRA TES
S1gned Manny Sanguillen . cat che r
t o a mulfiyear contra c t
BASKETBALL
National
Basketball Assocta1ton

ATLA NTA HAWK S Stgned
Hub•e Brown , head co ach , to a new
fnte yea r co ntract Announced that
Lew•s Sc haffeL general manager .
res1gned but w ill rema1n w 1th fhe
team as a consulta nt
FOOTBALL
Nat•onal Football League
DALLAS COW BOY S -· Thoma'
" H ol l ywoo d "
H e nd ers on
lin eba cker, ret•red
'

found W~U ah: Fran ns w1th a 15·
:oa rd ~ 11r1ng fX:ISS latl' m th e third
pt.' rt()(1 tu 1·u1 tht Hams lead to H ·7
JJ,. ' un nH tt·d wtth F ran r 1s agam on
&lt;:i '\:l,..~a r d lout hduw n ple~y wtth 4 II
lt·ft tn tht: l'Ontl'St to brm~ th e
1- a !cons Wi thin Stf!k lng dlSlance a t

2().14
Bu t .J {Jnes .
duslflg

HU LSTO \

Huus t on

IS tmk enn g w nh Uw tdf.'CJ, ,;nnntng
go ultsh ly a t the pc ssibiliiie s of
ptt&lt;-hing J H l!ll' ha n l, ~ &lt;, tan Hyar
cmd J ue Nie kn..~ on suc ces siv e day s
Should he da zzle the opposltlon b)
pttchmg stnkeout artiSts Hyan and
HIChard m suc cessive games or pu t
\ tl' kr u &lt;:trt d hts unpr editab le
knu ckleball bell'e en tht•m tn the
rotallon '
WIII t·al&lt; her Ala n Ashh) b,· ubl r to
St&lt;:tnd the hee~t uf two or ba-;ebai! s
ha rdest tft r &lt;~ " 1ng pit( h+·rs a nd then
rn.!st~·r th t
featl ii.' r\ pi tc hes of
;-.- Iekrn .,
6Jl these qu estwns a nd rnure
became topt cs of dlsc ll.;;swn "'h en
th e Astros an nollllr- c-d :11 ondu) th e)
had s1gned H.yan tu a four ·\ ear
(untract for a rl:'por tl'd $4 mll.lton ,
makmg Hyar the lughest paJd free
agent tn the htstor) of baseball
" I' m d eliberatin g wheth er I
should pet ~1 ekr o in the mtddle of
them, " Vlfdon ~td Or we might
go With Hyan and f\ 1ehard and then
come ba ck with ~1ekro We've gol
plenty of tum· tD roll t! around "
Hyan, who led the Amertcar
League In stnkeouls with 233 la st
season. will JOun H1chard. the maJ or
league leader at 313, and Niekro, the
Nat ion&lt;:~ l League's wlnmn gest
pit cher at 21 -11, in fonning one of the
strongest startmg threesomes m th e
maJor leagues next season
Ryan sa1d his contract did not
me ·tude defe rred pa) ments a nd ts
~uarantet&gt;d. fr,r thre e yra rs Th e
Astros h;;\·e th t opt10n tD renew lh e
r nntr rH·t f11r th t· frn tr1 h \t' ar

SAN DIEGO 1AP 1 - The San
D~ego Padres are adding veteran
nghl-hander Rick WISe to their
pitchmg rotaUon today, after betng
thwarted tn efforts to obt31Il pitchers
Dave Goltz and Don Stanhouse m the
free-agent market .
The Padres scheduled a news
conference at 2 p .m . EST toda y to
announce the signing of the 34-yearold Wise. who played out his opuon
with the Cleveland Indians thiS year
lie ag reed to terms w1th th e
Padres that will earn him
approxlffiatel} U .7 million over a
fi ve-yea r penod, the San Diego
Tribune sa1d Monday
WISe's wife . Susan. confirmed the
signing , as did Indians' President
Gabe Paul
'' I would asswne money IS the
reason Hiek ts leavu1g the Indians ,"
Mrs. Wise told the Cleveland Plam
Dealer tn a telephone conversatJon
from the Wtse hom e at Beaverton.

Ore .
" We loved Cleveland, our who le
family did . but smce we liv e on the
West Coast, H1ck wanted to pitch for
a West Coast team," she satd
Pa ul sa id Wise a nd his agent had

been scheduled to meet With Ind ians
off icials Tu esday. but news of the
Padres' stgmng arnved hrst .
.. Alter hearmg what San D1ego
off ered . I don 't blame Hick a damn
bit." sa1d Pau l. " Wh en they told us
the tenns th e&gt; were talkmg about.
we were out of Ri ck W1sc's
ballpark ...
Bob Fontame, general manager of
the Padres. said " We lik e Wise as a
sta rter in our large ballpark . I' here
we believe he can be more effectl'&lt;~
Thts IS a good park for a fellow like

Top Twenty
By The Auociated Press
Tne Top Twenty teams •n The
A$SOc1a f ed Press college tootbi'11 1
pol l, w 1th l1rst pla ce votes rn pa re n
theses, records a nd total po1nt s
Po•nts based on 20 19 18 17 16 15

14 13 12 II
2 l
1 Ala bama
2
3
4
5
6

7
8
9
10

11

GAAMEETING
All persons mterested m GAA m
the Southern Loc al School Dislrlct
are asked to attend a meetmg at
Southern High School , Nov 'n, at
7:30p.m

12

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 J
1321110001 I, 238

Oh1 0 51
( !81 { 11 0 OJ
Neorask a
( 4 ) 110001
So Ca l•f
1101 19 0 \1
F lOr ida Sf
110 0 0 1
Texas
l l 3 I !8 l 0 I
Ar ka nsa s
(1 3 1 (9 I 0 1
Ok l ahomd
19 I 01
Houston
I I 3 (8 I 0 1
Br•gham Young
110 0 0 1
Pi tt sburgh
19 I 0 1
Purdue
(9 2 0 1

1. 214

I ,214
I , 15 I

1,019
959
865

18 2 OJ
19 2 OJ
18 2 0 1

13 Clemson
14 x Wa s.h

P•e J Auburn
16 M1Ch1gan
17 Baylor

18 J OJ
17 J DI

18 Tulane
l9 S Ca ro1 1na
70 Penn St

18 2 Dl

17 3 OJ
17 J 0 1

"Freedom of Choice!
Not all insurance agencies
have it."
Hul. happily, tn tht -., Ln lllpc ttlt\ r h t t ,lllL'". nur Jmur . 111 ~._ t· )\Ll rl'
_1.., no1 l Ort fmed r~ 1 one !til L' u l rn n~ hanJt 'l t' \\ l' .. Jn 'ot'k'd
from the polr('V o11 l' rrng. ~ 111 a numhcr n t ! rnt· t!l 'll Ht't \ !rkc
Th e Contrn cn tdl Jn,u r J nu.: ( on r p~tnt t:&lt;.... h1r e\am pk
t\ \ a rc'lull , v.h en \\ L rL'l tH ll lll l'n J

a' aiiah le 10 u~.

\ t l ll (~!11

.t

he

pP h ~..~ f rll m

'llJ Tt'

t!l "&gt; ltrJil l2t' rr o tt"di o n !hat 'Lith )ou r nn~ J ~

tht.: IJrge
\ ou a rc ge ltlng
and

t\

afto rda hle

B~ta U 'IL' \\C h~ \ C free dl&gt; lll o l r,:hnt.:e , ~o u ha \ t' a hC II l' r
~. han (' e l o get e\a dl~ l hl' tll\ tHa n tT ~ ou ne-e d

Wise v.h o ha s good conirol and keeps
th e ball low
WtSR. . S(· \ected b~ 1:1 learns mUle
r e--e ntr )- dr a ft , wa 'i a l 5·g amr
wrnner w1th tile Indtan s m 1979 and
had a 3.85 earned nm average
Th e !:&gt;-year ve ter an of the major
leagues. pitched a no-li1tter agamst
the Cmcmnat1 Heds m 1971 lie has
compiled a IJiettniC 1711-165 record
dunng st tnts w1th Philadelplua , St
I J)Uts. Bo::-i ton and Cl eveland
All -sU1 r S f' r'( J!Hl b&lt;:J se rna n J ut
\ 1organ, whu pl~) ed o ut ht.s up twn
w1th th l' Cln c tnn a t t Reds, ts
e xpected to choose between th e
Padres and the Los Angeles Dodger s
b) thts weekend . the Tnbune satd
So far Los Angeles ha s signed
ptl chers r. oltz and Stanhouse . tn the
D00gf'r s' m ost v1gor ous actt vt t~
s mee fr et'·agent btdd1ng JOined th e
fam1 s ystem as th e ma Jor fa ctor s tn
butldm g wmn mg teams
Mo rg arl ,
:H;. a tt end e d tht'
!)Jttsl&gt; urgh Stet..'\p r s-San Otego
c 'harg ers f ootbdU game Sutid.a) and
Iu s attorn ej , Tom Re tch . v.as 10 San
lltegn Monda )

Hyan , 1&amp;-14 w1th Ute California
Angels last season , decided to test
the free agent market and quickly
St.·ttled on Houston a s hiS chotce, if
the price was nght.
" We talked to a number of clubs
and asked them not to ma ke a bid,"
sa 1d Dtck Moss, Ryan 's agent. "Our
flf 't priority was for Nolan to decide
whe re he wanted to play . From that
pc1nt . we felt we could reach
sutt a hle cont r act terms."
H } an sa1d signing with th e Astros ,
\\ as a bf~l ated dream come true.
Jnrl!l} )ear s and dreamed about it
J.";ro wlll g up 1fl rnearby J Alvm, " srud
H ~ t:~n , a nat1ve Texan " I always
"anted to plays for the Astros and
live at hom e. It's hard ror Ruth (his
w1fe 1 a nd I to realize that we've
fm all ) come home "
Ryan comes to the Astros with a
167 -159 career record and numerous
ma Jor league records. He IS tied
w1th Sa ndy Koufax with four career
no hitters and holds the records for
most ;&lt;rikeouts in a season, 383 and
most 300 strikeout seasons, five . He
ha s 2,909 career strikeouts.
It was the fourth big contract
s1gn ung for the Astros this year .
Outfielder Cesar Cedeno has signed
a IIJ.y ear $3 5 million pact ; Richard
recent!) signed on for four ye!rs at
$3 .2 million and outfielde r Jose Cruz
signed a five-year contract lor an
estlffiated $1 .8 rrullion

Home

Insurance
Lt•t\ lalk

~aluc .

A~ a local insura nce
agency, we can h elp you
find the best va lue for
you r insurance dollars.

And, we'll show you how
to mak e sure your cov erage s tays current with
yo ur home's rising value.

DAVIS-QUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel
" Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy "
992 ·6677

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

a..e

811

705
652

598
487
376
376
352

215
184
124
93

HERE
IT
COMES!

'

WINTER QUARTER

REGISTRATIO
Rio
Grande

College

and
Community College

NOVEMBER 26

9 a.m.-9 p.m.

II', . llould UJ.-,, To Tukt• Tlri.~ Tillll'

J

11\ I 'J

A....,t rus M[;IHag er Btll \.'u don a lread}

NOV. 19th · 24th

L_-

tng to pass m th e
uf the game,

fumbled away the Falcons' last
l' han cc He fin is hed with II
eolllpletwn s m 24 attempts for 18t
ya rds
The Hams' Wendell Tyler and
Atlanta·, Bubba Bean both topped
th e 100-yard mark m rushing , as
Ty ler picked up Ill yards on 21
!'ames and Bean gamed 104 on 17
{'arn es

Astros sign Ryan

The ln,urant·e Slnre

Inges t IPwer calones th an your b o dy burns ..

tr ~

JJ IUIIII:' rlb

Wise signs Padres contract

\l ot ~

WILL BE CLOSED THE WEEK

Sld£' 11nt:d for the po st m onth ,
recuperatmg from a broken hcmd
suffered m a garre agam.s1 Dalla '
" I thought I played well at tu nes.
he said after completmg run e of 22
passes for 171 yards agamsl th e
Falcons
Ferr agamo h1t Preston ~nnard
wi th a 29-ya rd touchdown pass earl y
m the flf sl quarter . connected with
Billy Waddy on a 40-yard scormg
play in the wanmg moments of tJw
rtrst half, then set up Bryant' s tall y
With a Ill-yard toss to tight end Terry
Nelson midway through the ftna l
penod
As It turned out, Ute Ram~ needeJ
a ll
thr ee
scores
Atlanta
Quarterback Jlllle Jones Ill. starl111g
m place of the tnjured Ste ve
Bartkowski, put the fa lcon s back 1n
the game with two second-ha lf
to uchdown passes
J ones . h1ttmg on Jusl two of mne
thro ws
and
s uffen ng
h., o
intercepllons m the opemng half .

HOU STON ASTROS Srgn ed
Nola n Ryan, pttcher , to a four yPar

ligam ·

Southwestern has 4
returning lettermen

game

Berry's World

sat1~hed Ow- fan s are not sattsf1ed
Til l') expect us to go to the Super
!low! a11d win It
· \1a ) be we sllll can "
T he Cowboys are a team
r en () wn~d
for
the ir
superb
orgamzatJon - from Presid ent Tex
Sc hranun and the chief of player
deve lopment . Gil Brandt , dowr to
the on ly c oach the team has eve r
had ,
the
Impeccable
and
professorial Tom Landry
"Tom doesn't feed us a lot of fire
and brimstone , I know most people
thm k of hlffi as a cold . methodical
dJscipltnana n ,"
the
veteran
quarterba ck sa td . ' 'He 1s on e of th e
fu~ n·est eo mpeutors I have ever
knowr It Just doesn t show "
Normally the Cowboys are not an
emo lwnal , demonstrative t ea m ,
Staubach said , but 11 would be folly
to mtcrpret that as lack of fire and
sptrtt
Stat istics show th e Cowboys hav e
lost 17 fumbles while r eco vering
on ly se ve n from the oppoSitiOn .
thr own 10 i nterc eptions whil e
picking off II It's lllllypical of the
tw()-{ Ime Super Bowl champs .
Thts Is Staubach' s lith yea r m the
~F l. after a brilliant college career
at ~avy a nd f1ve years in U1e
SNVIce At 37, he 1s not even flirlmg
w1th retirement
·r don't feel old," he sa1d •J plan
tD pia} as long as my arm and legs
hold out. I have a thigh bruise now not sen ous Sometunes a fter I've
been bwnped and banged around a
lot, I wake up and start questionmg
mysel f By Tuesda)', I' m r ar ing to

LOS ANf;Et.ES 1AP 1 - The siX ume diVISion champion Los Angeles
Rams are 6-6 and lied for the
Nah onal football Conference West
lead with New Orleans, but Hams '
Coach Ray Malavasi IS still colllltmg
his blesSings
'With all the In Junes we ' ve had , I
ju st feel fortunate to be m the
positJ.on we are rn nght now ,"
Malavas1 said after Monday nig ht's
2Q-14 !tam victory over NFC West
fO&lt;' Atlanta " I feel we can wm the
diviston , jw;t like I felt at the
beginning of the season ."
The loss dropped the F'alcons to 48, puttin g them two ga mes off the
lea d with JUSt four co ntests
remaming However, in what is th e
NFL 's weakest diVISion this season,
there are no for egooe conclusJOns
Atlanta Coach Leeman Bennett
refused to concede anything , say mg .
" As far as the race 1s concerned ,
we're still not out of 1l. "
One of man; Los Angeles '
reserves pressed Ullu a starting role ,
QU arterback Vin ce Ferragamo ,
gu ided the Hams to the Important
VIctory over the f' alcons Making h1s
first NFL start, the third-year pro
out of Nebraska passed for two first half touchdowns and set up the
chnchmg score - an 11-yard run by
Cullen Bryant - tn the final quarter
" I hope to do better next week ,"
sat d Ferragamo. the apparent
Hams ' starter the rest of the season
Since Pat Haden IS out with a broken
finger
Ferragamo him self had been

DAVIS CAREER CENTER
I.

�~-The U&amp;!Jy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Nov . 20, l!T/9

~-'The Daily Slntinel , Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Nov . 20, 1979

Christmas flower show slated December 1, 2
Whether you 're interested in ar tistic arrangements, horticulture
displays, wreaths and swags , or g1ft
wrap, holiday corsages and
Cluistmas crafts, you'll lind it all at
the annual Christmas flower show of
the Meigs County Association of
Garden Club.
The show is scheduled lor Dec. 1
and 2 at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. In the event the teachers'
strike is still on at that time . then the
show will be held at the Chester
Elementary School. Mrs. Margaret
Ella Lewis is general chairman lor
the show wlucll has as its theme.
" I 'm DreaJning of a White
Chriltmas."
All of the c~ of the show are
open for exhibit to the public except
eight in the artistic designs division
which are for garden club members
only. and those specified for Juniors

or those 18 years of age and under .
and those senior citizens, age 60 and

swag, one for g11t wraps whtch must
incl ude some plant material
stabil es, 24 to 411 mches tall , and
Christmas corsages of dried or
treated plant material which may or
may not be painted.
Mrs. Lewis has also asked that
every club member exhibit at least
one Christmas craft item which she
has made . Non-dub membrrs arl'

over .
In the horticulture division there

are classes for houseplants, foliag e
and blooming, African violets.
Christmas cactus, berried branches.
15 t o 20 inches long , preserved plant
material, either natural dried , one

stem in a container, or treated, one
stem in a container .
The juniOr horticulture classes are
dish garden, at least three plants.
and dried roadside or field material ,
s uitable for use in a winter arrangement, one stem in a container.
In the senior citizens horticulture
division there ctre classes for han~ ­

ing planter with one or more plant,,
and a terrarium, contairung at least
three plants.
There IS a class lor outside door
decorations, either a wreath or a

also invited to exhibit in the craft
class. The Crafty Ladies Shop is
planning a display , as is Ellen Bell
who will be showing holiday books
from the public libraries. Entries
are to be placed before noon on
Saturday and are not to be removed
until alter 4 p.m . on Sunday .
Entrv tags will be lum1 shed and

Students at Hartford Elementary
School are busy preparing lor a visit
from Governor RockeleUer . They
have been reviewing West Virginia
history and studying the structure of
government in their slate.
The governor was invited to the
school last year when the first grade
students instructed by Mrs . Rhonda
Tennant sent a West Virginia T -6hu1

which they made to the governor
along with a letter which invited him
to visit them at their srhool.
The governor accepted their in vitation and will visit Hartford
Grade School today .
The first and second grades are
making their T-6hirts again tlus
year and are planning to wear them
when they meet the governor.

(;,·rwration Rap
B~

.
•

'~· ~ ,,

-

'

...,

'1"1

&lt;~'

'
-.

"

I

In.ja n I

FIRST AND SECOND graders of Hartford Elementary School are
preparing West VIrginia T;;hirts which they plan to wear when they meet
Governor Rockefeller during Ius visit to their school on Nov . 20. Student
David Stanley and first grade teacher, Rhonda Tennant are shown
holding a T-6hlrt the class has JUSt fuushcd. Marilyn Riffle 1s also an mstructor.

\b.

Swiss Butterball Turkeys······ •1.19
Top Bee Frozen Hens .•.•.••.•• ~b~ 89~
French Calla Smoked Hams.~~~ 79'
lb .
H omema d e Ham Salad ·······'1.19
DAIRY _
K~afll2 oz. American o~
Pimiento Sliced Singles

CHEESE

Pkg.

SJ.49

I lb. Teen Queen Quarters

PRODUCE ·
I lb .

CRANBERRIES ·B·a·9• • 59'
30 count Florida

CELERY •••• ~~~;~ ••• 49'
3 lb . Yellow

MARGARINE 2/99~ ONIONS •••• ?:'~.•..39'

8 oz. l.ARG E COOL WHIP ••·•·••·79'
_ 30 oz. Del Monte

--~----

---

-

290Z.

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN .........:~~ ..... 59'
46 oz. Golden Isle

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ........... ~:;.. 69'
17 oz. Del Monte

SWEET PEAS ...................... 2/89'
7 oz.

so Count Dixi~

HOT

/vi cK in IICI'
-

Mr . and Mrs . Bill McKinney.
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their first child, a daughter, Jessi
Tanaya. Born on Oct. 13, she weighed fiv e pounds, 10 ounces and was 18
inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . William M. McKinney,
Middleport, and the maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard E.
Owens, Pomeroy.
Mr . and Mrs . Carl Jeffers are announcing the birth of a son, Joshua
Paul, Nov . 9 at the Holzer Medical
Canter, GaUipolis.
The infant weighed seven pounds.
two ounces. Mr . and Mrs. Jeffers
have a daughter , Carla Dionne.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Roush, Mason, and
the paternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs . Homer Jeffers, Clifton, W.
Va . Great-grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs. Hazen Roush, New Haven, W.
Va ., Mr . a nd Mrs . Okey Van Meter,
Sr., and Charles Jeffers, Mason, W.
Va .

r---1

Social Calendar

TUESDAY
RACINE IJ.HXJE 461 F and AM
will hold a special meeting Nov. 20,
at 7: llp .m . for the purpose of the in '1allalion of Ralph Webb as district
education officer All Master
Masons and their guests are invited .
EASTERN Local Board of
Educatwn meeting 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at Riverview Elementary
School.
CHES TER COUNC IL 323.
Daughters of America. 7:30 Tuesday
at the hall. Quarterly birthdays to be
observed . Poll uck refreshments .

---~-

FRUIT COCKTAIL .••••.......... ::~ .• 89'

cups .................... ~~;... $1.39

14 oz . Swanson

CHICKEN BROTH ................ 2/49'
10 oz . Instant

NESCAFE COFFEE ............j~:... $4.69
61; 2 oz . Star K1 sl Chunk

LIGHT TUNA ......... •............... 97'
1 lb. Medium Diamond
i
8
liiALNLIJS
In Shell
ag
]0,' ~
· "~~.
u
................................. . ~

Hirlhddy celebrated
POMEROY - The first btrthday of
Otandler Watson , son of Mr . and
Mrs . James Watson , Coolville, was
celebrated on Oct . 28 at the home of
hi s grandmother, Mr s. Donna
Brooks . Belpre . A Scooby -Doo
theme was carried out with balloons
and lollipops as favor s.
Those attending were Phil and
Rcta Barr , Jarrue and Brad Bar.
nhart. Skippy and Barry Barr , Ray
Watson, and Donna Brooks . Paula
Barr ,Parkersburg, sent a g11t
POMEORY -A party was held
recently hononng Ronald Bachtel on
his ninth birthday .
Cake. ICe cream and punch were
served at the home of Ius parents,
Ron and Diane Bachtel to his sisters
Trina and KBndi Bachtel. 11na . Wen :
di , Tra&lt;/Y Collins , Sharon , Shawn
and Amy Durst , Susan , Steve, Jef frey Tracy. Willie and Jan Durst.
Gifts were sent by his grandmother ,
May Mayle .
BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Local Board of
Education will meet this evening at
7:30p.m .

1

;

••

J

Past Councilors nominate officers
Officers for 19M were nominated
when the Past Councilors · Club of
&lt;llester Council 323, Daughters of
America, met Wednesday evening
atthehaU .
Nominated were Pauline
Ridenour, president; Margaret Tut Ue, vice president ; Betty Rousl1 ,
secretary; Goldie Frederick
treasurer ; Mary K. Holter. ne~
reporter ; Thelma White sentinel ·

lay as many white ribbons as she
wants .
Bases and accessories are acceptable in any class in wluch they are
needed or where they add to the
design . Backgrounds are to be used
only where staled but baubles, glitter, artificial snow may be used in
any class .

.

Expect Governor 's visit

Area 'births
~ • '!

residents are just to take their entries to the show location before
noon and they will be assisted in
entering their exhibit. No advance
registration is required .
Judging will begin at I pm. on
Saturday, Dec. 1, and one blue, red ,
yellow and white ribbon will be
awarded in each class e1cept in the
junior calsses where the jud~e may

CLOSING NOTED
The Meigs County Health Depart ment will he closed Nov. 2:1 and 23 .

lld•·n and

~IJt'

Build

HE WANTS MEN IN CREW .
Cl!J'S: TIIINKS DRAF'l'
wn..LOOIT
By Helen aod Sue Bottel
HELEN AND SUE :
If you had anything to say ,
wouldn ~ you want men to be wear ing crew cuts like they used to ?
i..ook at males these days! Half of
the stupid Disco-boys spend more
time on their hair than the vainest of
women . It has to be perfect i&gt;l us
before they go out and shake their
derrieres.
Then you have the scruffy hippietypes who let their dank, dirty or
frizzy locks grow unW they're tripping - over themselves , I mean .
I hope they bring back the draft.
Not only will it help us counter the
Ruskies , but it will round up these
natwnal disgraces and give them
good haircuts for a change. Nice and
short would make this country look a
hell of a lot better . - CALVIN THE
BARBER
DEAR CALVIN:
. .. And help chase the moths out of
your cash register, too, no doubt HELEN
P .S. I think crew cuts do more for
poodles than men .
CALL : Can you imagine Phil
Donahue in a crew cut? Pure
sacrilege! Take up men's hair styl ing, Cal the Barber. Those husky
fees will help you adjust . - SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My sister is 14 and lm 15. Between us, we do all the housework,
dlshwashing, everything. The only
thing my mother does is cook. You'd
think she'd be happy. but instead
she 's always jumping on us . Now
she 's even trying to make us cook .
when we do that half the time for
outselves anyway.
We're not bad kids, we don l
smoke dope or slay out late. Most of
the time we're working al home so
she 11 like us , but she never shows
any aHection and is always compla ingin .
Our dad goes along with her
because he can "t stand her yelling.
He has high blood pressure, and if
we ran away he 'd have a stroke. So
we stay here and keep going crazy .
Talking to her doesn ~ help . She
never listens, just bosses.
Help 1 - TWO CINDERELLAS
DEAR CINDERELLAS •
You dldn l say , but we'd guess
your mother has a full{ime job outside the home . Even S&lt;J, this is no ex cuse to make her children do all the
housework . You have a full day of
school, plus homework, and you're
probably just as busy as she is .
Here's an idea : For a week, keep a
complete chart of all the hours you
spend on house and school work .
Then ask your father to compare it
with his and your mother's
schedules. If you two kids are putting in longer hours than they are,
let's hope the adults will discuss
together and come up wtth a lair
trade agreement . - SUE
DEAR TWO :
Your parents ' side of the story
might be somewhat different . But
even if you aren l quite the
Cinderellas you picture . famiy life
here sound..o; very grim

The following poem was written
by J . R. Hunnell in tribute to his
grandfather. Don Stobart.
BYGRANDPADON
There are many men both big and
small,
But to me there is one that 1s
greater than all,
In all the world there is no other
That could take the place of my
grandfather .
A more loving man you could not
lind,
There is no other just one of Ius
kind,
I love him so much, that my heart
overflows
Although I don , tell him I think
that he knows.
He has taught me so much since 1
wasbom ,
He always grew vegetables,
tomatoes and com,
But farming isn, Ius only trade ,
He is one of a kind. a man sell made.
His convictions are firm, his body
is strong,
He always has worked, and the
hours were long.
Oh, grandfather, I love you so,
I wrote this poem to let you know .
Dearest grandpa , to you I must
say ,
111 be with you in heaven and
together we will stay .

cer.

SOMEDAY,
ALL cars may

ANSWER : False . This misconception was, in part, created unin tentionally by the American Cancer
Society when it listed these two con rlitions as warning signals of cancer.
Probably less than one percent of
these lesions are actually due to can cer. The remainder, once positively
identified, can usual! y be ignored .
However, the cancer society's intent
was to '··, vo all such lesions checked
by a 1
m since even one chance in ItA. ur 200 is too high . And ,
many times the physician cannot be
absolutely sure without a biopsy .
Therefore, the action required is attention, not worry .
3. The blood cancers, such as
leukemia and Hodgkin's disease,
remain the most lethal and continue
to have a !ugh mortality rata.
ANSWER : False . Pr.&gt;bably more
progress has been made in treating

run on

v.ours

can

NOW
Ga,oholl~

t he fue l of the
future . a va ilahlr lod.i:iy from
LI\ NOMA H: K 1. II \

.i:l

A woman

RACINE-A Thanksgiving dinner
hosted by the Esther Circle preceded a meeting of the Bertha M. Sayre
MlMionary Society of the Racine
Baptist Oturch recenUy .
The tables were decorated in keeping with the Thanksgiving theme
Twenty-three members attended
with the meeting being presided
over by Martha Lou D.eegle. president.

There was group stnging of "For
the Beauty of the Earth," and
"Come Ye Thankful People, Come."
The love gift was presented by the
two circles with a total of $51UO being noted for the love gilt offering
over the year .
A letter was read from Sue Curtis

LANDMARK
SUPER SERVICE
STATION
S44 E. Main Sf .
Pomerov, Ohio

DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT
Between 8:30 a.m.

and 5:00p.m.
'

1-614-992-2156

ANSWER : True. Thts is a cancer

we rarely see m men under the age
of 60. It has been postulated by some
cancer specialist that if men lived
long enough, virtuaUy 100 percent
would eventually develop cancer of
the prostate . Fortunately, this cancer is easily detected by a sunple
rectal e&lt;amtnation. Also, the
severity of the cancer seems to
diminish with age and spreads
slower in old~r men than in younger
men .
6. Lung cancer in women is increasing at an alarming rate .
ANSWER: True. The rate of lung
cancer for females IS up more than
311 percent in the last decade . This in crease is probably related. at least
m part, to the liberatiOn movement
among women and their increased
exposure to the business world and
so-&lt;;alled "male occupations," both
of wluch seem to encourage frequent
use of cigarettes. The increase of
lung cancer in men over the same
period has been only one percent.
posstbly because of the growing
popularity of low.(ar content
cigarettes . Lung cancer, however.
remarns the number one cause of
cancer in men . Just as breast cancer
continues to be the leading cause in
women .

·--~~-,------------------~

who is studying for mi.s.sion41.ry
work . She will be returning home in
December. The song, "My Hope is in
Thee" was sung by the group and a
love gift skit was giv by Ura Morris
and Helen Simpson on the work in
Haiti .
The program was presented by
Mrs . Simpson and opened with
readings, ''Together in Prayer " and
"What is Prayer'" wtth sen pture
from Matt 6.
Readings on the Lord's Prayer
were g~ven '"Y '1ildred Hart ,
F1orence Adams, Naomi Stobart .
Helen Simpson, Mary Lou Beegle ,
MarjOrie Grimm. Garnet Ervine .
Nondus Hendricks , Barbara Gheen .
and Ora Hill . Barbara Gheen then
sang "The Lord's Prayer" .

Loot bags to be prepared

Open
24 Hrs . A
Day 7 days
a week
992· 9932

CALL THE

All you parents out there : If this
colwnn fits, start working toward
change - and that begins with real
talk I - HELEN

or uterus .

were the entertaimnent cornrnitlee .

Ada Morris won the door prize .
Others attending were Ada Bissell ,
Goldie Frederick, Thelma White ,
Mary K. Holter , Margaret Tuttle,
Erma Cleland, Betty Roush, Opal
Hollon, Letha Wood, and guf''ls,
Fern Morris and S&lt;Jn .

Birthdays noted
The birthdays of Mrs . Della Curtis
and Mrs . Leona Karr were noted
dunng a recent meeting of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club held
at the home of Mrs . Madeline Chaf fin .
A decorated cake was served with
punch by Mrs. Chaffin foll owing the
meetmg . Mrs. Mildred Jacobs ,
president, read the aims of the
health club and a thought "Others",
from the yearbook . The Lord 's
Prayer was g1ven in unison . A dona tion from Mrs . Alice Smith lor use of
a hospital bed was acknowledged .
Members reported on a recent trip
to the Fenton Glass Co . at
Williamstown, W. Va . Going on the
lour were Polly Eiclunger, Jean
Wright, Ruby Frick , Della Curtis,
Marjorie Goelt , Doris Shook , Ann
Mash , Donna Gilmore , and Betty
Stewart.
Mrs. Ann Mash gave the
secretary's report , Mrs. Bertha
Parker , the treasurer 's report . Dues
were paid and readings included
"Thank You. Pilgrims". and "A
Christmas Prayer" by Mrs. Donna
Gilmore.
Games were play ed w1th Mrs.
Shook, Mrs. Frick, and Mr s. Ma sh
winning prizes.

Esther Circle hosts dinner

WINTER SNOW
TIRES NOW
ON SALE!

UUIDMARK ·

these cancers than lor any other
type . Some centers have been reporting a 90percent remission rate with
Hodgkin's disease . About SO percent
of all leukennia patients are now
living after five years. This is a
remarkable recovery rate compared to those even 10 years ago .
Most of tlus pro~ress is due to the
newer chemeotherapy drugs which
have come on the market in the last
decade .
4. Women who are sexually
promiscuous are more likely to
develop cancer of either the cervix

treasurer 's report . Erma C1eland ,
Opal Holl on and Ada Morris were
named to ma ke out the 1980 hostess
committees. The annual Cbristmas
supper will be held at Oow 's Steak
House Dec . 12 at 6·30 p.m . From
there they wtll go to the home of
P.o ul Jne Ridenour for a meeting and
party . Titere will be a $2 gift exchange . Betty Roush will be cohostess.
Poems pertarning to Thanksgivin g
were read by several members . Ser vin~ on the hostess committee were
Ada Neutzltng and Mary Showalter .
Mae McPeek and Leona Hensley

m1xtu re

nme par1 'i lead -fre e
g&lt;l\t)l l nc and one part
;Jkohol. c&lt;~ n 1m prove
mdeagl' a nd l'll~ ine
pt:rf(,rmancc. requ1rec,. no
t."ng1ne iidJuli,lment\ to usc
and ~.:o-. 1 1\ cn mpetlll'o'C With
pl t: mlum un lt•aded (lasollne
"fr } a tankful m vour car 1
11 f

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

is .

newspaper .

inch long and place it on top of your
big toenail before putting on the
nylon. Do the same on the other foot
and have no more holes punched in
the toes . The tape scarcely shows,
even through sheers. - RUTif
DEAR POU, Y - The rubber
backing began to peel off the back of
a perfectly good bath mat. To save it
I used a wire brush to remove all the
loose backing. Then I sewed a mat."
ching color bath towel to the back
with one end loosely stitched so it
could then be restitched after
laundering . No mess in my washer
or in the bathroom. - IRENE
DEAR POLLY - A wire cheese
sheer will slice clulled cookie dough
to any desired tluckness without a
breaking or sticking problem . FLORENCE

Loot bags for hospitalized
veterans at Christmas time will be
prepared by the juniors of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 1211 nell Tuesday .
The juniors are to meet at the
home of Mrs . Albert Roush at 6 p.m .
for the workshop . They will also
assist the legionnaires in sacking the

ATTENTION

who comes across to her children as
"always yelling and complaining,"
·never showing any affection"
might be headed for a nervous
breakdown - or maybe she just
needs a crash course in motherhood .
. .And a man who goes along with
a miserable home situation ·to keep
his wife from yelling" is an absentee
lather. never mind where Ius body

GOT A PROB!.P.M' Or a subject
lor discussion. two'!leneration style?
Direct your questions to eiL~er Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination mother daughter answer - in care of this

By Lamar C. Mlller, D.O.
CUolcal Auoclale Professor
of FamBy Medicine
Ohlo Unlvenlty College
of O.leopathlc Medicine
A QUIZ ON CANCER
Answer the following true or false .
I. Cancer can sometimes be contacted by spending a long period of
time around a person with the
disease.
ANSWER : False. Cancer is not
corrununicable. That is, it cannot be
spread like infectious diseases or
common colds. Also, unlike a
venereal disease, it cannot be
spread by sexual relations . You cannot get cancer by silting on toilet
seals or by eating from a cancer
patient's dishes or sleeping in his or
her bed . It is possible to have a
genetic predisposition for some
types of cancer, but these cancers
are still not catching .
2. Most lumps on the body or sores.
wluch will not heal are due to can -

Polly Cramer

The Poet's
Corner

.

and Erma Oeland, flower committee .
Elizabeth Hayes presided at the
meeting attended by 14 members
and two visitiors . She read the 67th
Psalm and the I..ord 's Prayer and
pledge to the American flag were
given in unison . Each member
answered the roll call by tellrng
where they will spend Thanksgiving.
Mae McPeek gave the secretary's
report , and Leona Hensley. the

Health Review

POLLY·s POINTERS
AMMONUCLEANSOVEN
By Polly Cramer
POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POlLY - Does anyone
know how to clean an oven with ammonia? I have heard that it is very
good but do not know how it IS done .
- E.M.R.
DEAR E.M.R . - Sometimes leaving a container of ammonia in the
oven overnight will loosen the
grease and grime enough so that it
can be washed rather easily the next
day . If ammonia is applied to fresh
spills when something being cooked
bubbles over they can soon be wiped
away with a damp soapy cloth . Be
careful of the ammonia fumes
When the oven is a mess commercial
oven cleaner is the easiest thing to
use, I think . Turn over off and follow
directions on the can . - POLLY
DEAR POlLY - I find that my
pizza cutter is great lor cutttn~
brownies and most kinds of bars. A
knife has to be used only around the
edges and the bottom of the pan does
not get scratched as it often does
when using a knife . -JOANN
DEAR POlLY - Want to save on
nylons' Snip off a piece of clear
gummed plastic lape that is about
one-quarter to three-eights of an

.. . "

·...

LAMAZE CLASSES OFFERED
ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes,
sponsored by O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Friday, Dec.
7. 11m class is for couples whose expected date of delivery is prior to
. Feb. 11 .
Oass participation will learn
' breatlung and relaxation techniques
- for first stage labor, effective expulsion technique for second stage
: labor. physical and emotlonal88Jle&lt;:: Is of the birth process, and body. conditioning e1ercises to promote
. comfort during pregnancy and post. partum.
'The lee for the series is Pl. To
; ~-register for this series, or to
; request a schedule of future cluses,
-contact Pamela Collier. 20 Wocdside
: Drive, Athens, OH 4~7Ul, or call593: 5049.
-

MEETING CANCElLED

j There will be no meeting of the
: Middleport Literary Club this·week .
; Next meeting will be held at 2 p.m.
• on Nov . 28 at the home of Mrs.
i Richard Owen. Mrs. Roy Cassell will
: review "Adam Beed '." For roU call
i memben1 are to name a favorite
I Olnfederate State .
7

candy lor tbe annual Santa treat lor
youngsters of the corrununity .
The Christmas party for the
juniors will be held in conjunction
witAu1iliary party with the
date to be announced later. Names
were drawn for a gift exchange, not
to uceed $5 in cost. The juniors
were asked to lake a can of fruit or
vegetables to the nell meeting for a
basket which will be used in a fund
raising project with proceeds to go
to the Gifts for the Yanks Who Gave .
Aget-well card was signed for Andy Batey who suffered a heart at tack and is confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital .
Melinda Thomas. president . opened the meeting ~&lt;ith the pledge to the
flag and praye· '&gt; y Sherrie Fox being given. Off 1 .,rs · reports were
given . Attendmg •·c; e Becky
Tyree ,mee and adv1S&lt;Jr, Mrs. Lisa
Roush and son, Jason , and nine
juniors.
Following a closing prayer by the
chaplain, pizza and soft drinks were
served .

Open
house
held
In observance of Amencan Ed uca-

tion Wee k, open house was enJoyed by
approximately 60 parent s and
teachers at the recent PTO meeting
he ld at the Riverview School .
Parents toured the classrooms and
were served refreshments by the
classroom teachers. Carol Spangler.
'-peech therapist , presided at the
punch bcwl.
Follo,.ing the open house. the
business meeling was conducted by
the president, Marlene Putman .
Thanks were exten ded to aU those
who helped make the school carnival
a success. A contribution was made to
the local boy scout unit whi ch is sponsored by the PTO
Jeff Johnson, fourth grade student.
led th e group with the fl ag pledge
foll owed by Pat Marti ng reading
" Likea bl e November."
Various committee s were named
by the prestdent an d Mrs. Shnver's
third grade won the banner and
mone y lor having the highest percentage of parents in attendance
Games were played folloWIIlg th e
meetmg.

Gl/1.1 hcin.r.: cullcctcd
Otri,tmas g11ts for th e Me1gs
Olunt y folks at the Alhens Mental
Health Canter are again being col ·
lected here .
A box for gifts for the 13 men and
nine women has been placed at
Davis Insurance in Pomeroy and

will be there until Dec . 8 after whi ch
time the gifts will be wrapped and
delivered to the Canter .
Mrs . Mary Martin and Mrs Ruby
Marshall, corrununity service chair man for the Amen can Legion Aux ilary, Drew Webster Post 39 , are
heading up the project Mrs . Martin
reports that the men are a~e 19to 77,
while the women are age 21 to 71.
The gifts are not to be wrapped but
g1ft wrap and ribbon may be mcluded .
Hose. combs, handk er chi efs .
deoderant, soap, talcum powder,
shampoo, jigsaw puzzles . games ,
candy, mints, gum , tooth brushes ,
toothpaste , pencils, stationary . and
stamps are 1tems suitable for both
the men and the women Other 1tems
suggested for the men are s ha v m~
cr eam. shoestrings, neckties.
gloves , while for women , swtable
items might be bedroom sl ippers,
hair curlers, gowns, perfume, head
scarves, crochet ed hats. a nd
haJmeL•
BATEY HOSPITALIZED
Andy Batey 1s a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital after
reportedly sulfermg a heart attack .

SIGNS PROCLA.'&gt;IA TI ON - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews,
left , s1gned a procl amation declaring the month of November as National'
Epilepsy Month . By stgmng the proclamalJon . Andrews pledged his support lor the Epileps)' ~ociation of Southeastern Ohio (EASO) and its
campaign to " .. educate patients and parents , service providers and the
public about the prevention and control of epilepsy and its con seq uences ." This campaign by EASO 1s part of the Epilepsy Foundation
of Amenca 's nat10n-wide dri ve to brmg more facts about epilepsy ~d its
consequences to public attention . TI1e Epilepsy Association of
South eastern Ohio is located 1n Athens. its staff provides information
about epilep sy to the public through brochures, fact sheets, and has
movies availabl e. They g1ve talks to civic groups, schools , social services
agenCies . and other groups interested ur epilepsy . EASO also provides individual and family counseling, transportatiOn to medical appointments,
helps get people mlo training programs. and helps them to find jObs . All
services are free regardless of age or in come . For more information call
EASO collect at 592-6688. Sho ..n with Mayor Andrews is Lois Jarvi of
Athens .

1-dluu ,/,if&gt;

.\IJ(IL 11 · lil t'!

Th e Women 's M1 .ssiona r v
Fellowship of the Laurel (Jiff Fro~
Methodt '1 r:hurch met recentl y at
the home of Mrs . Jean Wn Khl
Mr s. Wnght read the I45th Psalm .

Mrs. Don s Shook gave devotions,
and each of the members gave
sentence prayer of thankfulness.
Pledg es and funds were paid and
Evelyn Young gave the prayer.
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Bertha Pa rker and Mrs . Iva Powell.

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DliALS IN THE
TRl STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues ., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sal.
8:30 to 5: 00 Thursda v till 12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL't
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va .

773 -S$n

•
/

COMPLETES TRAINING Pvt. E-2 Joim E. Fiober, son of
Doris and PbJlllp Fiober, Racine,
has completed 13 weeks of
traloJng In bellcopter aviation at

Ft. Rucker, Alabama. He will be
stationed In CalUornla.

LEGAL NU liCE
Tne Public U111111es Comm1s
S1o r1 o! Ohro nasset lor ouD
11c hearmg (fl"ie No 79 234
Fl ·FAC to rev1cw •ne tuel
procurement pract 1ces and
poi1C!e s of the 01110 Power
Co•n~any the operat 1on ot
1!S Fue l Cost AdjuStment
Clause ana related matter s
Th iS tlear.ng IS SC h€0U ied

lrom 1 30 10 2 30 p m on
Nov embe1 25 1979 &lt;I ! he
C1ty

Counc1l Olt1c.e

?·~

Cleveland Ave S W Can
to n Ot'\ 10 44 702 An evem ng
sess1on w ill De con&lt;1ucled

lromo00 1o600om
Al l mterested pe1~011~ w1 11 be

g1ven dll opporluOI!y tc be
heard Fur1he1 1nlorma110n
may be obta1ned by conra c1
1ng the Comm15510n
THE PUBLic Ul lli!IES
COMM ISSION Of OHIO
Bj

0JVI0 M

Secretary

I'D!&lt;

They nee~
Room
serv1ce.
a day for an extension phone.

Only~

0oe1 0 call to Grandma turn into a
brawi? Maybe it's tin;Je for on e•teniion
phone "' two from GTE . For o po-ice thi•
low, you c.on hove a phone in any room in
the houMJ .
You con wish her o happy birthday from
the living room , the bedroom and the den .
Allot the mme time.

And an extension phone makes life a lot
simpler even ~ ~ou're the
per~
talking . Be&lt;:oUMJit g01es you prrvocy, and rt
can save you a lot of steps.
. .
.

?"'Y

All ittok"' to get Room Serv1c0 IS a quock
trip to yoor GTE Phone lklrt. Just pick out
yovrfavoriteph"';"' , t~kethemhome , then
share a convenohon w•th Grandma .

(€i i :t G.if.BE!
H) West Washington, Athens

)

)

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy. u .. Tuesday, Nov. 2U. 1979

Your Best Buys Are
Wanted to Buy

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

worm or Un~r

I day

Cash
I 00

Charge

i$0

1 110
2.25

2day.1
3days

1. 25

I IKl
3.00

6days

APPROXIMATELY 10'x15'.

Each word o~e r tM nurumum
15 words ~ 4 C'enl! per word per
day . Ads runnm~ other than con-

CALL 985-4344

days ..nil be dl8rJ(ed at
the 1 day rate .
~tlve

ln mtmory . ca rd of Thanks
and Obituary 6 cenu per word,
JI .OO mirumu.m Cash in ad -

AFTER 5:30 P.M.

1van&lt;.-e
Mobile Hm1e w~ tmd Yan.l
!We!! are accoepted onJy wlth
e RSt~ with order . :l5 C"enl charge
for ads carry~ Bel ."'lumber In
Care of Tilt Senttnel.
1lle Publl.!her reserve! thr
nght to l!dit ur ~ject any ad!

deemed

objectiona l.

The

P\JbllJher will not t»e responalble
for more than on.. mcorrect in~rtJOn .

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M&lt;¥Jd.t~y

Noon on S. t urd.ay

1\iesday
thr\1 Fnday
4 P.M
tht• tlay bt:fore pubhn1t10n
Sunday
IV M

Notices

~~~-

MEI GS
C OUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 991
6260. Pets av ai latlte tor
adopt ion and i nformat ion
serv ic e
GUN
SHOO T E V ERY
SUNDAY 1 PM F ACTO RY
CHOKE ON LY R ACI N E
G UN CLUB
no
NO
HUNTIN G.
tr espassing w1th no ex
ce pt ions on my pr ope rt y
Judy McGraw Se lf
G UN
SHOOT
Ra ci ne
V o lunte e r
F ire
Dept
Every Saturday . 6 .30 p .m
AI !hei r bu 1ldi ng 1n Bashan .
Fa c tor y c hok e guns only .
G UN SHOO T e ve r y Su nday
12 00 Fa c tory choke on ly
Corn Hollow Gun Cl u b .
Ru tl a nd Proce eds donated
to Boy Sc out T r oop 249 .

Fr11.ia)· afternooo

Yard Sale
YARD SALE

(Trash and
tre a sures ) NO~J Jq, 70. 11 .
23 9 t il 5 ClofhJng , tur
n iture, tovs , much , mu ch
m ore . Gord on Caldwe l l,
Tuppers Pl a1 ns . OH

CERAMI C CL A SSES . M on
day , Thur~day , 7 9 pm .
Tuesday and Friday 2 -4
an d 57 pm
D r ehel 's
Cerami cs, 59 N 2nd Ave .,
Middleport , OH . 992 2751.
ANYONE HAVING bought
baby furniture at 1 pri ce on
Nov 12 at Di ck Waev e r 's
residen ce , please contac t
992 3.502 i mmediately

Pels for Sale
HOOF HOL LOW , Eng l ish
and W estern Srtddl es a nd
h arn e ss
Hor ses
and
pon ies Ru th Reev es o14
698 3290
B o.rd i ng a n d
R 1ding Le sson s dnd Horse
Car e prOduc ts . We stern
boo t s
Ch ildren ' s SI S 50
Adults \19 00
RI SIN G ST AR
K ennel
Board1n g Ca ll 367 0292
P OODLE
GROOMIN G
Judy T dylor 614 l67 7120
HI L L C RE ST
KENNE LS .
Board i ng , all breeds . Clean
indoor outdoor tacil i tie\ .
Also
AKC
r eg i stered
Dobermans . 614 4.46 7795
--~·----

BEAUTIFUL L Y MARKE
D AKC Boston terrier pu ps
Shots , paper tra ined . male
orfemale . S175ea . 992 3905

Auctions
BIGAU CT I ON everyWed ,
7 pm Ha rlford Comm u nity
Center, Hartford , W V, .4
miles a bo v e
Po m e roy
Mason Br idge

Wedneedey, Nov. 21

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

CERAMIC CLAS SES star
t •ng November 17 each
Saturday , 6 : 30 9 :30 p m
Beg,nn in g and advan c ed
c e ram ics
Dreh el ' s
Cer a m 1cs , 59 N 2nd A\le .
M iddl eport , OH Ph one ~2
1751

CHIP WOOD Pol es m ax
d iameler 10"' on largest
en d S12 p er ton Bundl ed
slab . SIO per ton . Del iv ered
to Ohio Pall et Co , Rt . 2,
Po meroy 992 2689

OLD FURNITURE . i ce
bOlC.es, brass bed s, iron
bed ~ . d esk s, et c , complete
hou seholds . Wr ite M .D .
M i ll er Rt . 4 , Pom er o y or
call ~ 2 7760 .

1974 C APRI , auto , $1 750
991 6069 .
1"2 CHEVROLET L U V
p• ckup
truck . Ge ts
35
m p g 992 5933
1912 DODGE 318 Cha rger .
tinted gla ss , sport
wheel s, 40,000 miles , wif e 's
car , $1600, firm 997. 5448 .

ww , air ,

1976 F 250 Fo rd pickup ,
neavy duty, 390 V 8, 4
s.peed ,
AM FM Strack
Tru ck in good condition
Call 985 4236

WANTED :
SAW
l o gs .
Payment upon delivery to
our yard , 7 :30 to 3 : 30 week
davs . Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow . OH . 678
2'180

1974
FORD MU STA N G
Ghia , auto ., 6 cy l , low
mil eage
S1900
614 94 2
1042 .

ANT I QUES ,
FUR
Nl TURE .
gl a~s .
china ,
anyth1ng . See or call Ruth
Gosne y , antique s, 26 N
2nd , Middleport , OH 99 7.
3161
ANTIQUE POCKET wat
ches . Wil l ing to pay lop
dollar
Call
1 592 2913
evenings

Lost and Found
LOST , presum ed stolen :
Flatwods Dark
Hollow
area . Black and while
female Walker hou nd .
Bla ck right e yye and tal
too
U 7 3125 or contact
Carr oll Wh1te Answers to
Gypsy

Help Wanted
BOOKKEEPER for loc a l
di stributing co Wrile 719 J,
c o the Dailv Sentinel .
Pomeroy , OH .t5769 .

O UT
OF
BU S INES S
Car olina Fabr ics . SR 7 nor
th of Chester . OH will be
c losed permanently Wed . .
NO\/ 21. The business has
been sold and will be
moved to Gallipolis Ferry,
WV , 3 miles south of The
Si lve r Memorial Br idge
We wish to e)( press our sin
cere apprec iatino to our
pa st patrns. Henry and
Mary Hunter , owners .

WOMAN TO live in and
care tor e lde rly lady and do
some cooking 667 J074 or
843 2094 .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33 , north o f
Pomeroy . Large lots Ca I I
992 1479
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
ts. Phone ~2 5..434 .
THREE ROOM turn apt
Utilities paid . Adul1s , no
pets ,
no drunks . John
Stleets . 31r 1 mi les sou ttl , Rt
7, Middleport .
HO U SE
IN
Syra c u se
Pref er coupl e . Ni ce ne-i gh
bor hood . Cal l a fter 5, 985
3878

Auto Sales
1914 FORD M U STAN G
Gh i a , aut o .. 6 cyl ., low
mile ag e $1900 . 949 20"'2
1913 OLDSMOBI L E
4
brand new tires in goo~
shape 992 7094
1973 DOD G E CHAR G ER
985 333 5
F 1SO 4 wd
GOOd c lean 1ruo:. Topper s,
wide t i r es , whit e wheel s,
n ew dual e)(hau st 997. 5896 .
1971 CUT CA SS SUPREME .
AM Tape dec k , cru ise co n
trot , t ilt wh eel E xce ll enl
co nd 1t 1on . $4.500 W2 5786

TWO
LOT S tn Me 1g~
Memorial Gardens. Sec I
on 40 C 3 -4 . Both for $300
985 3862

King 0 Heat coal and wood
Hearth Mate wood
stoves free standing over
!he fireplace One King 0
HeatS room c oal heater .
~love .

Ou 5

November 31, tt7V
Through careful and clever planmng this c om1ng year you will be
able to make a great deal out of
spare t&gt;egmn1ngs Your fme neaa
will p ave the way lor a large

r11ward
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Now . 22) You
could turn a tun mee11ng wnn oiCl

pale .nto a sad affa.r lor you 1f
you begm to tudge your worth by
thei r !JuccesMS Your tur n w1ll
come. Find out more ot what lies
ahead for you 1n the year fo llo w ing your birthday by send1ng lor
your copy ol Astro·Graph Lettttr
Mall $1 lor each to Astro.G rapn .
Bolt 489, Radio City Stat •on . N¥
10019. Be sure to specify b1rth
date
SAQITT ARtuS (Now. 23-0ec: . 21)

You're belief off today if you
stick t o your

own

plans than to

allow others to lfly out your ltm erary . Lead you r own lllfl

PISCES (Feb. 20-M•rch 20)
Place your maJor emphas iS on
work•ng out the ans wers to a
large •ssue t oda y 1n stead o l
ar y u111g ab ou t 11 Th1nt.. . don t
light

ARIES

(M•rch 21 - April II)
Toda y IS an e .. cenent 11me to
b eg 1n
lo o lt mg lor lr esn
approaches 10 an old pr oblem
Chngmg to unw or ka b le 1deas tS
unprOCiuchve and waslel ul
TAURUS (April 20-Ma~ 20)
S•lence IS aa d •ng fuel to a diS

l urbmg tUua IOIIOI't11 fl9 someone
•mpor tant to vou Have a meet
1ng of lh6 m•nd s t m:l;~.,. an o d•S·
cuss thmgs openly
GE Mitrlll (May

21 -June 201

A

change m habrt PEIII!fHns 01 rou·
tme lor you 11nd yow mete may
be a gooo 1dea toda·f Malle
plan s to do somethmg d1flerent
- 11"11 do you both a world of
goOd
CANCER

(June

21 ·Julr

22)

Chores may be more ot a hand ful

Chester
News Notes
By Clarice Allen
Don Wickham and mother, Mrs.
Lenora Garter, Wintersville, spent
Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. B.
K. Ridenour and were Sunday dinner gueats of Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham.
Allen Weber, Akron, spent a few
days &lt;With Mrs. Ralph Keller and
called on Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen, Monday evening.
Randy Mugrage, Cincinnati, and
Lowell Ridenour. both students in
Rio Grande, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. James Ridenour and
Jolm.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert Allen,
Westerville, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hayes,
Nelsonvile, called on Mr. and Mrs.
Jolm Hayes. Wednesday.
Mrs. Larry Cleland, Mrs. Enna
Cleland and Mrs. Young attended

tod ay than usu al and -.,.ou m1g ht
nave a problem copmg w1th
them lncoroorat mg a gamel1lle
a1t1tude would help tremendous-

'

BOYS '
HUFFY
Tra i l er
Blazer bike , l ik e new Ca l l
992 3114

LEO ( ..M~ 23-Aug. 22) You can

av o1d some small ellpenses
around lhe hOu 5e today 1f you If!

more careful •n managmg lh•ngi
Tf'f to stret ch what you have
larlher
VIRGO (Aug . 23· 8ept. 22) No
use g•umbllng about a responSt ·
tHIIIt you ,e go•ng to be asked to
talo. e on You are g01ng to wmd
up acceptmg the job anyway
UBRA (Sepl . 23-0ct 23) Formu.
late a game plan and st•ck to ,,
aU the way !Odfly . no metier how
tough th1ngs start to toolo. Y"ou 11

truly have 11 mess 1f you allow
yoorseH to be s1de traclle&lt;J
! J.i f W 5 1' 4 P[FI

[ Nl[ ~ PJll S I

4 SS"' 1

the Pumpkin Show in Circleville
recently .
Mr . and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
Springfield, were weekend gueats of
Mrs. Letha Wood. Recent callers of
Mrs. Wood have been Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Efa w, Athens; Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Stewart, Mrs . Nora Davis
and Mrs. Kathy Clifford and baby,
local.
Mills K; istie Hawk, Tuppers
Plains, spent Wednesday everung
with Mr. and Mrs. Roy O!rl.sty.
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Audrey
Rowan and Mrs. Lydia Berry,
Belpre, called on Denzel Cleland and
Mrs. Clarice Allen , Monday.
Major Roger Rose, Phoenix, Ariz.,
and Anna Jean Phipers, Denver,
Colo., have returned home, after
having been called here by the
illness and death of their mother,
Martha R&lt;&gt;~e .
Mr. and Mrs. Darrel Weber, Fort
Wayne, Ind. , spent the weekend with
Mrs. Ralph Keller.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Newell,
Kathy. Kenny and Jimmy, were
we~keu u guests of Mr. and ,Vfrs.
Steve Meek. VXJI•i(ton. Ky .

EIGH T SNOW t1res m o un
ted on 5 1ugwheels, 4L7B 1.5
and .. H78 ·15. Was used 1n
4x4 p ickup Also 1 goOO
bath tub Phone 992 7892
CLEARANCE
SALE
Component systems
'"
matc h ed sets of mix a nd
matc h . Speakers for home
entertainment
cent e r s.
r11dios , automobiles a nd
patios Comoination AM
FM st e reos and tape d ec k ,
cassette or Strack , C B
base stations and mob ile
units .
Portab le AM FM
radios w 1th tape play er and
recorder Oigilal AM FM
clod&lt; radios and comp act
AM ·FM pocket rad 1 o~ P ar
table recorder T etev •s1ons
portable and c on so l t.~
models . Regen c y scann e r s
Antennas and
m asti ng
Many optional a cces~o r •e~
~nd general ele c tron ic sup
plies . France TV and E lec
trontc s , 39260 Bradb ury
Rd , Middleport , OH 45760
992 2276
GOLF
PRE SENT S ' "
Bag~
ball s.
Christmas
etc . Spec ial lad1 es ' puff ers
John Teaford 614 985 3961

FOR SALE
1 Used Homelite
Saw S90.00
1 good used 16 cu.
fl. Frigidaire
Freezer
OnlyS17S

POMEROY
LANDMARK

~

-

Jick W . Carsey
Mgr .
Phone 991 ·2181

Great Chnstma s G+tl
Bolh New &amp; Used
' , m11 (&gt; Off Rl 7 by ·pa ss.
Rt 17 4 towa rd

R u 11 .:~ nd .

Auto &amp; Truck
Re pair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
.d

APP L E S
C I DE R
HO N E Y
Fi tZp a Tr ic k Or
ch ar d . St ate Ro ute 689
Phon e
W1l kesv 1ll e . 66 9
JIBS

MODELING
work , down
outs , s
e concrete
work,
walks
and
drieways .
(FREE ESTIMATE I

WOOD STOV ES b y Be lter
N Ben s. G ldssview Leyden
Hea rth , Old lim er, F1r e
view
Suburban
mobi I e
hom e wood heaters , UL ap
prov ed , and Suburban fur
nace ma s ters .
Outdoor
Equipment Sales, Jet Rt s
7 ana 35 , Gallipoli s. OH
Phon e 446 36 70
RUTLAND HARDWARE .
Pl umb ing , Hea fing . Elec
tr ic al and Auto Suplies 812
Main 51 , Rut land, OH .
Pla st ic sewer and dra in
pi pe, 2 .50 f l . co i l , \90 . Cut in
any length s, J7c a t1. 20 ,000
BT U
cir c ulating
gas
hea ter , $208 K i ng 0 He at
live room co al healer ,
$226 .95 . Bond Tite auto
r e pair
kits.
with
in
sl ru c t1 on s Al so Bond ·T 1te
body putty , S9 n ga l Rapid
r e pa1 r,
$11 99
g al
Bu s 1ness e s
c nll
for
wh o les al e pr~ c e s .
APPLE S ~ ROME beauty
app les a t $4 per bu . Be st for
app le butter . Call 669 37 85,
Fitzpettri c k Or c ha rd , SR
689

30 !l r

ADD ONS &amp;

HOUSE COA L , lump or
stok er , will de li ver 742
11B 3

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE. 0 .
949 -2748 or
99HJ14
11 1 I Pd )

W H A T·::, TH IS AF30lJT HA VI N '
VU UR f'\ ID IN RA C K O F

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

MARK MORA
HAIR STYliST
Featuring :
m('n 's &amp;
women's styling, per -

ms .
Call for appt. or walk in

992 -2367
Main St .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Q" ~ Jack W. Carsey
~
Mgr.
~· Phone 997 -2181

Services Offered
BABY SITTER
tn
my
home Five days a week
Tw o c hildren Ref erences a
mu st
Contact
Deni se
Wolle at 949 1377 a t1er ~ 30
ANY O NE WI SHING an ol a
bttrn l o rn dow n and hauled
aw a y fr ee. ca l l 985 .4365
WI L L CARE for the elderly
.n our hom e Hav e va ca n
cy
T ra •ne d
an d
ex
per• en ced 992 73 14

-~ve_away__

__

T E RR IE R . SHO R T ha•r ed ,
ma le , pl ayf u l Pom eranian
lype . m a le, w o rmed sh ot s.
Humane SOC 1e1 y , 992 6260
GO OD
h o m e,
r e gi ~ t e r e d
ma le Carin
T e r r •er , 4 y es.
o ld
Hou!:&gt;eb r ke n ~2 3090
l H R E E SMA LL white long

ha •r ed pu ps 10 weeks ol d
11 1 year old w ir e hair ed
I err 1('r 99'1 785 3
SI X
PUPP I E S to g1vl:'
nway , 6 wee k s o ld 773
Gr a n t 51 . M iddlepor t . O H
f/(i7 77 40
EIG H T P UPPI E S, 6 w ee kS
ol d . 3 so l 1d bla ck 997. 75 7.7

Sal es Rep For
Sundin s
Hammond Or gan s
Tyr·ee Blvd . Ra,• ne, 0 .
0
h
'
0
Phone 949 ·1118 c velng s
alter s p .m YY t" C"- t: "u J
aft er 12 noon .
11 19 I rn o

COMM E R CI AL BUILDIN
G on 132 ft lot nt 1600 Ny e
Av e, Po m er oyd , OH . Will
l 1na n ce a t 9 Pet to re l, able
couple No rea u ors 9'92
51&amp;
HOU SE F OR SAL E beh 1nd
Jones B oys $5500 Call 304
77] 5079 Sh nr on Stark
1972 11ltb0 mobile ho m e
SS900 949 1860 or 949 2801 or
~ t:&gt; c n a r les B+ sse ll , Rf
1,
Long B ottom Ba sh an

Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts
Free
Estimates .
All
worh
guaranteed . 20 years ex ·
perience . Call A'hens .
collect. Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
79U74l .

'

6

9

N AiU~PL

L 11-- V !- IN
f-"&gt;IRTH _ L I ZZ '? #" A':, f'"\ '.....&gt; T E :._,~,

MI SS "TRfMBLY. YU UF&lt; F;F&lt;(JT Htf&lt;

HEINOUS

ATT[Mr '"TE [J ~ .

..,._,
. ...

~ --

t,....,(J,.--

·~ ··

KWISH

I VACIDEJ

rJ r

A 111ypes r oot work . new
or r epa 1r gutter s and
down spouts ,
gu1fer
c /ean1ng and pa•nt1ng
All work guaranteed .
Free Est1ma fe s
R&lt;'a sonable Pric es
Call Howard
949 ·1861
11 14 m o

LP H&lt;\ I&lt; DLY HA VE

KN OWtV YO~ WITH
THAT BEAR D: ... AN D
THOSE 5-AN DAL !i !
OOt-J' T TH L ME
~OU 'V E T URtVE r
INTO A HIPPIE!

COLETTE!

JJ

II n

M o, lq o mt&gt;r '

l ~n&lt;.! '" ol l + "

th e one
A HEAD

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

~~~ ~. ... ~

1 M •l +.&gt;\

Real Estate for Sale

.

tl 4 \

r

Skill begets slam 'luck'

'bJ'I&lt;£ PI&lt;DSAJ3L-'1' ~1&lt;1~0
W'i I {.Al..LW '1bu A~~ Hf~ ...

• A J ~It
• .-\ Q ! tl ~ :t

u p V."l lh q~g &lt;~II u\'l' r hi "- r·h1n
Sout h ex pl a lnt· d to u" t ha t
lw wa s t h1· m ost un lurk v
bndt~.:t· playt&gt;r 1n t he w •; r ld and

• 4

that 11nly

CALL 992 ·7544

aR e placcm enl

e:.n l cr w .l~ •·h •

.
.,

11 :n

S UPfg
COO ~ F
\ T O(
TRAI LE R N Q W A V h • l h !H f

~

• K fl ; ti-t
t K 1.J l(ll
+ .I H 4

Real Estate for Sale

FINAN CI N G VA F H A LO
ANS LO W O R NO DOWN
PAYM E N T
P UR CH A SE
OR
R EF I N A N C E
IREL A N D MORl G AGE .
II E ST A TE . AT HEN S
6 14 592 30 51
LAR G E L OT on dead end
street W1 th w o l er nnil
sewage
W1ll l1 na nce !o
reliabl e ' Uuple ,~1 q Prt
992 5786 t-. o r ea l rare,

M O!)fP N
Mf l HOlJ':&gt;. lfl

Business Serv ic es

l ~A N

216 E Second Si r e-el
N 1ce

new er home w .l h J BR ,
11 ) b at n . ha~ t ve 1 H JO .
cen tral neat . ,1nd •'J on
O h1 0 P o w e r
L &lt;~r gt•
w ooded lot J vc, : \J I. SOO
$1675 .00 DOWN
4 -tr "'&gt;
old 3 bed r oom~ . bat h.
n1ce k •! Al l e lf'c horn e
') ' 1 a c r e~

MOBILE HOME
thr ee Ot&gt;d r OOOlc,
n1 shed . a nd ' •

1971
l vr
.~rr•·

g r av el

Bf

n ml .-., pre ad •nq

' - - ·,(""(·

Al c; o l 1m t&gt; h au i Hi(}
Le-o Mor r1 !J,
Tru ck. 1n g Pt1on£' 1 4} J.t.S S

NL' w
elr (
rura l w ate r , ea t 1n k•T
g ar ages. on e rl f' 1dCh(' d
a nd 1 acre . l enu :: d
4 ACRES
L C Watr&gt;r
2 tr ai ler hoo~ uo c.,. r~ ~ c;
s t o ra~ e Onl'tl l 17 .S.OO
\l ,HO DOWN
N ee 3
t t?d roo rrr.n n&lt;1t •n 1&lt; 11 .
d iUm1n ... VU{() 1n q . ne w
bat h, f ul l b &lt;.. ment , and
1 ] ac r e
U2 S 00
DOWN
5
r oom r, , 3 b e dr o om ~.
bn th . ll •r ch I&lt; 1T, full
basemen t
WE NOW HAVE GOOD
QUICK
FINANCING
AND PROSPECTS IF
YOU WANT TO SELL
CALL 99HJ1S.
$2 , 261 SO DOWN
J be dr oom ~ . r~ll

Rousing
Headquarters

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
WE HAVE FINANCING FOR HOMES
WITH AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND

30 YEARS TO PAY.
In spite of high interest rates, we are se ll ing - If you want to sell give us a call.

i

ME N

1(

~

• i I"

~- ~ ---....
I H\-11 ' t' l~l!)
RFCKllN ~:10,

-1-/ f\1

1 r\N fit SPAREO BHT f R'N

L1~E

OUR •&lt;ltl D.

I

t i6Gf R

lt M
Wf
WON' 1 HAI/f:.

\ ' ulrw r ablt• r :&lt;J :-. 1· W e ~ t
DPil iN SolJ lh
W.-~t

i'\"urth

Ea st

South

!' a ~~

f ' J ~:-.

1'.-t 'ii...,

3•
4.

I' .i S'-

~
~ .' \T

l'a"

&gt;•

I'' "

; ~T

1' .. \:-.

;) •

I+

T11 ' DUf N S E AG II'-1
lt1FM A S VII O UL D
I?O B '1 0U

WON ' T 11 ?

I' J :-.~

/ .'.Jn

I'"'""

''I

fi .

+

l ' a ~"

""'""

&lt;" Omb m.:.ttl on ::. and w1 ll sec t ha i

flpt' ll lng !Pad t K

t)l rl &lt;; f lnq
~r
Call Q.t!f 161:!6

S() uth 1s sur e o f t hat r lub
1·ar d

END

LO ad ('r
b ru ~ h
h Og
W&lt;l l
d O
ba se rn en r s pona ~. o r usn .
!I m b e r
I M' d c lea r .nq
Char les Butc ner 141 /~ 40

Bv Os~o~~ · a ld Jacob\
atld Alan Sontaji.!; ·

AI.LEYOOP
~·

1

EXCA V AT I N G .
doz e r
lo ader an d ba c khoe w orll.
du rnp t r ul k. 'S rm r.: In boy &lt;;
fo r h 1r e, w ill haul f il l d 1rl ,
lop &lt;;.o1 1. 11 me~ 1o11e and
qrav e l Call Bob or R09e r
Jeft er o:. . a ay phone 992 7089.
n grt ph one 997 3525 or 99?
5131

l &lt;,n JZH'k of h&lt;.'a r b 1n th e E &lt;J :-&gt;t
hdn d he w1ll makf' q ' \"C'n
T !llL..I\··s So uth won t lu..•
d \,JtiHJnd . d rf•W t r um p~ wt th

p,p STEAL TH E M ,
YOUNG LADY.'

on(· lea d . l ~· d h1 ~ nm e uf hearts
an d lei 11 rt dt' to E a st s Jaf" k

E.a ..,t n •tu r n&lt;·d et &lt;'l uh :\r1 w
S• Juth ll•tl .a "t.&gt; &lt;" ontl hl'i:! rL ro"-t'
w1 th dum nl\" _.. , dct' and WIJUnd

by THOMAS JOSEPH

AU T O M O B IL E
oee n
) URA N C E
L o~t

operrtlo r &lt;.. l•c en s.e
99? 1143

1

IN
c an
.,- o ur
Ph on e

I N ST OCK for 1mmed1al e
d£' l1very . \la r 1ous S •I &lt;.&gt; S of
poo l k. 1 l ~ Do II ( Ourse lf or
le t us 1n st a!l l or y ou o
Bumga r dner Sa le&lt;.. . Inc
992 572 4
REY NOLD ' S E LEC rRI (
M o tors , re w .nd and re pa 1r
992 2J S6, 56 1 BC'e ch S t
M• ddlepor t , Oh •o
A &amp; H U p h ols t er~ n g, .:t cr o-:.s
fr om the TexMo Sta t1on 1n
Syrauc se 997 Jl 43 or 997
3152

2 fr ench
author
3 Polly ann~
4 Makeup

!\CROSS
I Cake

mgredt ent

GASOUNE AU..EY
- ~---~ -·

HOWERY A N D MA R TIN
E l( c av a t 1ng ,
se o 1 'c
wstP m s. dO i er . bM khot·
1-o!t I-4J Ph one 1 16 1-4 ) 61ilij
71)1 or 747 2 ~9 3

---- - -- ~ - - -, ( vesu · subconscious ly 40u
Yo ur problem. Wa lt )
I do. ~like to burn holes
1s

40 u don ; -

! rea lly

,,_,

·c

Doc ,

c

--

1n th1n q s'

.

· wan t

•

Yo u like t o '
f oul up
the air'

4 &lt;; o! f

It's 40ur wa4 of
qettinq

ba c ~

rtem
S Shenctm ga ns

II At.·nal
13 Sera gli o

at soc ret4'

6 &lt;'ond1t1 on

c hcnn bt' r

-

t

1t o qet
rid of
that
p1pe .•

clu!J

10 Sesame

; IJISUl ff

g ubbl e r

14 Su!Jslllutt.·

.I

16 Townsnwn

atl ons

17 S1 ng ular

9 &lt; ;cram t ·s

18 ,\d ornt•d

llJ \"l'
12 In addttl un

211· ran -

WINNIE
_:") ., :, E\.::'1

'o ~ :&lt;.

S2

::-::&gt; ()

o f :-;11ng

3K Opera

26 Yo ungst l' r
2M Wh(1dun1l

c h a r gt.· ~

hl ~ h!J g ht

dO&lt;

:19 I ) u n k l'~
l&lt;J lk

20 llllnt

30 ( ;,. 1 b)

htll l

21 ( ' oc kn e~ 's

32 Sdh ar a

41 !Jp't'' k
s h~H lt •

wa iH..l ('r r r

c 1gard

29 A dre~ !'i

=,v .. ;c &lt;. - .:: :--:: ::1 .:'?. -::A'&lt;: :c_?. =:::-·,, o ?.:-o-1,' '-.

Storm
30 Wr aith)

IE:5-:C&lt;.7A-,

31

Trapped

33 Sail f'r
36 Ynko 37 Hill
to Superviso r

BR ADFO RD , Auc t• oneer .
Comp le te Ser v• ce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 r nc 1ne .
Oh io, Cr i 11 Brad ford

42 Du badly
E LWO O D
BO W E R S
REPAIR
Sw ee pers .
t o a s t e r ~. 1r on-:. , al l sma l l
a ppl ia nces L awn mow er
Ne x t to Sl at e H 1ghway
Ga r age on Rou te 7, 985
3B2l
.

13 Ancestry
14 N ew
Mextca n

!':'". :..~gp,
[ '- . - -

lnd1an
45 Patnter 's

need
S &amp; G ( M Pf'l C 1e an 1ng
St ea m
c l ean ed
F r ee
est i mat e
Reaso n abl e
rat es
Scotc hgudrd
99 2
6309 or 742 23 4B

BARNEY

46 ScottiSh
r1ve r

- - - -·- - - !

DOWN
I S.: hool for
puzzle
rn a k('rS

PROPER I N SU L A T I ON "
c heaper 1ha n hea t •ng oi l
Ta k e adva nt age of a gOOd
inve stm e nt Call 992 328 8
for m or e i nf or ma llon

PIA NO
TU N I N G,
L ane
Dan ie ls New phone num
be r , 7.41 2951 Ser v1 ce to
!:&gt; chool s and ho m e si nc e
196S

Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br . Mgr .
Phone 992 ·2342, Eve. 992-2449
Middleport, 0 .

ttrmpt

purl r a ~ t·d

27 \1 rn n t-trle n
t~ !\ 11l drmk

:.. . 1:

(I

33 llu r ok
34 Dt&gt;pr ;-nT d
3S ll orne

~5 Adn' r sar~

19 FIXed

r 1sca ns, l' . ~
23 ft •) Danton

..

22 llru wn k1 w1
24 &lt;'ru c1al

1n r·orn hm-

/ll l" kll i:i /111.. '

'

Y esterday ' s Answt'r

~ Of Ind 1a .

13 \i cm ·s

JlAll.Y CRYI'TO&lt;!UOTE - lltr.-s how to work it :

HOR SE SHOEI N G
Cal l
W2 3288 , ask f or Da r rell
M cCi an at'lan

DOWNING-CHILDS

(00 you have a QUe5 110 r1 f Or
the eJperts ? Wrr te A s k the
Exoe r ts · c are o f th1s newspa per ln d11,n dua l ques tron s w1/i
be ans wered 11 acco m p anred
by s tamped. sell-addressed
en velo pes Th e m o s! In t erest .
1ng ques t1ons wr/1 be used m
th1s colu mn ana w rll recen;e
cop 1eS of JA C OB Y M ODE RN I

If South ra n Sl'l' t he Slngl e-

SUPPOSEDLY?! HE

r '&lt; EN '!UU KNO W HOTM1HG
A BO UT THE THEFr O F THE
Q UE EN'S TARTS"

p.. A,.AJ..i . THESE LI "L

. \ t· \1. " 1' \I ' H l r.\H.k l' l{ l\ f-. -1. \'i \

1\XYDI.B!\!\XR
I . 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

Is

years
on
.
Rt 143, only 2 miles from t. 7. Peaceful3 bedroom ,
1':2 baths, living room with fireplace, dining room ,
~rtc hen and laundry room . Cenlral heat and air con
dition . Garage and workshoP plus a pony barn . Over
3 acres with split rail fence . Call for appointm ent ,
$3'1' 900 .00

d t ~·

hi:' lt;J s rn ad t• t h1:-.

clll l "l'

s a fl' ty p lay
DOZER .

c e ll e d "?

$16 ,500

l \-:I t

r

l lt[ 'S PRtTiY
C HE f.1 P TO

BUl ONE THING

IHf:f tli N'T NE VFR
I ~ P R O V ED
1HE r' .S

I T USfD TO

SEW I NG
MA C H I N E
R epa 1r s
ser v 1ce.
all
ma k e s
9Q 1 2184
Ttw
F br •c
Shop . Pom er oy
Au tnor •led S•nger Sal es
and Ser v 1c e We sharp{'n
SCISSO r &lt;,

NEW LISTING

1fP

'

1(; f · J t i\ 7 1t k

W I L L H AUL lt me ~ ' O n e c1 na

I

+

+·,\' K ;

WITH CH L l ti f

P1ES ARE D ELIC IOUS

,., l J1 3

.~

.

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

10 19 I mo

-~

FA'oT

+ :&lt;

t I '• ~ 7 h 't
f.J 111 ~'
sot TH
+ KIJ II ;Ii i ~
• ~~ 2

W1n

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

.

Jd l' k of
the EJ st h.md ("nu ld
hdvt' lt·d to h1 s def('at
South had b een un lu&lt;" k y . but
hP had 11\"Pr look&lt;' d J p~ rf el"l
~ a f t·t y p!J y t hat woul d have
KUdl" .t n1c· •·rl h1 " c·u n t r act
agai n"-! ;.m _v .:1nd all comhm a·
11on:-. ul &lt;Hhe rsc ca rd::; That
. ., a ft&gt; t ~· play would ht:~v e ber n
!0 cas h dummv ·s ace of he arts
lnS\('a d of lcad 1ng the ntne for
a flnt•sse If ne1th t&gt; r honor
dro ppt•d So ut h would return t o
ht s hand . lead t he nme u f r luhs
and l et 1t n de
Suppnsf' tha t It los t to th t:'
)ack Th e defenders w o ul d
only have tw o hea rt s left T w o
11f dum m y ·s hearts (·o uld b('
r lJ ifed and ev entu allv t he f1fth
he drl woulfl set up ·
Y ou &lt;"an r he&lt;·k on al l o th e r
t ill' sm gletun

h t · &lt;~rh 1n

;, :\

1\E' T

Free Estimate

------~-

WANTED
ALWAYS
your own bu s ines5 ? Well
est a bli She d ,
K•dd1e
Shoppe com e s with a II
equipment Ca ll now for
more informa,•on .
MIDDLEPORT An
old er 1''., story bri ck
hom e
Kit c h en
has.
d ishwashe r d 1spo sa 1and
hood 3 be d room s and
lot s at c lose t s v er y nice
dl 123.500 00
NEW
Only 3 years old
ranch s1yl e- w 1lh J
bedroo m s,
full bas e
m e n! , equipped kit chen,
la rge Rec. room and is
total ele c tri c
Lovely
large lot . U.-4 ,900 .00 .
LIKE COUNTRY LIV ·
lNG?
Close to mines
Huge l 1v i ng room w ittl
f irepla ce , l a r g e k iTc hen ,
3 b{'droom s , par i base
6
ac r es
m cn t
124, 500 00
V.A. APPROVED
Buyer need s c l o~ in g
cos t s
l n l eres t r ate
111 J ~o . JO year s to pa y,
S283 2&lt;1 monthly
6 19
dot,bl e lo t 3 bedroom s.
built
+n
k il c hen,
carpe, ing and pa ne ling .
118.500 .00
LOOt&lt; -- Ni c e I story
w•th full oasemen1 Ha s
up to 4 bedroom s, sew
1ng r oo m . firepl ace in
family roo m
L ots of
cl ose t s, v A or F H .JA
approved 528 ,900.00.
WE ARE PLEASED TO
SHOW THE ABOVE CALL NOW FOR AP ·
POINTMENT .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Jr .
992 ·6191
Henry e . Cleland , Sr .
9n2S68
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
14).2474
Jean Trussell, 949 -2660
OFFICE 992 ·2259

~

dows
'''

GAR ISH HAN DL E
have a nu ycJU II get t h1~ -

__ Os~ald_ Jacob~- and Alan Sontag

BORN LOSER

e Storm W1ndow s

'" '"'1tt \

( Ou

BRIDGE

a Storm Doors

ll ~

TEPtO

U~e

Answe r

• I ns~at10 n

O h oO

" AT THE r II XJ

Jurnl.l les WEARY

Vinyl &amp;
' Aluminum Sidinq
7117~

Now arr ang e the c•rcled h'~lle r s to
form lhe S.J rprtse ans wer as sug
ges1ed by th e abo..-e cartoon

(Answe 1s tornor• on

INSULATION

TRNLER SALES

THEATER: LOOK_

(TI I . []

J&amp;L BLOWN

MONfGOMERY

HCNv' SOM E

PEOPLE AI T HE

~COMM~

FLO SS Y De'AR . .I D
L IKE '0 ~ TO MEET

Answer: "(

Hours 9-1 M ., W ., F .
Other t1 mes by appoint
ment .
107 Sycamore !Rear
Pomeroy , 0

Television
Viewin~

L

r-n__

[ ROSYR

CRI M E

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

9 28 1 mo Pd

OWN ER Wll L se ll 40 ac res
or
m ore
w i th
1978
Hol l yp ark mo b 1l e home
14'. 00 w .rh ex panao, plus
U x36
t a m dy room at
la c he d . tully c arpeted ,
ru r a l w at er , some pastur e,
fence ,
standing timber ,
so m e walnut , sun deck
f ro nt and ba ck . Loca,ed on
New L +m a Rd Call 614 7"2
1182
DO
YOU nee d ex tra
money ? Are your earnings
deflated by inflation? Does
your work lack opporft.Jnity
and c hallenge? If yhou are
interested in full or part
ti me opportun i ties tor
husband and w i fe teams or
sing les , send resumes 'o
PO 8 0 )( 729 ·E, c a the Daily
St&gt;nti ne l . Pom eroy , OH

~,f

Federal
Hous1ng &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

ROOFING

Real Estate_lorsale

5

o N'T vr;r 1

oy Harm Arnold and Boo Lee

UnscramOie 1hese lour JumOie s
one 1e 11er to each squa Te to fo r m
lour o•d mtr ry words

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

OHIO VALLEY

-----

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appli01nces
Sales &amp; Service

PETE SIMPSON

Pomero-y , 0 .
10 191mo

and

.4

D

f ~ THAT SC RAMBLED WORD GAME

..!}) ~ ~ ~L,!l .

~ORTII

HOTPOINT

TO

GI F T
IT EM
s al e .
ttcrossfrom Mi ner~vi li e
Ball Park . 992 3980

PIANOS

EM ERGE N CY
POWER
alt ern a tor s own fh t' best
buy WIN PO WER Ca ll 513
188 1SB 9

RUTLAND HARDWAR E .
811 Ma i n, Rutland , OH On e

1977 CHE V Y NOVA , )SQ
e ngine , a uto , S 1000 After 5
p m 991 389 1

F I R E W OOD FOR
so le
Now taK1 ng order s W ill
de l• v er , 742 2'056

COAL , deliv ered
$39 per ton . 992

20 FOOT Gibso n che st
freezer
Early Amer 1can
flower e d love seat
741
2348

&amp; Famous Nam e Brand

on Sl

For Sale

GOING OUT of Busi ne ss. 3
bla ck and tan coonhound ~
All
nunting
equ 1pm ent,
plus doghouses . Reason for
selling , ill health Cont ac t
Anderson,
Rt
3,
John
Pom e roy 997. 7096 or 997
IOJB

Hammond Oraan&lt;

• j f ff~ jli)'\}

~

Business Services

W IN T E R
POT A T OE S
C W Prol1 1ft farm , Por
nand , O H $8 a hu ndred and
\ 5 a hundred

THREE ROOM S and bath
Upstairs apt Adult s. only
92 ·5621 after5 : 30

1

A 4 - W ~ EEL DRIVE,
OU T IN THE W OOD S ?

COAL .
LI M E &gt; TO N E .
sa n d , g ravel,
c al c ium
c h l or~de .
fer til , zer , dog
food , an d all ty pes ol sa lt
Ex cel s•o r Salt w or k s, Inc .
E Ma •n Sr . Pomer oy . 992
389 1

10xS5 two bedroom mob il e
home i n Racine area . 997
5858

L UMP
locally
1116

1976 FORO

CAPRICOAtrll (O.C. Z2 · Jan . til)
Tat.. e care o t to dQ ·{ s resp onsltll l·
1t•es hrst befo r e you turn your
i:l llent ton t o mor e h• vo lous
matter s You II Dfl g1aa mey ·re
ou t ot I he wa y
AQUARIUS {J•n. 20-hb. ttl A
tnend •sn ·t too an .. ,ous to havt'l
you kno w the ful l det a11s o t a
s.ecret ol her s Help he r m a mta m
her d•gn1ty b'f no t t&gt;emg too cur• -

1914
F O RD MU S1 A N G
Ghia , auto , 6 cyl . low
mi leage . $1900 . 949 2042 I

OLD COINS, poc ket wt
ches, class ring s, wedding
bano s, diamonds Gold or
silver Catl J . A. Wamsl e y,
7411331.

NO
HUN T ING
or
tr espas5ing day or night on
the Charl es Yost and Ivan
Well fa r m s

GET TODAY ' S MARKET
VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER
CONTACT
ED BURKETT BARGER
SH O P
MIDDLEPORT .
OH

1911
D O DGE
RO YA L
Mona co wagon 440 V 8 ,
P.S , P .B ., A .C. . till wheel .
AM FM stereo , 5 stee l
betTed rad ial s, chrom 1u m
plated roof rac k E xcell ent
condit ion I dedi fo r large
tamil y and hau l mg cam
per Ask i ng $36 14f ir m Call
between 5 and 7 p .m 992
1019

the Sentinel Classifieds

For Sale

Auto Sales
1979 F O R D F 150. 4 wheel
dr 1v e,
tac l ory rap p e r
Auto . P S . P B 16800
Phone 98 5 4339

OUTSIDE STORAGE BUILDING.

3. 7~

~~ound

V:Janted to Buy

Wanted To Buy

•
Ill

- The Dail v Senttnel M1ddl
TRACY
·
epo rt~&gt;u meruy ,O .. Tuesda} . Nov . 20. 1979

Mo_bile
Homes - Sale
--- - -----·

1912 LY NN HA VE N 14X6l 3
l:)(&gt;d r oo m
1970 Vi nd ale 12x6J w i l h ex
pando, 1 bedr
1970 New Moon 12x6CI 3 bdr
19 73
Skylin e
12lc: S5 7.
bedroom

1972 Bonanza 12x52, '1 bed r
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SAL ES . PT P L E AS ANT
w v 304 675 4424
•

On(' \(&gt;tl f r s1rnp ly stand s f or ano th er I n ! hts S3mp)e ·\ t s
u sed f or I he thrH I. "· X f llr l hl' \WU cr ~. t•l r Sin gle ) e llt'r ~ .
apo s1ro p hes. lht: l (' n glh and fo r ma t ion of the w or ds art' all
hint~ F: ac h d a\ 1ht· ( " Itch: IC' ttc r s arc d dft:rt·nl

CR YPTOQI 'liTES

PEANUTS

U K S Q X

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IT CAN ALSO

cross out
m [ sta~ es

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UK S THLY
M U RHJ
!;HEATEST PLEASURE IN
l.IH: IS TIIAT OF HEAD!N!; , WIHLr: WE AH!·: YUUNG .K HH
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Yt·,h'rda) ., Cryploquole : TH E

I

';__ __ j

Wll.l.IAM HA ZI.ITI'

I

'

..:.__..

TUESDAY , NOVEMBER 20,1979
5 30--Caro l Burnett 3: News 6 ;
Gom er Pyle B; Elec Co 20 ,
Ma sh 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Drea m of Je annie 17, Doctor
Who 33
6 00-- New s 3,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News
6 ; Zoo m 20 ; Carol B urne1t 17.
6 3{)-- NB C N ews 3,15; AB C N ews 13 ;
Caro l B urnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob New hart 17; Over Easy 20.
7 ()(}- 3's A Crowd 3, T ic Ta c Dough
8; Pu lse 6; News 10; Newlywed
Ga m e 13 ; love American Sty le
15, Sa nf ord &amp; Son 17 ; Dick
( ewell 20, 33
30- Hollywood
Squares
3;
N ewlyw ed Game 6; Joker ' s Wild
B. Hollywood Squares 10 ; Sha Na
N a 13, TV Honor Society 15 ; All
In The Fam i ly 17 , Mac Neil .
Lehrer Report 20 ,33 .
8 oo-M ov1e " The Last Ride of the
Da lton Gang " 3, I S; Happy Days
6. 13, M o vie " Raggedy An n &amp;
A nd y" B. 10. Nov a 10.33; Movie
" Sh a ne " 17
8 30-- Ang ie 6, 13 .
9 ~Th re e ' s Company 6 , 13 , Movie
"' Young L ove . F i r sl Love " 8. 10;
Wor ld 20,33
9 30- T axi 6, 13
10 00--F amily 6, 13; News 20 : City
Nofebook JJ, 10 · 3Q-E Iizabeth R
17. L ike It I s 20 : Another Voice
33
1·1 00 - N ews 3.6, 8 , 10, 13, 15; Dick
Cav ett 7. 0; Carry On Laughing 33 .
11 30-- T on igh t l1S , Ba r ney Miller
6 . 13 , Barnab y Jones B; ABC
New s 33 , M ov 1e " The Racers "
10
17 OO - M ov 1 ~ " C ape F e ar " 17 ;
11 Os-- Movie " That Man Bolt "
6.13
17. 40--M ov• e "' H elter Ske lt er" 8;
1 00-Tomorro w 3 , News 15.
()(}--Tom orrow ] , News 15 , J·Os-New s 13 , 2 15---- News 17.
20 M ovie " She" 17, 4 2Q--Movie
" S,.=.ntiaoo· 17
WEDN ESDAY,NOVEMBEA 21.1979

5

•s- Far m

Report 13. S 5()-PTL
Club 13
6 00--7 00 Cl ub 6,8 . Health Field 10;
PTL Cl ub 15 ; 6 10--World at
La rge 17
6 3D--Chr i stophe r C loseup 10; News
17, 6 -45-Morn i ng Report 3;
6 50- G oo d
M o rning .
Wes t
V irg i ni a 13. 6 55- New s 13 .
7 GO-- Today 3, 15 , Good Morning
Ame r ica
6 , 13 .
W ed nesday
M or ning 8. Ba tm an \ 0 : Three
Stooge s L 1ttle Ra sc al ~ 17
15- A M
Wealher 33. 7 30 F a mdy Aff a ir 10 . 7 5.5--C huc k
Wh1l e Reports 10 .
8 00- Ca pt Kangaroo 8, 10: L eave It
To Beaver 17 . Sesame 51. 33.
8 )(}~ Romper Room 17 .
9 oo- Bob Brau n 3 : Big Valley 6 :
Ph il Donahue 15, 13 , Pork y Pig 8 ;
One D ay at a Time 10, Lucy
Show 17
9 3Q-- Bob Newhar 1 8 , L ove o1 Ute
10 : Green A cres \7
10 oo- Card Sharks 3. I S, Edge of
N 1g ht 6 . Beat the Clock 8, 10;
M orn ing Magaz ine 13 , Movie
" Mad ison Ave " 17
10 30 - H ol l ywood Squa r es 3, 15 :
$20 ,000 P yram id 13, Whew 8, 10;
10 55- CBS News B; Hou se Call
10
11 00-- H igh Ro ll ers J, 15 . LaYerne &amp;
Shirley 6. 13. Price is Right 8,1 0.
11 JO- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Fam il y Feud 6 , 13 Ses ame 51
70.]3 . 11 55- News 17
12 O O ~ N ewsc e nt e r
3
New s
6.8.1 0. 13. Mmdreaders 15 ; Love
Amer~c a n St y l e 17
12 JQ-- Ry an ' s Hope 6, 13; Sear ch for
Tomor row 8. 10; Hea l th F ield 15;
Mov1e " Ra w W1 nd 10 Eden " 17 ;
E lee Co 10.33
1 00- D ay s o f Our L 1ves 3, 15; All My
Chil dren 6. 13 : Young &amp; l he
Res t le ss. 8 . 10 . I JO- A s The
Wor ld T urn s 8, 10
2 DO-- Doc tor s 3. 15, One Lif e to Live
6, 13 , 2 2.&gt;--- New s 17
7 30-- Another World 3. 15 . Gu 1dlng
L 1g ht 8, 10. Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
00 Gener a l Hospital 6, 13: I Love
Luc y I 1. Conne c tions 20
]Q---O ne D ay At A T lme 8, Joker ' s
W1l d 10 , F lin1 stone s 17
J OO- M 1st er Cartoon J; P ass word
P!us 15. M e r v Gr 1ff 1n 6: Be verly
Hill b illies 8, Se same St 20,33:
S1 x Million Do l lar Man \0; Real
M cCoys 13 . Spectreman 17
4 JO Be&gt;~·n l c h e d 3 .
Pe lti c oat
Junct ion 8 T om &amp; Jerry 13 :
M erv G r 1tf in 15 . Gi llg ian ' s Is 17
) 00- 1 D ream of Jeannie ], Sanford
8. So n B. Mi st er Rogers ' Neigh
bo rh oo d 20 , 33 : Mary Tyler
M oore 10 : My Three Sons 17.
)0-- Carol Bu r nett 3, News 6 .
Gomer Pyle B. Elec. Co 20 ;
Ma sh 10 . Happy Day s Again 13; I
Drea m o t J eannie 17; D oc tor
Who 33
6 oo- News 3,8. 10, 13 , 15 , AB C News
6. Car ol B urnett 17 , Zoom 20 .
6 3{)-- N B C News 3, I S; Carol Burnett
6. C B S News 8, 10; B ob Newhart
17, O ve r Ea sy 20
Q(}--3 ' s A Crowd 3 : Ti c Ta c Dough
8. Match Ga m e PM 6, N ew s 10;
N ewl yw ed Game 13 ;
Love
Am eri can Style 15 , Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Di ck Ca v et t 20, 33 .
30--Country Roads 3; Newlywed
Gam e 6, Joker ' s Wild 8; The
Judge 10 ; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 17 : MacN~il Lehrer
Report 20 . 3~ .
8 00-- Real People 3. IS ; Eight is
Enough 6, 13; Movie '" Raggedy
Ann &amp; Andy " 8. 10; Great Per
tormances 20,33 ; Rat Patrol 17 .
8 3{)-- NBA Basketball II ; 9 00-Ch arlie' s Angels 13; The Seekers
6 . Movie " Mayflower " 8, 10; A
Pla ce to be 20.33
y 3{)-- Bee Gees 3. ll; IO :oo-Vegos
13; Ne-w s 20 , Connections 33 ;
10 3()- Best of Groucho 10.
11 00- News 3.6 .8, 10. 13, 1l ; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavett 10 ;
Wodehouse Playhouse 3::1 .
' 1 3{)-- Tonighl 3. 15; Love Boat 6, 13 ;
Black Sheep Squadron 8; Movie
" Mirage" 17 ; Movie " A Gun .
I ight" 10.
12 40-- Baretla 6, 13 , H&amp;waii Flve-0
8. 1.oo-Tomorrow 3; News 1.5;
1· 50-- New s 13, 17.
5 ~ - NB.C.
Basketball 17; 4::!5-M rwi c " Beyond Tomorrow " 17.

�'
B- The Da lly Sent mel , Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . 20, 1979

Eastern grid teams honored

EAGLF..S HONORED - East ern 's varsity , rese rve
and jum or high football teams and g1rls ' volleyball
squad we r e honored Munday night with a banquet
'l X&gt;nsore&lt;l by the sc hool 's athle tic boosters cl ub . Var SitY ~nd players recogmzed were Mark-Norton . left .

and Brian Bissell , Most Outstanding Backs ; Greg
Hayman , Most Outstanding Lineman, and Scott Hill ,
Most Impro ve&lt;! Player . They are flanked by head
coach Joe Mitc hem and Coach J . D. Graham, Newark
Catholic High School, the guest speaker.

10 more captives released,
freedom demands continued
T EHH A ~ .

lra11 1 AP 1 - Tt' n m o re
Am L'n cans f n't'&lt;.l afte r ix'mg held
h&lt;JS~t~ e

for 16 da~ s

tn

Emtx tssy ln Tehnm

th e American
Wt'r t'

nown t o

f·:urnp•·· t od ay tu Juln t.hret· lJther s
rt•leased MmHla\·
One of tht&gt; frt'(•d c uptll•es. J uan
Walsh of Ogden. Utah . told report ers
at Mehraba d Atrport thtit the
remaining 53 hostages were in
" greater danger than we we re . ·
The U S government said two
wumen wer t' &lt;-~m o ng th(• 49
Arnen cans still he ld m the embas sy
by &gt;1udenl&lt; dernand1ng that the
Umt ed SUJte s hand O\W depose&lt;!
Shdh Muh tm m1ad Heza Pa h1a,·l to
Ayolol la h lt uholla ll Kh omeini ·s
re volut.wn ar y regmw for tnal. Two
hla l'k rnen a lso wer e b•·ll e\' ed am ong
thl'm
Th e
Carl t:'r
adullnl s trati on
n:m'wed it s dt•tna nd for the rel eHse
of all Ult' hu;teg es illld sa td 1f
f\hurnt:' IIll corned out Ius threat t o
pul SOTlle of U1em on tnal ass. lt
woul d bt• a .. furt her flagrant

vwlcttlon " of mtt·rnatwnal law as
wPII as a vwl atiun uf ·'elem entary
huma n r i~ hb "
For e ign
Press
Dir e e c to r
Abol gha ss an Sadegh told Th e
A'iSOciated Press 1t had not been
de cide&lt;! whe the r a ny of the hostages
would iJe tn ed . But .. ,f there ts going
to be a tn a l. .. he conttnued . .. it Will
be carrlf'd out by Lht· c ountry' s l e~al
t·ourt s,
Plt her
the
spe c ial
r evul ullonan trlbunals 1 wh teh hav e
sentence d more than 600 person ~ to
de ath by finng squad 1 ur tht•
ordmar ~·

tnal by the studenls in the embassy
('OmpoWld . ··
Ir a nian
Foreign
Mini s ter
Abol hassan !Jani Sadr tn a CBS
mterv1ew
Monda}· sai d
thr
rcmaming hostages co uld nut be
re leased for two months
until
after a new lranian government IS
tnslalled - unless the United States
surre nde r ed th e ailing shah to stand
Ina I for th e death of at least 6(),000
po li ti c al oppon en t s Khorn e ini ·s
supporters claim were killed during
his :17-year re ign .
Four women members of the
embassy staff and SJX blacks were
freed today in com pliance with
Khorneini 's order Last weekend to
re lease female and black Americans
found not gu ~ ty of spying. They
were put aboard a n lranian airliner
fur Paris, and aU .S . Air For ce plan e
was to tak e th em fr om the re to an
c\Jr F or ce hospital at W1esbaden.
West Ge rman y, for medical
examina tions and questioning by
U.S. off icia ls .
Anothe r woman and two black
Marine sergea n ts were freed
Monday and flown to Wiesbaden .
They were reported in good m ental
and physical condition.
The th r ee release d Monda y
re ported the re had been seven
women a nd 10 blacks among the
captives in the embassy. two women
a nd two bl acks more than we re
freed . T he S tate Department
cun firmed that two women we re stil'
he ld and 1dentif1ed them asElizabetl

('OUrts ·mere wtll bt&gt; no

VETERMIS MEMORIAL
Adm1ll e d --Delore s
Miller ,
Cheslnr e: James Cunmngham ,
Pom e r oy:
F los Sie
!'lei so n .
Pom e r oy:
Rrtan
f\ 1t c hart .
Syrac use . .John Hwmell. R&lt;:l c tne .
Joseph Ste wa rt . Btdwell .
Dt sc harg ed --He rbert
Gilkey .
Mary Bonecutter. Vt'rnon Crant.
Harley Hutton

SQt.;A O RL:'II

The Middl eport Em e rgency Squad
was ca lle&lt;l a t 5 34 a Jn . Tuesda y fur
01arle' Wayland who had a pos:&gt;~bll'
a ppembcitis attack He was ta kent u
Veterans Memorial Hospital

SEEK UCENSE

A marriag e lieense was Iss ued to
David Hobe rt Haggerty, 26, Athens ,
and Marys Helen Hlaettnar , 20,
Pomeroy.
SER VIC E ANNOUNCED

The annual 111ank.'igiving service
of the Lun g Bo ttom United
Methodist Church will be held at 7: :l0
pm . Wednesda y.

OFFFRIDAYTOO
POMEROY Most General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employees
-.ill have Friday tNov . 231 off as
part of th ei r Thanksgtvtng ho liday,
a c cordin g to Jim L . Parker,
('Ustomer serv ice manager m
At hens
Parker srud the toll .free re pair
servtce number t l-.\92-&amp;i361 will be
1n ~rvice . However, the toll -free
bustness off tce number wlil not be
attended .
The Phone Ma rt a t 38 Miun St. ~11l
he open Nov 23 from 10 a .m . to 2
p .m ., Parker sa1d . Mo;t bustness offi ce serv1ces can be handled there
he added
'

CWSED FRIDAY
The Holzer Clime Ud . in Gallipolis
and 1ts Jackson Coun ty Branch 1n
Wellston wlll be closed Thursday ,
Nov 22 , and F'nday, Nov . 23, tn observance or TIHmksgiving
In case of an em ergency during
the holiday penod, phys1 c1ans of the
Holze r Clime Ltd . staff w11l be on
duty in U1e Emergency Room 144652011 of the Holze r Medical Center
Hospital to handle emergency cases
only.
Holzer Clirnt Ltd . will resume nor mal oper a ti ons at both locations on
Monday morn1ng . Nov . 26

Ar k .
A State Department spokesman
said the freed hostages would spend
seve ra l days unde rgoing medical
and psychological tests and r elaxmg
at a U S Air Force hospital in
Wiesbaden, with a hea vy guard to
keep reporters away from them .
The Stat e Department sa td
officials would question the m a bout
their ordeal, a nd Undersecretary of
Sta te David Ne wso m was flown to
Wiesba den to take charge of them .
But sp okc!:ilnan George Sherman
said th e ir stay in Germany would be
" very short a nd is on ly a way station
rn the return to thm famili es."

Local embalmer
•
attends seminar
Kyle Allen, of the Ew1ng Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, was one of the
licensed e mbalme rs and funeral
directors attending a course tn eye
enucleatiO n held at the University of
Pittsburgh School of Medicine Nov .
17-1 6.
Th1s postgraduate co urse has a t tracted w&gt;d e attention and during
the past six years has provided over
400 morticians certified in the
enucleation proced ure from the
s tates of Ca lifo r n ia
Indi a n a
Ma"achusetts , New Yo;k, New J e r :
sey, Ohio, Pennsylvama, West
V1rgin1a and the Dlstn ct of Colum bia .
In their horne communiti es these
grad ua tes are cooperating Wi th eye
banks in implementing the gifts of
donor eyes so vitally needed in sight
restoration .
Eyes are never removed without a
s1gned a uthom..ation fro m the next
of kin or agen t a pproving the gift of
eyes previously plartned by the
deceased .
The obJed!ves of th1s trainmg 1s to
provide certifi catiOn of embalme rs
a nd funeral directors to fac tlttate
the remova l of eyes, wtlhin the
lun1ted time period after death,
when m edi c al personnel and
s urg ical reSidents are not available .
In recent vea r s 8.000 to 10.000 cor-

neal tn. nsp lant operations have
been performed armually in the
hospitals of the nation.
The restoration of s1ght for so
many blmd or potentially blind persons IS a hwna nitaria n achievement
of major proportions, to say nothing
of the financial a nd soci al im portan ce of r eturning these in .
dividuals to happy produc tive lives .
The co urse m eye enucleation is a
part of the program tn the divtsion of
continuing e du catiOn w1der the
directiOn of Dr . Williann M. Cooper
of the Um versity of Pittsburgh
School of Med1 cme .
The duector of the eye e nucleation
co urse IS Dr. Emory S . James,
president of the PttLsburgh [nstt lute
of Mortuary Sc ie nce .
Allen ha s indicated he will
welcome the opportuni ty to speak to
local civic, re!Jgw us and fraternal
gro ups to present the urgent need for
eyes to bring sight to those in ne e&lt;! of
eorneal transpla nts . The s uccess of
the work of the eye banks depends on
the int erest, c ooperation, and
gen erosi ty of people living in the
community, Allen reports. Those
wiShing Allen to explain the
program t o their respective groups
may contact him at the Ewing
Funeral Home

Boosters .
Following is a list of athletes who
~ceived awards :
VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM
Brian Bissell , M ark Norton , Greg
H ayman, Joe Stout , Leonard Myers,
·Scott Hill. M ark Sm ith . Greg Wigal,
Steve Brown ing , Ranoy Staats , Den
n is Durst. Ray Werry . J eff Saun
ders. Greg Scarbrough , Rodney
K e tler , Kenny
Larkins , John
Beaver , Mike B i sse ll , Johnny
Riebel , Todd Nort on , N ick Leonard ,

l ee Gainer, Mike Ha uber , Virgil
1 ay lor , Charl es Massar , Joe Sayre ,
E d Riffe, Ray Spencer , Da ve Wolf .

Roger Bissell, David Dursr , Mark
Holter. Ken Browni ng a nd Dave
Gau l .
VARSITY CHEERLEADERS
Jeannie M cClu r e, Pe bbl es Blake ,
Beth Ritchie, Lori Longenette, Wen
Oy E lki ns , M elissa Thomas and Pam
Murphy
J . V. CHEERLEADERS
Renee Trusse ll , Brenda Ca l away,

Oivoree actions fiJ ed
Four s uits for divorce and two actions for dissolution of marraige
have been file&lt;! in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Filing for divorce were Christy
Lynn Beegle, Racine, against Mark
Ala n Beegle, Racine ; Kim Friend ,
Rt . 1, Portland , against Jeff Friend ,
Long Bottom; Josefina Myers ,
Reedsville, against AlVUl J . Myers ,
Jr., Reedsville ; Edith A. Bickers,
Rt . I, Racine, against Benwood D.
Bicker s , Norfolk, Va .
Filing for dissolutwn of marraige
were Ja y K. Swain, Pomeroy, and
Paul D. Swain, Gallipolis, and
Melante D. Barnett, Rt. I, Racine,
and Wesley Allen Barnett , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy .

Ca !&gt; S1e Shee t ~, Melan1e Bailey , Don·
na Jacks , Synthia White and Velvet
Elkins.
JR. HIGH CHEERLEADERS

Lor i Robln$0n , Tanya Fortney ,
Tara Guthr ie, Lori Wolf e, Renee
Bu c kly and Kristi Gaddis .
JR . HIGH
FOOTBALL TEAM
Rickv Johnson , Cliff Griffith, Tom
Everett , Mike Collins. Larry Life,
Larr y Cowdrv . Troy Guthrie , Tim
Probert. Jerry Rucker , Oa\l'id

"

..A;.~

and Jim Weber .

- ·.

building . Santo wlll a m ve tn
Pomeroy the day of the para de .
Those inter ested in taking part are
asked to fill out the fonn below a nd
mail it to the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce. or they may ca ll the
chan1ber office on Tuesday or
Friday from 9 a.m . to 4 p .m . The
num ber there is 992.,\()()~.

r

.

',

\

. • ·.

.

MUD &amp; SNOW

.

ADDRESS ...

Eight from Gallia,
Mt'igs are honort'd
Buc keye Community Servtces, a
Jackson-based agency whlch serves
developmentally disabled persons in
eight Southeastern Ohio counties,
presented certificates to eight
Galli a -Meigs home services workers
who had complete&lt;! Pre-service
Trairung in its Small Residential
Alternatives Program . The presentation took place on Nov. 8 at Ohio
University 's Convocation Center.
David Black, President of
Buckeye Community Services'
Board of Directors , presented the
certificates and expressed appreciation to the home services
workers for their interest and
knowledge concerning individua.lll
With a developmental disability.
Certificates were presented to the
following from Gallia and eigs Counties: Helen Belville, Amanda Chaffins , Wilma Mount , Dorothy
Plwnley , Eunice Saunders, Sara
Hull, Tina Moore and Walter Henry .

Burial will be in Highland Memorial
Gardens, South Point .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6 until 9 p . m Tuesday .

JOHN PICKENS
J ohn Pickens , :ill, Memphis, Tenn .,
fonnerly of Meigs County, die&lt;! Monday evening at the Memphis Naval
Hospital.
He is survive&lt;! by his wife Lucille ·
'
two sons, Michael of Memphis,
and'
Stephen of Knoxville ; his mother
Mrs . Bertha Wolfe, Racine; fo;
sistern , Dorothy Sayre, Racine ;
Doris Jackson , Tuppers Plains;
Frances Drenner, St . Albans , W.
Va ., and Betty Harria, Reedsville ,
and several nieces and nephews .
Military services will be held at
3:30p.m . Wednesday at the National
Cemetery in Memphis .

ELBERFELD$
CHRISTMAS GIFT SUGGESTION

Rolfs

Initial
Key Holders
-. -..~-

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL XXVI II NO. 155

···:::.:::: ~-

TYPE OR GROUP
HOW MAN Y IN GROUP ..

NeKt to Krogers
MAIL TO POMEROY CHAMBER OF COMMERCP. . POMEHOY. OHIO ~769
0~2-2101
in Pomeroy, OH .
OR CALL 992.,\()()5
t«~·~;~\\~S~SX¥X$~%~%~S~\~-~%~%~~s~:~:r.~~:XS~s:. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 21. 1979

TI1anksgivmg 1sn t what is used to be .
The Pilgrims stalked and she '1cir own turkeys . Today, the center of attraction on the
groaning board is prekilled , preplucked , prestuffed and possibly pr ecooked . It rnay even
come tn a hornogemze&lt;lloaf which , like a reeurd uf excerpts from musical maste rpieces
l1as all the hard parts taken out.
'
A centur y ago on Thanksgiving, we are told . the custom was to ma ke ao excur sion into
the coun try to vis it one's grandparents . Tod ay , gra ndma 's house is as likely as not a highnse condorru mum and the chtldren nde ele vators, not a horse-drawn carriage, to get there
Half a century ago, the on ly holida y entertamment for most farnilt es was what they could
provide for themselves in the form of conversation and games . Radio wassl!U tn 1ts tnfancy .
Today . teleVISIOn mass feeds our mind'i j u.&lt;.t, as th e modern food1&gt;ruces.s ing indu.':itrv mass
feeds our ;iomachs .
No, Thanksgiving isn t what 11 used to be . lt hasn 1 been for a long t1me and 1t never " 'II
be again .
Yet it 1s n t ThanksgiVIng tha t has change&lt;! Amenca has changed . and" changmg , but
the reasons each generatiOn continues to cele brate th1s festtval are timeless and enduring .
Thank.sj\t vinK IS, as 1t always was even before 11 became a n off ic1al holida y , the one day
m the year when Americans across the land pause fr urn their daily work to gather w1thin the
bosom of their o wn families simply to give thanks
To give thanks fur many things . For big things -!Jk.e a country that is free and still pur ~ng that great experunent called democracy . For things on a smalle r , personal scale - a
home, a full table, healthy kids and the whereWJthal to maintain the m .
America is c hanging. more rapidly "ith every yea r . U our ancestors from any prev1ous
penod could come back to see what Amenca IS hke in 1979, they nugl1t feel they had arrive&lt;''
un illlolher planet.
But one thinK would te ll them they were at home . lllat one thmg IS the l1vmg spmt Lf
Thanksg1 ving .

Patrol cites three ,drivers Tuesday
Three drivers were ci t e&lt;! fulluwinK
thre e Tuesday accide nts in vestiga ted by the Gal!Ja-Me~gs Post ,
fligh way Patrol
Offi cers tnvestigate&lt;l a three
··e tu cle acc1dent in Meigs County on
SH 124, on e ~ enth of a mile ea;1 of CR
~.at 3:50pm .
The patrol reports an east bound
aut o operate&lt;! by J ames Carleton ,JI,
Middieport , a ttempted to pass a
ve hicle driven by Walter Bradshaw,
tl, Gallipo lis, just as the Bradshaw
a ut o started a le ft turn .
Following impact, the Carletoc
vehicle passed uff the roadway and
&gt;'t ruc k a parked a uto owned by
Woodrow ZwiJ1ing, 67 , Syracuse .
Brudshaw was cite&lt;! on a charge of
m1pr oper turning. All three vehicles
mc urred slight damage .

Carolme Johnson, 30, Gallipolis ,
was cited on a charge of left of center folloWlllg a two-vehicle accident
on SR 160, at the junction of CR 30, at
5:35am .
The pa trol reports a north bound
auto operat e&lt;! by Johnson had
stalled left of center on 160 a nd was
&amp;ruck by a south bound vehicl e
driven by Osca r Griffith, 64, Vinton .
Th ere was moderate damage to
the Griffith a uto, slight damage to
the Johnson vehicle .
Gary Colvin , 32, Rodney . was Cited
on a c harge of fai lur e to )1eld
following a two "ietucle accident on
SR 588, eight~enths of a mi le west of
milepost ! ,at !0 :30am .
Officers report an auto operated
by Colvin pulled from a commercial
drive into the path of a vehicl e

operated by Jirrun y Halley, 3.1,
Gallipolis .
Both vehi cles tncWTed moderate
damage .

Board
accepts
bids
The highest bids submitted on two
pickup trucks and three buses no
longer needed were accepted by the
Southern [neal Board of EducatiOn
whi ch met tn regular sessiOn
Tuesday mght.
The boa rd added Martha c;raves
and Kitty Cassell to the substitute
teac hers list and Dan1elle Smith to
th e s ubst itut e custodian list
A field trip to Rio Grande Co llege
by the junior an d senwr busineS-'
and office education classes on Nov .
30 was approved . Plans were made
fo r parti cipatmg in the Title IV .J3
project nelrt year
Th1s pr ogram
provides book:; for the library .
The board also entered into an
agreement with the Meigs C.•wll)
Board of Education for the em ployment of a work study coor din ator
Donald Salmons , talents and g ift ed coordinator for the distric t ,
discussed a VISi t by Stag e Ill stud en ts of Ohio University at the h1g h
school m April, 1900.

ll /

J(
'-"',,

.

T hey ' re yo u a ll ove r.
Your o wn p e rso nal m onog ram inttial
o n a variety of key h o ld e r ~ .
Distinct tve lea ther fobs .
Bla c k cow hid e for h im
And a rainbow o f co lored fobs fo r h e r.

We have a f ine line o f Rolfs Wallets for men and
women . All arranged for your e asy selection. Select
yo urs now .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

POMEROY MIDDL EPORT, OHIO

Changing times, tiJieless spirit

COMPUTERIZED WHEEL BALANCING

John Fultz , Mgr .

en tine

.# ............

'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

at

..........

And eac h features a threaded,
jewe l-like h e~agon s leeve
to keep your keys tigh tly secu re d .

WE ARE NOW STUDDING TIRES

•

'

ln tlial ly beaull ful
NAME .

,. .

.

A bea u tifu l gold chain th ai lin k s you
to th e keys of y o ur life .

CHRISTMAS PARADE ENmY FORM

•,

. _ ·. ~

SALE CONTINUES
ON

'

'
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.
.
.·

' ·
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&gt; .w.i, "i {
;..

Dillion, Scott Kessler , Stephen Sams

Area deaths
ROY LUSHER
Roy Lee Lusher, 62, a resident of
Langsville, die&lt;! Monday morning a t
his home
He was born Feb. 24, 1917,in Cabin
C'reek, W. Va ., son of the late
Regtnal and Hilda Boster Lusher .
Mr . Lusher was a retired iron
worker .
He is s urvived by his wife, Evelyn
Meadows Lusher ; two daughters ,
Mrs . Hilda Seiber, Charleston, W.
Va ., and Mrs . Sherri Hart , Dexter ,
Ohio; one son, Richard Lusher , Rio
Grande; one s1ster, Mrs . Ann Trippie! , Huntington ; two brothers ,
Frank Lusher , Huntington , and
Hilbert Lusher, Barboursville, W.
Va.
Fune ral services will be 2.30 p .m .
Wednesday at the Sc hneider
Funeral Home in 01esapeake with
Rev Earl Sammons o fficiatin~ .

, .

Hawthorne, Roge r Balser , James
Nutter , Victor Gaul, Phil lip Eagle,
Jay Carpenter , Ron Hensley , ~ff
B issell , TOdd Tr ipp, Ken Ri ggs .
Mike Lance, Karl Smith, Larry

; -- ~

Pomeroy parade set Nov .24th
POMEROY - Persons l.Jtereste&lt;l
in participating 111 the annual
Pomeroy Christmas parade are
asked to complete the form below
and mail to the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
The parade will be he ld un Sat ur.
day , Nov . 24, at I p.m. The parade·
w&gt;ll rom\ behtnd the junior high

Ann Swi ft . a political officer, a nd
Katherine Koob . An unconfirmed
r eport sa1d the blacks wre a Marine
and a member of the embassy staff .
The Sta te Department srud the
four wo men freed today wer e
E li1.abeth Montagne, Calumet City,
ill . ; Terri Te d fo rd , So uth San
Francisco, Calif. ; M1ss Walsh, and
Lillian Jollnson, Elmont, N.Y. It
saJ d the SIX blacks were David
Walk er. Wa ll er, Texas; Ll oyd
Hollin s, Alexandria, Va.; Wesley
Wtlli ams, Albany, NY , Neal
Robinson , Houston , Texas ; James
Hugh es , Langley AFB, Va ., and
Joseph Vincent, New Orleans.
Uk e the trio freed Monday, they
we re put on di;-p lay by their captors
a t a news confe re nce a t the embassy
Monday mght MISs J ohnson said
they "were not harmed at all" but
s he
und e rw e nt
·a
lot
of
interrogation, believe m e - at rude
hours of the evening."
" I ~uess the y were just convin ced
that I wasn't a spy ," she added .
The three released Monday were
Katherine Gross, 22, of Cambridge
Sp rin gs , Pa ., Sgt. William E .
~aries of Washington . D.C , 23 , a nd
Sgt. !.adell Maples. 23, of Earle,

By Greg Dalley
J . D. Graham, head football coach
a t Newark Catholic High School,
was the featured 'peaker when
Eastern High School held its annual
fall ''POrts banquet last rught. Football and volleyball athletes as well
as cheerleaders were all recogni zed
and honored .
Bill Jewett served as Master of
Ceremomes and John Coffm an
delivered the inv ocation and
benediction . After a s ho rt address
by Coac h Graham, Coach Debbie
Taylor presented awards to the
volleyball team Then Suzy Carpenter, cheerlead!."!' advisor in troduce&lt;! the cheerleaders.
'
Special c heenng awards were
presented to J eannie McCl ure for
the Most Spirite&lt;l 01eerleader
Award and to Pebbles Blake, who
received the "Flying Eagle" Award .
Junior High football players were
present ed by Coa ch Dave Weber
and the reserve football team wa;
introd uc ed by Coach De nni s
Eichmger . Head foot ball coach Joe
Mitc hem then presented hls 1979
gnd team that finished 7-J for th e
yea r a nd th1rd in the SV AC.
Coach Mitchem then presented
special awards. This year the Most
Outstanding Back award was
c hanged to Co-Most Valuable
Award _ This year's selection was
presented to Mark Norton and Brian
Bisse ll .
Greg Hayman, also the SV AC's
MVP Lineman, received the Eagles '
Most Valuable l.111eman Award . The
Most Improved Trophy we nt to Scott
Hill , and Honorary Team Captain
Awards were given to Hayman and
Bissell .
Booster President Homer ('.ole
then presented Semo r Awards.
Coaches' Awards were presented by
O~arlie Weber , and Cole was given
an award fo r hi s work with the

LITTLE G IRL - BI G BI RD - Summer Mae Giles . two -yea r old
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Cecil Giles. Albany , is all ready for
TilWlksgiving da y. Summer holds a turk•y that is almost 1:10re than , he
c• n handle

The VISiting st udents 10111 present
a pro~ram and w&gt; ll conduct a
workshop .
The project was approve&lt;! by the board .
Bills were approve&lt;! alon~ Wllh the
financial report .
Attending were board members,
Dallas Hill , Dennis Evans, Shirley
Johnson and Davtd Nease ; two
board e[ect residents, 01arles Pyles
and Don Smith , the treas urer, Nanc y Carnahan and Supt. Bobby Ord .

YOUNG CAREERIST
Mrs. Hhonda Dailey, center . H .N . 1n -semcc director of Veterans Memorial
Husp1tal . was selected as the Young Car eerist of Meigs
Count y by the Middleport BusineS-• and Professional
Wom en ·s Cl ub Monday night. Mrs . Dailey will
represent the Middleport cl ub at the district com petllwn to be held March 16 in Logan . This was th e
second eonsec ut 1ve year for Mrs . Dail ey to be named to

the honor . She is betng presented with a chann and a
certifi ca te tn the photo. On th e left is Terrie Walker,
chairman of the Young Carcert st even t and on the right
is Franci S Lowse Davis, prestdenl of the local club.
Judges were Mrs . Edna Ma.x1ne Gaskill , Middleport ;
Mrs. Ellen Bell , Pomeroy -Middleport li brarian, and
Luc y Earwood . Gal lipol ts , di rector of distrtct 17 of
Business a nd Professwnal Wom en 's Clubs .

Massive rescue effort
underway at embassy
BU LLETIN
WASHINGTON I API - PalUstani army unit• rescued about 100 Ameri cans from the U.S.
Embassy in Mama bad today, evaclUillng them to the British Embassy. State Department
offlrials said.
WASHlNGTO:-i
' AP I
t\mencan s trapped mstde the U.S .
rrnbassy tn Islamabad, PakiStan. by
a mob of perh aps tens of thow;,mds
were bemg rescued Irum the rooftop
by Pakistan army untts, the State
Department sald today
A Marine guard s1alloned at the
embass y tn Is lamabad was killed in
the melee , department spokesman
Hodd!n~ Carter said . He said
Palustaru anny units Wf' rt' try1ng to
protect the embassy co!l lp&lt;Jund and
that the Pak"1ani gu,·enunent ha d
plt·dged 1ts cooperatiOn
Parts of the embass y bw ld1ng
were set afire by the mob, but the
unide ntified Marine was the only
known Amen can cas ualty, said
t:tnuth e r
State
Depar t ment
spokesman . Thomas Re ston
..They arc gettmg the m out
through the roof. .. Heston sa1d of the
anny rescue of the Ameri can.'i .
There was no immediate word on
whether all the trapped Amen cans .
possibly 100. were rescued by the
n nl1ta n w11ts

ROAD CLOSINI.
Officials of the Ohio Department
of Hig hways announced today that
SH 124 will iJe dosed a ll day Monday
at the Langsville ra Hroad crossmg .
Contrail will be wori&lt;ing on the
crossmg shortly after 7 a .m . Traffic
will be rerouted around the project .

•

School issue remains quiet
All was qwet again toda y on the
negotiatwns of a settlement on the
nine week old strike Ill the Me1gs
Local School Distnct .
Ne ither the Meigs IJ:x-al Teachers
Associati on n or the Me tgs Local
Board of Edocallon ha d iss ued
stat e m en ts on the s tatus of
negotiations at 10 :30 thiS morning .
It was reported that the Me1g s
Local Board was called to Col urn bus
for a session Tuesday mg ht and a p parently no soluti on reached at the
meeting
Tuesday several members of the
negotiating teams of the teac hers
group and the board were seen m

34
bruJa 'ttl
&lt;!lf1riattnun

Metgs County .
About 4 p .rn . Tuesday, one of the
tei:Jchers · team members was as ked
alx•ut hi s being in Meigs County
1athe r than m Columbus where
negotiations are taking place. He
said he wa' leaving for Columbll!l at
once .
Negoliat1 ons between the teams of
the board of education and the
teachers began Friday at 2 pm . in
Co lumbus under the auspices of the
Oh1o Department of Education with
the hope tha t a settlement would be
reached by 6 pm. Sunday.
However, no report of a settlement
was received by that hour .
l.ater a report came through that
negotiations were to reswne at 1
p1n . Monday. Although there was an
all qwe t on a ny reports, it is
assumed by many that negotiations
are continuing in Columbus.
Meantime, teachers of the
assoc tation continue&lt;! their daily
picketin g of Powell 's Super Valu
Store in Pomeroy owned by !..arty
Powe ll , a member of the Meigs
l.oca[ Board of Education.
The strike began on Sept . 24 and on
Oct. 16 schools were officially
close&lt;! . This is the 27th day for
school3 to be closed with makeup
day expected to be set for these days
when a settlement is finally reached
;" the r!Jspute.

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