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                  <text>D-12-The Swulay Times -&amp;ntinel. Sunday, Dec. 9, 1979

Farmers Bank observes open house Sunday

Tragic fire spawns concern for hoarders
By TIIOMAS RIZZO

Auodaled Preu Writer
The tragic fire that swept through
a boarding borne in northwestern
Ohio and killed 14 elderly boarders
has spawned new concern for
thousands of person.! living in such
facilities .
When a tragedy does occur, like
the fire at the Coots Boarding Home
in Pioneer, Ohio, legislators are
!&gt;!ually the first ones in the public
sector too respond. Their proposals
point to the need for fire escapes,
sprinklers, smoke detectors and
other safety equipment + none of
which is cheap and most of which is
already standard equipment at bel·
ter facilities .
When the health and safety stan dards of nursing and ' est homes in
Ohio came under severe criticism,
for example. a new state law was
adopted in 1972 that required all
such facilities to install sprinkler
systems and fire alarm systeiru to
qualify for licensing.
The law resulted in operators of
many facilities that previously had
been called nursing homes changing
the names of their establishments to
boarding homes . The Coats family

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was among them.
They stayed open as a boar&lt;ting
house when they found it financially
prohibitive to upgrade standards to
continue operating as a nursing
home.
There aren \many options open to
persons who can no longer live alone
and who don\ have anyone to care
for them . Aged and chronically ill
peersons who haave to take up
residence in boarding homes are
considered to be among the most
disadvantaged groups in urban
America:
Since their average income is
usually far below the poverty level,
they cannot afford the highiJriced
care provided by nursing homes or
rest homes . As a result. boarding
homes become affordable alter·
natives for fixed.fficome , older
Ohioans whooe benefit levels are ex.
ceptionally low and average bel·
ween $200 and $300 a month.
"U I didn \ have them pretty well
full, I couldn \ make it, " said Mrs .
Loett.a Smithson. who operates two
boarding homes in Toledo .
"Sometimes I come out a Uttle bit
ahead, but I'm paying on my homes
and I had to get home unprovement

EMINENT DOMAIN
.
A home may be a man 's caslle , but even tne k tng of his cast le has
lrftle c tout rf hr s or ooe r ty rs needed for publr c use
be rl urban
re nev.:a l , schools or publi c highways . The process is known as em 1nen t
domam ~~ rs the power budt .nto I he feder~l and all state constitutions
to t~k~ _pr rv ate propert y for public use upon payment of " j ust compen
sat ron wtl ~eh has oeen rn 1Npr eted by the cou r ts to m ea n · ' fa i r marke t
value " .
~our land rs deemt•d 10 be taken even though you may not oe
physr c all ydepr rvedof d lfrsatakingifyouaresimptydepri 11 edofthe
normal use of your property Only the amount of the property whi ch is
neces~ary f or the rntended public use may be tak en awa y fr o m you If
there rs only a par t ral ra k.ng , you are entit led to the difference bet
we~n the fa rr marke t value of your whole property before the parlral
takrng and the farr market va lue of the remaining part of your land
after the tak rng We Cdn help you deterine that difference Phone us

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If there IS anyth1ng we ca n do to help you'" the ft eld of real esta.t€
p4ease phone or drop rn af L!:AOI NGHAM REAl ESTATE , 511 Second
a.ve ., Ga\hpol1s Phone 446 -7699 We ' re here fo help .

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

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loans ...
Most of the boarders pay an
average of about ~10 a month .
"About 10 pay $1M, but they don,
have any more to pay and I won,
tum them away," said Mrs .
Smithson.
She estimates that a minimum of
$175 of each monthly fee is needed to
pay expenses, such as groceries,
mortgage and loan payments ,
automobile expense and utilities.
"I try to live on the rest ," she ad·
ded.
Insurance coverage on the two
homes she operates increased considerably, Mrs . Smithson noted .
"My insurance was canceled after
paying on it for years. After I started
mvestigating, I found that most
companies just don\ insure boar.
diing homes. When I did manage to
get it, I really got hit, " she said.
Mrs. Smithson's annual bill was
about $200 a year for each home, but
now premiums have soared to over
$1,500a year.
"I live in the homes myself and I
wouldn 1 want to come to a house
that isn 1 somewhat decent. I try to
keep my homes as nice as I can.
Everytime I get a little money
ahead, I try to improve them. Right
now, for example, I'm adding in ·
sulation and stonn windows," she
said .
Many of her boarders, who
average 50 years in age, are
referred by Toledo area mental
health officials .
"The (county) welfare depart·
ment has asked me to take people
for around $100 a month , but I just
can 1 afford to do that," said Mrs.
Smithson.
About I, 170 nursing and rest
homes were operating throughout
Ohio just before the new safety law
was adopted. Now there are an
estimated 950, according to state

statistics.
No one knows for sure how many
boarding homes there are, but state
officials estimate between 8,000 and
10,000.
"Nursing homes which couldn \
meet the new standards were decer·
tified," explained Bud Buker of the
inspection bureau of the state fire
marshal's office . "AI that point, ~·
became the owners ' responsibility"
submit plans and specifications to -'
building department to comply wiV
the change of use."
Boarding homes are not cor •.
sidered a part of the social service o.
governmental system and are
unlicensed and free to operat,·

without restrictions, rules or
regulations. Most charge whatever
the traffic will bear.
It's impossible to detennine exactly how many homes are operating
and whether their health and safety
standards are adequate. II 's also impossible to check on whether any
boarding facilities are operating
illegally as nursing or rest care
units .
Subsequent investigation, for
example, has revealed that boarders
at the CoaLs home were receiving
the kind of care provided by rest
homes.
Under Ohio law, a rest home Is
defined as a facility that "provides
personal assistance for six or more
individuals who are dependent on
the services of others by reason of
age or physical or mental ino·
pairment, but who do not require
skilled-11ursing care ."
A nursing home is defined as a
facility that provides skilled nursing
care. Residents of boarding homes
receive lodging and meals, but no
personal care.
The Coats home had been licensed
as a nursing home from 19f&gt;8 through
1973, according to the state health
department; records also show that
annual fire and building code in·
spections were conducted.
State officials, however, asswned
that the home went out of business
since no boarders were found there
when a health department inspector
visited it in December 1973. But inspectors may have visited the home
while it was undergoing conversion
to a boarding facility , said an of.
ficial.
Robert Cryer of the state fire marshal's office, who was involved in
studying the cause of the fire Nov . lJ
in Pioneer, believes Ohio should consider legislation to regulate such
facilities as boarding homes .

Buick
Pontiac
' GM

1'L-= . l'

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GIVING

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Soft Cup. Lightly Lined
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a Brief and a B1k 1ni .
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Underdressings ·
For the Playtex
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2-1979 CHEV. CHEVETTES
2 OR COUPES
1- Silver wifh red interior. 7,583

miles .
1- Yellow with saddle interior ,
13.051 miles .
Both
are
equipped with
automatic transm ission

YOUR CHOICE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

LONG-TIME CUSTOMERS - Theodore T. Reed, Jr., president of The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. is shown with Thelma and Clifford Hayes
of Long Bottom, long-time customers of the Pomeroy bank. Mrs . Hayes
looks over her 1913 savings account book which was opened for her by her
late parents, S R. and EUzabeth Biddle, when their daughter was only
rune months old. Mrs . Hayes has continued to maintain the account over
the years. Mr. and Mrs . Hayes were among the 500 visitors attending an
open house held by the bank from I to 4 p.m. Sunday in observance of iLs
75th anniversary .

DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

Between 8:30 a.m.

and 5:00 p.m.

(USPS 145-960)

1979 PONTIAC LEMANS
4 OR SEDAN
Finish is two tone burgundy with
carmine i nter ior , equipped with
air co nd ., P. steer ., radio , and
elec tri c. rear defroster . G .M . fac
tory effie ia l ' 5 automobil e .

SALE PRICE

1978 DODGE MONACO
BROUGHAM 4 DR

1978 DODGE ASPEN 2 DR
Th is new Firebird trade is br ight
red with a white landau top and
red 60·40 seating Equipped with
Chrysler 's Slant Six engine ,
automati c transmis sion and p
steering . This locttlly ow ned autO
is extra sharp and has on ly 14,656
low , low miles

SALE PRICE

'4295

1978 GMC PICKUP
This truck h as the lone;~ w ide bed,
6 cy l 1nder engine , std . transmis
sion and on I y 6,000 m il es .

'3795

Dark blue ex terror wrth mat chint,r
vinyl landau roof ilnd medium
blue cl oth seating . Equipped with
air conditioning. power steering
&amp; brakes , and Rallye 11 wheels

SALE PRICE

'3495

Dove gray exTer ior with con
trastino vinyl top &amp; interior . This
new Bonneville trade is very
clean inside and out Air condi
tioning, power steering&amp;. brakes ,
AM radio . Truly a family ~iled in
te rm edia te that
would
fit
anyone ' s budget
Only 19,686
miles .

l
'

I. -t ~ .....,...
Talks opened

1978 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
LANDAU
Dark burgundy exterior wiftl
mat ching landau roof and crui se
cdrmine inter ior . Loaoed w1th
equi pmen t like a rr conditioning ,
cruise control , power windows ,
power door locks, AM ·FM stereo
cassette tape , only 23,915 miles .
S1.1per sharp
1
SA
E

5495

1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE
ST. WAGON
Baniff b lue ex te rior w ith mat
ching vinyl inte rior , eQu rpped
w ith an ~onom i cal Slant Si•
engine , auto . transmission and
power steering New Grand Pri•
trade .

SALE PRICE

This new_ Bu ick trade is Midn ight
b lue w•th
co ntrasting 60
seating Equipment includes llir
cond ., crui~ co ntroL tilt steering
wheel. AM FM cassette stere-o
radiO

.a

'3495

'5295

1978
RALLYE SPORT
Br ight red finish with bl.ick ac
ce nt paint . THis sports car from
Chevrolet has if all Air condition ·
ing , AM FM 8 tra ck stereo,
Rallye wheels with rai~ while
letter tires. Factory T ·roof and
only 10.015 miles .

SALE PRICE

5795

1

1977
LESABRE
CUSTOM 4 DR
Buckskin exterior
witt1
con ·
trasting -vinyl top and 60
in ·
terior Th i s sedan is loaded with
equipment like a i r condition i ng ,
c ruise control , tilt wheel , wire
wheel cover and much , much
more .

..a

SALE PRICE

'3995

1976 BUICK LESABRE
CUSTOM 2 DR
Light brown finish with Buckskin
landau top anel matching 60·40
seafing . This 2 dr . coupe is extra
sharp and is loaded with equip ·
ment like air condifionino, cruise
con trol . t ilt steering wh~l. AM
radio with 8 track stereo . This
one owner has onl y 33 . ~ l]"lltes .

SALE PRICE

FINAL CLEARANCE ON ALL
LE
BUICK$
PONTIAC$
1- BUICK ELECTRA 4 OR - NEW
2- BUICK ELECTRA PARK AVENUES
- DEMOS
1- BUICK RIVIERA - DEMO
1- BUICK REGAL - DEMO
1- BUICK LESABRE LIMITED 4 OR - DEMO

LONDON rAP) - Secretary of
State Cyrus R. Vance LS opening
talks with Western European
leaders on U.S. plans for
tighterung economic screws on
Iran to gain the release of 50
American hootages .
His fast1'8 ced trip also ts
taking him to Paris. Rome and
Bonn over two days . A pnncipal
topic of the discussions, which
were beginning today, is a potential informal trade embargo by
the llUijor industrial nations if
any of the Americans is put on
trialm Tehran.
Vance 's talks will also reflect
the firm commitment gtven the
Europeans that the United States
will consult them before taking
any military action agamst Iran.

Rulings expected
COVINGTON, Ky . I AP i - U.S
District Judge Carl Rubin was
expetied to rule on several
motions today in the first of the
Beverly Hills Supper Cl ub fire
lawsuits to go to trial .
Attomeys for the defendants 28 manufacturers of alurrunum
wire and electrical devices and
Underwriters Laboratories Inc.,
a noniJrofit testing organization
- have asked for a change of
venue because of the cramped
conditions and "carnival at·
mosphere " in the courtroom.

Seeks backing
TilE

HAGUE, Netherlands
(AP J _ The United States,
already confident it has world
opinion on its side. seeks the
backing of the World Court on
Monday in its confrontatwn wtth
Iran.

1-PONTIAC LEMANS SAFARI ST. WAGON

- NEW
1- PONTIAC CATALINA SAFARI ST. WAGON

- NEW
1- PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR - DEMO

NO. 16 7

ADMIRES DISPLAY - Mrs. Dorothy Downie, a seamstress in her own
right, enjoyed admiring the many attrdctively costumed dolls on display
Sunday when The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. held a public open
house in observance of its 75th birthday. The dolls were costumed by
residents of this area as a part or the hank 's dress-a -&lt;loU contest . The dolls
will go to the underprivileged for Chnsl.rnas .

•

enttne

a1

POMtROYMIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY. DECEMB ER 10. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Frustrated Meigs veteran charges discrimination

1979 BUICK CENTURY
4 DR SEDAN

'5295

VOL XXVIII

GREETS VISITORS - Theodore T. (Ted) Reed, Jr ., center, the third
member of his family to serve as president of The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. was on hand to greet the approximate 500 visitors to an open
house held Sunday in observance of the bank 's 75th anniversary. Refresh·
menls were served and favors were distributed . Fourteen showings of a
sound slide presentation on Meigs County History , the bank 's gift to the
county on its anniversary, were presented during the day by Tricia and
Don Adleta who prepared the slide show. Pictured with Mr . Reed Sunday
are two of the many VlStlors. E. A. Wingett. left . and Erwin Gloeckner,
right.

•

e

1-614-992-2156

5

1976 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

To 1ntroduce the
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OPEN TIL 8 PM
a fla con of elegant
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~ TO SEE SANTA CLAUS ~ Bikini
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~ MON., TUES. AND WED.
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~ NIGHTS, 6:30 TO 7:30 ~ International
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CARRIER
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and Used Cars.

JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER SHIPMENT

NEW GIVENCHY
UNDERDRESSINGS*

ATTENTION

Johnson, Harland (Woody)
Wood, or Greg Smith at
the Sign of Quality New

r- ··--,

ELBERFELD$
IN TIME FOR

Ohioans may be only partially
resolved by a new law that requirel
the licenaing of group hcme8 and
adult foster care facilities . 'nle new
law, which takes effect in January
19111, dea1a with bousing other than
nursing borneo •nd rest homes .

See Bob Brickles, Gene

I SMITH
~

"We have a responsibility to
people," he said soon after sifting
through the remains of the Coals
Boarding House . "I expect
legislatioo soon for restrictions on
boarding houses and would certainly
support it."
The problem of housing older

u .S. spokesmen here said they
hope the court - formally the In ·
temational Court of Jusltce will agree to take the case and
decide in favor of U.S. clauns
againat the reginoe of Ayatollah
Ruhollah K,~omellll .

Shooting probed
CLEVELAND I APl - Pollee
are continuing their investigatlon
into the weekend shooting death
of a 6-year-&lt;&gt;ld child.
Wendy Petway was shot to
death Saturday , apparently ac·
cidentally, in a struggle over a
revolver with her 7-year-&lt;J id
brother London . police said .

BY BOB HOEFLICH
"Vietnam veterans are being
discriminated against·' .
You may have read or heard this
allegation many times over the past
few years but the message, at least
to me, has passed over my head. AJ.
ter all, I wasn \really involved .
The message was brought closer
to home, however, early Sunday
morning when a Vietnam veterans,
Roy (Gene l Powell, Rutland, parked
his automobile across West MaUl St. .
lll Pomeroy, under the traffic lights
of the Pomeroy-Mason bridge, and
demanded that his charge be heard .
Anned with a ball bat. Powell

stood on top of his automobtle to
deliver his message .
Pomeroy and Middleport Pollee,
the State Highway Patrol and the
Meigs County Sheriff 's Department
converged on the unusual scene just
alter2a .m Sunday .
Powell talked with police officers
but refused to move his car or come
down from the top of it Wllil he was
given the opportunity to talk to a
reporter on behalf of all Vietnam
veterans.
The talking between police of·
ficers and Powell went on at length .
In answer to a request from the
Pomeroy Police Department, I went

Ohio records 21
traffic deaths
By The Associated Press
At least 21 people were killed this
weekend in accidents on Ohio roads.
the Highway Patrol said.
Three young people died as the
result of a collision on Ohio 119 near
St. Henry on Sunday, while two teen·
agers were lulled the same day in a
crash m Chii!J cothe , and an Elyria
couple died Saturday in an acctdent
on Ohio 2 in Lorain County.
The patrol counLs the state's
weekend traffic fataliti es from 6
p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday .
The dead :
SUNDAY
CHILLICOTHE - Steven Novak.
16, and a passenger, Stephen Sigars.
15. both of Chillicothe, in a one-&lt;:ar
accident on a Chillicothe city street.
COLUMBUS - Robert Spellman,
50, of Gahanna, in a one-&lt;:ar accident
on a Franklin Cow1 ty road .
AKRON - Peter Caplette , 31 , of
Stow. in a one-&lt;:ar accident on In ·
terstate 76 in Summit Coun ty.
ONCINNATl - Timothy Davis ,
28, of Fort Mitchell, Ky., in a one-&lt;:ar
accident on a Cincinnati city street.
PIQUA - Steven M. Pugalee. 26.
ci Troy, in a one~ar accident on a

Miami County road .
MOUNT VERNON - Allee M.
Gleeson. 66 , of Mount Vernon , in a
two-&lt;:ar accident on Ohio 3 tn Knox
County.
CEUNA - Thomas W. Benanzer,
22. of St. Henry; Patricia A. Len ·
nartz, 16, of Coldwater, and Sandra
D. Fetters , 20, of St. Marys, in a twoca r acctdent on Ohio 119 in Mercer

SATURDAY
ATHENS - Michele Rishel , 17. of
McA rthur, in a one&lt;&gt;ar acc ident on
U.S . 50 in Vinton County.
ELYRIA - Charles J . GeUtin, 66,
and Mary Gethen, a~e not listed, uf
Elyria, ill a one &lt;ar accident on Ohio

2 in I.Jrain County.
CLEVELAND - Oorothy Day 78.
of Cleveland. in a one-&lt;:ar acciden:
on lo\ersl&gt;l te 71 ln \ '11:. ahoga County

YOUNGSTOWN - Christine A
Escarco, age not listed, of
Lowellville, in a one-&lt;:ar accident on
Ohio 224m Mahoning County.
MARIETI'A - Pa ul G. Smith. 22.
of Amesville, in a one&lt;ar accident

on Ohio 339 in Washington County.
PIQUA +Ca rl Dye, 28. of Dayton.
in a two-car accident on Ohio 202 in
Miami Cow1ty.
CLEVELAND - Lon Leeds, 20, of
Universrty Heights. m a two-car ac·
cident on a Cleveland city street.
FRIDAY NIGHT
WARREN - Roy Ady , 32. of Kin·
sman , 1n a one-car a cc iden t on a
Trumbull Coun ty road
COLUMBUS - Glen C. Brown, 48,
of Columbus, a pedestrian struck by
a truck on a Colwnbus city street.
TOLEDO - Luisa Buenros tro, 19,
of Curtice, in a two-&lt;.·ar accident on a
Lucas County road .

No work stoppage
despite big rumors
Rwnors of a walkout on their jobs
by employes of the Meigs Local
School Distnct this morning did not
materialize .
Rumors have persisted since
Friday when employes were not
paid. Teachers and non-&lt;:ertified
employes say they should have
received pay. It is believed that they
will file a gnevance in the matter .
On the other hand, it is contended
that there were only two days on the
pay period mvolved even though em·
ployes had been back on the job for
seven days since the end of a
teachers strike. Teachers were
docked additwnal money on the new
pa y schedule established by the
strike rather than the $9500 base in
effect when the .•chool year started.
it is reported. A complet e ex·
planation of \he situation was not
available and both sides un the rssue
indicated that "il is a highly com ·
plica ted situation"

to the scene where a small crowd

worker he was rons1dered self em-

had gathered.
I went to the side of the Powell's
vehicle. He wanted to get down from
the top of the car to speak his
message. However, police would not
assure him that he would not be
arrested if he did get down from the
car so he stood his ground, or.
perhaps, I should say his car roof.
and delivered his message rrom
there .
Powell. in his statement. charged
that Vietnam veterans are being
discriminated agairlSI and are net
being given their benefits under the
G. I. Bill of Rtghts .
He explained he had applied for a

ployed and was not eligible for the
loan.
In the cold of the early Sunday
morning, Powell related that he had
served in Vietnam for one year in
the navy aboard the USS Hollis1.er.
" It was an unpopular war but we
had to fight anyway ", Powell
shouted into the night. Contrasting
the return of the veterans following
World War II . Powell said. "There

Veterans

Administration

Home

Loan two and one-half months ago
and that the loan had been denied
even though he has the down
payment and closing cost.s in the
bank and makes about $1200 a month .
A.•ked what reason was given for
the refusal of the loan , Powell said
that he had been told that as a union

were no parades when I came

home."
Powell explamed that he needs the
Veterans Adrmntstrat1on Home
Loan because his wife i.s S€Ven mon ·
ths pregnant.
"I want my child to have a house
to call home, " he exclaimed . " ['m
tired of paying rent .. .
The Vietnam veterans also
remarked that he did not wa nt to
voice his discrunination charge m
the maMer he had chosen but felt
that he had no chOice m order to
make himself heard on behalr of all
veterans of the Vi etnam War

Powell satd that he had been a
long ~irue res1dent of Meigs CoWIIy
and wanted to live here.
"That's why I moved back here
from San Otego", he staled .
The amount of the loan which was
denied i.s rz:;,ooo.
·'We came back and this is what
we got. I stand on this car to get
justice for all Vietnam veterallS",
Powell concluded .
SatiSfied that he had been able to
relate his feelings to the press,
Powell was pennitted by poUce offleers to get down from the top of the
ca r wtlhout being arrested for im·
peding traffic for the approximate
hour long protest. Powell was taken
home with the penrussion of officers
by a friend .
Actually , Powell aJred his charge
well and effectively and , hopefully,
his voice carried as far downriver as
the regional office of the Veterans
Administration so that at least any
charges of discrimination against
Vietnam veterans will be in·
vestigated.

Accidents leave five hurt
changmg lanes without cautwn .
Five persons were inJured durmg
Roberts claimed inJury and was
two Sunday acctdents investigated
transported by a relati ve to Holzer
by the Gal~a Me igs Post. Highway
Medi cal Ce nter. where she was
Patrol.
Offi ce rs investigated a I wo· , treated fo r a contusion of the nbs
vehicle co lli.slOn on U.S . 35, at the and an mjured left knee, and
junction of SH 160. at 5:30p .m
released
TI1ree passengers m the Roberts
The patrol reports a tru ck
operated by Harry Fellure , 50. auto Paulette Roberts, 14. Btdwell.
Eureka Star Route, and an auto Chn~ina Axllne, 12, Gallipohs. and
operated by Debra Roberts, 17, :-&lt;or· Robm McComb, 13, Vinton, claimed
thup , collided at the mtersect10n. injury , but were not unmediately
Roberts was cited on a charge of treated .
The Roberts auto was demolrshed .
There was moderate dama~e to the
Fellure truck .

Weather

Clear tonight. Lows m the lower
40s. Partly cloudy and continued
mild Tuesday . Hi ghs in the lower
60s . The chance of precipilatiO!l is
near zero tonight and 10 percent
Tuesday

No one hurt in
train -car wreck
Two persons eseaped serious in-

15
~ay!i'til

Qlqrt!ilmaa

One person was injured during a
two-vehicle accident in Meigs CoWl·
ty on U.S. 33. three-tenths of a mile
north of SR 661 , at 2:50p.m.
Officers report an auto operated
by Guy W. Lee, 90, Pomeroy, pulled
onto 33 mto the pa th of a south bound
ve hicle dnven by Rhonda West, 21 ,
The Plains .
West claimed injury and was transported by the patrol to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
Lee was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. There was moderate
damage to the West auto, sligti
damage to the Lee vehicle.

juries in a car-tmin accident Sunday
at 2:50a.m. on county road 10 the
Meigs County Sheriff 's Department
reported.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Jim Covin, no address
recorded, owned by Constance
Roush, Dexter, was traveling north
on county road 10.
Covin missed a turn where the
road crosses the trac ks . The vehicle
went onto the rai lroad trdcks where
tt lodged.
While attempting to free the
vehicle a Conrail tram unable to slop
struck the car and knocked the
vehicle from the tracks into a ditch
against a utility pole. The car
demolished. The conductor was A.

H. Beegle of Racme and H. T. Young
was the engineer.
Ricky Blake, Rt. I, Reedsville, informed the sheriff's department
Saturday at 3:45 a.m. that an
unidentified vehicle travling east
was left of center and caused him to
go off the right side of the roadway,
cross the center line and off the road
on the left before overturning.
The vehicle was demolished. The
driver was not injured. No citation
was issued.

Deputies are investigating the
theft of a mailbox from the Ernie
Rood residence, Rt. I, Reedsville.
The theft occurred at ap·
proximatewly 3 a .m. Saturday .Also,
the mailbox of Roy ChevaUer was
vandalized.

•

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, De&lt;' . 10, 19'19

3- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomen y, 0 , Monday . Dec 10, 1979

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Saturday~s

Quit warming

By rhe Auoc1dli!d Pres s
Saturday ' s R es ult~
Aoa 72 , Rtdgemon t ~J
Akron Bu c htel 57. Al l 1nnce 'i6
AkronHowerB 1,Can M c K1n1,.,,.6J
Akron St
V1n Mnry 96 , Akron
Fires1one69
Ak ro n Ellet 60 , N Cetn t on H oovf'f

up spilled milk

49

i'f6lN

'\

\
\

'~
lliN\

'
rU(j)

~\

Single, special

COMMENTARY

and bad politics

i'i''·'.
,.h,.
- .. Donald F. Graff
~ ,,

Slllgle interest politics are a fair ly
recent development while Uw
special interest variety has been
around for a long time .
When the two gel together , the
whole in tenns of political •mpact
may be greater than the parts. as
demonstrated in the current drive in
Congress to restrict drasti cally the
mandate of the Federal Trade Commission .
The agency of late has b&lt;.'en
among the most activist in the
federal fold in part because of a gogetturn chairman, Michael Per tschuk , and in larger part because of
a congressional grant of powers tn
1974. These have enabled it to ap ply
fatr-trade regulations to whole Ul ·
dustries at a stroke rather than
piecemeal to mdividual enterprises
as specific violations or other appropriate cause arose .
The FTC has been zealous in the
exercise, and in the process a nwn ber of oxes have been gored . And as
a consequence, their owners have
JOined forces to pressure Cong ress
for redress .
Their cause finds consider a blc
sympathy m a public and on a
Capitol Hill turned off by broadening
govenunent regulation . But the
remedy proposed would appear to be
a case of over-redress.

Businesses as varied as funeral
homes, farm cooperatives, the
tobacco industry and used car
dealers have managed to get special
exemptio!lB for their interests written into proposed legislation
More serious than the catering to
the special interests. however, could
be contemplated elimination or
restriction of several FTC general
powers . One such is the authonty to
bar unfair sales practices. s uch as
unsubstantiated claims for product
performance, which it has employed
for four decades. Another provtston
would subject FTC acttons . to
legislative veto by eithe r house of

Congress .
There may be something to the
view that the FTC has been too
ex ube rant
in r ece nt
years,
becorrung, as The Wall St reet Journal asserts in a chara ctensttcally
hard-nosed editorial conunent, ··a
law unto itself -literally lawmaker,
prosecutor , judge and jury ..
But there is also somettung to
assertions that the proposed cure
could turn out to be worse than the
aihnent . Congress certainl y has the
right and the legislative means to
spectfy the powers of any federal
agency it charters, and to ca ll any to
account if perfonnance warranl'i it.
But the wisdom of substituting itsel f- or part of itself- for the agency m administrating those powers ts
questionable . The pnnc iple of the
one-house veto could become a
precedent to be extended to any
nwnber of other age nctes with
potenually chaotic resull.'l. Conflict
between regulatory agencies and
regulated interests is inesca pable,
and should these mterests be encouraged to seek specific redress
from Congress the latter would be
writing for ttself a role as a superagency .
The tendency toward legislation
through regulation
may be
justifiably criticized these days, but
regulation through legislati on 1s no
more desirable.
The drill went thataway .
A stg n of the energy-&lt;:onsc•ous

Editorial opinions,
comments

Washington today
WA.SlllNGTON !AP I - U.S . offtcials say the nation finally is
making significant progress in
reducing its conswnption of oil.
They hope it isn't too late .
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller cites the following evidence
that oil use is down :
- Total consumption for the first
I I months of the year was off 2.5 percent from the same period last year,
averaging about 18.4 mtllion barrels
a day.
- Net imports are under 8 mtllion
barrels a dRy, well below President
Carter's self-Unposed limit of 6.2
million .
-Consumption in the July through-september penod was 7.6
percent below the same period in
19'18.
-Dasoltne conswnption in October was 8 percent below a year

Urnes :

ear~er .

Rustlers a re thn vtng aga tn •n the
Southwest, onl y they aren't mterested in what 's on the hoof but
what 's 10 the ground .
The rush to seek new oi I sources
plus the expense and short suppl y of
drillmg eqwpment has created a
black market for stolen drill bits,
ptpes and other parts, The Wall
Street J ourna l r eport• . Whole rigs
are bem~ dJsmantled and carted off .

Chase Econometric Associates, an
economic fore&lt;:asting firm, reports
similar results in a late-November
analysis . It srud gasoline consumption for the year is down 4 percent from I 978.
"Overall petrolewn demand will
be down by more than 2 percent this
year, the first de&lt;:line stnce the 19'1419'15 recession , despite larger-thannormal inventory accumulation," it

ASTRO·GRAPH
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
Carolyn Sue Reynolds,
Platnt•tf,

Industry and law authorities are
developtng a specia l " branding "
system for eqwpment to thwart
tlueves, but it's a s ticky proposition .

Berntce Bede Osol

IAQITTAAIUB (Mow . 2)..0ec. 21)
Rety only on .,.ouraeff ano yo.,.i'lt
be freer to utilize 1.m8KpeGied
opportunltrea. thereb)' sla.ntrng
the odds m your tavor lor anarn.
u"lg a tougM goal You ' ll enJ oy t he
aect ron In your new Astro-Gri!I.Dh
Lauer . which tens you what Ilea
ahead tor yO&lt;.J In rom ance Mall

Sr ..
Defendant .
Case No _ 173JS
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO :
Ronald
Franklin
Reynolds , Sr ., whose ad dress is unknown :
You are hereb y not ified
that you hav e b ee n named
a defendant i n a lega l ac
tion enti tled Carolyn Sue
Reynolds ,
Plaintiff,
vs .
Ronald Franklin Reynold s.
Sr ., Defendant. T his action
has been assigned Case No.
17335 and is pend ing i n the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County , Pomeroy,

O~io

-45769 .
The object of the com
plaint is the obtain ing of a
divor ce and
the ter
mination

of a ma rr iage
contract between the par
ties, the settlement of the
property rights of the par ·
ties, and the restoration of
plaintiff 's maiden name.
You are requ ired to an
swer the complaint w ithin
28 days alter the last
publication of this notice.
which will be published on ·
ce each WeE&lt;k for si x successive weeks. The last
publication will be made on
December 17, 1979, and the
28 days for answer wi J 1
commence on that date .
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as required by the
Ohto
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure ,
the
final
hearing on this matter w i ll
be held after the e)(piration
of 28 days after t~ela s t day
ol publi c ation of thi s noti ce
or as soon thereafter as ca n

be scheduled by t~e Court .
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Court
Of Meigs county,
.
Oh10
(111 12, 19 .. 25 (!2) 3, 10. 11.
6tc

Game coul d come to you this
coming year from areas you ·d
least e•pect. so remam pO!Jitl\1'8
and open to all things . no msUer
hOw unusual they might 8PPi'&amp;r
You 11 come out Fine

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County Court of Common
Plus , Probate Divisi on
To the E-.Pcutor . or Ad
min is t rator .. of the estate ,
to su ch of th e follow ing as
ar e residents of th e State of
Ohio. viz :
the survivi ng
spouse, the next of kin , the
benet ic i aries
under the
will ; and to the attorney or
attorney s represent in9 any
of the aforementioned per
sons :
Roscoe Satterfield, 790
Maple Street, Mi ddleport,
Ohoo, Case No . 22851
You are hereby notified
thai the Inventory and Ap
pra is,em ent of the estate of
the
aforemenfioned,
deceased late of said Coun
ty , were filed in this Court
Said Inventory and A p
praisement will be for
hearing before this Court
on the 20th day of Dece m
ber , 1979 , at l · JO o'clock
P .M .
Any person desiring to
file e)(ce pti on s th er et o
must file them at 1ec1s t f ive
days pr ior to the date set
f or hear i ng
Gi ven under m y ha nd
and seal of said Court, thi ~
19th day of November 1979
Robert E . Buck
Judge
B y Ca rolyn G Thomas
Deputy CIPrk
112) 3. 10, 2tc

more emotional than 1 ~ 1 ca ! If
you nee&lt;J counsel , seek op1ntons

!rom outsiders who can separate
the two

AOUAAIUB (Jan . 20-FIIb . 11}
You 're a tnfle too susceptible to

&lt;489

date

PISCES

Radio Crty Sta t ron . N y
100 19 Be lure to specify brrth

O.C~Nr 11 , 1t71

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan, 111) A
lnend's well -meaning ad'lice 15

peopll!l 's opm ion s today
cou ld be led down th e
wr on g path
Follo w yOur

S t lor each to Allro -Gr apfl. Bo•

-vs Ronald Franklin Reynolds. ,

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealf'd btd~
w il l be
re cerved by the Board of
Coun ty Comm1so;,ioner s of
Me.&gt;1gs Coun t y at 1ts off ice
1n
th e Court h ouse.
Pomerov . Ohio 4576q , until
11 o'c lock noon. on Jan 3,
1980 and at that 11 me
openeo as prov ided b{ law .
for the pur c ha se o fur
n1ture and equi pment to be
1nsta l led 10 th e- Me1gs Coun
ty Multi Heatth Facd1ty 1n
acc ordance w1th The equtp
ment I 1s t and spec1 f 1ca t ions
dated November , 1979, now
on file in the off 1ce of the
Board of Coun t y Com
m1SS1oner s, Me1gs Cou nty,
and at th e offi ce o f Wr ight
Kr1tschgau and Associates.
In c , Architects Planner s,
JoOO Trabue Roac , Colum
bus . O~. io 43204 . Copies of
!!.a1d specif 1cations may be
obtained fr om the o ff ice ot
th e Architect, th e Ga lf 1a
Jackson Mei QS Community
Mental Hea lth Cen t er, In c ,
411 Vinton P1ke , Gall i polis ,
Ohio 45631 , or t he Me1gs
Coun ty Commissioners 6t
l ice

The Owner reserves tne
right to r ej' ec t ant or all
bid5 i n who e or .n part , to
waive any informalities i n
th e bids rece 1ved, or accept
any b id which i t dt&gt;em s
f avorable A ll bids must be
made on Form o f Proposal
1nc tuded
wi th
.,peci fi ca t1ons.
Bid adver Tisements will
be run on the date-s of De c
1(), 17. 24 and 31. 1979, by or
der of the BoMd of Cou n t y
Comm1~~u:mer ~.
MeH)S .
Sta t e of Ot11o
fl/oar v H obstetler .
Cler k
App r oveo as t o F orm
Freder1 ck w Crow 111
Prosecuting A tt o rn rv
( 1])

WASHINGTON tNEAI- John B.
C,onr~a lly
apparently enjoys tus
image as a tough..as-nails Texas who
doesn 't want anyone's sympa th y.
But even the tough guy of contemporary politics deserves compassion when he's being unfairl y attacked .
An ambitious. hard-driving
businessman and politician, Connally never will be a candidate for
sainthood. He undoubtedly qualifies
for the "wheeler-dealer" millstone
that's been hung irrevocably around
his neck .
But he doesn 1 deserve to be victimized by critics who have allowed
hunches , intuition and "gut
feelings " about Conally's character
to suootitute for the facts in their
detennined efforts to demonslrdte
that he's guilty of immoral - if not
illegal -activities.
Since the rnid-19508, Connally has
been pursued by critics convinced
that behind the facade of a shrewd,
slick lawyer-businessman lies a cunning practitioner of wtute-&lt;:ollar
crime.
But after a quarter century of Investigation, including a major
criminal probe conducted by the
Justice Department, there sttllts no
proof of illegal activity by Connally.
Undaunted by that record of
failure, the news media continues to

10, 17,14 , 3 1, .tfr

other

needs .

But the Unlted States fears that
substantial cutbacks in 19110 would
push oil prices sharply higher and
bring on a worldwide recession . Oil
supply and demand are now balanced " on a knife 's edge," one official
said.
Officials are especially worried
about Saudi Arabia, which has been
producing 9.5 million barrels a day
since the Iranian oil cutback last
summer, but wtuch would ltke to cut
back to 8.5 million barrels a day .

lllSIInCtS . no! lht:m \I'IIJWS.

(Feb .

Keep e&gt;~eryth mg
Ill the open 1n
today The truth

20-March 20)
rea lls!lc and out

your dealings
m1ght hurt but
not accep!lng 11 could hall what
you hop8 to accomplish
ARIES (llbrch 21 -Apt'll 11) Early
mrstakes could at l1r st ha11e you
1n a dlthf!r today, but don ' t let
th1s mt1m1d81e you Set about
repamng them and tllin~s w1ll
turn out tme

11IE DAlLY SENTTNEt
IUSPSIG--t

~~ ~---·~c:i·-

TAURUS (April :zo-Mey 20)
Someone yO\r were dependm~;~
on could let you down today II
you st111 need hetp . you 'll be
pleued to know It's a vailabl e
I rom tned -and-true pala
GEMINI (May :n-Jun• 20) It you
lind yourself wlth more chores or
responsibilities than planned on

today . JUS! make certam you
don 't saerlllce speed for efficiency '( ou Clll handle lt
CANCEA (June 2, - July 22)
fhtngs m ay not go as smooth!)'
you nad hoped today . yet

•11

good ad111Ce from

an

tltper l-

enced per son c an 1ron the wr lnltles ou t if you !olio.,.,.

11

LEO (July D-Aug. 22) If you re
C hristmal shopping tod8)' 818)'

clear of the sparkling trungs
Stick t o pracucal Items tor your
lam1ly. There '• l•ss cn1nce or
getting stuck
YIAQO (Aug .

23 - lept .

The answers w1/l be easy

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 231 A he s•
laney t o bargam a 11111e could

C11dn 't hHII'f!
to spend You 11 nave 10 speak up
when the vppor tun ofy to neo ot•·

c ost you m o ney you

ate presents 1tsett

SCOf:tPIO (Oct 26· No¥ 221 Be

.,.ou ct o
esoec1a11.,. ot
lh ose
ac queu n t an c es atlout
wh om .,.ou know ltiiiE If 1n douht
don I m1• pals and bu so n~s s
~~ W
'&gt;I' Af'l fl ~Nil loll' 4 • _, 0
busrness tod ay

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I- A
report that call s Ohio a
"deteriorating" industrial state will
probably produce a "significant
amount '' of controversies, its author
predicts .
But such a response is needed to
stir legislators and others out of the
lethargy lnto which the state's
economy has settled, William Bryan
says .
The
franklin
University
economics professor and president
of a consulting firm prepared the
analysis for a legislative committee
considering a proposed high;!peed
rail system for the state .
Otuo has been beset by rising
prices and interest rates, closing of
plants, declining capital in vestments and other economic
problems .
Ohio's steel, rubber, glass and
other basic industries "are old, and
perhaps not worthy of transplants, "
the study says.
Perhaps more important has been
the marked change from an in ·
dustrial to a service-oriented
economy, the study adds . Service
jooo carry sigruficantly lower wages
than those in an industrially
dominated economy.
Research and development have
registered gains of little significance
in Ohio , Bryan said .
Advances that foreign goods have
made into American markets have
contributed to a decline in produc tivity in the nation and , ''to an extent," in Ohio.
The report cites Ohio's loss of
military contracts "as a glaring
example of the de&lt;:line in manufac·
turing ."
"federal funds as such moved
along with industry , people and
po~ti cal power to the Sunbelt," the
study shows .
Developments in the steel industry
will be the key in detennining Ohio 's
economic future, Bryan forecasts .
"Since this industry is a multip~er
of jooo and incomes, strong efforts
should be made to rejuvenate this industry ."
A decline in the investment by
manufacturers in new plants and
equipment also has contributed to
the deterioration of industrial Ohio ,
the report contends.
The transporation industry is one
of the strongest in Ohio , but it also
suffered erratic employment , the
study says.
Employment peaked in 1978 at
about 160,txMl workers. But ''with the
uncertamties of oil, the auto industry, and other transportation
problems , it remains questionable

whether this industry can hold its
own ."
The t6 billion rail system proposal
would ' 'provide the leverage and the
unpetus to ferment Ohio ·,j stale
economy," but it will not solve all
the state's problems, Bryan said .
"It can be looked upon as a
nutrient to feed manufacturing, service industries , tax returns , spendable income, savings and a ho6t of
other spin-offs ."
Bryan was an economic con- ·
sultan! For the state development
department from 1969 to 1970. He
was chief economist in the department of urban affairs for the sta~ 's
Office of Appalachia from 1966 to
1969.
He also has taught at Capital and
Ohio State Universities .

Today IS Monday , Dec . 10, the
344th day of 1979 . There are 21 days
left in the year .
Today 's highlight in tustory :
In 1520, Martin Luther publicly
burned the Papal Bull ex communicating him from the
Roman Catholic Church .
On this date :
In 1817, Mississippi became the
20th state .
In 1896, Allred Nobel , the Swedish
chemist and ptulanthropist, died .
The first Nobel Prize was awarded
on the same date five years Ia ter.
In 1898, the United States and
Spain concluded the Treaty of Paris ,
ending the Spanish-American War .
Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam and the
Philippines were ceded to the United
States for $20 million .
In 1913, Leonardo da Vinci's
"Mona Lisa" was recovered, two
years after being stolen from the
Louvre in Paris.
In 1936, Britain's King Edward VII
abdicated, becoming Duke of Win·
dsor .

Ten years ago, United Mine
Workers Union President Tony
Boyle claimed victory in his bitter
re-&lt;!lection battle with dissident
Joseph Yablonski .
Five years ago , the Senate approved the nomination of Nelson
Rockefeller as vice president.
One year ago, Israel's Prhne
Minister Menachem Begin and
Egypt's President Anwar Sadat
were officially awarded their Nobel
Peace Prize .
Today 's birthdays : Actress
Dorothy !...amour is 65. Sen . Harrison
Williams of New Jersey Is 60.

221

Because ol a ch sap point ment
som11 on- the - spot dt!ICISIOflS may
btl call*' ror today Use you ,
head 1ns tead o r your emo110ns

e•lra careful w1th wh om

country 's best investigative repor·
ters .
Notwithstanding those creden·
tials, Brill also was unable to
develop any new information about
Connally's real or imagined
mtsbehavior. He did, however,
devote an inordinate amount of
space to a detailed recounting of the
" milk fund " cbarges, including an
analysis of the trial record apparently designed to suggest that
Connally may indeed have been
guilty.
Like his fellow cttizens, John Connally enjoys ce rtain rights
enumerated in the Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution. That includes the
protubition against being tried twice
for the same crime.
U the courts can't abrogate the
double-jeopardy provision, journalists ought to tread cautiously on
that ground. The same care ought to
be oooerved before accusing Con·
nally of wrongdoing "without due
process of law ."
There's no reason to abandon any
investigation , journalistic or otherwise, of Connally 's ac tivities,
especially since his conduct in
recent deca des suggests that he 's
hardly a paradtgm of integrity .
But if those probes aren't fruiUul,
there's no reason to disseminate
wanned&lt;{)ver accoun ts of stale
charges that were never proved or
were re jected by a jury . Connally
deserves to be accorded the same
fundamental civtl liberty guaranteed to all other Americans presumed innocent unttl proved
guilty

Ohio perspective

said .
Chase attributed the decltne to the
increase in prices, the slowdown in
economic growth and the substitution of other fuels, especially
natural gas . Miller says the decline
is partly due to the energy program
enacted by Congress last year.
Both Miller and Chase predicted a
further decline in U.S. oil consumption in 19110. Chase said con·
surnption worldwide will drop 5 percent next year, a savings of between
2 million and 3 millton barrels of oil a
day .
These are positive results,
whatever the cause. But the big
question for U.S. officials is whether
they have come in thne.
The major oi11Jroducing nations of
Saudi Araba, Kuwait and Abu Dhab•
are tiring of maintaining production
at mal!imum levels, and all are considering cutbacks, although they
haven 't said when.
They argue that they are earning
more from their oil production than
they :teed to finance their own
economies, and the extra oil should
be left in the ground to meet future

You

purvey unflattenng reports about
Connally that suootitute a melange
of insinuation, implication and in·
nuendo for the facts .
Three such articles have appeared
in ret·ent weeks - in the American
Lawyer, The New York Times
Magazine and New York magazine .
Those accounts use different
techmques to rehash Connally 's
widely publicized !974 "milk fund"
tria l, a lthough author Joe Klein 's account in New York magazine includes only passing references to the
eptsode.
That 's logtcal, si nce Connally was
found not guilty of charges that he
accepted a $10 ,txMl illegal payment
from a lawyer representing the
dairy industry .
But that acquittal didn't deter the
magazine's editors from using
several gimmicks to remind the
pub~c about the only time Connally
ever was Formally accused of a
cnme.
The "tease" headline on the
magaztnc cover asks : "Can John
Connally Milk the Electorate'" Inside, there's a full-page illustration
of a Coonally photo stuffed irt, ide a
milk bottle.
After acknowledging that " no one
has ever been able to prove anything
aga inst tum. " author Klein breaks
no new ground but strings together a
sertes of old newspaper clippings
that gtve Connally 's dea~ngs "the
appear ance of impropriety "
The American Lawyer story, an
expanded verston of an account that
appeared simultaneously in The
New York Tunes Magazine, was
written bv Steven Brill . nn(' of the

~w

wt1A1 '9

&lt;?OiN&amp; QN?

I 'L L 5HOW YOU f'OW TO
D£ COPA1E AN ()L[l WltJDOW GHAO£
"'iTH POSn:R Fl\I N T FOR PEIE:Y ' S
W IN::JO'A;. V-.HoENEVER HE PULLS
TH E SHA.or= DOWN
HE'LL SEE THE 1
SUNRIS£ 1

,_!,C»J c:o l
KNOW tT'S NOT
A SUNSE'F

Alder 70, Col A cadf'rny ~9
Amanda C lcarcree k
4/ .
TP ,lV '&gt;
Vdlley .46
Anna 68, Pa r kway 62
Arlington 70 , Columbu'&gt; G r ove .S 4
Badin 73. F e nw1ck 70
Barnesv i li e 69, Bea 11c:.v1ll c 68
Berkshire 58, Chardon 57
Berlin Re serve 57. Bru nncrdale 40
Berne Un1on 6B , Zane Tra ce 46
Bexley 71. N Uni on 57
Bl oomf ie l d 63 . Howland Chr1 st 44
Brook he l d 70, Sharon ( Pa J J F K
56
Buckeye Valley68 . B 1g Walnul-19
Canton Cath 51. Canton S 48

JOHNNY BENCH

Bench
RBI
leader

high school results
C.&lt;1n T1n1kt·n

~ I . (.anton ~

48

( (• (M r vdtP ~ 4 . Day Oakw ood 46
Cet1 na 1!, L1 ma Sh awn ee .S8
C1n Oak H i lls 64, C 1n Pr1n ct- lon )4
Co n 51 Fran c1s 66. (tn St Josf'ph

46
C1n Summi t 76. Cin L a ndm&lt;tr k 46
Cl r cl evill e 6J , w es tfall s;~
C le11e Cath SJ , Holy Na me 4')
C l eve Orange 54. Bedf o r d~~
Cleve St lgnat1u s 61 Cm S t
xav 1er 56
Co l Miffl1n 74, Benjam1n Logan 5 1
Columb 1a na 46, Colum b1ana Cr es t
vre w 44
Cu yahog a Fal ls 67 . Young BoarU
man 57
Day Cham J u t 68, Day Wrtght 50
Day Fa1rv1ew 55, Belle fontaine 50
Day Nor1hm on t 68. Tr oy -48
Day Roth 87. Ci n . Hughes 83
Day Stebb1ns 69 , Day . Sl 1v P al 6.4
Deer Park 48, N Ben dT a v lor 47
De lpho s St John 69, N ewark 65
Oix oe61. TwinVallf"y S 51

DIN(&gt;r

Je tt er son 79 . Per ry 40
Jpwelt Sc 1oAS Bu1.kt:' Yt W 77
Jo hn 5t o w n ~4. H eath 51
Kt&lt;nlo n R1d gt:' 56 , Mec hani cs burg

La k e R1dye 50 , Cle ve Chri stian 47
L1 ck 1ng Va t ley 69 , Ut ic a bO
L1m a 57 . M 1C1CIIetown 50
L1nco lnview 77. Continen ta l 7'1
Lor ain Cath 85. BrookSide 48
LouiS\title 62. Wooster 60
Mar1on L ocal 50 . Fan Loram1e .41
Marysv1lle 69 . Dubl1n bO
Maumee Valley 51 , M 1am1 Valley

A4 \.=m n v V..tl l ~&gt; ·t6 J

E

J7
M1 ngo 8'} , Bu c k e ye N 80

F a1 r mon1 E 6/ . D,l f (Mro/ 14 )
F1ndln~· 78. Col f,'i'&gt;l 40
F o rt Je nn 1nq:. 60 . Aye r sll'dle 4)
Fr &lt;:1n kl 1n Monfl)f&gt; 56 . New Brf' mPn

M1n ~ t e r

Na po leon 70. Def1ance 36
Newark Ca t h 69 , Gram1111e 6J
N Pw Philddelphlfl 67 , E L1verpool

Grnnr1 V.nlley S6 Fa 1rp ort Hard1n9

H am1 il on GMII&lt;•Id 79, W (he..-,tf'r
L ,l k o l a 65
Ham lion T aff 86 , Talawandrt ) 4
Hawk.Pn BJ Lu tt1era n E.=tsl 65
H eb r o n L&lt;lkew u od 71. L1c kmg HI&lt;;
44
H ud~o n t~ cdd

]4

19. Jal k ':&gt;O n M ilton

39 , S1dney Lehman 33

M orqan 65. Manetla 58
M1lerspor I 8 / _ M iller 76, Of

4\

54

63

4\

E- K no .. 61 ~ r !'r1r • " town ':Ill

P nlf"'•llrl~&gt; AO. Md'he w ':&gt; '){)
El1da 69 1\ltf·n r ,1. -, ttJ')
E!yr1a 67 l ui V\i , J o l\.·6~
Elyr1d Ca th N A &lt;:. hta tJul~ ~ 4
Elyr1rt W !3. O twrl on 1'1
Er1e 1P ,l ' M • 0 11 wPII 71 Younq
N IJr 111 sa
F &lt;ltrl dw n 6/ 1 r 1dd 48

Rossford 75, Dr Ita 59
Si dney86, St . Marys6 1
Sou th ington 08, Pymatuning Val.

IJ
N Co llegf' Hdl 53, (in L aSalle 50
Oh10 Deaf 65 . Man s Bapt1st 53
Ole nldngy 70. New Albany 46
o nawa G landorf 57 . Fostor ia 45
Ottoville 59, van Buren 50
Padua 83, Gilmour 55
Pt&gt;ebles 57. Ad1ena 46
Rottmrtn 57 . Loudonvil l e 413

Spencerv ille 98, Botkins 69
Spr ing . Greenon 41, Spring . Cath.

Jl
Tot. Ottawa Hills 66, Swanton 65
Tal St Francis.57 , Ciay-40
Tol. Whitmer 08, Bedford, Mich . ...
Trimble 61. Vin ton County 43
Trotwood 71, Centervi lie 6-4
Van Wert 62 , Coldwater SS
Vcrsai l les63, Tr i Vi l lage61
Warren Kennedy 75, Warren Har·
d ing 57
Watkins Memorial 62, Northridge
51
Waverly 62, Portsmouth SO
Waynesfield 82 , Mendon Unlen 4
Wayne Trace 86, Bryan 62
Wheelersburg 80, Jackson 47
Wick liff e 70, Willoughby s. 68
Woodmore 80, Fostoria St Wen·
de lin 67
Worthington 67, Franklin Hts . 44 •

In 1959, the United Nations
unanhnously approved a Canadian
proposal for global study of atomic
radiation.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds, who billed themselveJ
as the ' 'Team of the 7tb," have
released figures showing that Reds
catcher Johrmy Bench led the major
leagues In runs batted in during the
last decade .
While the Reds won two World
Series champl0113hips, four National
League crowns and six division titles
In the 197tb, Bench drove in 1,013

runs.
During the 1979 season, Bench
broke the Cincinnati club record for
runs batted in with 1,191 and took
over the team's career home run
lead with 332.
Two players traded by the Reds,
Tony Perez and Lee May, rauked
second and third in runs batted In
during the decade in the majors.
Another former Cincinnati player,
Pete Rose , got more hits than
anybody else in baseball during the
decade .

Pro
standings
NAtional Football League
At A Gl~nce
By The Associated Press
American Conference
xM i am i

New Eng
Buffalo
N .Y . Je1s
Pitts .
Houston
Clevelano
Cincinnati
San OieQO

Denver
Oak•and

East
W . L . T . Pet . PF
10 5 0 .661 J I I
B I 0 533 311&lt;4
) 8 0 46 ) ' 68
) 8 0 16/ 240
central
11 3 0 .786 371
10 • 0
/14 .322
9 6 0 .1100 347
J 12 0 200 321
west
11 .4 0
733 39o41
10 5 0 66/ '82
9 6 0 .1100 J41

8 7 o .533 :149
Kan . Cily
I 8 0 .46/ na
Nation11 Conference

~ottle

Dallas
Phda
Wasn
N . Y Giants
51 L ouis

10
10
10
6

East
5

o

5

0
0

.667 JJ6
66/ 313
.661 J u

9

0

400

5

PA
230
J0 3
251

JU
2&lt;2
288
JJ6

&lt;109
239

245
JOB
JAil
259
2/9
262
'60

230

292

5 10 0 .JJJ 301
Cent nil

316

Tampa Bay 9 6
Chicago
9 6
Minnesota
7 8
Gr..,n Bay • 11
Detroit
2 1J

0

o
o

0
0
West
• LO$ Ang
9 6 0
New Orleans 7 8 0
Allanta
5 10 0
San Fran .
2 13 0
• clinched division

600
600
467
.261
133

2/0
264
236
228
206

1100

309

280

467 )AI
.J3J 269
. 133 287
titl e

JA6
367
J85

137
243
310
JOJ
3-47

Saturday ' s Games
Dal las 24, Philadelphia 17
Seottle 28. Denver 2J

Sunday's Games
Chicago 1.S, Green Ba'r' lof
Washington 28, Cinci nnati 1-.t
Los Angeles JA. Atlanta 13
Miam i 28, Detroit 10
Sf. Louis 29, N~w York Giants 20
Minne5ota 10. BufialoJ
Kansas Cify 10, Baltimore 7
San Francisco 13. Tampa Bay 7
San Dieoo JS, New Orlea ns 0
Oakland 19, Cleveland 14
New York Jets 27 , New England '16

Monday ' s Game
Pittsburgh at Houston
Saturday , Dec . 1S
New York Jets at M iami
G re-en Bay at Detroit

sunday , D.c . u

Baltimore at New York Giants
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
Cleveland af Cincinnati
Kan~s Ci ty at Tampa Ban
Minnesota at New England
San Francisco at Atlanta
St . Louis at Ch icago
New Orleans at Los Angel es
Philadelphia at Houston
Seattle at Oakland
Wa5hi ngton at Dallas
Monday , oec . 11
Denver at San Diego

lntem.ationa I
Hockey Le•gue
By The Auocit~fed Press
NORTH DIVISION
W . L. T. Pis. GF
Kalo .
II 10 1 35 Ill
P . Huron
14 9 4 32 115
S&amp;Q int'!W
15 11 2 32 11 3
FUnt
12 8 I 31 98
Muskegorr
9 14 2 20 rw
SOUTH DIVISION
Ft Wayne
15 6 5 35 105
Toledo
10 10 7 27 91
Dayton
9 14 1 19 93
M i lw
6 15 4 16 80
G RpdS
I 16 I 15 64

S.t\Jrday 's

~esull s

Fort

W ayne 5, Mifwaukeoe
F I tnt 3, Muske9on 1
Po rt Huron 3, Grand Rap1ds 2
sa g i naw .t, Kalamazoo J
To led&lt;l 5. Day ton 4

SuncUy ' s A es ult5
Mvskt"gon 8. P ort Huron B
Davfon :;, Flint J
5aginaw 5, M1twaukee I
Kalamazoo 7. Toledo 1

GA
81
88

nq
85
105

95
97
103
109
91

.';'/"-~

~-'
Warn• ng lhe Su rgeon Ge ne1al li as Oelerm•ned
That C1gare:1e Smokn1g Is Da ngerous to You1 Health
10 mq ."!ar". 0.9 mg. n1cotine av. pet cigarette by FTC method.

�4- The Dllily Senllnel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday , Dee. 10, 1979

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pome, oy . 0 . Monriay, Dec. 10, 1979

fob's Daughters hold semi-annual inspection

Rams win seventh straight division title
By Auoctaled Pre88
The suddenly resurgent Los
Angeles Rams set a National Football League record by winning their
seventh consecutive division title
while the Miami Dolphins also won a
division crown and San Diego, Pittsburgh and Houston were """ured
of wild-card playoff berths Sunda y.
The Rams, afte r a slow start this
season, won their fourth game in a

row, trouncing the Atlanta Fakons
34-13 to clinch the National Football
Conference West title .
Three other teams - Oeveland,
Minnesota and Dallas - had won six
division crowns in a row. but no club
ever had taken seven straight.
The Dolphins gained the American
Football Conference East crown by
downing the punchless Detroit I..Jons

28-10 ~&lt;&gt;lute the New England
Patriots were losing to the New York
Jets 27-26. Miami has a 10-:i record
and New England is 8-7. each with
one game remaming .
San Diego , 11-:i, the leader in the
AFC West, assured itself of a spot in
the postseason playoffs by thrashing
the New Orleans Saints 35.{).
Pittsburgh, 11-1, and Houston , 10-

Free celebrates birthday
with winning clutch shot
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
lloyd Free wanted something different for his birthday - a victory in
Portland. It wa s, after all,
something he 'd never had before . So
rather than drop any subtle hints, he
decided to go out and get it for himself.
Free connected on a jumper from
22 feet at the buzzer Sunday night,
giving the San Diego Oippers a 98-00
victory over the Portland Trail
Blazers. It was Portland's eighth
loss in a row, 1ts longest losing
streak since Jack Ramsay became
coach in 1976.

North Gallia
101-8lloser
In an old fashion nm and gun
game Saturday night , Coach Steve
Kemp's Portsmouth Notre Dame
Fighting Irish deleted Coach Ted
Lehew 's
North Gallia Pirates,
101-lll.
All .state candidate Tom Bowman,
the Irish junior point guard, col lected 37 points on 13 baskets and II
free throws. Bill King had 19 points
and Miller finished with H .
Jim Barnes, for the second
straight night . led the Pirates with
29pomts on 13 baskets and three free
throws .
Also getting double figures were
Joe Peck with 14, T . Howell and
Payne with 13 each and Mark Mille r
added 12.
Notre Dame shot a sizzling 49 per ·
cent from the floor and won the
game at the foul circles hitting 21 of
2&gt;1. North Gallia, also enjoying a
good night , hit ~ percent from the
floor , but lost it at the foul lines con necting on jwrt five of 17 free throws.
North Galli a 's reserves won their
third game with a 54 -24 victory .
STeve Franklin and Bruce Shriver
led the way with 13 points each .
Friday night, the squad defeated
Eastern, 34-24.
North Gallia . 2-1. will host HaMan
Trace Friday .
BOX SCORE
NORTH GALLIA (81) - Howell,
61 13 ; P e-ck . 7 0 14 , Miller , 6 0 11 .
Barnes, l3 3 19 , Payne . 0 1 13
Totals 39 -S-81.
PORTSMOUTH N. D . (101 1
Bowma n. 13 II 37 . KtnQ . q 1 19 ,
Sc hm idt, 4·0·8, Fergu!.on, 3 2 8.
M i ll er, 6-7 14 , Desk ins . 0 '1 '1 . P ter
ron , 4 -0 -8; N ic hols, I 2 4 and Harrts,
o 1 1 To1als 40 ·21 · 101 .

Saturday 's College
Basl&lt;etball Scores
By The Associo1ted Press

MIDWEST
Bowling Green 80, Ba ll St 7q
Butler 65. Bradl ey 63
Cent Mi c hi g an 77 . M iami, Ohio 58
Evansville 79, Florida So . 71
t ttinoio:. 77 , Long Beach St 6CI
Indiana St 76, W. Carotma 56
Iowa 80 , Detroit 54
Kansas 79 , Sa n D iego St . 66
Kan5oas St 90 , Wis P arkside 77
Kent St . 67 , E . M IChigan 59
M ic higan 63 , Marquette 60
N ebra ska 64 , Cre1gh ton 55
Northwestern 80. Va lp ara 1 ~0 65
N ot re OamP93 , 51 Louis 65
Oklahoma Ci ty 88 , Oklahoma 7B
Purdue 76, Providence 44
SW M issouri 83. Nor th Dak ot a 76
Toledo67 , N tlt ,nois58
w. M ichiQan 7a , Ohio u 6q
SOUTHWEST
Arkan sas 70, Centenary 62
N Te)(as St 84 , Texas Christ ia n 79
S~uthern Methodist 86 , Co lorad o

"I never won up here before. This
is especially great because it's my
birthday ." said Free , the Oippers ·
self -proclainoed "all -world " guard
who turned 26 Sunday a nd is in his
fifth season in the National Bas ketball Association .
The Blazers were in no mood to
celebrate, although Ramsay wasn 't
overly depressed by the loss .
" We're about an inch away from
eight wms instead of eight defeats, "
Ramsay said . " We're not playing
that bad bas ketball . We've been m
these games . "
The Blaze'" have been crippled by
injuries to !..Jane l Hollins, Bob Gross.
Larry Steel e, Kevin Kurmert and
Mychal Thompson .
The Oippe'" were one of four road
teams to win in the five NBA games
played Sunday mght in a reversa l of
the NBA norm .
The only home team to win was
the Los Angeles Lakers , who beat
the Denver Nuggets 131 -118. In other
games. the Chicago Bulls defeated
the Seattle SuperSonics 121-112, the
Atlanta Hawks clobbered the New
Jersey Nets 122-l15 and the Boston
C..ltics trimmed the Milwaukee
Bucks 113-108.
Lakers 131. Nuggets 118
Kareem Abdui.Jabbar scored 31
points, shooting lf&gt;-for-18 from the
field, and the L.akers pulled away

r..································~

i•

•
•
•
••
••
•
•
:
:

•+

loss
But , we a lso have a vital In ·
in loss prevention , 85
should our cl ients . We encourage
car e , ca ut ion and safety
pr evenlive measures whi ch can
keep tha t car acci dent tram hap pening , thai build ing f ire from
s tarting , That home burglary
from be ing co mm i tted
Preven ti on saves life, li m b and
property
i'l nd he lps con tr ol in
sura nce costs and prem i ums .
WhPn losses do occu r . our
pol icy holders can coun t on pro
tect 1nQ and serving in t ime and
need But we still say - prPve n
fion I"&gt; the best poli cy

ter est

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
991 ·214 ]
102.W . Main
Pomero y

OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS: 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON

j'

L_o!_T~~~~ ~-=-:~s~ c&lt;:~R]~2'_:.:_~o_M_E~~~---- ... ...t

FOR HER

~

FRIDAYS -

Saver

Wyoming 73 . Air Force 68
SUNDAY 'S RESULTS
EAST
Upsala 95 F ra nklin Pier ce 6a
SOUTH
Jacksonville 72 Npw Orleans 57
MIDWEST
Mo . Wes t t&gt;rn 58 Rockhurst 57
SOUTHWEST
Lubbock Chr istian 70 Panhandl e Sf .

69
FAR WEST
Santa Bar bara 69 SW Te)( as ST .

6B
TOURNAMENTS

St. Joseph's Puma Classic

I

BOOK FAIR at Rac ine Elemenchased by the public lr001 3:30 to 7
prn . Pre-~~ehool to adult level books
are available .
REVIVAL beginning Monday at
Pagevllle Free Will Baptist Church
at 7:30 p .m nighlty . Rev . Merlin
Teets , evangelist .
AMERICAN LEGION AUX llJARY, Post 39, Christmas party ,
Monday , 6 p .m . covered dish dinner.
Gift exchange . Program on veterans
affairs by Mary Martin .
TIJESDAV
WINDING TRAIL. GARDEN
CL.UB, 8Mual Christmas party,
Tuesday at 6 :30p.m . at the River·
boat Room of the Athens County
Savinga and Loan Co. Potluck dinner. Members to wear homemade
Christmas corsages to be judg~~ dlld
to take a homemade gift item lor ex-

:
:

•:

FREE!
10 " We st Bend
Silverstone"
and lid with
purchase of an-;
KilchenAid I

dishwasher or
Only
energy -efficient
t&lt;ltchenAid dishwash er~
have value feature s

trsh compactor

Reg. '22.95 Value

like these •

change .
RACINE WDGE 461, F . and A.
M., installation of officers . Tuesday,
7:30p.m . All master masons invited.
Refreshments to be served.

l0o11®~Ji

RACINE AMERI CAN LEGION
AUXILIARY , 6 pm . potluck dinner
at the hall . Members are to take
covered dish and their own table service. There will be a $2 gilt exchange .

S oW®~IT'

1o1f@~[J'

FREE Blood Pressure Oinic
Tuesday fonn 10 a.m . to I p.m . at
Harrisonville Town Hall . Sponsored
by senior citizens of Harrisonville .

Country fresh 01enthol.
Mild, s01ooth and refreshing.

Everyone we!come.
MEIGS C&lt;Junty Chapter :&gt;:! DAV
Tuesday at home on Butternut Ave .
at 7:30 p .m . Arthur L. Leach,
district nine commander. Jacks&lt;&gt;n,
speaker . Refreshments .
EASTERN Band Boosters
Tuesday 7: 30p.m . in the band room.
All members are urged to attend the
inoportant session .

Between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:00p.m.

WEDNESDAY

________

POMEROY - MIDDLEPO RT
lions Oub Wednesday at Meigs Inn .
Christmas gift exchange . All mem bers ur~ed to attend .

1-614-992-2156

L-------------~_.

Social Calendar

tary Monday . Books may be pur-

CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

Weber St . 110. Puget Sound 69

0

Jeann&lt;-t Prmley, junior eustud.ian ; Amy S1.sson, inner guard .
Angie Sisson , past honored queen ,
pro tern, outer guard , Sharon
Hawley . choir.

dian :

Lori Weber , honored que e n,
Hilliard; Betty Riehl , Rock River,
past grand guardian; Donna
Bauman , Belpre, past grand guardian ; Paul Darnell, past grand
associate guardian and past
associate guardian of Bethel 62;
Emma Oat worthy , past guardia ndina of Bethel 62 ; Tom Edwards,
past associate bethel guardian ri
Bethel 62 ; Mary Wise, guardi an of
Bethel 62 ; Kenny Wiggins, associate
gua rdian of Bethel 62 ; and Be ssie
King, deputy grand matron, District
~, Order of the Eastern Star .

MONDAY

•

For Friday Evening Hours.

Merri Ault . pC!.st honored queen. pro
lem . firs t mes.scn~:: e r : Kun Pauley,
se&lt;'ond mcssengrr ; I .on Weber , pro
tern tlu rd messenger : .J eanme
Wel sh. pro tcm fourth messenger :
Jennifer W1 se. f1fth messenf&lt;(er : I.Jnda R1ggs. h iJranan ; Kathy Mil ler .
past honored queen , senwr cu.stu-

Two candida tes. I..isa Riggs and
Debbie Wyatt . were Initiated .
Refreshments of punch and
eook1es were served in the dining
ruom which was decorated in pink
and wh1te . Precedmg the inspection ,
a luncheon was served in the dinmg
room Money from the coin march
went to the Grand Guanlian 's proJCCt of scholarships . Her goal IS a
scholars hip for each Bethel in the
state .
Guests were Sandra Peterson,
Bethel 13, Lakewood, Granu Bethel
honored queen of the sta te of Ohio;

1WIN CITY Shrine Oub special
meeting, 7 :30 p.m. Monday. at club
house in Racine .
SPECIAL MEETING, Meigs
L.ocal Board of Education, 7:30p.m .
Monday to revise school calendar.

:

All Departments Will Be Open

pa st

r-- -

•
•
•
••

5 PM TO 7 PM

Ct11Jd s,

Thlll'9day . Dee . 13 - Sr. Citizens
Center, 12 : ~ to I : 15 ; Mulberry Hts .
Infirmary I :30 to 2; ftacine, 6th
Street, 2:30 to 3; Letart Falls, Effie 's
Restaurant , 3 : 15 to 4 (short film at
3 : ~1 ; Racine, Home National Bank,
4:15 to 5 (short film at 4:30);
Wagner's Hardware, 5 to 5:45 (short
film at 5:151; Syracuse, pool, 6 to
7:30 Ishort filmat6 :30.

ngthe

•:

&amp;

Twl! &lt;:t

7: ~to8 : 15 .

THIS CHRISTMAS

:

9 AM TO 3 PM

trea~ urcr .

honort•d queen , pro lern rnu st ('lan :

Monday, Dec. 10 - Dexter, church,
3:45 ID 4:15 ; La.ngsvlle, Small's
Grocery, 4 :30 to 5; Rutland,
Pomeroy National Bank 5:15 to 6
(short film at 5:30 1; Depot street,
6:15 to 7 (short film at 6 :301; Middleport, A.!lh St. Freewill Baptist
Olurch, 7:30 to 8:15 !short film at
7:45 ).
Tuesday, Dec. II - Success Road,
near 39060, 3 : 30 ID 4: 15; Reedsville,
Reed's Store, 4:30 to 5:30 (short film
at 5 I. Tupper 's Plains, Arbaugh
HoUStng , 6 to 6: ~ (short film at
6: 151; Salisury , housing, 7: 15 to 7: ~.
Wednesday, Dee. 12 - Torch, post
office, 3:45 to 4:30 (short fllm at 41;
Hockingport, Community building, 5
to 5 : ~ (short !lim at 5:151;
Coolville, school lot , 6 :15 to 7 : 15
lshortfilmat6 30) ; Rigg'sAddltion,

r----------------N. W. COMPTON. O.D. 1

I
I
I
I
I

Ward Weber. grand outer g uard of
Hilliard, was the inspecting officer.
Guests and
members
were
·egistered by Erruna Clatwortlly
member•ndp;nons werereplicasof theopen
Bible.
other officers of Bethel 62
eluding ·' David Copperfield "
presiding with Miss Byer were
and "The Christmas Carol."
Susanna Wise, senior princess ;
A discussiOn on both books follow Brenda Chappe lear.
ju n1 or
ed the reviews . Next meeting will be
princess; Theresa Starr, guide; Zanheld at the home of Mrs. Bernard
dra Vaughan , marshall ; Barbra
Fultz with a gues t speaker .
Chappelear, cha plain ; Jeannie
Refreshments were served by Mrs .
Welsh, recorder ; Barbara Fultz.
Moore with Mrs . Mourning
past honored queen, pro tern
assisting .

BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE

defensi ve end who was

••

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

Colorado St . 73, Tex as Tec h 66
Fresno St . 62 , Loyola , Ca l if . 59
Nevada · L as Vegas89, Idaho 51 75
New Mexico St . 68, New M exico 58
Oregon St . 92 , Hawaii 62
Pacific u 64, Rice 52
Portland 66, Sti'l nford 59
UCLA 92 , Santa Clara 79
Washington 63 . Gonzage 59
Washington St . 84, Rhode Island 63

As an i ndependent insurance
agency, our primary fu n ction is
to provide poli cies whi ch afford
finan ci al protedion in c ase of

:

ATTENTION

Brigham You ng 76, Oral Roberts

Mrs. Wilson Carpenter was
welcomed as a new member when
the Middleport literary Oub met
Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Nan
Moore
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, president ,
conducted the meeting and welcomed both Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
El.l7.abeth Mourning, a guest. The
group gave the collect In unison .
Mrs . Bert Grlnun reviewed
Sadat's autobiography, "In Search
of Identity ." President of Egypt, he
succeeded Nassar in 1970. Mrs.
Grimm stated that Sadat is of the
Moslem faith , a devo ut and sincere
man, one who has done much good in
the United Arab Republic. She noted
that he received the Nobel Peace
Prue in 1978 and that his country is
an a lly of the United States.
Mrs. Charles Gaskill gave a
review of the We of Charles Dickens
by Steven Leacock. She gave short
sketches of several of his books In-

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY

play ing his last home game, was the
inspirational force in the Vikmgs ·
tnumph over Buffalo. Both team&lt;
have 7-!1 records.
Jan Stenerud 's 43-yard field goal
with 3:44 gone in the fourth quarter
was the Winning margin for Kansas
City, 7-l!, in its game against
Baltimore . 4-11.

24 at the Middleport Mason ic Ternpie with Julie Byer, honored queen,
presiding .

.
,
Lzterar11
Club
welcomes
J

,.-~----~WMIWW-I!S;II:WWWWWWIII:II:-. .... w:B:~WII .... WW ___ J. . I•I•o•••••··---1..

l .••....•....................••..•.•

75

Third Plac e
Cen tral St . 75 Sf . Joseph's 74

one touchdown , and scored once on a

5-yard nm .
Veteran Bob Gnese. getting his
first start after being benched for
two weeks, completed all s ix pass attempts for 101 yards and two touchdowns in the first quarter , tri gger in~

yea r~ld

The semi-&lt;111nual inspection of
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job 's Daughters , was held on Nov .

:

9AM TO 12 NOON

•
•
:
•:•

In other games Sunday, St. Loui s
trimmed the New York Giants 29-20,
the Minnesota Vikings defeated the
Buffalo Bills 10-J and the Kansas
Oty Chiefs topped the Baltirnore
Colts IIJ..7 .
The Rams , 9-li, took command
against Atlanta with 28 points in the
second quarter, including three
touchdowns in less tha n five
minutes. Wendell Tyler spa rked the
Rams with 138 ya rds rushing, including a 00-yard s print that se t up

110t

of playoff contentiOn .
Dan Fouts passed for 25.1 yard~
and one touchdm~rn while 1 escrve
running back Hank Bauer had three
TDs. all on !-yard runs. as San Diego
battered New Orleans . 7-!1.
Jim Breech 's field ~oa ls of 23, 25,
38 and 45 yards, plus Ken Stabler's
39-ya rd touchdown pas.&gt;; to Oiff
Branch, carried Oakland past
Oeveland .
J oe Theismann passed for two
TDs to Oarence Harmon and John
Riggins hulled his way for two
scores and exceeded the I, OOIJ..yard
mark in rushing for the season,
leading Washington over CinciMati.
3-12.
Linebacker Tom Hicks ' 66-yard in ter cept ion return for a touchdown
a nd Bob Thomas' field goals of 33, 34
and 44 yards helped Chicago mp
Green Bay , 4-11
Retiring O.J . Simpson, the secondlea ding rusher in NFL history.
played his final home game for San
Franc isco and the 49ers, 2-13. in tercepted five passes by Tampa
Bay's Doug Williams in handing the
Bucs their third straight loss .
Ottis Andersoo rushed for 140 yard,, increasing his season's tota l to
1,:&gt;66 - an NFL. record for a rookie
- a nd scored tWi ce. helping St.
Louis, :&gt;-10 , beat the Giant,, 6-9,
despite three TD passes from Phil
Sirruns to Billy Taylor
Jim Marshall, Minnesota 's 41 -

•
••

9AM TO 3 PM

:

•

•

downandknockthePa lrlOt" ll,

Hobert Newhouse's 17-yard
scoring nm in the third period broke
a liJ..IO tie and Butch Johnson 's 17yard TD reception of a tipped pus
by Roger Staubach In the fourth
quarter lifted Dallas over
Philadelphia . Wilbert Montgomery
scored both Eagles' touchdowns .
Jim Zorn's second long scoring
strike of the game to Steve Largent
- a 43-yarder with I : 40 left - lifted
Seattle over Denver . The first Zornto-L.argent TD connection covered 35
yards. Shennan Smith scored the
other Seattle TDs on nms of 17 and I
yards while Craig Morton pused for
one Denver touchdown a nd scored
another.

1

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAYS -

:

:
:
:
:

play, enabled the J ,.h . ;.a. tu
Withstand a late New f-:ngl an&lt;llom· h-

aty .

•: I

MONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY-

:

Hil ls 73

)!

NOTICE

CENTRAL TRUST CO.,
:
MIDDLEPORT, OH..
: WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE TO
: THE PUBLIC OUR NEW BANKING
HOU~
:
:
EFFECTIVE DEC. 13th, 1979

T ex as A a nd M 98, Vermon166
T ex as Arlington 78 , Hardin
Simmons 67
FAR WEST
Arizona 69, G rand Canyon 60
Boise St . 75. Cal St Dom iniguez

Championship
H i ll sdale 58 S. Illinois · Edwardsville

•
i
•
:

t

65

uc

from Denver by outscoring the
Nuggets 19-9 at the end . AbduiJabbar also had nine rebounds , nine
assists and six blocked shots . Los
Angeles made 52 of 84 field goal attempl• . a sizzling .619 percentage.
Bulls 121, Sonlcs 112
Reggie Theus scored 26 pomts as
the Bulls beat Seattle. snapping the
Sorties' IO~ame King dome winning
streak .
Sea ttle, led by Gus Williams ' 30
points, cut a 22-point deficit to four,
lll -107. with 3:41 left to play !&gt;efore
the Bulls' David Greenwood and
The us each sank two free throws to
clinch the victory .
Hawlui 122, Nets 85
Reserves Charlie Criss and Jack
Givens contributed 18 points each as
the Hawks routed the Nets , breaking
the game open with 16 straight points tn the second quarter for a 47-29
lead .
Atlanta led by as many as 48 points in the final period .
Celtlcs 103, Bucks ~
Despite playing their third game
in three nights , the Celtics led all the
way in raising their record to 21 -7,
pulling even with Philadelphia for
the lead in the Atlantic Division as
well as the best record in the NBA .
Larry Bird had 25 points, Dave
Co wens 23 and Nate "Tiny" Archibald 21 for Boston .

M.Jarru 's v ictory over I.H.. tr&lt;ll l , 2·13.
Dave Jacobs ' seeond fi eld ~oal of
the game, a 25-yarder wilh I 57 to

4, who meet Monday mght 1n the
Astrodome, got mto the playoffs
when the Cleveland Browns, tra iling
them in t~e AFC Central , were
beaten by the Oakland ftaiders 19-14 .
Both Cleveland and Oakland now
are 9-li and Denver is IO..'i in the bat tle for the ftnal playoff berth in the
AFC . Denver ends its season at San
Diego m a Monday night game, Dec.
18. Oeveland finishes at Cincinnati
next Sunday and Oakland is home
against Seattle on Sunday .
Meanwhile , Washington moved into a first-place tie "it11 D'dllas and
Philadelphia at IO..'i in the NFC East
with a 28-14 victory over the Cin cirmati Bengals .
Saturday, Dallas , last season 's
losing Super Bowl fmalist, clin ched
at least a wild-card berth , beating
Philadelphia 24-17, and the Seattle
Seahawks prevented Denver from
clinching a playoff spot , overcoming
the Broncos 28-23. Philadelphia had
clinched a playoff spot last week .
In the AFC Central , Chicago and
Tampa Bay a re tied for the lead with
9-li records after the Bea rs edged the
Green Bay Packers 1!&gt;-14 Sunday
and the slumping Bucs were upset
by the lowly San Fra ncisco 49ers Z:l·
7.
That left Tampa Bay, Chicago and
Washington still alive for the two
remaining playoff spots in the NFC
On the closing weekend of the
season , Washington plays a t Dallas ,
Chicago is home against St. Lo ui s
and Tampa Bay entertains Kansas

.

••

Warn1r.g Th e Su: gecn General Ha s De te rm1 ned
That C1gare11e Srn ok1r1g Is Danger ous to Your Health

---- ---

- ----

'I~G

16 mq "lill . . 1i rn g rnco wre. IDO's 19 mg "1ar''. 13 mq. niCOIIne. av. per c1garo.ne. FTC Report MAY '76.

�6- 'The Daily Sent inel, Middlepoi'I-Pomeroy, ll., Munday, Dec . 10. 1979 ·

Wedding plans made

Helen Ht&gt;lp

US • • •lh lf t•lt •n lloltd

Plans have been completed for the
open church wedding of Janet Gibbs
and Charlie Reed .
The double ring ceremony wtll be
an event of Saturday , Dec. 15, at the
Hartford United Methodist Church,
Hartford, W. Va ., 7:30p.m.
The REv . Bill Da wsoo and the
Rev. John Wildman will officiate. A

HELEN B01TEL - MON., DEC. 10

AN IMMATURE MAN BOUNCES
FROM ONE EXTREME TO NEXT
By Helen Bonel
I went to school with Nate back Ill
the 60s. He was a disciple of drugs .
You know, that stuff: "expandtng
the mind, putting you m toueh with
the wtiverse '' etc.
Last week I met hun whtle I was
running in the park . Now he ·, a
fanatic on health foods, exercise.
megavitamins and yoga . He ·s JUSt
as convi~ 50 vi tinain piUs per day
per person can sa ve the world as he
was that LSD ta bs would crealt·
genius .
Frankly , he sttll looks scrHwny.
But his pitch IS very ronvinl'ing .
Helen , what 's your opiruon on thts
health kick so many people are on
thses days' - NE ll.
DEAR NE IL :

1lrmu reJ u ·tl !J /Jlirl)'

i' lll tiST.\1.·\..' IS I' AIU '&lt;(;- These girl seoul&gt;; of
S\ r&lt;tt"U."' ' Jurttr lr

Trr~op

1204

tt~l(t e

who accepted the gifts on behalf of the club. The scouts
pictured, left to right, front, are Jennifer Arnold, KeiU
MuUen , Angte Grueser, Kim Cogar and Wendy Fry :
and back, Kim Ada ms , Angie Davis , Jane Jett, Tracie
Hubbard, Pa ula Winebrenner, and Shari Sisson . J ayne
Good who a lso worked on the toys was absent.

::i nd prese ntL'&lt;I to the

ll1g lknd 1·,t IZL'"' I\&lt;1ml H&lt;11!t n ( 'l ub several st uffed toys

I'd never \mock gettmg fi nd sta _\ in!! well , and certamly your fn end 's

he ~~l\ rn to th·r·d~ chllLl n •n a t Christmas time . F n Urt \ thr· S!"O UL~ 1' l' l"t' nwt at the Sy racuse E lementa ry
t 11

fanati c kick is a great unprovement
over drugs , but excesses of an y k111d
Indicate immaturity .

~·il\ J(d h_'l Sht rl r· ~ ( ;tbbs. frn nt ldt .a nd Patty Capehart.

Just as he was once con vm C"d tha t

LSD made tum a superman, he's
now sure me ~a v ttanuns WJU do the
bick. Next year ' Who knows '
My advice : Eat and exercise sen sibly but avotd fa ddism \l ot nnlr ts
it non-produ cllv ~. but It tu rns you m toa first ·dass bore . H.

.S
~1
"'

DEAR HELEN
My father is determ ined he will
donate his body to a mt'&lt;lical sehool
He says this wiU save the expense 11f
a funeral , and fill a present b1g nc•Pd .
as corpses are running short for
research and tea chmg these da ys
I can't bear to think of Da d betng
dissected by medical studento. or IllS
skeleton hangmg tn a labora tory. Ht•
says , " I won't need my body am
more , why not put 1! to good u.se ' ..
How can I talk hun out of thts'
SHOCKED
DEAR SHOCKED :
Don 't try . Doesn't your fa ther 's
decision make more sense than a
$2,000 funeral he certa 'nl y won't be
able to enjoy' - H.
P.S. Woudd you prefer the foll owing idead of a perfect send -&lt;Jff"
DEAR HE LEN •
I don't have close rela ti ves. but I
have a lot of fme friends Wlwn I tile .
if I nnanag e it right . I s houdd ha l'e
just about $5 ,000 left.
I want to blow it all un the best party this town has ever had ·-· a gmngout party for me. This will be my
way of saying thank-you to everyone
who had made my life worthwhile
Is it a crazy idea ? How can I be
sure my wishes are carried out and that no one will mourn , but instead have a bang-up celebration.
knowmg that's the way I want tt ' JAKE
DEAR JAKE
No , Jake's WAke isn 't a

Pouv·s POINTERS
Po lly Cramer

DYE GOT ON I&gt;R&amp;'&gt;SER
B~· l'oll y ('ra m&lt;r
POlLY 'S PROBLEM
IJEM\ POIJ .Y - We Spilled
brm.n l sh()(' dye on our t-.edroum
rlr(&gt;ss Pr I h:-n·p t rH•(l Il l rernovl' Jt
w1 ttl Sl' \·t.·ra! llung :-; Uu t lhe dyl' soa k-

l'd tn v1 fa ~t tha t nothmg has helped .
1 tlnp.• you tla vr som e suggestio ns

for gt'tt 111g 1t off
MAARY 0
IJqutd shoe
DE AR ~1AH Y 1' .
d~ r 1s 1mty~ss1hle to remove . Some
p&lt;•oph· rl1p a cotton .tt pped stick 111 it
and then dab it on sc ratches or ni cks
in f um1 ture fin ished in brown wood
tones . If yours is painted fum1ture
dou btl css thr dy!' d id not penetrate

too

deep. Have

a

professiona l

refJm sher look a t t hr dresser and he
could thl'n u f~ ~&gt;r su g g t.'~ t w n .~ (j S to
wha t rmcht bt~ don(' 1n tht W H Y of
r t'ft m .'ih l n~:

P(H .J .Y
[)FA!&lt; !J1rLJ.Y
1 ,nn

uld .ll\t'

;,IIli i!"

itl!d

~:1

Yl':tr"i
.Jr1h n tt .'i At

!1;~\c

lll nP :-. tiH' p dll l.\ 111 11l_\" o.;houl dl'r etn•
scvl'rt' and I c&lt;mnot rea(' h ttle
sorf' &lt;.; pnl.&lt;; wtth rny hiimi" to rub on a
soottung sal1·r . Ftnal!y I ca me up
wt lh the l1dea uf puttmg the sal ve on
tiw bac k of" kl blesJ&gt;Oon . I can rea ch
my shoudder •i th the spoon wt th no
diffi culty. II IS then easy to ru b the
merlH.'Jne mto lhl' sore and ac hiri~
spots flo hope thts Will hrlp others
who han· thf' sault.' tro uhle - MR.'S .
\ 't.'!Y

J. W Q
JJJ.: ,\1! l'lli.I .Y

I "'" tid li ke lo

sh;J n ' lhP n •t' lp .. · fm ;1 funut ur t'
cl t·&lt;Hw r I hon~ bet·n trlttkmg rmd tt'j -

Cf&lt;i l Y

idea, but really, if you'd throw the
party "alive ", you'd have a lot more
fun.
Discuss your wishes With your
lawyer or a trusted fr iend And do
send me an invitation . - H.

ing fnr uvPr ttm •t• ~ P ~.tr s. It is not only ~ t tls f&lt;H't r J ry but ,·asy to ma ke ;mrt
CO.\L'i very IJttlt! J ust mix one qua rt
01 ~ J i tn g wate r . two tablespoons
bol! ~d li nseed oil lean he bought

alrea dy boiled ) a nd a Wblespoon of
Got a problem ' An adult subject
for discussion ? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bottel , care ofthts newspaper
Van c ou v er

I s l an d

turf)('n tlne. Wi pe fun1i t ure with rt
~oft c! nth that has been V.TUng out of
th1s mistu n• un til almost dry. Next
ru h wJ t tl a de:lll dr.v r' lftth th&lt;t t
d 1•; w s ;1 nd pnlt.'-11" ' t ht• ptl'('('

VI I
111-:A H llF.AilEI L\

"a s

amalgamated with the colony of
British Columbia m 1006.

mg but I feel sure she took that for
granted . I have a similar recipe and
it says to let cool before usin g. PO I.l.Y
Polly will send you one of her stgn ed thank -you newspaper coupon
cl ippers if she u.ses your fa vorite
Pointer , Peeve or Problem in her
co lumn .
Wr1t e
PO l.I.Y 'S
PO INTERS in ca re of th is
newspaper .

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs . Herben Roush
Mr . and Mrs . Vernon Donohue
spent Thank.-;giving weekend With
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert Hard en and
famli v. Mr _ a nd Mrs. Kea m ey
Donohue and farrul y, Mr. ;md Mrs.
Hut ch DouohuP at Marion . Ohi !J.
Mr . a nd Mr s. B1U Fox and son
Davtd spent Thanksgiv ing weekend
Wl th Mr . and Mrs . Ray Russell at
Newa rk , 0 .
Mrs . Mary Pi ckens was returned
home Wednesday from Veterans
Memon al Hospital where she had
been a surgical pa!:!.fnt.
Mrs . Irene Rlf~of RavertSwood
vi.s1ted her .si."iter, Mr . and M rs.
Owen Anderson recently.
Mr and Mrs. Roger Housh and
4

'

da ughter, Kim, Mr . and Mrs. Louie
Pi ckett and daughter , Tracy. and
Archie Jarrell were Thanksgiving
Day guests of Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Michael and family .
Ma rshall , Mark and Mi chael
Ja rrell were Thanksgiving Day
guests of Mr . and Mrs . Russell Findley.
Mr. and Mrs . Wallie Morris. Mrs.
Bonrue Wilford , Kim and Lisa, of
Portland were Thanksg1ving Day
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Owen An-

Susa n Hannum of Long B&lt;Xtom
was recently honored with a surprise birthday party at the home of
William Provert, Reedsville Roa d.
Planning the party for her were
Karen Probert , Cindy Pitzer and
Kay Balderson.
Gifts were presented to the
honored guest. Refreshments of a
decorated cake usmg a musi cal
tbeme, punch, ~ps, and dip were
served to Debbie Spencer, Mike
Hayma n, Scott. Dillon, Kenny
Newell , Randy Keller , Keith Wolle,
Lawrence Pooler, J oe Boyles, La uri
Ma tthews , Sheila White, and Danny
Spencer.

PARTY DATE CHANGED
The Tw in City Shrinettes
Christmas party will be held on Dec.
19 instead of the 18th as earlier announced. The party will be held at
the home of Cora and Shirley
Beegle

reception wtll be held at the church
immediatel y fo ll ow in g th e
ceremony .

Passes state board

hrJIH\ay party ;;~ nd the
·' tr u;li ( Olt lllt Urr Jt y Chnslma."i tree

l'l; u\1

Office Schedule of

or. ~teo P . Oayo. Jr-.
306 N. 2nd Ave .,
Middleport, Ohio
Effective Januaro; 1980
Monday
10 : 00·1: 00
l : OO ·l :OOP .M .
Tuesday, No Office
Wednesday
9 : 00-11 :30
2 :00· 7: 30 P . M .
Thursday
9: 00 ·11 : 30
2 •00· 7 •30 P . M .

Fridav
10 •00 ·1•00
l : OO · l .OO
Saturday
9 •00 ·l .OO

E•cept the last Satur diy of the month .

was answered by members e• changihg homemade candy with
each one receiving a piece of c• ndy

~~,,h t lllF: Wt'I"P rlt.1tff&gt; at the November

Betty Bell , Morning Star Road,
Racine, recently passed the Ohio
State Board examination for Ucensed Practical Nurse .
Mrs. Bell graduated on Sept. 2
from Washington Technical College,
Marietta . She received her nursing
experience at Marietta Memorial
Hospital and Selby General Hospital
at Marietta . Mrs. Bell resides at
Morning Star with her husband,
Paud , and children, Doug, Shawn,
Terry and Sheni .
Announcing the Revised

f r11 ;1

uf th~ Hlverv iew Garden
luO he l d ~~~ th t&gt; hmm• of Mrs .

r:wt'ttng

from every member .

Gifts were brought for ''Operatioo
Santa Claus " for patient. at the
Athens Mental Health Center.
Names were drawn for a Christmas
gift exchange.
For the program , a workshop

1 " 11 \'t'r Wf'I &gt;P r

\1 "
tl•~"

llonald l'utm' n preSi ded at

tnt•t-llllg wtth Mrs Okey Connol -

IJ rtm hn~ tht pot- Ill of the month,

·\ utuu u1 inU re 1;arden." Roll ca ll

FOR fRffZfR OR GIFTING
••
•"
•

.
••
•
•

•
••
•

••
••
•

•
..

10 LB. CHUCK ROAST
5 LB. CUT UP FRYERS
5 LB. SPARE RIBS
10 LB. GROUND BEEF
5 LB. SIRLOIN STEAK
5 LB. PORK CPOPS

40

•

•

$5999

lBS. FOR
APX. WT.

BALLARDS

99

WbtJryuu- aatfiO
lirlep )1M' 01' m '" or
D 111f pel I II, 116

SALE DATES DECEMBER 10-15, 1979

IOus.Wf-..rfu....
I.IJa cpcldy, ealy IIIII

-.!wr I' ....._ bl
Clll bcirrow db ll'lla

wbere peopr .....
tna a., w. a !'.c:l •
1VetniW¥1llidll.

I,,_"'

1&lt; 1 140.000

l ho.

oh L• - 1 ,.....,.,.

t

VAUGHAN'S

•

The U.S. Congress first met in the
unfinished Capitol building on Nov .
17, !MO.

FRESH
Ground Several
Times Daily

GROUND
BEEF

BRAUNSCHWEIGER .•............~-. 69e

9~

SLAB BACON •....................~:--6.
CUBE STEAKS ...............~·. '1 49
CHICKENS .....••......•....... ~~~- .. , ..
PORK

lB.

$}49

Any Size Pkg .

ROASTING

BOSTON
BUTT

PORK
ROAST
LB.

PRODUCE

89¢
CAULIFLOWER ..................
4 69¢
APPLES···················
SNOW WHITE

BIGGEST SAVIftGS

will be held oo Dec. 18 at the Myers
home. C&lt;Hlostessea will be Mrs.
Walter Brown and Mrs. Gene
Young.

e

SUPERIOR

SUPERIORS

The door prize was awarded
Mrs. Myers. The CJui.stmas party

son.

SAUSAGE ........................l.B~
FRANKIES .................... .I!.?~.. 89e
SUPERIOR

w

Mrs. Ray Young, Mrs. Gene Young ,
Mrs . Ernest Whitehead, Mrs .
Weber, Mrs. Tom Spencer, Mrs.
Putman, Mrs. Dllhorne, Mrs. Donald
Myers, Mrs. Roy Nannwn, Mrs.
Hennan Grossnickle, Mrs. Frank,
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery, Mrs. Okey
CoMoll;y, Mrs . Walter Brown, Mrs.
Frank Blae, and Mrs. Lyle Balder-

BREASTS............~·.. 99~
THIGHS.............. ~~~.69e

99$

PER HEAD

RED OR GOlDEN DEliCIOUS

lBS.

3
I$} 00
LETTUCE ............ ~~P..
00
NAVEL ORANRGESCT. 6/$1
12/$1
(
)
(
)
TANGELOES········
SOliD HEAD GREEN ICEBERG

MEDIUM SIZE YELLOW

COOKING ONIONS
3

LB. BAG 29~

100 CT.

..... , .....

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!
( J I I •\ 'o ! I I '!

FRESH-LIKE

ll I r ; I i I '\

Rl •; rH v f f

VEGETABLES

DIAMOND
LARGE SIZE

3

WALNUTS

CANS

MONARCH

'1 00

CHOCOLATE
$
CHIPS
t 1 oz .

199

E VE R FRESH
Br own or Powdered

SUGAR

WHEAlWORTH CRACKERS ..... ~~k~~· 69~
NABISCO

-16 OZ. VEG.-ti.L

ESCORT CRACKERS ................. !:~.. 79c

MONARCH SliCES OR HAlVES

$

SHASTA

...........
1
PEACH ES.........~.~..59$ POP.
REGULAR OR DIET
$
99
PK16$}19
5
COFFEE ............~.~. .
PEPSI 8
8CANS

2 lBS.

$}89

NABISCO

- Wh OL SWEET PEAS

NES T LE S

48 OZ.

0 IL....................~~ .....

- 14% OZ. CRM. STYlE OR WHOlE KERNAl CORN
- Wlz OL GREEN BEANS

99~

LB .

\ ' H d1 d not

'

for Mrs. Claremont Harris who Ia ill.
Refreshments wel'l! served by the
program planning committee, Mrs.
Putman, Mrs. Harllas Frank , Mrs.
Gene Young, Mrs. Ray Young, Mrs.
T001 Spencer and Mrs. Harris.
Guests attending were Mrs. Gerald
Johnson and Mrs. Robert Roberta.
Memben at the meeting wel'l! Mrs.
R. H. Hannum, Mrs. R-E . WUllams,

CHICKEN PARTS

der son.

Mr. and Mrs . David Blessmg and
children of Rutland visited Mr. and
Mrs. Wallie Morris Sunday evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
Mike and Mandy, Mr . and Mrs.
Steve Hagey, Brad and Stephanie ,
Mr . and Mrs . Don Russell were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr .
and Mrs . Robert Ru.sseU at Wollpen.
Mr . and Mrs . Ronald Russell spent
Tha nksgiving evening with Mr. and
Mrs. David Sha in and son at Antiquity
Mr . and Mrs . Dan Hayman and
ch ildren, Sherry and Brian, of
La urel, Md ., Ted Hayman of Columbus were recent guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and Keith.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Donald Barnette of
La ngs ville, Da vid Roush of Manchester. Ohio VISited Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsa Parsons over the weekend .
Mr . and Mrs. Carroll Norris of
Syracuse and Thomas Wolle of
Racine visited Mrs. Euda Wolle and
Aaron over the weekend.
Mrs. Dorothy Chaney and son, Ed,
of Pine Grove visited Mr . and Mrs .
Von Bell recently .

planned by Mrs. Lyle Balderson and
Mrs. Gene Wilson was condiXUct.
Each member and guest created a
braided yarn wreath . Other
Christmas decorations were
displayed . Mrs . Roy Nannum
assisted Mrs. Balderson with the
program in the absence of Mrs.
Wilson who was unable to attend.
Mrs. Hannum also made a wreath

00

FOlGER'S

TERRY

...

OM .

1-a. aOil

H80 t'U• ~- NU • •I ••• a lti•RUr

~ i11on , th iti.l the
11110

Ot-llto r

~lort

TOWELS

oerlect t•me to odd

flff • "' ...,,

1)(to

• 114 r .. ·u

- .So ....,. keeping the fettival .pil-it going
KJVe on im t c i!Ofron , too (If 'fOIJ're not oo
by Mtending our rD..ced-installotion offer
cable, we 'll get )'00 sta rted the nght way b a ' - .... clayo.
complete wrth HSO )
tf ,au tuned in an Fwt.tivol ~end .
So d ip the C&lt;XIpon ~l()looo· or 1~' grve ~ c
ca ll And 1tort entoy•ng HBO. tl,.e year-round
,.,. - hit hit ol Hol lywood'• bo•tfroom •China Syndrome• to "'Califom,o 5._;,te" film hntrvol
10 . , _ . , ol ... Body Snot&lt;:h•d - plu1
------\
~ speciok like the •Rict-. l •ttle" ond
-sc.rmy Ocrvi1, Jr_• ~ HIO subtcriben liJflf fhn ktnd ol super

ROll

/--- -

HBO WEEKEND ;
FILM FESTIVAL
SPECIAL OFFER I

.ntertoinment, day af-ter day. all year r·ovnd
AM 10 con VOO .
lmogine . The biggest ond best n-'10\o ~~

b.kw.lh.y r"'IIdl COinnlefcoal tele¥ 1S t011
KN:tdwut spor11 prugrom1 that can't be

_.,..from

I

\

I

F~" I

'" •"I

tn 1dd lll'\41 1&lt;l m 1 lht .f c•ltlr

•"•kn •• UW IH'' momll •IN n 1.1 1 • " "''
..,, , I .....,.~..~".. I •Ill pol ) • • , " ' :

. ,. 1 ~.- .

~

'"'"" '" " • r nk t ..... rl'("f" lu

•

rr..,

wllk h rr or " tonu 1 11 ~ 1 n 1• ot I l l

I

MILK

L~ '~'• • I "" o"t Ho me l o " Off, { ~
I m ...,, o cobl• wbKr &gt;b.&lt; JIII-(Olof
....... . g ,~. .n lot..-• &lt;olf me

I -~
I Nld.....
I
I ( •,

: " ,.:, . .

PLASTIC
I
I

GAL

I
I
"·'· ~

.'r

I ,. -

'\~

I
I

llllt..lllll ...
(

I

The Year-Round
Film Festival ·

2%

I

5een

on """''"• ciol tele¥iston. PI~ ougmal HBO
all """ ... ,.,..ld .
And no commercials. Not one. That')
;r-ot ~nmen1 the woy it wo1 meant to
bo ~and un;n-.p~ed And
it\ oil tn ..._comfort ci your """"" lr.-ing roorn
But wily "-;no? ~ you have cable

69¢

- ~· =· -------/

:1

I

GARVIN'S

ORANGE
JUICE

$}69

OZ. BTlS.
With Deposit &amp; Purchase

REGUlAR, DRIP OR ELEC. PERK

2 ROU 89~

SOFTWEVE

•z

TOILET TISSUE••.•........... 2 PKGS.
A-1 8LEACH•..•••.•••..••.•••.•....G.A.:. 69~
I FROZEN FOODS AND- DAIRY I
BLUE BONNET

s 129 ~

59'
IE ............ ~~·

Quert•rs

BANQUET

POT PIES.............

8-oz .
Pkgs .

B••f. Chick•n or Turl&lt;•v

FROSTY ACRES

ORANGE JUICE .......1.:~.:. 89~
SHEDD'S

MARGARINE........... 2

lR_ ~ 119
BOWL

"'---~
- . OR I S

�'il\f\11M} fii)'\t ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
f!;!,J ~ ~ ~ ,
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port -Pumeruy, 0, Monday, Dec . IU , 1979

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec. 10. 197!1

DICK TRACY

Your Hest Buys Are

}~ou11d

in the · Sentinel Classifieds

IN A FEW MINUTES V'o'E"'LL BE TAI'(IN G Ot:F:•

DO YOU HAVE A

L LIRLT L

IN TOURIST

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

WANT AD

1 day
2days
3days
Sdays

Deceased ,

Plaintiff ,

· VS -

MABELC . CARMAN

Cui&gt;
1.00

C!w-ge
I.Z
1.90

l.IMI
3 00

~25

uo

3.75

Each word over Ole rrunimum
1~ word! l5 4 cents per word per
day Ads~ otherthanconse&lt;"Ullve days wtU be chall(ed at
!.he I day rlilte

addres~

is Wheeling. W. Va . Other
wiseun~nown ,

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEES,
AD
MINISTR ATOR S. EXEC ·
UTORS AND ASSIGNS , IF
ANY, OF EACH OF THE
FOLLOWING :
CARMAN ,
ARTHUR

In ml!mory, Card of 'MumUI
and Obituary 8 cent!l per word ,
P .OO nummwn. CUh In ad~"ant"e.

Pets ava i lable tor
adoption and in formation
service .
lnvt&gt;sfigative
Agent

GUN
SHOOT
EVERy
SU NDAY I PM FACTORY
CHO KE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB .
NO
HUNTING ,
no
trespassing with no t&gt;x
o~ptions on my property .
Judy McGraw Self

PAGEVILLE FREEWILL
Baptist Rev ival beginning

Mobllr: Herne sale~~ and Yard
sal~ ar~ 8l."'t."Yptfti unl)· with

Monday , Dec 10 7 )()p .m .

ALBERT
CARMAN .
Dece-ased.
RALPH R . CARMAN,

cash WlUl onJf'r Z!i Cf'nt ctlarge
f ew ad.!l caiT)ing &amp;a Number ln

Rev
Merlin
Evan9elis t .

Deceased,

The;- ?ubil3her re.ervts the
nght lu edlt IX ~ject any ads
d~ .. med
ubject10n• l
The
PUbllAher lll'tll not be re:sponalbl.e
fOI" mor? than one incorrect Ln -

Deceased,

Cart of Thf' Sentmel

MARGARET CARMAN
DAVIS , Deceased,
MARGARET
DAVIS

SMITH ,

Oece.~~sed ,

HENRY

CARMAN ,

ELMER

COFFMAN ,

Deceased,
Deceased ,

~rtion .

["'hone

99'2-2156

COFFMAN

BAIER , Deceased ,

CARMAN ,

ADVERTISING
DEADLJNES

Defendants .

N0 .223 19
- SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS
ABOVE
NAMED ,
You are hereby not ified
that you have been named
Defendants 1n a legal ac
tion en t itled : " EI1zabe th
Ann Luces, Administratr i x
With the Will Annexed of
the Estate of Ralph Car
man ,
De ceased ,
vs.
El•zabeth
Ann Lucas.
eta I " in the Common Pleas
Court of Meigs County ,
Ohio
Pr ob ate Division,
Case No. 21319 , rne demand
be1ng tor the sa le of the en
t1 r e in ter est in the real
es tate
hereinafter
described in o r der to pay
the debts of the decedent ,
Ralph R. carm an, and the
costs ot adm1n1stration
Th e rea l es tat e is described
as follows

PARCEL

I

1f?llow l n~

The

Real
Estate
Situated 1n tne County of
Mei9s. , in the State of Ohio.
and 1n I he Village of M iner
svi lle , to wit : Being a part
of 100 acre lo t No . 301 in
Town No 2, Range No 13,
in said County of Me 1gs,
p art1cu larl y desc ribe d as
f o llows Beginnin g ttl the
Northeast corner of a loT
deeded
by
Freder1 c k
to
Gehart
Sc h reiner
Schoneberger, t hence Nor
th 80 Deg East, 45 feet .
thence at ri9ht ang i{&gt;S to
thi s lme and 1n a Sou therly
d irection 35 feet : thence at
right angles to the line last
mentioned
and
1n
a
we ster.ly d1rection .45 feet
to a po1nt in the East l ine of
said Schonebt&gt; r~ er·s loL
thence along sa11 d Gehart
Schoneberger 's East li ne t o
tn e place of beg i nning , ex
cepttng the coal and other
mmerals and the right to
mint&gt; the same without in
cu mbrance to the surlace .
and the right to fence o;.a•d

lei

Being the- sa me property
convey ed
to the sa i d
Robert 0 Schmoll from th e
tru stee s of tht&gt; St Pau l 's
Evangeli ca l and Reformed
Chur ch of
Minersville ,
Ohio, by
deed dated
February 16th. 1948. and
recorded in Deed Book No
161, Page t 85. Meigs Coun
ty Deed Records
PARCEL 2 : Being the
following described real
estate , si tu.=tte in 100 acre
tot No. 30 1 in Town 2 and
Rang e 13 in the satd Coun t y
of Me1gs, nea r the school
house on said 100 Acr e lot
No . 301.
described as
follows . that is to say
Beginning at t he Sou theast
cor ner of a lot belonging to
Fr ederick.
Schreiner ,
deceased . th ence along the
East line of said lot 1.50 feet
to the Northeast co rner of
th e Sc hr ei ne r lot . thence
North about 80 Oeg EasT 80

Monday

TU_,.y

thru F'nday
tP.M .
publicallOfl

4P .M .

f'nday afternoon

Notices _ _
GU N
SHOO T .
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
D ept
Every Saturday . 6 :30p .m .
A t their buildingin Bashan
Fa c tory choke guns on ly .

GU N SHOOT every Sunda y
12 : 00 Fac tory cho ke onl y .
Corn Hollow Gun Club ,
Rutland Proce-eds dond ted
to Boy scout Troop 2-49.
HAVE
YOUR
tr o ph y
mounted
Bir chfie l d ' s
Tax1dermy on 1:2-4, east of

Ru! l and. 61&lt; 742 2178.
PROUDLY

AN

NOU N CI NG jus t in time
for Ch ristma s . On a per
manent ba si s we are n ow
selli ng
all
Aladd in
Ke-rosene lamps, heater s
and r eplace m e nt part s at
10 pet lis t Stop and see tne
many beaut iful styles .
M ou nt ai n Leather and
~ne ra l Store, 104 106 W
Unmn St ., Athens . Open til
8 30 beginning Dec . 10.

Giveaway

6160
BEAUT IFUL WHITE, part
husky , part shepher d male
dog
very
fr ien dly
DoQhouse. too Call 991

'&gt;697

Lease
---===-'--

BUS INE SS BU IL DING tor
lease
F or mer warner
Beauty Shop Approx 1100
sq f1 Call 992 2117 or 991
2528 lifter 5 p m

_,.
~-

, .....

7

·

~r:;f. 'v
·~ · ~~
,. -

.
__ ,
,

1--

.:
··"' ]
·· :.;,. ,, ' ·
~
, ....£..

,\

....,
_

1

-

\ "_
-~ "'

(-:-r

"

· •

Jacob Massar by V . B . Hor
_,_..
ton and C A . Horton and _ -_·_· ----"""."'-'-~-;-~-'-'·===--'
recorded in
Re-cord of
Deed s of M eigs County, I lt:t 1 " '(11)~1' v.orr~ ahout the
Ohio, Vol. 33 , Pages 376 and lidh I llil\"1' l'nough prob lt ·ms
377 .
The 30 feet by 40 feet o f
abov e des cribed
tand

The aforesaid r eal estate

being the same real estate
conveyed to F Iorence Car
men who was also known
as ~Iorence Kerman, by
Jacob Massar and wife by
deed recorded in Deed

Book 93 al Page 196 ot the
Meigs County Deed Recor

ds .
PARCEL

3,

The

following
Real Estate
situate in th e Village of
Minersville , M eigs County,
Oh i o , and
m o r e par
ticularly
descr ibed
as
f oll ow s: Being sixty (60)
feet off the we5ffr ly side of
Lot No . 53 in M inPrsv ill e,
Meigs County , Ohio, known·
and designated as sub .

" B " OO Being

slxt~

(60} feel

fronting on CliH Street and
running in a northerly
direction at right ang le
with said Cliff Street two

hundred ( 200} teet .
Deed Reference : Vol.
22S.&lt; Page 579, Meigs Coun
ty ueed Records .
PARCEL
4:
Th e
following desc ribed real
estate situate in the State of
Ohio, County o f M eigs and
Township of Sutton and
Vi llage of Minerwille and
bounded and described as
fo llows . Beginning at fhe
south co rne r of a f wo acre

l ot deeded by V . B. Horton

t o Dan iel DeWolfe in 100

acre Lot No . 301_, Town 2,
Range 13 of !he vhio Com
pany 's · Purchase ;

North

~6

thence

De;; . Easl 122 feet

to a stake : tnence Nort h 45

BEITER 'N' BEN'S
G_LASSVIEW
LEYDEN HEARTii
AND SUBURBAN
FURNACES

LOST ·
WALKER
coon
dogs,
o ne
male , o n e
female . lost in Vinton area .
Phone Lester ParKer , 74:2

3064
F OU N D ON West Main .
Monkey
Run
ar ea,
Pomeroy
Brown
and
wh1te , female c h •huahua
H umane Society , ~2 6260
LOST OR stolen Woul d the
person who took the one
eyed coon dog out of th e
Meigs Count y Dog Pound ,
please contact. 742 3065

Deg Wesl 51 4 10 tee t to a
stake ; then ce south 66 1 ")
Deg West 115 8 · 10 teet to a
stak e; thence along the
road to th e pla ce of be9in
ning.
B ein g the same lot or
par cel of land conveyed to
John Baum, Sr . by M inn 1e
Kautz and husband by deed

dat ed June

2.

1916. and

recorded in Vol . 113, pa ge
486 of the Deed Record-;. of
Me igs County , Ohi o .
Being a portion of the
real estate conveyed by
Irene Mc Dowell and J ack
Me Dowell to Karl Grueser
by deed dated J une 1, 1945 .
and r ecorded in Vol 158,
Page 257 of the Deed
Records. M ei g s County ,
Ohio.
Reference Deeds
Vol

263,

Page 389 , Vol . 263 ,

Pa9e 225 Deed Records ,
Me1gs County, Ohio .
and tt1e demand of th e
Complaint i5 to sell Defen
dants ' interest in t he
above .
You are requ i red to an
swer the Complain t w ith 1n
twe nty -eight days af ter th e
l~st
publ ication of th is
not ice, nam e ly , by not later
than
the 1 Hh day
of
F ebruary
19 80,
or
judg m ent by default will be
rendered against you .
Elizabe th An n Lu cns
Administra tor with
the Will Annexed
ot the Es ta t e of
Ralph R Carman,
Deceased
Crow , Crow and Porter
Attorneys f or Pla intiff

( Ill 3, 10, 17 , l4, Jl I l l '

14, 7t

Ilt' ! ·d~.

DOWNING -CHILDS
Phone 992-2342
Middleport , 0 .

OPEN

For Sale

Tues . Fri . 1 P .M . -6 P . M

COAL,

Sat. 9 A .M . -I P M .

LIMESTONE ,

Mrs . Richard F1nlaw ,
Owner

19 76 FORD F 150 p;cku p
Guaranteed A 1 condi t1 on
S2495 Call 'I'll 5304 or 991

E M ERGE NCY

1976

OLDS

CU T LASS

supreme, 4 dr . seda n , v 1ny 1
top . 260 V ·8, auto ., P s ,
P . B ., AM radiO , A .C.,
power vinyl seats, tinted
grass, no rust , good ti res,
mid size. good co nd it ion
May be seen at P omeroy
Motor Co .. Pomeroy . OH
Con ta ct Russell 1 Wilson .
Administra tor . 992 7283 or

2156 between 8 30 and 5 00

'192 lll6

Ca l latter 6 p m . 985 3541

AVAILABLE .

Ro ute

35

at

SR

160,

Gallipolis, O H

CHIP WOOD Poles max
di ameter 10 .. on l arges t
end . $12 p er ton Bu ndled
slab SlOper ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt 1.
Pomeroy 991 2689
OLD
FURN ITURE.
1ce
bo)(es. , brass beds, iron
beds. d es ks , etc . complete
househo lds
Wr•te M D
Miller R t 4. Pomeroy or
ca ll 992 7760

WA NTED

SAW

logs

197&lt; CAMARO , ,800

A N TIQUES ,

FUR

NITURE , glass , Ch1na.
anything See or c al l Ruth
Gos.ney , ant•qut&gt;S , 26 N
2nd, Middleport, OH ~~

991

COU NTRY M OB IL E Home
Par k , Route 33. nort h of
Pome roy . Large lo ts .Catl

9'12 7479
3 AN D 4 RM furnished ap
ts p,,one 997. 5..04 .

BEDROOM

THREE

h ome
near
mobile
Pomeroy a nd Middleport

m

TWO BEDROOM apt ..

I

BUYING US SILVER co•ns
dated
1964 or before
Pay 1ng top pr1ce
Call
Brown 's, 9?2 5113

OLD COINS , pocket wat
c hes, class rings , wedd1ng
bands, diamonds Gold or
si l ver Cettl J A Wamsley ,
7-42 233 1. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens , OH 597
6461
COMMODE and tank

99"2

2101

Pets for Sale
HOOF HO LLOW. Eng lrsh
and we stern . Sa ddles and
har ness .
H orses
and
ponies . Ruth Reeves b14
698 3290 . Barding
and
Riding Lessons and H orse
Care pr oducts . Wes te rn
boo t s . Chi ldrpn 's S 15 50

Adui!S $29 .00 .
RISING

Kennel

Boardi ng Cal l 367 0192

POODLE

GROOMING

Judy l ay lor . 614 36 7

HIL LC REST

rno

KENNELS

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor outdoor f acili ties
Also
AKC
regis t e red
Doberman s 614 446 7795

APPLES
CIDER
Fit zpatr ick Or
HONEY
c harcJ ,
Phone

HOUSE . FOUR r ooms and

HOUSE

'n

bath . Ful ly carpeted, all
new paint , un f urnished

State Route
W i lkesville .

689 .
069

FUR

st oker,

COAL,
will

lump

deliver

or
742

2183
APPLES ~ ROME bea ut y
app les at S4 per bu . Best for
a pp le butter Call 669 J785,
F 1f1patrick Orchard, SR

NI SHEO , larger 3 bed r om
trailer Must have re f er en
ces No pet s. S100 plus
utd1 t ies 8 · 30 a m t o 11 30

1&gt;89

p m , 'I'll 5511

GLASS FIRE PLACE doors

CHRISTMAS

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

'1S4J6

SAVI N GS

W e ttl lhe Badey ·s Shoes uf
M •ddleport would l•k e to
extend the sp1rit of Chr1&lt;,t
mas and
th e
H ol•day
Seasons
to
you.
our
c ustomers we are off er 1ng
a 10 Pet . discount on all
mercnandise in our stor e
Once again have a Merry
C hr istmas
and
a
p rospe rous New Year Sate
period De ce mber 8, 1979
through Dec
1979

n.

SE T OF support boards
and extra th ic k ma ttrescs
tor ounk bed M..Hfr esc.:.es
f or bunk bt&gt;d
Mnltrcss
co ven, •n cl ud('(l All 111 t')'
cf'l lent cond,f,un s, ; . , ~?/
7188

FIREWOOD ,
load

S266

S35

S30

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been

P"kup

delivered .

997.

IN
can

celle d ?
Los t
you r
operator 's license? Phone

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr .
~ Phone "2 -2111

----------

9'12 2143
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery : vario us sizes of
pool kits . D o it yourSf!lf or
le t us install for you . D .
Bumgardner Sales, 1nc

bedroom
1970 Vinda le 11x63 with ex
pa ndo, 2 bedr .
1970 New M oon 12x60 3 bdr
1973 Skyline
12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12)(52, 'l bedr

B fl, 5 MOBIL E HOME
SA LES , P T. PLEA SA NT,
w v 304 675 44 1 4

BR AD FORD , Auctioneer.
CompleTe Se rvice Phone
9..9 'l -48 7 or 949 2000 . rac 1ne .
Ohio. Critt Bradford

ELWOOD

BOWERS

R E PAl R
Sweepers,
toasters. irons . al l small
appl iances Lawn mower
Ne)d to Sta te H1ghwdy
Garage on Rou te 7, 985

3825
19 70 HOLLY PARK 11x60 1
bedroom,
front
living
room , exce ll ent con dition,

snoo . 197• Buddy llx64 3
bedroom. fr on t kitchen,
$7600 Can be seen aT
Kingsbury Mobile H ome
Sales.

Real Estate for Sale

S &amp; G Carpet C leaning
St eam
c l eane d
Frett
est1milte
Reas.onablt&gt;
r ate~
Sco t cnguard
992
6309 or 742 2348
~IANO

T U N I NG ,
La ne
Oan1el s New phone num
ber , 7421951
Serv1ce 1o
schools and home since

1965

old ,

3

l&gt;edroom , all elect r ic home ,
nice eat in ki t chen. over 1
acre, ca rpet and v1 ny1
fl oors. garage and storage
building , washer and dryer
hook uo . Nea r Langsville
mine-s . ~4 1 ,000 Raymond

-

~ -----

Real
Estate for Sale
-·· - · - - ----51 X ROOM house and lol
with out buil di ng . Ca rpeted
thr oughou t . Some fu r
n itu re . 991 5989

Hatfoeld 742 16 19.

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

T REE S,

NEW
W1 . Jl1S

Sp m

216 E. Second Street

PRODUC T S

vanil l as .
sp1ces,
p1e
fill1ng s. Cold remedies and
vifam •ns . 991 782.5.

2 1' 1 ACRES - lv\odern 3
bedroom home, e lec
baseboar d hea t , drilled
w ell on hard road near
Rutl and . 5% down

WURLITZER

MOBILE

PIANO tor

HOME

-

3

s.a le . Excellent condit ion
Phone 667 ·307 4, Norman
Weber

bedrooms. 2 f ull baths ,
equipped k 11 a nd fur
n 1tur e 7/ 8 of an acre
near Harrisonv i lle .

LE NN OX

4 ACRES -

CENTRAL

heating and A .C with due
ts . 992 2S60 or see at 1262
Powell St ., Middleport .

FIREWOOD l or sale
3567

985

o ld Appa l oosa geld1ng
Good manne rs Anyone can
ride Makl? top 4 H or show
horse See She rr y lndes t ad
a T Rock. Spr1ngs F airgroun

ds
GOOD FUE L oi l heater
with 300 ga ll on tank , $70
147 3615 eve n •ngs
Ruth
C1r c le . Letart

LUMP COAL , $39 per ton .
Delivered . Ca ll any time .

991 7116.
MAYTAG DISHWASHER ,
avocado green . top loade r
Exce llent cond it10r1 , ~

On Rt . 114

Trai ler 12)(60, small
building and 2nd setup
Go ·car t spot, garden or
playground
5~ DOWN - J bedroom
home on Li ncoln Hts
Ba1h, gas furnact&gt;, base
menton h igh lot . Birch
kitchen

",000 .00

DOWN

-

3

rooms . 11·• baths. 4
bed rm s
and over -4
acres of l and In good
repair and possessi on on
deed . Ohio Powr and
T P
Wat er
Dishwasher. 5 c lost&gt;fs,
And out of high water
Bargain for $20,000 .00 .

INVEST
IN
REAL
ESTATE FOR YOUR
CHILDREN ' S
FUTURE .
IT
HAS
PAID OFF BIG . CALL
"2-lllS or "2-l176 .

Rousing •
Headquarters .

LISTING

2

bedroom fram e home in
Tuppers Plains . K i t ·
chen, dining room , b~th
and fu ll
basement .

$23,000 00
RACINE -- 6 1! 1 ~c res
with nice 3 bedroom
ho m e Liv 1ng room k it ·
che n , bath , L shaped
family room , laundry
and s1orage . Sell pri ce

$39,600.00 .
ACREAGE - 3.65 acres
on St . Route 143. Sells

tor SI0,600 .00
HYSELL llUN -

A Iii

tie over 1 acres w i th 2
bedroom home Lots of
po5sibi l ities with this
one . C~ll for more info

Asking U3,500 .00.
MIOOLEPORT
Large 9 room nome on
Locust St Se ll ing Pri ce

S2S,OOO .OO
POMEROY -

Lovely 3

bedroom home on East

Ma in. Only $25.500 .00
ST . ROUTE 14l - 1%9
New Moon tra i ler with
51'1 acres
Se lls t or

'I 5,000 00
We need listin95 . If you
are thinking of buying
or selling, give us a udl
for friendly , courteous
service .
Cheryl Lemley , Auoc .
Phone 142 -2003
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .

Phone742-lll'l2
Georges . Hobstetter Jr .
Broker 992 -57]9

997 71?6

LIKE N EW (Aq uar•usl 5
c; tr ,ny
bcV"It O case
N 1ce
(h r• ':. lm,lS lllff, Sl25 985
4')6)

WHIRLPOOL GAS dryer .
GOOd wor~ ing condition

997 3910

NEW THREE bedroom all
clec tr• c horne . over 1 ncre .
n1 c e k1t c hen,
garage ,
d1spasa1 and dishwasher
washer and dryer hook up :
ca rpet ed exce pt kitchPn
and bath Near Langsvilleand
m ines
$-43.000
Raymond Hatfield , 742

1819

F"0$5 Y ' 5

FATHER:

ACCIDE~r:

A

&gt;WO MAFIA

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER
Win -

MR . ~ff BU'O. F£S!BR

"----

----v--

10 19·1 mo .

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag-- ---

4&lt;; FOR _~HICH f\:);1'\IOt,; 'IO~'R£
( BV-I Q\.:Al.l Fl fA/ l!JHJI.T

HAS "SKW ~IE. 10
, 1\JTEORIII~W '{OJ. /

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

NORTH

• 85

Tru ck in~ . Phone 742 2455.
&gt;and

blasting . Free estimates.

,_,

Call949 ·2680

{1."&lt;..£...~ \

END

2

Loader ,

brush
hog
Will
do
basements, ponds, bru~h .
timber ,
land
clearing
Charles Butcher . 7..2·2940

HOWERY AND MARTIN

HOUSE FOR SAL E behind
Jone s Boys \5500 Calt 104
273 5071 ShMon Stark

NEW HOME . 3 bedroom,
21.:") baths, rec . room with
fireplace,
large deck ,
basement lind garaoe . 1
acre lot Call
3454 . I f no
answer . ca ll
5455.

m
m

· LC

ANNIE
· YOU Hl:l.Vf

·~001'"?

_

'«)J'Vf'A( TUALt Y
Excavating,
sep!l c
sys tems, darer , bac khoe .
Rt UJ . Phone 1 16141 6¥8

12 111

~ '"E FUfL
CRISIS? H()\IJ?'

..

SIMPLE . BY PROOUCI""'
Tftt MILLIOf'i OR SO

SAR~OILA~Y
FOQ.

~()Rl

'(

~

HI= 1 Y

YEARS ... RIGI!T HERE 11'1
n&lt;I&lt;O WUilTR r ·

· WE CM BE SEL F·

tK(,/
+ Q8 75
WEST
EAST
.Q6
.K J7
. A 10 643
.QJ 92
tJ 9
t8 53
+1 0642
+J9 3

UKE WHERE IN l H(I INSlfAD OF l ELLl l'iG
OCI&lt;Ef1S ARE YU.I ; '!'OU I'LL ShOWY6U

SUt=FJC IENT IN
"'E'VE DEVELOPfD

~

SOURCES .

opened . South took h1s king,
cashed the ace-kmg of dubs
and dumm y's high diamonds
and queen of clubs . Then he
came back to his hand w1th
the ace of spad es and ran the
rest of the diamonds to make

Vulnerable Both
Dealer · South

7331 or 742 2593

Wt5t

North

Easl

Real Estate for Sale

Pass
Pass

I •

Pass
Pass

FINANCING VA FHA LO
ANS LO W OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . ST ATE , ATHENS
614S9230SI

ers got to th is nict&gt; con tr act
lnvartab ly a heart wa s

tAI 016 t2
+AK

GOH NA GET All
ANMIE ' PUNJAB ,
l HAT OIL?.' ~--"" ORDER l11 E hfl!COPT[ R '

ALTERNATE

"When th1s hand
a Master Pa1rs
eve nt onl y a fe w Sou th play-

.K 7

j

ENERGY UNTIL

Oswald

wa s pl ayed tn

SOUTH
• A 1l

3 NT

five odd ."
Alan : ''There were t wo rea sons why onl y a few Souths
got to play the notrump game

Soulb

It
2 NT

Some opened one notr ump a btd we disapprove of hearti ly. North would sho w spades
and wmd up going down after

P&lt;tS!i

Pass

a queen of hearts lead by
East. Then some North play-

Open mg lea d • 4

ers rebid three clubs after

South's diamond opening and
two notrump re bid. South
would then bid three spades
and North would go on to lour

By Oswald Ja coby
and Alan Sontag
' I '5 BEEN TWO

WEEKS SINCE

U\Sr FEED
lNG, AND l'M
~

H INCi RY'

y

-

6

ACROSS

1

(For a copy of J ACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to · "' Win a t
Bridge ,·· ca re ol th is newspa per. P. 0 . Box 489 . Radio City
S t allon . New York . NY
10019)

WTNNIE
TRY TC UNDERSTAND

• ~ADL7'1'5 SO SORIZ)
~E f.\IBARI&lt;ASS!:D
YOU Al\oD YOU'&lt;
DATE LAST

HE

CAN I HELP HIMSElf HE '5

·3 EEN AWAY WON!
Cl\ c i ZA~ ON
'-~~~
L2\J6.

-oo

::&gt;EF&lt;

BUT GOSH, '10M ..VHAT

BE PA-

A~

LEA.ST _N-r-1- ,.:.o-;:R_
-...~ o....:L :JA\S \ \.-\' 35..
CAN SO"-E'- .Ou-;:'_

I OOING TD ::&gt;0 ?
I . I CAN T 130 ON
LI KE TH:5 IA~Crl
cONG!"'&lt; .

N 1.SHT

c"~

~AT-::.&lt;. ~;&gt; )-...

,~

"1--:::'\.' .

33 ;

7 301t' s

8 ' 1l0--Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Family
Affair 17 : Sesame St . 33 .
a · JO-Romper Room 17.

9 ·oo-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8: One Day l&gt;.t A Time
10 : Phi l Donahue 13, IS; Lucy
Show 17.
9·»---Bob Newharl 8; Love of Life
\0 ; Green acres 17 .
lO ·IlO--Card Sharks 3, IS ; Edge of
Nigh! 6; Beat the Clock 8, 10,
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
" The Golden Mask" 17.
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3,1S ;
'20 ,000 Pyram i d 13 ; Andy
Grlfllth 6, Whew 8, 10.
10 :55--{:BS News 8 : House Call 10.
II oo-H;gh Rollers 3,15 ; Laverne fl.
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10 .
11 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, IS;
Family Feud 6,1 3: Sesame Sl
20 ;

Know

Your

12 · oo - Newscen1er

~hools

33;

J;

News

6,8, 10,13: Mlndreaden 1!; Love,
American Style 17; Pearls 33 .

12 · »-Ryan's H - 3, 1S; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15;
M ovi e " The N ight of the Hunter "

2 5 ~~-po tnt

Yesterday 's Ans"er

4 N ige rian

16 German

cit y
n ve r
5 Cower mg
19 Preh1stortc
Woman " ·
6 Not live,
mou nd
as a TV show
1964 song
22
Martial and
17 (;reek letter 7 F:lec . term
Buchwald
IH lrnWted
8 Trust m
20 MPrnment 9 Steno's error 23l;t eek
24 Kennel
21 C.1 utched
10 Solutwn
sound
22 Swts-5 n ver
m medic me
ZJ R oll t·all

~

Gouged out,
as a P'P"
26 Lurch

28 A.A 29 Unearthly
30 Forb1ddmg
35 Bnel
plunge
36 ExclaiTUitlon

a nswer

33 Mmsten

34 Buttmsky
does
36 H;td 1a I. e.g
37 K&lt;ulroad

I.ONGFEI.LOW

One \eUPr §Imp ly stands for another I n lh1 s samp le A is
u sed f or th r threr l ."'l . X for the two o·~ . el c Si ng l e lett ers .
apost r ophes, the leng t h and formatton of the words ar e all
hrnts Each da y I he code l etters are d 11fer ent

PEANUI'S

CR I PTOQt ' OTES

f-1.-\vEN.T '1'0V EvER 1-lEAIW
OF THE THREE L1TTLE

)t.Lt(; IIUN

k. I7TEN5' GOOD GRIEF~

6'k12' to 12'X16 '

&lt;?-________

$3800

YFP

CZT P
!JRI:l

SE:W KS ,

K H I' T E

and up

F KKWYTK
ZT

ZHYKTDA

F

-'·

Doctor

3, 15; Happy Day&gt; 6, 13 ; Christmas Gi ll of Love 8, 10; Nova
20 ,33; Movie " Once Upon A
Horse" 17
8 31}-Angle 6,13
9 oo-Movie " The Great Smokey
Roadb lock "
3, 15 ;
Three' s
Company 6, 13 ; Hawaii Flve -0
8.10 : World 20,33 .
9 31)-Tax I 6, 13; I 0 :llO-Harl to Hart
6. 13 ; Paris 8. 10; News 20; City
Notebook 33 .
10 ·31}-Like It Is 20 ; Another Voice
33
11 OD--News 3,6,8,10, 13,1S ; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavett 20;
Carry On Laughing 33 .
11: Jl)- Tonight 3, 15 ; Barnev Miller
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; ABC
News 33; Movie "The Bovs of
Paul Street" 10; Movie " City
That Never Sleeps" 17.
12: 0s-Movle "Terror ln the Wax

Museum " 6, 13 . 12 : 40-Movle
" Alexander : The Other Side of

IWGDRB

' oo- Tom orr ow 3; New&gt; 1S; I : » -

-- S Z M Y ~- K
NT AATE KM P
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: FAILURE IS NOT OUR ONLY

-~J

Dream of Jeannie 17 ;

BM P ·

KZMWDV
F K

I WG -

I 1: ~ · I T E S fl

Call 742 -2211

s 31}-Carol Burnett 3; ; News 6;
Gom er Pyle 8; E lee. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happ~ Days Again 13; I

8: DO-Misadventures at Sherltf Lobo

11

GOOD REMNANT

Moore 10; Merv Gr iffin 15 ; My
Three Sons 17

Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
30- Hollywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker' s Wild
8' Hollywood Squares 10; Sha No
Na 13; TV Honor Society IS; All
In The Family 17 ; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33 ..

IJAILY CRYPTOI!t:OTE - Here'• how to work it :
AXI DL BAAXR

IN STOCK

Son 8. Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 10.33 ; Mary Tyler

fl,

10 . Newlywed Game 13 ; Love
Amer ican Style 15 ; Sanford &amp;

car

SAU: 0111 ALL

Spectreman 17.
4 30-Pett lcoat Junction 8: Tom &amp;
Jerry 13; Gilligan's Is. 11
5 00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford

Wr iti ng for a Reason 33 .

38 F.xCite

t.arr~

Sesame 51 10,33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Real McCoys 13;

6 » - NBC News 3, 15 ; ABC News 13 ;
CB S News8. 10. Bob Newhart II :
Over Easy 20.
7 oo-3's A Crowd 3; Pul&gt;e 6; ; News

nervous

/'LL TIIKE Jr!.'

17 ; Over

Who 33
6 oo-News 3,8,10,1 3,15; ABC News
6 ; Zoom 20; Carol Burnett 17;

25 Net:kwea r
goods : Var .
26 l::arly
s uff ragist
27 Old c loth

,_

Fl i nhtones

4 oo- Special Treat 3, 1 S ; Mer\/
Griffln 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;

type
3 (~ o on
the wagon

c heese

BARNEY

and up

u.

Stooges-

Family
Affair
10 ;
Everybody's Business 33.

Easy 33 .

28 Swamp
lands
31 Brew
32 Make

'4"

Rutlano,

7 IS-A .M . Weather

W i ld 10;

14 French

·"

rC:&lt;

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

RUTlAND
FURNITURE

Morning

Little Rascals 17.

I Nut

m easure

·9~!up

Morning

Li ve 6,13; 2 · 25-News 17 .

15 Consumed
16 "You -

Jean Trusell 949·2460

lnstalledwith Pad Free

V Irginia

l 31)- Another World 3,15. Guiding
Light 8, 10; Glgglesnort Ho!el 17.
J oo-General Hospital 6, 13 ; I Love
L ucy 17; Poldark II 20 .
J 30--Cne Day At A Time 8: Joker' s

1

14 Attra r t 10n

991-6191
I&gt;.SSDCIATES
Roger &amp; Donie Turner
742-2474

Casn 11.

6·4s--Good Morning , West
13; 6 : ss--News 13 .
7 oo- Toda~ 3, 15; Good
America 6, 13 . Tuesday
8; Batman 10; Three

Rest less 8, 10.

DOWN

favon te

Henry E Cleland Jr .

I

6· 30-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17 .

»-As The World Turns 8, 10;
2 OD--Doctors 3, IS ; One L 1fe to

profound
40 At that li me

Jerry 5 Pull up 11 Old oath
12 Jud ge's
chamber
13 Dessert

OF

SAVE ·oN .:AKrtf'l
DRIVE AllmE
~VE K LOI

TUESDAY.DECEMBER 11,1979
s,4s--Farm Report 13 ; 5 : ~PTL
Club 13
6 oo-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10;

11 ,5s--News 17.

l9 Become

I Goller,

~4 . 800

$58 ,900 .00.
MANY OTHER PRO PERTIES TO CHOOSE
FROM ... WE HAVE
WHAT YOU WANT OR
CAN GET IT.
REALTOR

ENTER I'H IS[ ASSN

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

ADDITION

ROOM?
In town,
large kit c hen , formal
dining room. library ,
sc r ee ned
porch,
fi replaces , pane li ng ,
ca rp e ting ,
one ot
Pomeroy 's most eleoQant
older homes pr iced far
below market value .

three

~~a.V»d'

Ren

LOTS

iN EWSPAP~R

17;

17; Elec. Co. 20 ,33.
oo-Days of Our Lives 3, IS ; All My
Chi ldren 6.1 3; Young &amp; the

New home abovt 1111
years, 1'11 acre , bui 11 in
kit cht&gt;n , d i ni ng room , 3
bedrooms , 2 baths .
gar age , all c arpeted,
many other f eat ures

NEEDS

1n

on e-dia mond ope ntn,R lS emr-

tal property , J apart ·
ments, always rented ,
large lot, real money
maker, does need some
repair \8,000 .00 .

NEW

pr obl e m s

ently of little Interest South 's

rooms, 3 bedrooms, bay
window . full ba~ment ,
9~rag e,
hardwood
f l oors,
large
lot,

'26.700 .00.
NEW LISTING -

real

Alan· " Th e bidding shown m
the box i s simple and appar ·

LISTING

biddtng

instead of
notrump ."

no problem m pla y. but d1d
biddmg ."

story frame , 5 room
hovse, 2 bedrooms , lot\
of
remodel i ng .

SIO ,OOO 00 .
NEW LISTING

de vote lht s week 's articles to
hands that presented l tlllr or
present

MAIN
POMEI!O.T, 0 .
NEW

Oswald · We are go1ng to

2 : 00- News

1 Os--Movie " Shake Hands with
the Devil" 17: 4 : 3~pen Up 17 .

ne ntly cmTe&lt;:t as 1s the spade
response an d the t w o-notrurnp
r eb1d . North "s raise to th ree
no trump ts also co rrect He
sees that hts king -queen of
dtamonds are golden ca rd s."

.10 9852

7:()()-3' s A Crowd 3; T ic Tac Dough
8; Muppe! Show 6; News 10;
Night Before Christmas 13; Love
Amerlc~n Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavell 20,33.
7 »---That ~~ashville Music 3; Nashvi lle on the Road IS ; Newlywed
Game 6; Joker' s Wild 8; Family ·
Feud 10. 13; Allin The Family 17;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 ()()-Little House on the Prairie
3, 15; 240- Robert 6, 13 ; Peanuts
8, 10 ; Cousteau Odys&gt;ey 20,33;
Falcon Football 17.
8 31)-Raggedy Ann &amp; Andy 8, 10.
9 oo-Movle "She's D"ressed !o Kill "
J. IS . NFL Football 6.13; Mash
8, 10 ; Mark Twain : 20,33 ; Movie
" The Naked Maja" 17 .
9 »---WKRP in Cincinnati 8.10;
IO :OD--Lou Grant 8,10; News 20;
Co llege Basketball 33.
10&lt;10--0ver Easy 20.
II :oo-News 3,8, 10, 15; Last of the
W i ld 17 : Dick Cavett 20 .
I U()- Tonight 3, 15; Harry 0 8;
Mov ie T he Good Earth" 10;
Movie " The Gay Sisters" 17.
12 :oo-News 6,13; 12 : »---FBI 6;
Charlie's Angels 13.
12 40---McMillan &amp; Wife 8; 1 :()()Tomorrow J ; News 15.
40 - News 13.

Bidding proper contracts

fOST L'[,' '10LJ U•6T
-(,~ --

/

W ILL HAUL l i mestone and
gravel. Also , lime haullno
and spread ing . Leo Morr is

DOZER ,

rn KXI I l I XI J

Jumble Book No. 12, contalnlnQ I 10 puul... 11 •w•lllblelor $1.75 po1tp•ld
I rom Jumble , c/o thl• newap•per . 6o• 34, Norwood , N.J . 07Ut . lnelud.e w-our
name, •ddreu. rip code •nd m•k• checks p•y•bl• to N•w•p•perbooh .

WoRE

'l'OU TRAIL l f\16
LJ~ OR 1 H05-E

PUN I&lt;. Sf~

AND

Now arrange lhe arcled leners 10
lorm the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by I he above cartoon

(Answers tomorrow)
Saturdays) Jumbles HO AH O GAUGE BEDBUG SEETHE
Answer Hu w 111ey rna•ntc11n set. ur~ly at !he haunled
fl Ou!;.e - WITH TH E GHOST GUARD

Mlt.JUTE! '1'0Lt
OIDN "T J LI .5-T
5H0~\ UP 8 ':&gt;

Free Estimate

PAl NT I NG

J

Pnntanswerhere

()UR

1971 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3

YEA R S

ME~&gt;/

A&amp;H Upholste ring , ac ross
fro m the T ex a co Stati on in
Syrac use . 992 37 43 or 992
3751

PHONE 742-2003

REGISTERED TWO year

For Sale

d oze r ,

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Ma in sr, Rutland 9 a .m ro

RAWLEIGH

WANT ED TO own and
opera te vend1nq
rout e.
PomNO'I' nn11 \ur roun oing
arl''' Pl easant bus1nes s
H1gh profit •tPm&lt;; Can start
part f•me
Age or e)(
per 1ence nut liTlpo rt ant
Requ 1res ca r and \1495 or
~499 S cash •nve"&gt;tmPn t For
dt•tad~ wr•t(' and •nclud('
your phone number Eaglt•
lndusf r te~ .
75 1S Wayzata
B lvd . M•nneapot ,s. M 1nn

The

Jeffers, day·phone 9'12 7089,
mght phone 992 ·3525 or 992 ·
5232 .

'I'll 7866

BIG AUCT ION every Wed ,
7 pm . Hartford Commun1ty
Center. Har t ford . WV . 4
m• l es above Pomer o y
Mason Bridge

992 2284 .

Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy
Authorize-d Smger Sales
and Service W e sharpen
Scissor s.

w1th black
fin1sh
plus
tubular grate with blower ,
l1ke new ASk.1n9 SIOO Call

Auctions

CHR I ST MAS

makes

all

3785 .

'192 309Q.
COMPLETELY

MACHINE
service.

l o ad er and bac kh oe work :
dump tru cks and l o boys
f o r hire , wi l l haul f ill dirt,
to p soil, limestone and
gravel. C~ll Bob or ROQer

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

THREE

HAY FOR SALE 84 3 7795

STAR

TONY LAMA , Acme and
01nqo
boots,
M i ll er
w&lt;:&gt;s.tcrn wear , H BA r C and
DC sh1r ts . Resistol hats .
Buy t haT cow boy or cowg irl
•n yo ur l•fe th e lat est . n
w es tern boo ts , hats and
sh•rt s
for
Chri stm as
Moun l a•n
Lea th er
and
Gt·ne ral Sto r e. 104 106 W
Union Sf , At hen s. Open t i l
B JO Monday Saturday

bedroom apt
1 kid ac
cepled . N o pets, no drunks
Furn ished, utilities paid
3 1' ? miles south , Mid
d leport , Rt 7, John Shee t s

B_us_iness O_pp'ty
ANTIQUE POCKET wal

VACANCY

Mobile Homes - Sale

5ll5ll

31 61

cnes W1lling to pay top
dollar
Call
1 592 JQ7J
evenings

SEWI N G
Repairs ,

9'12 572 4.

REDUCE SAFE and fast
w•th GoBC'S.C T ab lc1s and
E Vap
' water
pills "
Nelson Drug .

'1439

Payment upon del1ver,.. to
our yard , 7· JOtoJ JOweek
days . Blaney Ha rd wood ~ .
SR 339. Bar low, OH 678

2'100 .

Tyree Blvd . Racine, 0 .
h
;
o
Phone 949 -2111 eveings
after 5 p .m . Weekenas
after 12 noon .
11 19 1 mo .

elnsuJatlon
eStortn Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

o·

WILL DO babys i tting in
m y Syrac use hme, 5 days a
week. . 997 7276 or 992 3423

Paul Ours and Bob

ER. I

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Sales Rep . For
Sundins
Hammond Org.ins

WILL DO nousec teanmg
one day a weeK 949 1b55

FRESH CUT
THIS WEEK
SPRUCE
WHITE &amp;
SCOTCH PINE

] []

TRAIPI"-!6 GWE~DOLY'-1 ' ~ -­

INSULATION

PETE SIMPSON

and

buy WIN POWER CBII 513
788 ·l5ll9.

197J NO VA 2 door , 350 , 4
speed,
good co nd itio n
Good t ire~. must sel l , $1100

p .m .

MLT
(A S . C P
or
equivalent ) for part t1m e
employment at the Jackson
Cou nty Branch of Holzer
Medi cal
Cl inic U d
at
Wells ton , OH Sa lary com
mensurate
with
e)(
per.ence . Ex ce ll ent fri nge
benefits Apply in per son at
th e Pe r sonne l Offi ce of
Ho lzer Cl inic
Ltd . US

PIANOS
Greai Christmas Gift
Both New &amp; Used

HOTPOINT

POWER

Lower Mid
Old Keith
Car Lot
swimming

'EtfHEI'" , , TU4"L~ l WA S

J&amp;L BLOWN

&amp; Famous Name Brand

privat e home for elderly
only . Board , r oom a nd
la u ndry
992 6027 .
No
drtnk 1ng a I towed .

a l1 e-rn ators ·own the best

For Sale in
dl eport , on
Goble used
n ear the
pool .

CAPI'AINEASY

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9'12 -S682

Hammond Oraan&lt;

All types roof work , new
or repair gutters and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleaning and painting.
All _work. guaranteed .
F"ree Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949 -2801
11 1-4 -m o.

Will

CHRISTMAS TREES

on St . Rt

.4·JO ·tfc

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

sale

Now taKing orders
del ive r , 742 ·1056

PEOPLE MAY ~E
AMUSED WHEN
ONC:'5 HELD UP
"THIS WA Y.

W~IT

Auto Sales

CA RRIER N EE DED ;n lhe
Pomeroy area CALL THE
DAILY SE NTIN EL . 991

127 ·1mo

CALL 992 -7544

EXCAVATING,
FOR

LHELEC

mile off Rt. 7 by-p.an
124 toward
Rutland .

MONDAY ,D\:(;EMBI:II10,1t7'

h
-

·~ ·- ·

10

Roofing , gutters , and
downspouts .
Free
E stlmates . All work
guaranteed. 10 years ex ·
perienc'! . Ct111 Athens ,
collect, Gerald Clark
7f7-48S7 or Tom Hoskins
797 -2741.

Hours9· 1 M_, W .• F .
Other times by ippoin1 ment.
107 Sycamore ( Rear
Pomeroy, o.

HAVE

),-----,

~[

14

3891.
FIREWOOD

~

OHIO VALlEY
ROOFING

Services Offered

sa nd, gr~vel, c.!t lc iu m
ch lor ide,
fertilizer , dog
food, and all types of Sdlt.
Excelsior ~a lt Works , Inc .,
E . M ain St ., Pomeroy, 99?·

Sun . &amp; Mon .

1971 AMC HORN ET St at ion
Wagon , 6 c yl , auto , good
tires . Runs good . 992 '1779

Help Wanted

t

\\'t··n· hen· w h t'll \1HI IWPd
ll"' lo r mohih· ho1m· i u
...,, tran&lt;"c . Co m e 1o lht· pro·
ll'~~ionaJ S for I ht' s pt"c iaJ
polil"y 111 !it y our !-.JW~· ific

Located in the A-fr a m e
514 E . Main St .
Pomeroy, Ohio

---~ --

-----Wanted to Bu y_

For
-----

be~~~n~f"~;,g and reservong

hereby reserved and ex
cepted in this transfer

Lost and Found

11\Tr Hl "W 01 ll~t"d
molllh' h o me ~. You can
,.\'(' ll ~t' l ~~·&lt;:t~oua l . rt•nta J
111 nH unw n ·ial i n&lt;.,uran cf?
Cli\T'fil,l!t' ....
Wt· 'JI

2138

POS ITION

FIVE BORDER COll ies, 1
females , J males, black
a nd wtHte
St . Bern ard
type , brown, white. bla c k.
needs home . on farm
Fema l e boxer types , It
tan . Hum ane Soc1ety , 991

the coa and other minera l s
therein with t he right to

heretofore deeded to the
German Pr o testanr Church
of Minersville , Otlio , is

Ytni .V(' ~pt·nt a lot t ,f t im e
.uul llltHtt·y p i c k.in~ ou t t
11111bile h1 inlt' that ntt"t'ls
\"Olll o,pn i l i1 m-et.l~ . Now
l.:!t'\ tlw in-., \rran ct· tu
m ;1td1.

For Rent

with the West 11 ne o
Bear ' s lot to the street run
ning lowards the Ohio
River : menc.e along !:.a1d
Stree t 80 t ~t 10 th e pl ace of

deeded March 121h 1868 to

pay cash or ce rtified check.
for antiQues and col lec
fibles or en tir e estates
Nothing too l arge . Also .
guns , pocKet wa tc hes and
co in co ll ec ti ons . Ca ll 614
767 31 67 or 557 341 1

lnswance.

Featuring:

Clo~ed

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
For Mobile Home

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

L!Jusiness Services
Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

WOOD BURNING
STOVES
FIREPLACE
ADAPTERS AND
ACCESSORIES

ATTE N TION
l iM
POR TAN T TO YO U I Will

Sunday

LAFF - A DAY
Ph 11 1, p r-----~:__..=:._:___:___,

mi ne the same w;tnout in

Ca ll 'I'll '&gt;693

OPENING
TUES., DEC. 11

~fort-

tee! ; then ce sou th farallcl

c umbrance to the surface
and all wavs and r i9 ht of
way itlong any m1ne r al
seam are here by reserved
And being t he sam e land

ning gui tar and trumpet
OpeninQs on M onday 4 00
7 30, starti ng 1st of year .

PAY hig he st pr•ces
possi ble for gold and silver
coi ns , rings , jewelry , et c.
Con ta ct Ed Bur k ett Barber
Shop , Middleport

Noon on Saturday

tM day

of l tce

MUSIC LESSONS . Begin

WANT-AD

Deceased.

CAB

now open 8 a .m .5 p .m ., 7
da,..s a weeK .

NOTICE

MAN, DE-cea sed ,

ELMER

GET TODAY ' S MARKET
. VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER
CO N TACT
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH
POMEROY

MARY CARMAN COFF HELEN

Teets ,

--~---

a . k . a. Ralph R . Carmen ,

RIVERSIDE WHEN YOU
FIREPLACE MEED us.

6260

15 Wonia oc Under

0 J

THE

MEIG S
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 9'12

CHARGES

- PROBATE DIVISION ·
ELIZABETH ANN LUCAS
Administratrix With the
Will Annexed of the Estate
of Ralph R . Carman .

Whose last known

Noti,,.s

Television
Viewing

Unscr amble these tour Jumbles
one lener to each square . 10 for m
four ord1nary words

PUNISHMENT FOR I AZINESS TiiERE IS ALSO THE
SUCCESS OF OTiiERS.-,JULES RENARD

Dawn " 8.
News 17 .

1· 3s-- Mov le " Great Day In the
Morning " 17 ; 2:05--News 13.
3:35- Movle
" Ambush
at
Tomahawk Gap " 17 ; S: 10-Untouchables 17.

�!~'The l'laily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday,

Dec. 10. 1979

Area deaths
OMA WINEBRENNER
Oma Winebrenner, 95, Syracuse.
died Sunday morning at her residence.
Mrs. Winebrenner was born Dec.
:Ill,. 11184 the daughter of the late J . J .
and Eva Singer Roush. She was also
preceded in death by her husband,
Frank Winebrenner, threi! sons ,
Dale, Dick and Dorset.
Mrs. Winebrenner was a member
of the Syracuse Asbury United
Methodist Church, the WSCS and the
ladies aid.
She is survived by four daughters.
Eva Mills, Beaver Falls, Pa .; Viola
Miller and Mildred Davidson , both
of New Brighton, Pa., and Beulah
Ward, Syracuse; two sons, Dana and
Bill Winebrenner both of Syracuse :
one brother, John Roush, New
Brighton; 16 grandchildren, 26 great
grandchildren and SlX great great
grandchildren .
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at the Asbury
United Methodist Church with the
Rev . Harvey Koch officiating.
Burial will be in Snowball Hill
Cemetery . Fiends may call at Ewing
Funeral Home ttus everung from 5
p.m. to8p.m .
RUSSELL SAUNDERS
Russell Saunders, 46, a resident of
Athens, died at Riverside hospital m
Columbus early today
He was born April 2, 193.1, son of
the late Elmer and Lillie SaWiders .

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh .
992 · 5776
Open Daily 9 til s
Open Sunday 1 til s
Poinsettias, Christmas
Cactus, Hanging Baskets,
Foliage Plants.
Featuring:
Monument
Sprays &amp; Candle Ar·
rangments.

Ue was reared m lht• hom e u1 Mrs .

Ollie Oliver, who surv1ves and
resides in GHllipolis .
Two children sumve : Allen Ray
and carolyn Sue, both of Rt. I, Scottown ; one brother and one sister :
Virgil Saunden;, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Maxine Hamilton, California. One
brother. Leo, and one sister,
Kathryn, preceded him in death.
Funeral arrangemen'-'&lt; will be announced by the Willis Funeral
Home , Gallipolis.
MABEL WOOD
Mabel Wood, 85, Rt. I. Ewington ,
died Sunday morning at Holzer
Medi cal Center.
Mrs . Wood was born in Vmton
County , daughter of the late John
He nr y and Vi la Weyand
Strausbaugh. She was also preceded
m death by her husband , Dailey E.
Wood and a brother, Ray
Strausbaugh.
She attended Ohio Uruven;ity , was
a r ellred school teacher and a
tile tong rug weaver .
She was a member of the
Wilkesville Presbyterian Church,
Wilkesville Pythian Sisters, Past
Chiefs of the Pyttuan Sisters,
Wilkesville Grange 2716, and
Wilkesville
Amerian
Legion
AUXJliary.
She is survived by one son , John
W. Wood, Radcliff; two daughters,
Mrs . Paul 1Neva l McElroy,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Leo (Mary
Elizabeth 1Davidson , Rutland , eigtt
grandchildren and seven !(reat grandchildren: two sisters. Marie Steffen, VanPort-Beaver , Pa .. and
Gladys Major , McArthur .
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m . kat the Wilesville
Presbyterian Church with the Rev.
Robert Purtell and the Rev. Kathryn
Dawson officiating. Burial will be in
Castor Cemetery, Pt .Rock, Ohio .
friends may call at the BigonyJordon Funeral Home, Albany
Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. The
body will be taken to the church one
hour prior to services.

r-------------------------1
Letters of opinion are welcomed. Thl'y should be less
than 300 words long 1or subject to reduction by thl' editor I
and must he signed with the sigoet&gt;'s addrl'SS . Names may
be withheld upon publicatiob. Howevl'r, on request,
oaml's will be disclost'd. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

No pay received
Sock it to 'em' Sock it to 'em!
LAugh-In continues in Meigs Local
School District. The latest episode in
this on-going comedy of errors is the
failure to pay teachers for work
done .
No matter who is responsible superintendent, clerk, or board
members - the fact is that a
regularly scheduled pay day for
teachers came and went Friday, and
no official explanation of any kind
was given as to why there were no
checks .
Neither have teachers been told
when - or how much - or lf - they
will be paid. They are simply expected to continue working without
pay in good faith until the powersthat-be decide to prepare and
distribute checks to the peons.
How's that for an attitude of
respect and-(lr cooperation'
A simple statement of the
procedure or policy the superintendent - clerk · board intended to
follow would have been simple ,
human courtesy .
Instead, teachers were unable to
discover what method would be used
to compute paychecks.
Money that is legally and morally
due the teachers is being withheld,
while (perhaps lengthy l grievance
or legal maneuvers are being conducted to get it. Meanwhile, the
teachers' money can be drawing interest- but not for teachers'
Teachers who have long been
without income are expected to hang
in there awhile longer until ... until
what' The moon is in the right
phase'
We haven't been told "until what "
or when. Would you work under
those conditions'
In an earlier letter I commented
that teachers must, by nature of
their jobs, be patient creatures.
So, here we go again : be patten~
tum the other cheek, wait without
complaint, don 't cause problems.
forgive and forget, and for goodness'
sake don't misconstrue anything as
a reprisal for strike activities.
Be patient, and laugh along with
the latest Laugh-In, a program

which began here during the summer and is now going into reruns.
Sock it to 'em! Excuse me - this is
where I came in . - Dorothy J .
Oliver , 213 Union Ave ., Pomeroy,
Ohio.

HOSPITAL

"iEW~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions -Ralph
Coleman, Gallipolis; Paul Wilson,
Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges-Jack Ginther, Eric Hart, Basil Haynes, Mae
Holter, Nonnan Lehew, Anna Alley .
Sunday Admissions-Eileen Smith,
Syracuse; Albert Cadle, Pomeroy ;
Jack Neff, Middleport : William
Mowery, Pomeroy; Roxie Marcinko, Reedsville .
Sunday Discharges-Raymond Little, Ralph Coleman, Charles Schad,
Lena Nesselroad, Paul Wilson, Anil&lt;l
Newhouse .
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
David Michael Hindy, 41, Mid·
dleport, and Patricia Ann Roush, '!1 ,
Middleport .

DAMAGES SOUGIIT
A suit in the amount of $21,000 has
been filed in Meigs County Common
PLeas Court by Marie L. Caruthers,
Middleport, against James R. Johnson, Baltimore, Md.
The suit IS for injuries and
damages as a result of an acc1dent
on April :Ill, 1978 in the village of Middleport.

- : -: -:::. : -:-:-:-:-:-:· :·: ·:·: = : : : =::;::::t: :::;: ;: ;:;:::: :: ::~:;:;:;:; :;:;:;: ;: ; :;:: :::: :::::

Man's body
identified
The body of a man discovered
early Saturday lying submerged in a
water-filled ditch in front of the
Federal Mogul Corp., 21110 Eastern
Avenue, has been identified as that
of Jessie Plantz, 39, Kanauga .
P011itive identification was made
late Saturday by Anna Mae Combs,
Ravenswood, W.Va., the sister of the
deceased. Combs was contacted
following the establislunent of A tentative identification made by
Gallipolis City Police from police
records. Two initials, 'J.P.' found on
a 191'&gt;9 Kyger Creek High School
graduation ring were instrumental
in making that preliminary identification.
As of this morning, the exact
cause of death had yet to be deter·
mined . Gallia County Coroner Dr.
Donald Warehime was scheduled to
perform an autopsy today .
No foul play is suspected in connection with Plantz's death. City
police said Saturday all available
evidence indicated be had walked into the four-foot deep ditch, feU and
couldn't get out.
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emer~encv SaUJ1rl
answered a call to 244 \'z N. Second
Ave ., at 2:28p.m. Sunday for JaCk
Neff who was taken to Veterans
Memorial H011pital.
MEETS TONIGHT
The Southern Local Board of
Education will mei!t at 7:30p.m. this
evening in the tugh school cafeteria.
MEETING CANCElLED
A special meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education scheduled
for 7:30 this evening, primarily to
adopt a revised school calendar, has
been cancelled.

~

~

CHRISTMAS PARTY SET

International observers will see hostages

cbuct

of dlowen or Wedlleluy. Flllr 'lbaradlly. A clwlce of abowen
Frld8y. flllba from the th Wedaeaday 1o &amp;be mid JIB lo low too
ThiU'IIIIIy ud rrtuy. Lowa 1rom
the so. lo 111'0111111 to "edl"'llly'
111 &amp;be ZOo 'lbuncl8y ud from &amp;be
upper 1011 to &amp;be low JIB Friday.

num•

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Foreign
MinJ.olter Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said
today international observers will
see the American ho&lt;rtages in the occupied U.S. Emhlwy "in the very
near future . "
"We
going to have in ·
dependent international observers
to go and visit the priooners in, I
hope, a very short time and alterwardll I hope that visits will be
(made) regularly," Ghotb28deh told
a new11 conference.
The news conference was for
newspaper and magazine reporters,
not wire services, but The
Allsociated Press obtained a tape
recording of the questions and an-

ar"

;.;.;:;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

SANTA VISITS
The Ohio Eta Phi Sorority Is spon-

soring visits fr001 Santa. The
schedule Is a• follows : Tuesday,
Syracuse and Racine; Wednesday,
Pomeroy, (in town) ; Thursday,
Flatwoods and Rock Springs area;
Friday, Middleport.

swen.
''One visit certainly is agreed

DINNER TONIGHT

upoo, and it will be done I hope in the

The Rutland Garden Club will
have their annual dinner this
evening at 6 p.m. at Craw's
Restaurant .
Following dinner members are to
meet at the home of Mrs. C. 0. Chapman and Elizabeth Arm Webster at
7:30 p.m. for their annual holiday
party .

very near future," Ghotb28deh said.

I offer a lOla! poogodiil 10 .....
protoctyour f""""'t.-y of .......
and build ftnondal MCUIIty lot !/OWl
r&lt;llrcme]ll veon.

c.ll I'I'IC lot~

.uE swm

~iddle

orJ, 0.

992-+of~ ·

qlltt f.1nn Ut tnO

Accident Au\lrlnct

CompanT
......... t l

!tJfl'lll

Ottu

CHRISTMAS TREES

BRADFORD'S

__,
1

~

I
~
I
li Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin onto At. i
~ 681, go 4 mi. to Milepost 13 . Turn south on gravel roild, I
U ll/ 2 miles to grove.
I
li WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS 10 TIL DARK I
FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

Pomeroy, Ohio

and revolutionary guards through
America . He disgraced America in
the weekend lor control at the 10081
the world. He mobilized M011lems
radio station and other government
against America .... The nation of
buildings.
America should know that they
Khomelni 's forces regained con·
should not vote for Carter because
trot of the radio station Monday 8lld
Carter has betrayed America ."
broadcast government Jli'OIII'IIIII
Khomeini
also accused
and pnHOiomelni slogans. Tehran
"American spies" of fomenting the
Radio said a "group of armed
rebellion, now in its sixth day, by the
people " tried to attack the statloo
Azari Turko, the largest of Iran's
but were repulsed and 72 were
ethnic minorities, in Tabriz, the
Reporters in 'l'llbrlz said
arrested.
it.al of the northwestern province
rival
groups
demonstrated in the
of AZel-liarjan and Iran's third
city
but
they
saw
no attack oo the
largest city.
station.
cks on the
Angered by mob
Khomelni sent a peace delegatloo
Qom home of thell' sp ·tual leader
to
Tabriz headed by Finance
Ayatollah Mohammad ShariatAbolhassan Bani Sadr, but
Minister
Madari and by the fa lire o{J
leaders
of
the the Turks' Moelem
Khomeinl 's new Islamic constitution I
Party,
refused to meet with
People's
to grant them autonomy, the Turks
them.
The
party's
three...tory
seized control of Tabriz last Thur(UJnunuea on page 10 l
sday and battled govenunent troops

•

enttne
TUESDAY. DECEMBER II.

197~

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Retiring clerk-treasurer
•
•
gives encouragmg reports

L-~~~-~-~~~~-~~~-~---··-'

Pickens, left, and Hennan London hold a few of the
strands of lights from which bulbs were taken . The
Mayor indicated that identification of the persons in volved Will be made soon

VANDALISM - More than 125 Christmas light
bulbo were taken from Christmas trees located at the
Syracuse Municipal park . Syracuse Mayor Eber

Two encouraging financial reports
were given and a new clerktreasurer was appointed Monday
night when Middleport Village Council met m regular session.
Gene Grate, retiring clerktreasurer, reported that for many
years he has been able to invest excess funds in the sanitary sewage
collection system in accordance
with a pian that any money left over
would be held in escrow to pay off indebtedness of the town.
Grate said be had purchased certificates of deposit foc the village
over the yeal'!l and the interest has
accumulated to $113,000 to be added
to the principal of $100,000 to be applied to village indebtedness .
Grate was tughly corrunended by
council memben; for Ills handling of
the funds.

Nation's retail sales up,
economy picture brighter
~

,...

·.. .

i

.

; . , : .-A~ ;.~.~~·

'

.

~ (j '•,..~'!'&lt;

-;•/.
. .''J;i
.r . . ,,,......"
~

~

'

Second suit filed
CINCINNATI (APl - A second
damage suit, this one seeking
$11.25 million, was filed Monday
in connection with the rock con·
cert stampede Dec . 3 at River·
front Coliseum in which 11 died .
A class action suit for the 11
dead and 12 injured was filed
Dec. 6 in the same court .
The Hamilton County Coroner
said the deaths occured from
asphyxiation caused by the
crowd stepping on the fallen con certgoel'!l .
David A. Chicarelli
of
Franklin.filed the latest suit on
behalf of John and Betty Snyder.
also of Franklin , paren'-'&lt; of
Phillip Snyder, 2(), one of the
dead.

Chances slim

Member FDIC

at y

lor'lbcl vS
Fazrl"rr

OOLUMBIA, S.C. !AP ) - The
state Supreme Court turned down
a stay of execution Monday for
confessed killer Joseph C. Shaw,
who is scheduled to die Friday.
Shaw had asked the court to
tool! into whether he had been
well represented by his lawyers.
But the court - without comment
- turned down his request foc a
special attorney and a stay .
Shaw was sentenced to death
two years ago, after pleading
guilty to the killings of Carlotta
Hartness, 14, and Tommy Taylor,
!7, in October 1977. He is
scheduled to die in the electric
chair on Friday .

Farmers
Bank

•

made a personal attack on Presidert
Carter as the outcome of the
rebellion in northwest Iran against
his authoritv remained uncertain .
" We are not frightened of
economic blockades . These
brainless superpowers ... think that
now they have such power aU the
wocld , all the universe should follow
them, " Khomelni said Mooday in
response to carter's threat of more
severe economic measures against
Iran if the :;o Americans held
hostage at the U.S. Embassy
Tehran since Nov. 4are not freed .
''America should remove Ca r
from its political scene," the
religious leader of the Ir ·an
revolution asserted in a s
h to
Moslem students at tus h dquar tersinQom.
"He was a ba president for

tJ'e la-I'IIDCe

Stay ordered

Serving the area's banking needs since 1904.

Meanwhile, the official Pars news
agency reported today that a
revolutionary guard was shot dead
behind the embassy last Sunday
morning and said the "martyred "
guard was buried in his home town
in the Sennan central province . Pars
said only that the man was killed by
"an unknown person " during a
change of guard .
ABC News reported the Carter administration had "signaled" that if
the hostages were not released
within seven to 10 days, the United
States would launch an economic
campaign to bring down Iranian
strongman Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelni. But a spokesman for the
Stale Deparbnent 's task force on
Iran denied the report.
Khomeini on Monday defied the
United States to blockade Iran and

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 168

(USPS 145-960)

..

We were around when
the Ohio River Electric
Railway and Power
Company operated
a street car line
•
In Meigs County.

"I hope that visits will be regularly
fallowed) . I can 1 guarantee that
now.''
Among the international in termediaries ·in Tehran is Harold
Sclunidt Degl'lllleek of the International Red Croos, who saw IS of
the hostages earlier in the five-week old siege.
U.N. emissary Zuhair Yamin
arrived in Tehran Monday and Sri
Lankan Foreign Minister Shahul
Hameed, who already has acted as
an intermediary , is reportedly back
in Tehran.
Ghotb28deh said attempl-'l were
being made by Iranian officials to
assemble an international grand
jury as soon as possible to in vestigate Iran's grievances, including crimes charged against the
dePOSed shah.

e

Aak . . rburl

,~~~~~------------~PPA

~

The
Third
Wednesday
Homemakers Club, Syracuse, wW
hold its Chrislmas party Wednesday, Dec . 12, at 6 p.m . in the an·
nex of the First United Presbyterian
Church.

EXTENDED FORECAST
WedDNuY lbrol&amp;b Frida)', •

WASHINGTON I API
Congressional leaden; are telling
the White House that chances of
enacting a suggested Slkent-agallon gasoline tax range from
slim to nonexistent .
Top adminlru'ation economic
olficials, in a closed-door meeting
Monday with House Speaker
Thomas P . O'Neill , reportedly
li.!ted the w as one of the options
the president has under serious
consideration as he prepares his
19111 agenda, sources said.
Administration economic officials see the tax as a way of forcing conservation of gasoline by
making the fuel much more expensive at the pwnp.

WASHINGTON (AP l The
nation's economy demonstrated further resilience in November, further
confounding predictions of a downtum.
Total sales at the nation's retail
sto""' rose 1.8 percent to rn billion
in November, wiping out the 1. 7 per·
cent drop in the previous month, the
C&lt;&gt;mmerce Department said Monday.
The data on retail sales - an important component of the economy
- came on the heels of a Labor
Department report showing that the
nation's unemployment rate fell
from October 's 6 percent to 5.8 percent last month.
"You certainly don't get a picture
of an economy that is folding up
around us," said William Cox, a
senior Commerce Department
economist. "It seems as though this
business expansion has nine lives,
and I am not sure which one we are
on."
The nation's output fell sharply in
the period from April through June ,
leading many economis'-'&lt; in and out
of government to conclude that a
recession had begun. Then the
econ&lt;my rebounded strongly from
July through September.
Despite the latest good news,
many analysts still predict the
economy will show little or no
growth in the fourth quarter and that
output will continue to weaken mto
1900.
·'There are some signs of strength,

Southern board buys 2 buses
The Southern Board of Education
meeting Monday night agreed to
purchase two new school buses
which are expected to be ready for
use during the 1~1 school year .
The two International buses were
purchased from the John Gibson
Motor City, Athens, and the bodies
from Edwin H. Davis and Son,
langsville.
The board approved the speech
class visiting Rio Grande College
and renewed the distnct 's contract
with OVAL foc bookmobile service
to the schools. DPPF funds were
used for this contract renewal .
The board discussed the need foc a
football coach-English teacher employe and is taking awlications,
hopefully, for ooe person to fill the
1)00.

The organizatiooal sess1on was set

•

but I don't want to try to call the
(fourth) quarter at this stage," Cox
said.
One sign of weakness showed up in
government figures Monday on the
sales of new one-family houses,
which fell 1.8 percent in October to
an annual rate of724,000 units.
The latest figure was nearly 20
percent below the 900,00().unit rate ri.
October 1978, the report said.
The falloff in home sales had been
expected in the wake of Federal
Reserve action Oct. 6 to tighten
credit. The central bank's move has
pushed mortgage tnterest rates to
record levels around the nation,
discouraging home purchases.
The Commerce Department
report also showed that the median
sale price of homes sold in October
was $61,900, down 7 percent from
September.
"The last time we had a drop of
that magnitude was from May to
June in 1970," said Dale R. Jacobson, a C&lt;mmerce Deparbnent
analyst.
Price declines often occur during
tight -money or
recessionary
periods, such as happened in 1970,
because people are forced to lower
the asking price of their homes to attract buyers.
But Jacobson and Jack Carlson,
economist for the National
Association of Realtors, warned
against reading too much into a
single month's ststistics.
Carlson said the figures probably

•

for 7 p.m . on Jan . 2 with a special
meeting at 7:30p.m. to approve temporary appropriations .

Free parking
offered
Middleport merchants with the
cooperation of village officials are
again offering free parking to shoppers in the busmess section this
holiday season,
Village CoWicil Monday night approved the freeing of the meters
from now through Dec. 24. Coven;
have been placed over the meters. In
exchange for the free parking . mt&gt;rcMnts will pay the village $300.

reflected the fact that "homes in the
lower price range are selling and
homes in the high price bracket,
those above $75,000, are not selling
as well."
He added that the Realtors expect
the median sales price of previously
occupied homes to increase this year
more than last year 's record 13 .5
percent.

Dexter man

Also during the meeting Gra re
presented Willis Anthony, chainnan
ol the town's board of public affairs,
with records showing that the town
has $107,4'll.ll to be used foc the construction of a new water storage
tank. While that amount would not
build the tank it will provide a good

start.
Council took special action to
establish a special water storage
tank fund
Grate said this money had been
accumulated over the years through
a plan suggested by the late John
Zerkle, who was mayor.
Though the plan money not needed
to make the payment on the village
owned water system was set aside to
accumulate the over one hundred
thousand dollars for the tank . Grate
made the presentation on behalf of
the late Mayor Zerkle.
Grate was again conunended for
the measure which provided for the
accumulation of funds.
On behalf of the village olfictals,
Councilman Dewey Horton presented Grate with a gift and spoke
highly of Grate's dedication to the
interesUl of the town and the people
over the years.
BUCK APPOINTED
During the meeting, council appointed Jon Buck of Middleport as
new clerk-treasurer of the town
beginning in January.
Buck holds a bachelor of science in
business adrninistra lion from Ohio
University and Is employed with the
Gallia-Meigs Community Action

Pay problems remain today
Problems still remained today
because the Meigs Local teachel'!l

given credit
A Dexter man is credited with
preventing a major Conrail train
derailment near Dexter Sunday afternoon.
Receiving praise of the railway
and personnel on the train was
Carroll Tyler who disc overed a
broken rail in the track near his
home.
The break was such that undoubtedly would have caused the 91
car train to derail.
A variety load including lumber,
chemicals and other articles was
being carried on the train and there
were a number of empty coal cars.
Livmg close to the tracks, Tyler
was knowledgeable enough to know
that a train would be coming
through Sunday afternoon and the
direction from which it would travel.
He stood for about three hours
waiting for the train . The train
engineer stopped at Tyler's violent
red cloth flagging.
A couple of years ago, Tyler 's
home burned down and residents
chipped in not only financially, but
physically to rebuild him a one-room
house in the Dexter area .
Tyler, not having a phone, could
not telephone any warning about the
broken track and could not leave to
use a telephone at a distsnce away
for fear that the train would c&lt;me in
his absence .

WINNING NUMBER
CLEVELAND (APl - Here is the
number picked Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily number
drawing : 783.
The lottery reported earnings of
$1&lt;12,512 Monday in Its daily nwnber
game . The computer tabulations
showed that $308,905.!i0 was
wagered . Winners will receive
$126,393 .!i0.

Agency . Council cancelled the next
meeting, scheduled foc Dec. 24, and
last night, as a result, WM the final
meeting for Grate as clerk·
treasurer.
Council discWISed the collection ~
trash in the conununity 8lld agreed
foc the time being that only two
licenses will be- issued because it is
believed that more licenses mlglt
cut down the income of those picking
up the trash and end up putting all
collectors out of business. The
Manley family was on hand to
discuss the matter of licenses with
the council as was another collector
who wishes a license. Council will
discuss the matter at the next
meeting.
Council heard the reading of bida
on leasing and purchasing a pickup
trucil and a dwnp truck. These btda
were submitted by Pat Hlll Ford, the
Athens Trucking Equipment Co.,
John Gibson Motor City, Athena, and
the Genesis Leaaln&amp; Corp., Columbus. Copies of the blda weft made
and will be studied before a sped.al
meeting at 6:30p.m. Friday.
Clerk-ueasw"er Grate reported
that a check for $22ll .85 has been
received from Pointview Cable
Television Co. for its yearly
payment on the franchise . A report
was given showing a two cent a
gallon increase on all grades of
gasoline by Ashland Oil.
A communication from the Ohio
Municipal League was read indicating the village may expect
(Continued on page 10)

14
~ay.a'til

Qlqrt.atman

Sheriff
•
Issues
•
warning
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports his department has
received complaints from several
area fire chiefs that fire trucks ,
wtule responding to calls, are being
followed by motorists.
Motorists then pari&lt; their vetucles
near the fire scene causing traffic
problems that could result in
delaying other deparbnent trucks
from reaching the scene .
Sheriff Proffitt warns that state
law prohibits vehicles following
emergency or public safety vehicles
closer than 500 feet. The section also
prohibi'-'&lt; parking in the vicinity of a
fire or emergency scene unless
directed to do so by a police officer .

did not received any pay last Friuy.
The issue is highly complicated
and controversial, it is reported.
The teachers were on strike for
almost 10 weeks and last Friday WM
the first pay date since their return
to their classrooms.
The teachers association was to
have held a meeting Monday
evening but did not have a quorum.
Some of the teachers are the high
school are wearing black arm bands
of mourning "over their money'~, a
teacher said .
Meantime, a special meeting of
the district's board of education
scheduled for last night was can·
celled.
District Superintendent
David Gleason said the morning that
he has asked for a committee of
teachel'!l to meet with him this
evening to discUSil the matter with
the hope that SOOlething can be
worked out so some immediate action can be taken for teachers to
receive a partial payment now 8lld
another partial payment before
Olristmas .

EXTENDED FORECAST
'lbursuy tbrougb S.lm'lllly,
fair Thursday. A dwlee ol
sbowen Frluy ud Sat.nbly.
Hlgba from &amp;be upper 3tl lo 1lle
upper IIIII 'lbiU'IIIIIy, wU1IIlll&amp; lo
&amp;be 4011o low SO. S.turdloy. Lon
from &amp;be mid 1ee111 to &amp;be low ZO.
euty 1blll'ld8y. rlalq to &amp;be llpper !01 to mid 3tl S.tanlll)'.

Weather
1'liming colder with showers likely
tonight. Lows between 35 and 40.
Colder with showers likely Wed-

nesday rooming and beccmlng
mostly cloudy in the afternoon, with
nearly steady or slowly f8lllng tem·
peratures.

,

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