<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15605" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15605?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T13:13:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48727">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/4080d2b3f9d598949f52eeb618a690fb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>143db9aa72e5ae7f73044cdedbc6aaaa</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50023">
                  <text>-.
10-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Tuesday, Oct.

More gove~11m~nt
servi~es sought

,•.·

·:·:

WEDDINGS CAN RUIN FRIENDSHIPS
RAP :
J erry and I grew up together and our parents are good
friends - or were, until they started planning our wedding.
When we told them we were engaged they were superpleased. Right away they decided they'd go in together on a
big, sit-down dinner wedding bash. Ever since, our lives have
not been calm. ·
Each mother wants a different menu. They are bickering
over the nwnber of guests, the kind of wedding cake, music,
flowers, you name it. Mom and Jerry 's mother, even .though
they're like sisters. compete a Jut, ami our Dads arc gelling in"
to the act too . It's still fou r months to go, and ah·eady Jerry
and I are nervous wrecks . The parents forget it's supposed to
be our day, and we wanted something simple. When we tell
them that, they get their feelings hurt . As in , " What would people think if you had a chintzy wedding ?"
What would you suggest 7 - TERRY AND J E RRY
DEAR TERRY AND JERRY :
As a non-believer in big, posh weddings, I'd suggest you two
make a dale with your minister, invite dose relatives, and
have a simple ceremony in his study. Your respective mothers
may even feel relieved ~ after they recover from nearcoronaries. -HELEN

TERRY .A NDJERRY :
If Mom 's way is just too simple, why don't you make your
own wedding plans and slick to them, no matter how the
parents howl ? It's your day, No one should take it awaY from
you, even though they think they 're doing you a favor. -SUE
DEMONSTRATES
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
JAWS OF LIFE-Mason Fire
I thought I'd be a "liberated woman " and ask a guy \o go to a Chief Ross 'Roush, front,
disco with me. He made up some .l ame excuse, very embar- demonstrates this new piece
rassed. We're pretty good friends, but ' now we avoid each of emergency equip.menl
other. And I feel just plain crushed .
. designed to free a trapped
Now I understand what fellows go through ellery lime they person from a vehicle. The
~~out a new girl. One rejeclion was enough to finish me . Yet
males are supposed to keep right on trying. No wonder a lot of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
guys don't date. I wouldn 't either if l always had to take the inAdmitted - Paul Shuler,
itiative. -FEELS FOR THEM
Portland;
Edna Evans,
DEARFFT:
Middleport
;
Debbie Eynon,
Your letter shows again why in today's world, it may be
Pomeroy; William Wilson,
"okay" for a girl to ask a boy for a dale, but most girls won't.
Middleport.
Centuries of conditioning have geared us to be the ref users, nul
Discharged - Deborah
the refused . - .SUE
,
Ridgway, Betty Hammons.

situations throughout the
Hurat Jaws of Ufe was
county. Looking on, left to
purchased through matching
right : Commissioner Micheal
county and state funds. While
Bob Hockenberry,
Whalen,
the Mason Department wiU
keep and maintain the tool, it .. who is president of the Apwill be used for emergency palachian Emergen c y

Medical ·services Board of
DireCtors ; Commissioner
William Rardin; and Mason
Mayor Fred Taylor, who is
also emergency services
director for the county.

~--A~e~-D;;atiis-1

Logan teachers· settle,

OAPSE members still out
di;;pute .
The students, most of them
Negotiations between re- seniors, established the camp
presentatives of the board Monday about half a block
and OAPSE were scheduled from their teachers' strike
for today. ,
h~adquarters.
Ron Bawnan, president of
The students , indicating
the local OAPSE chapter,
they are the victims of the
said 17 - 13 language and · strike, said they will continue
the protest around the clock
four money issues
until teachers return to work.
remained to be resolved
Court action was expected
before today's meeting.
The teacher's &lt;ditract pro- soon, possibly today, 01! a
vides a base salary of $9,100 request by the Painesville
and sets forth procedures for Township Board ol Education
negotiations when the pact for contempt citations
against teachers refusing a
expires.
back to work order.
Elsewhere,
strikes
The board also wants
continued
today
in
negotiations, which broke off
Painesville Township-and the
Monday, t 0 be contingent on
Lorain
County
Joint
teachers returning to work.
Vocational School District.
The teachers walked out
Meanwhile , about two
dozen Painesville Township
Sept. 27 in a fight over wages
and working conditions and
High School students have set
up a camp to protest their
have stayed out despite a
court ruling against tbeir job
school system's 31K!ay-&lt;&gt;ld
teacher strike.
action .
Teachers in the Lorain
County Joint Vocational
School District at Oberlin
went on strike one week ago
in a dispute over salary,
fringe benefits, dismissal
policies and retroactive pay.
All school districts ln
Lorain County, except the
city of Lorain, send students
to the vocational school.
going Into the Mall

By
United
Press
International
The Logan Board of Education and the Logan Education
Association
have
unanimously ratified a new
contract, but the state's
longest school strike h
history continued today.
LEA
President
Bill
Parrigin said teachers would
man picket lines again today
in supp&lt;rl of striking nonacademic
personnel,
members of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees.
Parrigin said negotiators
for the board and the LEA
reached
a
tentative
agreement on the new twoyear pact Monday'and it was
approved by both sides in
meetings a few .hours later.
The teachers in the 4,100. students system walked out
August 29th in a contract:

SPRAWUNG FACilJTY - The Sentinel camera was unable to pick up the entire
construction picture of the new nursing borne facility in Meigs County. The large H-shape
complex will c~tain 28,000 feet of floor space.
PRODUCTION SHUTDOWN
TEHRAN, Iran (UP!) - A
general strike against the
shah today completely shut
down Iran's $20 blllion-a-year
oil industry, which supplies
both the United States and the
Soviet Union with fuel, newspapers reported.
The shutdown was total, the
Kayhan newspaper reported.
Major oil weDs in southern
Iranian fie lds stopped
producing crude and the
world's largest integrated
refinery at Abadan has

MORE THAN
$ ·1 30,000.00
·~·

Will be

Monday, October 30, 1978
To Our 1978 Christmas
Club Members to help provide .
them with a Worry-Free

FUNDS APPROVED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Controlling Board
Monday approved the release
of $1.7 million for construction of an office building

in Marietta for the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services.
The bureau said slightly
over $1 million of the money
wil_l be taken from funds
planned lor a similar olfice in
Painesville. Those BES
facilities will continue to he
leased.
Another $307,561 will be
transferred from funds intended for an office building
in Findlay, where the cost
can be reduced, a spokesman
said.

~------..

Holiday Season.

~R,~

,...--JOIN ~
OUR
'79

Open Your New Accounts
· As of October 31,1978
Walk-Up Teller Window
And Auto Teller Window

M~e~--------------------Phone'-----~-----------Type of Entry_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Please complete and mail to Candy Ingels, in care of
Ingels Furniture Store, N. Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio
45760.
ceased
refining
products, it said.

most

ABORTIONS CONSIDERED
WASIIINGTON (UP!) The inflanunatory issue of
abortions for minors will be
considered once again by the
Supreme Court this . session.
The high court agreed
Monday to review the constitutionality
of
a
Ma~achusetts law requiring
unmarried girls under 18 to
obtain · consent from their
parents or a judge before
having an abortion.
The court's review follows
a 1976 ruling in which it held
unconstitutional a Missouri
statute containing a " blanket
rule" requiring parental
consent for minor daughters
to obtain abortions.

L:ili1ens l'ational
••aLEI'OkT
01110

"'n·•-•

•' .y., .

'·
Member F.D.t.C. Deposits Insured to $4~.000.00.

LAFF- A- DAY

"Let's get out of here! The
MENUS cost a dollar and a

ELBERFELD$

hal£."

1976

CADI~

Full Power

Diamonds total 1 ct.

Special Price
•

Set

Rent o BLUE UJSml' slmtpooer

10 got me !ICMlbing oction you .
need to k&gt;osen and till out

ground-it dl~ ond.grine. And use
BLUE WS1RE shampoo to got
·
yout COTpeiS brigllt. cteon ond

ELDORADO

RENT only $2.50 Ptrdoy

992-2920

'9700
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll LlkoOurQuolity
Woy 'of Doing Bualnoas ,

· Everything you cou ld ask for
in a bulky sweater-jacket!
Space-dye cab le knit cardigan of
100% Acrylic : convertible collar, front-tie
belt, two patch pockets, cuffed sleeves.
Grey combination and beige combination.

Sizes S,M,L

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342

PDmoroy
Opltl Evonlnga '1116 :00
TitS p.m. Sat.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Wblte HOUle Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UPI ) - President,Carter today ordered tbe
Treasury Department and the Federal ·Reserve Board to
implement a series of moves to halt the damaging decline of
!h~ dollar.

Officials said tbe Treasury and the board would move
immediately "to strengthen tbe dollar" and to "counter contintllng domestic inflationary pressures."
The board said it would:
-Approve a 1 percentage point Increase in the discount rate
at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from B'h to 9'h
percent, effectively immediately. The discount rate is tbe rate

charged member banks when they borrow from tbeir district
Federal Reserve Bank.
- Establishment of a supplementary reserve requirementin addition to present member bank reserve requirements equal to 2 percent of time deposits in denominations of $100,000
c.- more.
·
.
-Increases in the boatd's reciprocal currency (swap)
arrangements with the central banks of West Germany, Japan
and SWitzerland from $7.6 billion to $15 billion, and activation
of the swap arrangement with the Bank of Japan ..
Carter told reporters at ti-.e White House, "Tbe continuing
decline in the exchange value of the dollar is clearly not
warranted by the fundam·ental economic situation. That decline threatens economic progress at home and abroad and the

success of our anti-inflation program."
" As a ... step in the anti-inflation program, it is now
necessary to act to correct the exctlSsive decline in the dollar
which has recently occurred," the president said .
"Therefore, pur$uant to my request that strong action be
.taken, the Department of the Treasury and the Federal
Reserve Board are today initiating measures in both tbe
domestic and international monetary fields to assure tbe
strenth of the dollar."
. Treasury Secretary Michael Blumentbal said that in addition to the domestic measures being taken by tbe Federal
Reserve, " The United States will, in cooperation with tbe
governments and central banks of Germany and Japan and tbe
Swtss national bank, intervene in a forceful and c""rdinated

Levy passage urged,
road problems aired

,

Marauder

BY NED TE[W(O
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!)
- Arab foreign ministers
today debated a compromise
proposal on dealing with
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat while countering U.S.engineered peace moves in
the Middle East.
The sharply divided Arab

• •
participate

I_.J~r.....~~.-e_w_
. ._or_ld_To_d_a_y_
Merger hearing concludes

Governor's fund to be used

Wellston
residents
irritated

·· be voted upon Nov. 7 will be published in the final two Issues of
; the local papers prior to election day.
·
Purpose o1 this policy is to assure that no charges or
• 1

WELlST6N,Ohlo (UPI) A group of Jackson County
residents said Tuesday they
would begin a petition ~ive
to stop the dumping of
industrial wastes in the
county by a Houston, Texas,
firr.l .
Representatives
of
Browning-Ferris Industries
of Houston met with concerped citizens in Wellston
Tuesday night and said' they
had nothing to lear about
dumping the industrial
wastes from various area

sources.
BEAUTIFUL WEATHER - Horsemen at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds are taking advantage of the
beautiful faD weather in getting yearlings into training for .
I!I!XI summer's racing program. One of them is Ed
Humphrey, Rock Springs, pictured with his yearling,

(:ralg Bowman of Lake
Charles, La ., vice president
of the firm's chemical
services division, and A.J .
Kennard of Houston , a
company engineer and vice
president of the firm' s liquid
(Continued on page 12)"

compromise plan , as printed
by Beirut's conserva tive AI
Anwar newspaper, reflected
a victory foc the hard-line
camp led by Syria, without
completely antagonizing
Saudi Arabia - the Arab
world 1S arch mocl er ate and

bankroller .
The newspaper said the
pla
n stressed the Palestinian
ministers
meeting
in
question
was the core of the
Baghdad sought the last East
conflict, rejected
Middle
minute compromise plan of
the
Camp
David
accords and
action to present to a summit
condemned
Sadat
's policy .
meeting Thursday called to
The compromise, the paper
counter the Camp David
said , also stressed the Arab
initiative.
the compromise wa s cha racter of Jerusalem 1
worked out in a five-h our ca lled for greater financial
or
Arab
meeting
late
Tuesday support
between the representatives .. confrontation " states, and
of Syria, Iraq, the Palestine
Liberation Organization,
Kuwait, Jordan and Tunisia .
The six were entrusted with
boiling down tbe existing
Arab differences on Egypt's
peace initiative into a
"unified plan of action"
Dr. April B. Magnussen, a
acceptable
to
Arab
in
Inte r nal
moderates and hard-liners, sp ecialist
Medicine, ha s joined the staff
diplomats said.
draft
of
the of Holzer Clinic Ltd., acThe

agreed on a

~~temporary"

tr ansfer of Arab League
headquarte rs from Cairo to
Tu nis.
But the French-Language
L'Orient-Le J our reported
from Baghdad the moderates
were prevailing .
Arab diplomats noted the
AI Anwar version of tbe
comprom ise fell short of
reported Syrian calls for
categor ical expul sion of
Egypt from the Arab League ,
breaking of all poli t ical ,
. economic and trade ties with
the Sad at regime and the
application of sanctions
against it because of its peace
overtures with the Jewish
state.

Dr. April Magnussen
joins clinic staff

Arrests solve
Mayor
coal firm B&amp;E urges

hand will

, statements will be published without adequate opportunity for
,refuting such charges, or statements.
Friday's paper (Nov. 3) will be the last day lor letters on
- -all election Issues and individual races. Letters Should be in the
banda o1 the editorial department no later than 5 p.m. on
'rhunday, Nov. 2, for Friday's publication.
Letters o1 opinion are welcomed. They should, however, be
' lesllhan 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by lhl!
•-'ediiiJr) and must be signed 'with the signee's address .and
telephone nwnber. Names may be withheld u~ request.
However, 00 request, names will be dlaclosed. Letter should be
~ .Ia ~ lute, addresaing issues, not personalities.

manner in tbe amounts required to correct the situation ."
Carter said the international aspects of the program have
been developed with other major goverrunents and central
banks, "and they intend to cooperate fully with the Unitud
States in attaining our mutual objectives."
Blwnenthal said, "The fact is this foreign exchange situation
that this program is designed to correct has gotten out of hand.
It must end and will end.
. " The dollar's deterioriation already has lead to a rise in
unport competitive pr ices which further fuels inflation and
per petuates a vicious cycle. The image of tbe American
economy and its leader ship is adversely affected by this.
" Failure to act now would be injurious ... "

Compromise being debated

Fred George and Harold
"This operating levy should
"We are convinced the
Dewhurst, Rutland Township not be confused with a con- training of the retarded of our
Trustees, met with the Meigs struction levy of .50 of a mill . county can be best a c. County Commission Tuesday which began to be collected complished by a program
night discussing conditions of this year. Due to an ad- located in our county, taught
a bridge and roads in . their ditional grant from the state by local teachers and adtownShip.
made in June 1978, this ministered by our local
Also meeting with the construction levy will cease retarded board.
'···
commi~ionerswasJim Page when $90,000 is collected. We
" To meet such need the
'
MEIG S COUNT¥
of Fleming, Page and Stolte, anticipate that this will stop county conunissioners are
.
fhH&amp;l Add~1u1 01 ~tor't
ent:ineering firm. Page next year.
submitting to the electors at
dis~ussed the alignment of
"Because of lack of the coming general eleciion a
the access road to the new facilities in Meigs County, we special tax levy of 1.25 mills
multi-purpose building.
have been transporting our for the operation of an
The board requested Page mentally retarded. to GaUia adequate mental retardation
prepare two alternatives on County on a temporary program for this county, we
the final construction of the yearly contract since 1975. are recommending passage
road. ·It will run · in con- The cost of service varies of the levy. The amount
DiRECTORIES ON SALE - Meigs CountY Rural
junction with the parking lot from year to year.
requested is estimated to be
Address
Directories are available for purchase, 50 cents
" At the present, there is no the least amount required to
of the building. Comeach
which
includes a map of the county with a cross
missioners authorized Page levy for the operation of a operate such a program. If
at ·the office of the Meigs County
reference,
to finalize detailed plans for mental retardation program. such levy fails to pass, then
Commissioners.
The directories give listing of the new
the access road from Union · All costs' come from the such cost must be borne by
rural ad~esses. Mary Hobstetter, clerk for the
Ave. to the parking lot. county's general fund. At the county general fund
commissioners, is shown holding one of the directories.
Commissioners
have pre~ent 31 mentally retarded Which wiD mean a curtailing
released the following are being served on this of other.county services that
statement regarding the temporary basis. The state are now provided."
mental retardation levy.
has estimated that there are
Attending the meeting were
"The Meigs County com- 83 mentally retarjied needing Henry Wells, Richard Jones
missioners recommend and service in Meigs County.
and Jim Roush, comurge the s,upport of the
" AU chil~en are entitled to missioners,
and Mary
operating levy for the mental receive an education or Hobstetter, clerk.
retardation program for training at public expense
Meigs County which wlll be and aU, including retarded
submitted at the cop1ing are required to attend school.
'- ... · " h breaking and entering num·b.er.· .-an&lt;\. tlescription
gentit'al'~l'riloo. "'l'hts ·Jevy The public school systems do
of the Jaymar Coal Company matched a vehicle stolen last
ill for 1,25 ' miU levy for the not provide ·a training
on Oct. 24 has been solved and week on SR 7 near the Gallia
operation of the new facility program for the retard·
for the retarded. There was ed and such are certia stolen car has been County line. ·
When Deputies Darrell
formerly a levy of.75 of a mill - lied and transferred to
recovered with the arrest of
Slone,
Keith Little, Walt
two
walkaways
from
the
which expired in 1975 and a the county mental retarManley
and
Manning Mohler,
School
for
Boys
.
.
Fairfield
.20 of a mUI which expired dation _program · for apAccording to. the Meigs Larry Coleman, Rutland
this year. There is presently propriate \raining. The cost
Marshal, Gary Wolfe, Inno levy for operation. This of such specialized program
Meigs High School March- County Sheriff James J.
vestigator
and county
levy amounts to$1.25 for each must be borne to a large part ing Band
under
the Proffitt, deputies were juvenile officer, Carl Hysell
$1,000 of tax yalue of by Mr.igs County.
direction of Randy and Alan alerted Tuesday afternoon arrived near the Swadley
Hunt will compete Saturday ·two boys had an auto stuck in
property at Langsville, two
at the annual Newark High mud at the strip mines near
juveniles
were in the stolen
license
plate
School marching band Langsville. The
.
.
.
vehicle.
competition to be held at
One of the youths was from
Whites Field footbaU stadiwn Emergency units
Meigs County and the other
in Newark.
from Scioto County. They had
Eighteen competing bands had three calls
walked away from Fairfield
will be judged on playing
School for Boys on Oct. 23 and
The emergency unit of the
performance, marching and
hitchhiked to Meigs County.
CINCiNNATI {UPI) -A seven-week federal hearing on
field maneuyering from 12 to Middleport Fire Department
According
to
t he
the prop05ed business merger of Cincinnati's two daily newswas called to Plum St.,
statements taken from the
papers, tbe Enquirer and Post, bas ended and written briefs 5 p.m.
Each band will compete in Pomeroy at 10 :34 a .m. juveniles they entered the
are to be submitted during,lbe' next several weeks before a
the division according to the Tuesday for Thelma Grueser, office at the Jaymar Coal Co. ,
ruling is made, says a Justice Department attorney.
size of its school. Seventeen a medical patient , who was near the Meigs - GaUia
Just)ce Department attorney Charles Stark said Enquirer
trophies . will be awarded taken to Veterans Memorial county line and took apand Post lawyers will bave three weeks to file briefs and then
recognizing Hag corps, rifle Hospital where she was proximately $1,000. They
lawyers lor groups opPosing the proposed merger wiD have corps, field commanders, admitted.
three weeks to file their response .
At 1:04 p.m . the lire walked a short distance away
~ill teams and marching
department
went
to and took the car. They ~ove'
bands. ·
to Sandusky then returned to
The Newark Marching Cheshire to extinguish a fire
Meigs
County
Sunday
Band competition is another in a corn field owned by Joe
evening.
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Initial funding ol a training opportunity for Meigs band Thompson and located near
Following questioning, both
program for 250 people idled by industrlallayoffs in the Mans- parents and boosters to Kyger Creek High School.
individuals
gave written
At 8:11 p.m. The fire
field area will be provided through $229,000 from tbe support the band. Tickets
statements admitting enwill be on sale at the Newark department was caUed to tering the J aymar Coal
Governor's Discretionary Manpower Fund.
stadium,
adults
$2.50, Utile Kyger where a bridge
Gov. James A. Rhodes said Tuesday tbe money will be
Company.
students
$1.00.
Food
will
be was reported on fire .
used to sponsor training prosrams through the North Central
Approximately $600 was
Technical College In Mansfield. Additional funding for the available manned by the lfowever , the department
recovered.
They
are
program to carry through 1979 for at least 1,000 jobless sponsoring group the Newark was returned to station
currently being held in the
before reaching the scene.
workers, at a total cost ol $1.3 million, is being reviewed by Band Parents' Club.
juvenile section of the Meigs
state officials, be said.
county jail.

"Bunny Stone."
I

F iftee n Cents
Vol. 2!), No. 140

Carter issues orders to.· halt skidding dollar

No letters to the editor pertaininglO caridllliites or Issues to

1977 CADILLAC

pltl$111

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRYCourtSTO
St ..

at y . . . . enttne

'5995

$86500
Now is the lime lo Lay Away
For Christmas

e

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- State Attorney General William J.
S:.own has been asked to freeze aU records in Ohio Auditor
'n11111as Ferguson's office that would be needed in a grand jury
investigation.
·
·
"This is an wwsual step f&lt;l' a political cl)allenger to take,"
· Dmald Lukens the Republican candidate f!ll' state auditor,
•said in a letter to Brown Tuesday. "However, it is an unusual
· situation for a candidate to he •campaigning against an
lnCIDJibent who is also under grand jury investigation.

SEDAN DEVILLE

14K white gold

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 1, 1978

•

All records will be frozen

USED CARS

Ba~....,·

·
·~
£6
/
~!f5LJI!~j~z~,G2~{~d~, ~---~~-~~~--..._

The enjoyment of hearing
rain pattering on the roof is in
inv erse proportion to the
possibility it leaks like a
sieve.

·~:i·

YOUR BEST ·DIAMOND
BUYS ARE HERE
FIRE-LITE

.THE FRIENDLY BANK

.

.Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(Darlene) Shortridge, Rt. I,
W. J. ROLLINS
Thurman;
· Mrs. James
William J . Rollins, 92,
(Irene)
Coe,
Rt. 1, Bidw.eU
Route 2, Letart, was
and
Mrs.
Jimmy
(Ruth)
pronounced dead on arrival
Barnes,
Rt.
1,
Bidwell.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Nineteen grandchildren
He was born Sept. 29, 1886
survive
along with nine greatin Letart, to the late H. N. and
grandchil~en.
Sarah Smith Rollins. He was
One sist_e r survives, Maude
preceded in death by his wife,
Sarles,
Pomeroy.
Elizabeth R. Smith Rollins.
Funeral
services will he
He was a member of the
beld
at
p.m.
T)lursday at
Star . Church,
Guiding
Rebecca Lodge of Letart, and Miller's Home for Funerals
the IOOF, Point Pleasant for with Rev. John Jefferies
65 years. He was a farmer officiating. Burial will be in .
Camp&amp;ign Cem!'{ery.
and banker.
Friends may call at the
Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. Sybil Norris, funeral borne from 2-4 and 7-9
Junction -City, 0.; Mrs. p.m. on Wectnesday.
Kathryn Ble;;sing, Mrs. Clare
Capehart, both of Letart; two
sons,
Nathan,
Letart;
EVA G. WEI.8H
George, Elgin, Ill.; 10
Mrs. Eva G. Welsh, 86, 5155
grandchildren; 16 greatN. High St., Colwnbus, died
grandchildren.
Saturday at her realdence.
Funeral services will be
Mrs. Welsh was retired
Friday 2 p.m. at the Guiding
from the Columbus and
Star Church, Letart, with the
Southern Ohio Electric Co., ·
Rev. Wilbur Baxter ofAthens, after 28 years serficiating. Burial . will be in
vice. She was a member of
Evergreen Cemetery.
· the Maple Grove United
Friends may caD after 3 Methodist Church and the
p.m. Thursday at the ·Athens
Business
and
Foglesong Funeral Home.
Professional Women's Club.
Surviving are sons ·and
daughters-in-law including
CECIL RUSSELL
Cecil Russell, 68, a resident Roger C. and Ruth Welsh of
of Rt. I, Bidwell, died in Grove City; John . M. and
Holzer Medical Center 3:30 Anne Welsh, Gallipolis,
former residents of Meigs
a ,m. Monday.
He was born July 4, 1910, at County; five grandchil~en;
Pomeroy, son of ti)e late four great-grandchil~en; a
sister, Bernice and her
Lewis and Allee RusseU.
Mr. Russell served in the U. husband, Bernard Higley of
S. Army during and after Grandview.
Funeral services were held
World War II, from 1943
Monday evening at the
through .1946.
He was a retired employee Woodyard Co. Chapel, 255 E.
of the Ohio State Highway State St., Colwnbus, with the
Garage,' havlrig retired in Rev. Hans Klee officiating.
The body was then taken to
1974.
Mr. Russell married Hazel the Jaegers Funeral Home in
Fields on May 11, 1974. Sbe . Athens where services will be
survives, illong with four ehld at 10 a.m. Wednesday.
step-children :
Bert Friends may caD at that
Browning, GaUipolis; Mrs . funeral home. Burial will be
Joseph (Sadie) Jones, Rt. 1, in Wells Cemetery in Meigs
Bidwell;
Mrs.
Harold County.

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

Open Friday Evenings S to 1 p.m.

'~~

C&lt;mnt us in to take part in the annual Middleport
Chamber of Commerce Christmas Parade on the evening
of Nov. ?:/.

FOR CHRISTMAS AND fOREVER

CHRISTMAS
CLUB

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
Hospital care can be
I,.OUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI ) obtained on the Kentucky
- Gov. Juli81) M. CarroU side of the river with only an
pointed Monday to residents additional live or ltkninutes
of northeastern Kentucky in travel time over · the
who are angry over tbe normal driving time to
shutdown of the U.S. Grant Portsmouth, Carroll said.
The U.S. Grant Bridge, the
Bridge as representative of
increasing citizen demand for ooly link between Ohto and
more government services. Kentucky for 25· miles, was
The residents of South closed in July when
Shore - who normaUy use structural defects were
the bridge to travel across the discovered. Officials hope to
· Ohio River to Portsmouth, repair the defects within 13
Ohio, for hospital care · months.
have
"complained . Earlier, ca·r roll was
vociferously," a bout the cheered by the highway
bridge problem, Carroll said. administrators when he
"The American public is pointed -out the state's ·
demanding more and more of success in raising $600 millioo
us every day," Carroll told through lhe sale of bonds in ·
delegates to a convention of recent years to pay for coalstate highway department haul roads.
"Wouldn't you like. to have
officials from around the
nation.
an authority like that," a
Carroll noted he was unable beaming Carroll asked. The
to·
continue
medical question was met with warm
emergency helicopter service · applause.
·
between South Sbore and
The governor also said he
Portsmouth. The helicopter believed inflation made it
service was discontinued cheaper to bOrrow money at
because of its $1,000-a-day · interest rates which he said
cost.
can
make
highway
" They don't understand construction costs lower in
why we can't just pull the the long Mil). Last week the
money out of the sky," said state sold highway bonds for
Carroll, referring to demands 6.506 percent while lnflation
by South Sbore residents for a may reach 10 percent this
reswnption of the helicopter year, CarroU noted.
service.

•

cording to an armoun cement

made today by Robert E.
Daniel, Clinic Administrator.
Dr. Magnussen comes to
the clinic after · completing
her residency in Internal
Medicine in Western Pennsylvania Hospital in Pitts-·
burgh, Pa.
.
A native of Gallipolis and
daughter of Dr. and Mrs .
Keith R. Brandeberry of
Gall ipolis, Dr. Magnussen
Middleport Mayor Fred graduated magna cum laude
Hoffman
today
urged from Marietta Coll ege,
residents to vote for and
support the one-mill levy
which will be on the Nov. 7
ballot in the village.
This levy, which wiil be for
a five-year period , will
provide funds for the purchase of a fuUy-equipped new
fire truck for t112 Middleport
Volunteer F ire Dept.
Approximate cost of the
new vehicle will be between
$80,000 and $100,000. The levy
will provide approximately
$45,000 toward this purchase.
The fire depart ment has
$10,000 which they have
earned which will be paid on
the truck at the time of
purchase, along with any
other mon ey which is
available.
Through t he negotiating
efforts of fire department
members, Cheshire Village
OR. APRIL MAGNUSSEN
and Cheshire Township wiD
also be paying their fair
share on this new vehicle.
These two areas have fire
protection contracts with our
fire department and will also
greatly benefit from this new
piece of equipment.
.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
The truck which will be
replaced is approximately 20 Valley Regina! Development
years old and is naturally not
District and its Area Agency
as dependable as it was a few on Agin g announ ced the
years ago even though it has availability of approximately
had good care and proper $250,000 for Social Service
Programs for Senior Cit izens
maintenance.
This one-mill levy amounts in its eight-county area . The
to only $1.00 per $1,000 of funds are- made available
property appraisal value and from Title III of the Older
is certainly a small price to American Act through the
pay for improved fire Ohio Commission on Aging.
Funds are to be used to
protection in the village.
Fire Department members provide needed services to
have always worked hard in persons over the age of 60 in
money-making projects and the followin g co unti es:
have always been supported Athens, Hockin g, Meigs,
by the residents of the Monroe , Mor gan, Noble,
Perry , a nd Was hingt on .·
community . Most of the
equipment
and
Im- Among the services for which
provements which have been the $250,000 may be used are
made during the past several Information and Referral ;
years have been made with Transportation ; Escort ;
money which fire department Outreach; Home Services;
members have made from Legal and other Counseling
and Assistance Programs ;
these projects.
The mayor luriher stated, and Residential Repair and
•
"I urge all residents to Renovation.
Application for funds in the
support this levy for tbe fire
department of our com- form of a proposal may be
munity and help us to con- submitted by any governtinue to have one of the finest ment unit or public or private
and . most efficient depart' non-profit corporation.
Proposals must be on the
ments in the area . You have
. always supported their proper format, reviewed by
needed projects in the past the local County Council on
and I'm sure you will over- Aging, and Sumbmitted to
whelmingly endorse this Buckeye Hills by November
30.
levy."

.

-

·passage

$250,000

available

Marietta, in 1973. While there
she was el ect~d to Phi Beta
Kappa . She completed her
medical school training at
Ohio St ate Univ ersity,
Col umbu s, in June , 1974 ,
achieving cum laude status
and was a memher of the
Alpha
Omega
Alpha
honorar y academic society.
From J u\y 1 , 1974 to June
30, 1975 , she served her int ern ship
at
Riverside
Method ist
Hospital
in
Colum bus, and her residency
training in Internal Medicine
was completed two years
lat er at We stern Pennsylvania Hospital in Pittsburgh.
Dr. Magnu~en and her
hu sband ,
Dr.
Jim an
ENT ·
Magnu sse n,
specialist who joined the
clmic staff in August, and tOmonth old son, Ro bert ~ a re
residin g at 5 Vine St. in,

Gallipolis.

Teachers
honoring
OAPSE line
United Press International
Striking teachers in the
Painesvill e Township School
Dis tr ict t oday asked for
binding arbitration with tbe
township board of education.
But School Superintendent
Earl Bardail says the board
is going to see what steps
have to be taken to fire I~
teachers .
Meanwhile, a strike by nonacade m ic
empl o yees
continued in the Logan School
District , with teacher s
honoring picket lines. And a
strike by teachers at the
Lorain
County
Joint
Vocational School also continued today .
The PainesviUe Township
Educa t ional Association,
which represents the striking
teachers, today asked for
binding arbitration in the
contract disupte.
However , Bardall said tbe
r eques t would not be
dis cussed at the board's
schedul ed m eeting today,
but, instead the board would
discuss po~ible avenues it
could take to terminate tbe
teacher's contracts.
Logan ' teachers and tbe
Logan Board of Education
reached agreement on a contract earlier this week, but
nonacademic employees are
still negotiating.
The teachers , said they
would continue to honor the
picket lines of the nonteaching personnel untO . a
contract agreement IE
reached .
Schools have been open
with classes taught by
substitute teachers and some
regular teachers who haw
refused to participate in the
strike.

�\ --,-----------

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov. I, 19'Z8

I lost a friend Friday
!lost a friend Friday night ! A deep, personal loss struck
me late Friday night after learning of the tragic death of Bill
Miller, general manager of radio station WJEH. Not since my
father's death in March, 1976, and the death of another close
friend, Chet Tarmehill, have I felt so depressed.
Bill and I first became acquainted in 1968 when he was
named production manager at the station where I was
employed as news director. Bill's presence was soon felt. He
began making changes in programming, regulations, general
day-by-day operations and the patterns of doing things one
develops after a certain number of years.
To say the changes were made without challenging his
authority would be putting it mildly.
Bill weathered the storm withOut losing his patience. In
doing so. he earned the reSpect ofthe WJEH staff.
It soon became evident Miller knew what he was doing. His
leadership soon took over . MiJ.ler was always there to help a
young announcer starting out in the broadcasting Industry or
to lend a helping hand if an older employee needed it.
Bill was a hard-working, dedicated Individual who was
proud of his. profession. He wanted his staff to become as
good as their abilities would permit . Miller spent many hours
working m the programming at WJEH.
A few years after joining the local station, Miller renewed
another love "airplane flying." With that hobby, another
f~iendship developed at the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport
where Eddie Atkins, a former air personality at WJEH and the
station's chief engineer had become manager.
Bill began flying Atkins' airplane and soon became a
fulltime flight instructor. Miller was well versed in flying. I
have flown with him several times, while taking news photos
from the air. My· most memorable Olgbt was In 1975 to
Cincinnati. Bill, Bill Gray, Dale Whitt and I flew from U-Hl
Gallla-Meigs Airport to the 1975 World Series in Cincinnati. We
had a good flight landing at Luhken Airport about an hour
before the Boston-Reds game.
During our return trip , we hit turbulents over the Portsmouth area. I can recall Bill assuring me everything would be
all right.
Even though Bill was not a !'ometown boy, he soon became
very active In community and civic affairs. Miller served on
various committees promoting the coWJty and city. He served
as emcee for the annual July 4th River Recreational Festival,
Gallia County Junior Fair and many other events.
In addition, he was an active member of the Gallipolis
Rotary Club and was a member of the club's board of directors
.a t the time of his death .
Perhaps, one of the hardest things will be not hearing his
voice on the "Early Bitd Show." You see, Bill became
somewhat of an institution on that show. When an announcer
was ill or if one left, Bill would assume the early morning air
duties at the st_ation. I have food memories of shaving while
listening to Bill go through his newscasts and trying to spin
records while being interrupted by the many phone calls from
youngsters wanting to know if school was going to be held
sometimes when just a lew snowflakes were falling. Those are
memories, I am sure all his fans cherish . Ufe is so uncertain,
no one knows why a tragedy like this occurs. For me, the
memory of "The World's Oldest Living Disc Jockey" will live, ·
on and on.
Dale Rothgeb, Jr .
News Editor

HEALTH
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

in the breast in a
T reating prostate lump
woman. When tliat small
cancer fa st
lump is found early enough,
surgery or radiation or both
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read can he used to treat the
your collll)lii in the paper and cancer, sometimes resulting
I need to know if' the~e is in a complete cure.
If the lump is not found
anything special my husband
should do lor himself? He has soon enough, and cancer has
a malignant prostate. The already spread to other parts
doctors at the Veterans of the body, then the therapy
Hospital are giving him is directed towards neutralizlemale hormones. He has ing llll!le hormones and slowbeen taking them everyday ing down the growth of the
lor over a year. He is 65 years cancer cells. That's what the
old.
doctors are doing for your
Some days he feels real husband and that is the best
good and works all day and treatment and standard
the next day he feels terrible. treatment that is usually
He has stomach cramps and given for cancer of the prohe is just so tired. I tried to state. at that stage.
get him to see other doctors, Sometunes this works. very
but he thinks they are doing a 1 well, controlling the disease
good job for him at the for qmte some tune.
v,· ... ' Hospital. He has Usually , the Veterans
always worked hard, and it Hospitals are very well inmakes him awfully nervous formed about the problems of
not to be able to do the things cancer of the prostate simply
he wants and needs to do.
by virtue of dealing with
DEAR READER - I ap- apopulation that frequently
preciate your concern and has this problem. I doubt that
your problem. Cancer of the he would get any better treatprostate is a frequent oc- ment from other doctors. In
currence. In fact cancer of fact, they would probably
the prostate is th~ third most provide the same or similar
conunon cause of death in treatment to what he IS now
men in the United States. The receiving.
.
sad part of it is that most of
I am sending you . The ·
these could be detected early, Health Letter numbe~ I~ on
e~ i cured early.
the prostate gland to g1ve you
. ':e Walter Reed Army more information about its
, ...:..,ita! has a 50 percent cure function and cancer of the
rate and that good record is prostate. Other readers who
because the persoMel they want this information can
deal with have an annual ex- send 50 cents for it with a
amination.
long , stamped, sellThat examination includes ·addressed envelope. Address
a rectal examination in men. your request to me in care of
past the age of 40. This ex- this ne":spaper, ~.0. Box
amination enables the doctor 1551, Radio C1ty StatiO!\, New
to feel a lump early in the York, NY 10019.
course of the disease. It 's enI would hke to urge that
tirely similar to finding a every man at age 40 or over
should have an annual ex,...----------"1 amination which includes a
1liE DAJLV SENTINEL
finger examination of the proDEVOTED TO THE
state
gland. That is the only
fNTERESTOF
way that this relatively comMEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEfLICH
mon disease can be detected
, City Editor
early,
and the death rate and
PuiJiillhed dally except Saturday
by 'fbe C)Jliu Valley Publb~
other complications curtailComp•my-Mulllmedia, Inc.,
111
ed. We badly need an extenCuurt St., Pomt!roy, Ohio 45769.
,;ive public education proBu.'!incss Office Phone 992· 2156!
F..t!iturhtl Phone 992--2157.
gram about this probl"fll·
, StacurnJ clus posUtge pHid lit
Men need to be informed
Pomt.'I'Oy,Ot11u.
N&lt;:ttiumd ildvert~illf! repr~n·
about
the real necessity of
W.tive, l.untlon At~Socl!ltes, - 3101
having this examination.
EudidAve., Clevelund, Ohio f.t115.
Sub!lcrlpllon rates: Delivered by
I would like to stress that it
carrier where Hvailab\e 75 cents per
is
just as important to men as
Wl't!k. By Motor Route when c11rrier
finding a lump In the breast is
scrvkt not avuihtblt:, One month,
$.'1 .25. By mtdl In Ohio and W. V.a.,
for women. Actually, cancer
One Year, $22.00; Six mootlw,
of the prostate is responsible
t li.SO; Three monlh!l, 1 $7.00 t
Elsewht11! $26.00 yewr; Six monthl
for more deaths in men than
$13.50; Three months , 17.f~O .
cancer of the uterus is in
.Sullst'l'ipti un price ioch•.les SuncJMy
l'ime::~-&amp;ntine l . .
_ women.

3- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy. u., Wednesday, Nuv. 1. 1978

11
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Three games slated in
SVAC -Friday night

Meet the Southern Tornadoes

Iowa will test voter 'anger'
By Martha Angle aad Robert Walters
DES MOINE.S (NEA) - In a year when the country is
supposedly swinging to the right, an Americans for
Democratic Action rating as the most liberal member of
the U.S. Senate is not exactly a political asset.
No one understands that better than Sen. Dick Clark, Dlowa, holder of the dubious distinction. But he isp 't about to
change his spots simply because liberalism is out of
fashion.
.
•
"I decided when I came to the Senate that I'd do wh8t I
felt was right and I'm not going to start flipping now,"
Clark said. " I'd rather not be here than to be~;&lt;&gt;me a
nothing."
·
·
Stubborn allegiance to P.rinciple is easy enough for a Ted
. Kennedy, who can be as hberal as he wants without risking
his Senate seat, but it is a genuine gamble In a stste where
no Democrat has ever been re-elected to the Senate.
.
So far, the gamble seems to be paying off. The respected
' Iowa Poll of the Des Moines Register shows ClarJr.clinging
to an 11-point lead over his conservative GOP challenger,
former Lt. Gov. Roger Jepsen. The margin has remained
essentially unchanged sil)ce July.
Jepsen is as conservative as Clark Is liberal - maybe
more so, since he is a darling of the " New Right" who
focuses as much on inflanunatory social issues like
abortion as he does on traditional economic and foreign
" You'll learn to love it. "
.
· policy mnatters.
. And it is those social issues - especially the emotional
abortion controversy - that threaten Clark's re-election at
this juncture. About 20 percent of Iowa voters are Roman
Catholic, and the church is playing an active sub rosa role
in the campaign. Clark's opposition to tuition tax credits
for private and parochial pupilS has further antagonized
many Roman Catholics, who would normally vote DemoL ~.,_&lt;1&lt;
cratic.
I
When Clark and Kennedy, who was in Iowa this month to .
8
~
By Clarence
It ,......
campaign for his Senate colleague, appeared at an airport
rally in Dubuque, a Roman Catholic stronghold, they '!~Cere
Miller
A
D
.,, ....
all but drowned out by strident jeers from anti-abortion
activists.
M e m b e r s
o f more in 1979 than it takes in
y
Jepsen, on the other hand, has problems within his own
Congress, finally heeding and have a public debt rising
party. GOP regulars aligned with moderate Gov. Robert
threats of tax revolt from to $8.'16 billion. Interest alone
Ray, Iowa's most popular politician of either party, were
disgruntled taxpayers, voted on that $836 billi.on national
dismayed when the ."New Right" conservative upset one of
to reduce fjscal year 1979 debt will amount to $48 billion Mary Beth Long
their own in the primary. The wounds have not healed.
appropriations bills by $642 for the year, or a little less 156 S. 3rd St.
Between September and October, Clark lost 8 point&amp;
Middleport, Ohio 45760
among likely Democratic voters and 10 among likely
million from House com- than a billion dollars a week.
Independent voters, although he is still the choice of a
mittee recommended totals.
Most of the $836 billion
· majority of both groups. During the same period, Jepsen
Passage on most of the key accumulated in the public Dear Mary Beth and all 456 Club Members,
Who will ever forget the stunning performance of Reggie dropped )3 points among likely Republican voters.
money bills came after debt is borrowed through the
With Clark now holding a 50-to-39 percent lead among all
Californians voted over- domestic money markets, but Jackson in the last game of the World Series? Our library has a · voters,
the key to the election probably rests with the
whelming approval of over $108 billion is borrowed wooderful scrapbook about his baseball career. lt's a big book undecideds - some of whom are Roman Catholic
Propostion
13,
which from foreign governments to full of pictures that Reggie chose, and it's filled with Democrats, others of whom are disenchanted Republican
significantly reduces which we have to pay about $5 interesting stories. Can you imagine Reggie playing baseball moderates.
·
property taxes in that state. billion a year in interest, and while people In the stands threw rotten eggs and tomatoes at
Although Clark has made a national reputation for his
leadership in govenunent reform and his expertise in
Some Members of Congress, these figures are up con- him?.
foreign
affairs, (he chairs the Africa subcommittee of the
With
Christmas
just
a
few
months
away,
many
people
are
smarting from that stinging si.derably over past years. '
rebuke; joined others of u5
The total appropriated so trying to save up some mQI!ey for those Christmas shopping Foreign Relations Committee), he has never ignored his
who have tried for years to . far, for the fiscal year 1979 sprees to come. FortWI3tely, the library just received a new fences back home.
He serves on the Agriculture Committee, which is vital
reduce government spending budget comes to $321.8 book called, Good Cents: Every Kid's Guide To Maldllg to Iowa farmers; and has returned home more often .\ban
I:&gt;Y voting for cuts in the billion, while last year's total Money . It's crammed full of money-making ideas that you can any member of the Senate over his siX-year term. lie won
was $320 billion, but the 1979 do now to earn money. This neat book gives directions on in 19'12 by walking from one end of the state to the other,
appropriations bills.
Most of the $642 million cut figure will increase many making a spook house, oo having your own flea market; on and he has never quit hiking.
from the five appropriations billions of dollars more as becoming a SUnday morning pa}ler kid, and lots of others too . . If he loses this year, it will not be because he beat
bills came through what in agencies come · before Better get to the library $\on to check out this book. I know it himself.·lt will not even be because he Is the most liberal
member of the Senate, although that doesn't help right
past years have come to be Congress to request sup- won't be on the shelf long.
now.
Do
you
enjoy
cooking?
Maybe
you've
never
tried
it
because
called 'Miller amendments'.
plemental funding. In adIf Dick Clark loses, it will be the single-issue voters who
your
mom
doesn't
want
you
to
use
the
stove.
I
know
a
neat
book
These amendments shave · dillon, appropriated figures
defeat
him - the voters who care more about abortion
for
you.
It's
called
Cool
Cookillg
and
it
has
16
recipes
to
make
from 2 percent to 5 percent do not include all money to be
than
agriculture,
more about gun control than govenunent
from certain parts . of the ' spent,' or . the total budget without using a stove. There are scrumptious desserts like reform, more about tuition credits than tax refoi'llls.
money bills. Mandatory outlays. Money for trust Chocolate Fruit cream Dessert and South American Bananas.
The politics of the "New Right" is the politics of atnalespending for Social Security, funds for Medicare, Social It even tells you how to make Chocolate Ice cream Soda !
issue anger. Nowhere In the nation will it be put to the test
I hope you enjoyed halloween. Are you stlll "hungry" for more directly than in Iowa this November 7.
pensions and other such Security, and certain other
items are protected from payments, for example, do some scary stories? Try reading The Ghost of Ballybooly,
these cuts. ·
not need to be appropriated Tom's Midnight Garden, The Wicked One, or VIctorian Tales
I have introduced these by Congress. All this will of Terror. You'll wanttoleave the night light on when you go to
amendments for · the past bring the total Federal bed.
Until next month, cheers to members of the 456 Club!
several years but, except lor budget outlay for fiscal 1979
.
Sincerely hooked on books, Patty Asbeck.
the approval of my $273 to around $500 billion.
Unfortunately, too few
million reduction in the
Foreign Aid Appropriation Congressmen and too lew
bill last year, my efforts were Americans recognize or are
less than rewarding.
willing to deal with the
This year was different, dangers of fiscal irresponBy KENNETH R. CLARK
however, with Members of siblity. Time after time I By JOA HANAUER
United Press lllternaUooal
both sides jumping on the 'tax have spoken out on the House UP! Television Writer
INTERMEZZO TO SONATA: She began ber film career as a
NEW YORK (UPI) - The fLrSI series to bear the Fred pianist in "Intermezzo." She'll end it as &amp;.\Pianist in fi~Cmar
revolt' bandwagon and ,.floor and in letters to my
uniting for substantial budget Congressional colleagues on. Silverman stamp debuts on NBC this week and it could go Bergman's "Autumn Sonata." Says Ingrid Bergman, Cf\ the
reductions for the 1979 fiscal the dangers of excessive either way - a big hit or a terminal case of the cutes.
" Diet Cavett Show," maybe somebody's trying to tell me
The Show is "Diff'rent Strokes," replacing Joe ·Naniath's something."lnan interview, taped for PBS-TV release Nov. S.
year.
Even the Ad- goverment spending and
ministration, · noting the repeated deficit financing, "Waverly Wonders" starting Nov. 3, 8-8:30 p.m., E.astern 9, Miss Bergman says "Sonata';' will be her last movie. Uv
California vote, suggested a 5 and I will continue to do this. time.
.
.
Ullmann costars as her daugh~ in , the film, and Miss
Silverman .has taken a pair of pros - Conrad Bain (Arthur Ullmann's own real-life daughter plays Misa Ullmann as a
percent cut in its own budget But it is necessary for. all
request, contradicting Its Americans to speak out as on "Maude") and Charlotte Rae, a wonderful comedieooe In one scene, Miss Berkm/ln kisses the little girl
and made them second bananas to a couple of cute black kids. child.
earlier
b ,udget well.
goodbye, becoming an absentee mother again as she leaves for
Baln plays a millionaire who lives in a New York City another concert tour. Says she, "I recognized th!lt I had done
testimony. Overall, the
The vote in California held
penthouse
decor a ted In middle period bordello. He is adopting that so many times to my own children ... It seems to me that
Congress did better on the the attention of Congress for
spending front than might a time, but we need to do the Harlem street-wise orphaned children of his late !his kiss, and this runn~ awav. is my farewell to movies.''
have been expected a year more, at least until the free housekeeper, much to the dismay of his present housekeeper,
ago, since the budget was spenders realize that most Miss Rae.
What has she got against boys? "They bite."
reduced· nearly $10 billion Americans are against exBUDDIES: It was the Eddie an(fEubie Mutus! Admiration
Todd Bridges as 1~ear-old Willis and Gary Coleman as S.
from what the President travagant and wasteful
Society
Tuesday at New York's City Hall, and 96-year-old
requested last January. But programs which fail to reach year old Arnold arrive and you realize everything is window
composer
Euble Blake loved every minute of it, Mayor Ed
dressing for lltUe Arnold - in real life 10 years old and tiny for
even with all these cuts the goals.
Koch
presented
Blake - currenUy being immortalized in the
his age because of the growth-dampening effects of a kidney
Nation will spend $38.8 billion
Broadway
musical
"Eubie" - a certificate of appreclaUon,
transplant.
He is devastatingly adorable and when he's on.,gcreen, it's all just "to show him that New York City loves and appreciates
a setup for Arnold. Whether Arnold can charm the audience him more with each passing year." Blake repaid the comI
away from "Wonder Woman" on CBS and. "DoMie and pliment, breaking into a slighUy edited version of one of his
_l!l.Df~ famous tunes- "I'm Just Wild About Eddie ... "
Marie " on ABC remains to be seen.
The writing, at least on the opening show, offers some good
,------=-·- ----------lines, including reverse racism (Willis to Arnold: "No wonder
CoMPETITION: ltisn'teVerydaythat a mayor gets to have
they can't play. basketball").
A comment with some depth about poverty and 'television the p-esident of the United Slates as an overnight house gueat,
comes when Arnold surveys the room that has been lavishly and Chicago Mayor Michael Bilaadlc is hoping an impending
decorated for him and his brother and·says, "This is better .blessed event doean 't foul up his chances. He and wife Heatller
are e&gt;:pecting their first baby this month. They're ezpectlng
than anything I ever saw oo 'The Brlldy Bunch."'
Aniold has the charm of cl!ildish hooesty. When Willis insists Prelideut Carter oo Thursday. And what happena If the stork
they go back where they belong and Ialka about missing files an early flight plan? &amp;ays Mrs. Bil8ndlc, "'llle thought
Harlem, his little brother says, "Good, and I war.t to miss has croslled our minds. I suppose ive could name It Jimmy If
that happened." She says baby or no baby, she's glad Carter is
Harlem the rest of my natural life ."
·
' His adoptive father's attitude is simply, "Harlem Is just a coming because "I got a lot of bouse cleaning clone -.,it was a
~ood rel!SOn to do it."
limousine ride away."
Trying to second guess Silverman is like figuring Don
Shula'sstrategy with tbe Miami Dolphins. U you could do that,
RONJiiiEREIGNS: t\Oil Howald spends most of his time on ~
you'd get paid for the Jll'lvilege.
"Happy
Days" following in the foot.ltepB of "The Fonz" - 10 ·
But it would seem Silverman is wooing the grownup
being
crowned
King of Mardi Gras In ~ew OrIeana is just typeaudience - not the Polldent crowd, but the young marrieds
casting.
But
he's
10 proud af the hooor he 88ys he'll take the
and up - with a combo of "Diff'rent Strokes" and a revamped
wbole
cast
along
wben
be accepts the Utle "Bacdms XI" ill the
"Who's Watching tbe Kids?" that wllllltreas ~ Breeding
Fell'uary
carnival
parade.
Foozle - u Heary W1Dk1er and .Jim Bellllhi Instead of lhowl!ltls and their kid siblings.
· I Anotber.NBCentryfor thew~k is a television movie, ''Thou reigned over the parade two years ago. "Happy Days" cut
Shalt Not Commit Adultery," on the air. Nov. 1, 9-11 p.m., members expected to join Howard's royal court Include Tom
Hooley, MarloD Roll, Erfll Mol'lll, Domly Mm, AuoD
Eastern time.
I.Aluise Fletcher is tempted to ccmmit adultery with Wayne Willlunl and A1 Mollllaro.
&amp;gers after her huaband, Robert Reed, is paralym from the
waist down In an auto accident. Aa a bad example, she bas
@ 197Bby NEA. Ioc
friend Bert Convy, wh011e "pact" marriage meallll that both Gt:iMPsES: NataUe Wood will be In New York Nov. 14 to
promote two recently completed fllma In which she itara Convy and wife are free to adult at will.
AlP's
"Me~" and NBC-TV's lix'!*1 minl~ea "From
Will she or woo 't she? Only her scriptWriters know.
Here to Eternity" ... Dorothy Louil011 Ia In Stratford, Conn.,
starring In Mlebllel Bellllett'a new musical "Ballroom" ...
·'Whatever amount my opponent claimed he
Betty Rollin Ia in New York promoting her novel "Firat .You
"ADd
.
thou,
.
aoa
·of
maa,
The barber"s trade existed
would cut ta xes - I 'll slash 'em EVEN
Cry,"whlch will be aired Nov. 8 as a CBS-TV dramatic lpt!Clal
take
thee
a
tbarp
knlle,
take
600
B.C.
Barbers
were
forMORE! "
merly also practitioners in tbee a barber'• razor, and lltarrlng 1ar)' T)'lw Moore ... Llza MlnneW, Cblta Rlftl'a, JCibn
surgery and dentistry and canoe it to paas upon lblne Raitt and Robert Goalet are __, stan U. wlll!lll'ltrm
were often called barber· bead aad upan lblae beard Nov. U ia New Yorll: trlbllte to Jlllmlhw!lef and l'nd Db at
••• "-Ezek1 &amp;:1
..
Avery FIBber Hall ...
·
'
- - - - - -- - - ' surgeons.

Wa~hington

'I

1
-·

Brian Bass, 5-9, 165 lbs.
Jnnior End.

By FRED UEF
UP! Sports Writer
Johnny Davis, the quick
· guard
acquired ·from
Portland in the off season,
and Rickey Sobers, a
schoolyard-tough ballplayer
from the Bronx, N.Y., helped
the Indiana Pacers down the
Cleveland Cavaliers, ll&amp;-114,
Tuesday night.
Davis scored '!/ points to go
!llong, with 12 assists, while
Sobers finished with 24
. points.
"We keep people moving oo
our offensive attack and that
helps open things up for me."

Letters

" ......

.

.

all

TV ... in Review

8erry s

&amp;4::tr--

said Davis, who had 11 of
Indiana's final 16 points.
With the Cavaliers making
a fourth-quarter charge at
the Pacers, Davis helped
steady Indiana .
After
Cleveland cut Indiana 's lead
to 101-99 with 6:16left, James
Edwards made a 10-footer
and Davis hit two foul shots in
the next minute to put a lock
oo the game.
Alex English added 21 for
Indiana, and Campy Russell
and Jim Chones had io each
for the Cavs, losers of four .
straight.
Elsewhere in the NBA,

High sch(Jol
grid notes•..
By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio
high school football notes
from around the state :
UNBEATEN Galion
clinched at least a share of its
first Northern Ohio League
championship in 20 years
wjth a 22-21 vict&lt;ry over
Bucrrus .Friday night,
scormg 12 points in the last
minute and 16 seconds to turn
the trick.
Quarterback Jeff Kirk hit
wide' receiver Mike Sagle
with a 20-yard scoring toss
with ~:16 .left to play and,
after a successful onside
kick, found slotback Dave
Agee with a fourth-down, 30ysrd TD pass with 17 8econds
left in the game.
TOM Beaschler rambled
for :M5 yards and three of
touchdowns Friday night to
rally Mohawk to a comefrom-behind 30-28 victory
over Riverdale. Beaschler
carried 't1 times and had TD '
runs of four, 36 and 81 yards.
WAUSEON rolled to its
eighth win of the season
Friday night behind the
running of Todd Myers .
Myers , a 6-2, 185-pound
fullback and the 100-yard
dash champion of the North.west Ohio Athletic League,
rushed for 196 yards in only
seven carries, scoring on
runs of 96, 56 and 15 yards. He
also scored on a ~yard
screen pass.
JIM Owen scored three
touchdowns, including two In
the final period, to . lead
Olmsted Falls to a 20-7

Peopletalk

w0.rId

cy~

James Meadows, Il-l, 210
lbs. Junior Tackle..

Kent Varney, 51, 135lbs.
Junior M-Guard.

Brian Lawrence, Il-l, 170
lbs. Junior End.

Pacers edge Cavaliers

Library

Report

Three games are scheduled . Friday night , the
next to the last weekend in Southern Va ll ey
Athletic Conference. League
games feature Southern at
Hannan Tra ce and Kyger
Creek at Southwestern.
Eastern goes to Symmes
Valley in a non-league affair.
Coach Joe Mitchem's
Eastern Eagles have all but
wrapped up the 1978 championship.
With its 42-20 win over
North Gallia last Friday
night, Eastern owns a Hl
l.eague record wit h iust

,
:
:
•
:
'

3
~

:•

••
••

:

•

i•
..
••

.=
~

••

INTERESl
On Certificates

Of

De~

$1,000 Minimum

I Yr. Term
Effective nte with
Compounding 6.6ol per cent.
Ninety day Interest penalty
II withdrawn before

~

Tho Athens County

•••

Savings &amp; Loan Co.
W.MalnSt.
Pameroy, Ohio

~

I!
=

.
~

....

Larry Cremeens.

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
W L T POP
Eastern
7 1 0 199 49
Kyger Creek 4 3 1 97 150
North t;;a lli a 4 4 0 172 1 ~6
Sou thwester n 3 5 0 109 129
Sym . Vall ey 2 5 o 86 215
Ha nnan Tr ace
1 7 I 6 3 IB6
Sout hern
0 6 1
0 21 1
TEAM

SIIAC ONLY
TEAM

W L T P

Easter n
Nor t h Ga lli a
Kyger Creek

NCAA grid statistics
MISSION, Kan. (UPI) NCAA
Division ·1-A team · statistics released
today:
Rushing Off.
g car yds avg td ydspg
Ok lahoma
8 516 3350 6.5 38 418.7
TexA&amp;M
7 456 2271 5.0 24 324.4
Nebraska
8 498 2568 5. 2 30 321.0
Fllrtn St
8 462 2562 5.5 21 320.2
Ohio St
7 443 2091 4. 7 22 298.7

Whether it was just the
sp iri t of homecoming or
something else Cremeens will
be hoping enough of it will be
there when the Wildcats take
the fleld against So uthern
Friday ni ght.

J
'}

1 2
Sou th w es t er n 1 3

1
0

38 53
4 1 52

0 3 0
Friday's games :

0 90

Sout hern

at! yds avg ld ypg

181 889 4.9 9 148.2
149 1176 7.9 13 147.0
182 1010 5.5 8 144.3
169 1153 6.8 7 144.1
247 1105 4.5 4 138.1
Passing
att cmp yds int ld cpg
Dils, Stnfrd
300 194 22!i7 14 18 24.2
Ford,SMU
257 146 1934 13 12 20.9
Halda,SDgSt
200 116 1267 8 7 19.3
Sprggs,NMx
246 l:l2 1951 21 14 16.5
Smith, Mch St
165 99 1387 5 14 16.5
Scoring
td xp ig pis ppg
Cri bbs, Auburn
12 0 0 72 12.0
J ones, Miss St
11 6 0 72 10.3
Poole, Lsvlle
13 0 0 78 9.7
Sims, Okla
13 0 0 78 9.7
Brown , Clmsn
11 2 0 66 9. 4
Receiving
cl yds td ctpg
Petzke, No Ill
58 717 8 8.3
Francis, Stnfrd
49 378 0 6.1
Beasley, Applchn St
4B 769 3 6.0
Tolbert, SMU
40 711 9 5.7
Butler, Clmsn
37 508 2 5.3
Total Offense
att yds avg ypg
Dils, Stnfrd
362 2237 6.2 279.6
Spriggs, N Mcx St
354 2168 6. I 271.0
Ford,SMU
306 1886 6.2 269.4
MWright, Bwlg Gr
324 1923 5.9 240.4
Smith, Mich St
187 1U2 7.6 235.3

Atlanta defeated Washington , defending champion BuUets
110-108, New Orleans took have now lost five straight.
Oticago, 97-92, Milwaukee Jazz 97, BuDs 92:
edged Kansas City, 114-112,
Truck Robinson scored 28
Golden State topped San points and backup center Joe
Antonio, 139-138, in overtime Meriweather grabbed a Passing Off.
all cmp int yds td ydspg
Phoenix dumped New York: career-high 20 rebo unds as Stnfrd
309 198 15 2261 20 282.6
120-108, Los Angeles ripped New Orleans won its fourth SMU
257
146 13 1934 12 276.3
Denver, 134-107, and P&lt;rtland straight.
NewMexSt
269
143
25 2000 15 257.5
defeated Detroit, 112-96.
Bucks 114, Kings 112:
Ca lif
252
144
19 2051 12 256.4
Hawks ]10, BuUets 108:
· Brian Winters scored 27 Mich St
210
123
6 1781 16 254.4
Jack Givens hit a corner points and Marques Johnson
jump shot with II seconds left 23asMilwaukee broke a four- Total Off.
g plays yds avg id ydspg
to win it for the Hawks. The game losing streak.
Oklahoma
8 602 3946 . 6.6 44 493.2
Warriors 139, Spurs 138:
Nebraska
Meigs' 7th tops
8 652 3838 5.9 38 479.7
· John Lucas had 29 points Stnlrd
8 656 3632 5.5 30 454.0
Belpre team, 8-0 and 14 assists to lead Golden MichSt
. 7 512 3166 6.2 39 452.3
Revenge wa s sweet State past San antonio ·in ApplchnSt
8 6!9 3613 5.8 35 451.6
Monday night for the Meigs overtime.
Scoring Off.
Seventh Grade football team SUns 120, Knlcks 108:
g pts avg
Paul Westphal tossed in 35 · Oklahoma
as they defeated host Belpre
8 336 42.0
lor an ~ win in the final points and Phoenix scored 12 Nebraska
8 309 38.6
game of the season. Meigs straight points during a four-. Mich
7 231 33.0
ended with a 4·1 record, their minute span of the fourth Penn St
8 263 32.9
only loss coming to Belpre in quarter to down New York. Applchn St
8 260 32.'5
Lakers 134, Nuggets 107:
the season opener.
Adrian DanUey ·scored 22
Monday, the Meigs offensive backfield had a fin e points Lou Hudson 20 and Los
MISSION , Kan . (UPI )
NCAA
,night as they consistently Angeles made 67 percent of Division I-A individual leaders released
broke tackles and exetuted its shots in the third quarter Tuesday :
well.
The ba ckfield is ·to beat Denver.
composed of quarterback Trail Blazers 112, Pistons 96:
Nick Riggs, wingback Mike . Lionel Hollins scored 13
Willford, fullback Chris points in a lf&gt;-4 I ourth-period
Burdette, and tailback Jon surge that carried Portland
CINCINNATI (UP!) past Detroit.
couldn' t agree on an might even draw
Perrin.
an
Free
agent Tommy John says "equitable agreement."
Perrin's runqing led a
additional 200,000 fans for
he would "love" pitching for
The Reds are looking for a them from Terre Haute ."
Meigs drive in the second
LEBANON RE!lULTS
the Cincinnati Reds, who are lefthanded starter like Jobn
quarter to the Belpre 25. On a
LEBANON, Ohio ( UPI ) •:at the top" of his shopping for next season.
fourth and long situation,
Tom
guided .Wonder list of teams he would like to · John, 35, is a native of
Meigs end Eddie Bishop Buck Prickett
to a I 1';, length victory in play for .
·
Terre Haute, Ind., about 150 '
carried a reverse all the way
Tuesday
night's
·
featured
John,
unable
to
come
to miles from Cincinnati.
for the lone. touchdown. Chris eighth race at Lebanon
terms with .the Los Angeles
.. Who knows," said John
Burdette's dive for the extras Raceway . .
Dodgers,
will go through the "pitching for the Reds,
was good behind the blocking
Air Wave was second and free agent draft Friday.
of Dave Barr and Bishop.
Ivy's
Otarm came in third.
"I would love pitching for
The fine Meigs defensive
WHA Standings
The
winner
covered
the
the
Reds," John said in an
effort was led by Burdette,
By United Press International
mile
in
2:05
3-5
and
returried
int
erv
iew
after
naming
W L . T . Pts .
Barr, Perrin, Andy lan5
3 1
11
$3.20 and $2.60.
Cincinnati as one of several New England
narelli, Dave Follrod and $3.80,
Cinc innat i
5 3 1
11
Cousin Nettie and Margie 's teams he would consider Winnipeg
4 3 2
10
Dave Roush.
Lad teamed up for a 6-8
.4
5 1
9
other players contriburting nightly double combination joi,ning. "All thing:; being Quebec
Birmingham
4 3 0
a
equal,
Cincinnati
is
right
at
Edmonton
J 5 0
6
to the fine season were Shawn that paid a whopping $917 the top of the list. And I mean Indianapol i s
2 5 1
5
Eads, Jay Evans, Randy
Tuesday 's Res ult
largest double· payoff of the right at ll)e top."
Carl, Bryan Zirkle, Bobby
Quebec 5, Edmonton 4
John said he saw no reason
Wed nesday 's Ga rn e
Southern, John Powell, season at Leba non.
Bir mingham at Cinc inn ati
A
crowd
of
1,165
wagered
why
he,
his
agent
and
Reds'
Danny Davis, Vaughn $124,435.
Thursday's Games
.
President Dick Wagn er
( No games scheduled )
Spencer, ·and Jim Farley.

Sout hern at Ha nnan T r·ace i
Ky ger Creek a t Sou thwes t er n

and Eas tern
Val ley.

John says ·Reds top choice

at

Symme s

• Fishing Tackl e
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
wBall Gloves
Camping
Equipment
·e ·.;rche ry
• Indoor Game s
• We
hav e Gift
Ce rt ificate s
601 Main St .

Pt. Ple asant. W. Va .
VISA '
Courthouse

PHONE
'

675-2988
Open ~unday 1- p .m . -6 p .m .
MondaY thru Saturday
9~

m . to8p.m .

i

1
C:RReFREe

SRLe·PRIC.ED

MUSHROOM
OR

TAN BARK
HISTORY

$
ONLY

•
SHEET -

HURRY WHILE PRICES IS RIGHTI

CAPS
SHIELDS- FLAIR-S
at

,,

Codner's Campe15

'

,'

Ralnbo.w Ridge

C.!:!. 2A t., Bashan
)

,.

20
55
60

Ha nna n Tr ace

Rushing
Holland, Cornell
Sims, Okla
White, SoCal
Graves, Fllrtn St
Perseli, IV Mich

OP

0 0 127
1 0 84
1 1 40

.4

NEW '
PICKUP TRUCK

c•
••

straight victory following a
rash of early season losses.
Kyger Creek is 4-3-1 going
mto play Friday at So uthwestern.
A victory at So uthwestern
foll owed by another one in the
season finale again st North
Gallia would gi ve the Bo bcats
undisputed second place.
Coach
Bob Ashl ey's
Highlanders will be out to
upset KC, especially after
la st week's 12-0 loss at
Hannan
Trace .
The
Highlanders were unable to
muster an offensive threat
against the Wildcat s of Coach

maturity date.

;.
••

victory over Westlake Friday
night. The senior tailback had
TD runs of 10, 2 and 64 yards
and set a school rushing mark
with 219 yards in 36 carries.
WEST Liberty Salem
knocked
Mechanicsburg
from the ranks of the
unbeaten Friday night with a
211-7 decision over the Indians.
The Tiger victory threw the
West Central Conference into
a three way tie among WSL,
Mechanicsburg
and
Fairbanks. Fullback Butch
I.Alwe led ttie Tigers with 117
yards and touchdown runs of
four and 31 yards.
JUNIOR tailback Brian
Miller rushed lor 193 yards
and two touchdowns to lead
Bowling Green to a I~
victory
over. Holland
Springfield. Miller had TD
runsolsixand 69yards as BG
recorded Its first shutout in 33
games.
WYOMING, the No. 1
ranked Class AA team, had to
come from behind Friday
nighi to record its 20th win in
a row. Trailing 15-6 at
halftime, the Cowboys rallied
behind 'the running of Jeff
Dennis and Frank Jacobs for
a 211-15 win over Finneytown.
Dennis finished with 136
yards and Jacobs 115, both
carrying 18 times.
JIM Smith ran for 190 yards
and four touchdowns in 40
carries Friday night as Tiffin
Columbian beat Norwalk 3422. The longest run for Smith, ·
a 3-10, !55-pound junior, was
40 yards.
MILTON-Union ran its winning streak to 20 Friday night
with a I~ win over Dayton
Oakwood . This weekend,
Milton-Union meets Tipp'
City, which handed the
Bulldogs their last loss, 21-20,
in 1976.
MONTPELIER and
Archbold put Cf\ offensive
shootout Friday night with
Moo tpeller coming out on top
41-:H. Kevin Thomas was the
Locoototives big threat with
263 yards rushing and four
touchdowns. Archbold · was
)lliced by quarterback Mike
Britenriker, who threw
touchdown pasaes of 25 and 74
yards, kicked field goals of ~
and 31 yards and added four
extra points. He completed 9
of 25 passes for '0:1 yards.

winless Southern left on its
league schedule. Overall, the
well-balanced Eagles are
enjoying one of their better
years with a 7-1 record.
A win over Southern would
give the Eagles their first
league championship in football since 1971.
Symmes Valley going into .
Friday's contest is 2-5. Last
week, the Vikings battled
Kyger Creek to an 11-3 tie
going iqto the final period,
but lost as the llobcats
converted a fumble and interception into touchdowns .
That win gave Coach Jim
Sprague's Bobcats their third

'

�·...__
5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov. 1. 1978

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. W&lt;!!lnesday. Nov . I. 1!178

fi;HS FLAG CORPS - Fronting the Eastern Eagle
Marching Band this year is the Eastern Flag Corps.
Members include, left to right, Sonia Carr, Treasa Dailey,

Guidry AL 's .Cy Young-winner

Darlene Barton, Wendy Elkins, Csssie Sheets, Carla
Cowdery, Sheryl Bush, and Debbie Eynon.

Wittenberg fourth in Division III
MISSION, Kan. (UPI )
Nevada-Reno, 8-0, moved to
the !Dp spot in this week 's
National Collegiate Athletic
Association football poll in
Division I-AA while WinstonSalem (N.C. .). 9-0, and
Min nesot a -M orr is , 8-0,
remained No. 1 in Division 11
and Division lll.
Montana State, 7-1, No. 1 in
Division I-AA the past two
weeks, dropped into a fourth
place tie with Massachusetts
5-2, and South Carolina State'

r----'

QUOTES-

By

'

•

Davis

'

Insurance
Nothing
is
AL
wrong! Even a clock
that -· has . stopped
running is right twice
a day ...

'

Of all the investments
you
can
make
towards
your
family's
future,
nothing wi II do for
them
what
Insurance does.

-SEE-

DAVIS
INSURANCE
AGENCY
"Across from
·~e

Courthouse"

in Pomeroy

Bill Quickel
Jeannie Starcher
992·6677

7-1-1.
It was the fifth consecutive
week Winston-Salem has
been No. I in Division II.
Youn gstown . (Ohio) , 8-1 ,
dropped to No. 2 after sharing
first place last week.
Top 10 in Division I'AA:

I, Nevada-Reno, 8-0; 2,
Jackson (Miss.) State, 7-1; 3,
Florida A&amp;M, 6-1; 4, (tie)
Massachusetts, 5-2, South
Carolina State, 7-1-1 and
Montana State, 7-1; 7,
Western Kentucky, 6-2; 8,
Lehigh (Pa. ), 6-2; 9, Eastern

By FRED McMANE
been clocked at · 96 mph,
UPI Sports Writer
Guidry established a host of
NEW 'YORK (UPI ) -Ron major-league, AL and club
Guidry of the New York records in 1978.
Yankees, the "Louisiana
Among them were:
Ughtning" who electrified
- Highest wInning
the baseball world by postinli percentage in major league
the
greatest
winning histocy ( .839) for pitchers
percentage in modern winning 20 or more games.
- Most strikeouts in history
baseball history among :~Go
game winners, today was by a Yankee (248).
named the recipient of the
-Most strikeouts in an AL
American League's Cy . game by a left-bander (18
Young Award
by
a against Calif&lt;rnia),
JIDanimous vote.
-Second lowest ERA in AL
The 28-year-old left-bander, histocy.
who posted a 25-3 record with
-Most shutouts by an AL
a sterling 1.74 ERA, became left-bander (9, tied with Babe
only the seventh pitcher 'in Ruth) .
·
history to receive all the firstIn addition, he won his first
place mentions in the voting. 13 decisions and ended ·up
The only otljer unanimous AL leading the AL in victories,
selection was 31-game winner ERA, shutouts and fewest
Denny McLain in 1968. It hits allowed per nine uirungs.
marked the second year in a· He was second in strikeouts.
row that a Yankee pitcher
"I'm surprised that my
has taken the Ieaguels most record was so great, but I
coveted pitching prize, wasn't silrprised at the way I
Reliever Sparky Lyle won the pitched," said Guidry; "I
award in 1977.
always thought I could pitch
Mike Caldwell of the Mil- that way. I could have lo!li 10
waukee !lrewers finished or 12 games that I won. I was
second to Guidry with 25 . fortunate to pitch a lot of good
second-place votes in the games when we were strugballoting of 28 sports writers gling. The club and I worked
- two from each AL city - pretty well together."
and Jim Palmer of the
Winning the Cy Young
Baltimore Orioles, a three- Award came as no surprise to
time previous winner, was · Guidry. He has his sights set
third. Guidry was the only oo the bigger prize - the
pitcher named on every Most Valuable Player award.
"It's between me and Jim
ballot.
Rounding out the !Dp vote- (Rice)," said Guidry, "One of
getters
were
Dennis us is going to win it. Maybe
Ecker!\)ey of the Boston Red they should give two MVP
Sox, Rich Gossage of the trophies.
He's
done
Yankees and Ferguson something no hitter has done
Jenkins of the Texas in years and I've done
something no piicher has
Rangers. ·
A skinny 5-foot-11, 160- done in years."
pounder whose fastball has
Guidry's rise ID the top has

Candidate For

County Commissioner
Meig·s County
Gener•l Election, November 7, '78

YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED

Thank You

ANNOUNCING
For a smoother ride . ·-

COMPUER COMPUTERIZED
WHEEL BALANCING
Featuring ou~ FMC
Electronic Wheel Balancer

ARMSTRONG

for 49ers poor showing

GILES SMITH

Meigs Tire Center, Inc. ·

Kentucky, :&gt;-2; 10, Northem
Arizona, 6-2.
Top 10 in Division II:
I, Winston-&amp;llem (S.C.), 90; 2, Youngstown (Ohio)
State, 7-1; 3, NebraskaOmaha, 1!.1; 4, California
Po)y State, 5-1; 5, Troy
(Ala.), 6-1; 6, Delaware, 5-3;
7, California-Davis, 5-2; 8,
Akron (Ohio), 5-3; 9, Eastern
lllinois, 6-2; 10, Jacksonville
(Ala.) State, 4-2.
Top 10 in Division III:
1, Minnesota-Morris, 8-0; 2,
Dayton (Ohio), 7-1-1; 3,
Ithaca (N.Y.), 8-0; 4,
the team was not improving · Wittenberg (Ohio), 7-0; 5,
as the season progressed. We Baldwin-Wallace (Ohio), 6,
were not happy with the Widener (Pa\ 6-1; 7, St.
direction our program was Lawrence (N.Y.), 6-1; 8, St.
moving, and this decision is Olaf (Minn.), 7-1; 9,
me that had to be made .... " Camegili-Mellon (Pa,), 7-1;
Designed and created by peopl" for
McCulley
was 10; Western 'Maryland, 641.
people - Floors t~at bring your
philosophical about his
mdoor world more var:iety, vitality
abrupt dismissal. "U Billy
Martin can get fired after
and originality · than ever before.
winning
a
world
Floors for today's living:
·
BLOOMINGTON, Minn:
championship, they can
(UP!)
The
Minnesota
certainly let me go," he said.
"There's no way you can go North Stars have called up
through life blaming people leftwlnger Mike Polich from
for what happened. You take their Oklahoma City !ann
the job and hope you do good. club, the team said Tuesday.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
To
replace
Polich,
Fair
shot?
I'm
A
Payne City
has. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...
been sent toSteve
Oklahoma
embarrassed for my wife and leftwinger
family. No one likes to get
into a position where he feels
UI!SUccessful."
O'Connor
was
a
quarterback
at
East
.Stroudsburg (Pa.) State in
his collegiate days. Later he
served as an assistant at C, W,
Post, Villanova twice, Maryland
and
Southern
Mississippi before going to
work fer Jack Pardee in the
Canadian Football League
and the Chicago Bears. This
was his first season with San
Francisco.

McCulley made goat
. SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) ,Either
owner
Eddie
DeBartolo Jr. or General
Manager Joe Thomas told
Atlanta Falcons' Coach
Leamon Bemett about the
firing of Pete McCUlley as
head coach of the San
Francisco 49ers before they
!Did the media or their own
organizational people.
of
Bennett
learned
McCulley's firing Tuesday
mornlng, yet the club did not
officially announce the
decision until hours later, and
then only after learning that
the secret had been let out.
McCulley, seeniingly, was
made the goat for San
Francisco's 1~ showing to
this poin\. The team plays the
Falcons next in Atlanta and
Fred O'Connor, a man who
never has held a head
coaching job at any level, will
be the team leader.
Thomas amounced McCUlley's firing without cmunent
and said O'Connor, who is 39,
has been named intertm hea9
coach. He also said Dan
Radakovich, let go by
McCulley
over
a
disagreement, will return as
defensive coordinator.
After Radakovitch left,
McCulley named defensive
back coach J~y Carr as
. defensive coordinator. Carr
was fired along with
McCulley, also without
comment from Thomas.
As for McCUlley, Th001as
said, "We had to make a
change due to the fact that

been dramatic, considering said and I told her, 'OK, if you
he was all set to give up don't mind going back and
baseball only two years ago. forth between New York and
It appeared in 1976 that Syracuse, it'~ all right with
Guidry didn't figure in the me. I'll give it one more try."
Guidry got his chance in
Yankees' future plans and
when they sent him back to June of 1977 and over the last
the minor leagues he balked haH of that season was thoj
Yankees' top pitcher. Thi.l
at reporting,
"I packed everything in the year he became the Yankees(
:
car and told .my wife I was "stopper."
Caldwell,
the
Milwauket:·
going home," he recalls.
"She just let ~e talk and Brewers southpaw who
we're on route . 80, heading earlier was named UPI's .,
l)outh, when slie said 'Do you Comeback Player of the
reallywantto'quit? You know Year, rebounded from a · 5-8
you won't be happy not record in 1977 to a 22-9 mark
playing ball. Don't do and a 2.37 ERA this year.
something you'll regret the Caldwell's . 22 wins were
SW"passed only by Guidry's
rest of your life.' ·
"I thought abOut what she 25,

FLOOR COVERINGS

NEW AT:

BAKER FURNITURE

-MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
John Fultz, Mgr.
992-2101

700 E. Main, Pomeroy

~iSAVES.&amp;VESAVESAVESAVE~

"

~

..

---A's going to East Bay group~;;~;~~RAPH
Ma~

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPl) - Commission.
the club, would make every
The new Oakland A's
The same commission eff&lt;rt to sign two or three free .
asswning Charlie Finley will refused to let Finley out of his agents.
go abead and sell the club to a lease when he tried to sell the
He also said he anticipated
local group, will have two club 13st year to Denver no
problems
getting
general partners and 15 oilman Marvin Davis.
American League approval
limited partners plus an
While the commission was of his group. The next AL
escape clause in their lease. adamant in making Finley meeting Is scheduled for Dec .
Finley all but confirmed Uve up to the lease in that 4 in Orlando, Fla.
Tuesday he will sell tlie club instance, a spokesman for the
NOTICE OF ELECTION
to a East Bay group headed group has suggested
ON TAX LEVY IN
by furniture e:recutive Ed something could be w&lt;rked
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Bercovich f&lt;r $12 million.
MILL LIMITATION
out with local ownership.
NOTICE iS hereby g iven
Bercovich said money
The A's have nine years left that
In pu_rsuance of a
never has been a problem and on Finley's original lease and Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the Township of
except for a minor detail or Bercovich said his group Sal
,
By ~jor Amos B. Hoople · .
i Sbury , Ohio , passed on
Egad, fnends, this 1s the week the "sure thing" bettors get two his group could wind up would like to renegotiate it the 1st da.y of September
with the club within a day or down to three years, giving 1978, there will be subrriitted
for the season - um-kwnph!
to a vote of th e people of said
.•. even
There are many excellent, closely matched conlests on this two. ·The hangup at· the lo..al fans enough time to CQUnty at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held in the
week's card, but - kaff-kaff ·- the Hoople System sees the mtment Is over the A's lease show their support of an Towl"!ship
of Salisbury, Ohi o,
with
the
Oakland
Coliseum
American
League
club.
favontes emergi~ victorious in each insta.nce -har-rwnph!
at t he regular places of vot ing
"As soon as we know the therein , on Tu es day , the 7th
The top aUrac!Jon 1s slated for University Park, Pa. : Penn
day of No vember , 1978, the
makeup of the ownership," question
- State, shootmg for that .elusive national crown, hosts everof levy ing , tn excess
said
Coliseum
General
of the ten m ill limita11on , tor
dangerous Maryland. In a brilliant offensive show we see the
Manager
William the benefit of Salis bu ry
Nittany Uons outscoring the Terps.
'
T o ~nsh, i~ for the purpose of
Cunningham,
''we
will be ma1ntammg
and operat ing
, Led by senior tailback Steve Atkins (126 yards rushing per
glad to sit down and discuss cemet eries .
game), Maryland has been averaging '!I points per game. But
,Said ta x being .: an ad .
the lease."
- and it's a big BUT - with quarterback Chuck Fw;ina an
d1tlonal ta x of 1.0 mill to run
Cunningham's statement for FiOJe (5 1 years
authentic Heismann c-.tndidate, the Nittany Uons have chalkleft
Utile doubt a compromise at a rate not ex ceedin g (1)
ed up better than 30 c'Ounters per game. Fusina, he of the rifle
SENDAI,
Japan
(UP!)
can
be reached.
one m ill for each one dollar of
ann, has connected for over 13 yards per completion. Jove! He
~o~aluation, Which amounts to
The
Clncinmti
.
R
eds
and
the
Bercovlch
said
Finley
may
has t~e unerring accuracy of a youthful Hoople during my
S.lO for each One hundred
Ymniuri
Giants
battled
to
a
5be
retained
by
the
new
dollars of valuation , for Five
playmg days for dear old Yale -Boola-Boola!
·
(5) vears .
5
draw
Wednesday
in
the
ownership
as
a
scout
and
In a spine-tingling affair we give Joe Paterno's forces a 31-24
The Polls for said Election
coosultant
at
fourth
game
of
the
Reds
17$200,000
a
year
edge over Maryland -hak-kaff!
·
will open at 6: 30 o'clock A .M .
game
Japan
Ioiii'
at
Miyagi
for
10
years.
and remein open until 7· JO
At West Point, the Cadets will entertain the Air -Force
P.M . Ea stern stan .
Rep&lt;rtedly, Finley asked •o'clock
Academy, whlch always brings out the best efforts of both Stadium in northern Honshu.
dard Time of said day .
Catcher
Johnny
Bench
for
such
an
arrangement
so
By order of the Board of
squads. The Cadets lead in the series with six victories to five
El~ c tions , of Meigs County ,
and one contest.even. The Falcons will even the series by winn- slanuned a solo homer, his that he wouldn't have to split Oh10
.
third in the exhibition series, $2 million of the $12 million
ing 21-13.
Ernest A . Wingett
The other service representative, Navy, takes on Notre off right-hander Takashi Ni· selling price of the A's with
Cha irma n
shimoto
in
the
third
inning.
his
wife,
who
is
divorcing
Dame in Cleveland. The Middies have been one of the season's
Dorothy M . Johnston
real ~urprises with their ~tingy defense. However, they Outfielder Ken Griffey, who him, Also, Finley has said on
Oirec1or
drove
in
the
first
run
for
the
several
occasions
he
would
haven·t faced an attack w1th the power of Montana and
Dated October l Oth , 1978
Reds
in
the
first
inning
with
a
like to "keep a hand in
,Heavens and Ferguson. For that reason, the Hoople nod goes
(10) ll , 18, 25 (11) 1, .tt c
triple,
also
hit
a
solo
hmner
baseball."
to Notre Dame. Make it Irish 24, Navy 21.
off
right-bander
!sao
Tamura
Bercovich,
in
a
The surprise teams of the Big Ten - Purdue and Michigan
cooversation with Finley oo
· State - will keep rolling in high gear as they vanquish North- in the seventh.
The Reds scored two runs Monday, asked the A's owner
western and Illinois. The.scores: Purdue 32, Northwestern 10;
in
the second on Pete Rose's to take an active role in this
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Michigan State 38, Illinois 17.
ON TAX LEVY IN
double
and
an
error.
free-agent
draft.
He
Friday's
EXCESS OF THE TEN
. A trio of Pacific 10 c'Ontests is highlighted by the Southern
But the Giants, I'UIIIIers-up said his group, once it gets
MILL LIMITATION
California visit to Stanford. Here again, like the Penn StateNOTICE is hereby given
in
the
Central
League,
scored
Maryland fray, we have a matchup of a superior infantryman
that in pursuance of a
Resolution of the Council of
Charles White of USC vs. Stanford's Steve Dils the nation's two runs in the first and
the Vil l age of Syracuse , Ohio ,
in
the
added
three
more
premier passer. In a knock-down, drag-out affair we see the
passed on the 3rd day of
August, 1978 there w ilt be
Trojans finishing on the long end of a 35-28 count. In other fourth to lake a 5-4 lead
Griffey
belted
his
first
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
submitted
to a vote of sa id
games, UCLA will trample Oregon, 42-13, and Arizona State
ON TAX LEVY IN
people of said VIllage of
in
Japan
in
the
top
of
homer
Syracuse at a General
will pr~vail over California, 35-18.
EXCESS OF THE TEN
ELECTION to be he ld in the
In the Southeastern Conference, Alabama will sweep the seventh inning to tie the
MILL
LIMITATION
Village
of Syracuse, Ohio, at
score.
NOTICE is hereby given
the
1
1
Mississippi State 34-7 and l.SU will claw Mississippi, -28-10.
that
i
n·
p,
u
rsuance
of
B
regu
.u Paces
of voting
The
Reds
have
won
two
.
Resolution
of
the
Board
of
therein
,
on
Tuesday
, the 7th
In SOJ!le other worthy games, Oklahoma will take Colorado
.d ay of November, 1978, the
42-21; up-and..,oming Baylor will dwnp Texas Tech 17-14· and games, lost one and have one Trustees of the Township Of question of levying, in excE!ss
draw. The fifth game will be Olive, Ohio, passed on the 5th of the ten mill limi tat ion, for
Houston will have little trouble with TCU, 45-17.
'
'
day of August. 1978, there will
the benefit of Syracuse
The Nebraska-Kansas contest at Lawrence, Kan. will he the played at Tokyo's Korakuen be submitted to a vote of' the Villa .g~ for the purpose of
Stadium
Friday.
people of said Township of ~rov1dmg and maintaining
85th in this series. The Cornhuskers hold the edge '00-21-3 and
Olive at a General ELEC · ftr ~ _apparatus, appliances,
will make it their 6lst. The Hoople Systems calls it 49-14 for the
TION to be held in the bU!Idmgs,orsitestherefor,or
,, Cornhuskers.
Township of Olive, Ohio. at sources of water supply and
'
the regular places of voting materials therefor. or the
Now go on with my forecast:
therein, on Tuesday, the 7th establishment and main ·
SATURDAY,Nov.4
day of November, 1978, the tenance of lines of fire alarm
question of levying , in excess telegraph
or
the
Temple 28 Akron 7 (N)
of the ten mill lim nation, for pi!llyment of permanent , part coach
.
Alabama 34 Miss St 7
the benefit of Olive Township time , or volunte er firemen or
Missouri 28 Okla St 10
Hockey
the purpose of dust · fire fighting Companies to
ArizSt 35 Calif 18 (NI
Minnesota - Called up lett for
Penn St 31 Maryland 24
control, tor the prevention, operate the same .
wing Mike Polich from Ok· r;ontTol and abasement of air ·
Arkansas 42 Rice 7
Said tex being : a renewal
Penn 21 Princeton 14
lahoma City end sent left wtng pollution .
of a pert of a 2.0 mill e,.;istlng
Air Force 21 Anny 13
Steve Payne to the Central
Purdue 32 Northwestern 10 .
Salt tu; being : an ad · levy, being a reduction of 1.0
.
League team.
Holy Cruos 28 Boston U 12
dltlonal tax of (3) three mills m !'I to constitute a tax of 1.0
No Carolina 16 Riclunond 14
left
Pittsburgh
Assigned
to run for Five (5) veers at a · milt to run for Five (5) years
~ll St 29 Bowling Gr 13
ColoSI 28 SDiegoSt 20 (N)
wing Brian Spencer to Bing . rate not exceeding CJ J three at a rate not exceeding .1.0
. BYU 24 Wyoming 8
hamton
(AHL)
and
reactivated
SJoseSt 26 Fulertn 12 (N)
mills tor each one dollar of mills for each one dollar of
de,fenseman Bob Paradise.
Cincinnati 2NE La 10
valuation, which amounts to valuation, which amounts to
NoTexSt 21 SoMiss 17 (N)
&amp;nketball
5.30 Thlrtv Cents for each one ten cents for each one hun · Lafayette 17 Colgate 16
Cleveland
Put guard hundred dollars of valuation, dred dollars of valulltion, for
Texas A&amp;M 24 SMU 22
Clarence '~Foots" Walker on for Five (5) years.
Okla 42 Colorado 21
Five (5) years.
USC 35 Stanford 28
In lured list; rel!ctlveted Bobby
The Polls for said Election
The Polls for said Election
Colwnbia 23 Dartmouth 21
Pitt 33 Syracuse 16
Smith.
will open at 6: 30 o'c lock A.M . will open et 6: 30 o'clock A.M .
Foolblll
ECar 24 ApalachnSt 21 (N)
and remain' open until 6:30 and remalr'l open unt i l 7: 30
Tenn 21 Duke 15
San Francisco - Fired Pete o'clock P.M . · eastern Stan· o'clock P.M . eastern Stan .
Florida 35 Auburn 14
Baylor 17 Texas Tech 14
McCulley as head coach and dard Time of said dav .
dard Time of said day .
Georgia 28 VMI7
replaced him with offensive
Miami(F) B!.Tulane 14 (N)
By order of the Board Of
By order of the Board of
coordinator
Fred
O'Connor;
Elections , of Meigs County , Elections, of Me igs County,
Brown 21 Harvard 20
Tulsa25 WTex St 11
fired defensive back coach Ohio .
Ohio .
Houston 45 TCU 17
Jimmy Carr and replaced him
UCLA 42 Oregon 13
Ernest A . Wingett
with
Dan
Radakovich.
Mich St 38 lllinois 17
Chairman
Ernest A. Wingett
Utah 25 New Mexico 18
NY Jets - Signed defensive
Chairman
Michigan 42Iowa 12
Utah St 35 Pacific 8
linemen Joe Morelno.
DorQ tohy M . Johnson
Soccer
Iowa St 21 Kan St 15
Director
Dorothv M . Johnston
Villanova 21 Bost Coll2
Phlladelr.hls (N AS LJ Dated October lOth , 1978
·
Director
Nebraska 49 Kansas 14
Kentucky 21 Va T~h 12
Signed de ender Colin Waldron
Dated October lOth, 1978
Lehigh 33 CW Post 21
tor 1979.
Clemson 39 Wake Forest 9
1101 11, 18 , 25 1111 1, 4tc
1101 11. 18, 25 111 1 t , &lt;lc
l.SU 28 Miss 10 (N)
Washington 33 Arizona 28
· Rutgers 18 Mass 7 .
Wash St 41 Oregon St 14
,..,...._..~---..---------~1
Mphs St 14 Vanderbilt 13
Virginia 21 WVa 7
I
Minn 24 Ind 14
Louisville 28 WichitaSt 14
Montana 36 Montana St 21
Wm&amp;Mary 32 Citadel 21
Notre Dame 24 Navy 21
Ohio St 35 Wisconsin 10
NC St 15 So Carolina 13
Cornell17 Yale 14
Miami (0) 22 Ohio U 6 .

Hoople's

Football
Forecast

Reds battle

to 5-5 tie

take part Ftiday

brilliant coming off the bench
last Sunday, may get his first
pro start Sunday in appropriately
his
hometown of San Diego,
Bengals' Coach Homer
Rice said previously he likes
to choose his starting running
backs from week to week
based on "hot streaks" -and
Turner currently is the
hottest back. And, nothing
would suit Turner better than
to start - and perform well
- in his hometown. "I sure
want to," he said, "We should
beat San Diego.''

CLEVELAND (UP!) The Cleveland Indians may

at

An
l'a
~

.Yes! Ron James has never voted for a tax rncrease or a
new tax_ In fact he has 'proposed a plan to actually reduce
property taxes and still keep our schools open. We can
have lower taxes!

...

•
--------------------------,.-------·--------------------~

Hamburger and 5alid Bar :

Big Shefand Regular French
Fries

:

Only$1.00 i

Only$J.Oq.....

..

~:
requires aeparate purchase. I

Each coupon l'equires separate purchasi.
,
Present colipom when ordering.
Coupon expira: Nov. IS, '71
.
•

Each coupon
Present coupone when ordering.
Coupon ekpires: Nov. 15, '71

I
1.

I
I
~--------------------------·--------------------------~
Super
Regular French 1
, Regular French. •
:
Fries :
and 16oz. Drink :

I
1

LErS KEEP

OJ

i
1

I

$1.00 i

~y$1.00' i
£2::
pure~

~- :

coupon requires separate purchaae.
Pre•nt coupons when order.ing,
Coupon expires: Nov. 15, '71

:"

I

coupon requlra eeparate
Present coupon~ when ~ring.
Coupon ~xpirn: Nov. 15, '71

be your own worst enemy in

surely desert you in outlandish

commercial dealings today and
weaken your position throu gh
Impractical ac tion . Be. care fu l.

gambles,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.

agree too readily to a matter
you ' re negotiating today you

start out rosy, but sloWly· turn
sour. If )'01J give up, you' ll lose .

ZZ) You
need a bit more staying power

GEMINI (Moy 21-June 2D) II you than usual today. Things could

could later be smitten by

LIBRA (Sept. 2Wct. 23) A rift

remorse . Take ample· tim e to in a relationship with one
weigh your alternatives.
you 're fond of can be avoided
CANCER (June 21-July 22) As-· today by being a giver as well

sociates will be irritated If you

expect too--large compensation
for a servi ce today . Don' t un-

as a taker. Treat others as
generously as they treat you .
(NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

GOLDEN

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
well-meaning friend could be
more hindrance than help i n a
m~tter affecting your statu s
and financ;es today . Try not to
let her become involved . Having· trouble selecting a career?
Send for your copy ·of Astra-

TOUCH 6 SEW. II
Model 771

Graph Letter by mailing 50

cents for each and a long, s elfaddressed , stamped envelope

to Astro-Graph , P.O. Bo• 489,
Radio City ~tation , N .Y. 10019.

Be sure to specify birth sign .

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec,
Z1) To be ambitious is admirable, but take care k&gt;day not to

step on someone's toes in
order to achieve your aims .
This isn't your style. .

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 191
This should be a very profitable
day, but there is also a danger
you cOuld create a seriou s and
needless problem for yourself.
Maintain your cool.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) A

. $34995

friend who disappointed you

regarding a joint venture may
come to you with a simila r

proposition today . Keep his

track record in mind.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Less-productive persons may
cling to your coattails today
and try to claim partial credit for

(Lay-Away a Singer for Christmas)
Featur e se~~: c lusive Singer, 2·way sewing surface, push
~utton drop-in OObb in, bu ilt · in 2·step buttonholer, bu i lt.
m speed ba sting, slant needle and 30 year warranty .

Christmas Gifts, Material

your achievements. Shake

them loose.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You ' re extremely creative
today . Unfor1unately, your ir'n-

THE FABRIC SHOP

Many other styles and
colors in Boots and Shoes
starting at $21.95

CORDOVAN
SMOOTH LEATHER

Jarman Town Boots ...
rriade for today's lifestyles.
A distinctive 6" zippered boot that's ready to go
any time. any place! In genuine leather with comfortable long-wearing sole and heel . 544.95

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0.
9 a.m. -5 p.m.

'

Mon . 1hru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m .B p.m . Fri
Closed Sunday

I

not acquire any players In
Friday's baseball free agent
re-entry draft, Indians
President Gabe Paul has
Indicated.
~I dm 't see us spending all
this money just because
they're lree agents," Paul
' said. "We're not going to pay
ex&lt;rbltant prices to guys who
can't help us - cr can't help
us enough. The average age
:• of the free 1111ents Is 34. How
are you going to build with

office for the practice of

Sparts Transactions

By United Press International

general dentistry.

Tuesct1y

Bneball
Cincinnati - Promoted pitch ·
ers
Bruce
Berenyi, Geoff
COmbe and Jay Howell end
outfielders Peu
Householder
and Eddie Milner to major
league roster ; assigned pitchers
Raul Ferreyra, Rick O'Keeffe
and Angel Torres and Infielder
· Mike Grace to Indianapolis
IAAI .

·

New York Yankees - Signed
Charlie Lau as batting coach,
Tom Morgan as pitching coach
and Jim Hegan as bullpen

205 North Second Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Office hours

by

Telephone

'

~

appointmen~----~:..~~j

' · theee guys?"
Paul argued that the
'' Indiana must trade to
im)li'Ove-the·team. "The way
to rebuild this club Is through
trades. "Naturally, when
, clubs call us, they want to
" talk about our better
., players."
Among Cleveland players
mentioned as possible trade
bait are third baseman
' Buddy Bell, first bo1111118ll
:' Andre Thcrntllll, pitcher Rlclt
" Walts,
catcher
Gary
:: Ale:under and aecond

, he..,..... Duane Kuiper.
Bell's 111!8111, Ed Keating,
said ~ Is convinced the
.. wta'an tltlrd baaem8D will
:' be traded. "Mart DIY wcrda.
•· ButkiY Bell has played hla
lilt pme fer the Clewland
lndlanl.''
Paul said hla declllon to
llay out of the free a11nt
IIIIJ'ket II baaed purely on
avauAbl~ talent, oot on
"

~PC1AP
lnflnlte-~Iilon tempera-

ture control with reeetald
knob
.

0 lift-oU1 buket

D SUm-Wall dealgn-foamtd·
·In-Place lnaulatlon tor
more apaceinakle .
D Counterballii1Ctd Sear-Tlte
lid with magnetic guket
0 Baked -met Interior end
exterior ·
D Defroet drain

YOUR

,

Reo. Price S37Us

106 N .•
,,

CHOICE

OF TWO BEAUTifUl. .STYLES
$
AT ONE l.OW, l.OW PRICE! •••••••••••••• •• •••• •••••

Special
Price

flnancel,

Pd. by Commiffee to Elect R. James. C. Allen. O!airman.

..

November 2, t9T8
Conditions relating lo your re p·
utat_ion and finances a~e likely
to l':"prove con sid erably thi s
com~ng year. Be on your toe s
so you can answer th e door
when opportunity knock s .

LEO (July Z:l-A119. 22) Lady
Luck Is likely to match you
TAURUS (April ZO-Moy 2D) step-for-step today in all exThere's a possibility you cou ld cept financial areas. She'll

R. CRAIG MATHEWS,
D.D.S.

Indians may not

"Deacon" Turner, who was

RON JAMES

vmcrmrDmv

wisely price Vourself out of the
market.

Announces the opening of his .

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Cincinnati Bengals' rookie
running
back
David

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

~~(!][?

----. . . .

I
!

LOWER-TAXES?

Bernice Bede Osol

patience is likely to equal your
imaginative efforts. Vou could
discard lhat which you can 't
immediately implement.

.'

.

95

599
INGELS
FURNITURE
.
2nd A
Midd

'

o.

�•

.
••

(

6-;he Daily Sentinel. Middlep&lt;Jrt-Pumeruy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nuv . I, 1978

POLLY.$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer
spots from a fine
tablecloth? I have

Latex dried
on floor

Mr. and Mrs. 'Edward Voss

Celebrate anniversary
On Oct. 14, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Voss, Pomeroy,
celebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary . In observance
of the occasion their children

hosted a surprise party. Gifts
were presented to the couple
and refreshinents including a
decorated three·llered cake.

lemon, peroxide, vinegar and

DEAR POLLY
When we painted the ceil·
ings in our home we got some
of the latex paint on the floor.
We 've iried to get it off but it
hardened. Can YoU suggest a
method for removing It from
our oak floor'- IONA
DEAR IONA- If the latex
paint has dried and hardened
on your floor it is probably
there to stay. Such paint
should be removed while wet,
So keep a damp doth dose at
hand while doing such pain·
ling.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY- While taking a shower I put a face doth
over the drain, add a small
piece of soap and let my feet
soak. If the water fills up too
much I move the cloth from
the drain for a while and then
cover it again. There is no
wasting of water and your
feet feel so good. ··
ROSAUNO
DEAF! POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with the long-haired
waitress who hovers over yyu
and serves your food while
her hair flips and falls WI·
confined. Not too long ago I
found a black hair in my cottage cheese.

How ca n I remove brown

in care of this newspaper.

w. -

Child Conservation
League has meeting

~f~~~~!!~~ngh~e':f.y. r::.e:.:~~~.

I

Bottom Community Association recently held a meeting
at the community building
which is currently undergoing rem.odeling inside and
out.
Mrs. Leona Hensley presid· ed at the meeting which opened with a prayer an(l ti)e
pledge of allegiance. Thanks
were extended to Harlan
Ballard, Bill Thurston and
Fred Larkins for donating
t hei r ·time toward the
remodeling project.
Winning a quilt donated by
the Long Bottom Senior
Citizens was Mrs . Sue
Hayman . Entertainment
following the meet\ng was
provi&lt;!ed by Mr. and Mrs . Bill
Thurston, George .Buckley,
and Francis Andrews..
Attending were Mrs. ·

Mr. and Mrs. Thurston, Mr.
"CCV CCL? Chestnut
and Mrs. Harlan Ballard Mr. Crackers League? Cookie
and Mrs. Tom Hayman and and Cake Lovers? What is
family, Mr. and Mrs. Francis CCL?" "It stands for Child
Andrews, Mrs. Ernestine COnservation League." "How
Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. Paul and ·why do you conserve
Hauber and family, Mrs. Jen· child~~n?" "Because we
ny NewlWI, Mr. and Mrs. believe our state slo·
Martin Nesselroad, Mr. and gao · which
says,
'A
Mrs . Howard Larkins and Child Well Guided To·
family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred day, Tomorrow Will Guide
Larkins, Mrs. Donna Bogard, Well His Own Destiny!" Thus
Mr . and Mrs . J oe Bissell, Mr·._tlie skit, "CCL vs the Booby
and Mrs. George Buckler, Trap"" ~plained what the
Mrs. Vera Weber, Emerson Ohio' Child Conservation
McDole, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsal League is to the 38 members
Larkms and family , and Mrs. and nine guests present at the
Leota Ferrell.
South Central District, aU·
league supper meeting held
' Tuesday evening at the
There is no such thing as a Kyger Creek Club House.
A get-acquainted mixer
minute rise in unemployment
if you're one of the few being game, prepared by Mrs.
laid off.
Arthur Rupe, Jr., was participated in by all those
present preceding the
bountiful potluck supper:
FUNNY BUSINESS
by Roger Bollen
Devotions and table grace
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . were prepared by Mrs .
@ 1978 by NEA, Inc .. f .M. Reg . U.S. Pat. Off.
Sidney Sanders and Mrs.
Raymond DeLille.
Mrs. · Carl Gillespie,
District President, then in·
... ALL. IN ALLI1HE
troduced the State President
EARIHU~s ~~T
of OCCL, Mrs. William
Kreais, of Fostoria, who
SEeM UEJ&lt;Y
spoke briefly to the members.
l~ELW6ENT. ..
Other guests were welcomed
and
recognized
as
Nice.
prospective members of
EYES ...
various leagues.

,

TI-lEY HAVE

BOT

---PRE-.

EASON
HOLIDAY
SALE
STARTING NOV. 2
AT
.

. .

TQOKJES

Il-l

..

~

I

The
leagues
were
presented with two proposa,ls
of philanthropic projects for
their consideration and
possible participation ; Mrs.
Rupe explained the details of
the ·Guidlng Hand Sehool
Levy to the group encouraging them to become
infonned of all aspects of the
levy, then to Sllarch their
hearts and minds as to the
way they should vote. She
also stated that the Guiding
Hand School system is in no
way connected with the
Mental Health Center nor
with any monies provided for
it.
Mrs . )l.obert Perkins ,
formerly a' member of Worth·
ington Stepping Stones
Mothers' League in the
Columbus area, and a
volunteer representative
from CSB Inc. - a non·profit
organizaton from Hubbard,
Ohio, concerned about giving
young people the opportunity
to read books with a positive
approach - encouraged the
leagues . to consider the
sponsoring of these high·
quality, beSt sellers for their
local school libraries. The
books, offered on an
elementary as well a• high
school level, lift up God,
co.untry, and family and
cover a wide variety of
subjects. Over 70,000 books
are now in schools in many
states and abroad. As
the only non • profit
that
of·
organization
fers this type of pre·
processed, shelf·ready, book
selections from over 30
publishers, CSB is'found to be
a big success with librarians.
They attest to the books'
among
the
popularity
students who can find
pleasure in such selections as
The Hiding Place, Jon!, The
Name of the Game, Christy,
The Cross and the Switch·

FASHJQN~ bl~~yo~~- wishing

New Haven W Va

1..--~~~-:- .

·

......~~~~~......
~:I
. . • 9/6.

.. C:~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~
t

E

linen
tried

sunlight and the dry cleaner
does not want to take the
responsibility. - M.E. W.
DE;AR M.E.
If the
doth is white apply the lemojuice and.then add salt over it
and put in the sunlight. I can
well understand the dry
cleaner not wanting to work
on these spots since you
evidently do not know what
they are. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I am an
old envelope saver for mak-·
ing li;ts, etc., and use a print
trimmer I photograp hers use
thsm to trim their pictures )
to make memo pads from
junk mail or flyers that have
one plain side. I make threeby-five blocks of paper and
put a piece cardboard under
every 25 or so sheets. Smear
white glue along the top of
;tacked sheets and when it
dries you have tablets galore
_ instead of overflowing
wastebaskets. Placing a
weight on them as ths ; dry
makes. the pads hold together
beIter.- A.L.
Polly will send you her
signed thank-you newspaper
coupon clippers if she uses
your favorite Pointer, Peeve
or Problem in her column .
Write POLLY'S POINTERS ,

Long Bottom Community

.

. •. • .. M.

further
infonnation on how to get
involved with this book
project, may call Mrs .

Perkinsat44~~.
Props for the skit

were in
charge of Mrs. Floyd Johnson

HARDWARE

'6

u

"Ace is the pla ce with
the Helpful Hardware Man "

Announcement is being
made of the birth of a
daughter, Jenny Lynn Rich·
mond to Mrs . Julie L. Rich·
mond 1nee Johnson ) of
Mason , W. Va. The baby was

and Mrs. Robert Gillespie
(who gives her son, Tim,
credit for making the car very
cleverly
which
resembled a 4-door V.W. -

for the cast to "ride" iri).
The cast of the skit, which
brought out many facts about
including the
CCL Achievement 10 guideline for
programs to develop a child's
spiritual, mental, moral, and
physical characteristics, the
state slogan, the state colors
of green and gold (sym·
bolizing life and growth,
maturity an&lt;! responsibility),
the availa bllity . of the
Scholarship Loan' Fund, the
dues being a nominal fee, and
that any woman, a resident of
Ohio, interested in the pur·
pose of OCCL and sponsored
by an active member is
eligible for membership in an
organized league- included:
Mrs. Robert Hennesy, Mrs.
Lester Plymale,
Mrs.
Michael Shaw, Mrs . Jack
Slone, Mrs. Charles Bostic,
and Mrs. Glenn Smith.
Attending this meeting
other than those already
mentioned were: Joy Atwood, Thelma Osborne,
Nancy Morris, Peggy Harris,
Susie
Souls by,
Merle
Howard, Sharon Morgan,
Ruby Hurt, Gail Martinko,
Winnie Howard, Lonna
Janey, Cat)ly Wray, Pam
Theiss, Velva ··Langhorne,
Patty Hutchinson, Donna
Barnes, Karen Gilliam, Ann
Colburn , Eloise White, Peg
Houdashelt, Susie Abbott,
Tonda Seidenabel (who won
the door prize), Becky
Tannehill, Eleanor Gilliam,
Sharon Hutchins, Brigitte
Soles, Barbara Sheets, Sallyanne Holtz, Sandy Gatewood,
Jane Skelton, Sherr! Repass,
Nancy Queen, Nanette
Moody , Clarice Kennedy.
The Ohio Chlld Conservation League was formed
at a convention of 14 leagues
in Marion, Ohio, in 1920, with
President Elect Warren G.
Harding as main speaker on
December 15. On October 11
and 12, this year, Convention
was held at the Colwnbus

N

ACE HARDWARE
,,

.f::':

Winner
Mother·m-law
Drawing
Lilly Gheen

A Clrl.ltinu project for
The meeting time was
th!lle ·confined to Veterans spent working on lap robes
Menlj)rial · Hoapllal will be for natients at the nursing
~eel out by the Bradbury home in Gallipolis. Get-well
Variety Club.
cards were signed for Hilda
Meeting Thursday at the King and Oleva Cotterill.
home of Mra. Role Carson, . Mrs. Bernice Wino presided
the club decided to make at the meeting with Mrs. Car·
ChtUim8ll stockings and fill son giving the devotions . Mrs.
them with crayons and color· Arline Davis had the
log book.Ii for the children, secretary's report. A potluck
and tray lavon for the othe"" dinner was enjoyed at noon
!'~~~~fined to the hospital at with ,Mrs. Wino giving grace.
ChrUtmaa time. The project
Last mflllth the members
will be started at the next toured the Fenton Glass Co.
,neet1ng to be held at tbe at WiUiamstown, W. Va . Also
home of Mra. Dixie Sayre, attending the meeting
l'!ov. 18, beginning at 10:30 besides those mentioned was
a.m.
. Mrs . VIrginia Whitlatch .

--,

Submitted

By
_.J~1~a Gheen

Middleport

Sheraton with 1,206 CCL
members in attendance.
Banquet speaker was noted
author, Marjorie Holmes and
luncheon speaker was 1963
Miss America , Ja'cquelyn
Mayer Townsend,
Those attending from South
Central District were: Cathy
Wray and Carol Thompson,
First..Step Mothers League;
Peg Houqashelt, Thelma
Osborne, and Ann Colburn,
Middleport CCL; Nanette
Moody, Progressive Mothers
League; Cathy Bostic,
ll.osealee DeLille, Mary
Louise Herinesy , . Joann
Jolmson, Molly Plymale, Ann
Sanders, Mimi Slone, and
Jean Gallipolis, Toddlers to
Tassels Mothers League.

p:~n::-.;erald

Mrs.
and
daughter,
Katie,
accompanied her mother, Mrs.
Muine Arnold to her home in

~~l~r~~~~o~':~8b~~~~

home at Van Wert, Ohio
following an illness.
Mrs. Helen Barker, Clifton,
spent the weekend at
Groveport, Ohio where she
visited Edna Moore and
Olevia Sweeney.
Mrs. Clara Williams visited
her sister, Mrs . Ethel
Rayburn on Sunday at Letart,
W. Va. Mrs. Rayburn is able
to walk now with the aid of a
walker.
Mr . and Mrs. Denve.r
Blake, Mr. and Mrs. Andy

VanMeter attended Moun·
taineer Dinner Theatre on
Friday evening.
SP 4 Donald Johnson,
The Harrisonville PTO
stationed in the Army in halloween party was held
Germany, is visiting hls Saturday night with l'OStume
parents, Mr . .and Mrs . · prizes being award~ to the
Freeman Johnson at Clifton . winners.
·
Gennie Merritt, daughter Qf
Jud Kes were Minni e
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ml-Grath, . Louise Eshleman,
Merritt, is hospitalized at and Marga ret Doug las .
Hol•er Medical Center with Pr'iZI:!S were awarded as
pnewnonia.
follows ;
CHILD INJURED
Pre -sc hool
throu g h
Robbie Thomas, IS-month · kindergarten : Barbara.
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Donahue, prettiest; Melissa
Thomas, New Haven, burned Neutzling, most original ;
his chest, right hand and
arm, when be reached up to a Emergency Squad. The
counter and pulled a cup of Thomases' son, Chris,
returned to school on Mon·
hot coffee on himself.
day,
after recuperating from
He . was , taken· to Holzer
pneumonia.
Medical Center by Mason 's

Harrisonville PTO holds Halloween party

STARTS
THURSDAY
MORNING
10 A.M.

Aaron Sheets, funnie;t; and Althouse, Kathy Stanley, usa orange drink providw by.
Sandy Vanl"e, ugliest.
McDonalds of Athens were
Riggs, and Kim Osborne.
First through third : Robin
Refreshments of pumpkin served. All of the children
Butcher, prettiest ; Jerrod eookies and donuts and rel-eived treats.
Sheets, most original ; Wendy
Phillips, funni est ; and
Rodney Butcher, ugliest .
Fourth through eighth ;
Jerry Althouse, pretties ;
Brian Gibbs, mo;t original;
Valerie Deskins, fWUiiest ;
and Katrina
Donohue,
ugliest.
Ninth through adults; Anita
See Sandy, . Kay, or Deb Tuesday thru '
· Lee, prettiest; J ennifer
Saturday Evenings by Appointment .
Sheets, most original; Marjorie Hall, funniest ; and Donna Hall, ugliest.
Severa l games were played
2nd St., Pomeroy, 0 .
992 -7606
with prizes going to Fred ·

OIATEAU BEAUTY SALON

NOVEMBER
Artificial Washable

$4.99 Value

CHRISTMAS

AM POCKET
RADIO

FLOWERS
•POINT PUASANT tMASON

Poinsettias in 4 different sizes,

By . Nobility, Save $2.00
on this AM Radio . Nice

white or red, greenery, too. Get
your hoi iday needs now .

•.

.·.,. .
'
Indiana Glass
Hen on Nest

Ruby Red

FRUIT
Boxed

Mrs. Imboden and son

Birth announced of son
:

Mr. and Mra. William R.
Imboden, Rutland, are an·
nounclng the birth of a soo on
Oct. :13 at the Holzer Medical
CeDter. Gr~ts are
Mr . and Mrs. James

~~"t

'. ' . ' ...

:&lt;

~··

.,·

Ohve
.
Amber .

99

,/Ia

Lightweight
2 speed
Save $4 .00

JUSTEN CURLING IRON ..............$344
.

Snodgrass, Columbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Jm.
baden, Rutland. Mr. and Mrs.
Imboden have a daughter,
Tonya.

$24.95
Value

WIEN,ERS •••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••• ~ ••~~!~ 97e
1 lb. Blue Bonnet

MARGARINE .........:~.s.}.~: 69' 'PEARS.-~~: ........... .
Calif. Tray Pack

Ohio Colby

2/29~

$

LONGHORN ....~Y..~~:~:~;.$1.49
CHEESE ......... ~!!~~~.~~:. $1.59 GRAPEFRUIT. .... ~~~...
5 lb. Florida White

.

l.29

N CATFISH •••••••••••••~~.$1
10'1• oz. Campbell's

CREAM OF CELERY SOUP. ••••••••••••••••. 2/4'1
17 oz. Del Monte

SWEET PEAS ................................. 2/79$
10 oz. Castleberry

HOTDOG SAUCE............................. 2!6'9$
16 oz . Idaho

INSTANT

Bag '
ft()lrllllliE~ ...••.•••.•••••••...•..••••

67'

available from Mrs. Ruth
Simpkins, Millfield, 797·2338;
Mrs. Robert Morrison,
Trimble, 787·3007; Mrs.
Anthony Sargent!, Amesville,
at tbe.Fint United Methodllt 448·3051; Mrs . William
Cburch, 2 South College Pidcock, Albany, ~353;
Street, Atbelll. Mra. Orva Mrs. Robert Main, New
Heluenbuttel,
lecturer, Marshfield, 66f.2635; Mrs.
eolumnllll
and
noted Reva Abraham, Nelaonville,
iauthorlly on antiques wW 753-1302.
·conduct the two day program
Mrs. Orva Hela8enbuttel Is
' wltlcll 11 open to the public. nationally recognized as a
Mrs . Heluenbuttel comes lecturer on antiques and is a
: from Southeastern Ohio and columnlat for several antique
resides
in
the · journala,lncludlng "Tri..State
now
Wlllblncton, D. C. area. She Trader," "Spur" magazine.
gives a almllar program The Washington Star News·
, ·aMuaUy at the French Art paper pubUshes her colwrut
' ' 'Colony in GaUipolil.
entitled, Antiques and
· 'lbe flnt seulon of the Americana. Mrs. Heilsen·
, MDI"'r will be Wednesday, butte! is alao 8llii0Ciate editor
·Nov. a, from 1 p.m. to 3:30 of''GlaSBRevlewMagazlne,"
.p.m. The evenln&amp; session wW and has authored booklets
be from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. entitled, Pairpolnt Glass Cup
ToPICI to be covered during Plates , and American
the flnt two ltlllona are the Collectible Glass of the
11111ory and popular varieties . Twentieth Century. Since ·
of American Glau and china 1988, her articles entitled,
pOttery. •
About Antiques have ap·
The llelliclllll wW continue peared regularly in national
011 ThUI'Iday, Nov. 9, from newspapers. Mra. Hela8en·
8:111 a.m. to 12 noon and butte! bas been Instrumental
feature American antique in the restoration of the Mary
• fumltllre. The tharac· Surra! Houae and is a Trustee
f tailtiCII of woods used in the of the Surrat Society. The
varied stylll and reclonal Cbesapeake Carousel
ftrlatiollloflhe 18th and 19th reatoratlon
In
Large, .
Centurl• will be hl8hll8bled· Maryland was an important
, j ..DllriiiC the lfternoon session · proJect of hers. Clubs devoted
i )Jrl. ·Heiuenbuttel will to Heisey and Steuben Glau
:: ,eooduc:t a worbhop on the have been established
j ' can and restoration of an- through her Interest. The
· 'Uque furniture from 1 p.m. to Imperial Glass Collectors
: • 8•111 p.m
Society, the National Duncan
'' · ·A - 1 feature of the Glass Society and the
: ,Aistlq11e 8emlnar wUJ provide . American Antique . Arts
" '•
opportunity for par· AaoclliUon resulted from her
tlci!*U to brine one small special interests in American
antique Item for !den· Antiques..
The
latter .
': ,uftcaUon bY Mrs. Heluen· organlzatloo now baa grown .
.; buttel.
to 18 Chapters.
·:
Tlc:ketl may be purdtaled
The
Athens
County
,; ' blfore the M!J!Jnar at S10 for Museum Corporation Is
! ' tbe llltlrt two-4ay 1111111nar, presenting this Seminar as a
:; ot p for each Mlillon. part ot Ita ongoing program
to develop Interest in regional
1 &lt;211lrllll ticket 111e1 are Mr.
; 1 ' and Mn.. JPred Abnblm of autlque objects and crafta.
'!U-1102. Other
t: ' ·memben of tbe ticket
DAVID HARRIS
~ ~ - • • are: In Athenl,
i:iavld Harris, 1978
d
Mlrl• lltoae, IN-lOll; graduate of Melp High
Mn. Ella Stout, IN-7111; School, Ia employed in the
. • Mn. Put1r Walt•, IN- American School of Broad·
~ Hlppa" cu11n1 In Columbus. He is
~: ' IIi 1101; and Stanley tbe son of Mr, and Mrs. Ken·
!!bot ,.....: Tlekltl are lllo neth Han'ls, Pomeroy .

$

.

x 25 ft.

. With 7c

.,

$

· With 4c

200 Count

·

WHITE PUFF TISSUES ••••••••• ~!f..... ~2 Box 1.29
'"
PUMPKIN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
29 oz. Sweet Brier

·

.

.'

·

Stadium Down Coats, Quilled Nylons, P. V.C.
Vinyls, DenIm Ranchons. Sky Types, Wool

t·

*·

WESTCLOX
POCKO
WATCH

Blends . A really huge selection . Stop in .
You'll like the styles, love the. savings.

25%0FF

•3••

REGULAR VALUES TO '25.99

s

-

WE SAVE YOU MONEY
ON CHRISTMAS GIFTS! I

M
L

Quality Gifts, at the lowest possible
price! We've added many new lines and
items for your Christmas gifting. Look· us
over, you'll be pleased,_

XL
. · \:·. ··.' WOMEN'S

COME VISIT US THIS WEEKEND

Solids, Prints S.M.L

2

FOR

$500

TOPS

MEN'S

MEN'S
JEANS

SWEAT

SHIRTS

Entire stock of Pre-Washed

Men's Jeans on sale. S1zes
28 to 42 in many, many

Full cut,

styles.

fleece lined .

Navy, blue or gray . Sizes S·

M·L·Xl.

Values
To
$16 .99

$422

REG.

'5.99

Po~ester

LONG SLEEVE
TOPS
V-necks, Turtle necks, Mock
turtles, white and fall co lors .
From our every day stock .

Regular
$3.99
Value

SUPER SAVINGS
WOMEN'S
SWEATER
SALE

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

. ...

LEE - BIG YANK
MAVERICK- WRANGLER

REG.

4.49

1

Cardigan and Pull over styles .
Full fashioned . A big sa le
group . Fir st qual it y and i m
per f ects

$3~?.

1

10.99

DECORATED GLASS

COFFEE MUGS

3

FOR

$100

$399

V~ES

Jute

UMBRELLA
Reg.
$3.99

.

$~

WALL HANGER
33 Inches

Long

$200

PROCTOR • SILEX

STAINLESS
TABLEWARE
Se~

TYCO
. DOUBLE LOOP
Matte!

LUV

A

BUBBLE
DOL.L
Reg. $16.99

·;rr..

L ,.,..;

WOMEN'S
POLYESTER
TOPS

Women's

;: : rw.mua.

tl

Pair

B IG SELEC-1 IDi'-J'

i

:l
:l

46¢ 3 $1

'

Antique Seminar
sponsored by . the Athens
County Milleum Corporation
irliJ be beld on Wednelday
• llld 'lburid&amp;y, Nov. a and 9,

French City 12 oz.

bowl by Ind iana Glass .

F~lOM

An

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD•••••••••••••• .~b;. $1.09

Sizes 8, 9, 10. White and
pa stel colo r s . 79c if
perf ect

Avocado col or. Large 9"

Women's Hooded

in Athens, Nov. 8, 9

1

X-LARGE
PANTIES

SHORT SLEEVE

~'Heissenbuttel to speak

Pk

FRUIT
BOWL

PRICED!

STYLIST
DRYER

Boxed

W~ite

Reg.
$1.99

Women's

-1250

CANDY
DISH

BOWL

:

gift Idea.

9" Glass

REG.
89'
Indiana Glass

,

. co N••••••••••••••••••.•
. . g... $139
VAC. PAK SL. BA
•

COME SAVE

CROSS OVER THE BRIDGE FOR SOME VERY SPECIAL BUYSII I

;
'

REYNOLDS ·FOIL •••••••••••••·•••••••~f!•.••. :s::~· 3'1
CORN BEEF HASH ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7'1

•

Maoonaud Area

A SPECIAL INVITATION TO OUR OHIO CUSTOMERS -

.

· 1S oz. Armour

"Next to. Elberle1ds in

.•

born on Oct. 25. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.James E. Johnson, Mason i
W. Va. The baby weighed
.seven pounds, one ounce. and
was 20 inches long.

12"

CHAPMAN SHOES
o. ,,

MEIGS PLAiA-992-3662

·-u..,..,

TEA BAGS ................................. ~ •••.. 1.19

START THOSE NEEDED
REPAIRS NOW
· . AND SAVE ON PRE.QJT STUDS. PANEUNG,

•
•I

CrJnstmas pro;ect
1 b
hOSted b~ CJU

Attending the Ylllltatloo day :
and camp fffll'eNelaowere ~ ~
DaMer, Je
n,
r s~
Stepp, Tony u~~~~·
Stein, ~tt
Y:
Glaze, Richard Cassell, Steve :
Cassell, Ed Baer, Jeff Hood:;
Pat Shrlmplin. J . R. Kit ,
chen, and Richard Long.
•
•

Solid Cherry Bedroom ~uite with
2 TWin Beds . . ........ . .... .. . . . 5399.95
3 Pc. Walnut Bedroom Suite . • •..... $299.95
3 Pc Oak Bedroom Suite ... • • •..... 5299.95
4 Pc · Bassett Bedroom Suite, like new
Reg. ss99.95 )'!low .. . ..... . •. ... . • S599.95
French Provencial Bedroom Suite,
like new . . . ........ .. ...... · ·· .$499.95
several Complete full &amp; twin size beds,
PRICED RIGHT .
.
.
over 90 chest &amp; dressers in stock starting
at ,
... .... .. .... .. : ..... . . S29.95up
w~~d~n.oesks
... ..... . .. . 579.95 &amp; S99.95 .
2
19" Portable Color TVs ...... . . .... .5299.95
Table Lamps .... ......... . .· : .. : . $5.00 ~P
Round Lamp Table •. .. . .... . · ~ .... $49.95
2 Pc . Living Room Su ite .. .... ... . $49.95 up
1 ft . Long China Cabinets .. . .. ... . 5499.95
2-3 pc. Breakfast Sets .. ... . $49.95 &amp; $59.95
5 &amp; 7 pc. Breakfast S'e ts . .... . .... $39.95 up
7- Up Pop Machine ................... $100
Maytag Automatic washer . ....... $199.95
Maytag Dryers ....... .. .. 5109.95 &amp; $69.95
10 cu. ft . Gold Amana Chest Freezer . $249.95
5cu . ft. Chest Freezer,likene~ . ...• 5.1 99.95
23 cu . It. Upright Freezer, like new. .. $329,95
2- 65,000 Warm Morning Heaters .
.
$149.95&amp;$299.95
.
Siegler Fuel Oil Heater, reg. $699 .95
NOW $399.95
2 Portable Washer . ..... •.• $79.95 &amp; $169.95
3 Wringer Washer ... . .... .. . , ... $49.95 up
35 ooo btu Warming Heater • ..•. .. .. $99.95
s~veral Gas &amp; Elec. Ranges . , .•.. $69.95 up
NEW - 3 pc. Living Room Suite,
Sofa ' chair &amp; love seat..... , .....• $349.95

48 Count Tender Leaf

'

FIRING STRIPS CEIEIUX • PWMBING
AND ELECTRICAL NEEDS, THAT MAKE
ANY JOB ASNAP.

John Epple, most fish .
Other contests were won
by: crab race, Scott G~een;
one foot race, Joey Poulin ;
shoe kick forwards , Darrin
Wolfe ; ..shoe ·kick backwards,
John Epple; whistling con·
test, Don Stein. The contest
winners were also awarded
silver doUars.
In other scouting activities,
pack 245 went to Camp
Krodel at P\. Pleasant, W.
Va. for scout visitation day.

Announce birth

Stride

s

won: Don Stein, biggest fish ;

Tim Cassell, smallest fish ;

.Mrs. Richmond and daughter

.is good enough
for your kidsT

12

Cassell, Nick Bush, Don and
Sandy HaMing, Scott Han·
ning, Kim Hanning, Richard
and Marilyn Poulin , Joey
Poulin, Lisa Poulin, Jim and
Linda Martin, Jay Marlin,
Patty Martin, Karen Martin.
A fishing derby was held
Jor which the following people

•

RUTLAND FURNITURE
BARGAIN CENTER

s :sec:ause only the best
"A
T.

Epple, Dan and Patty Arn~ld,
John Arnold, Melani Arnold,
Frank and Donna Gheen,
Scott Gheen, Danya Gheen,
Eric Johnson . Davi~ and
Lynn Shuler, Michael Shuler,
Eddie Miller, Billy Weaver,
Harold and Carol Wolfe,
Darrin Wolfe, Beth Wolfe ,
Susan Baer, Eddie Baer,
Charles and Kitty Cassell,
Trey cassell, Tim Cassell,
Steve Cassell, Susanne

'l- •

•

~:::--"'!·

'

I

~·

Scout Pack 245 held picnic at Forest Acres .
Middleport Cub Scout Pack
24~ recently held a picnic at
Forest Acres Park.
Attending the picnic were
Susie Barker, Wendy Barker,
Chris Barker, Cathy Barker,
Jody Miller , Kim Stewart,
Rick Little, Jeff McMahon,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lowery,
Pat Stein, Donald Stein, Mary
Beth Stein, Ed Kitchen, J. R.
Kitchen, Frank Epple, Amy
Epple, John Epple, Lynn

7-'nle Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Nov.l,l!178

UTE
BRITE

RACE

sn

$39.99 Value

JOAN IE
AND HER
PONIE
DOl!
·Reg. $16.99

MATTEL

DANCEREUA
DOLL

2 SLICE
TOASTER

$999

For 8

$999

·. DEEP FRYER
A cooker ·or fryer . .

Save $4 .00 Set

$14.99. Values Merit
' brand .

$999

$14.

$1099
KENNERS
MALT &amp;
BURGER SHOP
Reg.
s9.99

~88

·u

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON
OPEN EVERY NIGHT - SUNDAY 1 TO 6

�Auxiliary donates

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wcdneli!lay, Nov.
1978
-I ,- - - - - - - :i='='='='='='='='='='='= =========,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,::,,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,::,;:,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,llll

l,
I
I

Social I,
Helen Help ::: money.fior parttes
·
Calendar
I :: U ·
·
I •..:·.':
S • • • By Helen Bottelf· Money lor Christmas par- Plans were made for . the

Meter, Mrs. Mary Pickens,
Mrs. Eunie Brinker, and. a
. junior, Cheryl Johnson.

=.:.'.,.:

THE PHOTO PLACE
109 High St.
Pomeroy

.. ties at the Chillicothe annual Christmas party I&lt;&gt; be
held at the Meigs Inn, Dec. II ,
WEDNESDAY
MORE PRAITICAl Ttri\r&gt;o MEN?
Veterans Hospital and the with a $2 gift exchange.
LADIES AUXIIJARY of DEAR HELEN.
Xenia children's home was Reservations are to be made
Weddings
Middleport Fire Department
Portraits
Several limes r~-cently I've read of men who killed their designated when the Racine with Mrs. Norris or Mrs.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. at fire wives, then themselves. But I've yet to hear about a woman American Legion Auxilairy,
· Passports
Martha Lou Beegle.
station. Hostesses are Phyllis who shoots her husband, then turns the gun on herself, or Post 602 met recently at the
Anniversaries
The
traveling
prize
donated
Baker, Sue Imboden and otherwise makes it a murder-suicide situation.,
hall ·
by Mrs. Beegle was wolf by
Special Occasions
Barbara Hoffma~.
Mrs. Julia ~orris .presided Mrs. Thelma Walton. Mrs.
Appears that husbands pulled toward murdering their mates
REGULAR MEETING,
are often so miserably in love that they prefer to go with them. at the meetmg ~tth Mrs. Ables and Mrs. Norris served
Pomeroy Lodge 1~, F&amp;AM, . Not wives' If a woman does in her man , she stays alive to heat . Leora Young gtvmg the refreshments. Others attenBob Hoeflich
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.; all the rap.
'
prayer. There was the pledge ding were Mrs. Betty Van
master masons invited.
Doesn't this prove again that femahis are the stronger, less lu lhe flag, the preamble, and
THURSDAY
a. prayer lor the deceased.
romantic, and more practical sex ? - THINKER
ANNUAJ, FRIENDSHIP DEAR THINKER :
1 he fall conference was noted
night of Daughters of
We-e-ell, maybe.. .
and attended by etght
America, District 13, ThursWife-killing is often a crime of passion, followed by deep members ot th~ umt. Several
day, 6:30p.m. potluck at the remorse; or perhaps a mutually planned murder-suicide if life fumtshed cooktes for the tea.
Chester lodge hall. All lodge hec'Umes untenable for both parties.
Th~ un!t subscribed lor the
members welcome. Covered
When a woman kills her husband it's sometimes in sell- legtslaltve bulletm.
dish aod own table servlee to defense. Rather than feeling compelled to go with him, she
be ta)ten. Business meeting may even experience relief that he's gone. Moreover, juries
followirls supper.
are lenient with ballered women; but men who do in their
PRACTICE SESSION
PLANNED PAREN- wives get prelly harsh treatment , and they know this.
There will be practice for
THOOD clinic Thursday .
Yes, when it comes to spouse-murder, maybe women are initiation at 7:30 Thursday
Appointment necessary. Call more praclical. An interesting theory, anyway.- H.
ni ght at the Pomeroy
992-5912.
Masonic Temple by Pomeroy
BAZAAR Thursday at DEAR HELEN.
Chapter 186, Order of the
VathoUc- Church. Dinner at
Whel' my husband drinks, which is often, he gets mean and Eastern Star. All officers are
4:30 p.m. Creamed baked vile. He says I've either got to put up with his temper or leave. urged to attend.
chicken and ham dinners.
Last night, in front of our youngsters he described how he
Country store and fancy . had sex with another woman five years ago, .using filthy gutter
stands.
Christi Rene johnson
·language. f got !hem to bed but he kept on yelling. If I argue
EVANGELINE CHAPTER back, he breaks something. Or he hits me, though not to the ex172, O.E.S., 7:30p.m. Thurs- lent of having to see a doctor, yet. He refuses counseling.
day at the Masonic Temple
He has La ken a sledgehammer to a brand new car windshield
Middleport. Officers to wea~ and he smashes things I care about when he's mad. I fear for
gowns.
the children.
WESTERN
SQUARE
I'm a spineless jellyfish or I'd take the two kids and leave.
The open church wedding
Mr. and Mr•. Johnny
Johnson of Mason, W.Va. are will take place at the Clifton Dance, Thursday, 8 p.m. at How can I get the self-&lt;:onlidence to strike out on my own ? .
announcing the engagement Holiness Tabernacle on Fri- the Royal Oak Park P.J .
and forthcoming marriage of day, Nov. 3, with the Rev . recreation bulldlng. Dewey DEARP. :
Classes being offered can be applied
Call your local Mental Health Association and ask for a
their daughter, Christy Rene, Lester Van Meter, uncle of Hart·of Columbus will be the
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
lu Eddie Lee Russell, son of the bride, performing the caller. All Western Square referral to a haltered women's shelter or holline. Here you'll
college with you in mind. We can
Dance Clubs are invited.
learn that wives and children needn 'I live jn fear just for the
Mrs. Carl Hood, Mason, and ceremony.
POMEROY
MID· sake of being housed and fed.
·
Eddie Russell, Middleport.
give you the training that you need
DLEPORT LIONS Club zone
Do it today, before the thing your husband breaks is -you.to qualify for the job of your future,
meeting for 13K, Thursday, 7 H.
We have more calls from employers
p.m. at the Meigs Inn. James
C. Butler, district governor DEAR HELEN.
in the area for our graduates, than
Cheers for the guy why dared express his views on joggers
will
be
the
speaker.
All
Lions
.we have graduates.
CHESTER--Cub scouts, Jean Norton and Brent, Ran- urged to attend.
and runners! When these stuffy critters start extolling the virdy
Kesterson,
Lee
Kenny,
webelos, families, · and
SOUP SUPPER basement tues of their self-induced suffering, I point out that if it was
friends of Pack 235, Chester, Mike Sim, Jirruny Wilson,
really healthy to run, how c'Ume the slowest-moving creatures
Join the employables, take the first
enjoyed a hayride and wiener Mrs. Unda Yonker and of Sutton Church Thursday 4 -the giant turtle, elephant, etc . .live several hundred years,
p.m.
to
8
p.m.
Sponsored
by
roast Saturday at the home of Derek, Mr. and Mrs. Jon
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive your
while the greyhound lasts no more than 15 or so? - RUN
Jon Karschnlk on Flatwoods Karsclmik, Keith and Kevin. Sutton Carmel Church.
marketable skills and then the jobs
DOWN
FRIDAY
Also attending were Mark
Road .
will come to you.
POMONA GRANGE, 8
Enjoying' the outing were and Sharon Werry who sup.
plied
and
drove
the
tractor
p.m.
Friday
at
the
Rock
SprHalloween
party·
Mr. and Mrs. Rav Landerings Grange Hall. Hemlock
mill, Jeff, Andy, Dell and andwagon. ·
Sherry and Gene Goodwin,
Grove
to be host.
Sherry, Mrs. Jackie StarMiddlepurl,
are announcing
held
Saturday
'
SATURiJAY
cher, Terri and Scott, Mr. and
of
their
second son,
the
birth
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Mrs. Paul Harris, Paul, Jodie
Nathan
Eugene,
Oct.
27 at the
CI.UB, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2
and Mali, Mr. and Mrs.
WEST
COLUMBIA
Holzer
Medical
Center.
p.m. workshOp 'im Christmas
Donald Maxson, Donnie and
ELECTION DINNER
Goblins
of
all
sorts
appeared
Paternal
grandfather
is
Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
There will be an election arrangements and decoraat
a
Halloween
party
on
David
J
.
Goodwin,
Pomeroy,
Starfire diamonds bring
Davis and Kyle, Mrs. Elmer ctay dinner ~d bazaar at \!le tions. Members to take a sack Saturday evening at Salem
you guaranteed fine quality,
and
the
maternal
grandYoung and Mike, Mr. and Chesler Umted Methodist lunch, materials and ideas.
beautifully mounted in 14K
Mrs. Mitchell Holley, Mit- .. Church soctal room Tuesday. Some materials will be Community Building. The mother is Mrs. Helen Holt.
yellow or white gold ... with
hall
was
decorated
In
keeping
Mrs.
Norma
Goodwin
is
the
permanent registrati on .
chell and Brian, Mrs.Erruna · The baza~r and bake sale will available for purchase.
with Halloween and was paternal great-grandmother.
continue at the church on · REACT
MEETING,
Wednesday, 10 a.m.to 6 p.m. · Saturday, Senior Citizens sponaored by Salem Com·
munlty Church.
GUNCLUB
.
Center In Pomeroy with Jolm · Children receiving prizes
lA!Ist, president of the Ohio were Shannon Neal, most
There will be a party for
YARD SALE
RUMMAGE SALE
REACT Connell as speaker. original; Ricky Wiseman, members of the Racine Gun
· The Mount Moriah Chqrch
A rummage sale will be Also featured will be a 15 ugliest; Amy and Mauha Club and their wives, at the
21~ E. Main
recreation buDding, Royal
of God Is having a yard sale held by the Shriners at the minute film, "Where Seconds Russell, prettiest.
No. 75.02-04728
Pom_,.r~r
,J&gt;.
Thursday afternoon and all club house in Racine, .Friday . Count"
and · special
Teenagers were judged as Oak Park, from 7:30 to
day Friday and Saturday at and Saturday. Rummage Is to recognition will be given follows: Ellen McDermitt, midnight Saturday.
the Carl Schultz, Jr ., be taken in Wednesday after- REACT members. An at- ugliest; Sharon Crites,
residence located on State noon . For pickup shriners tractive door prize will be prettiest; LaiUla Burris, most
may call992-2038.
Route 124 In Racine.
given and the public Is In- original.
vited.
Adults : Jane Johnson,
funniest
; Diane Johnson,
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . dinner
ANNUAL
HARVEST
and bazaar
at the most original; Arlene Mcfirehouse ln. Coolville, Dennitt, prettiest.
DRAW A BEAD·
beginning 5:30p.m. Saturday
. Many participated in the
by Coolvtlle United Methodist
games such as -bobbing ior
Church Women. Complete apples, etc.
• dinner, adults, $3; children,
Refreslunents of donuts
$1.75.
cookies,
potato chips, coffee:
PUBLIC DINNER
hot
chocolate,
Kool-Aid and
Steel
Radials
Saturday at hall by Wilkes- pop were served.
ville Pythlan Sisters Lodge
Eliminate WinCer
591. Complete dinner, $2.50
tbaDgeoter
adults; children, $1.25.
' SUNDAY
fill
REVIVAL Friday through Smith, Coolville, speaking.
Gabriel
Quartet
on
Saturday
NO'JEMBER 4nt IN WEST VIRGINIA
Sunday at Old Dexter
Church, 7:30 p.m . each and The Messengers on
Plus$1.93 FE. ET .
WHITEWALL
ilnd
Old 'fire
evening with Rev. Ralph Sunday.

Announc~

••

...

IT'S NOT
TOO LAUI

.

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE

'

-~

IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASS ..".
STARTING OCT. 30, 1978

engagement

VOCATIONAL AGRICULTURE students from Mason
County Vo-Tech receive the award plaque for winning the
agronomy competition in the 55th annual Slate Vocational
Agriculture Judging C~ntests held at West Virginia
.

•
,.

I

VISIT US AT THE

'37.!S~SRI3

Jtmington

MASON, W. VA.

• .•
•
•·
•
•

RAIN TIRE
Belted

•
••

~

~;

~

rue

SEASON?

PICKENS HARDWARE

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

:

READY FOR RABBIT

SHOTGUNS - RIFLES
SHELLS AND ACCESSORIES

.,

CALL TODAY Al .
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND

'Q'Jettelers

.,
:;
•
•,,
•
••·'
••

~~~~n~~tt~~w.~~

You'll never have· to put on
snow tires again . Here's all

the grip -you need for almo5t

:':
"
"
'
.,
;,;
•
•
"
"
.::

hardworking tread edges for
tract ion . A well -grooved
tread tor adhesion In the rain .
A smooth, quiet ride . Plus

.
DR. CONDE ANNOUNCES HIS RETURN
10 PREVIOUS OFFICE HOURS.
EFFECilVE lHIS DATE APPOINTMENTS .

gas -saving

radial

struction. Get T lempo one tire that does It all.

con th e

.

(Good 'Til Nov. 30, '78)

"CHICK OUR PRICES AND QUALITY"

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

ARE BEING ACCEPTED AS BEFORE.

~100

9'n-2101

John Fultz, Mgr.

E. Main, Pomeroy

r

•

PAPER nMELS; .....................J.~'!'.~~ ."."!~ .. 59'
. OSAGE PEACHES..................~;:::~~- 2Pl.09
COOKIES.... :~::.~~......................... 3JS1.00
~~~
KIDNEY
BEANS ........................~~.·~. 3P1.00
'
JEllO
PUDDING ..~~~.'.~7~::...........~.~~-. 4/'1.00
Jiffy
CORN MUmN MIX .................. ~.~~.S/'1.00
..
DOG tuUU ............. ~ .................~:~ 41'1.00

-

PHEBE'S STOltE
Thursday, Nov . I through Nov . 4'

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp:.
Monday thru Friday
9:001117 :00
.
saturday 9:00-9:00

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

Valley Bell

::~~P. . . . . .49~
I'

.

Ken-L- ~

CARROTS.......................~.·-~:.~.~~: 19'
TOMATOES. ..........................'.~: . 394
PEARS
3 La. $100

••
~:

$1 09 Ptus tax

CH~

FRANKS

$1 ~~

JOWL
BACON
Sliced

2

lb.

~169

._;;
"
~··
~·
•

&amp; depoilt

·aRAUNSCiiWEiGERI::: •• ~ ••••••••••~~~79~
French City

ROAST

. $}09
LB.

~

'

--•

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. Ravenswood High School
vocational agriculture
students recently won top
honors in the 55th annual
State Vocational Agriculture
Judging Contests at West
Virginia University.
Conducted annually at
WVU, the competition includes 10 contests. This year
teams involving 557 vo-ag
students from 43 sc hools
competed.
Coached
by
Donald
Stephens, 26 Ravenswood voag students entered threemember teams in each of the
10 judging contests and won
first pla ce judging dairy
products and dairy cattle.
Ravenswood studerits also
took second place in
agricultural mechanics and
placed high enough in the
other events to earn 412.1
points~ 4.8 more than second
place Circleville.
So Ravenswood was
awarded the Sweepstakes
Award, given each year by
the State Association of the
Future Fanners of America. Presentatioo was made by
Pam Reed, FFA state viee
president,
Southeastern
District.
In addition to Ravenswood,
pther teams placing first In
the contests were Mason
County Vocational, poultry
and eggs .and agronomy;
Mineral County Vocational,
agricultural. mechanics and
livestock; Hundred, entomology, meats, and plant
pathology ; and Jefferson
High, horticulture.
First-place teams were
awarded plaques from the ·
WVU College of Agriculture
'and Forestry and awards also
were made by the National
FF A Foundation . Highscoring individuals In each
event received awards from
Alpha Gamma Rho, the
agriculture fraternity at

a"""

tfOIIPOi

$

.....-·

PAIIIfAITIC U.WIOI

-.ow~-·

....... u.u~

fd ch n ! lni!'Sol!! ~l:lv!f1 1 MO otr m s ·~ req uor! ll 10 ~ l&lt;!&lt;ltHV
• ~•• li bl~

w le ,,., u ch l(•o11e• StQ• e

e • c ~t .n
.t r&gt; t dvtH

W! Wi ll oN e! \IOU y our ChOIU Of ~ CQfti ~ .. IJII!
,...,.,,, ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ e . r e!lec t o n~ I he u me uvong ~ o• • •a•n

I •H d &lt;l!!m

•

""''' ent•tle vou 10 llu• c ll• s.t the ad,erl•Std '""'
I

PhC t '"'tl h on

rldVS

·~ ij u~ r dn te~ lnr """ JU!dl

m a ne&gt; ta ~ ru•e•

I

11 , o~

J•~

you• otem "'''"me""'" ~

not

1 11~ 1' !1

~C»YIIGMr lt71-TMI !'IOGII C:O. lfiMI ot.ND 'IIC:U

All

0000 SUNDAY OCT. Jt1 THIU SATUimA't' NO'tf. 4, 1t711N

12 oz.

Pkg.

;;:
·: ;
'·
:
;;

$}09

~;
~

"'
~·
•

~
~

SMoKE ·
SAUSAGE

~

•·
· i
·"'
·•·

$}7!6.

. ~:
~..

II

JB,Ckson.

Stokely
Catsup

I

Frozen
Banquet
D'1nners .. .. ...... ..

I'OMIIOV I UlVII _MIDGI kiOGII, WI IUIIVI THI
lttGHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIIS. NON I SOLO TO OIAUIS.

"

I
I

,---..,. I

SAVE :

Quart
Btls.

White
Bread ...................

I
I

OF

$

20·01 . ROUND TOP KROGER

$110

:

On 2 Bt\s. .

1

I

LIMit 2 IllS. llllH COUPON UO 1750 IDDITIOm PUR CHIS! :
(flCIUDINC THIS IT!M).
I
liMIT O NE COUPON Pf:JI 'AMtl V

COIII'GIICIOfS~UifOCf 11l'IUSUUUfiiO~'
UIIHI

ro '"IICIIU s r111 1 LOCi t run

J"l

~:=

I
I

' ... -

15' OFF LABEL

Aiax
Detergent ... ...

49·0%.
LIMIT 1 Ptrm

Box

nus

Reynolds

I"INT IIWINAILI IOTTLU . IAHILHI ... D.

Root Beer or Orange Crush ...... ..

:

25-ft.
Rolls

DII'OStT

8 ,,, $1 ""'
09

1
I

OfP01tT

I
I
I
I

CREAM STYLE

Stokely
Golden

t Baking
Potatoes

Onl(ons

Can
UMIT ONE COUPON PER

F~MII y

court~• CIMlO nuar ocr n tHiu utUIDn ~ov 1 1m

Hot

Foods

II Afll-7 PM

TABLETA\K

Pumpkin
Pie

Hi Nu 2%
$
Lowfat
Gal.
Milk ..................... p;:n~r

IS')

.
C)n1ons 25

1b.

00

KROGER 0.5% LOWFAT MILK. GAL. PLASTIC CTN. $1.49

Bag

SERVE 'N' SAVE All VA'RIEl'IE
;,_,.,,.,.,.GRADED CH()tCE
BONE IN

Sliced

c

Luncheo~ -lb.

Meats
... . Pkg.
•

'

Full Cut
Round Steak

$ 5~9'-""'YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORES

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,

Wht;i~G.

$

Boneless
Beef Rib Eye ..... ..lb.

....

200-Ct.

FRESH

HOLI.Y FARMS . U.S.O.A.INSPECTED

Picnic
Pork
Roast........ lb.·

Mixed
Fryer
Parts ...........

.

99
SLIClD

FlEE

OPEN
24HRS.

ADAY
c
Except Closed Slblnlly lliRi&amp;lrt Til 9 AM Sunday
l~&lt;opt Hloton,

lb.

I
I

I
I
~I
~~ I

bailible Only In Stores With Deli Dtpt's

KROGER

I

LIMIT 2 CINS WITH COUPON AND 57.50 IDDITIONil PUmAS£
(!ICLUDINC THIS II!M I

'DeficaW6eK S~ecia~

17 -oz.
Cans

Bag

Ye~low

1-lb.

:
I

1iiii!CIIGA"llCUll SliT!' .l OCi l lUE S

-lb. •

(tESS THAN 25-LBS .. LB .

.spa

:
:

L • •••••••••••••••••••••••

$

20$ 49

0 SAVE

$

1
I

~:

Country Club
Ham Patties

:

ALUMINUM FOIL

.....

Superior's

I

f er

50eC•I•c.lly fi O!ed on th •s 10 II w r do ·~n out ol

"

SLICED
BACON·

On 2 P•t•·

I

Winning teams in the .
livestock, dairy, agricultural
mechanics and poultry
contests ·are eligible to
compete in the 1979 National
FFA Judging Contests In
Kansas City . The state
contest is made possible
through the joint effort of
WVU's divisions of animal
and veterninary sciences,
plant sciences, and resource
management.
The Agricultural Education
Committee In the WVU
division
of
resource
management
and
the
Vocational Division of the
State
Department
of
Education arrange the
overall ,event.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 31·
Roy Bums; Vernon Clifton;
Barbara Cline, Patrica Cremeans; Roger Davis; Barbara Glessner ; Richard
Glessner; Golda Hanson;
Ruby Hicks; Mindy Hill;
Teresa Jividen; Emma
Keatley ; James Lambert;
Nora Loomis ; Jewell Niday;
Harry Parsons ; Sharon
Pierce; Carl Rodgers;
Evelyn S'lars; Jane SLack;
Jeannine Songer ; William
'Stewart; Dennis Sturgill;
Teresa Swango; Michael
Thomas; Brian VIgliotti; Lo.u
Ella White; Carroll Zachary.
Births, Ocl. 31
Mr. and Mrs. George
Tackett, and daughter,

SAVE
98'

4-Roll

•"

.•

'

Waldorf
Bathroom Tissue

: wvu.

anv road , any weether . ·10,000

N-0-T-1-C-E

.

1.0011 N)l . . . -

Announce·birth

~~

advisors are: (Ito r) , Tim Harper, advisor Gary Walbrown. Jenny Koon, advisor Rodney Wallbrown , and
Roger Boswell. Danny Hooge, assiSU! nt profes sor of
anunal and veterinary sciences at wvu, presents the
award.

Mason County Vo-Tech student.-; receive the award
plaque for poultry and eggs judging competition in the
55th annual . State Voca.tional Agriculture Judging
Contests held at West Vtrgtma University . Student.-; and

.Ravenswood-~~~~
Mason FFA
take first

Cub scouts enjoy hayride

-*

University. Students and advisors are: (I to r) , Jim
Henderson, advtsor Gary Walbrown, Jeff Livingston, Don
L:'yton, and Advisor Rodney Wallbrown . Richard
Zurunennan, associate professor of plant sciences at
WVU, presents the award.
·

Wllht s.lphvr s,o'int•
-514 s. Tlolr. St., .......

- --

.

'

�10-The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., WL'tinesdHy, Nov . 1, 1978

.

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
1:; Wurr.ls or Undt't
Ca~ h

A nd Thurs.

1 80

'"!Ill
2 25

JOO

175

'""

6 llll)',!j

In

I

returned as hairstylist

uf Thanks LHKI

Sl:lit'~ and Ya rd sales
only wtth c:l:l.sh wtlh
order ~ce nt cha rge (ut ailii larry.
1n ~ Box. Number InCa~ of The &amp;!n-

Homt"

unel

Tht&gt; Publisher reS\!['\/Cl:i lht right
w t'tltl ur reJect a11y &lt;ids deemed ulr
jet ltotl&lt;ll Thi:! PuUhsht! t wtU 11ut tJc
respunstble fur mule than unt&gt; llll'UI ·

Not ices

Notices

GUN SHOOT ~co ne Gun Club
~ v ery Sunday 1 pm
Factory
~h_:l~e gu~s o~l1_ _____ ~
G UN SHOOT, Racme Volunt-eer
Ftre Dept he ry Saturday b 30
pm at the 1r bu•ld1ng '" Bos hon

NO HUNTING or trespassmg on
my properly wtthou t perm1 s
Sta n Judy McGraw

.

red lnsc rtiutl

Plu.ltll'W.! 21[)6

~~cf:' ~ c~o_k e~~.n s on ly

ARI:: YO U troubled w tf h wil d
ontmols? f o)( m.nk r acoon
o possu m beaver etc? Co li the
trapper q95 398.4 Wtll contact
•n person for stgned pe rm •s

NOTICE

SIOn

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Card of Thanks
WI: WIS H to e~epr ess our stncere
tha nks to the Doctors and
Nur s e s o t Pleo sno l Vo lley

M0nda)
Noon OIIS&lt;Itunlay

H ospi tal ,

thru Fntl·a~
4P M

the day bt.&gt;fute pulllicllhun

Sum]a.,
4P M
F rtda~ ;~ ft e rn uon

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITAT ION
NOTICE ls hereby gtven
tha t In pursuanc e of a
Resolut 1on of the counc il of
the Village of Pomeroy , Ohio ,
passed on the 17th day of
July, 1978, there will be
su bmtfted to a vote of the
people of said V1llage of
Pomeroy , at a General
E L ECTION to be held In the
V•llage of Pomerov , Ohto, at
th e r egular pla ces ot vot ing
there in, on Tuesday, the 7th
day of No111ember . 1978, the
&lt;:~uest•on of leOJy rng , tn excess
of the ten m1!1 ltmttation , for
the benefit of Pomeroy
VIllage for the purpose of
pro viding and ma 1nta tn ing
ftre appllratus, llppllllnces,
bUtldm gs. o r sites therefor, or
sources of water supply and
mater ials therefor, or the
establishment and maiO ·
tenan ce of lines of fire alarm
telegr aph or the payment of
per m anent, part t1me . or
vo lu ntev f1remen or f ire
fighting co mpa n1es to operate
the same
Sa1d tax being · a renewlll
of an exlstmg levy of .90 mills
and an Increase of .10m il ls to
const ttut e a tax of 1 00 m 11ls
to run for F1\l'e l 5) vears

NOTICE OF ELECTION

ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOT ICE is hereby given
that in purs ull nce of a
Reolution ot the Council of the
Village of Middleport, Oh io
passed on the 28th day of
August. 1978, there will be
subm ltted to a vote ot th e
people of said Village at a
Ge neral ELECTION to be
held 1n the Village of Mid ·
dleport, Ohio , at the regular
pll. - ... of OJOtlng therein , on
Tue:sdav, the 7th day of
NO\Iember , 1978 , the QueSt iOn
of le\ly lng, in excess of the ten
m tll limltat ron , for the benefit
of Mtddleport Village for th e
purpose of Providing and
m alnta 1n 1ng ,
apparatus ,
appliances , buildings , or sites
therefor , or sources ot water
s upply
and
ma teria ls
therefor , or the establiSh ·
ment and ma 1n t enance ot
lines of fire alarm telegraph
or the payme nt of permanent ,
pllrt -t 1m e
or
1110l unteer
firemen flre ttght1ng com ·
panies to operate the same .
Said ta x being
an ad ·
d ltlonal ta x of 1.0 mi ll to run
for Fi111e (5) vears

.•r a 'r ate not ex ceed 1n0 1. 0

·s for each one dollar of
.. . ation , which amounts to
7o::!n c ents for each one
hundred dollars of valuat ion.
tor F i\le (5) years .
The Poll s for sa id Elec tion
will open at 6 30 o'clock A. M
and remain open until 7. 30
o'clock P .M Eastern Stan
dard Ti me of sa id day .
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Meigs County ,
OH io
'Tl

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M Johnston
Director
Dated October lOth . 1978

P ome • oy •

---

RACIN~

GUN Club I S ha ..,.mg a par
ty a t Royal Oak Pork , Sat ntt e
Nov 4 7 30 till Mtdmte All
me mbe rs and w• . . es tnvtt ed

ATTENT IO N SHIRLE Y S Baruty
Nook Custo me rs Due to ftre
Sh 1rley wtl l now be located at
Hoc •ne
Ltnd a s Lody fo•r
9J9 2838
$10 reward fo r the re turn ol my
d tnn er bucket w ht ch was ptck
ed up at Old Town Creek lost
Sunda y Co ntam ed my glasses
and tm portont papers No
q ues ti o ns asked
Franklm
Wilso n 949 2322
fR~C

CAN DY Classes
Cake
decorotmg classes now form
•ng Co li The Candy Carou sel
Confecltone ry 992-0342 Come
1n and regtsler for fre e co ke
pa n ________ ____ _
Lost and Found

LOST 1n Flat woods area Whtte
Chorolo ts ca lf we•g hmg bOO lb
Co nta ct
Vtrg1l
Wt ndo n
985 3846

NOTICE OF ELECTION
SET Of keys fou nd on Syca mo re
ON TAX LEVY IN
St 1-lome roy To cla•m see at
EXCESS OF THE TEN
107 Syca more o r call 992 6071
MILL LIMITATION
----- - ------NOTICE IS hereby giOJen
that in pursuan ce of a
Help wanted
Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the TownShiP of PART TIME Clt ntc Recepttont st.
Rutland, Ohio, passed on the
Clerk Appro)( 32 hours per
31st day of August, 1978, ther e
mOnth Requ1re ments .nclude
Will be submitted to a OJOte of
res •dence 10 Me 1gs Co ob•lity
the people of sa 1d Townsh 1p of
to mee t people eos 1ly ac curacy
Rutland at a
General
ELECTION to be held In the
w11h figures and spel11ng, clear
Townsh tp of Rutland , Ohio , at
hondwrtltng loca l references
the regular places of voting
l::quo l opportun tty e mploye r
there.n , on Tuesda-; , the 7th
For more mfo rmot mn contact
day of November, 1978, the
Planned
Par,e nth ood
of
quest1on of levying, In excess
Sou the a st Oh•o Off•ce 1n Cour
of the ten mill limitatton , for
thouse phone 9t!l2 59 12
the beneftt of Rut la nd
'---:Township for the purpose of
providing and mamtaming WANTED. AUTO mechan tc for
new cor deolershtp Wrtte Bo)(
fire apparatus, appliances ,
7-43 Pomeroy Oh1a or pho ne
buildngs, or sites therefor, or .
992-2174
sources of water supptv and
mater1a1s therefor, or the
establishment and matn
ten a nee of lines of fire alarm
Wanted to Buy
telegraph or the payment of
permanent , part -time, or CHIP WOOD
Pales mo x
volunteer firemen or fire
d• o meter 10 o n largest end
fighting compan1es to operate
$8 SO pe r ton Bundled slab ,
the same .
$b .50 per ton Del wered to
Said hn1. belng , a renewal
Ohio Pollet Co ., Rt 2, Pom•roy
ot an exlstlng tax of .30 mllls
Q&lt;J2.'2689
to run for Fl111e (5) years
at a rate not exceeding 30
mills for each onf: dollar of
OJ81uat ton , which amounts to
three cents for eac h one
hundred dOIIll rs of 111aluation ,
for F1ve CSl vears
The Polls for said Election
will open at 6 .30 o'clock A.M
and remain open until 7 30
o'c lock . P .M EMtern Stan .
dard T1me of sa1d ctav
By order of thf Joard of
Elect1ons , of Me l'.!• County,
Ohto
Ernest A Wm gett
Cha1rman
Dorothy M Johnson
Direc tor
Dated october lOth, 197B

TIMBER . POMEROY
duch Top prtce
sow timber Coli
Kent Hanby, 1-4.46

Forest ' Pro
fo r slandmg
992-5q65 o r
8570

OLD FURNITURE , 1ce bo:w:es , bross
beds , •ron beds , des ks e tc
complete household s Wnte
M 0 M1ll e r Rt 4 Pome roy o r
co11992 77b0
OLD COI NS pocket watches
class nngs wedd.ng bonds
d 1omond s Go ld o r Sliver Call
Roger Wamsley 7J2 2331
WE PICK up 1unk auto bod•es buy
mg Junk car s , sc rap •ron, bot.
tenes and metals Riders
Salvage SR 124 Pomeroy
992 5&lt;68

( 10 ) 11 , 18, 25 llll 1, 4tc
Yard Sale
IF YOU hove a sen11Ce to offer
won t to buy or sell somethmg
oe look1ng fo r work
or
you II get res ults
w hote . . er
fo ster w1th o Senltnel Wont Ad
Call992 2150

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that in P urs uance o t a
YARD SALE Fndov November 3,
Resolut ion of the Board of
10 3 Semo r Cttt zens Cente r
County commissioners of the
Pomeroy Ot shes books cur·
co unt y of Me1gs, Pomeroy,
to1n s, toys , good clolhtn g and
Ohio, passed on the tst day ot
many m• sc 1tems
August , 1978 , there will be
sub m ttted to a 1110te of the
1
people of Sllid county at a POHCH AND Yard Sole /t mtl e up
1o13 Wed 1111 ?
General ELECTION to be
held in the County of Meigs, RUMMAG ~ SAL E slorttng the 2nd
Ohio. at the regular places of
of No" a nd w1ll conll nue thru
voting there , on Tuesday , the
the wmter e ... ery Thurs , Fn ,
7th day of No111ember , 197B, ,
Sot in Chummv Shoe Shop tn
the Question of 1evv 1ng, In
exc ess of the ten mil l
Syracuse Two beds one anti
limitation. fo r the benefit of
que ond one bed and d resse r
Meigs Co unty for the purpose
lots of cloth tng and mise
o f the melntenance and
operatton of schools, training YARD SALE now tn progreu, cor·
centers and workshops for
ner of 3rd and Co llege
mentally retarded persons
Syra cuse Lody s pont SUits and
Said ta x be ing
an ad good dresses , mt sc 1tems
dittonat taK of 1 25 mtlls to
992 5655
run tor Ftve (5) Years .
GARAGE SALE Nov 2 &amp; 3 Thurs
at a rate not exceeding 1.25
ond Frt 9-5 ot Ronn1e Salser's
mil ls for e.!ch one dollar of
East on 12.4 o ur of Roctne , 6th
valuation, wh ich amounts to
house on left post Southern
twelve and one half cents for
H• gh School Good wtnter and
each one hundred dollars. of
summer clothmg Bu1ldmg sup·
valuatlon, tor Five (5) vears
The Polls for said Elect•on
pl tes Sma ll appliances M1sc
wilt open at 6 :30 o'c loc r AM
1te ms
and rema1n open until 7:30
o'clock PM. Eastern Stan . MISC YARD Sole letart Fal ls
dard T 1me of said dav
Commun1ty Hall Sat , No111 4
By order of the Board of
9.4 Clothes for all ages coots
Elections, of Meigs co unty ,
shoes curtatn s, bedspreads
OhiO
ond etc Elecl n c oppl1onces
Ernest A . W1ngett
Polled flowers Mary Hdl, La 1s
Chairman
Be ll ond Lo rno Hort
Doroth v M Johnston RUMMAGE SALE E111erything must
Director
go Shnne Cl ub , Racme , Ohio
Dated October 10t h, 1978
No" 3 and 4th q . 4
1101 11, 18, 25, Ill) 1, &lt;tc
Pets for Sale

(10 ) 11, 18, 25 Ill) 1, 41c
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
tha t In punuanc e of a
Resolut ion of the Board of
Trustees of the TownshiP of
Salisbury , Ohio, pa ssed on
the 1st day of September ,
1978, there w ill be submitted
to a vote of the people of said
Township of Salisbury at a
General ELECTION to be
held In the Township of
Sal(sbury , Oh io , at the
regular pla c es of OJ Otlng
therein, on Tues da y, th e 7th
day of November , 1978, the
quest1on of lev ying , tn excess
of the ten mill limitation, tor
the ben e fi t of Salisbury
Townsh ip tor the purpose of
dust
control.
for
the
Rre\lentatlon. c ontrol and

-- -

~

at a rete not exceeding l 00
m il ls tor each one tlollar of
valuat1on , Whi Ch amounts to •
ten ce nts for each one hun dred dollars of valuation , fo r
F1 ve CSI vears
The Polls tor s a1d Election
w il l open at 6 :30 o 'clock A .M .
and remain open until 7 . 30
o'clock PM Eastern Stlln · dard T tme of said day
By order of the Board of
Elections , of Me1gs county ,
Ohto .

(10) ll , 18 , 2S (11) 1, &lt;!C

t he

Em erg ency Squad , ~ w m g
Funera l Home Re"' Clyde
Hende rson
poll b eare rs
r ea l1 t'Jes
frt en ds
and
ne 1ghb ors fo r the u km dness
dunng the loss of our dear
mothe r
gran dmo th e r an d
great g randmot he r Your k1nd
ness IS greatly opprectoted
~h e Fo~~~.!_~or~o Chapma n __

Ttu."sda\

Doroth v M Jo hnston
Otrec tor
Dated October loth , 1978

1977 MONZA SPY DER 305 engr nc
Power steenng Powe r brake s
AM FM rod10 Ma re ex t ra s lo ll
742 282b

.,.;.;;:.;::...:.!~C...--..1

a ~ IK't't&gt;ph~tl

Ernes t A Wi ngett
Cha1r man

Auto Sales

KAY 'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd Ave.
Call Today
Middleport, 0.
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 992-2725

Obttu ~try 6 cent.s JXf word , SJ.OO
tnulun wn Cash m advanc.'t'

M u b t~

evenings

Brenda Sayre 'Randolph ha s

E.al'll word uv~ lht• tUIIIU:lWn 15
wtKds IS 4 u~nls pt!r wun.l ~r da.~.:
Ads runmnl'j other thtin L'tlnst.'t'UllVI!
&lt;Wys wLII bt.· char)!r.d at the 1 day

"'"' mt'mury Q.rtl

&amp; Fri .

B1G AU CTI ON Sole Frt 1 pm
Al so at i'pm Lots of Chr•stm os
dems ond o ther new me rchon
dlse at Oh•o w.... e r Au&lt; I lOll 537
Hg1h St Mtddlepor t Oh1 o No
sal e Saturday n•gh t

lor the working Women

Char~:~

100

I W.y
2Wiy:!i
3 Ucay~

New Hours-New Styles
Now Open Mondays 12 : 00-4:30 p . m .

allaten.ent at ai r pollution.
Sa1d tax being
an ad ditional tax of 2.0 mills to run
fo r Five (5) vears .
at a rare not exceeding 2 0
mills for each one dolfar of
valuation, whic h amounts to
$.20 Twenty Cents for each
one hundred dollars of
valuatlon 1 for Five (5) years
The Polls to r said Election
will open at 6 :30 o 'c; lock A M
and remain open until 6 : 30
0 1clock P M . Eastern Stan
dard Time of said day .
By order of the Board of
EJections, of Meigs County,
Oh iO
Ernest A Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
Doted Oc1ober loth. 1918

'

110 ) 11 , 18, 25 111 ) 1, 41c
r

HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , sell
trade or tram. New a nd used
sadd les Ruth Reeves Albany
(0 1&lt;)698-3290
RI SING STAR Kennels. Boord•ng
and groommg, oil breeds
Chesh•re, 367·0292
LOVABLE WHITE snow drift great
PYRENEES Pupp te s
Phone
1 614-661·3838
GO ING O~U::T=
o;:f-:8-:-u-,-:-,-. -,.- -::
Sole 1
Poodles , Pekmgese , Pomero·
nt on, Teacup, Tm tes . $35 to
$125 PhaneOl&lt; -696 1297

. --- ----

-- --'---~- -

AKC REGISTERED Be agl e 8 mon·
lh s old Male 575 307-0292.
AKC REGISTERED Black
retne ... er pupptes.
Shots Excellent w1th
Phone 61-4 ·667-3039
or wefioke nd s
-

I

I

LCJliirador
Wormed .
children
Even mgs

1975 DATSUN PICKUP Good con
d1t1on · Goo d ltres
Low
mdeoge Step bumpe r Tru ck
m•nors $1750 9!;5 39/q

Fur ~alt•
- - - -

GHlMl: S GOLmN He d Del.nous
&amp; Golden Deftc•ous apples hlz
polnc k Or&lt;hard , SH 689
bl4 bb9 378S
IYi'd DATSUN PICKUP
99"1 b 192

PHO NE

197/ OODGl: CHAHGEH Sl: Under Sa le CARP H HEMNA NTS Odds
ond Ends Shop HI I M1d
10 000 mdes l oaded Phone
dleport Oh•o 9Y'l. Ol l"J or
992 2063
qn_ b206
197J PO NTI AC Co lohno 4-doo r
A C , 56,000 m1les Make offer APPALAC HIA N STOVl: CO Lorge
selec ltan of wood or coa l
992 3890
heal ers lowest prrces leo tur
1974 VEGA GT 1n good co ndttt o n
.ng Ashley Open Sot 10 111
985 &lt;133
4pm Su n 12 noon 1•1 :J pm In
M1ddl e por t be twee n :J rd pnd
COLLKTOH S IT I: M 19bd Che vy
4th Sl dawn lhe a ll e y from
Impa la co nver to ble 283 Std
Cor r)lou t
Ph o ne
Tony s
Ex tra n1ce bod y W1ll trade for
614 b9H 7191
p rc kup or $450 Col l742 24Jl
--·--

t

1912 FORO l TD E~e t ro se t of LUMP HOUSl: coal S"J5 pe r ton
dehvered !J&lt;I'l 7 12b
wheel s a nd snow ltres low
mdeoge Col i C•hzens Noti onal 1910 'f:OR O I ton stak e be d truc k
Bo nk 992·3007
$'1000 99'1 J5HJ after 6pm
PONTiA C
E!J 3 4802

350

mo to r

lo ll

-~--------

1973 FORD PI CKUP 6 cyl std
1975 VW Rab btl
$18 50
992 2987

.

.

HA Y FO R SALE 992 2453
OLD AND YO UN G tro me d beagle
dogs mole a"nd female Or wt/1
trade fo r g un s of and desc np
!ton 142 252 1

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Po rk
Rout e 33 north of, Pomeroy
Lo rge l ot~ S a~l ~~- 7J7_9 __ _
3 AND 4 RM furn tshed and un
furnt s h ed
opt s
P ho n e
992 5434

-

-·----~-~

TWO BEDROOM , k1tchen fu rnrs h
ed opt Coli befo re 8 om
9'12-2288
TWO BEDROOM trad e r Adults
only No pe ts $135 per month
plu s ul dtll es Secur•ly depos1t
_ !e~~r':_d_ ~~ e949- 225~~ _
ONE BEDROOM furn1s hed house
_ !'J!..o~ • ~g-~~1!'.._992 ~98 _ _
HAVE ONE room fo r rent to o con ·
stru ct1on worMer Has pn vale
to tl e t ond was h bowl , tf de s1re d
wtll furn1 sh TV and some k1t
che n pm1leges Coli 997. 2b23

~ l.!_e~ 6-~~------- ~
TWO H~UHOOM mob1le ho me
Patd utt hhe s Adul ts only or
w1ll consider I ch1l d 2 m.les o ut
o n SR 143 Re ferences a nd
depos•t req utred 992 3b47 o r
992 3~59

Fur ~nit•
CE MET ARY LOTS Beec h G ro . . e
groves 5 8. 6 lo l 45 $50
b 14 -373-3877
H E Bo ney,
Monetta , Oh1 o lnqu tre at Ctty
_ _!ia_ll Pomer oy
MF2b5 d1 esel ,',·o-c-lo-,-.-:-M::F~I:-:0-::5
D•esel traco tr MF11 35 d tesel
tractor Case ~ 30 ga s tractor ,
Ford 600 gas tractor, Mf200 2
row chopper Sh mn s Tracto r
Soles Leo n WV 304 458 1630
REDUCE SAFE ond fast wtth
GoBese Table ts &amp; E Vop water

_...P~ ....:_~!'~-~.~'-"9"-;---.,.--:-·
21 color TV conso le Need s
mt na r repotr $-4 5 Ga s ron ge
$15 992-7236

....

--~---

RCA MARK 8 solid stale stereo H·
frock tope play e r home umt
wll h butlf· tn speakers ond ou x
JOcks Very good condtt to n
Must sell Co li after 5pm
992 2995
~

----~--:-:-:-c:-::-::-:c::--c:---

1975 FORD VA N E 300 Nc w
po 1nf new fires Whtte s poke
_ ~ h eels Corpe tmg 992 7876
WAHM MORNIN G cool he ater
0 104 pow er m1ke
Co li
992 7042

HOMl:M~A~D~E-:Q~U:-:1-::l~TS~Io_r_s_u-::le--:$::2::0
eo 742·2984

ONE SC REW type lag splitte r
Halltt cralt er
ho m rod10
992 622q

PERMANENT
ANTI -FREEZE
Why pay S3.99

011\_o&gt;ll o&gt;ll

,c.&lt;r, $"J47

'-' 'I'~ ga f•

.fJ

Town &amp; CountiJ
Pomeroy Landmark
w . Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

GOLF SHOES fo r Chnstmos John
Tcoford . 985 39bl
RAY
re Add
1son
OhSro USED
01 4Furnitu
367-0637
2 •eg
le r
automatiC gas heate r b5 000
BTU $100 6 o ther gos heaters,
$15 to $35 J electn c heaters
$8 to SIS Gas cook stove $35
Hoo..,.er portable wa sher $.4 5
Dresse r With large rou nd rll it·
ro r $20 Sew1ng ro cker $22 50
La mps, potte ry glassware.
1973 CHE VROLET C20 cam per
spec1ol 1974 Chev rolet ( 20
p•cku p All m good cond1t1on .
~2 - 2724 or q!/2·21 o13
FOUR CRAGAR mag s
for
Cflevrol et 9t!l2-2205, after Spm
co li 992-562 1
1974 FORO •;, ,:-o-n-p7oc-;'k~up -w-:,::
lh~I-Op·
per Call985.4339 after Spm
TWO ITALIAN sty le sw1ve l
rocf... ers , rust Scotchg uord
upholste ry 28 )( 14 plush o i1 'Je
green woo l carpet All tn ex·
rellent shape Coli 949-266 1
aft er 5 pm.
--'--~~- -

POMEROY
LANDMARK
For All Your
GE T .V.'s &amp;

Hotpo1nl Appl.
Sale

Pnces

Jack W.

Car s ey,

Mqr.
Phnn•• 94 7 7181

ROGER HYSBl
GARAGE

I

'~'•

mile atf Rt. 1 by-pass on
St. Rt. 124toward Rutland, I

0.
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-30-llt

Jack's Septic
Tank Service ·
Chester, Ohio
10 30 c

BoX 3

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
Complete· Real Estate
service:. Call us for what we
have avatlable. Listings of
all kin(ls wanted. Homes,
farms, commercial. Your
satisfaction is our goal. ·
Give us a try.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
New Lima Ro"'l
Hutchinson Sub-Div.
Rutland , Ohoo
Phone 742-2003

~ E MOD~LW

FAMILY HOME
4
bedrooms, bath , natural
gas heat, dishwasher In the
kitchen , dri l led
welt ,
carport, and m ce level lot
$27,500
CONDOR STREET 3
bedroom ho m e,
bath,
na1ural
ga s
furnace,
parking, and garden space
On ly $9,500
30 ACRES - and 6 room
house with city Y~&amp;ater , new
bath . and two outbUildings
In bac k of Pomerox ;us! off
Rl 1 $24,500 or Will trade.
BASHAN
Large 3
bedroom home with over
an ac re of la nd Natura l
gas ,
woodburning
fireplace, T P wa ter , and
lots of outbuildings. J ust
$16,000.
NEW LISTING - 1 yr old
3 bedroom home with bath,
garage . htce ki1chen,
dining · a-rea w1th glass
door , garage and 1 acre.
INVESTMENT Brick
bu s1 ness
location
or
res1dence w ith natura l gas
furna ce, bath, and garage.

r:'ioP&lt;ii~~l E~ ET

MOST
FINANCED IF IN GOOD
REPAIR. CALL 992-3325
FOR THE TEAFORDS'.
Helen l . Teaford
G . Brute Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

Housing
Headquarters

-

Muffler
Shocks
Battery .

Brakes
Tires

, MAIN

P9MEROY, 0.
NEW LISTING
In
Pomeroy. ntce 2 bedroom
12 x 60 mobtle home, level
lot, pat to, f enc1 ng , of f
street parking. ONLY
$7,500 .
NRW LISTING - Small
Business opportunity, car
wa sh and lot In good
location on St. Rt. 7. Good
potential for a part time
;ab. Call tor details
IN THE COUNTRY - 10
lots , barn , fencing, a
storage building , plus a
mce 1 floor plan , 3 bedroom
home wtfh basement. View
of Hio River Garden, fruit
trees - all for only 517,70
RANCH
Excellent
neighborhood, 3 bedrooms,
butlf-in kttchen, bcisement,
2 level lot s , serarate
utility , owner wil
he lp
finance. 527,300.
,
BEAUTIFUL BRICK Ran c h , 3 bedrooms, 11h
baths, nice kitchen, dining
room, covered ~ patln
ce nt ral air, wood burn mg
fireplace . Bel~~ow market
value. 531 , 600~
COUNTRY Great 2
bedfoom home in excellent
condition , must be moved
to new loca tion . A steal at
$6,000 Also owner witt self
1-15 acres tor the house
PRICE REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE This 2
bedroom home in good
condition with many new
veatures
Excellent
neighborhood
In
M iddleport Now $9,500.
USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE
HENRY E. CLELAND
HENRY E. CLELAND,
JR .
REALTORS
992-2259, 992-6191
Leona - Kathy
Realtor-Associates

_A

~~~~------------------~!"1--""i

.CENTRAL REALTY CO.

LOTS ~ 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.

50 ACRE$ FREE GAS - Good l'h story house with full
basement Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
qu ick sale, 540.000.
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL - This may be your d•eam
home. II has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sliding g tass doors. Large living room and
family room , and to finish th is well -laid oul home we
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage . Very low
healing bill Red barn-like storage building . Located
about len minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt . 7.
Asking 555,000.
•
MIDDLEPORT - This well cored for newer home has
3 BRs, living room , bath. mostly carpeted, kitchen Is
equipped with refrige rator and stove, utility room,
natural gas forced air heat, outside storage building .
Price S27.ooo.

WIFE
TOLD
US- THE- MDB5TJ;R
WA ~ A GUY NAMED

J. R. ConstrUCtion
Co.

S l- HE TRIED TO BRIB&amp; M&amp;
TO MAKe ~A80R •ROUB~e
FOR McKEE·MeXPORTt

00 WE TIE

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark
9..,~ck W. Corny. Mgr.

tAiil

Phone 992-2181

Wee nHd lorte &amp; small Forms
ond Mlny types of property.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Anoclote949-2MI

HIM lt.i WITH

VOLTA!

TH~

'/Ot:J,

-

I YORRS f~

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 742-2029
10-22-1 mo.

-

Pomeroy, O.
3 15-tfc

I ,._

BRADFORD , Auc llone e r, Com
plete Servtce Phone 949 2487
o r 949 2000 Rocmc Ohto Cntt
Bradford
0
HWOOD.:.:::..BOW~RS R ~PAIR Sweepers toa sters, ~ron s all
small a pplm nces lown mower,
ne)( t to Sta te Htghwoy Garage
o n Route 7 Phone (61 4) 985
3825

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

IT COO-D Ot.lL'f B6 OIJ~ 11-11 tJ0 ...
me; NOTOfl.'S 6URI-l~D OUT!

Service

I I

~

b
I I I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

IOPTATE

SEWING MACHINl: Kepatrs ser·
vtce oil makes q92 -2284 The
fabrt&lt; Sh op
Po m eroy
p~ 192-2114
Authonzed Smge r Sal es and
Ser . . tee Wr:_ s_
ha_r~-~ S_c_os_s_o_rs ~ l~-----------.J
EXCAVA TING , dozer , loader and
backhoe work, dump truck s
Real Estate for Sale
a nd lo· boys for h1re w1ll haul
f1ll d1r t to so tl. limestone and
HOMI::SITES for so le 1 a cre ond
gro111el Ca ll Bo b or Roger Je f·
up M1dd leport ne or Rutla nd
fers doy phone 992-7089, nigh t . ;~
Co li 992 7481
phone 992 3525 or 992- 5232.
, ••
:.;
VA FHA 30 vr ltnanctng al so ~
EXCAVATING
,
dozer
,.
backhoe
,.
reftnan cmg Ire la nd Mortga ge
an d dttcher Charles R Hot·. "'
'17 1:: Stole Athens phone {6lo1 )
lte ld
Bock Hoe Ser\'ICe :
592 305 1
Rut land , Oh1o Phone 7.42·2008 ·•'!.
THREI:: BEDROOM frame home 1n
~--~----------- ~
WILL do roofmg, co ns truction ;
Middlepo r,l Coli 992 3457
plumbmg and heotmg No tob ·•
FAHM FOR sole House 2 ba rn s
too Iorge o r too small Pho ne ·•
tra der Lorge pond 10 ceres or
~
742-23&lt;8
82 a cres 742-2560
HOWERY AND MARTIN EJ.:. ' 1
FIV~ ROOM house ond both ,
covattng , septiC s ystems
re modeled , fully carpet ed May
dozer, backhoe, dump truck
be seen offer 3 pm Phone
limestone
gro'Jel. blacktop
992 3933
po"'ing , Rt 143 Phone 1 (61.4 )
b98 7331
THR EE OR 4 bedroom hou se fo r
so le tn Pomerov
Central BA THROOM S AND Kttchens
heot mg
Full
baseme nt
remodeled , ceramiC~ llle, plum·
992-7074
bmg, carpentry , a nd general
ma intenance. 13 years e)(
perlence 992-3685.
.,.:
Services Offered
PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete~
WAfER WELL drtllt ng W1lhom T
Ser1111Ce Phone 992·2.478
Gran t 742 2879
REEVES TRADING Post , Poge111 tlle
FOR YOUR complete hous tng
Groceries dry goods, hard·
remodeltng , constru cflon and
wore feed , tack shop SpeCia l
25 lb of dog food , $3 68 .
mamt enance g• ve J R o try
a v ailable
Refe r ence
AUTOM061lE INSURANCE been
fle os onable prtces
Pho ne
ca ncelled? Los t -;our operators
992 5191
ltcense? Pho ne 992 2UJ .
DUSTL ESS FIREPLACE ond ct;1mn ey
cleontng The Chtmney Sweep
Ca ll 61&lt; 373-6057
WI LL TAKE care of the e lder!-; 1n 1
my ho me 992-731 0'1

SAVE ON
CARPETING

G I V~

AWAY Wh tte mole adult
cot Alas ha lt grown k1ttens
yellow lobby a nd whh e and
tabby Meigs Cou nty Human e
Soctety 992 -2592 or 992-2039.

TO GIVE away to good home Old
Engltsh Sheepdog q4q·2181

Mohilt• Honws for S al e
1976 NASHUA 14 x bS 3 bed room
1'I~ both , underptnning , $1500
a nd assume ~oon . 949-2683 or
6&lt;3 l3l l

1'!1 ACRE 12 ~e 60 mob1le ho me
nea r Dexter 992-5858
1907 HOUSE TRAi lE R 12 x 60. All
e lectri c furni shed, otr condi·
hon ed, washer ond dryer , Also
2 lots
In Horrtsonvllle
742-2826

Yes1erday s
HERE'S TH' OLD MAP...
t\ND 1H' REPOR"f ON
All TH' STLIPID LUGS
WHO TRIEO AND
MISSED "·

Now arrange lhe Circled let1ers to
form the su rpnse answer, as sug·
gesled by lhe above car1oon

I I I ]1

I

J umbles ELUDE GOUGE DAWNED AGENCY
Answer What a hear1y Scotsman might co nstder
a seve n-day case or the fluJUST A WEE COLD

NEW-J UST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 1111 with 110 puzzles Is avall·
able tor S1 35 pos.tp111l d hom Jumble, c/o this newspaper p o Box 34
NorwOOd, N J 07648 tnCIIJde your name, address, zip cOde and maki
checks payable to Newspaperbooks

~M'tJ.td
by THOMAS JOSEPH

41 Mea n
42 Ga rish s tg n
DOWN

ACROSS

I Cattle feed
5 Leave m

1 Whole crew
2 Mythological
monster
3 Jutting

Ute lurch

.. ."f'l.IE;N "Tl-1E: SCALY·
TAI~S At&lt;!!' IN LE:AGUE
WI~ ~INCE l11UM!
50 BE: WATCHI'UL :

11 Elephant's
ear

12 One of
the Perrys
13 Surrounded
by
U Nullify
15Shame

~~(~'~[~

16 Joke
17 Just a
··"1;-te

18 Uiitruth
200nce blue moon
21 Prior to

GAsOUNE ALLEY

We dnesday, Nov . 1

Yesterday's Auswer

5 Toss m the hat

8 Funereal
verse
7 Man 's

22 Scene of

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

30 Musical

some parties

23 RAltaliale

. compos111on
31 BaUroom
dance
32 In the

ruckname
24 Ethiopian
8 A getting
lake
out of
nuddle
25 Exempted
9 Part of an orb %6 Setting
37 Coin of
10 Boring tool
27 Wtth a careMacao
18 Encircled
free heart
38 Room to
19 Rudiment
29 Give life to
relax in

22 Banking

Right declarer important
South 's queen and establish
NORTH

23 Catch

WEST

+

promise

•

25 Toboggan
27 Old saymg
28 - au feu
29 Constance

that we

are just
old
friends!

Rubber Back Carpet

34

9' and 12' Virijl

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Floor Colering In Stocli •
•
•

Vulnerable : North-south
Deale r · South

ptlot
Gay Nineties, e.g.

North East

I+
Pa ss

3 NT

2+

1.

South

Pass
Pass

2 NT
Pass

Pass

;..~;;~;~;:..-....:""""'::'::7::7:::":':'--TT"---;_-----------------,.---, marble
!
:t.T'S T~uE You GAN :~:~~il

Opemng lead : •

7

FRANK and ERNIE'S

;LOAN COM 1""'~~~::::-:-

1\PPL.Y fo~ A

LOfliN OVeR

fll

,....e

~

PifONI,. Mil. . ,.... I ,

M

TALK·TO
Wendell or Herb Grota
or Gene Smltll

we

&amp;.IJC.&amp;

39

RUnAND
FURNITURE

~:ler's

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

dozen
40 Advantage L-..L.-J......L.-.1-..J...-

rro

lfiURN PEOPL.i
IN P!'I2$0N.

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work

Is

It:

One letter s1mply sta nds for another. In this sample A is

used for the three L's , X f or the two O's, etc Sm gle le tters.

Rutllnd

CRYPTOQUOTES

IF- YOU 1HIN K THATfLl
, NOf ONLY MU5r )OUNEV!:R GIVE GARY BREAK HIM OF-THE
HAI31T; YOU'VE BOT
CREii'IT AGAIN BUT WE WANT YOU
ANOTHER
GUEB&amp;
TO SPRC'\17 mE WORl7 TO ALL
COMIN
~
5-IBTER.
OTHER 1300KIEB AND LOAN

&amp;HARKB1 roo.

WHY, HE CAN
PLACE A BET '
lEG ITIMATELY
AT ANY Ti?ACK
IN THE
COUNTRY.

NIH K

GDE

QUH

DVIHUM

ZHV

VIH

OHQZ

MQXH

ZQJDUWKC

wv
QM

J H
WY

HE?-CAROLIN WELLS
'

© I fiB Kill( Ftiiiii'OI Syndicalo, lac

'

PAW, WOULD YOU HELP
:....mou.........J....-...-l

FIGHT 15 OVER!

HEir', I(OU 6Uir'5 ! TI-lE
FIGHT 15 OVER!

YOU

N W VI
NHUH

YDU
GDEUMHZY.
PDKYEPWEM
Yesierday's Cryploquoie : A CANNER CAN CAN ANYTHING
THAT HE CA~,.~,,BUT A CANNER CAN'T CAN A CAN, CAN

I

IT'S OVER! THE

WV

ME MOVE TH' BED
OVER 'fONDER?

I'D BE

PLUMB
TICKLED

TO

Th1s hand took place m a
high-stakes rubber bridge
game. The btddmg requ~res

some explanation.

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the le ngt h and formation of th e words are all
hints Each day th e code letters are differe nt

MAKES A

West

couJd not occur
North's two spade cue btd
ask ed South to bid no trwnp
w1th a ny h1g~ h o n o r 1n
s p ades. If North he ld a real
c ue btd, h e would show 1t by
repea ling the c u e btd o r by
dnvmg the bidding past

three notrump As 1t was , he

+AJ11l92

35 Playmg

•

.Clll74~-~211

• 94 3

.. 1084 2
t K 10 4 3
+ 65
SOUTH

Q6
• QJ 8

or Bruce

sv~

No rth-south pruden tl y made
South the declare r , thi s

EAST

• Q5

br-+-t-

West's smt. West would gam
th e lead w1th th e ace of
hearts and t h en c a sh hts
spade !rocks to de feat the

contract However, beca use

¥ K

33 Fighter .

As Low As

lH

+ A62
.. J 7 J
t A 95
+ K Qa7

+ K J 10 8 7
"A 9 5
• 76 2
4J

servtce

All corpet Instilled wltll
padding ot no charge.
Expert lnstollotlon .

15 IN STOCK
urgest Selection In Tilt Valley

BRIDGE

wmdow

24 Sun.lotion

SAVE ALOT

6 · 50--GOOd Morn ing , West V1rglnta 13 , 6 · 55--C huc k
While Reports 10; News 13
7 00-Today 3,4. 15 , Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 6: Jetsons 10.
7 lS....Weather 33. 7 30-Schoolles 10
a ·OO--Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame Sf 33.
9 . 00- Merv Griffen 3; Phi l Donahu e 4, 13 , 15 ,
Emergency One 6, Hogan 's Heroes 8, Match Game
10.
9 30-Brady Bunc h 8, Family Affair 10
10 00-Card Shar ks 3,4, 15, Dat ing Game 13: Edge of
Nig ht 6: All In The Family 8,10.
10 30-Jeopardy 3,4, 15, Andy G riffith 6: Magazine
8, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13 .
11 00-High Rafters 3,4,15 ; Happy Days 6,13
11 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ; Family Feud 6,13, News
4; Love of Life 8, 10, Sesame St 20 , Nova 33
11 55-CBS News 8; Hause Call 10
12 QO--Newscen ter 3, Bob Braun 4, Amer ica Alive 15 ,
News 6, 10; You ng &amp; th e Restless 8; M idd ay
Magazine 13
12 30---Ryan's H ope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;
E lee . Co 20,33
1 oo-Hoffywood Sq uares 3, All My Childre n 6, 13 ,
News 6, Young &amp; Restles s 10, Not For Wome n Only
15
30-Days of Our Lives 3.4, 15: As The World Turns
8,1 0 , 2 .01)--()ne Life to Live 6, 13
2 · 30-Doctors 3,4,15: G uidin g Light B, 10
3·00-Another World 3,4,15 ; General Hosp&gt;lal 6, 13;
L tlias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 30-Mash 8; Joker ' s W&gt;fd 10, Dick Cavell 20
4 DO-M1ster Ca rtoon 3, Battle ot the Planets .4, Merv
Grittln 6: Por ky P 1g &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St 20,33 :
Batman 10, Dinah 13, Ho ll ywood Squares 15
4 Jo--our Gang-L tttle Rasca ls 3 , Gtll1gan ' s Is .4,8;
Brady Bunch 10 ; Pett icoat Junction 15.
5 DO--Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4,
Beve rly Hillbillies B, Mi ster Rogers ' Neighbo rhood
20,33 , Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Emergency One 13,
Brady Bunc h 15.
5 3D-Hoga n' s Heroes 6, Sa nford &amp; Son 8, Elec Co
20,33 ; Mary T yle r Moore 10 ; Odd Coupl e 15
6 00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20 .
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC New s 13, Carol Burnett &amp;
Fnends 6, CBS News 8,10, Over Easy 20 .
7 DO-Cross-Wtts 3, PM Mag az ine 4, New lywed Game
7, 13, Family Feud 8, News 10, love, American
Style 15 , Hocki ng Valley Bluegrass 10 , Consume r
Surviva l Kit 33 .
7 J~Ho llywood Squares 3, Da tm g Game 4 , Bon
mkers 6; Waltons 8, $100,000 Name That Tune 10,
Nash ville On T he Road 13 ; Dolly 15; MacNe il
Lehrer Report 20,33
8 00-Pro;ecl U . F 0 3,4,15: Mor k &amp; M1ndy 6,13;
Wattons 10 , Nova 20,33
8 30-What's Happening 6, 13
9 00-Qulncy 3,4, 15 , Barney Mill er 6, 13, C&gt;nderella AI
The Palace 8, 10 ; Duc he ss of Duke Street 20,
Evening w1 lh Chuc k Mangione 33
9 30-Soa p 6,13
10 00-Davld CasSidy Ma n' Unde r cover 3,4, 15 , Fam1fy
6, 13 , News 20
10 30-Eiectlons '78· Prelude to ' 80 20
11 00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, Dick Cavell 20, Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15. Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Gunsm oke 8, Mov1e "C leopa tra" 10 ; AB C News 33
12 .30-SWAT 6,13, 1 00-Tomorrow 3,4 , 1 SD-News
13

4 Place of peas

on you!

&amp;.

142-2211

IN l!IU:!S&gt;INE'e&gt;S.

(Answers tomorrow)

DRIVE ALITILE

•4.aa

A SOUND INC.REA;,E

Print answer here,: (

Give Away

1970 Amherst SOx 12 2 BR
1970 Champton 60xl2 2 BR
1965 General 60x 12 2 BR
19b8 PMC 52xl2 2 BR
1955 Pro1rie Schooner 28)(8 1 BR
I 973 Royal Embany 68x 14 3 BR
1959 Star 50x10 2 BR
1973 Stor 60;oc14 2 BR
1968 Star 60)(12 2 BR
1970 Sylva 60x12 2 BR
1968 V1llages 60x 12 2 BR
19b4 Wmdsor 51 xlO 2 BR
1970 Ktrkwood 12;oc60 3 BR
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SAlES
PT PlEASANT . W VA

byHonriAmoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener lo each square, to form
four ord1nary words

Construction
Maintenance

-

3

it~l}rul jl;}1f ~THAT SCAAMBLEOWOAO&lt;IAME

W 1-!::!J ~~.~~.!h

CHESTER Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement &amp; 2 baths Nat. gas heat, approx . 1 acre land
and large storage building Price $21,500.
TWO ACRES - A beautlful4 year old, 3 bedroom home
wllh farge eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely·
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room. Many
more extras. low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location . Will go quick for $3.5,000.
40 ACRES of land In Sulton Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn . Priced at only $21,500.
su.ooo - Good 5 bedroom house with 2 lull baths.
Natural gas forced air heat, located In Chester

I CAN

AM16Q, 1!7- I WOULD
See HIM ON THE'
THE UNION HA~~ 1 .. ,
STREET OR ~OME·
WA-A·AIT A M1NlJTE. 1
TIME~ H&amp; WOU~D
YOU JU~T REMlNDEO
COME TO TH6
ME OF cSOMI?THIN61
UN IO N HALt,

MAYO R 6056~~

SNOW-

-TIRE SALE

A~~

BU"!" 50 FAR, H&amp;'5
JUST A NAM E~ HOW

Carpentry, Electrical,
. Painting

Installation Service

1Ph. 992 -2848

C!PT AJN EASY

P" JUAN'~

AL~EAD Y

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

MOORE'S

'

8-20-1 mo. (Pd.)

THURSDAY , NOVEMB ER2, 1978
5 · 50-PTL Club 13 ; 5 ss-Sonr lse Semester 10.
6 .00-PTL Club 15, 6 2S....For You Black Woma n 10
6 :30-Doctors o n Call4 . News 6, 6 4S....Morn&gt;ng Re por t

WEDNESDAY , NOV EMBER 1. 1978
S 00-Voyage to the Bottom of lhe Sea 3. Star Trek 4.
Beverly Hillbillies 8, M1 ster Rogers 20.33: Gom e r
Pyl e, 20,33, Emergency One 13 ;Brady Bunch 15
5 · 30--News 6; Elec C 20,33. Odd Couple ll. Mar y
Tyler Moore 10.
6 ·QO-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 30-NBC New s 3,4,1 5, Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6.
C BS News 8,10, Over Easy 20
7 oo--Cross-Wits 3; PM Maga zi ne 4, Newlywed Game
6,13 : Sha Na Na 8, News 10 ; Lo ve, Amer ican Style
15 ; Coping w ith K 1ds 20, Big G reen Magaz&gt;ne 33
1 30-Dolly 3, Daf&gt;ng Ga me 4: Matc h Game PM 6,
Pnce os Right 8, T he Judge 10, That' s Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15 ; MacNeil-Le hre r Report 20.33.
6 00-DICk Clark's L1ve Wednesday 3.4,15 , E1ghl Is
Enough 6,13: Jelfersons 8,10; Marie Curie 20,33
8 30-- l n The Begl nnong 8,10
9 .0(}---Mov le ''Th ou Shalt Not Com mtt Adultery"
3,.4, 15, Cha rlie 's Angels 6, 13; Movte " Gator" 8, 10 ,
Prisoner 20, Great Performances 33

••

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160 .

Real Estate for Sale

FO Hsol e Good mvest
tne nl 3 ', oc res w1t h opp rox
over 200 It of n "'er l rontoge
An~e 1 ous to sel l Cull otte r Opm
bl 4 8bb 902/

--- ~~~

New or W
_epair
Gutlels and '
Downspouts

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
10-18-1 mo.

ReStdenttal and commercial. Call tor estimate. 24
HOur Servtce. Anv day ,
anyt tme.
Phone 985·3806
Jack Gonther 985-3806

fl i&lt;Of~HTY

216 E. Second Street

•
-·
..

H. L WHITESEl
ROOFING

All
Type•
l~dustriat
Commercial and Home
Building
Any Type Improvements
To Exist1ng Strudures
All Type Contrele Work
No Contrad Too LArge Or
Too Sll')all
25 Years Experlente
All Work ?uaranteed

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Rea I Estate for Sale

OLDE R home o n ' ,
cere 3 o r &lt;l bed rooms Full
ba seme nt Gos cen tro! heat
budg e t $50 o mon th De tached
~a!oge qcn 7.!l.?~ .- - - - - -

I

Mourning and
Price Builders

tO 00-Vegas 6.1 3. News 20
10 3D-Elect ions ' 1B: P elod e to ' 10 20
11 00- News 3.4,6,8, 10, 13, 15, Dick Cavell 20.
11 30-Johnny Cars on 3,.4, IS : Police Woman 6, 13;
Guns moke 8 , Mov1e " Cleopatra " 10. ABC News 33
12 30-News 8: 12 40-SWA T 6,13
1 ·00- Tomorrow 3,4 , 1 SO--News 13

TELEVISION
VIEWING

' "

.

COAL LIM~SfON~ se nd , ~ro.,el
coloULn &lt;hlonde ferllhzer dog
food and all typos of so h l::x
cels•ar Soil Work s Inc , 1:: Mom
~~
Pomero11 9"1'1 J891
BUH ROUG HS SE NSI MAl l( oc
cou ntin g mo chm e , Pho ne
CJI./'1 LJ~ The Do1ly Sen!tnel
Ill Co urt Stree t Pomeroy
Ohm

DICK TRACY

Business Services

-- -·--- ----

_____A '!_c_! •&lt;!n ~--

11 - The Dlitly Sentinel , Mtddleport-Pomc1 oy, 0 ., WedncsdHy, Nov 1. 1978

.·

West' s spade overc all was
based on vulnerability . He
did not have much of a hand,
but he did have a good spade
s uit. If North had played
notrump, the spade overcall
would have produced a
spade lead from East and
the hand would have collapsed. However, North and
South had the methods to
reach the right contract
from the right side of the
table.
It is easy to see that if
North IS the delcarer at
three notrwnp, a spade lead
from East would finesse

raised two notrwnp to three
notrwnp.
West still was not beaten
He discovered the only lead
that might d e feat the contract - a dtamond. If de-

clarer ftnessed at t rtck one ,
East would win with the kmg
of d tamond s and unmedt·
ately s hoot a s pade thro u gh
South's queen . This would ·
knock declarer bac k to
square one and he would not
make the contract.
Declarer ro se wtth
dummy 's ace o f dta monds

and the contract was secure
It was a sunple matte r to
drove out the ace of hearts
and take fi ve clubs, two

hearts, and the two aces.
Declarer eventually scored
a second d1amon&lt;i tric k with
his queen-jack of diamonds,
making 10.

Th1s was one of t hose rare
hands where each of the four
players performed flawlessly. The key move - one too
often overlooked by partnerships - was the c h oice of
d eclarer.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRlSE ASSN )

(For a copy of JACOBY MODERN, send $1 to " W1n at
Bfldge, ' ' care of fh1s newspa·
per, P 0 Box 489, Radio City
SfBIIOn, New York, N Y 10019)

�.
12- The Daily Sentinel , Middlcpurl-Pomeruy , 0 .. Wt•dncsday . Nov. 1, 1978
MEET PUBLIC
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
CHURCH BAZAAR
Three
Republican CanAdmitted - ·Roy Jones,
A church bazaar will be
didates
will
meet the public
Racine; Thelma Gruese r , held at the Syracuse Asbury
Pomeroy; Martin Cunning· United Methodist Church at 3 p.m. Thursday at the
ham, Racine , and Dorothy
Friday and Saturday from 9 Meigs Inn, Richard Jones,
Chairman of the Meigs
Wright, Rutland.
a.m. to 6 p.m.
Discharged - Debbie
Featured will be a country County Republican
· Eynon and William Wilson. · store, candy store, and Executive Committee
bakery. Items to be sold will reports. ,
They are Sen. OakleY
be homemade articles ,
Collins, Former U . Gov.
sloppy joes and hot dogs.
NO MEETING NOV. 2
John Brown and Sen. Claire
Ball,
Jr., of Athens. The
Syracuse Mayor Eber
EXTINGUISH FIRE
Pickens announced today
public
is invited.
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Syracuse Council will not Department was called to
How easy it is to laugl1 off a
meet Thursday Nov. 2. The · Danville at 11:58 p.m. bad meal if you complain to
next meeting is scheduled for Tuesday to extinguish a fire the chef and he's carrying a
Thursday, Nov. 9 at 7:30p.m. in a hay field.
d~aver.

Wellston
iContinued from page I)
wastes division, said the
company will, if given
approval by the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency, begin depositipg
chemical wastes at Green,
Valley Farm in six to nine
nwnths.
Oscar Taylor, a Bloomfield
Township Trustee whose
farm is one farm away from
the proposed dumP site, is not
happy about the prospect.
" Why can't tbey keep that
stuff out west?," be asked tbe
company officials. "We're

going to get up a petition
drive in both Wellston and
Jackson. Nobody down here
wants that to happen."
The farm where the
dumping is scheduled to be
completed is owned by
Harold and Dorothy Cudden
of Logan, W.Va., BrowningFerris has an optioo on 365
acres of the 500-acre farm.
Bowman and Kennard said
they selected tbe site because
it iS ideal for the disposal of
chemical wastes. They cited
the Minford clay and Mount
Simon rock formations which
exist below ground.
"We've got people out there
who get water out of that
ground," said Taylor.
"111ere's no way tbey can
keep that stuff out · of tbe

COMING, NOVEMBER 11th

1 DAY ONLY
RUTLAND FURNITURE IS REPEATING
THEIR 1 DAY STOREWIDE SALE
FEATURING 11 HOOVER11
A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE. WILL BE
IN OUR STORE ALL DAY NOVEMBER 11th
TO. DEMONSTRATE THE BEST HOOVER
COMPANY HAS EVER MADE.
.

water."
The rompany spokesmen
said they plan to sink a hole a
mile-and'a
quarter
in
the
earth,
deep
enclosed in steel cas·
ing and cement· to prevent
seepage into the water table.
Materials to be dumped
include sulfuric wastes from
steel mills, · chlorinated solvents, sulfuric .acid and
various other chemicals and
solvents.

;l

Mayor's Court

MEETING CHANGED
A change in the Harrison·
ville PTO meeting time has
been made due to usual date
being election day. The
meeting will be held on Mon·
day at 7:30 p.m. The program
will be by the children of
several grades.

Eight defendants forfeited
· bonds and two others were
fined in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clare nce Andrews
·
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Ronald
Pauley, Mason, W. Va., $50,
posted on a charge of
squealing tires; David
Hudson, Lockborn, $100,
intoxication; Karen Haines,

)'LEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs..Earl
Snyder, Cheshire; Edna
Potts, Henderson ; Mrs. Fred
Heldreth and daughter,
Mason; Robert Kayser, Point
Pleasant ; John Ross, Mason ;
Mary Mullins, Point Pleasant; Wilbur McKowen,
Letart ; Leland Smith Jr.,
Mason; Emmons Selby,
Poir1t Plesant; Anita Inscoe, '
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasant ;
Lefa Mangum, Pliny; Mark
Hale, Oak Hill; Kayleen Bog·
gess, · Gallipolis; Donald
Nichols, Point Pleasant ;
Nellie Sharp, Ashton; Donald
Gardner, Gallipolis; Michael
Barlev, Lon~ Bottom.

Syracuse, $27, speeding;
M.ark Tannehill, Pomeroy,
$30, traffic· light violation;
Donna Gibbs, New Haven,
$50, disturbing the peace;
Linden Aliman, Albany , $30,
failure to yield the right of
way; Marion . Runyon,
Athens, $30, improper
Clear tonight, lows near 40.
backing;
Mary
Mora,
Swmy Thursday, with highs
Pomeroy, $26, speeding. .
Mary Blanks, Pomeroy, in the mid 60s. Probability of
was fined $300 and costs on a precipitation 10 per 'cent
charge of resisting arrest and today, and zero tonight and
William Knisley, Coolville, Thursday.
was fined $50 and costs on a
REVIVAL SLATED
charge of squealing tlres.
A
revival
wiU be held at the
'
Nine defendants were fined Salem Community Church,
and seven others forfeited West Columbia, on · Lieving
bonds in the court of Mid· Road beginning Sunday, Nov.
dlq&gt;&lt;&gt;rt Mayor Fred Hoffman 5. .
Speaker wiU be the Rev.
Tuesday night.
Herman
Jordan. There will
Fined were Roger Me·
·be
special
slmglng each
Daniel, 19, Middleport, $50
Pastor
is the Rev.
evening.
and costs, no op.;rator's
George
Hoschar.
Services
license; Sammy Little, 41,
7:30
p.m.
ni~htly
.
The
are
Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner; Carroll public is invited to attend.
R. Nelson, 19, Middleport, $50 The speaker is Rev . Herm~n
and
costs,
reckless Jordan.
operation; Keith McDaniel,
19, Middleport, $225 and costs Joseph Rinaldi, 35, Syracuse,
and three days in jail, driving N. Y., $50, ·posted on a
while intoxicated; Timothy disorderly manner charge;
Hazelton, 21, Sefineville, Buddy McKinney, Mid$225 and costs
and dleport, two $50 honda posted
three
days
in
jail, on two disorderly manner
driving while mtoxicated; charges; John C. Sheldon, 28,
Ellis Moricle, 48, Burlington, Woolwich, Me., $350, driving
N. C., $225 and costs and while intoxicated; Kenneth
three days in jail, driving R. Wheaten, 27, Cheshire,
while intoxicated; Jay $350, driving while in·
Manley, 22, Middleport, $50 toxicated; Gary E. Hysell, 20,
and
costs,
criminal Rutland, stop sign violation,
trespassing; Roy G. Bares- $25; Therrill S. Randolph, 21,
wilt,
18,
Middleport, Reedsville, $27, posted on a
speeding, 35 in a 25 mile zone, charge of speeding 40 miles
$10 and · costs; Mark K. an hour in a 25 mile zone;
Qualls, Poineroy, assault, Paul J . .Jacks, 29, Westland,
Mich., $29, speeding, 42 miles
$100 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were an hour in a 25 mile zone.

Carter's action revived dollar, stock market

ELBERFELD$
The Class It! An abstract :r;,
button Iron! shlrldress of
Celanese Fortrel polyester ·
kn it. Shirring on the yoke
-

U!liled Press International
losing for two weeks - took a was that the steps were lon g
President Carter ' s dramatic turn upward. By overdue.
Bankers and foreign exannouncement of drastic nightfall, it had posted the
dealers
were
economic measures revived largest gain ever in a single change
lll)animous in their praise for
the
stock
market, day .
The Wall Street buying , Carter's measures to buck up
.resurrected
American
business \'Ptimism. created a spree sent the Dow Jones the buck.
And they responded by
born-again dollar and bucked Industrial Average up 35.40
· bidding !be dollar to one-day
up Carter's image on the points to 827.79 points.
U.S. businessmen also wel- increases that in foreign
economy.
Carter's cavalry charge comed the measures, eVen exchange markets were "asrescue of a besieged though they mean tighter tronomicitl."
By day's end the dollar had
American dollar Wednesday .credit.
Foreign leaders welcomed gained an Incredible 5.5
flipped the world economic
the Carter administration's percent in Germany . At
picture 1l,ke a pancake.
Within an hour of Carter's moves to strengihen the daybreak today. tbe dollar
pledge Wednesday, the stock dollar . Thelr only criticism -posted another 5.5 percent
gain as markets opened in
market - which had been

front and back. Long

button cuff sh lrt

~leeve

with contrast buttons and
belt. Colors are black·

white. Sizes 12-20. Machine
washable.

Weather

--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 2, 1978

IT'S
FOR IREL
Thol'lol,... .-roru-

Non-immunized
students
.·
.will he excluded Nov. 13

Style No. 1234

Meigs
Local
school
students not complying with
Ohio immunization
requirements by Nov . 13 will
be excluded from classes
until they are in compliance,
Sup\ . Charles Dowler said
tdday.
Out of the total enrollment
of 2,900 in the district, only 95
students are not in com·

READY-TO-WEAR
DEPARTMENT·2ND FLOOR

pliance with requirements. students who must meet
Fifteen of the 95 are enrolled requirements.
Parents of students not in
at Meigs High School, many
of them need only the im· compliance are being advised
by letter that they must
munization for measles.
Meigs County Health comply. Building principals
Department nurse, Mrs. Opal are being notified that
Grueser1 R.N., will be at students not in compliance
Meigs High School Monday, after Nov . 13 will be excluded
Nov. 13, to adrilinister free of from classes, Dowler said.
Those faiiing to comply
charge inununizalions to all
must present to Dowler in
writing a statement showing
"good cause." This would
include
religious
or
philosophical reasons lor not
rece.iving immunizations.

i,.,)_r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d__a_y_
Open warfare breaks out

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY
.
.

BANGKOK, Thailand ,(UPI) -Open warfare broke out
between thousands of Chinese and Vietnamese troops along a
mountsin border pass in the first major fighting between the
two Communist nations in 200 years, Radio Hanoi said today.
The broadcast, monitored in Bangkok, said there were
heavy Vietnamese casualties. The. reported incursion by
Chinese troops into a 'Vietnamese village in Cao Lang
province, 135 miles northeast of Hanoi, occurred while
Vietnam's top leaders were visiting the Soviet Union, China's
I!I'Ch·f'ival in the Communist world.

•••AT THE FARMERS BANK

Suspects found guiity
-CINCINNATI (UPl) - Both men arrested in connection
with the shooting death of a Cincinnati policeman last July
have been found guilty ol murder in separate trials.
Wayne Reed, :IAi, Cinclnilati, Wednesday was found ~llty
of aggravated murder and five other charges by a Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court jury. Russell Bell, 25, Cincinnati,
who waived a jury trial, was found guilty of aggravated
murder and lour other charges'by a three-ju(ige panel.

PLAN AHEAD

JOIN OUR

•

CLUB'

FREE SWEEPER GIVEN AWAY

OTHER REPRESENTATIVES WILl BE PRESENT!
FOR ONE DAY ONLYI

Drinking results in death

~~~~

*ZENITH REPRESENTATIVE
FOR TV'S, STEREOS &amp;

•

,.

*COBRA REPRESENTATIVE PRESENT.

u-·------------.
•
II PICK YOUR CLUB NOW . • .

EACH REPRESENTATIVE WILL HAVE

•

IDeposl' Each
II! Week For
4' Weeks

SPECIAL PRICES ON THEIR PRODUCTS

i

DON'T MISS THIS ONE DAY

• •

. Recieve Next

Year For
Christmas

I $2.oo
$3.010
ss.oo
II m.oo
.
$20.00

nso.oo •
.,..:oo I

11000.00

YOU PAY 40 PAYMENTS·
WE WILL

i

•

J

PAY THE 50TH

•

,,'

,.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - inflation report. Food ready
Wholesale prices in October for sale to groceries rose 1.7
soared 0.9 percent for the percent , the identical
second · consecutive month, advance register ed in
the government repor ted · September and · the biggest
today, dampening hopes that gain since last April.
inflation will taper off during
Bui even more signficantly,
the remainder of 1978.
the government report
As in the past, sharply showed prices at all three
rising food costs were a main levels of production climbed
~ontributor to the over aU
sharply across the board. For
inc!ease,
the . . I,@o~:, instance, intertl)~i'll!l. PriJ'l'S
Department said in its latest · ·. - those producl.'l not quite

ARNOLD GRATE

YOUR FULL SERVICE
BANK
.
.

0.
'

-'

ready for sale to consumers increases in wholesale prices
- jumped by the largest show up at the retail level.
Government officials said
amount in four years and
crude prices posted the they do not expect to see any
stat istically
"big gest increase since results
speaking - !rom President
February.
The administrati on had Carter's new anti-inflation
been expecting inflation to drive until at least the middle
ease UP. somewhat during the of 1979.
If wholesale pri ces rose at
second half of tbe year, but
the
same rate over the entire
those hopes have now
app_arently ~n dashed. It is year as they , didin both
only a matter of time !Jefore September and October, the
annual rate of increase would
be 10.8 percent.
The overall index which
measures wholesale prices
governor but also realize " the stood at 199.7 last month,
tremendous reponsibility of which means costs have
the legislature, especially the nearly doubled from their
1967 level, the department
majority party ."
"It is the opinion of the said.
Over the past 12 months,
OALSS that the responsibility
consumer-ready
food costs
of the present school crisis in
have
gone
up
I
1.9
percent
and
Ohio m11~t rest with . the
all
wholesale
prices
have
majority party of the Ohio
legislature," the association advanced 8.6 percent, the
department said.
said.
The 1.7 percent rise in food
Superintendents that
belong to the asilociation are costs represented a stunning
mainly from rural districts. turn-around from July and
August when foods costs
act ually declined at th e
wholesale level.
REP. HERE
Sharp rise~ were recorded
On Nov . 8, a representative for such staples at pork, fish ,
!rom Congressman Clarence beef and veal, fruit, eggs and
E. Miller's office will conduct . sugar.
an Open Door session from 10
The prices of consumer
- 12 noon in the Court House in non-durable goods jumped
Promeroy.
1.1 pet. the largest gain m
If anyone has any questions
that category since 1974. The
concernfn g the Federal acceleration was paced by
Government , please stop by more expensive gasolin e ,
to discuss · them with the home heating oil, tires, shoes,
representative.
clothing and beverages.
At the intermediate level,
prices
advanced 1.2 percent
SEEK LICENSES
compared
with 0.7 percent m
Marriage licen ses were
September
and 0.5 percent in
'issued to Jackson M. Mays ,
August,
the
department said.
:&gt;J, Reedsville, imd Patricia
Intermediate food costs
A. Buchanan, 19, Reedsville;
Perry Franklin Hoffman, Jr ., went up by 2.8 percent while
:&gt;J, Middleport, and Cynthia nonfood items gained 1.1
percent.
Lou Price, 21, Cheshire.

Celeste.
The superintendents ,said
both candidates need to
present more information
about how much additional
money is needed for
education ~ where the money
, will reaUy come from and
when the money will be
available to small ;;chools as
well as large schools across
Ohio. I
The superintendents said
they "sincere1y ·appreciate n
the leadership of th e

Fifteen C'&lt;· nt s
\'ol. ~~~ - "&lt;o. 141

HONORING PICKET - Midwest Steel workers at the
Pomeroy plant are honoring a picket line set-up locally
by striking workers at the Midwest Steel Plant at
Charleston. -Pomeroy plant worker s are not crossing the

picket line. Shown above is a representative of the
Charleston workers.
:~ : :;. :-:.: ·:':-:-:.:.:-;.;:;:;.;. :.:·:.:.: ·:·: :.;. :.;.:-;.:.;.;·=·::::::::::.

Two seniors
enter contest

278 HA VE VOTED
A total .of 279 Meigs
&lt;.:ountiaos have cas t ab-

Two high school senior girls
from Southern Ohio are tile
latest entries in the 1978-79
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
finals, Miss Calista ScHrls,
contestant ch a irman. announced today.
New contestants are Miss

Sherri
Lcaon
Ri shel,
dau ght er of James and
Na ncy Rishel , Rl.. 2, McAr·
thur, and Miss Hebecca Leigh
Crow, daughter of Alfred and
Marge Crow, Fifth Street,
RRcin e.

,

sentee ballots in the Nov. 7
election. Deadline for such
\'Oting is 12 noon Sa turday.

The Meigs Coun ty Board of
E lecti ons office will be
open from 9 a .m . to 4 p.m.
Friday and from 9 a.m. to

12 noon Saturday for such
voting.

Patrol checks
minor accident

Miss Hishel is a senior at
Vinton County high school
and is plann ing to attend
Holzer School of Nursing. She
has appea red in Who's Who
Am ong Am erican High
Schoo l Students and is an
alternate for the English
scholarship team.
She is in the marching
band, conce rt band , pep
band, pep club, mixed

The Gallia · Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol in·
vestigated a one-car accident
at 7; 15 p.m. Wednesday on
Story's Ron Rd . srx tenths of
a mile west or SH 7 in Meigs
County.
.
Officers said a westbound
vehicle driven by Chester
Suttin, 33, Cheshire, ran off
the left side of the roadway
chorus, junior leaders and is ;triking a ctitch. There was
news editor of the Vinton high slight damage. Suttin was
school paper.
charged with failure to drive
For her talent she will on the right side of the
present a vocal solo. She is roadway,
being sponsored by Elloilt
Appliance !I, Pomeroy.
::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Miss Crow is a senior at
EXTENDED FORECAST
Southern High School and is
Saturday
through
being sponsored by the Meigs
Mond
ay.
dry
a
nd mild
Inn, Pom eroy. She is a
through the period, with
member of Modern Music
highs in the middle or
Masters, concert band, pep
upper 60s and lows in the
band, marching band and has
lower or middle lOs.
appeared in Who's Who in
An1erican High School Music ;:;:::·:::·:·:·::;.;:;.;.;;:;:;:·:·:·:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Students. Miss Crow plans to
attend Ohio State University
and major in music. For her
talent she will present a
Cle&lt;~r tonight, with lows
trumpet solo.
Pro bability of
near 40.
The first two contestants precipitation is near zero
entering were Miss Carol through Friday.
Morris , sponsored by the
Racine Home National Bank
and Lori Chapman, spon· :;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
sored by The City Loan of
Pomeroy.
RANKED 19TH
Finals wlll be held Sunday,
In the weekly high sehool
Nov . 19 at the )\leigs Junior
grid poll this week Eastern
High Schoo l auditorium,
Is ·ranked 19th in the UPI
Middleport, beginning at 3:15
coaches poll and 18th in the
p.m.
AP poll. This is the first
time the Eagles have made
TAG DAY SET
the top 20 Class A squada
Mrs . George Yonker ,, this season. Under the
president of the Southern computer ratlogs, Eastern
Band Boosters, announces Is 11\b.
the Southern Band will have
Tag Day Saturday in Rarine
::::::::::::::::::::::::\"::::::::::\::::::::::::::::::::::::::i::,:
and the surrounding area.

Weather

BOYS TOWN, Neb. (UP!) -111e Boys Town Choir wiU
embark Saturday on its 33rd annual concert tour, covering 18
~dwest and eastern communities, It was announced
Wednesday. The group will appear in Archbold, Ohio, next
Thursday and Galion, Ohio, Nov. 11.
A spokesman said the program will include a variety of
PoPular and Christmas music, including Barbra
-Strelsand's "Evergreen," Robert Scott's "He Ain't Heavy," J.
A. Schehl's ."I!Oent Night," and the Ukrainian song, "Carol of
tbe Bellll."

y'

increa se in crude oil prices

expec ted
when
·the
Organi7.ation of Petroleum
Exporting Countries meets in
December .

Where there are no ceilin gs,

Democratic majority is blamed

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr .,
Democratic nomlliee for Ohio secretary of state, has asked the
state's highest court to intervene in his attempt to get ballots
reprinted in seven counties where his name is not the same size
.and style as his opponent's.
Celebrezze filed a lawsuit Wednesday asking the Supreme
Court of Ohio to force a reprinting of the ballots. He asked for
similar relief . for "all candidates similarly discriminated
against .''

MEXICO CITY (UPI) - At least 7li percent of all
j.ollcemen In MeJico City suffer from hemorrhoid&amp;, according
to a medical report. The repori relealed Wednesday said
Jlllll:emen normally begin to elj)erience symptoms of the
.ument In their second year on the job.
It iald pollee develop hemorrholdll beca111e thelr job often
· mak1111 them ten1e and nervous and hecaWM! many of them
mUll either lland or 81\ In one position for long periods of~-

that where mortgage rates
are close to or at local legal
ceilings, the suppl y of
mortgage money may dry up .

Wholesale prices rise

Mexican police suffering

POMEROY, OHIO

steps would ease its severity.
Higher interest rates mean

mortgage interest rates will
rise.
A spot che ck by UP!
showed most mortgage rates
already are higher than 10
per cent , and there a re
predictions some could hit 11
percent as early as today.
The latest mo ves to
strengthen the dollar still
probably are not enough to
head off a 5 to 10 percent

By United Press International
Economic developments at-a-glance:
In Washington - President Carter ann ounced a series of bold measures to strengthen
the dollar including higher interest rates and the sale of more U.S. gold.
In New York- The stock market resporrded quickly and registered the largest increase
ever in a single day of trading .
In Europe - The value of the dollar soarect ; everybody wanted to buy and nobody
wanted to sell the U.S. currency; the price of gold plunged - about$20 an ounce.
In Japan- Tbe dollar climbed; the price of roffee for American tourist s dropped from
$1.40 a cup to $1.33; the price of a modest hotel room dropped from $51 to $48 for Americans.
Around the world - Carter's measures were welcomed. Among foreign leaders, the
only crihcism was that the steps were long overdue. U. S. businessmen praised the moves,
even though they mean tighter credit.
.
In the United States- Home mortgages, a spot check by UP! shows, are already more
than 10 percent, and there are predictions they could hit 11 percent as early as today.
Government officials and private economists have warned the higher cost of money could
produce a recession beginning some lime in the second half of 1979.

'

·.'

Otto Eckste in, ' of the
economic forecasting firm,
Resour ces,
in
Data
Cambridge , Mass. , s aid
flatly : " We are changing our
forecast to recession. "
Ot h er e c onomist s ,
including former White
House
adviser
Alan
Greenspan , said a recession
was likely , but that the latest

Economics-at-a-glance

Boys choir hegins tour

I

Farmers Batik

RUTLAND FURNITURE
RUTLAN

B

'

100.110
i1H.OO 11

•.

742-2211 ·

1
1

:::.1

.:~

lh--·--11;1------

'·

=
•

.

cup of coffee went down about
7 cents overnight, from $1.40
to $1.33. A modest hotel room
that cost $51 on Wednesday,
cost $48 today.
One American housewife in
Bonn noted that even with
dollar 's spectacular gain of
5.5 percent against the
German mark Wednesday, it
was still worth 19 percent less
than a year ago.
And
the
long-term
prospect, according to a
number of economists, is still
a U.S. recession in the next
couple of years.

en tine

at

Seeks court intervention

JOIN OUR 1979 CHRISTMAS CLUB

wanted to sell and nobody
wanted to buy. Now, foreign
exchan ge dealers say dollar
owners are holding onto them
to get a better price. For the
first time in weeks,
everybody wants to buy and
nobody wants to sell the U.S.
currency.
Americans living overseas,
who have watched the buying
power of thelr dollar wither
drastically over the last year,
were
delighted
at
Wednesday's dramatic rise,
but still felt it wasn't enough.
For the American tourist in
Japan, it meant the pri re nf a

•

Detectives seeking leads'

lHIS YEAR WE MAILED sl71,364.50
TO OUR TO OUR 1978 FARMERS BANk CHRISTMAS
Q.UB MEMBERS. BE SURE TO GET YOUR
SHARE NEXT YEAR. STOP BY NOW AND ...

* BEARCAT SCANNER REPRESENTATIVE
PRESENT.

was the currency everyone

United Press International
Theexecutivecommittee of
the Ohio Association of. Local
DARES SALAAM, Tanzania (UP!)- Ugandan dictator School Superintendents said
Idi Amin boasted he was the master today of a triangular today the present school
chunk of northwestern Tanzania captured by his troops in 25 crisis in Ohio must be blamed
minutes, a foray that risks drawing the wrath of black Africa. on the Democratic majority
The announcement from Radio Kampala said Uganda in the Ohio General
invaded Tanzania Tuesday 'in retaliation for "continued Assembly.
aggression by Tanzania for seven years since 1971," the year
The executive committee
the volatile Amin seized power.
said in a statement that it
would not accept tbe school
funding proposals of either
Gov. James A. Rhodes or his
BIG BEND, Wis. (UPI)-An alcoholic version of trick-or· opponent, Lt. Gov. Richard
treat resulted in the death of Mary Ann Ashpole, 22, of
Michigan Lake, police said. Mrs. Ashpole was killed Tuesday
night when she tripped in a neighbor's yard, fell on a glass she
was carrying, and slashed her throat.
AuthOrities said Mrs. Ashpole and her husband, Otto, bad
No letters to the editor pertaining to candidates or issues to
been going from house to house asking for drinks. She tripped be voted upon Nov. 7 will be published in the final two issues of
over a railroad tie used for terracing in the neighbor's yard . the local papers prior to election day .
·
Purpose of this policy is to assure that no charges or
statements will be published without adequate opportunity for
refuting such charges, or statements.
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Cleveland homicide detectives
Friday's paper (Nov. 3) will be the last day for letters on
said today they still were looking for leads in the slaying of all election issues and individual races. Letters should be in the
Arthur J. Jaffe, a prominent Jewish community leader in bands of the editorial department no later than 5 p.m. on
Cleveland.
Thursday, Nov. 2, for Friday's publication.
Jaffee, 51, of suburban Cleveland Heights, was president
.Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should, however, be
of his own plastics recycling finn. He was found dead on the less than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the
loading dock of his flrm in Cleveland. He had been placing editor) and must he signed with the signee's address and
items for shipment in a truck trailer.
telephone number. Names may be withheld upon request.
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letter should be
in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Dictator Ida Amin boasting

CONSOLE STEREOS.

e

Japan .
Investors who had gambled
on a furth er decline of the
dollar lost their shirts. Gold
bugs likewise took a bath.
The price of gold dropped by
around $20 an ounce to about
$220 before the close
Wednesday.
Robert V. Roose , a partner
at
Brown
Brothers
Harriman, said "the package
is as decisive and emphatic
as the British actions in late
1976. It marks the end of the
decline of the dollar."
Only a week ago , the dollar

l\'IIDDLEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT - If voters
approve a one mill tax levy at Tuesday's general election,
Middl~port firemen will get a new fire engine to go with

the relatively new headquarters shown above. Funds
from the levy would be used to purchase a new engine. '

l

J

.

~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="809">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11452">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50025">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50024">
              <text>November 1, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
