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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

.

~

�•

3-The Daily Senlind . Middleport -Pumeruy . 0 .. Thu1·sday. Nnv . 2, 1978

2- The Daily Sentinel. Middlcpurt -Pomci'Oy ; 0., Tlmrsd&lt;O y. Nuv . 2. 1978
\

---- - ---

IN WASHINGTON

- --

---

l 'f\15 fLI&gt;.f A.\3ol..JT liE

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

~

, _Stargell NL's comeb'itck honoree
OCI\-kj

oVr:RcRoWI/f.P Ill\? .\?EE.N

HEALTH

WWN AU.-ct'ir c.f ~PoRTioN , .

Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

How does it look in Illinois?

(1as problems
rmnmon

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
CHICAGO ( NEAl - Unless the Republicans s urprise
everyone with a sweep on Nov. 7, the off-year elections of
1978 ar~ not likely to offer many clues to Jimmy Carter's
re-election prospects for 1980.
But that doesn 't mean that this year's balloting has no
r elevance to presidential politics. On the contrary, for at
least three men who are eyeing Carter's job with more
than casual interest , the Nov . 7'results will be crucial.
One is California's Gov. Jerry Brown, the president's
most likely Democratic challenger. The second is Senate
Minority Leader Howard Baker Jr., R-Tenn., and the third
is GOP Gov . James R. Thompson of Illinois .
All three are up for re-election this year, and all three
must not only win but win big if they are to remain credible
as presidential contenders for 1980. Which imposes added
strains above a nd beyond the ordinary pressures of a
campaign, especially for " Big Jim" Thompson.
Thompson, 42, became a figure to be reckoned with in
national politics when he won the governorship two years
ago by a record-shattering 1.4 million votes, a 65 percent
margin. But the very si~e of his 1976 victory is what makes
his election sticky ; it is a hard act to repeat.
Thompson, a former federal prosecutor who made his
.I
na me fighting corruption in Chicago, was blessed two
years ago with an .inept and unappetizing Democratic
opponent put forward by the machine of the late Mayor
Richard J . Paley.
This time, he wasn't nearly as lucky. The Democrats
nominated their attractive and aggressive state controller,
Michael Bakalis, 38, who has made a career of winning
elections that were considered hopeless.
Furthermore, Bakalis and his fellow Democrats who
I
i
control the state legislature managed to steal the initiative
I HAVE CLOSED
last .s ummer on the big issue of 1978 tax reduction.
They did so with a property tax rebate bill that Thompson
MY HEART
felt obliged to veto for budgetary reasons.
I have closed my heart
Ever since then, the tax issue has dominated the
to the raging tempest of time .
gubernatorial campaign. Thompson belatedly countered
(Seeking a reprieve , a rest,
his opposition with his own drive to put a referendum on
within my nest)
the ballot as~ing voters whether the state constitution
I twist myself
should be amended to impose a ceiling on taxes and
into
myself, and pray.
spending. The referendum, however, is purely advisory ·
(aloud, so loud, for solitude)
and contains no specific formula.
The petition drive for the "Thompson proposition" was
I · feign madness - with
scarred by charges of forged signatures and other
gladness
irregularities, and cleared a court challenge only Oct. 18and I hide behind tbe ivory
a bit close for comfort, since Thompson had already
gates
decided to peg his entire campaign to the proposal.
(of towers in the sky).
Bakalis is still pushing his property tax rebate plan, but
No faun-creature can leap out
with Thompson-s pending $400,000 for television advertising
of the flames
geared to hjs own proposition, it appears tbat the governor
to declare itself my master.
has recaptured the lead on the tax issue.
(for
I have closed my heart)
Thompson is also getting unexpected help from a family
drama . His first child, born in August, was recently
hospitalized 10 days with bacterial pneumonia. Every
I have closed my heart
parent in lllinois felt a rush of sympathy for the g. overnor
to save my heart
and his wife, and even !hough the baby is now home and
(from the raging tempest of
doing fine, Thompson is besieged with questions about her
tirtle ).
health. And he doesn 't hesitate to volunteer a progress
By Jim Brewer, Jr.
report on those rare occasions when nobody asks.
Thompson needs every edge he can find . Although polls
show him well ahead of Bakalis, voter turnout is likely to
be way down from 1976 and that could spell trouble for the
governor. Machine Democrats in Chieago will go to the
THE HOME
polls come hell or high water, but the same is not
WE ALL LOVED
necessarily true of Republicans in the suburbs and collar
I recall my childhood days
counties.
how we worked, and .how we
Thompson is banking on his tax proposition to entice
played
voters to the polls, on the theory that a vote for it will
Our
house set in a hollow
translate into a vole for him. He insists he is not looking
there between the
nestled
beyond this November's elee\ion, although he refuses to
rule out a 1980 presidential bid. AB a practical matter, It's hills
alt the same. Unless he wins- and wins big - this ye11r, he I have often seen some
can forget about 1980.
swallo.ws
and heard the sound of whippoor-wills.

v---------,

I The Poet's I
I

Peopletalk
.tly D;NNETH R. CLARK

Uulted Press Inlernadonal
CATCH HIM FIRST: America's most famous fugitive may
be facing a bigamy rap as well as charges of dealing in cocaine
if ever the FBI can get Its hands on him. ADita Hollman. to
whom Yippie-founder Abbie Hoffman refers as "my ex-wife,"
says there's never been . a divorce, but that "Abbie has
remarried." Sbe's in New York from California with 7-year-old
son America, who, she says, Hoffman fathered before going
underground . Hoffman surfaces in print from time to time his latest Interview will be published in the December issue of
F?rum magazine - but bigamist or no, Anita says, "We'll be
~Ien'!" forever .'_' And she adds, somewhat superfluously,
'Abbie doesn't live by the conventional rules."

Comer

Then I glanced down at my
watch
For i knew I must go
So I started walking down
that lonesome road
I knew so long ago.

will have no record of us.
If you need help with writing your story, there will be
workshops at the Senior Otizens Center on Monday at 1 p.m .
and at the Meigs County Museum on Friday at 1 p.m .
throughout the month of November . Or phone 992-2264 for
arrangements at other times. Deadline lor having stories
submitted is December 5.

One day the summer of 1959
I strolled back to that sacr.ed
spot
To see how many things 1
might have forgotten
So I sat down on that old
porch
for just a little while
And thought I saw my mother
there
To greet me with a smile.
And then I looked over the
fields
Where my dad had toiled so
we mjght eat
I loolied down tbe old well
We kids once played arotind
I often heard my mother say
"Stay bac~. you might get
drowned."

noises

•Mortlte Caulking Cord
•Window Plastic
•Stove pipe, elbows
•Stove Acceuorles
•Coal Buckets
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

Ebersbach Hardware
'.

We thought we hadn't heard
hef(l'e
and found it ··was nothing
Only Dad opening the door.

You could search this wide
world over,
and none such would you find
The place I loved so very
much
The home I once called mine .

And then I think of Mother
and Dad
with their toil worn hands
How hard they tried to train
us kids
To start that old country
band:
· And then they would leave us
kids sometirries
To take some wheat to the
mill to grind ·
And when it wsa getting dsrk
We would go into the big room
Then I think of the old school And around the stove we
would park.
house
And then we would hear some

•Aluminum Door Strips
•Aluminum Door
Bottoms
.r=elt Weather Str.pplng
•Self-sticking Foam
Weather Stripping
•VInyl Foam Tape

PH. 992-2811

Meigs historical notes
· BY MARGARET PARKER
Meip County Pioneer and
Hl~turlcal Society
The 20th century has been a century of growth and
progress. Sometimes almost unbelievable has been the speed
at which not ooly our country, but our county bas changed.
Many people now living can remember when there w~re no
cars in the county, no surfaced highways, no electricity, water
systems, tractors, or many of the other conveniences, we now
take for granted .
My generation is probably the youngest to remember the
threshing machines as they traveled the countryside threshing
the golden grain at harvest time. I remember as a child, fields
of corn shocks, llke tee-pees against the winter cold. A haven
for field mice, rabbits, and birds.
The summertime was haying time, much as it is today,
except we hauled it in loose, on a wagon pulled by a team of
horses. A horse was also used to pull the hay, with a hay fork,
from the wagon to the mow.
1
Tractors and machines now do the work my father did with
horses and a strong back. Cows are mostly milked by machine,
instead of by band. The memocies of a coey warm barn, with
the cows contentedly munching their hay while the winter wind
whistled around the corner is dear to many of us.
Fireworks at the county fair! We don't have them
anymore . The belling of newlyweds! It's seldom done . Pie
socials, box socials, and the community fair on the 4th of July.
They are almost a thing of the past. The TV has replaced the
radio as a family gathering spot. Remember the soap operas,
mysteries, cowboys, and comedies? WhY! I grew up with Gene
Autry, The Shadow Knows, Henry Aldrich, Backstage Wife
and The Grand Ole Opry. What ever other programs were
popular during the late 4~ and early stfi, we enjoyed.
·
Dominoes, checkers, ·and puzzles were favorite pastimes,
and there were always neighbors coming or going. People
visited back then.
Of course, it wasn't all fun and games. Carrying water
from the bam to the houae to wash clothes, or drawing water
for house use from a well was not as easy as turning a spigot.
Bathrooms were air-conditioned, only who · needs alrconditiqning, when it's 20 below?
But, we like to remember it all as a time that made
memories. It was a quieter tirtle and a slower tirtle. We had a
chance to dream. Tbe world was not rushing by and leaving us
hehind,or if it was, we dldn'treally notice.
In my lifetime, paddlewheel steamboats bave disappeared
from the river and many other things have become a thing of
the past. I can not reach out and stop these things from
disappearing. I cannot stop progress, and neither should I wish
to. But, a part of my life has gone and can never be replaced.
Just as the seasons change, so must we and the world about us .
But, we can remember and share our memories. We owe it
to the future genera lions to leave a record of how it is now, and
how it was when we were children, so they might have a
greater appreciation of their lives.
The Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society is giving
each household a chance to share tbeir stories, by wriling them
down and having thein published in the Meigs History Book.
We need your story to make this book complete. Tell about
your family, past and present. Include incidents that bappened
in your life. Schools attended, recreation, anything that you
think might be of interest.
If someooe bef(l'e us hadn't written things down, we would
have no records of the past. If we don't write it down, the future

I have often thought of what
I might have missed
If it had not heen ((I' friends
Tuttles,
like the Bahrs,
Fishes
and the Smiths
And there were Mr. and Mrs.
Parker
who would come to our house
so very clean and neat
And I would hear my mother
call
"You kids come in and eat."

BEFORE WINTER ARRIVES

MAIN ST.

I

oo Silver Ridge
We would trod there to learn
our lesson
but most of all to learn of God
Then when school was out
and we were homeward
bound
We would take that crooked
path,
.
The one over the hills and
through the woods
And then there was that apple
tree
that belonged to the Tuttles
It stood so stately there Us kids would always gather
apples there
And how that tree did bear.

You cannot turn back the
clock, my friends ,
Nor neither turn back the
tirtle
Years have taken its great
toll
.
God has called part of our
family h&lt;me
and left some of us behind to
write
thil1liltle poem
So God has got our nwnbers
Fifteen of us in all
And when He closes that
great book ·
There will be nooe left to caU.
The Christy Family by
Edith Christy Bel2lng.

••

GUMPSES: When fans and the celebrities get mtxed, the
celebrities ·get mobbed, and they were at the Stardust
Ballroom's Halloween disco ·bash in Hollywood where Mark
Hammlll, Jeremy Bretl, Krlsty McNichol, Shan Cassidy,
Karen Black and Jane and Peter Foada were among the
bese1ged ... Patly Andrews, ooe of the singing Andrews Sisters
of th~ '.41B. is giving the gong to the "Gong Show," suing NBC
televiSion oo grounds it'screw caused her to fall and bruise her
leg during a taping last year wllen she was a pimellst ... Walter
•Croaklte was guest of hooor Wednesday in a dinner-dance
thrown in New York by Lord and Taylor chief exec Joeepb E.
BroukB who gave the L&amp;T Rose Award to Cronkite for courage
in reporting the truth ... New York Yankee superstar Reigle
Jackson was on hand to greet Rachel Robinson, wife of the late
Jackie Robldsoa, at the All Sports Hall of Fame dinner on
behalf of the 102-year-oldBoysCiub of New York .. ..

liET
READY
FOR

~QJJ@a§~©:ri!'A9

THf. DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE

DEAR DR. LAMB - We
would like to have your com.
ments on the problem of gas.
My husband has cut out
eating all milk products and
almost all . fruit and juices.
Does activity or inactivity
contribute to the problem?
We need an answer soon.
DEAR READER- Gas is a
common and frequent problem. A high percenlage of
people who go to see a
stomach specialist do so
because of symptoms related
to gas. About 10 percent of the
general population has symptoms from gas retention.
There are two main sources
of gas. A major portion of the
gas often comes from
swallowing air. The problem
is people don't ~ealize they're
swallowing it, and if you don't
know you're doing it, it's hard
to stop it.
A good trick here is to hold
a rubber eraser between your
teeth . While doing this it is
difficult to swallow. This will
alert you to the fact lhatyou
are swallowing air and it will
give you a mechanism to stop
the habit.
The other major source of
gas is the fermentation of undigested food. Milk can certainly be a cause in people
who have milk intolerance.
Large amounts of carbohydrates seem to do this in
other people. Then, of course,
there are the well-known gas
formers such as beans,
radishes, onions; soine people have particular foods that
are real gas formers for
them. If you · know which
foods cause you gas, it's wise
to avoid them.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number !HI,
Controlling Gaseousness to
give ' you more information
abOut how gas is formed and
what you can do about it.
Often you need to improve the
colon function. Others who
want this information can
send 50 cents with a lohg,
stamped,
self-addressed
· envelope for it to me in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Rajlio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
The digestIve tract does
seem to work better if a person is active. Regular walks
seem to help eliminate gas
and prevent distention. Patients who bave to stay at bed
rest often have more ~as

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
NEW · YORK (UP!)
Willie Stargell of the
Pittaburgh Pirates , who
fought off claims that he was
" washed up " by having his
best season in four years
today was named th~
Natiooal League's Comeback
Player of the Year by the
United Press International.
In a balloting of 30 UP!
baseball
correspondents
fi'om across the nation, the
37-year-old first baseman
received ~ votes to win the
award handily. Pitcher Vida
Blue of the San Francisco
Giants received two votes
and Pitcher Gaylord P.erry of
the San Diego Padres and
J!itcher Jim Bouton of the
Atlanta Braves got one vote
apiece.
Stargell had an am~ing
turnaround this season after

trouble than usual.
Although activity helps
eliminate gas, the ideal situation is tu avoid excess formation and tu have normal colon
fwiCtion so the gas isn't trapped to cause pain . If you have
good colon function,, eat ·the
proper loud and don't
swallow air, you're not likely
to have gas problems.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is
there any information to
substantiate or refute the
feelings of some that apple
seeds are toxic , that if too
mimy are taken into the body
serious damage could result?
Is it true that grape seeds and
apple seeds can get lodged in
some way and cause damage
to the appendix? I have heard
that in extreme cases death
has resulted in otherwise
healthy people .
DEAR READER - Half
true. The seeds of apricots,
cherries, peaches, plums or
apples are all capable of
causing cyanide poisoning.
That means you shouldn 't eat
the pits of these seeds. As a
matter of fact, laetrile, made
from apricot pits, has caused
several deaths from cyanide
poisoning.
It's unlikely that seeds will
lodge anywhere in the intestine. There are stories
about seeds lodging in the appendix, but the question is
was the appendix already
diseased before this happen·
ed.
Patients with diverticulosif
(pockets of the colon) are
often advised not to eat small
seeds for the same rea:ion. In
the normal person, who still
has his appendix, the danger
or having a seed of any kind
impact in it is extremely
remote, to the point tbat it is
probably not a. practical consideration.

NEW YORK (UPI) National
Football League individual statistics:
NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE
Rushing aU yds avg lg td
Payton, Chi.
194 783 . 4.0 76 4
Middleton, G.B .
162 755 4.7 76 9
153 754 4.9 34 5
Montgomery, Phil.
Riggins, Wash .
165 734 4.5 31 3
Dorsett, Dall.
147 670 4.6 51 2
Punting
no lg avg
Jennings, N.Y.
57 68 43.7
Skladaqy, Del.
53 63 43.0
Blanchard, N.O .
52 51 41.6
DWhite, Dan .
45 53 41.4
47 56 41.2
Bragg, Wash .
Punt Returns
no yds avg lg td
11 165 15.0 57 I
Henry, Phil.
Wallace, L.A .
28 349 12.5 44 0
Green, Wash .
23 288 12.5 80 1
Reece, T.B .
20 221 11.1 50 0
Johnson, Dall.
29 307 10.6 23 0
Kickoff Returns
no yds avg lg td
10 304 30,4 81 0
Walterscheid,Chi.
16 485 30.3 99 i
Green, Wash.
15 435 29.0 85 1
: Odom,G.B.
15 369 24.6 42 0
·· JThompson,Det.
18 433 24 .1 38 0
Chandler,N.O ..
Scoring
Touchdowns
td rusb rec ret pis
Middleton, G.B.
9 90054
7 5 2 0 42
Newhouse, Dall .

.

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"Now there was at Jojlpam a certain disciple,
named Tabitha, which by
lnterpretallon Is ealled Dorcas: this woman was full of
good works and almsdeeds
which she did. -Acts 9:36

Rutland, Ohio

1975 GRAN TORINO
2 DR, '1595
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1975 CHEV. MONZA

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Montogmery, Phil.
6 5 I 0 36
Csonka, N.Y.
6 6 0 0 36
6 5 I 0 36
Harper, Chi.
SWhite, Minn.
6 0 6 0 36
Kieklng
ep-a fg-a lg pts
17-1913-19 52 56
Danelo, N.Y.
Moseley, Wash .
21-22 11-19 52 54
Corral, L.A.
16-18 12-22 47 ·52
Thomas, Chi.
14-16 12-13 44 50
Danmeier, Minn .
22-22 9-14 46 49
Passing
att comp pet yds td lot
Mannng, N.O .
245 146 59.6 1727 10 7
301 185 61.5 174714 12
Trkntn,Mnn.
Staubach,DU.
272 147 54.9 1923 16 13
Jaworsk, Phi .
232 126 54.3-1475 10 7
Whthrst, G.B.
176 96 54.5 1161 8 7
Rating based on pet. comp, avg yds.,
pet. td,, pet. int.
P1111s Receiving
no yds avg lg td
Young, Minn.
47 358
7.1i 48 2
Galbreath, N.O.
45 390
8.7 35 2
Rashad, Minn.
36 376 10.4 25 4
Payton, Chi.
33 338 10.2 61 0
Gray, St.L
32 660 20.6 44 I
Miller, L.A.
32 486 15.2 52 3
Interceptions
no yds lg td
Buchanon , G.B .
793771
Lawrence , AU.
576440
Bryant, Minn .
569230
Scott, Wash.
540390
(8 tied with 4) (more)

All statistics are out

. when GHS plays Meigs

742-3154

The pioneer in women 's

e~ies.

year. I have the desire to
compete and to be'out there . I
enjoyed playing this season
and did so with enthusiasm."
"!have ID give credit to my
teammates, and to my manager, Chuck Tanner, who was
very inspirational all year . I
thougl)t sure ·he'd he the
manager of the year."
Tanner finished second in
the manager of the year
voting to Joe Altobelli of San
Francisco.
The ability to bounce back
from
adversity
is
characteristic of Slargell .
During his 17,year career he
has had his share of personal
trauma, the foremost of
which was a serious illness
suffered by his wife, Doloces,
two years ago. Slargell's wife
suffered a blood clot on the
brain in the early part of 1976
but made a complete
recovery by the end of the

NFL grid statistics

Thursday
church work began her career in Paul's lifetime. Her
name has lived 19 centuries
through the Dorcas Soci-

struggling through the 1977
campaign, in which he was oo
the disabled list twice and
appeared in a career low 63
games. The Pirates' slugger
hit .295 with 28 homers and 97
Rm iir tills year in helping
Pittsburgh to a second place
finish in tbe NL East.
Last
year
Stargell,
bothered by headaches, dizzy
spells and a pinched nerve in
his left elbow, got to bat only
186 tirtles and managed just
35 RBI and 13 homers.
"I think the most thrilling
thing (about winning this
award) is . knowing that
anytirtle that you're burt (as
he Was in '77), you have to
really fight lor your
credibility again," said
Stargell, who signed a multiyear contract with the
Pirates Wednesdsy.
"I just knew I had the
capability to .have a good

1976 FORD 4X4
Extra hl ce

'4495

WE

BY GREG BAILEY
When the Gallia Academy
Blue Devils invade the Meigs
Marauder Stadium Friday
_night, fans can throw away
the statistics. When these two
teams meet in their annual
gridiron rivalry, slats don't
tnean a thing. Here's how
they match up on paper.
Coach Bill Trent's Devils
fell to league -leader Ironton
last Fridsy 36-8, but they
battled valiantly.
At 2-7 overaU and 1-4 inside
the SEOAL, the Blue Devils
are having a rough year.
Some bright spots were found
last week against the Tigers.
Spilt end Nick Robertson
caught five passes for 75
yards and junior quarterback
Greg Harrington completed
si~ of his 10 pass attempts for
86 yards. Harringtoo is also
the league's leading punter
and second in passing behind
Meigs' freshman signal·
caller Bob Ashley.
Mike Hemphill , a 145 pound ·
sophomore, filled in lor
Baron Haner last week and
did a fine job. Juniors Mark
Sheets and Scott Morrison
finished out the back field . .
Morrison was the leading
ground gainer last week with
36 yards, although the other
runners were close behind in
a balanced ground attack.
The team had a total of 125
yards on 'offense, a unit that
shows just two seniors
starting . The GARS defense
gave up 364 yards to the
strong Tigers.
The Meigs defense has a
strong hold on second place in
defense after holding Athens
to just 84 yards in a heart·

breaking 2-0 loss to Athens
last week. The only points
scored in the contest came on
a bad snap from center on a
punt that rolled out of the
Meigs end zone for a safety.
That loss gave Athens second
place in the SEOAL and
Meigs third. But a Meigs win
tomorrow night, coupled with
an Athens Joss to Wellston,
could again throw second
place into a tie.
In last week 's Athens tilt,
the Marauders of Coach
Charlie Chancey outplayed
the Bulldogs, but failed to
score . Meigs gained a
respectable 210 yards on the
night, 115 in the air and 95 ·
rushing. The rushing attack
was led by sophomore Jerry
Fields who collected 59 yards
in 13 carries.
Bob Ashley, a 6-1 freslunan
quarterback continues to lead
the league in the passing
department as he connected
on 12 of 24 and 115 yards. Bob
Seelig caught five of those
aerials for 46 yards while
John Stout garnered three for

year .
Blue bounced ba ck from a
14-19 campaign with Oakland
last year to post an 1~10
record for the Giants and
Perry rebounded from a
mediocre 15-12 season with
Texas to post a 21~ record
with San Diego and win the
NL's Cy Y01mg Award .
In
many ways
the
comeback of Bouton was the
most remarkable of all. He
retired from baseball 10
years ago and had enjoyed a
successful career as an
author
and
television
sportscaster. He hega0 the
long road hack in the low
minors two years ago at the
age of 37. He reached the
Triple-A level with Richmond
early this year and got a
chance to pitch ((I' the Braves
near the end of the season .

Golfers
hope for
•
repeat Wln
By PAULA SCHWED
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla .
( UPI ) - Mac McLendon had
not earned more than $40,000
in a single year before be and
Hubert Green won tbe 1974
Walt Disney World National
Team Classic, and he has not
collected less than $70,000
annually since then.
He and Green return to
Disney's Palm and Magnolia
courses today hoping to
repeat their victory in this
year's $200,000 version of the
PGA tournament, which ends
Sunday. McLendon calls the
1974 event a career turning
point , but Green doubts its
significance.
" Mac puts too much
emphasis on that. He was
going to be good no matter
what," Green said between
practice swings. "He· made
everything that week . I
thought he'd sue me for nonsupport. I figured we'd just
have a good time. I
remember he was as low as a
man could get coming here.
Why, he could have gone
under doors instead of
through them."
Andy Bean and Lon Hinkle ,
Andy North and Steve
Melynk, and defending
champions Grier Jones and
Gibby Gilbert are among the
112 teams competing for this
year 's prize money.
McLendon took the title at
Sundsy's Pensacola Open .:..
the last event on the PGA tour
in which money won is
officially couiited - after a
sudden death playoff. He now
stands 22nd on the 1978 money
list with $107,299 . Green has
won $247,405, but says, ~~rve
never had a year like this
where I was caught from
hehipd so many tirtles.
"It just proves that what
you expect doesn't mean
much."

PulllllllM:tl W.ily c~~:cepl &amp;Hlurday

by Tiw Ohiu Valley Publi shin.:
C'!l lnJN:IIIY•Multimedht, hie. ,
Ill
Cu urt St., P111llt'ruy, Ohiu 45769.
Bmdrr es.~ Offk t! Piton!! 992· 2156.

F..clitorial Phone f!92·2157.

Sltt.·und chJ ss J)U.'Jial!(t Ptiid· &lt;~ I
Pnmt'ruy, Ohw.
~
N&lt;~l tnn!ll

U!tivt•,

OI,.D MAN WINTER IS
A TIME AWAY

n~ptt'!il'll ·
Al!$ocilth~li, 3101

onlverlisinl(

l..arutcon

Eut·hd Avt•.. f'lcVl'hmd, Ohio 4411S.
Sul l.~t ·r·l /ltl un rille.~ : ~li vued by
l'&lt;U'rtt·r· w rere avoulablt· 75 ct!n1Ji pt·r·
wt•ck . fl y Motor· Roul!! wh~t· t'urrli.'r
$t•n•lt-..• nut avail able , One rnunth
S.:J.t5. Ay mall in bhlu 1md W. V.11 .:
f'&gt;nt• Year, tt..l .OO ; She rnunths,
SIUII : Tht t't' nwnlhK, $7 .ll0 ;
1-:L'!t·wht·n· flfi.OII year: Rhl 1norrlhK
fl:l .5tl ; rhrl't' muuth~ , $1 ,1;11 .
Suh.~t-r r p u n r 1 pril·1 · ltll'htd r~s Smt ti H~

Tur w~·"' '' ' "l ''

BEAT lHE
WINTER
PRICES

~

TIRE .SAUS
N. Second

MiddlePort;

992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri .
7:00to3:00 S.turd1y

an d

Meigs is now 5-3 overall and
3: 2 in the league . The
Marauders are healthy after
that tough game. II the
defense
keeps
coming
through, it could be a long
night for the Blue Devils. But
as I said, in this rivalry,
throw the books ·out the
window .· Don ' t miss the
game!

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - This
week •s Oh io High School
Athleti c Ass oc ia t ion com-

puteri zed footb.a ll ratings ,
with poin t totals :

Class AAA
Region 1
1. North Ridgevi ll e, 102.50 ;

2. Solon, 99 .00.
Region 2
1. Groveport - Madison ,
112.50 ; 2. sandusky . 103 .42 .
Region 3
1. Zanesville, 119.42 ; 2.

Newark. 11 3.00.
Region 4
1. Ci ncinnati Princeton,

135.50; 2. Cincinnati Moeller,
122.38.
Class AA
Region 5
1. Brookfield, 79 .88 ; 2.
E lyria Cat_!loli_c, 78.09.

I
Reg1on 6

l. Millb ury La ke, 93. 00 ; 2.
St . Marys Memori a l, 85.00.

Region 7
1. New Concord John
G le nn , 92 .00 ; 2. lron tori , 70.85.
Region 8
I.

Ci ncinna t i Wy om i ng,

10 7.00 ; 2. Cin ci nn a ti Mc Nicho las , 91.24.
Class A
Region 9
.1. Lorai n Clearv iew, 74 .00;
2. Mogadore . 59.50.
Region 10
I. Cres t line , 70 .00 ; 2 .
Hamle r Pa trick Henry, 65 .00.
Region 11
l. Newark Catholic, 73 .50 :
2. Crooksville , 64.00.
Region 12
1. Covi ngton, 74 .00 ; 2. West
Jefferson , 72.00 .

Monday Nite Late
October 30, 1978

Roach's Gun Shop
Salem 51 . Mkt.
Frye' s Pennzo il
Powell ' s Mkt .
Heiner's Bakery

w. L.

66
52
52

14
28
28

.42

38

18 62
Meigs Co. Ad Taker
10 70
Team High Series
Roach ' s Gun Shop 221 9 .
Frye's Pennzoil 2126 . Salem
51 . Mkt . 2162.
Team High Game Roach' s Gun Shop 798, Frye's
Pennzoi l 753 , Frye's Pennzoil
747.

Men's High Series Raymond Roach 521 , Roger
Carpenter 521, Bill Smith 517,
larry Hendri cks 492 .
Men's High Game --:Raymond Roa ch 204, Bill
Smith 198, Roger Carpenter

190.
Women's High Series Naom i Floyd 488 . Betty
Whitlat c h
and
Bess
Hendricks 466 , Anne Hatf ield

455 .
Wo~en 's High Game Betty Whitlatch 173, Naomi
Floyd 171, Bess Hendric ks
170.

V.W.-AMC-JEEP
"The Dealer That Cares About Quality"

Now$2595

Was

1974 CHEVY

NOVA
4 door

sedan, burgundy
with white vinyl top , auto .,

ps .

1972 OLDS.
~9a'

4 door sedan,

a.c., am -fm

ster eo, power seats. power
windows, a cl assic big car .

1595

5

1975

v.w.

BUS

'I

Customi zed in side , the only
van that gets good gas
m ileage .

3995

.5

1974 CHEVY

CAMARO LT

Bucket
auto.

~eats, console ,
afr, ps, bro wn

metallic paint.

1975 DODGE

CREStWOOD.
Station wagon loaded · with
all the exfras fo r fa mily
use.

2895

1975 OLDS CUTlASS................ }3695
Yellow, ps, pb, air , nice car.

1!78 AMC CLEARANCE
" .
4 Models left In Stock
1 MATADOR WAGON, 1 CONCORD1
1 GREMLIN, and 1 PACER
To Be Sold At Or -Below Dealer Cost.

CLIFTON

o.

LOWER
'RATES

TOLEDO RACEWAY
TOLEOO, Ohio (U P! ) -

Super Taffy was successful in
his first start at Raceway
Pa rk, pacing to v1ctory in
Wednesday night's featured
eighth race.
Steve Martz guided the
winner to a 110. length victor y
over Sam Bengazi, good for
payoffs of $15.40, $.1.40 and
$3.40. Delta ODell wa s
third .
Sweet Coffee won the lOth
race, kicking off a :;..2-4
trifecta that was worth
$1,319.80. Arts Playboy was
second and Mesa bet came in
third.
A crowd of 1,673 wagered
$148,012 . .

STAR SUPPLY CO.
949-2525

Raeine, 0 .

1978 MONTE CARLO LANDAU .••• s6695
L1a ht b l ucwilrt w11. v1nylrop . i'Jr V O['llq111" lull p oVJt' r'
one I. winclows &amp; door lOCk S, f\M FM &lt;; ll'rcu r ,1\I IO,
c r u iS(', t ol l s l whC'f'l , r,l rhnl w c, tr1pf' l lf•"l. ,11 r conci.,
loi s of o ttwr t;&gt; xtr·,, s. D c rll('r D •~ mo &lt;.,r,v l

1977 PINTO 2 DR .••••••••••••• s2995
l ocal owner , clean inte rior , AM.FM CB rad io, good
t ires.

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON ..... ~2295
4 cyt. , ~ u1omatic trans., good tires. good economy &amp; a
local 1 owner car . Radi o. color whi1e ..

19731CHEVEllE ••••• ;;~u: ~: .c::·••.s1995
Local ~ ow ne r car , V-8 engine, automat ic trans. , P .S,
P. B., '"radio. Clean inter ior .

1973 FORD TORINO WAGON ••• •••s995
1976 CHEVROLET.•••••••••••••• s3495
Sport Pickup, 350 V-8. automati c trans ., P.S., P . B.,
radio , ,li·ke new tires, be.d rail s, orange with white trim .

1976 GMC % TON ••••••••••••.s3695
1 owner , good tires. V-8. a utoma tic, P .S., P . B., r ad io.

1973 CHEVROLET 1/z TON •••• , •• s1995
8' Fleetside, good t ires, cle an inter ior , 350 V-8,
automati c, P.S., P. B., radi o.

1976 CHEV. T.E.C. MINI HOME
See Us, We Have New
Blazers. Suburbans, Vans,
Conversions, Mini Homes,
El Camino Pickups 4-Wheel
Drive &amp; Reg. In Stock

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til&amp;: 00 p.m.

1

\.

.

-----------,.-

992-2126

Located on W. V• . Side of Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge IJ041

\

---------- --

"Your Chevy Deoler"

AUTO SALES

I :

!

DO·J l· 'tourse/1
anrl get pro fess io nal
results

4 cy l. , automatici good ti res. blue f inish . radio , good
econom y &amp; real spor~ y .

RIVERSIDE

to

AN-tape. black, black. ps. pb.

the Ohio Dep•rtment of
Natura l Resources rODNR 1 WE 'VE LOWEREU
closed the quail season as
THE COST OF
part of a com pre hen siv e
CARPET CLE ANING
program initiated this fa ll to
in crease t he numbers of
NOW RENT
bobwhite quail in the sta te.
The decline in the rabbit
population in Nort hern Ohio
also is attributed to the
severit y of the la st two J.c•o P\'l CLE AN ING
winte rs.
The extreme f&lt;v &lt;T&lt; M AT NEW
weather conditions and loss
of suitable habitat arc factors
that have adversely affected
the
slate' s
phe asa nt
po pulation.

1976 MUSTANG II CPE.. ••••••••s2795

Lay-Away for

1973 cun.ASS SUPREME.. .........$AVE

"ferry McNic kle , S-8, 135
lbs . Sophomore Hack.

.-

Local Bowling

Just in time

Christmas

low. Ht..n te rs

Computer ratings

Aulo., 350-VS, a. c.. ps

DOWN
JACKETS
VESTS

r e ma ins

should be aware there will be
no quail hunting season m
Ohio this year. The quail
populati on
is
dow n
drast ically as a result of the
severe winters of 1976-1977
and 1977-1978.
The Division of Wlldlife of

S n uthw P.&lt;~t

LEMANS

PRIME NORTHERN

Scott. Nease, &gt;-9, 135 lbs.
Sophom'ore Ba r.k.

I

53295

29.

Ohio. However, the rabbit
population is down in Northern Ohio.
Pheasant hunt ing will
continu e to be s potty
statewide. Surveys mdicate
the Ohio pheasant population

5

VALLEY lUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
923 5. 3rd Ave.

Southeast

1975 PONTIAC

DELIVER

. CQR~ORATION

COLUMBUS - Hunters
preparing for the opening of
the 1978 rabbit and pheasant
seasons on Nov . 15 are noting
with interest the early success of Ohio's grouse hunters.
Field reports indicate
hunters are taking more
grouse this year than last,
particularly in Southeast
Ohio . Surruner surveys indicated that Ohio's grouse
population is up eight percent
from last year.
Surveys also showed rabbit
numbers to be in Central,

WEEKEND SPECIAL

Middleport

Jonathan Rees, 1&gt;-9, 145
lbs. Junior CB.

Rabbit season begins Nov. 15

$60,000.

WITH

RETREAD SNOW TIRES

John Pape, f&gt;.O, 150 lbs.
' Junior QB.

CINCINNATI (UPI) Thomas Blunt says he ·was
walking his mail route as
usual March 3U when he was
" attacked suddenly and
without warning" by a dog .
Blunt is suing the dog's
owner, John Hall , for

!~EST OF

MEIGS.MASON AREA
• ROIII':Rf.HM:ruCH
. City Editor

Meet the Southern Tornadoes

, I

.,

�.

•

4- The Daily Scnlmcl. Mid&lt;llcporl-Pomcn•y, 0 ., Thu ..day, Nov . 2. 1978

.

\

.

Nets continue winning ways
By FREU UEF
UPI Sports Writer
lbe New Jersey Nets, a
·curious
collection
of
ballplayers who bungled their
way to the worst ~.cord in the
NBA last season, have the
most victories in the league
lhjs year.
Md they continued their
b•ffling way s Wednesday
night.
They won their fifth
straight game and seventh of
the season with a 131·110
blowout of the Milwaukee
Bucks . Only Seattle and
Phoenix have as many Wins
tb us far.
While the Nets finished
with a laughable 24-M record
h\ st year, the joke has
apparently gone stale on the
rest uf the league.

"The Nets are for real,"
Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson
11&gt;1id. "They are one of the

teams

better
in the NBA.
They pass well, rebound well
and they were shooting very
accurately tonight."
Bernard King , New Jersey'
sturdy forward, led the way
with 29 points followed by
guard Eric Money with 23.
The Nets put matters out of
hand right from the start. ·
They broke to a 41·26 lead
a fter the first quarter.
extended it to 72-53 at the half
and had the Bucks ·wishing
they were nowhere near the
Jersey shore .
had
sylid .,
They
performances from Wilson
Washington with 18 PQints,
including nine straight field
goals, and eight rebounds,
and John Williamson with 19
points. Bob EUiott had 10
rebounds and King 12.
The Nets also reached a .
minor landmark of sorts with
their. 131-point total - the

most they have scored in a
regulation NBA game.
The Bucks were paced by
Junior Bridgeman with 20
points and Brian Winters with
19.
" They destroyed us," said
Milwaukee ' s Marques
Johnson, who had 17 points.
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Boston defeated Chicago, 1111·
112,
Washington
beat
Indiana!.JiM-113, Philadelphia
trimmed San Antonio, 11&amp;115 , Gold~n State topped ·
Houston, 11Z.l05, and Kansas
City doWI)ed Cleveland, 122107 . . . ' .\_
Celtlcs , 118,.Bulls 112:
Nate Archibald, with 25
points , and Don Chaney, with
14, led a fourth-&lt;1uarter surge
to send Boston over Chicago
in a game between the
league's two ~orst teams.

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

i

Pro I
l Standings!

N-0-T·I·C·E
DR. CONDE ANNOUNCES HIS RETIJRN
10 PREVIOUS OFFICE HOURS.

NBA Standings
By United .Pres ~ lnte.r natlonal

EFFECTIVE THIS DATE APPOINTMENTS
ARE BEING ACCEPTED AS BEFORE.
1~-------------------·

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Divisio'n
W. L Pet.
Ph i la
.
6 1 .857
New Jersey
7 d .636
Wa sh ingtn
5 5 .500
•New York
A 5 .44.4
Boston
2 6 .250
Central Division ·
W- L. Pet.
Houston
15 4 .556

San
Antonio
Atlanta
• - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - , Cteve tanCI

1
2112
3
4112

GB
If:~
lf2

54 54 .500
.500
4

5 .444

1

New Orlens
4 5 .4.44 1
Detroit
2 7 .222 3
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L. Pet. GB
DenYer
6
3 .667 Ind iana
· 4 4 .500
Ph
Ka nsas Ci t y
5 5 .500 11!2
Milwauke
4 7 .364 3
Ch ic ago
1 9 . 100 Sl/2
Pacific DiviSion
W. L. Pet. GB
Seattl e
7 1 .875 Phoenix
7 3 .700 1
Golden St .
6 4 ,600 2
Portland
4
4 .500
3
Los Angeles
4 4 .500 3
San D iego
5 6 ASS Jlh
. Wednesday ' s Results
Boston 118, Chicago 112
New Jersey 131, Milw 110
Phlla 116, San Antonio 115
Washington 124, Indiana 11 3
Golden St . 112, Houston 105
Ka n City 122, Cleveland 107
Thursday ' s Games
Seattle at Detroit
Gol den state at Atlanta
Phoen ix at New Orleans
New York at San Diego
Friday's Games
san Antonio at Boston
Seattle at New Jersey
Milwaukee at Ph il adelphia
Kansas City at Ind iana
Det roit at Ch icago
Clevellmd at Denver
New York at Los Angeles
San Diego et Portland

COOL WEATHER

SWEATERS
• . CARDIGANS

AND
PULLOVERS
BOYS AND GIRLS
Mo. Size To 14

ALSO

BlANKET
SLEEPERS
6 MONTHS TO SIZE 14

.

NHL Standings
By United Press International

HtJUI'S :

Campbell Conference

9 : l0 fo S: OO

Patrick Division

Mon . lhru Sat .
9 : l0

1

GB

W. L T. Pts.
Atla nt a
9 o 2
20
NY Rang ers
5 1 3
13
N.Y Islanders
5 2 2
12
Ph il adelphia
3 5 2
8
Smythe Division
W . L. T. Pts.
Ch icago
4 2 3
11
Vancouver
5 5* 1
11
St . Louis
2 6 3
7
Colorado
2 7 1
5
Wales Conference
Norri~ Division
W. L. T. P1S.
D e troit
4 3 3
11
Montreal
5 4 1
11
Los Angeles
4 5 0
8
Wash ington
2 5 2
6
Pittsburgh
1 7 2
.4
Adams Division

to 8: 00

Friday
2nd St.

POMEROY, O.

COR
FRUlH PHARMACY CIRCUlAR

W. L. T. Pis.

PlO-D

Bo ston

canon

Toronto
Buffalo
Mi n n ~sota

6
5
2
2

1
5
4
4

2

14

1

11

2
2

6
6

Wednesday ' s ~esults
At lanta 3, Ph i ladelphia 0
Mon trea l 4, Detroit 1
Washington 6, Pittsburgh 4
Van couver 1/ Chicago 0
Minnesota 9, St . Louis 1
Toronto 4, Los Angeles 2
Thursday's Games
N .Y. lslanden at Boston
Buffalo at Philadelphia
Washington at Montreal
N .Y. Rang er s at Colorado
Friday's Games
Pi ttsburgh at Atllmta
Toronto at vancouver

lLI:C:JRQNI~ :cALC\A.IU~

With Bath Dtitll
And Paper
Readout

69

WHA Sfimdings

By United Press International
W. L. T. Pis.

s

SOME CIRCULARS HAD PRICE

New England
3 1
Cincinnat i
S 4 1
Birm ingha m
5 3 0
W inn ipeg
4 3 2
Quebec
.t 5 1
Edmonton
3 S 0
Ind ianapoli s
2 S 1
Wednesday ' s Result
Birm ingham 4, Cine! 3, ot
.
ThursdJiy's Games
( No games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Winnipeg at Edmonton
Quebec at Bir mingham
lndpls at New England

PRINTED AS 69• - CORRECT
PRICE IS '69 AS SHOWN ABOVE.

FRUTH PHARMACY
POINT PLEASANT, GALLIPOLIS, HUNTINGTON

11

11
10
10
9

6
5

fj,

By FRED. MeMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The people who organize
the annual Orange Bowl
college football game will
have a definite rooting
interest over the next three
weekends.
U things continue in the
current pattern, the Orange
Bowl could have ooe dUly of a
game on New Year's Night
when it pairs top-ranked
Oklahoma against second·
ranked penn state for the
national championship.
Four things stand in the
way of that match up Maryland , Pittsburgh ,
Colorado and. Nebraska.
PeM State, unbeaten in
eight games, still has
Maryland and Pittsburgh
remaining on its schedule
(along with potentially
dang~rous North Carolina
State) . Oklahoma, also
sporting an 8.() record must
get by Colorado, Nebraska
and Oklahoma State to win
the Big Eight title.
The countdown begins
Sarurday with Penn State
hosting Maryland and
Oklahoma visiting Colorado.
Maryland, ranked fifth
with an 8.() record has lost 15
straight games to'PeM State
and there is no reason to
believe the Nittany Lions
woo't make it 16 straight.
PeM State has never woo
national championship and
the Lions are too close to that
goal to let It slip away.
The Colorado Buffaloes
also ate coming off an
·

a

Marauder gals
advance to
second round

lnternationa I
Hockey League
United Press International
(North)
w II pis. gf go
Port Huron
3 '4 1 7 40 32
Fl int
3 3 0 6 28 31

Kalamazoo

Saginaw
Muskegon

24042129

South
w II pts. gf ga
Fl. Wayne
7 0 0 14 38 15
Grand Rapids 4 2 I 9 29 23
Mllw.
4 2 1 9 29 26
Toledo
~ 2 1 7 29 26
Wednesday's Results
Fort Wayne 9, Muskegon 2
Milwaukee 4, Port Huron 2

FriCiay's Games

Saginaw at Kalamazoo
Port Huron at Flint
Toledo at Mulwaukee
. Muskegon at Grand Rapids

'

Pancake endorses Hillyer

PRESEASON
HOLIDAY
SALE

Charles pancake, former
stale senator and current
president of Local 1466
IBEW, has recently endorsed
the candidacy of Jack Hillyer
for the 17th District • Stale
Senate. Pancake said he felt
the 17th District needs better
representation than it has
had in recent years. He feels
Hillyer is the man who can
provide full time nipresen·
tation, which the district
deserves.
In their latest issue of
Focus magazine, the AF of L
CIO gave its support to Jack
Hillyer, candidate for State
Senator in the 17th District.
The AF of L CIO screens
candidates for stale and
national offices and on the
basis of this process determines which candidate they
believe will best represent
the people they will serve.
In choosing Jack Hillyer ,
and in urging voters in the

STARTING NOV. 2
AT

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Security

Rust

Brown
Wine
Black

Ala~ 35 ~isslssippl ~·

. 7 - Crunson Tide watting m
the wings for Oklahoma and
PeM State to .lose.
Nor.th Carolma St. 24 South
Carolma 17 - Ted Brown
nms over Gamecocks.
Duke ~1 TeMessee 14 mue Devils should move tbe
hall against Vols.
Cleffi80n 20 Wake Focest 0
-Tigers are bowl conscious.
.The Midwest
Navy 22 Notre Dame 17 Our BEST BET. You nee~ a
torpedo to penetrate the Mtd·
dies: d~ensive line.
.
Michtgan 40 Iowa 7 - Rtck
Leach is too versaille for
Hawkeyes.
Ohio. st ..45 Wiscoosin 14 Buckeyes ww grind Badgers
to mincemeat.
Purdue 33 NorthweStern o
- The Boilermallers should
start with a handi~an - rna 1&lt;1'

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Brown

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GIVE HIM A SOFT
VELOUR 11 HUG ME"

Betty Ohlinger

102 E. Main

Pnmeroy •.O.

SHIRT
SOUD COLOR ONLY
GREEN
PURPLE
RUST
NAVY
Dear Oakley:
September
19,
1978
.
"You continue to be an elected official for whom I have
·great respect and admiration. You . always make a
supreme effort to help, no matter what type of problem
one has." B. Bush, 17th District.

Also

Super Suede Shirts
Brown, Tan, Burgundy,

Blue, Rust, Navy Blue.

October 24, 1978
"Your support to education in
Southern Ohio has been
outstanding. Without your
help I'm · sure Southern Ohio
would have had a lot of
problems.
l'ni
looking
forward to your continued
presence in the Ohio Senate."
R. Bowen, 17th District.

October 19, 1978
"It is my pleasure to suppott
a fine State Senator and
Education Leader.
May the fine people of the 17th
District again return Senator
Collins to the legislature." C.
Rennder, Dunkirk, 0.

LayAway Now For Christmas

.o;;.n Frklll.'i' ns t:oo p.m.

====

WEEKEND SPECIAL

(

Oc.t ober 23, 1978
!'We appreciate your interest in taking the time to be a
part of governmental development. Our system needs
men and women who are truly interested in good fiscal
policy. We wish you success in the forthcoming election."
C. Boring, Columbus, 0 .

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17th District

Pd. Pol. Adv.

By ALLEN ALTER
about Israeli settlements in [iact to the Palestinian question . .
NEW YORK ( UPI )
the Camp David talks.
Israeli Prime Minister
AI Abram said the
In Cairo, the semi-&lt;&gt;fficial
Menachem Begin is seeking AI Abram newspaper said the document
was
" very
up to $4.5 billlon in U.S. aid to Egyptian and Israeli delega· important" and will be called
help pay for pulling out of the tions to the peace talks in the " linkage document"
Sinai Desert as part of a Washington have prepared a because it links the Egyptiano
peace treaty with Egypt.
document removing the last Israeli peace treaty to the
Theaidrequesttooffsetthe stumbling block to a treaty by West Bank and Gaza
cost of leaving the Sinai linking the Israeli-Egyptian problem, where 1.1 million
Palestinians live.
tankerous attitude at a tender topped the agenda at today's
age, cultivate it diligently meeting in New York
over many years and bring it between Secretary of State
to full flower no earlier than Cyrus Vance and Israel's big
the initial stages of senility. three - Begin, Defense
Although life is filled to Minister Ezer Weizman and
Ualted Press Intematloaal prompted a warning to
overflowing with myriads of Foreign Minister Moshe
Travelers today faced dlf. drivers.
cultivation aids, I consider Dayan.
Scattered rain occurred
only four indispensable to
Israeli sources estimate the ficulties with rain and snow In
from northern Arizona
the
mountains
of
the
West
anyone'shope·of ever gaining cost of a :J:Ye~r withdrawal
through Utah, Nevada, and
griping's pro ranks ; One, from the Smat, captured in . patches of fog in lowlands of
northwestern California ,
the
East.
subscribing to and reading 1967, will run to $4.5 billion.
A mixture of rain and wet changing to snow in the
the Congressional Record; This would be in addition to
snow on the lower elevations
Two, evaluating the decisions the . $300:500
mtlhon
of our courts; Three, oi&gt;- Washmgton IS ready to pay of Nevada's mountains was
serving how one's tax dollars for new atr bases replacmg freezing and the National
are spent; and Four, com· those Israel would evacuate. Weather Service said It was a
peting for driving space
But Prestdent Carter, ';'ho hazard to motorists. Higher
during the rush hour!
asked the Israelis to subrrut a elevations received the
heaviest snow. Fog over the
Close observance of the c~st estimate. of the Sinai
central Atlantic Coast ·and
four rules should assure Withdraw~! , dtd not plan to
upper Ohio Valley ~ !so
anyone of super-stardom and see Begm although both
entry into the Griper Hall of leaders were . m New York
Flame.
ooday - Begm to accept a
United Press laternallonal
The Lake County sheriff's
Upon turning "pro" , r "Family of Man" A':'ard
ofllce reported today that
immediately began the from New York Council of
rocks were thrown at school
process of classifying all of Churches and Carter to
buses as they attempted to
my gripes and discovered campatgn for Gov . Hugh
leave garages in the
they fall into three major
id h d'd
hink
strikebound Pa inesville
categories :
perp·et ual,
~sa
e .' n~t t
Township
school district.
seasonal and spontaneous. Carters not meetmg him was
Sheriff's deputies were
As an example, one of my . a snub althou~ both leaders
called to the scene to help
seasonal gripes deals with all were staymg m hotels a few
escort the buses on their
those fortunate souls who, at blocks a~rt. "I don't see why
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ The rounds to pick up children
scent uf fall's first frost, flee the .~restdent wants to snub
fate of the Erie Nuclear who are attending classes
to the southern sun; spend the me, Begm s&amp;d.
winter perfecting a deep tan ;
But Carter last week sent a Power Plant and several taught by substitute teachers
fly north with the swallows sharply worded message to other nuclear projects in and supervisory personnel.
Ohio
and
About 180 teachers went on
and exclaim, "Cheez, was the Begm over. the Israeli northern
weather here really all that Cabmet's dectston to expand Pennsylvania are being strike Sept. 27 in a contract
had', or " Gosh, it was just settlements in the occupied reviewed by utilities faced dispute.
The Painesville Township
bee-ootiful where we were!" West Bank and the two · have with reduced load forecasts .
of
Education
ALPH E . Nusken. an Board
Such exclamations are differed on what was decided
administrative
law
judge
Wednesday
ordered
its
usually accompanied by a
with
the
Ohio
Power
Siting
lawyers
to
begin
taking
the
trace of a smirk and though I
Commission, has granted an first
steps
toward
} tee! myself in advan ce, V
h
tt d
jealousy always prevails and
aug an a en s Ohio Edison Co. request and terminating the contracts of
suspended the schedule for the striking teachers .
I quickly berome timber for
Also, a Lake County
submission of final briefs by
Mr. Johnson's list of favorite annual session
all parties in the Erie Nuclear Corninon Pleas Court judge
people.
Power Plant case.
dissolved an order which said
Perpetual gripes are long
The briefs had been due the hoard of education and.
enduring and my personal
Leo L. Vaughan, Manager
teachers must continue
collection is as lengthy as it is and Memorial consultant of Oct. 27.
Logan Monument Co. , Inc. of
The company told the judge negotiations. The j:udge had
diversified.
One of my " pets" concerns Pomeroy, just returned from it wanted to assess a revision · also issued an order for the
the amount of mail I receive the annual convention of the in the load forecast of the teachers to go back to work
from individuals of the Great
Lakes . Tri-State Duquesne Light Company but they ignored the order.
Monument Builders at the forecast, a part owner of the
Meanwhile, school strikes
country 's so-called right Columbus Sheraton Hotel in J)l'ojected plant through its continued in the Logan school
wing . Somewhere along Columbus.
membership in CAPCO, a district and at the Lorain
the
line
my
con·
servative tendencies were
More than 200 monument consortium of five northern County Join Vocational
retailers from Ohio, Indiana, Ohio. and Pennsylvania School in Oberlin.
found out a nd now my and Michigan attended the utillties with a heavy
Negotiators ' for non·
mailbox rUMeth over with three-day convention. The commitment to nuclear academic workers in Logan .
various appeals for monetary session featured numerous facilities.
and the Logan Board of
seminars by well known
assistance.
Ohio Edison itlso said the Education continued talks
InCidently, this creates a speakers on such business CAPCO construction late Wednesday. ·
paradox in the sense that topics as the current trend in schedule will he reviewed by
Teachers in Logan voted
e,ach solicitorferve~Uy hopes me m 0 ria 1s,
e ff e c ti v e the heads of the CAPCO earlier this week to accept a
I U become ultra·h~ral at management and cemetery utilities during the next 30 new contract but have vowed
the moment I contnbute to . plaMing and designing. ·
days.
to stay off the job unW the
his or her r.~spe~IVe cause.
Logan Monument Co. has
Ohio Edison spokesman issues with the non-teaching
Another pet involves been in business in Pomeroy Jim Dodson said he "would personnel are settled.
acronyms a~d people who for over 30 years. It has. not like to speculate" oo
seem to spt~e each con· designed many personalized whether the review might
versatJon .wtth generous memorials for families in result in postpooement or
sprinkli~gs of these con· Meigs, Gallia, Mason and delay of the much-criticized
densed hUes. AU too often I Jackson counties. The project.
ANNOUNCE PROMOTIO~
haven 't the foggiest notion display is located on West
RAVENSWOOD - James
Also to he re-evaluated , he
what they're talking about Main Street near the said, are the $2.02 billion L. Garrison has been named
and as a conseq~ence, am Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. Perry Nuclear Power Plant staff maintenance engineer
forced to reveal
my There are other branches at now under construction in in the fabrication maintenace
ignorance by asking.
Circleville, Wellston, Vinton Lake County, and projected department of the Ravens·
To prove a pomt, recently, and main plant at Logan
expansions of the Davls- wood Works of Kaiser
an acquaintance inquired as
·
Besse Nuclear Plant in Port Aluminum and Chemical
to how I stood on CRAP.
Clinton and a Beaver Valley, Corporation.
Poised, with what I con·
Garrison joined Kaiser in
- - - - - - - - Pa . !li;Oj~t.
sidered an appropriate reply, earth's salt.
· 1973 as a senior maintenance
I thought better of it and
Spontaneous gripes are the
engine~ring specialist, a
Local Bowling
asked " What the devil's most numerous of all, but
position he held until his most
CRAP?"
thankfully, of the shortest
recent promotion. Prior to
My inquisitor seemed
duration. They arrive sud·
joining
Kaiser, he had been a
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
shocked that I was unaware denly without warning and
systems engineer at Leeds
MORNING GLORIES
of the Commission to fade with the abruptness of
Oct. 30, 1978
and Northup.
Rehabilitate Asparagus the falling star.
G&amp;J Auto Parts
51
Pickers!
Karr &amp; VanZandt
38
They are easily activated
32
He would have been more by any number of distasteful Newell Sunoco
No.3
26
shocked, however, had he experiences ...pot-holes in the Gibbs
Grocery
23
known that for months ..I road, bad breath (someone Sears
22
High Ind. Game - Vicky
though the SALT talks were else's), crap games with the
Gillilan 192, Gerry Parsons
directed at divvying up the
dice loaded, gopher halls with 181.

The

Camp

framework

David

envisioris

autonomy
for
the
Palestinians on the West
Bank and Gaza Strip with the
fate of the area to be decided
af!er five years. Israel has
sought to keep any linkage
out of the text of the treaty
with Egypt.
AI Ahram said the idea of

Travelers hit rain, snow, fog

Painesville

school buses

a

hit by rocks

Review
plant
fates

ea;:y:

• - - - - - - - - - - . the bases load~d. aU events
with father loaded ...
Although gripe Is a gripe
to the professional, some of
the more sophisticated prefer
to relate to spontaneous
gripes as mere aMoyances,
pet peeves or simply, things
that bug' em.
Be it gripe, peeve or bug,
let us hope any emotion
provoked by my ramblings
here, fade like a · • falling
star ....

Weights. Sizes Small through

STATE SENATOR
•

Begin seeking financial aid

a

High Ind. Series - VIcky
Gillilan 477, Gerry Parsons
439.
High Team Game - Newell
Sunoco 781.
High Team Series
Newell Sunoco 2311.

mountains.
Southern and eastern
F1orida also had scattered
and
occasional
rain
thundershowers .
Forestry officials in the
Alabama , Georgia,
Mississippi and the Carolinas
said most of the area was a
tinderbox for lack of rain .
Fires
have
charred
thousands of acres.
A pall of throat-searing
smoke from forest ftres in
northern Alabama hovered
above 'Birmingham for the
second consecutive day today
and the remains of an
arsonist's fire smouldered in
northern Georgia . Two
persons have been arrested .

OFFICERS ELECTED
The Meigs High School
Chapter of F .H.A. mel
recently to elect officers for
the 1978-79 school year. The
officers are Paulette Sigman,
president ; Angela Payne ,
vice president ; Gail Pierce,
treasurer; Patti Dugan,
secretary; Angie Houchins,
historian; Debbie .Danner,
parliamenta ri an ;
Susan
Danner, news reporter; J oy
Majors, song leader; Shelly
Roush, recreation leader.

the separate document may
have been introduced by
Vance and that Dayan
"agreed to it in principle."
In Washington Wednesday , ,
Dayan l!Bid the treaty with ;
Egypt - Israel 's first with an ·
Arab state - was 11 alinost" 1
wrapped up and Cairo's dele· ,
gate to the pea ce talks t
Osaman Baz said "we are
moving."
.
In Baghdad, Iraq, all Arab ·
League nations - except
Egypt - ended three days of .
talks by rejecting the Camp •
Dav id accords in their .
current form bullefl it up to a
summit starling today on
whether to isolate Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat for
hi s peace overtures.
In Moscow, Palestinian
guerrilla chief Vasser Arafat
conferred Wednesday with
Soviet
leaders
on
coordina tin g strategy to
counteract the Camp David
accords which Arafat said
"set the stage" for U.S. 1
domination of the Middle '
East.

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-·- ·· -

EDITOR'S NOTE Pomeroy Postman David
H. Cumings occasiooally
over the years has written
articles for The Dally
Sentlael on various· aspects
of life.
Following Is the latest of
Cumings'. tongue Ia cheek
type of a.rtlcles aad upon
readlag you'll find It quite
easy to become a realarllst
Ia the field of "the gripe."
Cumhigs says According to historians,
author, educator and all·
around sage, Samuel Johnson
once declared he liked good
haters
Well:Iwon'tgothatstrong,
but in all honesty, I am
partial to good gripers.
· I suppose my partiality
stems from the fact that in
the field of gripery, consi'der
myself a true professional.
And contend griping shoud be
given it's rightful place of
honor alongside the world's
other fine arts.
Admittedly, very little, if
any, time is required to
produce a common run-of·
the·mill griper. On the other
hand, a rank of professional
caliber caMot he a chieved
overnight.
To become an expert, one
must establish a can·

CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON
-

candidacy of Hillyer for the
17th District and urged voters
to support him on election
day.
Earlier, Hillyer
had
received support from Ohio
Senator John Glenn .

.
by Cumznns
Comments
e.

See Sandy. Kay. or Deb Tuesday thru
Saturday Evenings by Appointment.

OAKLEY C. COLLI'NS
SATURDAYS
9 til N"~"

17th District to vote for him,
they illustrate confidence in
his ability to serve Ohio.
Additional labor support
was also given Jack Hillyer
by the U A W.. This state
organization endored ttie

£

RE-ELECT~---------

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

,.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Thursday, Nuv. 2,1978

October 24; 1978
"I sincerely hope the electors of your District recognize
the invaluable service you have rendered to them, as
well as your service to all school districts in the State of
Ohio. In my opinion, you have done .more than any other
individual in the State to promote quality Education in
Ohio." W. Haney, Coshocton, 0 .

..

.

by

2. 0 4. 30 36
0700 945

.LErS KEEP
. .

'·

unpressive upset victory over
Missouri last week and will
be J)l'imed for the Sooners.
But, there isn't a more
devastating offensive unit in
the country than Oklahmta
and Colorado doesn 'I appear
to have a good enough
defense to stop the Sooners:Here's how we see .tbe
games around the country
this week :
Tbe East
PelUl State 28 Maryland 16
- Lions' defense forces
mistakes.
Pittsburgh 30 Syracuse 12
- Panthers won 't have to
throw 52 times against
Orangemen.
Army 23 Air Force 9 Cadets new aerial weapon,
Jerry) Bennett, shoots down
Falcons.
Virginia 25 West Virginia 20
· - Just one of those years for
Mouhtaineers.
The South

In AA Girls Volleyball
tournament
action
at
Nelsonville-York
Monday,
the Meigs gals of · Coach
Karen Walker rallied in the
last two games to down
Alexander in three games.
Alexander was top-seeded in
the tourney.
'
The local gals got off to a
slow start and were defeated
in the first game of the
match, 15-11. Meigs got it aU
together and roared hack for ·
an easy 15·7 victory in the
second contest.
.
In the rubber match, there
was never any doubt . Meigs
won dandily 15-4. Tonight the
girls travel to ~elsonvWe for
the second step in the tour·
nament. They will face New
Lexington. Meigs is now 15-5
on the season.

•

Pd. by Committee to Eled R. James, C. Allen. Chairman.

Huskies have finaUy found an
offense to go along with their
defense.

over ND team

Yes! Ron James wants to keep working for just that. He
sponsored legislation tllat has already saved.us over $12
million, but he knows we must change our PUCO to make
them protectors of the public.

RON JAM.ES

respectable.
Arkansas 33 Rice 8 - After
straight
losses,
two
Razorbacks need a 1breather.
Baylor 27 Texas Tech 16 Walter Abercrombie · has
giveri the Bears a new
dimension.
·
'I'M Far West
Southern California 27
Stanford 19 - Trojans wW
pressilre Steve Dils.
UCLA 30 Oregon 7- Br:uins
should be home . free unW
they meet Trojans.
California 22 Arizona St. 11
-Sun Devils finding out that
life in the Pac 10 im't as
glamorous as life in the
Western Athletic Conference.
Washingtoo 31 Arizona 13..:.

•

Today's Games
No games scheduled

FAIR UTILITY RATES

Warrlurs liZ, Rockets 105:
John Lucas had 26 points
and 15 assists against his
former teanunates to lift
Golden State. to its fourth
straight victory.
Klags 122, Cavallero 187:
Pbii Ford scored 19 points
and handed out 12 liSSists as
Kansas
City
handed
Cleveland its fifth straight
defeat.

Bullets !Zt, Pacers 113:
Kevin Grevey scored 24
points and Elvin Hayes 23 as
Washingtoo snapped a five·
game losing streak.
76ers 116, Spun 115:
· F~ul-plagued Julius lj':rving
led a fourth-quarter drive and
fmished with 28 points to send
Philadelphia over San
Antonio.

Mark HerrmaM pass left.
handed.
The Mldlaada
Oklahoma 31 Colorado 16There's not a lasso big
enough to snare Billy Sims.
Nebraska 25 Kansas 15 Cornhuskers might • be
looking ahead a bit to
Oklahoma.
Missouri 27 Oklahoma St. 8
- Tigers recover from last
week's shocking loss.
Iowa St. 21 Kansas St. 9 Cyclones·
have
been
disappointing but Wildcats
are several degrees below in
talent.
The Southwest
Texas A&amp;M 20 SMU 17 - ·
Mike Ford makes Mustangs

.

'5" depo8it hold ~
an y merchandit e
until Chriltma&amp;

heritage house
OF SHOES
, Mi4dltport, Ohio

�.

~

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Nov . 2, 19i8

Ann Hoffman celebrates 9Qth birthday
.

.

Ann Hoffman rece ntly Glen and Ruth Thompson. Mattlww ..Joshua. ~:~ r al Marcelebrated her !lilth birthday Connie, Sam, Elizabeth. Den- slw Van Mt&gt;lt'i· . O&lt;iwn Rlakc.
with family and friends-shar- ny and Belly Thompson , Lou Hie hard and PhylliS Gilkey,
Ada Vickers. a nd Cloris
and Pam Thompson.
ing the occasion.
Numerous gifts and cards
Cheryl and Jim Young. t.r inun .
were presented to her along Jack, Martha, ami Jason Col- · Harry and Nora Stm.1 ls
with a birthday cake made by !ins, Maxin e Hof fman . l'ame lrtler in the day anti
Pam Thompson. The cake Shirley, Angie and Steven s h~red t he evening meal with
was served with it.-e &lt;.Team to Cline, Pat and Becky Huff- Mrs. Hoffman . i\ highli ght of
lloyd, Mary Ann, and Johnny man , Brenda, Barbara, and the day was a lung-dista nce
Hoflman, Ray and Bea Bobby Chapalear, Kenny and call from Mrs. Hoffman 's
Thompson, Gladys and Alvin Barbara Huffman and son, niecl' and her husband. Zcltlo
Wolfe, Jan, Wanda , John, Bobby, In ez and Alton Roush. ami Dunetld Li cvi ng fro m JJ.
Elizabeth Vaughan , Kevin Mary Lee , Roy and Juanita linuis.
Sending gifts were a .son,
Schneider, Mark Border, Huffman , Robbie Bri ght ,

Mary Martin to attend conference
Among those attending the
American Legion, the
American Legion Auxiliary,
and the Eight and Forty's an·
nual Western Area Conference on children and youth
will he Mrs. Mary A. Martin
of Pomeroy.
The meeling will be held in
Denver , Colo. today (Thursday) through Saturday.
Chi ldren and youth leadPI" of

the American Legion, the
American l.etgon Allxiliary,
and the Eight and Forty from
15 WC.Stern area states are
meeting to discuss program
plans fur th e 1979 program
year and to work on problems
affecting the children and
youth of their respective com01

munities.

Theme for the 1979 children
,;.

and youth program i,o; .. A
Children and . Youth Adventure - Moving in New Directions."

Specific areas of interest to
be considered at the Conference include : Child Abuse
and Neg lect, Dis1·upti ve
Youth, Immunization ::~ nd
Education and ' Scholarships.
Purpose of the Conference
is directed toward implementing the 1979 children and
youth program a t the ~om­

munity level.
Mrs. MHrtin is a member of

Personal Advocacy Program

Drew

Advocates and several discussed were the need for
advisory board members met new advocates to help at our
at the Community Mental activity therapy held each
Health Center, recently for Wednesday from I p.m. to
program planning for t11e 2:30 p.m. for the women and
proteges and advocates for from 2:30 to 3:30p.m. lor the
the next three months. A men. Anyone interested in
potluck pat;ty to he held Nov. helping in a learning
8 at the Riverboat Room was situation, " Learn to do by
planned.
·
doing," is asked to call and
Plans were also made for discuss the program with
the yearly Christmas party in Mary Skinner, Coordinator,
December. Other topics 992·2192.

Webster·

Amcri l'::Jil

Legion Auxiliary 39, a pmtner of the Meigs County Eight
and Forty. Salon 710, and is
the national _ children and
youth chainna n fur Eight ami
Forty.

Fall festival at Syracuse school huge success

The fall festival held at
Syracuse
Elementary School
F.mil l·lnffmon , Bruce Huffsponsored
by the PTO netted
man . Hay, Sue. Tanuny and
a
profit
of
$1,147.
A1rita Hoffman.
Winners of special prizes
were Debbie Triplett, portable mixer; Esther Joseph,
double burger ; Frank Cox,
coat stand; Freda Wilson ,
lighted ceramic pumpkin;
and Virginia L. Davis, a $22
permanent. The door prize
was won by Carolyn McCoy
and a lighted Christmas tree
was won by Kathy Moore.
Games included fish pond,
duck pond, basketball throw,
RCtoss, dart throw, bean bag
toss, pumpkin face, penny
pitch, pendulum, tic tac toe
and spook house. Also included this year was a
TOP STUDENT - J.
makeup center, fortune
Brent Patterson, a student
teller,
pocket lady and a
a I Southern High School In

winners

from

among

nearly 16,000 seniors who
took the 1978 preliminary
American History Contest
examination. The llnal
essay examination competition will be held at Ohio
Uuivorsity on Nov. 10.
· Following the test there
will be a dinner In honor of
all the participants, and on
Saturday morning, Nov. II,
there will . be an awards
ceremony 3nnouucJog the
final winners. The first
place winner will receive
$100 and full lullion
scholarship.

SHOP

By Helen and Sue Bottel rNG

The office of secretary will
be honored at tonight 's
meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the

HENRY WELLS

'

Surprise party held
A surprise birthday party
was held for Mrs . Mary Buck
at her Route 4, Pomeroy,
home. Hosting the celebra·
lion were Mrs. Joe Wolle and
Mrs. Dorothy McGuffin, with
Mrs. Tom Woods and Melissa
assisting.
Others attending were Joe
Wolfe, Viola Rumfield, Mr. ·
and Mrs. Joe Chapman, Lin·
da and Chris, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Burt, Mrs. Jack Sat·
terfield, Amy and Kelly,
Dayton McElroy, Frances
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit
McElroy, Gene and Virgil
McElroy, and Mrs. Ellen
Ehersbach.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

COMMISSIONER
MEIGS COUNTY
GENERAL ELECTION

CHESTER KNIGHT
Chester Knight is
recuperating from surgery at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Here for the weekend were
Mr .. and Mrs. Terrr Knight
and son, Stevie 1 Caledonia,
witli Dick Kniqht of Marietta
. spe nding Tuesday and
Wednesday here.

ISSUED: COLLINS FOR SENATE COMMITTEE
PD. POL. ADV.

"Our Purposes in Action"
was the theme of the program
presented by Carolyn Smith
of Pomeroy, program chairman for the Oct. 28 meeting of
the Alpha Omicron Chapter
of Delta Kappa Gamma.
Meeting at Lake Hope
Lodge, it was noted inxthexprogra that since 1975, the in·
ternational theme has been
on positive leadership for
purposeful action . Miss
Smith's program consisted of .
thoughts and discussion on
the topic and concluded with
comments on the 1978-79 program theme, "'Ho,nor the
Past, Celebrate the Future."
Miss Smith chose one of the
seven basic purposes of the
Society and concentrated on
the one which calls for
members to inform
themselves of the current
social, economic and political
happenings. She used a questionnaire entitled "What Is
Your Delta Kappa Gamma
IQ" which stressed current

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Virginia Atkinson mentioned the recordings of the 1977
Europe concert tour of the
Ohio Youth Chorale. Of the 36
members making up the
churus, two were from
Wellston High School, Cheryl
Dearth and John · Burson
whose mother, Pauline, is a

OAKLEY COLLINS

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SMARr SANrAS SHOP EARLY ••. MOSr sroRES OPEN fATE NiGHrs "lit CHRIS'(MAS

Most Stores Open Sunday Afternoon

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
M A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

FRIDAY
POMONA GHANGE, 8
p.m. Friday at the Ruck Springs Grange Hall. Hemlock
Grove to be host.
SATURUAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
CLUB, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2
-ti .n1. workshop cili·istmas

un

a rrangements and decorations. Members to take a sack
lw1~ h. materials a nd idea s.
Sume materials · will be
aVailable fur purchase.

REACT
MEETING,
Saturday, Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy with John
Leist, president of the Ohio
REACT Council as speaker.
Also featured will be a 15
minute film, "Where Seconds
Count"
and
special
recognition will be given
REACT members. An attractive door prize will be
given and the public is invited.
ANNUAL HARVEST
dinner and bazaar at the
firehouse in Coolville,
beginning 5:30 p.m. Saturday
by Coolville Unite~ Methodist
Church Wome n. Complete
dinner, adults, $3: children,

WHAi HE GOT WHEN
wh
HE WEN! 'TO ONE OF
you're playing a good crowd. But you have to t:lt:~·er)t ..thl' b;J
lT UWd ~ too .
TH06E 'HIGH-CLA*"
Some nigllts it seems that your voice can do anythi ng, lU
HAlF!: 5T"!'L16T-5.
your finger~ move like magic, ·a nd p~ople s top and llsten . R
all t&lt;lo ofte n drinkers and diners cons uler you ''backgro und .
Now arrange the circled leners to
Sume \\'aYs to altract attention : For yom opening song, pi ] form the surprise answer, as sug·
Friends 6 ; Over Easy 20.
ges!ed by the above cartoon.
one that calche~ the ear, and hc:IVe a good rap ready wh
7:00--Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Muppet Show 8; News 10: Love American
you 're finished . Chouse the type of music the crowd likes-· r
Style 15: Consumer Survival Kit 20; Insight 33.
mellow if they 're hard-ruck people. Do a few popular numb• e·
9
7:30--Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game4; Sl.98 Beauty
ami encourage sing-alongs. Get to know the " regulan r ·
Show6: Family Feud 10; Bonkers 8; $100,000 Name
(Answers tomorrow)
They 'll start applause.
That Tune 13; Pop Goes The Country 15; MacNeil .
And keep yourself going by these words, " I'm gonna be !lAY ABBEY CALMLY TEAPOT
Lehrer Repart 20.33.
one in a thousand that makes it big 1"
8:00--Different Strokes 3,4,15: Happy Days 6,13;
1und increase in business-BOOM!
That 's what I do. - STAR OF THE FUTURE
Wonder Woman 8, 10; Wash ington Week In Review
20,33 .
1ere ln JUMBLE BOOK 1110 and JUMBLE
.35 EACH, postpaid from Jumble, c/o this
8: 30--Who's Watching The Kids 3,4, 15; Welcome Back,
rwood, N.J. 07848. Make checks payable to
MONDAY
Kotter 6,13; Wall Street Week 20,33.
ville Pythian Sisters Lodge
9:()().-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Movie "How To Pick Up
RACINE
C
H
A
PTE
R
591. Complete dinner, $2.50 Order of the Eastern Star, in·
Girls" 6,13; •ncredlble Hulk 8.10; Congressional
adults; children, $1.25.
Outlook 20,33.
itwtiun 7:30 MondHy at the
SUNDAY
9:30--Turnabout 20: Real People 33.
Masonic Temple. Olfit'ers to
10 :()().-Eddie Capra Mystrles 3,4.15: Flying High 8,10;
REVIVAL Friday through wear gowns . Members to
News 20; Faces of Communism 33.
Sunday at Old Dexter take cov ered di sh fur
11 :00--News 3,4,6,8,10,13.15; Dick Cavett 20; Sound.
Church, 7:30 p.m. each refre1:&gt;lunents.
stage 33.
everting with Rev. Ralph

"r XXII I I r

---;;;;::;;;;;;;;;.;;;;:;;,;;;;;g

11 :30--Johnny

Ci:l! &lt;;r~r-

3,.. : , 15; Baretta 13; Movie "The

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Recognized Stale-wide as a Legislator with
an outstanding record of accomllshment lor
R ral Ohio- and a man w1th the know -how
!~safeguard our future!

Radio Sheck
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YOUR STATE SENATOR·

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·11

Reg. 49"

40-MlNUTE
I·TRACK

.

DDN1' DRDlR WIIIDOWS

39
90-llllNUTE
CASSETTE

I
I

I

.

Nov. 7th

95

60·MINUTE
CASSETTE

I

.

News 6,10; Young &amp; the Restless 8: Midday
Magazine 13 .
12 :Jo-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;

E lee . Co. 33.
1:oo--Hollywood Squares 3; All My Chllden 6,13: News
8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
.
1:30--Days ot Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:DO-One Life to Live 6,13
2:30--Doctors 3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8,10.
3:00--Another World ,4, 15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:00--Another World 3,4,15: General Hospi tal 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30--MASH 8; Joker's Wild 10; You Bel Your Life 20.
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Edge ot Night 4; Merv Griffin
6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33: Bat.
man 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15.
4:3Q---Our Gang. Little Rascals 3; Gilligan's Is. 8,4;
Brady Bunch 10; Peftlcoat Junction 15.
5:00--Voyage to the Bottom ot the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hillbillies B; Mister Rogers 20,33: Gomer
Pyle USMC 10; Emergency One 13 : Brady Bunch
15 .
6:oo--News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

lorm

I'd like to say .something t_u Cecella, tl~e sm~er and gu1 t!!r~

member of the Chapter. Mrs.
Atkinson played excerpts
from the recordings.
Margaret Benson presided
Smith, Coolville, speaking.
at the meeting which opened
Gabriel Quartet on Saturday
with a poem, "Take Time
and The Messengers on
To .... " Thank you cards were
Sunday.
read from Dorothy Woodard,
Roma Nickels, Patricia
Ratcli!,f, and Hariett Wood .
Vote Yes
Program book s wer e
distributed by Mrs. Litter. It
was noted that Alplja $1.75.
Omicron has four charter
PUBLIC
DINNER
members and plans were Saturday at hall by Wilkes'
made to honor them at the
April meeting .
Mrs. Benson reported on
the semi-annual executive ine Whitehead, Dorothy
board meeting held recently Woodard. Thelma Northrup,
Tuesday
in Columbus. Hostesses in a member of Beta Alpha
charge of arrangements for Chapter, and Elizabeth Mourthe 12:30 luncheon were ning, twin sister of Mrs. Nan
Roma Nickels, Dorothy Scott Moore, also attended.
The scholarship committee
who gave the invocation,
Maud Esmont, Elizabeth reminded members of the
Lantz and Jean Ward . silent auction to be held at the
Meeting in ttie View Room of Nov . 10 meeting at tl1e Meigs
the lodge, the tables and Inn.
Pd. Pol. Adv.
firepla ce were decorated in
the fall and halloween tl\eme.
Favors were draped ghosts
inade by Jean Ward.
Attending from Meigs
County were Ruth Euler,
Martha Husted, Lee Lee, Nan
••••• •• .••••••
Moore, Winifred Naas, Olive
Page , Nellie Parker,
6" el hberela• lnaulatlon with purcllaM of 6 or
Margaret Parsons, Maxine
more lnatalled 4Uttom made wlndowe•.
Philson, Mary Virginia
Reibel, Beatrice Rinehart,
SPECIAI.ISTS IN .
Emily Sprague, Rosalie
CCISTO'II MADS
Story, Roberta Wilson, Max·

by Mlcronta

-CAULKING
-WOOD OR COAL BURNING
STOVES

Associ atan.

MULT.ITESTER SAVINGS I

-STORM WINDOWS
-HEAT TAPES

tial names and cultural
aspects of interest to
members. This was a selfevaluation with each member
participating, She introdued
Barbara Litter, vice presithmt and program chainnan
for the year.
Dorothy Scott played a
recording "We Teach the
Childen," and explained that
this is the official song of the
National Education Association : It was developed by the
Illinois
Education

HE.J.EN ANIP SUE

12 :00-Newscenter 3; Bob Braun 4; America Alive 15;

Rf,PLACEMENT WINDOWS

1'4-842

. by Realistic

PIPE INSULATION

s tatus in education , influen·

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PP.RSONAI. ITO "CAN'T I EYEH PLEASE HE:H '' "- If Y'
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feed the mul~itudc 1, your gtrlfnend would cornpiHIIl be~au se_J
•
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.
.
Do yourself a favor and let the other guy w111. You II 01
miss he!' a litt le while .- HELEN AND SUE

~~~:ULATlON

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PATROLMAN CB-6 PORTABLE

Emergency One 6; Ma1ch Game 10.

9:30--Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13 .
10 :30--Jeopardy 3,4,15; Andy Griffith 6; Price is Right
8,10;; $20.000 Pyram id 13.
11 :00--High Rollers3,4,1S; Happy Days6,13; Elec. Co.
20.
11 :30--Wheel of Fortune 3,1 5: Family Feud 6, 13; News
4: Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.

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News 8; Jetsons 10.

7: 15--Weather 33; 7:30--Schoolles 10.
8:00--Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33 .
9·00- Merv Grltfln 3; Phil Donahue 4.13,15;

~.n
mc::~sur1g 6, 13.

___

---·----,·- · Delta Kappa Gamma metl Social I

SUPER GIFJ BARGAINS
FOR EARLY SHOPPERS!

.
.5
3399

Transition 10.

6:30--Columbus Today 4; News 6; 6:4s-Mornlng
RepOrt 3.
6:50--Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
Whlte ' Reparts 10; News 13.
7:00--Today 3,4,15;' Good Morning America 6,13; CBS

Should Cung'ress or stale legislatures consider this
cmti ·liquor pt'Ople would slump fur equal revenue . Then s weurney Miller 6, 13; Cinderella At
haters might ask a suga r tax to fi ght obesity, diabetes, etc. Duchess of Duke Street 20;
And how about all those "suspected" products - from eg1k Mang&lt;one 33.
1high cholesterol ! to diet soft drinks and hair dye I could sun
of their chemicals cause cancer ? L
,. ~1~· n~l? work insteatl to educate youn~ people away fro; ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
c 1 ~a1 ettes . -HELEN
___
~.!!'l ®
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

TAKE·ALON&lt;i &lt;iiVEABLES AT AFFORDABLE PRICES!

GET READY FOR
OLD MAN WINTER

tres 3; Dating Game

NOTE F'R011J SUP. : ... And also booze'!

CUT 17080

SOUTHERN OHIO NEEDS OF THE SECURITY OF HISEXPERIENCE

15 ; ABC

~x .

QUALIFIED- RESPONSIBLE- EXPERIENCED.
YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT APPRECIATED.
.Pd. Pol. Adv.

789"

- - - - State Senator

.

father.
/
Bul l cC:tn 't offer much hope regarding a · 'rned icC:tl ' · d~c1ret j,-4, 15; Mork

UESIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1978

RE-ELECT~---

QAKLEY COLLINS

.

1
News 6; Zoom 20 .

· tt 1 ss f ,. : 5100,000 Name That Tune 10;
I tuu send my l 1cepest Sympa thY t 0 you 111 l c 0 • 0 i 01 Road 13 ; Dolly 15; Mac Neil-

SOUNDS OF JOY- The "Sounds of Joy" from the Cincinnati Bible College will present
the program for a weekend revival at the Tuppers Plains Church of Christ, Nov . ~.Friday
and Saturday-evening at 7:30p.m., Sunday morning and a Youth Rally Sunday afternoon at
2 p.m. The minister, Eugene E. Underwood invites all to attend. Shown are, 1-r, back row,
Dan Gilliam and Billy Swain; front row, Gretchen Amos, Gay Williams, and Lisa Lewis.

Reg . Separate

.

DEAR Bl'l"rER :

MASON FURNITURE

SENATOR COLLINS already knows - what
would take another lndlvldual years to .
learn - SOUTHERN OHIO'S problems arid
the Legislative action needed•••

eaused by s mokmg.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1978
5,4s-Farm Repart 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13.
6:00--PTL Club IS ; 700 Club 8; 6:25-Socletles In

How do I work up intercstln my Idea!- BITTF:R
: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
f&gt;F:AR BITTER :
ws B. 10; Over Easy 20.
Wrilc tu your rongreS!iper~ons, lo n~wspape r lettl'rs c.l.\ Magazine 4; New lywed Game
wnns. lo anti·smoking societies. Mueh sympatl1y comes w11 8; News 10; Love, Amerlcen
this letter. -- SUP.
Iaiiey Bluegrass 10; Consumer

MASON FURNITURE

OPEN :
Mon .• Tues.; Wed . &amp; Sat. 8:30 til 5:00
Thursday Ti 112 Noon
Friday Until&amp; P.M.
Herman Grate
773-559~
Mason, W.Va.

, NOVEMBER 2,1978

My fe~ tlt1.. . ·m~1kcd three packs of cigarettes a tlc.ty . He died ?ttom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
lung l'CI Ill 't•r . .
J; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
If they &lt;'an't outlaw cigarettes 1 wish they 'd put a big ta x&lt; USMC 10; Emergency One 13;
every package, the money to be ust•ll for medicctl rcseard _.
.
and to help pay expenses of peupl&lt;• with diseases probabl~~o;:ni~~do!d S~~u~e E ~~c. Co.

..

·~

TRI-STATE AREA

Eastern Star, and all past
secretaries of the chapter are
givl:!n a special invitation to
attend. Also on display will he
the plaque which hears the
names of those who contributed on the Temple
remodeling project.

'

MEDICAL TAX ON CIGARF.TH:S'!
f&gt;P.i\R l,{i\P :

IN THE

Star to honor secretary tonight

9 30--Soap 6, 13.
10:00--David Cassidy Man Undercover 3,4,l5: Family
6, 13: News 20.
10 :30--Eiectlons '711: Prelude to '80 20.
11 :00--News 3.4.6,8, 10, 13, 15: Dic k Cavett 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4, !5; Starsky. &amp;' Hutch 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; Movie "Cleopatra" 10; ABC News 33.
12 :30--SWAT 6,13:· 1:00--Tomorrow 3,4; 1:50--News
13.

Generation R:apVJSJON

FOR THE BEST DEALS

Evangeline Chapter of Eastern

',

-=tOCI--~

, VOTE FOR

MEETING TONIGliT
RACINE
Racine
American Legion Post 602
will meet in regular session
at 8 this evening. Refreshments will be served after the
meeting.

.

::::·:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·::;:;:;:-:;:;:;&gt;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:::::;:;:;:;::.·:;:·:;:·:;.·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;::· :-:.:-:-:.

the merchants who donated
and all parents who assisted
in the festival .

drinks were offered.
The officers of the PTO
extend their sincere thanks to

balloon clown.
Prize. table, country kitchen , sandwiches and soft

Racine and son of James

and Linda Patterson,
Racine, was one of 200
county and state-wide

,..

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumero)·. 0 .. Th1u·s1Iay

..

SOUTHERN OHIO CANNOT
AFFORD INEXPERIENCE

' Seth

WIRIGW liD.
7

. 2.3Z lVIJRCOCit AVE
Parkersburg, W, Va .

•

.;;;;;;; .

ESTIMATES
WITHOUT CHARGES
,

FHA FINANCING,
NO DOWN PAYMENT
TIL JANUARY

WE ALSO DO EXCELLENT
SIDING WORK

'366.1ess than Toyota Corolla
1/BB.Iess than Chevy Chevette 3-Door
Pinto.otter• e~:onomy ot operation.
·
PINTO'S COMBINED CITY·HIGHWAY MPG RATING FOR ' 7915 26 MILES PEA GALLON.
AT 75 CENTS A GALLON FOR AN AVERAGE OF 12,000 MILES AYEAR. THE
' GASOliNE CO$T F.OA THE YEAR-WOULD BE S346.
NOW IF WE WERE GETTING 29 MILES PEA GALLON FOR THE SAME 12,000 MILES •
OUA ~UEl BILL WOULD BE $310.

~""' !iff '1/llt k:~~~~

M!lit ~~O·J

I

·-· ~

!.

See your local Ford Dealer. ..
and see whg 1979 belongs to him/
\

FORD

�I

.l
6-The Datly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomero: , 0 , Thursday. NO\•. 2, 1978

Ann Hoffman celebrates 9Qth bitems Into Cash
Ann Hoffman recently
L'elebrated her 90th birthday
with famtly and frtends shar·
mg the oc'Casion.
Nwnerous gtfts and cards
were presented to her along
wtth a birthday cake made by
Pam Thompson. The cake

was served w1th ace cream to
Lloyd, Mary Ann, and Johnny
Hoffman, Ray and Bea
Thompson, Gladys and Alv10
Wolfe, Jan, Wanda , John,
Elizabeth Vaughan, Kev10
Schnetder, Mark Border,

Glen and Ruth Thompson,
Conme, Sam, Ehzabeth, Drn·
ny and Betty Thompson, Lou

and Pam Thompson
Cheryl and Jun Young ,
Jack , Martha , and Jason Col-

lins,

Maxine

Hoffman ,

Shtrley, Angle and Steven
Chne, Pat and Becky Huff.
man , Brenda , Barbara, and
Bobby Chapalear, Kenny and
Barbara Hoffman and son,
Bobby, Inez and Alton Rolllih,
Mary Lee, Roy and Juamta
Hoffman, Rubble Brtght.

M(;tttlww. Jo~hu&lt;J. and Mar ~ha Van Mtolt•J . Oawn Rlake ,
R1rhard "''d Ph ylhs C:tlkey,
Adc1 Vtekt·z s, and Clons
Grmun
Hi:lrry and Nora Staats
l'cune later m t11e day (;t!ld
.shared the evenmg meal w1th

En

Notic es

11M

Business Services

Wante d_t Q Buy _

t\n' HUNTING o r trc&lt;;po!.~ tr&gt;!=l on

the Amencan Legwn, the
Amencan Letgun Awnhary,
and the E tght and Forty from

IS western area sti:ltes

~re

meet mg to dtscuss program
plans for the !979 program

year and to work on p1 obiems
affectmg the children and

youth of thear respecltvc communities.
Theme for the 1979 chtldren

Personal Advocacy Program
Advocates and several dtscussed were the need for
advisory board members met new advocates to help at our
at the Commumty Mental acttvity therapy held each
Health Center, recently for Wednesday from l p.m to
program planning for the 2:30p .m. for the women and
proteges and advocates for from 2 ·30 to 3:30p.m. for the
the next three months A men . Anyone mterested m
potluck party to be held Nov. helpmg
tn
a
Iearnmg
8 at the Riverboat Room was sttuatton, "Learn to do by
plaMed.
domg," is asked to call and
Plans were also made for discuss the program with
t he yearly Christmas party 10 Mary Skinner , Coordmator,
December. Other toptcs 992-2192.

MOurning and
Price Builders

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
New or R,epai'r
G It
U 81$ and
Downspouts
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

-

FOR THE BE

Evangeline Chapter of &amp;tern
Star to honor secretary tonight
The office of secretary will
be honored at tomght 's
meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, ·order of the

Surprise party held
A s urpnse btrthday party
wa s held for Mrs. Mary Buck

at her Route 4, Pomeroy,
home. Hosting the celebra·

Eastern Star, and all past
secretartes of the chapter are
gtven a spectal invtlatton to
attend. Also on display Will be
the plaque whtch bears the
names of those who con·
tnbuted on the Temple
remodehng project.

:Fairview
News Notes
'

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mauel
· visited Mr. and Mrs . Sid
Manuel at Long Bottom.
Mrs. Joyce Manuel gave a
· party Monday evening 111
honor of her husband Don
who was celebrating his
birthday. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pyles
of Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Me Ntckles local.
Refreshments of cake, pie,
donuts and cider were served
by the hostess.
CHECK PRESENTED
The Salem Community
Church presented a check of
$1,000toMr. Dave O'Neal, Pt.
Pleasant, chairman of Board
of Directors of Mason County
Senior' Cltizens Home In·
corporated.
Mrs.
Homer
(Lucy)

'

.

TRI-STATE

MASON FUR

1.........._______

SENATOR COLLINS already kn~,~~~t~~~~d~;,-;;,;b;,'3

lion were Mrs. Joe Wolle and
Allen , Margaret Christy,
Karla Chevalier, Erma
Cleland, Clara Conroy, Cleo
DeTray, lnzy Newell, Sheila
Taylor and Opal Wickham
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
Newell, Kathy, Kenny and
_ Jtmmy vtstted in Mount
Sterling , Ky., with Mr. and
Mrs. Steven Meeks Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen
spent Sunday 10 Ashland,
Ky., wtth Robert Allen and
Mrs. D. B. Martin.
Allen Weber, Akron, spent
a few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Keller.
Mrs. Lucy Gaul, Sunmer,
spent Sunday wtth Mr. and
Mrs. John Wickham.
Denzel Cleland called on
.
, . Mr. and Mrs. George Abbott,
Mt. Herman, Tuesday.
Weekend guests of Mrs.
·, Opal Eichinger,,_Dennls and
· Laura Jean were Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Eichinger and
· Suzannah, Columbus, and
· Mr. and
Mrs.
Donald
' Etchmger, Rio Grande. On
: Saturday evening they olr
• served the birthdays of Don
• and Sue Eichinger with a
• dinner
Mr. and Mrs Roy Christy
spent the weekend With Mr.
and Mrs . Ernest FISher,
Wooster.
Wallace Amberger is a
· medical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center
Allen Weber, Akron, called
on Clayton Allen Monday
evemng.

-------~·

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

'" • Dt.an'81111ffl" lfl!fJ'IfeJ-~~~~h

------·-

-----

The above repor t Is
available tor publtc lo'iew at
clerk 's· home , Rt 3, Box 82,
Albany, Oh10 45710 Novem be r
4 th ru 8, 1978
Glor.a Hutton ,
Columbta Twp Clerk
10 26 1978
{11) 2. He

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on Oct . 15 was 44, the offering
was $21.90.
A get-well card was stgned
andsenttoMrs. Lloyd (Ruth)
Brooks, a pallent m Camden·
Clark Hospttal, Parkersburg.
The attendance at worship
services was 34 with Rev.
Thomas
speaking
on
" Elements of True Beltef"
from II Cormthians 4:7·18.
Rev . and Mrs. Thomas
presented a spectal number

m song, " He."
Hobart and Ahna Swartz
accompanie d
by
their
cousins, Avery and Helene
Goeglein of Pomeroy Rd .
recently vtstted their brother
and CO USinS, Edgar and
Evelyn Koehler of Amesville,

Ohw.
Weekend guests of Mr and
Mrs. Wilber Parker were her
cousins, Bob Powers, Otter,
Montana, Bill and Jeanette
Powers Hess, Great Falls,
Montana, and Bert and
Elean or Powers '·Avery',
Seattle Washington. They
also called on Mrs. Florence
Michael who Is the aunt of
Bob, Jeanette, and Eleanor.
Other members of the family
who vtsitW wtth the guests
were Samuel and " Louise'
Michael , Mr. and Mrs, G¥,cy
Michael, Matthew, Kim and
Todd, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Letfhelt and Dorothy, all
local, and a second cous10
from Marengo, Illinois, Mrs.
Edith Fritz, accompanied by
Mr. Fritz, and Mrs. Mary
McGovern.
Mrs . Arthur Atherton
acco mpamed her 'sister,
E"elyn and husband, Charles
to see their sister·n·law, Mrs.
Lawton Taylor of Walton, W.
Va . Mrs. Taylor is very ill.
Johnson, the oldest member
of the church, presented the
check on behalf of the church
towards building a Senior
Citizens' Home ln Pt .
Pleasant.

J. R. Construction
Co.
Carpentryr Electrieal,
Painting

-

•

•

-

- - _.j

-- --

Pomeroy Landmark

I:IRADFOJ.IO Auc llone er , Com
plete ServiCe Phone 949-2487
or 949 2000 Ro c1ne Oh1o Crttt
Bradford
ELWOOD HOWEJ.IS f!EPAIR Sweepers, toosle rs 1rons al l
small oppl10nces lown mower
nex t to Stole H1ghwoy Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (61.:1) 985
3625

Pomeroy Landmark

'

- - - - -- ---

St. Rl. T24 fllwolrd Rutlond,

CRAID

0.

I [J

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair

~--

J.IEMODHED OLOI:R home on 'il
acre J or 4 bedrooms Ful l
basement Gas cenlrol heat ,
budgel SSO o monlh . Detached
__go~oge '!_9::2c:7c:O::c
36::__ __

992-332!
216 E, Second S1ree1
FAMILY HOME 4
bedrooms, bath, natural
gas heat, dishwasher In the
ktlchen, drilled well,
carport, and nice level lot .
$27,500.
3
CONDOR STREET bedroom home, bath,
natural
gas
furnace,
parking, and garden space.
Only $9.500.
30 ACRES - and 6 room
house wllh tlly water, new
bath, and two outbuildings.
In batk of Pomeroy just qlf
Rl. 7. $24,500 or will trade.
BASHAN
Large 3
bedroom home with over
an acre of land. Natural
gas.
woodburnlng
fireplace, T.P water, and
lots of outbuildings Just
$16,000.
NEW LISTING- 1 yr. old
3 bedroom home with beth,
garage, nlce kltthen ,
dining · rrrea wllh glass
door, garage and 1 acre.
INVESTMENT Brltk
business
location
or
residence with natural gas
furnace, bath, and garage.
WE CAN GET MOST
PROPERTIES
FINANCED IF IN GOOD
REPAIR. CALL 992-3325
FOR THE TEAFORD$.

-

Town &amp; CountJy

--

!1. mite oH Rl. 1 by.pass on

;Also Transmission
Repair

I I (J

\RELP'¥1

r

"(Ill XI XJ"

~

BRIDGE

POMEROY, 0.
NEW LISTING In
Pomeroy, nice 2 be~room
12 x 60 mobile home, level
lot, pat io, tenting, off
street parking
ONL V
$7,500.
Nl:W LISTING - Small
Business opportunity , car 1
wash and lot In good r
tocallon on St. Rt. 7. Good
potential for a part time
ob catt ''"' details.
N THE COUNTRY - 10
lots, barn, fencing, a
storage building, plus a
nlte1 floor plan, 3 bedroom
home with besement. View
of Hlo River. Garden, fruit
trees- att fO&lt; only $17,70.
RANCH
Excellenl
neighborhood. 3 bedrooms,
buill-In kitchen, biisement,
2 level lots . serarate
utility, owner wll help
flnanc'!l. S27,300.
BEAUnFUL BRICK Ranch, 3 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, nice kitchen. dining
room,
covered catln
cenfral a1r, wood burnmg
fireplace . BeiQw market
value. S31 ,60(),
COUNTRY Great 2
bedroom home In excellent
tlll'ldltlon. must be moved
to new lotatlon. A steal at
$6,000. Also owner will soli
1-15 acre• for the house.
PRICE REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALE - This 2
bedroom home In good
condition wl1h many new
veatures.
Excellent
neighborhood
In
Middleport, Now $9 ,$1)0,
USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE
HENRY E. CLELAND
HENRY E. CLELAND,

I better
explain t
Melba!

Helen L. Tulord
G. Bruce Tulord
Sue P. Murplly
Auoclo1n

'

--n

A stupid play is costly

..,.

~

••

T&amp;ME:-: I)ON''T' WAN,. ANY
PAR'r' OF -t'ou!
011111~11EA.ttc, TM

.'

fill. US ,_Oil

T~~

YOU ...

NAW,

WE JUST THREW A GOOD

YOU HAVEN'T

SCARE INID HIM. COME TO

GARY&gt;

OF IT1 MAYBE HE'lL
BE TOOAFRA/0 m GAMBLE
FOR A LON&amp;, lONG TIME.

IIARMEP

:

foR 'rH&amp; L.AS,.

'THINK

"'"~-

IIFKN!CE ???
WHAT ARE YOU
!/OING

HERE?

Housing
Headquarters

George I Hamilton
bill
I

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is l . ONGFEI. LOW

GLORY BE!!

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

NOW, THAR'S A

I

CAN'T BELIEVE I{QU
SU~IVED A FIGHT WITH
THE Citr NEXT DOOR

heat,

located on
one-sixth of an acre of ground on Union
Ave., known as the Allee Spencer Home.
Going fast at $6,300.00. For more info call
George S. Hobstetler, Pomeroy, Ohio. 992-

5739.

I{OU NOT ONLY WON
THE FI6HT. BUT 'l'OU
RESCUED THAT KID'S
STUPID BLANKET

''4''".'''t

tltlfltl' ' ''
\({(,\t /1~11

\ l ( l q U df\
IHt'(lH 1 t{lt

I

\((t•' ,,,,, ft
'.f((

ff l' d h

Ud (t HI,t //'-...._

',

'

it:

Pass
Pass

2•
3t

p...
p ...

7+

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

+8

One lette r stmply stands for anol her. In this sample A is
used for th e three L' s, X for th e two O's, etc Sm gle letters, By Oswald Jacoby
apostrophes, the len gth and formation or the words are aU and AWl Sontag
hm ts Each da} I he code l etters are different
South won the trwnp lead
CRYPTOQUOTES
1n dummy, cashed the ace of
hearts, ruffed a heart with
XKTVXATVWW
AW
K T X P
G T hia ace of trumpa, led a
trwnp to dwruny, ruffed a
KEEKCJNTAJP
JK
FNJ
G R C A S J second low heart with the
Jack of trumps and led a club
GTR
SAT R
P K N C W V X S
- lil order to get to dummy and
pull West's last two trwnpa.
GTTG
BKTCKV
Theldeawasgoodbut
Yesterday'• Cryptoquote : WHEN YOU ARE LABORING FOR unfortunately for SOuth,
OTHERS lET IT BE WITII TilE SAME ZEAL AS IF IT WERE Weal had di.lcarded his four
FOR YOURSELF.- CONFUCIUS
of clubB on that last heart
© lP78 King Featur~~• Srrxhute, In~
BArlNF:Y

.

6 room Frame, 2 story, gas

.

well?

.·~·
• •

11· 2..

I

Yer po' sicJ.t.
whoi

b-+-+-

l

REALTORS
9?2-2259, 992-1&gt;19t
Leona - Ko1hy
Rtol1or-Anoclotes

0

ITEMNECl

PhoDe 992 _5682

JR.

I

(] 0

WHAT WI:' AR!:' ABOLJT

GARAGE

Real Estate lor Sale

--- -

..

--

PLIMB

ROGER HYSEll

------

~

,_

I'UtZ.Zl74

5 · 4~Farm RepOrt 13,

ft

work
dumpw•lltrucks
backhlooeboys
ond
for htre
ha ul _'::::::~:;:;"~~~~··~3~(1.;1t~c~
t.u dtrt . lo soil, ltmestone and
Real Estate for Sale
grovel Call 8ob or Roger Jef·
fe rs day phone 992 7089 n1 ght HOMESITES for sole, 1 ac re and
up Middleport near Rutland.
ph~o~e !93:~25 or 9!2_:;232
_
Coll992·7481 .
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and d•t cher Charles R. Hot
VA FHA 30 yr f1noncmg also
ft e ld
Bock Hoe Servtce
ref~nanctng Ireland Mortgage.
J.lu tlo nd Ohto Phon e 742-2008
77 E Stole Athens, phone (614)
592 3051.
WILL do roofmg co nstruc t1on,
pl umb tng and heot1ng No 1ob THREE BEDROOM frame home ttl
too Io rge or too small Phone
Mtddleport Call992-3457
741. 2348
FARM FOR sole House 2 barns ,
-·
HOWI:RY AND MARTIN J:x.
tro•l&amp;r Lorge pond 10 cues or
cavotmg
sepllc systems,
1:12 acres 742-25b6
dozer backho e, dump truck ,
limeston e grove l blacktop FIV~ ROOM house and both ,
remodeled ful ly carpeted MaY
pov1ng J.lt 143 Phone 1 (61.:1 )
be seen alter 3 pm Phone
b98 7331
992 3933 .
BA THf!OOM S AND K11c hens
THREf OR 4 bedroom house for
remodeled, ceramiC ltle plum
sale tn Pomeroy
Central
b1ng carpentry and general
heatmg
Full
basemen!
momtenonce 13 years ex
992 7074
.P':.'"'!n_:e 992·368.~5-:-~-,...PULLINS E&gt;&lt;CAVATING Complele MODERN J bedroom house Fully
carpeted Central otr Full•
Servtce Phone 992 2478
ba sement wrlh It replace :
RH VI::S TRACING Post , Pogevtlle
Enclosed sun porch located on
Grocer1es dry goods hard·
6°/1 acres near Racine oro '
wore feed lac ~ !!hop Special
blacktop rood. Price $40,000.;
25 lb of dog lood $3 88
Contact l orry Wolfe weekdo'ys •
after 7pm, 61-4 949 2836
'
AUTOM081l~ INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost your operators
liCense? Phone 992 2143

POMEROY
lANDMARK

-

_
- .....
...

SI:WING MACHINE Repo1rs , ser
v1ce. all makes 99'2 2284 The
Fabrtc Sho p . Pom eroy
Authomed Smger Soles and
Se!v_:c~ ~!_~arpen SCts~o.:s _
EXCAVATING, dozer loader ond

------~--

-------- ----- - - --·--

- - . - -

.,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

References Available
Phone 742-2029
10·22-1 mo .

..

FRIOIIY, NOVEMBER 3,1978
5 50-PTL Club 13.
6:01l-PTl Club IS, 700 Club B. 6 2~Sodelles In
Transition 10
6 3o-Columbus Today 4; News 6 ; 6 . 4~Mornlng
Report J .
6 50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13, 6 55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13 .
7·00-Today 3,4, 15 , Good Morning Amerka 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10
7 l~Wealher 33, 7:3o-Schoolles 10
CAPTAIN F:ASY
s .oo-capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame Sf. 33 .
9 .00-Merv Grltfln 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, IS;
TIM!' THISTHE NAME
\V"IN" RI6HT I KNOW
Emergency One 6; Match Game 10.
9HOP STEWARD
"VOLTA" RANG A
C ROOK~ ONLY IN
9·30-Brady
Bunch 8, Family Affair 10.
TOOK Me 1' THE
!IHL ,TOO, WHEN
O~e; DAY7 ~E WE'NT
10 . oo-card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Nigh t 6, All In The
U!JIOI\I HA!.I..- I
MRS, ~ANCHEZ '
ElY THE NAME
Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13
SAW SOMEO!.IE
ME'NTIONED IT!
VOI.TE~RA!
JUST t.eAV rN ',,
10 3Q-Jeopardy 3.4, 15 ; Andy Griffith 6; Price Is Right
HE l.OOk!'D
8,10;; S20,000 Pyramid 13
FAMIL IA R ~
11 OO-H1gh Rollers 3,4, 15 ; Happy Days 6,13 , Elec Co.
20
11 3Q-Wheel ot Fortune 3.15, Family Feud 6, 13, News
4, Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St 20,33
I I 55-C BS News 8; House Call 10.
12 00- Newscenter J, Bob Braun 4, America Alive 15;
j1ji~ fii)'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
News 6, 10; Young &amp; the Restless 8. Midday
Magaz ine 13.
~ ~ ~~~ ®
byHenriArnoldandBoblee
12 30-Ryan 's Hope 6,13 , Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
Elec. Co 33
one leiter lo each square, to lorm
1
Oil-Hollywood
Squares 3; All My Chllden 6, 13, News
four ord1nary words
/IJ.•\J.III
8; Young &amp; the Restless 10 .
1 :3o-Days of Our Ltves 3,4, 15, As The World Turns
BORN LOSER
8,1 0, 2 !»--ne Life to Live 6, 13
2 30-Doctors 3,4, 15, Gu iding Light 8, 10.
3 Oil-Another World ,4, 15 , General Hospital 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
TO R~IV~;~,·:.....,....------.
3 QO--Another World 3,4, l .S; General Hosp1tal 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3. 3Q-MASH 8; Joker's Wild 10 ; You Bet Your Life 20
4 Oil-MISter Cartoon 3, Edge of Night 4; Mer v Griffin
6; Porky Pig &amp; Fr iends 8, Sesame St. 20,33; Bat·
man 10; Dinah 13, HollywoOd Squares 15
4 3G-Our Gang . Little Rascals 3; Gi lligan's Is 8,4,
Brady Bunch 10; Pet1Jcoat Junction 15.
HE 60TWHEN
5.01J-Voyage
to the Boltom of the Sea 3, Star Trek 4;
HE WEN"T iO ONE OF
Beverly
Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33, Gomer
iH06.E "Hit:&gt;H-C.L.A::6 "
Pyle USMC 10. Emergen cy One 13; Brady Bunch
HAl~ 5'NL15i6.
15.
6 Oil-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6·Jo-NBC Newsl,4.15, ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Now arrange lhe Ci rcled letters to
Friends 6; Over Easy 20
torrn
the
surpr1se
answer,
as
sug·
IJ1'TLE ORPHAN ANNIE
1
gesled by the above cartoon
7 00-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--MORE WAYS TIIAM ONE
6, 13, Moppet Show 8; News 10, Love American
Style
15; Consumer Survival Kif 20; lnslghl 33
A~D WE 'RE SAFE
GEE I AlL WE'VE
DON'T BE SILL'f .. ·I'M NO
Print
answer
here:
7·3o-Hee
Haw Honeys3; Dating Game4, $1 .98 Beauty
... 'CORDIH' TO THAT
TAKEN HASN'T
GRUBBY MOLE ... I USE MY
Show
6,
Family Feud 10; Bonkers 8. S100.ooo Name
NOTE
FROM
PUN
JA6
EllEN
htADE
A
BRAINS•" ('ALL '" THE
(Answers tomorrow)
... euT ARE YOU
That Tune 13, Pop Goes The Country 15, MacNeilBOYS .. • I' lL BRIEF THEM"·
De14T IN THAT
Yesle,days I J umbles SORRY ABBEY CALMLY TEAPOT
SURE?
PILE···
Lehrer Report 20,33 .
I Answer
A sou nd Increase in bustness - BOOM I
8 Oil-Different Strokes 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Wonder Woman 8,10, Washington Week In Re~J l ew
20,33.
The latest JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK •11 Avai lable for S1 35 EACH, postpaid from Jumble, clo this
8 .3o-Who's Walthlng The Kids 3,4.15; Welcome Back,
newspaper, P 0 Bo~ 34, Norwood, N J 07648 Make checks payable to
Kotter 6, 13; Wall Street Week 20,33.
Newspaperbook!l
9:01l-R ockford Files 3,4, 15 . Movie " How To P~ek Up
Girls" 6. 13; Incredib le Hu lk 8, 10, Congressional
Outlook 20,33.
9:3o-Turnabout 20. Real People 33
by THOMAS JOSEPH
10 Oil-Eddie Capra Mys tr les 3.4, 15. Flying High 8, 10.
News 20, Faces of Communism 33.
ACROSS
DOWN
11 Oil-News 3,4,6,8,10,13.1 5, Dick Cavett 20; SoundI Drain
I Lengthy
stage 33 .
4 Armband
bout
11 Jo-Johnnv C)r ~r.r. 3 .;, 15 , Baretta 13; Movie "The
material
2 Sc1-fi villain
HellhP.nder::.' 6, l,unsmoke 8, Movie " Who Slew
Aunt ie Ro?" \0
9 Dock·
3 F'orum
1'2 oo-- M onty P ·fthon 31
workers' org. 4 Boasted
12 ·3o-Twiggy's Jukebox 8, 12 4Q-Ironslde 13.
10 Fishing spear 5 Border
1 CO-Midnight Special 3,4, 15, News a, Movie " The
12 One, m Bonn 6 - Rehan
Mummy's Revenge " 10
J ·4G-News 13; 2 JG-News 3
13 Affair of
7 Melancholy
3.01l-Movle "'Three for the Show"' 3. s·oo-Movle
Yesterday's Answer
the heart
8 Boxed
" The Juggler" 3.
It Bauble
10 Outlined
22 Long cigars 30 French
16 Angelo
II Card c ombo 23 Any
river
nursday, Nov. 2
or Salvador 15 Liquid
human
31 Church
17 Twine around measure
being
instrument
18 Little
18 Earp and
24 Fabric
35 Ntcknarne
Elizabeth
Ness, e.g.
26 Of the
of a
GASOLINE ALLEY
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
matl
prmcess
o;;;;JiiiLD;.~~:h:P.ti:P.i)'I'CmMI' 19 Gwded
21 Of governWith Fr.
ment
'
29 Restrict
36 Macaw
21 Burn
24 Mahno
oi I
cttizen
lead and was able to ruff the
club.
NORTH
11·2
25 Ruckus
"What horrible luck, "
---·
26 Mrs. North
moaned South.
• AKJ94
27 Island near
t K Q 109
"Expletive deleted,"
lreland
+ K J 85
yelled North. "You played
the hand like a half-witted
28 Verdi opera
WEST
EAST
millionaire."
+K98743
•
QJ
5
Hen's mate
What North meant was
• 72
•QI0863
Almost
that
South had indulged In
• 8 76 4
• 3
a graduate
the luxury of an extra trwnp
• 4
• 10 7 6 3
lead.
Vivify
SOUTH
His play to the first three
Russtan Jet
e A 1062
tricks had been perfect. At
38 St. John -, 1=+--+---t•s
trick four he should have led
t A J 52
FRANK &amp; ERNIE
pope's
a club to get to dummy. This
+ AQ 92
could only loae to a lHJ club
church
break. Then when he ruffed
Vulnerable:
Both
Outlawed
the next heart with his jack
Dealer
:
South
Irtsh org
of trwnps he would have a
Wtol North East
40 Actor,
trump left to get to dwruny.

Service
._

.
Re•sonabte Prices

~

TOO

"""'·

Construction
Maintenance

THURSDAY , NOVEMBER 2,1978
5 00-Voyage to the Bottom of 1he Sea 3, Star Tr.ek 4,
Bever ly Hillbil lies 8; M1ster Rogers' NetghborhoOd
20,33 ; Gomer Py le, USMC 10, Emergency One 131
Brady Bunch 15.
5 30-Hogan's Heroes 6, Sanford &amp; Son 8, Elec Co
20.33. Mary Tyler Moore 10. Odd Cou!&gt;le 15.
6. 01J-News 3,4,8. 10, 13,15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
6 3Q-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Frtends 6: CBS News 8, 10, Over Easy 20
7 .00-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
7,13, Family Feud 8. News 10; Love , Amer1can
Style 15 : Hock1ng Valley Bluegrass 10, Consumer
Survival Kit 33
7 3D-Hollywood Squares J; Dating Game 4; Bon.
mkers 6; Waltons B. $100,000 Na me That Tune 10.
Nashvtlle On The Road 13 , Dolly 15, MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33
B OIJ-Pro1ect U F 0 3,4,15. Mork &amp; Mtndy 6,13,
Waltons 10 , Nova 20,33
8 JQ-Whal's Happening 6,13
9 Oo--Qu1ncy 3,4, 15 , Barney Mill~r 6, 13 ; Cinderella At
The Palace 8, 10, Ou(:hess ot Duke Street 20,
Even1ng w1th Chuck Mangione 33.

QUIET... ••

Chester, onlo
10' 30·c

8-20·1 mo. (Pd.)

-

LIKE THEY
SAY IN THE
MOVIES :
IT'S QUIET-

Jack'S Septic
Tank Service,

Free Estimates

MOORE'S

-

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Rflldentlot end commer·
clol. Coli lor estimate. 24
Hour Service. Anv day,
anyt1me.
Phone 915·3106
Jack Gtnther985-3806

9 Jo-Soap 6, 13.
IO ·OIJ-DaY&lt;d Cassidy Man Undercover 3,4, 15; Family
6, 13 ; News 20
10 3Q-Eiections '78 . Prelude lo ' 80 20.
11 ·01J-News 3,4,6,8.10, 13. 15; Dick Cavell 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, \5 , Starsky . S: Hutch 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8. Movie "'Cleopatra"' 10. ABC News 33.
12 3Q-SWAT 6, 13, 1 00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1 50-News
13

TELEVISION
VIEWING

J---~------. r-+------_,· ....-------:-:-1'

er

MASON Fu $~

fliCK TRACY

•
L_---~--------___.,t;;,,

CHIP WOOO
Poles mo)(
dtOinelct 10 on l01gest c.'l1 d
S8 )() per ton l:lundled slob
56~ pe r to n
Del 1vered lo
SHOOT Rocme Gun Club
Oh+o Pollet Co ~t 'l Pomeroy
""'-4e'v Sunday l pm fa c tory
II&lt;I'J 16811
•···''''o"' guns only
All
Type
t~d'ustrtol
SHOOT Roc 1!le Volunteer TIMBI:f.l POMI:ROY forest Pro
Commercial and Home
du ets Top pnce tor stondmg
Mts. Hoffman . A lughltght of
Uept btery Sat urday b 30
Bu1ldrng
sow lim ber Call 992 5965 or
the 1r b utldmg m Boshon
the da y wa1) a lung-distance
Any Type lmpo'ovemenls
Kent
Honby
I
446
8570
choke guns only
call ftom ' Mrs. Huffman's
To Existing Structures
All Type Concrete Work
tro ubled wtf h wtld OLO fURN!lURE tee bo)(es brass
mece and her husband. Zelda
beds 1ron beds desks elc ,
fox mmk racoon
and Donald L1 ev1ng from lJ.
comp lete households Wrtte
~!, c;:;,~~ct Too Large
p~~:~,~'q~b·~eo~:'~~e~r.. etc?
the
M 0 M11i er Rt -4 P o mero~ or
illlOIS.
]a:
Wtll Coli
contact
25 Years Experience
call99'1 7760
Sendmg ~ 1fls were a sun,
s1gned permts·
All Work Guaran1eed
OLL&gt; LOINS
poc ket welches
d o~ ., rmgs
wedd1 ng bonds
Phone 992-1&gt; 144
IN!: GUN Club IS h0111ng a pa r
d1omonds Go ld or Sll lo'er Coli
992·7547
at f! oyal Oak Park Sat ntte
10 18-1 mo.
Rog er Wams ley 74:/-'133 1
&lt;I 7 JO tdl Mtdntle All
·, .,,be&gt;&lt; Ond WilleS InVIted
W~ PICK up tunk auto bod1es bu y
mg junk cars scrap trOn bot
1fNTION SH IIU~Y S Soruty
For The Best
terte" and me lol s R1der .,
Brt ook Customers Cue to ft re
Sa
lvage,
SR
124
Pomeroy
and youth prog ram 1,&lt;; .. /1
Price
In Town
a t h•rley w1l l now be located at
W'154Ml
Cluldrcn and Youth Adven~ ndo s
l ody fo1r
J.!o ctne
See
ture - Movmg 111 New Dtree- Ra,9 2836
Denver Kapple
801
. '
For Rent
tlun s ''
reword for the return of my
At
Ramner bucket whtch was p1ck COUN TftY MOBilt Home Pork
Specific ar eas of mterest to
Cold up at Old Town Creek last
J.l oul e 33 north at Pomeroy
be considered a t the Con· wiJJ
nday Conto1ned my glosses
large lots Coli 992.7479
ference mcludc . Child Abuse
Muffler
Brakes
nejld Important papers
No
and Neg le ct, Dtsrupttve
uesttons asked
fro nklm 3 AND 4 RM furm shed and un
Shocks
Tires
furn1 s hed
opts
Phon e
Youth , lnunumzalwn ami too,1l son 949 2322
Battery
.
W'l 5-434
Educa tton and · Seho larslups .
Arf\: CANOY Classes
Cok e
Installation Service
TWO
I:II:DROOM k1tchen furm sh
ex~
corotmg
classes
now
form
Purpose uf the Gonferencr•
ed
opt
Call
befo
re
1:
1
om
ess•g Ca ll The Candy Carousel
Pomeroy,O.
Ph 992-2141
1s d1reL'ted toward tmplemcn99'1 'l28l:l
petonfecftonery 992 b342 Come
3-15-lfc
t m g the 1979 c hildren and U • and reg•ster lor free cake
TWO I:II:OROOM tra der Adulls
0
oo
youth program at the comonl y No pets $135 pe r month
Ful
·
I· ur Snit·
mumty level
plu s uhltt1 es Secunty dll postl
ill" SHOOT , Sunday Nov 5
requtred
Phone
949
2253
\\ orn Hollow Gun Club 12 go
Mrs. Martm IS a mcmbc1 of
COAL , LIMESTON!::: sand grovel
calciUm chl onde ler hl1 zer dog
Drew Web!:iler Am encan all 1ctory chok e onl~ Storts at 1'l ONI: BEDROOM fu rn1s hed house
food , ond all types of salt Ex
W10km g men only 992. 2591:1
LegiOn Auxthary 39, a part- Sateen Proceeds donat ed to
thefOOp 249
cels1or So il Works Inc I: Mam
ner of the Metgs County Etghl
l WO BEDROOM mob de home
Sl Pomeroy 992·3891
cerHGUN
SLUG
Match
every
-·--------Po1d uttl tt1 es Adu lts only or
and Forty, Salon 710, and 1s
fluB:'nday m November Isaac
wil l cons1der 1 cht ld 'l m1les out 8Uf!f!OUGHS SC NSI·MATIC ac·
th e national chtldr en and
fallon form near Chester I
co untmg modun e
Phone
on SJ.I 1.:1 3
Relerences and
youth ch~urman for E1ght and PI3Im Hams tur keys other depo101 t requ1 red 992 3047 or
c;cn 2156 The Do•l v Sentt ne l
$1 0\eots Shells ovo tloble All
111 Court Street Pomeroy
Fort y
99'l 3859
schoug es
Oh1o
CJ.II ME S GOL DEN fle d De l•oous,
Auto Sales
H. Golden Deii(IOus apples F1tz
Lost and Found
pol rtek Orchard
Sf! 689
1917 MONZA SPVD~f! 305 engtne
SHOFT tn Flatwoods area Wh1te
b 14 ()b9 3785
Power steer mg Powe r brakes
harolo1s calf we1ghmg 600 lb
AM FM rod to More extras Call 19/4 DATSUN PICKUP PHONE
o n to ct
V1rgtl
W•ndon
14L 11::1Lb
9'12b iY1
5 384b
.
- - - --- - 19!5 DATSUN PICK UP Good con AP PALACHIAN STOVI: CO large
OF key s fou nd on Sycamore
dll to n
Good l1res
low
select1on of wood or cool
Pomeroy To cl mm, see at
mileage Step bumper Truc k
heaters , lowest prtces feo tu r
)7 Sy ~omor~ or c?ll9!2 _b6! 1_
m1rrors 52750 985 3979
mg Ashley Open Sot 10 ltl
IN THE
&lt;lpm Sun 12 noon Ill 3pm In
197'1 OODGt: CHARGI:R SE Under
M1ddleport betw ee n 3rd and
10 000 mdes loaded Phone
4th St down the alley lrom
992 2003
Auction
To n~ s
(arryout
Ph one
1974 PONTIAC Catol1no 4·door
b14 ·b98 7191
l AUCTION Sole f" I pm
A C 56 000 miles Make otter
LUMP HOUS~ cool $35 per ton
.lso at l pm Lots of Chnstmos
992 3690
delivered 992 7120
lems ond other new merchon
t 97 4 VEGA G T m good cond1llon
OPEN~1 se at Oh1o Rtver Auchon 537
1970 FORD 1 ton stok e bed lruck
9H54133
C'lg1h St M1ddl eport Oh1o No
MOn ., Tues ., We d ' &amp; "oleSolurdoymght
$200' -~-~!.!._e~ bpm _
COLLECTOf! S IT EM 1964 Chevy
Thursday Ti I ' -- - - - - - - - - - Impala co nver toble 21:13 STd HAY FOR SALE 992 1.453
~xlra n1ce body Wtll trade lor OLO AND YOUNG tro1n ed beagle
F nda y Unti 1- - . , Y:-a-r""
d""S,...a.,le_ __
pt~k_up_o~ ~5.£_ ~~~ ~42 ~I .
dogs mole and female Or w1ll
Herman GG----'-'"-'-'"-"'=- - trade fo r guns of a nd descrtp
19i'2
1-=0RD
,LTD
~)(Ira
sel
of
773-5592
YOU hove a serviCe 10 offer
!ton 742 2521
wheels ond snow ttres low
wont to buy or sell someth1ng
m1leoge Call Ctltzens Not1onol CEMI::TAf!V LOTS , 8eec h Grove
oe lookmg for work
or
l:lonk , 992 3007
wholever
you II get resul ts
groves S &amp; b lot 45 $50
----- ---- - b 14 373 3877
H~
Boney
Loll
tas ter With a Senltnel Want Ad PO NTIAC 350 molar
Monetta , Oh10 lnqu1re at (tty
B43 4802
. -- -~
Hall Pomeroy.
1973 fOR O PICKUP 6 cyl std
• 10 ~ Semor C1trrens Center,
t&lt;n5 vw Ro bb1t
$1850
Pomeroy 01shes, books cur
(}q2 ~87 ,
SNOW
ta1ns , toys, good clothmg and
-~-..,...--.,.-,-·
!"ony ~~ _:~~~!_~ _ ___ 1974 MUSTANG II &lt;I cylmder 4·
TIRE SALE
~ p:e_d _ Co l ~9!~ Z~~ o!!-=:_s.fl~ .
RUMMAG~ SALE stort1 ng the 2nd
Good
of No v and w1ll contmue lhru 1%4 BU ICK ELECTRA
November 3, 1978
shape 992-7708 $500
the wmler every Thurs , Frt ,
SNOW TIRES
Some of those changes that
Sot tn Chummy Shoe Shop 1n
ON SALE AT
you wanted so much to make
Syro cuse Two beds one onlt ·
POMEROY ALNOMARK
wtll ftnatly be poss1ble lor you
que ond one bed and dresser
Fur Snit·
SERVICE STATtON
th1s coming year. Your chances
lot s of clothmg ond m•sc
------ - - -- MF2b5 diesel tractor MF 165
of flndtng success are excelYA RD SALE now m progress , cor·
lent.
O•esel trocotr Mfl t 35 d1 esel
ner of 3rd and Co llege
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
tractor Case 430 gas tro clor
Syra cuse Lady s pont su1ts a nd
You're very adept today at
ford SbO gas tractor, MF200 2
ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
good dresses m•sc 1tems
worktng thmgs out so that a
row chopper Sh1nn's Tractor
992 S05S
Phone 992 ~2181
Soles , leon, WV 304 458 1030
profit resu lts . If someone asks
.,
-------------your ass istance, don 't be alratd C.A RAG~ SAL~ Nov 2 &amp; 3 Thurs. REDUCE
SAFE and fast w1th
and Frt 9 5 at Ronnte Salser s
lo tell lhem what you thtnk.
Go8ese Tablets &amp; I:·Vap water
~
o
s
t
on
124
our
ol
Racme
,
6th
Like to find out more about
p1:ls_ ~':!s_c:n Drug - - - - _
house on left post Southern
Services Offered
yourself? Send for your copy ot
H1
gh
School
Good
wtnter
and
21
color TV console Needs
Astra-Graph Letter by ma1ltng
summer clothtng Buddmg sup
mtnor repo1 r $45 Gas range WATER WELL dnllmg W1 ll 1om T
50 cents fo r each and a long,
Grant 742-2879
pl•e s Small appltonce!' Mtsc
$IS
992 7230
self-addressed, stamped enve~
-----·--Items
FOR YOUfl com pl ete hous mg
lope to Aslro-Graph, P.O. Box
RCA MARK 8 sol1d state stereo 1:1
remodeltng m nslr uc tt on and
lrock tope player home umt
489, Radio Ctty Statton, N Y. MISC VAf!O Sole l etart Falls
mom teno nce g1 ve J R o try
Commumty Hall Sot Nov -4
w1th bu d! 1n speakers ond au•
10019 Be sure to specify birth
Re fer e n ce
ovodoble
9 4 Clothes lor all ages , coots
1ocks Very good condtllan
sign.
Re aso nabl e prtces
Phone
shoes curtam s bedspreads
Must sell Call after 5pm
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J..Oec:.
992·5191
and
etc
E:
:
lectnc
appliances
992
2995
-21) You're extremely percepPotted flowers Mary H1ll , l ots
DUSTLESS FIRt:PLACI: and ch1mney
tive at this time and can come
1975
FORO
VAN
E-300
New
Bell and lorna Ha rt
clean mg The Ch1mney Sweep
up with revo lutionary 1deas If
pomt, new ttres . Wh1l e spoke
_ Coii014·373·bOS7; _ _ _ __
something needs to be RUMMAGE SALI::: E.lleryth1ng must
~~«:.-:._1~ Corpetmg 992 7876__
go Shnne Club, f!oc•ne. Oh1o
relashloned, do il today
WILL TAKE co re ot the elderly m
WARM MORNING cool heater
Nov :::1 and &lt;tlh 9 4
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jon. 19)
Dt04 power mtke
Call _ .!!}Yhome. 992·7314 .
Usually you ' re at your best MISC SALE Fnday and Sot Nov
992 7()4 2
when you can proceed In slow
:J &amp; Nov 4 ot 701 Beech Street
HOMI:::MADI:: QU ILTS for sol e $20
and well-analyzed movements ,
~~~leport 9om ~~-~~ __ _
eo 742 2984
..
but today It' S not such a bad
VAJ.ID
SALE
9
to
? Frtdoy 22-4
idea to follow your Intuition .
ONt: SCREW type log splttter.
w~~_u ~ s~ ~_:d~!_P~r_
r _ __
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211oMorch 20)
Holltf cr ofter hom
rod1o.
Mixing with people rs good for THREE: FAMIL V Yard Sale Fn Sot
992·6229 - - - and Sun 2nd house on nght
you today You're ready to
F"' f\11 Your
Post Sm1th Grocery tn Wolfpen GOLF SHOES fo r Ch rtstmos John
exchange ideas and formulate
Gf_ TV ,11.
Teaford
985-3961
on SR 143
some new oplmons of your
Holpo,nl/\ppl
own.
f.=OUR FAMtl V Porch Sale Frtdoy RA I( S USED Furntl ure Add1son
Ohto
bl4 307 Ob37 . Ztegler
PISCES (Feb. 211oMarch 20)
and Solvrdoy. November J &amp; 4
S.Jij· t~t-IC•'S
automatic gas heater b5 000
Achieving your aims should not
10 til ? Nex t to Chummy s Shoe
BTU $100 6 other gas heaters,
J.1&lt;k VJ C,H\t",
be too dtlhcult today. Others
Shop 1n Syracuse
Toys ,
SIS to $35 4 electm: heaters ,
clo thmg
What nots , co al
will s pur you on before you
l''..~,q t
sa to $15 Gas cook stove $35
Jew~l r!' _! t:_ ____ ~ ___ _
have a chance to work up any
Ph•liH
,,,,,. )JU
Hoover portoble wo!her $.45
doubts
ALFRED UNITE::D Met hod1 st Church
Dresser wllh Iorge round m1r
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 19) Let
w1ll hove com b1ned yard and
ror , $20. Sewmg rocker $2:1 50
that siKth sense you're experl ~
bak e sole Frt and Sot, Nov _-~o~ps , pottery glos s~re __
enclng guide you In your deal·
Jrd and .4th from 9om to 4pm
1973 CHEVROLET C20 camper
1ngs today. Its source IS well- · Route081
specto l 1974 Chevrolet C20 GIVE' AWAY White mo le odult
founded .
L YARD Sole Fnday Jrd an d
p1 ckup All m good cond1hon
cal. Alas half grown ktllens,
TAURUS (Aprll211oMoy 20) Ben· FALSalurdoy
4th at Pearl W1ll1s'
yellow tabby ond whlie and
992 2724 0 ' 992 2..:_
1"43" - ---ceflts will come to you today
house letart Falls
lobby Me igs County Humone
because you'll look beneath
FOUR CRAGAR mags for
Soclely . 992 2592 or 992-2b39
Che11rolet 992·2205 after Spm
the surface and see what es
co11992-5621
really there You 'll not be easPets lor Sale
TO GIVE away to good home Old
ily fooled .
~ngl1sh Sheepdog 949-218 1
1974FORO 1 '~ lonptCkupwllhtop
HOOF
HOLLOW
Horses
Buy
,
sell
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Ev·
per
Call
985·"'339
after
5pm
trad e or tratn New ond used
eryone around you IS Put at
Mohilt• Homt•• for Salt·
saddles Rulh Reeves, Albany ·-TWO ITALIAN style swivel
ease today because of your
(014)098·3290
rockers
,
rust
Scotchguord
1976 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
philosophical approach to
- - - -------uph olstery 28 x 14 plush ol1ve
RISING STAR l&lt;enne ls. Soo rdtng
1''~ both underptnnlng, $1500
things You don't take yourself
green wool corpet All tn ex
and groommg , oil breeds
and aSsume loan . 949 2b83 or
too seriously . Neither will they,
cel lent shape Call 949·2bbl
Chesh1re 367·0292
843 3311 .
from the example you set
oiler 5 pm.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) That
LOVA8LE WHITE snow dnft great
1970 Am hers I SOx 12 2 BR
which has been discarded will
PYRENEE S Pupp1es
Phone APPLE I:IUlTER 95i"' Broodwoy , 1970Champ1on60x i22BR
M1ddleprot 992 2892.
• 1965 Generol 60x12 2 BR
1 014·&amp;67-3838
take on new llfe In your capable
hands today. The transform&amp;· GOI NG OUT of Busmess Solei GOOD EAR corn $2 a bu. Model I%8PMC 52x122BA
12 shotgun $27S 747 735q
1955 Pro1ne Schooner 28x8 I BR
lion will be startling.
Poodl es, Pekingese Pomero·
1973 Royal Embassy b8x14 3 BR
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Without
n1on Teacup Tm13s $35 to
1959 Star 50x10 2 BR
even trying, your popularity will
$125 Phone 61.4·696 1297
1973 Star 6Dx1 A 2 BR
.
accelerate over the next few
ANTI-FREEZE
AKC
REGI
STERED
Beogle
8
mon·
19b8 Star b0x12 2 BR
days. II looks like a very pleasths old Mole $7 5 307 0292
1970 Sylva 60x12 2 BR
ant weekend In store for you.
.
..-- --·- ,... PERMANENT
1968 Vtlloges 60x12 2 BR
AKC REGISTERED Block labrador
VIRGO (Aug. 2J..S.pt. ZZ)
ANTI-FREEZE
1964 Wmdso r 51x l0 2 BR
retrieve r puppies Wormed.
Something you've been want·
Why pay $3.99
1970 Ktrkwood 12x603BR
Shols
Excellent
w1th
ch1l
dren
lng could be acquired today
8&amp;S MOBILE HOME SAtES
Phone
6l&lt;ll-b67·3039
Even1ngs
because you allow your lmagl·
011\_o'fl ()'fl ,,~ $~
PT Pli:::ASANT W. VA
or
weekends
nation to work for you. The
"' ~"gel. iJ ·
answer was there all the time .
MCLEAO S POOOLE Grooming
1'1t ACRE 12 1&lt; 60 mobt)e home
LIBRA (Sept. U-Oct. 2S)
Hove AKC reg ts te red toy
1
neor Dexter. 992 5856.
poodles for sole Ready to go
Ftaaheo of Inspiration could
-- .
lsi
of
Oecembe1
Quoltty
pnc·
1907
HOUSE TRAilER 12 x bO. All
occur all day. It would be worth
ed , $1 SO each Pel groommg
eleclrtc furn1s;hed. otr condl
~ to write some of these Ideas
•
ock W. Coruy, Mgr.
done 1 or SS wtlh bo th S7 b
honed washer ond dryer Also
down If you can't put them to
dovs o week 'I 9 Coolvd1 ~
2 lots m Hof risonv ille.
work at this t•me
Phono 992-2111
' 014 067 · 3~15
742 2620.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
wt lh out pe nn 1s
'--I n Judy McGraw

1y prope rly

1~7R

~

Mary Martin to attend conference
Among those attending the
American LegiOn, the
American Legton Amuhary,
and the Eight and Forty 's an·
nual Western Area Con·
fe r ence on chtldren and youth
wtll be Mrs. Mary A. Martm
of Pomeroy.
The meetmg wtll be held m
Denver, Colo. today &lt;Thursday l through Saturday .
Childre n and youth leH &lt;I Pr&lt; nf

9-The Dally Senhnel, Mtddleprut-Pom&lt;•t·u;, 0 ., Thursda; . Nov . 2.

ROOSTER'S
ROOSTER

An Illinois reader asks
what Is meant by a discovery play.
This Is a line of play
adopted by declarer In order
to discover the location of a
key card or ~e division of
cards In a key suit. We wW
show a discovery play In
tomorrow's article.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

/Do you have a question lor
the experts ? Wrlfe "Ask the
Experts," care ol this news,..
per. Individual questions will
be answered II accom,.nled
by stomped, ..11-acldreSied
envelopes. The most InterestIng questions will be used In
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.}

�---· ---- -·
10- The DHily Sentinel Middleport-Pumeruy , 0 .. Thursday, Nov . 2. 1978
'
Earthquake hits
Pamir Mountains

MOSCow· UPI-Radlo
Moscow today reported a
st rong and potentially
devasting earthquake struck

a remote region of the Pamir
Mountains in Soviet Central
Asia late Wednesday.
Radio Moscow reported
that the quake occurred at
10 :49 p.m. EST and
registered a massive 9 on the
Soviet 12 point seismic scale.
Western seismic
ob·
servatories In Sweden and th e
United States reported their
instruments logged the
earthquake at between 6.7
and 7.2 on the openended
Richter scale.
Radio Moscow said the
epicenter of the quake was
located in a sparsely
populated area of the Pamirs
and there were no reports of
casualties or damage.

-------------------------I,
Ar'ea Dea'ths I,

I
MABELV.CLELAND
Mabel v. Cleland, 87,
Racine; died this morning at
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Center.
Mrs. Cleland was born Jan.
7, 1891the daughter of the late
Phillip and Martha Shain
Wolfe. She was also preceded
in death by her husband, Rev.
Thomas A. Cleland and one
son, Meredlty.
She is survived by the
following children, James, St.
Joseph, . Mich., Kenneth of
Kingston, Ill .• Isabel PiekPns.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED-Clara Hall,
Middleport; Norma Wilson,
Pomeroy; Kenneth Reed,
Portland;
Lee
Wood,
Rutland ; George Hackett ,
Sr., Middleport.
DISCHARGES - William
Reitmlre, Edna Evans.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Nov.!
Jeffrey Adkins; James
heaver ; Beaver; Juanita
Brown ; Leah Brown; Junior
Cullins; Beverly Crank;
James French ; Chad
Gilliland ; Geraldine Harrison ; Alma Elmer Henson ;
Celelia Jenkins ; Marshall
King ; Sharon Landers; Mrs.
Donald Lyons and daughter ;
MarthH McComas; Charles
Mt-Goon ; Ted Moore; Flora
Mullins; Duris Nolan; Judy
O'Neil; Mrs. Jeffrey Paller·

WOMEN'S WARM-LINED
by

Hush

lliPP.!~J!

THE
..REGENf'

son and son ; Patrica Pelfrey;

Pamela Pennington ; Duris
Pervatt; Timothy Powell;
Geneviene Price ; Loretta
Roberts; Edna Rogers;
Genieve Sehneider; Mrs.
Ronald . Stiffler and son;
Shannon Tucker; Jane
Walton; Judy Warren; Mrs.
James Watson and son;
Sharon Webb ; Paul
Williams; Joyce Winters.
Births, Nov.!
Mr. and Mrs: Ernie Fisher,
daughter, Oak Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. David David·
son, son , Oak Hill.

•Black

THE SHOE BOX
Middleport. Ohio

...
'•

CHARGES REAFFIRMED
FORT JACKSON, S.C.
UPI-Maj. John B. BloUilt .
has reaffirmed charges
agalnsl a drill instructor
accused of the heatstroke
deaths of two Anny recruits.
Blouni reaffirmed the
charges after studying a
revised sununary given him
late Wednesday. U. Col.
Richard P. Scheff, a military
circuit judge, had told
Blount's legal . advisor to
submit the revised summary.

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

KITCHEN-AID
MIXER
SALE'6995
.,_,
1- ---- - - - - - - - - - · _., '- ....

WEEKEND

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

-----r~

-....t...:
....
Ill

ID

o(

----+-&gt;- :
... '"'

5

O
Ill

!::

A.
uo(

---+-

•

•

Thousands

Cash and due from banks ........ .. .... . .. .. ..... ...... ... .. ............... 771,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ... .. ..... . ........ .. .......... ... . ......... .. ... 1,206,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ...... •.. .. . . .. .. .. . . . .••.... . . 379,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and c-orporate stoek ........ ... ........ .. ....... .... .. .. 8,000.00
Federal lunda sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .... . ....... . ........... .. ..................... 896,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ........ , ..... .. . ... 7,700,000.00
Less: Reserve for possibl e loan losses ... .. . ......... ... .. ....... 79,000.00
Loans, Net . ........................ . ... .. .......... .. ... . ............ 7,621,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . .... .. .•..... .•... . . , . .. .. ..... . .. 153,000.00
Other assets . ..... . ..... .. ....... . ........... . ...... .. ..... ...... .... . . . .. . 1,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ...................... ...... . .... . . .. . . .... .. .. .. ..... . 11 ,035,000.00

Reg. S84 ••• • ••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $'7
Reg. $76 ••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••Sale $61
Reg . S74•••• ••• ••• •••• ••••••••••••••• •• •••••SaleS59
Reg. S72 •••••••• • ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• Sale $57
Reg. S70 •• • ••••• • •••••••••••••• ••••••••••• , .Sale S56
Reg. S68 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale SS4
Reg. S66 ••••••••• •••••• •• •••••••• •• ••• •• •••• Si le SS:Z
Reg. $60
sale S4B
Reg. S58 • • •..__.._._
••• • •• •••• • ••• • • ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • ••S.Ie S46
Reg. $54 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••• Sile S43

_______

.

.'.

0~

Blq SAYINGS

REG. 14.50 TO 117.00

TO

SALE

$

1359

-·-w~~-W"IW_W__.....,..________ -

I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-named bilnk do

hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. ·
John T. Wolfe
October2!j, 1978

.

I·

•.

Clarence V. Price - Directors

l'
lI

Sizes Medium (15-15'1•1. large (16-16'12), and
extra l.arge (17-17 '12 ), "Wrangler" "Mr
Leggs" and Ely Brands . Plaid ~atterns :
Reg. price $7.95 . •

633

1

TUBE SOCKS
Boys' sizes 7 to 11 . Men's sizes 9 to 15, white
with colored top, an excellent selection.
Save on what you need Friday and
Saturday .

One size fits sizes 10 to 13. Tremendous
selection- of solid colors, and heather
tones. Bulky knit orion.

99~

.

Men's .Flannel Shirts

"---+-------------:o-1
MEN'S AND BOYS s1.25

ORLON DRESS SOCKS
PR.

j

99~

.

PR.

- - - - - · --.--.---..-.--.--.-.-+-_.,_..__.._._, ___,,...,~,--,-~w-•w-••-...,;-1

•a••

1---·--w--w___________.......,_.

SALE

•988

! ·4 qt. RIVAL CRQCK;.POT

I

Removable Stoneware for convenient
serving - easiest cleaning ever! Made by
the orig ina I crock-pot.

REG. 131.50

_..

.....

SALE
~

•24..

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

tW"'w:!~.,...._..-

.....

SAVE.20%

OUR ENTIRE STOCK

TABLE COVERS
Buy now for Thanksgiving or Olristmas, an
excellent selection In Ol!als, squares, rounds .
and oblong , vinyls, cloth covers and lace.

SAVE 20%

...
SPECIAL SELECTIONS FROM
OUR JEWELRY COUNTER

-·~~~-"~------~---------w--·----4· ---------------------_.~~~----~---

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

DRESS SHIRTS

STICKPINS, NECKLACES, EARRINGS.

Neck sizes 14112 to 17, Sleeve lengths 32 to 35
inches , solid colors, white and patterns,
Quina or Splendor knits and · cotton
polyester blends.

Reg. S2.00 to ss .oo Values

20% SAVINGS SALE
KNIT BRIEFS
AND T SHIRTS
-

Sizes S. M, L. and XL. 3 garments in a
package. 75 pet. cotton , 25 pet. polyester.

'6.29 Pkg. T.SHIRTS........... ;......SS.Q3 pkg• .
'5.99 pkg. KNIT BRIEFS. ............ 14.79 pkg.

!

Our entire stock on sate Friday and Saturday. All sizes,
collar"ed sweater shirts, turtle neck, crew neck styles,
jean shirts, all arranged for your easy Selection.

STEP 2- Be sure the two holes at the top of the card
fit over the two red pins on tbe vote recorder.

Meigs voters .will use
votomatic machines
On Tuesday, Meigs Countians going to the polls will be
using small machines called votomatics to cast their ballots.
The machines are new and &amp;I e expected to greatly
increase not only the simplicity of voting, but the count as well.
All of the votes cast should be tabulated by late Tuesday night.
In past years the hand-counting has taken all night and into the
wee hours of the following morning.
· Voters can use the votomatic by following four easy steps
which are explained In the above.
Use of the machines will reduce poll workers from the
usual six to four and there will be a fifth person at each polling
location to provide instruc'tion to any voter who needs help in
using the votomatic.
·

STEP 3 - To vote -Hold the punch straight up and
push down through the card for each candidate of your
choice. Vote all pages. Do not use a pen or pencil.

•

e
VOL. XXIX

NO. 142

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

STEP 4- Mter voting, slide the card out of the vote
recorder and place it under the flap in the write-in
envelope. Note: If you make a mistake, ask for another
ballot card.

enttne
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

I

Celeste's platform attacked
l''ormer

L ie utenant

Governor, John W. Brown
· charged Thursday Richard
Celeste is seeking the best of
two worlda when he refuses to
make decisions on issues that
concern all Ohioans.
"How difficult can it be for
a candidate for Governor to
decide whether or not he is
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The deadline for applying for .for or against the Legislature
black lung medical benefits has been further extended to June enacting a new Death
30, 1979, Rep. Carl Perkins, 0-Ky., announced Thursday. He Penalty Law?" Brown asked.
14
said miners presently receiving benefits became eligible for
Why can't 1 Dick Celeste
the payment of their medical expenses resulting , from . the make these decisions' Is he
disease with the enactment 1lf the Black Lung Reform Act afraid that he will lose the
earlier this year.
vote of those who advocate
The original deadline was Nov. 3, 1978, but as a result of a Capital Punishment if he
request lrom Perk\ns, the deadline was ext~nded initially to opposes them, or conversely
mid-February of next year and now to June 30, 1979.
is be afraid he will lose the
vote of those who oppose
Capital Punishment if he
takes a different stand,"
CINCINNATI (UP!) - It is now against the law to buy Brown asked.
cigarettes in Cincinnati if you are under 16 years old.
This is an issue in Ohio that
The Cincinnati City CowiCU ordinance, passed Wednesday needs leadership. The polls
after considerable dellate over its necessity and ability to be
indicate that the majority of
enforceability, Is similar to a state law repealed In 1974 that the people advocate capital
ballneci clptelte aale to persons 18 and un_der. ,, ... ~pu~ishment. These same
polls ln&lt;\lcate that there is a
CAMPAIGN'S IN MEIGS COUNTY - John Brown, former lieutenant governor of the
growing feeling of being soft
State
of Ohio, was in Pomeroy Thursday afternoon to speak to some 25 residents on the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State Agriculture Director JOI)n on criminals.
Republican
slate of candidates in next Tuesday's election. With Brown, left, are Henry
Where is Dick Celeste on
Stackhouse announced Thursday that producers voting at
Wells,
incumbent,
Republican candidate for county commissioner, ·and Howard Frank,
Agricultural Extension Offices_in each county have passed the this issue? Will he make a
incumbent,
unopposed
for county auditor.
decision and announce it
Ohio beef referendwn.
He said passatie Ql.eans the voluntary assessment will be publicly before November 7
increased from 10 to 25 cents per animal marketed for beef, or will be continue to give you
the Jinuny Carter treatment,
beginning Jan. 1, 1979.
'smile and trust me ,' "
Brown concluded.
Brown addressed some 25
Meigs
Countians at a meeting
WASIDNGTON (UP!) - _The gove'1"11edt says It's high
Thursday afternoon at the
time we recognize the lull potential of our traSh.
· The Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday it Meigs Inn:
will make $15 million available to state and local governments
to help them turn garbage into energy and recycle valuable
with a wage reopener clause
Lake County Common
Uoiled Press Intemalional
trash. "Technologies are now available to recover this energy
for the second year of the Pleas Judge John M. Parks
and materials," said Deputy EPA Administrator Barbara
Non--academic workers in pact.
had ruled earlier that tbe
Blum.
the Logan School District will
A strike continued today at school board didn 'I have to
vote tonight on ratification of the Lorain County Joint negotiate with the teachers
a new contract and striking Vocational Sehool in Oberlin. for a new contract until they
Painesville Township school
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) -The Colwnbus Dispatch has
Striking Painesville ended their walkout.
teachers, faced with the Township school teachers
reported that the Massachusetts religious crusader who
"It's a crime that the board
impending loss of their jobs, voted late Thursday to return would decide to spend lunda
pushed the Ohio General Assembly for silent meditation in
· have voted to return to work to work today.
public schools and now is wanted for kidnapping her grandson
to eliminate the competent
today.
is in the Mansfield, Ohio, area.
The action ending .the 1&gt;- staff it now has instead of
Teachers in the Logan weekold strike came after the using the money to improve
The newspaper said Thursday it received a call from Rita
Sehool District, who struck system's board of education the educational programs of
Warren, who said she had her 3-year-&lt;&gt;ld grandaon, James and
Aug. 29, voted earlier this decided to invoke. the state's the system," said Kathleen
admitted laking the child from her daughter Teresa Warren,
week to accept a new Ferguson Act against the Riley, president -of the
22. Brockton, Mass.
contract, but remained on teachers. The act bans Painesville Township
strike while negotiations strikes by public employees. Education Association.
continued between the Logan The board had warned that
CLEVE!4ND (UPI) In Cincinnati, the current
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Two city councilmen, a former
Board of Education and non· teachers not reporting to contract between the
This
week's
wlnniog
Ohio
councilman and a former Deffiocratic ward leader pleaded
teaching employees.
Lottery numbers:
work today would have lost. Cincinnati Federation of
innocent Thursday to charges that they accepted kick hacks to
Negotiators
for
the
120
non·
Gold
number
0.
their jobs. •
Teachers and city school
allow carnivals to operate in their wards.
academic employees in
White
number
-00.
Some 13 of the system's 210 hoard continues through Dec .
Free on f500 bond each are Counclhnen Lonnie Burten and
Logan and the board of teachers
Blue number - 468.
returned
to 31, 1979, but union and board
Mary Ann Lecate, f(l'mer council member Carol McClendon
education
reached classrooms
Wfn..A·Thon
.
Thursday,
officials
have
been
and former Democratic ward leader Walter L. cOx.
agreement early today on a making a total of 89 teachers negotiating off and on tbe
79%83•
tentative two-year contract, who had decided to cross past six months on wage and
picket lines and go back to class size reopener clauses m
work.
the pact.

i~J"-·_r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Extend black lung deadline

Cigarette buyer8 must be 16

Beef referendum approved

Logan's .OAPSE voting
tonight on new pact

Garbage potential stressed

Religious crusader sought

Four enter innocent pleas

VISITS POMEROY - Congressman Clarence Miller
was in Pomeroy Thursday afternoon on the campaign
trail. Cong. Miller, left, confers with Meigs Auditor
Howard Frank on the steps of the county courthouse.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday, dry and mild
Sunday and Monday, with a
chance of

showers

and

turning cooler on Tuesday.
Highs will he In the upper
50s or the lower 60s Sunday
and Monday and In the
loWer or middle . 50s
Tuesday. Lows generally
will be In the upper 30s or
the lower 40s.

Middleport
squad has
busy night

The Middleport emergency
unit of the fire department
was hit with a wave of calls
Thursday and Friday.
At 10:26 a.m. Thursday, the
unit went to 186 North Second
~-· for Lois Com ell;. "'l!o ·
had fa llen down some stairs.
She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 10 :40 a.m. the unit was
Pomeroy police are in· sent to the front of the
vestigating a breaking and Elberfeld store in Pomeroy
entering at the K. and C. where
Ernesti ne
Jewelry Store on E . Main St. Wi nebrenner had fa llen
Police chief ·Jed Webster against a front window glass.
said that the entry was The glass was broken and
discovered at 7:56 a.m. Mrs. Winebrenner cut her
Friday by Mrs. Edna Schoen- head in the fall. She was
leb who was enroute to her taken to Veterans Memorial
employment at the Reuter· Hospital.
Broga n Insurance Services
At 3:04 p.m., the squad
office. Glass had been broken went to the Village Manor
from the front door to ga in Apartments for Jackie
entrance. One showcase in Powers, who was treated on
the est ablishment was the scene and at 8:47 p.m.,
brok en. The amo unt of the squad went to 648 S.
merchandise stolen had not Second Ave., for Clay Bums,
been determined this mor- a medical patient, who was
ning.
taken to Holzer Medical
Chief Webster said Herman Center.
Henry, Logan, of the Bureau
At 2:42 a.m. today, the
of Crim inal In vestigation, squad was called to the
has been called to assist with railroad cross ing near
the investigation.
(Continued on page 12 1

Pomeroy B&amp;E
investigated

Men's $8.95 Shirts .......... ; ............. ,7.16
Men's 510.95 Shirts .......... ·............. $8.76

Men's $12 .95 Shirts ...................... $10.36
Men's $14.00 Shirts ...................... $11 .96
Men's $15.95 Shirts ...................... 512.76

----·I,,...,..,_

MEN'S ·wiNTER JACKETSRegAND
LINED VESTS
. $19.95 Jackets ..................... $16.55

"Excellent selection of styles in men's warm
winter jackets and coats. Regular and extra
large si~es. Buy what y0\1 need now for
yourself or for Christmas giving .

.

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctne.S"of this statement of resuurces .and
llabiHties. We declare that it has been examined by !IS, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.
r :1·
Earl Cross

SPECIAL ~ROUP

I

Gl RLS BLOUSES

2nd Floor

_.._.._._.._.._. ....... .._..__._.._._.__ _, '"~w~"'""

REG. 115.95

,, ,

..

,,.,

... .., ... I.

STEP I - Using both hands, slide the ballot card all
the way Into the vote recorder .

I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ready To Wear -

_ ; . ...
-~- ~

TO NEXT
PACE

Reg. S20 •••• ."••• ••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $16.00
Reg. $19. .... ........................ . Sale $15.20
Reg . $16 .... . ..... . .................. Sale $12.80
Reg. $15 •••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••• Sale $12.00

11h qt Covered Gourmet
Doubki Boiler

------

.I'ACf.

SALE

Junior, Misses, and hall-siies

________

co

co

JUNIOR SLACKS

PYREX DOUBLE BOILER

O.,mand deposits of individuals,
.
prtnshps., and corps ....... . ..... , ................. . . . .. . ... . .......... 1,311,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnshps., and corps.... ... ... ... ...... .. .. . ........ . ........ . .. . .. . ... 6,955,000.00
Deposits of United Stales Government ........ . ... . ...... . ........ .... .. .. .. 239,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ... .. . .... ...... . . . . .. .... ... ..... 596,000.00
Certified and officers ' checks ......... . .. .. ..... . ............. .. .... ...... ... 54,000.00
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS ............. . . . ...... .. , ........ .... . ... 10,155,000.00
Total demand deposits .. . .. . . . ... . .... . . .................. .. 2,943,000.00
Total time and savings deposits .................... . ......... 7,212,000.00
Total O.,pusits in Domestic and Foreign Offices . . . . . . . .... .... . ......... . . . 10,155,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) ... ... .. 10,155,000.00 - - - a. No. shared authorized 5,000 (par value)
b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value) .. . ..... . .. . . . ...... . ............ 125,000.00
Surplus ................ .... ... . .......... ... .. .... . ... . .. .. . . . .......... 125,000.00
Undivided profits ...... . ..... .. .. .. ..... .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. ...... 629,000.00
Reserve for contingencies and
other capital reserves .. . .......... . ........... ... ........ . .. ... .. . .. . ..... 1,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ..... , ................. .. . . .... .............. 880,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL . . ..... . .. . . .. ........ . . .. .. 11,035,000.00 - - - Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date :
Cash and due from banks . .... .. ...... . ....... . . ..... . .., , ... . .... . ...... 695,000.00
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .... .. ........ ....... ............ .. ..... . ...... 936,000.00
Total loans . .. .............. ... .......... ... .. ... .. . ....... . .......... 7,637,000.00
Total deposits ..,...... . . : ........ ........ ... : ... .... ....... .. .. . .... .. 10,077,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ....... ...... ... . .............. . . ... . . . ................
10,3113,000.00
,.,
.
~

• "' i!fl ,r ·

l
I

~·.

10 NEXT

DRESS
~.~~~

r

length. flare leg style, pre-washed blue
denim.

National Bank Region Number 4

VfvMEN'S DAY TIME

Reg. $1&lt;l ....... .......
. .. . .... Sale $11 .20
Reg. S12 ................... ........... Sale 59.60
Reg. $11 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SaleS8.80
Reg. $10 •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• Sale $8.00
Reg . S9 .oo ............. ; .............. Sale$7 .20
.I,......,..._.._.. __ _ . . _ - - - - - "W .,...,_.,__._..__.....

Coat sale by Jerold

in tpe state of Ohio, at the close of business u·n September 30, 1978 published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter nwnber 9815

#.

'\ ·,

,

;::

,~.~~:~ !~u~~}~,~~~

. Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

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

'

I

Special Two Day Salel

..

~·
'"'"

I

MEN'S s1.25 pr. T.V.
MEET MONDAY
The
Salem ·Center
Educational Organization
will meet Monday, Nov. 6, at
7:30 p.m. at Salem Center
elementary school.
All parents are urged to
attend to help improve
educational standards at
their school.

~ull

FRIDAy NOVEMBER 3RD AND
SATURDAy NOVEMBER 4TH

1 ONlY REG. '99.95

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged
Mrs.
Michael Thomas, Point
Pleasant; Robert Martin,
Sissonville ; Roy Flint,
Gallipolis Ferry; Steven
Fowler, Point Pleasant;
Hatold
Blaine,
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs. Jerry
Johnson and son, Rutland;
Mrs. Eugene · Prunty and
daughter,Sandyville, W.Va.;
Tammy Henry, Point
Pleasant; Carlos McKnight,
Middleport; Mrs. Julia Long,
Point Pleasant; Norman
Benson, Southside.

. ... . .,

BARGAIN DAYS

Shelby, N. C., Dallas,
Paul, Robert, and William,
Racine , aqd Betty ·Me·
Murray,Columbus.onesister
Hazel Bearhs, Racine, 17
grandchildren, 23 great
grandchildren.
Private funeral . services
will be held Saturday at 1
p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home. Burial will be in
Greenwood
Cemetery.
Frienda may call at · the
uneral homethis evening
from 7 to 9 and friday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.

HOSPITAL NEWS
.

UNDERGOEs SURGERY
Mrs.
Grace
Glaze,
Pomeroy, underwent major
surgery today at the Holzer
Medical
Center.
Her
daughter, Mrs. Louise
Radford, has been joined by a
.sister, Anna Pullins, and a
brother, George of Rock
Bridge.

•Brown

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

I

.

Reg, '$22.95 Jackets... ••p••••oo•o•oo•oo $19.•00
Reg. S34.95 Jackets..................... S29.00
Reg. $39.95 Jackets...................... $33.15

Reg. $54.95 JaC:kets ...................... $45.60

~~~~-"--~~W"WN-"~•WW~IWW"-W~~~··---~-·--------------"W"W~~~--~~---1
;

·,

.OPEN FRibA Y NIGHT TIL 8:0~ PM
SATURDAY TIL 5:00 PM

Carrol R. Norris

.'

ELBERFELDS IN· POMEROY ...

f

(

I

INSPECI' FIRE TRUCK - Middleport firemen
lnttpect a new lire ellldne which Is similar to the one they

-

.

i

hope to be able t~ ~rchase if Middleport voters approve
one mill, five year. levy at Tllesday's election.

-~

a

FREE PARKING FACIUTIES - The Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. parking lot beside tile ·vacant

Middleport office Is now serving shoppers as a free
parking place. However it could be cutting down on
parking meler receipts.

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