<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15610" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15610?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T22:12:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48732">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/696b51ac5147befa951b9e4b126f24b0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a50b2d064c8f3cbebd19ea4d37c3e0a2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50038">
                  <text>•

Rhodes beats Celeste
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Gov.
James A. Rhodes today
happily accepted a fourth
four-year term as a mandate
from Ohio voters for "sound
management
of
state

government."
His vanqulahed opponent,
Democratic U . Gov. Richard
F. Celeste, gracefully
accepted defeat, vowed not to
be a "quitter" and refused to
rule out the posslblity he will
seek elective office in the

Countywide levy loses,
renewal levies okayed
. Meigs · County voters alj!ain turned down a · tax levy
designed to provide funds for operation of facilities for the
mentally retarded at Tuesday's general election. The 1.25 mill
levy went down 2,911 to 2,257. It was the only county issue
placed before voters yesterday.
Although new levies went down to defeat for the most part,
voters did approve renewals of existing levies in several
instances. In Middleport, voters approved a one-mill levy to
provide ·a new fire engine for the village fire department.
There were 525 votes in favor of the new tax while 123
Middleport voters cast ballots against .the levy.
In Syracuse Village, voters, 176-52, approved a renewal of
a one mill levy for fire protection.
Pomeroy Village voters, by a 504-143 margin renewed .9 of a
mill and added .1of a mill, to pr.ovide fire protection funds.
Rutland Township votes approved 278-109, the renewal of a .3
of one mill levy for fire protection.
· Two new levies were turned down in Salisbury Township.
One, a one mill for maintaining and operating cemeteries was defeated 896 to 652, while the second - two mills for d1111t
control- went down 1,079 to 383. A new three-mill levy in Olive
Township which would have provided dust control was
defeated 253-99.
A wet-dry issue in Bedford Township lost by a narrow
margin. A total of 173 voters there cast ballots against the sale
of malt beverages, wine and mixed beverages by the package
for off-premise consumption while 155 voted in · favor of
permitting such sales.

Celebrezze
unseats -Brown
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State
Sen. Anthony J. Celebrezze
Jr., D-Cieveland, early today
ended the quarter-&lt;:entury
tenure
of
Republican
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown In a bitter contest
which ended with accusations
that Brown tried to "tamper"
with hla own election reaulta.
Celebrezze's 10,ooo:vote
victory In the uricif(iclal
returns epparently gave
Democrats control of the
state Apportionment Board,
which will redraw state
. legislative boundaries for the
19808.
Celebrezze's margin of 0.38
percent is within the range
guaranteeing a free recount
to the loser. Brown, retiring
for the night after overseeing
the election returns until 5:30
a.m., said he might not even
ask for a recount.
. "I don't need one," he said.
"You have a recount and
unless you pay people to be
out there watching, they'll
steal more votes from you
than they stole in the first
place."
A margin of 0.5 percent or
less would entitle Brown to a
free recount, and It is possible
he might reconsider his statement.
Unofficial returns from 99
percent of Ohio's polling
places gave· Celebrezze, a
one-term state senator, a
margin 10,129 votes out of 2.7
mlllion cast. Only 63 polling
places from Sandusky County
were left to come ln.
Brown Immediately
ordered voting machlpes
sealed and Impounded, and
paper ballots locked up to
safeguard
them
from
tampering.
Even so, Celebrezze and
top Ohio Democrats charged
an irregular procedure took
place In Clark County,
Brown's native territory, and
demanded that a federal
agency be brought In to
supervise tbe count and
prevent tampering.
Brown refused to do
anything Immediately and
said any complaints should
be filed after the returns are
final.
Celebrezze's certified win
would give Democrats 3-2
control of
the
state
Apportionment Board, which
will convene after the 1980
.census. The controlling party
normally defines legislative

future .
and
his ·
Rhodes
runningmate,
Cuyahoga
County Commissioner
George V. Volnovlch, shared
the · limelight amid 50
cheering cabinet members
and staffers at a carefully
staged victory production in
the cabinet room of the
governor's office.
Celeste, hoarse from a
hardfought
but
futile
campaign against the caMy
69-year old governor, faced
newsmen as his wife,
Dagmar , and misty-eyed
supporters looked on at his
campaign headquarters.
He attributed his defeat to
" indifference, ·incumbency
and independent candidates"
but added he has no regrets
about his own campaign
strategy.
Rhodes , already Ohio's
longest
running
gubernatorial act and the
nation's oldest governor,
edged Celeste by about 50,000
votes. "That was a landslide
compared to last time," he
joked.
In 1974, Rhodes beat Democrat John J . Gilligan by only
11,000 votes.
Celeste, who may still have
a political career ahead of ·
him at age 40, refused to
directly concede defeat when
he
trailed
by
an
insurmountable margin

shortly after 2 a .m .
Prior to speaking, Rhodes
But he later sent Rhodes introduced Voinovich's
hand-written
concession family
and
his
own
note :
daughters, son-in-law and
"Dear Governor: seven grandchildren. His
Congratulations on your hard wife, Helen, was not present.
Rhodes pledged "a new
fought victory. Good luck in
of
bipartisan
meeting the challenges of the spirit
years ahead. Sincerely, Dick cooperation" and said he has
already conferred with
Celeste."
"The people of Ohio have legislative leaders ab.o ut
spoken, expressing their sup- ·solving the state's school
port for our programs and finance problem.
policies;• responded Rhodes,
"With the kind of mutual
who was flanked
by trust and understanding we
have, it will be solved,"
Voinovich, Columbus Mayor
his said Rhodes.
Tom ' Moody and
Celeste said any future try
campaign coordinator, Kent
B. McGough .
for public office will have to
"During the past four be decided by his family ,
years, we have been firmly including his wife and six
committed
to
sound children . "It's a family
management
of
state decision," he said. "They
government, so that the (the family) have paid a very
taxpayers of Ohio can be high price."
While he would not rule out
assured they are getting full
value for every tax dollar. future political involvement,
Ohioans have said they want Celeste said he doesn't plan to
this kind of costcutting challenge either U.S. Sen.
management, and we will John Glenn or Howard
continue it in the four years Metzenbaum, and it is
ahead," he vowed.
"extremely unlikely" he will
run for mayor of Cleveland
year.
Collins triumphs next
"The idea of waging
another campaign next year
17lH DISTRICT
is farfetched," he said .
County
C
H
However , his daughter,
Athens
5,301
6,469
Noelle,
9, in a list of random·
Lawrence
10,923 5.803
Gallia
4,830 2,478 observances written down
Meigs
3,401
1,683 election night, said "my dad
TOlALS
24,455 16,433 is not a quitter."

now

Collins ;

•

e
VOL XXIX

NO. 145

Wllllam J. Brown !llld state '
Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey,
· gave
the
Democrats two more state
offices with smashing r~­
election to third terms.
Mrs. Dooahey, a proven
votegetter In Democratic
ranks, cruahed Republican
George C. Rogers, while
Brown, one of the youngest
attorneys seneral In the
country,. whipped Republican
Franklin County Prosecutor
George C. Smith In a repeat
of 1974.
With 13,153 of the state's
13,216
polling
places
reporting, or ·99 percent, the
vote was:
OAKLEY COLLINS
Dooahey, 1,630,118 votes or
64 percent; Rogers, 935,560
votes or 36 percent.
Wllllam Brown, 1,664,019
votes or 63 percent; Smith,
971,J95 votes or 37 percent.
Ferguson, 1,447,506 votes or ·
55 percent; Lukens 1,170,645
VQtes or 45 percent.
Celebrezze 1,357,550 votes
or ~.19 percent; Ted Brown,
1,347,421 votes or 49.81
percent.
Celebrezze, the 37-year old
son of the former Cleveland
mayor with the same name,
trounced Brown by more than
100,000
votes
In
his
hometown, outpolllng his
fellow
Democrat
and
Clevelander,
Lt .
Gov .
Richard F . Celeste, who lost
to Rhodes.
He fashioned his thin
GERTRUDE DONAHEY
margin of victory by
accusing the 72-year old
Brown of allowing the office
to fall intO a state of "benign
neglect" since 1951. It broke a
string of nine succesalve wins
by Brown and was a direct
reversal of · the secretary's
influence In helping defeat an
election
day
voter
Use of votomatic machines
registl:ation law last year.
in Meigs County went exCelebrezze is the son of
ceptionally well, Meigs
former Cleveland Mayor
County Board of Elections
Anthony J. Celebrezze, who
officials said late Tuesday
served as the secretary of
night after their first exhealth, educatloo and welfare
perience with the machines.
under President Kennedy and
The first ballots from a
is now a federal judge.
polling
place arrived at the
"I see the .vote as im
at 7:50 p.m., 20
board
office
Indication of the feeling that
minutes
after
the polls
It Is time for a change In the
closed.
secretary of state's office ,"
All of the records from the
said Celebrezze. "The office
33 precincts were at the board
has fallen into a state of
office by 8:55. Counting was
benign neglect. I have
completed by 10:50 p.m. with
campaigned to be an active,
all totaling completed by
visible secretary of state."
11 :30 p.m.
Brown held out !Jope until
While the vote turnout at
the end of a mistake In the
Tuesday's general election
unofficial reaults telephooed
was not heavy, early comto his office. "I have not
districts.
Pletion of the count was still a
' Although Republican Gov. conceded defeat," he said.
marked contrast to previous
The secretary took notice of
, James A. Rhodes was reYears when the· paper type
elected, Democratic state a heavy organized labor camballot was used. Counting
Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson paign against him, and of
many times was not com· handily won a second term. Celebrezze's hard-hitting
leted at dawn following
P
and
radio
'The other two Apportionment television
elections.
Board Q)elllbers are ooe state commercials depleting
legillatcr from each party. Brown as a relic who did
CLOSED FRIDAY
Ferguson
weathered nothing to help encourage
The Gallla-Meigs Com·allepUons of scandal In his voter participation.
munity Action Agency office
"I think the people bought
olflce and easily defeated
and
programs will be closed
state Sen. Dooald E. Lukens, his meCIIa stuff that he took
Friday,
Nov. 10 in observance
out of context," said Brown.
·R-Mlddletown.
of
Veterans
Day.
'1 ~te Attorney General
(Continue&lt;lonpal(e 10)t

Votomatic
system gave
quick results

Gov. James Rhodes

Hillyer.

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RON JAMES

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1978

Henry Wells, R
Relected as
Commissioner

Howard E. Frank
Reelected Meigs
County Auditor

Charles H. Knight
New Meigs Judge

Robert E. Buck
New Meigs
Probate Judge

Wells beats Smith in
county's only contest
Incumbent Meigs County
Commissioner Henry Wells,
Republican, was the victor of
the only race for a county
post in Tuesday's general
election.
Wells was reelected to his
seat over Democrat Giles
Smith by almost a two-to-one
CLARENCE MILLER
margin, receiving 3,430 •
votes while Smith received
:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 1,752.
Other candidates were
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
unopposed
and include
Friday through Sunday,
Howard Frank, R. , reelected
mostly clear Friday and
to his post as county auditor
Saturday and partly cloudy
with a vote of 4,035; Robert E.
Sunday. DaUy highs will be
Buck, present county court
In the 60s, with overnight
judge, who was elected
lows In tbe upper 30s or the
probate court judge, juvenile
lower 40s early Friday and
division, with 4,091 votes and
In the 40s Saturday and
Charles H. Knight, who was
Sunday.
elected county court judge
:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
with 3, 735 votes. This was
Knight's first time in ihe
political arena .

Weather.

Sunny Thursday, with
highs in the lower or middle·
60s.
Probability
of
precipitation is near zero
throughThursday.
. :;:;:::::::::;:::;:;:::::::;:;:;::::i::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::::::::

Despite the lack of local
contests, Tuesday's turnout ·
was over 50 percent with 5,580
residents of the approximate
9,500 registered voters
casting ballots.
Mei gs Co untian s,
traditionally Republican,
gave the Rhodes-Voinovich
ticket 3,161 votes yesterday
as compared to the 1,859
votes given the Democrat
gubernat orial
slate
of
Celeste-Dorian.
Here's how Meigs residents
voted on other candidates:
Att o rney General:
William J . Brown, D., 2279;
George C. Smith, R., 2530.
Auditor of State: Thomas
E . Ferguson, D., 2236;
Donald E. Lukens, R. , 2598.
Secretary of State: Ted W.
Brown, R., 3196; Anthony J.
Celebrezze Jr., D., 1703.
Treasurer of State; Ger-

'

Board of Education ; Thomas
M. Herbert received 2,163
votes compared to 1,757 given
his opponent Frank D.
Celebrezze for the post of
chief justice of the Supreme
Court.
Meigs Countians gave
William B. Brown 2,541 votes
and Richard M. Markus 1,190
votes for justice of the
Supreme Court for the term·
beginning Jan. 1, 1979. Paul
W. Brown, got 2,319 votes and
his opponent Clifford R.
Brown 1,230 for justice of the
Supreme Court for the term
beginning Jan. 2,1979.
Unopposed Homer E. Abele
received 3,507 votes for judge
of the Court of Appeals. On
State Issue I, 1,971 Meigs
Countians votes yes and 2122,
no. On State Issue II, 1,919
voted yes and 2,223 voted no.

Ohio voters reject more than
•
. hal~ of sc
' hool zssues
Tuesday

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
closed Oct. 13 for lack of
United Press International
funds, but J) will reopen
Voters in the Buckeye Th urs d ay f or th e 950
Centra 1 Schoo1 n·IStnct
· in st uden ts.
Cra wfor d Coun ty Tue sda y
More tha n half tbe near Iy
ed
th
tate'
1
t
200
" 'II Iev1es
·
approv
e s
s arges
opera t m
an d
t
'
1
t
d
'
t
I
·
t
opera mg evy o sen
cap! a 1mprovemen an d
stude nt s back to c1asses, but bond ISSUes
·
across the state
t
1
Cl
1
d
n
yt
d
f
·
vo ers n eve an , a on were
e ea t e d , meamng
and several other school schools face cutbacks, some
The $21 million bond Issue districts turned down school even closings. Districts which
·
for new
went down 3-1, 2,4Ba ta 848. A 1·ssues.
sought bon d Issues
2.9 mill operational levy was
Buckeye Central's 11.8-mill facilities will still have
defeated 2·1, 2,414 to 1,055. In operating levy won approval, overcrowded conditions at
the ·.6 mill operational levy but Cleveland's 3.7-mill schools.
·
for the Guiding Hand School operating levy and Dayton's
Buckeye Central students
voters rejected the proposal 8.9-mill operating levy went won't be getting much
5,403 to 2,638..
d ~wn. · to defeat by 2-1 vacation as school officials
margms.
plan classes Friday and
,,,.,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,:,:,:,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,:,,,,,,r,,:,:,:;:,,,,,:,:,,,,,, Buckeye Central schools Saturday lifter Thanksgiving,
1n Gallla County voters In
the consolidated Gallla Local
School
District,
overwhelmlngly defeated a bond
Issue for new buildings and a
tax levy which would be
necessary to equip · and
operate
, new facilities.

trude W. Donahey, D. , 2516:
George C. Rogers, R., 2386.
Residents gave Republican
Clare nce Miller stro ng
support in his bid for
reelection to congress with
4,095 votes compared to 1,177
given his Democratic opponent , James A. Plummer.
The county also supported
Oakley C. Collins, R., with
3,401 tallies in his bid for
reelection to the state senate,
Democratic opponent, Jack
Hillyer, received 1683 votes.
Democrat Ronald , H.
James drew strong support
from Meigs voters, however,
getting 3,058 votes for
reelection
as
state
representative while his
Republican opponent, Harold
Schritter, received 1,871 .
Wallace E . Blake, unopposed, received 2,611 votes
for membership on the State

three days during the
Christmas holiday, several
Saturdays and one week after
the original spring closing
date.
Super in ten dent Ron
Yaussy said the students
were the winners. He said the
voters were shocked the first
week after schools closed and
realized the only way to get
them back in classes was to
approve the levy.
He also said he believed
had the board of education
opted to borrow money from
the state's emergency loan
fuild, the issue would have
been defeated . Voters diil
turn
down
a
..9-mill

i

permanent improvement
issue .
Cleveland voters solidly rejected a 3. 7-mill levy for the
third time this year. It would
have raised $11 million, most
of it going for salaries.
"It's unfortunate the levy
has been defeated because it
was going to be used to fund
already-negotiated pay
raises for teachers and other
school employees, " said
Cleveland School Board
President John Gallagher.
"The employees need the
money and they deserved the
additional funds the levy
would h~ve generated ."
(Continued on page 14)

•

'

�2- Th" Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978

' IN WASHINGTON-1

-

I

Martha Angle and
~, Robert Walters
.

.~.WHOA! ••

i

'

Wid ... w~ .•• tJJftoa_ ...
.w~ . whoa. .•wbca •••

Cotto'n's king?
lly

Whda.~..

,..•

Our thrifty states

Wma??

Martha Angle and Rohert Walters

Fl•sl of two rela/ed columns 1

WASHINGTON 1NE,~ I - When the president of Cotton
Inc. a greed three" years ago to accept a substantial cut in
his pay. the board of directors of that national agr icultural
organization prai.s ed him for the .. personal sacrifice"
involved .

But J . Dukes Wooters Jr .. also the gro up 's chief
executive officer . actually had litlle choice because an
angry Congress had threatened to halt payment of $.1

millio n in puQlic funds to the orga nization unless his salary

was drasticallv slashed.
. Now, however . .federal officials are investigating allega·

t1ons that a leadmg mem ber of the Cotton Inc. board of
d!fec t~Jrs so ught to circumvent the intent of Congress by
d1vertmg to Wooter s $60,000 originallv earmarked for a
cotton industry pro~otion program. ~
The controversy over Wooters' compensation dates back
to 197~. when he s igned a contract making him the
o vc ra tm~ head of the · organization devoted to cotton
p:-omotion, research a nd product development. Among the
br nefits he was to receive:
- An annual salary. beginning in May 1975, of $121,275.
- A furnished apartment in either Raleigh , N.C., or New
'::ork . City , the two cities where Cotton Inc . maintains
offi ces.
- Payment of all travel, enterta inment and business
ex penses, including those for Wooters ' wife. whose
presence dubng his travels " may well be desira ble.''
- All membership dues. fees and other charges at the
Harvard Club of New York , the New Canaan, Conn.,
Country Club "a nd s uch other cl ubs or organizations"
where his membership " would fac ilitate (his I work ."
- A new $500,000 life insurance policy and a package of
hea lth and disability msurance benefits .
Rep. Silvio 0 . Conte, R-Mass., led indignant members of
Cong ress in a protest against that " lavish compensation
schedule,.. questioning whether the "taxpayers should he
required to subsidize 1this I type of 'sweetheart' employ·
mcnt contract. ' ·
As Conte noted, Congress had authorized Cotton Inc. to
receive SlO million an nually in federal payments during
1972 and 1973. The subsidy was a lower but still-substantial
13 million yearly in 1974, 1975 and 1976.
In addition, the Agriculture Department through a
quasi-governmental organization called the Cotton Board,
collects and turns over to Cotton Inc ..the proceeds of a $1
per bale assessment imposed on all the nation 's cotton
growers. Those payments have averaged $10 million
annually .
The spending habits of Cotton Inc. are hardly news in
Washington . In 1972, the organization allocated almost $1.3
million for new office space in New York and research
fa cilities in North Carolina.
Included in that total was $160,000 for telephones, $96,000
for cabmetry and woodwork, $7,2000 for granite used in a
receptiOn room and 1$1.25,000 for floor , wall and window
covenngs .
On that occasion, Rep . Paul Findley, .Jl:Ill., was among
. the congressmen who questioned " the reckless and
extravagant use of public money, "
·
In 1975, Congress added to an appropriations bill a
provision that would have denied Cotton Inc. its yearly $3
million federal payment unless Wooters' annual pay was
reduced to the salary level of the Secretary of Agriculture
- $62,250. .
Wooters accepted the pay cut of almost SO percent but
early this year Findley received a report that in 1977 o~e of
the nation's largest cotton growers, the J .G. Boswell Co. of
Los Angeles, requested a refUI)d of an earlier dollar-a-bale
assessment totalling $60,000 - an amowtt almost identlcal
to the Wooters salary reduction.
The Agriculture Department's inspector general now is
conducting an unpublicized investigation to detennine if
that $60,000 eventually wound up under Wooters' personal
control - and if it was intended to provide hlm with
compensation forbidden by Congress.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Total pre\'ention
im1)()ss ihle
DEAR DR. LAMB - There
is so much written about persons having heart attacks
because they are overweight,
smoke or have high blood
pressure and drink alcohol.
But f never see anything
about a pe rson who does not
have all of these above pro·
blems ,like me .
I am 78 yea rs old , 5-feet-9,
weigh 126 pounds and never
had high blood p1·essure in
my life.
I was getting out of the
shower on a Sunday morning
when suddenly I had severe
chest pains. My wife called
the ambulance and they
came in five minutes. They
gave me oxygen which helped
to relieve the pain.
I was rushed to the hospital
and was in the coronary care
unit for four days and in tile
hospital for two weeks . I
haven't had any pain since.
During the pain, I had cold
sweats. When they X-rayed
me in the hospital, there was
water in my lungs.
I am getting my strength
back, eat and sleep good and
get lots of rest. I have always
been U!lder the impression
that I would never have a
hea rt attack because of nut
having high blood pressure or
the other problems that you
often mention in your col-

wnn.
DEAR READER- There is
no fonnula which guarantees
anyone that he will never
have a heart attack. You are
absolutely right, there are
peo pl e who are no t
overweight, don 't smoke and
don't have high blood
pressur-e whO. do . have ·heart
attacks.
·
But, I would like to point
out \hat, even in your case,
you didn't have one until you
were 78. Moreover, you sur·
vived i\.
wt!trecognize thllt we can 't

totally prevent people from
having heart attacks. But we
hope that by follo wing a pru·
dent course, such as you
have, that rather than having
a serious heart attack in yoW'
latter 4il&gt;i, 50s or even early
60s, that one might live to 78
before havihg any serious
problems.
By having a good lifestyle
and keeping your blood
pressure down, you decrease
your chances of having a
heart attack or a stroke . That
doesn't mean no one will ever
have hea rt attacks if they
follow such a lifestyle.
To give you more informa·
tion about what happens
when you have a heart at·
tack, I am sending you The
Health Letter nwnher 2-11,
Heart Attack : When It
Strikes. Other readers who
wunt this issue cun send 50

cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
it. Address your request to
me in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551 , Rlidio City Sta·
lion, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am:;.
feet-9 and weigh 130 pounds.
_ Reloently , I nollct!d I am
developing a doubled chin.
How can I get rid ~f this
without losing weigh! ?
DBAR READER - By
surgery. Local fat pads such
as the dwbled chin just simply do not disappear on their
own . There is no such thing as
"spot reducing. " If you want
to get rid of a spot or lump of
fat, it has to be cut out.
The alternative is to lose
excess body fat all over. In
the course of losing all that
fat , hopefully, you will get rid
of the undesirable feature.
Unfortunately, it doesn't
always work that way. A person may get thinner and thinner and still have fat in spots
they don 't like, your double
chin heing a classic example.
Some people have a
familial charal'lerlstic to
develop a double chin . Others
ha ve cha~a.,teristics to

•

...

-

,

Washington
Report

By Clarence
Miller

L ~;
I
8

R

A

R
y

........

Library L ,.,.,.vc,..,
.

I

8

~

......\\f.~·""

Letters

II

A

........

~ ,,~

.
R ,,, ,.~,._.r
.

'(
During the final days of the transportation programs.
The
Act
creates
a
formula
95th Conb.-ess, 'Congress
reached agreement on a four· grant program under which
Novemher 6, 1978
year $51 billion highway . funds will be apportioned to
the states based on non· Lym Lovdal
authorization bill.
Under the biD, the Federal · organized area populailon. Rutland Elementary School
Eligible sponsors include · Rutland, OH
share of most highway
projects is increased from 70 public bodies, non·proflt
to 75 percent. For safety organizations and operators Dear Lynn :
I'm happy to hear that your students have been enjoying
programs (including bridge of services. Up· to 15 percent
the
classroom
collections we have loaned to you each month. I
projects), the ratio is 80·20 of the apportionment may be
expect
that
other
teachers will be asking for similar service
used
for
project
planning,
Federal·state coSt sharing,
after
the
bookmobile
stops going to the schools.
administration,
coordination
with Interstate funding
We
are
trying
very
hard to Improve our collection
and
technical
assistance.
The
remaining at 00.10. The Act
esp~lly
In
anticipation
of that reduction in boolanobil~
Federal
share
is
80
percent
of
authorizes $1.55 billion an·
service.
We
have
received
a numher of informational
capital
projects
and
50
nually for highway safety
children's
books
about
math,
animals, cooking, sewing,
percent
of
operating
deficits.
programs and $1.64 billion
managing
money,
·
scientific
experiments,
gardening, the
each year for Federal·aid Other unrestricted Federal
human
body,
and
famous
people.
primary
and
priority funds may constitute up to 50
If you and the other teachers would give us some idea of
primary highway systems percent of the local share.
what
you will ask for In the future, we will do our very best to
The Act also authorizes a
and an average of $512
anticipate
million yearly for secondary bridge replacement program collection. the demands by adding what you want to our
systems. These figures that sets the Federal share of
So many times, people ha~e said, "I don't need to tell you
represent increases of $290 project colt at 80 percent and
w~t
I want. You almost always get it sooner or later." Well,
million and $112 mllllun authorizes the following:
we
d
get
the books much sooner if people would call up when
- Funding ls: $900 million
respectively over previously
they
see
the
ads and let us lmow they've seen an ad for a.new
In
fiscal
year
1979,
$1.1
biUion
. authorized funding levels.
book
and
they'd
like to read lt. Knowing that It's a new book
In
fiscal
year
1980,
$1.3
biUion
The measure also authorizes
therefore not avallable through Interlibrary loan usually
a total of $360 million for in fiscal year 1981, and $900 ~d
saves
us about a week. Knowing which ad to look In to find
million
In
fiscal
year
1982;
continued work on hazardous
the
correct
title and author and the price usually saves us
- $200 million is set aside
highway • railroad crosaing
about
another
week. And lmowlng that someone wants the
demonstration programs. each year for the Secretary of
book
can
save
up to 3 months!
The Federal share under this Transportation . for
Pie!""
spread
the word for us. We're trying hard to please,
section of the Act was in· replacement qr rehabilitation
we
ll
ALL
be
happier If the libraries can speed up the
and
creased from 70 to 95 percent. projects which cost more
service.
Sincerely
yours, Ellep Bell, Ubrarian, Serving All
The major source on revenue than $10 million ;
of
Meigs
County.
- Off-system bridges
to implement the programs in
the Act is the Highway Trust would be eljgible for the fl.rst
Fund, which Is supported by time (at leal! 15 percent and
ongoing taxes levied on fuel, up to 35 percent of the nate's
. licenses, automobile fees and bridge funds must be ex·
on
off-system
vehicle parts alid ac· pended
cessories. The bill, also , projects) .
requires the purchase of
transportation materials,
supplies and equipment
manufactured in the United
States.
Two programs included in
the meas~re are of special
interest to Southeastern Ohio.
The Act increases the
Federal share for con·
structlon of the important
Appalachian Highway
System from 70 to 60 percent.
The House version of the, Act BySANDRAL.LATDKER
(approved in September), UDited Pren IDienuitlonal
It's about that time - time
included our language
to
get ready for winter - and
upgrading the funding for·
some
of the eventS In Ohio
mula for the 3,000 mile Apthis
week
do JUB! that.
palachian Highway System
Events
range
from a Wood
from 711-30 Federal-state cost
(l) 1978DV NEA.Inc.
Heat
Day,
to
a
Skl
and Winter
. sharing to 00.10 percent. The
Sports
Fair,
to
a
Christmas
Senate , however,
did ·
not
fav or
the
90·10 crafts market to an early
" Saturday night, we 're having a toga party
change, and House-Sen- Thanksgiving celebration.
and I want you to act like John Belushi!"
Wood - from the foreat to
ate conferees eventually
the
fireplace
is
the
theme
offered the House and Senate
Wood Heat Day at
a watered down version of the for
Malabar Fann State Park In
Act which permits funding of
the ARC highway system at Richland County Saturday.
The Division of Parka and fire, will be provided.
80 percent Federal sharing
Hours are from 10 a.m. to !
Ohio
Recreation
Although they may be oo p.m. Friday and Seturday
with the states providing the Department ofof theNatural
IIIOW on the ground, th!lre wW
2!1 percent balance. While we
Raources is spon!IOI'lng this be some In the bacllground. in and from 10 a.m. to S p.m .
are pleased that the fonnula
program from Cleveland at the Ski and Sun!lay.
for the Appalachian system . free~f~harge
Advance reservations are
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Winter Sports Fair.
has heen altered to give 10Several
needed
for the luncheon and
businesses will put
Repr~tatlves of the skl
~r eater emphasis to the
can
he
made through Jean
displays and demonstrate lndulthrl plunge into the Nero at the
program and lessen the state up
Canton Fine Arts
various woodbumlng stoves
match, I would have been and power cutting and winter' season with the Ski Association, 1001 Market
and Winter Sports Fair Ave ., North Canton, Ohio,
more pleased if the CQngress splitting equipment.
Friday through Sunday at
would have approved our 00.
People will be on hand to Public Hall In Cleveland. It 44114. (216) t53-7666.
10 percent proposal.
Also this week and
Another highlight of the biD · answer questions about features representatives continung through Nov. 26 is
and to lhow from skl areas, ski lhops
is the creation of a new and woodburnlng
the Marietta College Crafts
visitors
how
to
split wood.
making all types of ski National '78 at Grover
se parate program
specifically to assist small . An old-fashioned bean paraphernalia, and live Hennam Fine Arts Center at
·
·
Marleita.
cornmuniiles and ·rural areas lunch, cooked liVer an open · entertainment.
Hueston Woods State Park
in the financlDg of public
This is a competitive crafts
near Oxford has a program and sculpture exhibition runthis weekend lhowlng how ning Monday through Friday
't1fE DAILY SENTINEL
early
Ohioans observed from 9 a.m. to 2 p.ffi. ;
DEV£n'ED TO nt:E
Thanksgiving.
INTEREST OF
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5
MEIGS-IIIMON AR~
Thankagiving
In
the
Woods,
p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 11
ROBERT HOEfLICH
Friday,; through Sunday' is p.m.
.. Clll Edtlor
ly ext."ept S..turdly
devoted to rediscovering how
develop heavy thighs, and it , byP'Ublithedllb
Now is also the time to
The Ohio Vidley Publ LBhintc
the plooeers, with their sldlls make those necessary
makes it more difficult for
Comp.~ny-Mullimedla, lnt!,,
111
observed advance reservations to ride
these people if they want to Court Sl., Pomtroy, Ohio 65769. and modes,
8Wiinetl8 OffiL-.. Phune 9!a2· 2158i
Thanksgiving.
avoid such features.
the Hocking Valley Scenic
EdiWrial Phun~ 992·2157.
.
With the winter season Hallway with Santa Claus.
SL-.:ond dus poHhtl(e pMid e~ t
Certainly, the removal of
Poarueroy, Ohio.
approaching, It's time to
the fat pad just undernth the
Santa boards the train at
National ~~;dv~ repre»en·
chin is not a difficult surgical talive, IMR\Ion A.SIOtlalt!i, · 3101 think Ouistmas.
NellmviUe Dec. 2 and 3 for a
l~u dl dAv~ .. Clevtdand, Ohiu ~ll~ .
Seventy-lis crattsper,'lllns special .Christmas run. The
procedure. A good cosmetic
SubHt•ripllon r~le1 : Dl!livt"n!t.l b)'
have
been Invited to display· train leaves lts .statlon Dec . 2
surgeon can do it without . · i:arrier when! IIVliilllble 75 c.:enlll per
their
crafts
wt:l'k.
Ry
Molor
Route
whtre
clUTier
at the Chrlstki.ndl and 3 at ooon, 2 and 4 p.m.
much trouble. If you really
Rrvke nol IIVIIiiMble, One, mtl'lti(.
Mark!
at
the
Cultural Center
think you are thin enough t:i.:.!S. Ry 11'11111 lr\ Ohkl and W, Va.,
Reservations are
Onr
Ycltf",
SZ2.00:
.
s
tx
munthl,
In
Canton
Friday
thf'o~'lh necessary and can be made
already, and don't want to
,I.OO : Th rct- mur1lh•, S7.00!
&amp;mclay. The crafts penon s tlirough Eunice Ballard, 2366
lose weight elsewhere, it SJ
t:IMt•wtM!rt• fbi .OO year : Six af\OI'lth!l
might be a good idea to ~~ee a ' 1,1.50 : rhn •c monlhM, 17 .flf. were selected for thel r Shrewsbury Rd., C&lt;lhunbua,
doctor who does cosmetic SulJ.••.,:riJ!Iiou 11ricl' tnc.•!ut.IH SlflU:: ~llty work and diver•! Oblo 43221. (614) 451·7863.
'l'i!lll':i ...~ltlll. ~ ! . .
. talents, '~,
· SUI'gei'Y·

Berry's World

Winter
festivals
slated

~ e~

•

i.

What 's the diffecence hetween state and federal govern· l:'
ment?
For one thing : money.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, state governments
in fiscal 1977 piled up a $13.3 billion surplus.
The federal deficit, meanwhile, was about $50 biUion.'
The facts .and figures offer an Interesting looll at how '
such widespread All-America problems as lliflation can be
handled by states, at least.
The U.S. government statistics show total expenditures
by the state governments reached $191.2 billion, an &amp;Uiual
increase of 5.1 percent.
Education was the No. I state-level expense, according
to the data . That was followed by welfare, highways and
hospitals.
.
To break it down: the states spent $64 biUion for '
education, a hike of 7.4 percent. (And higher education "
accounted for more than one-third of that.) ·
Yearly welfare costs for the states hit a total of $32.8
billion, rising $3.1 billion. A 14.3 percent hike In medical
assistance payments was the key increase. State transfers
to local governments for welfare were $8.8 billion.
·
At the same time, the states 't rimmed highway expenditures 3.3 percent to a total of $17.5 billion, reflecting a
decrease in federal funding .
.
Hospital funding by the states amowtted to $8.7 billion, a
hike 11.8 percent.
Finally, a refreshing note was the popularity of the state
·
lottery .
Thirteen states !'Oiled up nearly $1.2 billion in gross
revenues during fiscal 1977 from lotteries. The leader,
Michigan, grossed $255 million with $110.3 million leU for
other spending.
.
Others with hefty lottery surpluses (after expellses):
New Jersey, $77.9 million ; Maryland, $68 million; Massa·
chusetts, $66.6 million ; and Illinois, $52.2 million.

For art's sake

Not all kinds of gambles work for the hest, of course. And
something that happened in the state of Rhode Island
·
·
provides another good eumple.
Three years ago, the Newport Historical Society made
an i~teresting discovery about one of the paintings It
owned.
·
A work by the daughter of Gilbert Stuart. - the 18th
century artist best known for his portraits of George
Washington - was found to have another painting
underneath it.
Art experts thought, perhaps, the bottom painting was
by Jane Stuart's famous father.
So, the society agreed to have the top layer of paint
removed.
. .
Now It turns out the bottom painting is definitely not a
Gilhert Stuart. In fact, it's not even as nice as the Jane
Stuart.
Society director Wilbur T. Holmes is trying to be
philosophical.
He says: "It was a gamble that was impossible not to .
take. "
-

Lost degrees
In North Carolina another sort of aesthetic matter Is a
problem.
The Untversity of North Carolina is recalling one of Its
defective products- diplomas. Letter' on some of the 1975
docwnents are peeling off.
Raymond Strong, head of the University's records and
registration office, wants 1975 graduates to notify him If
they need a free duplicate sheepskin.
.
An engravinl! company blamed the trouble on supposedly qefective mk, produced after chemical experiments
that followed the 1974 oil shortage.
, Even If the original diploma looks all right, notes Strong,·
il may not he. If framed, the letters might stick to the glass
when the diploma is removed.
.
.
. Now each request for a substitute Is being thoroughly
checked. That's just to make sure nobody gets a degree he
didn't earg.

Peopletalk '
ByKENNETHR.CLARK

UDited PressiDtematlonal
NO MISFIRES FOR MARCOS: Eat your hear! out
Gerald Ford. Ferdinand Marcos swings the mightier golf club .
That 's the word from an expert. Jack Nicklaus played a round
Tuesday with the Philippine prealdent In Lubang and Marcos
emerged in the front nine, saying he'd learned "many secrets
of the game" from Nicklaus. Says the superstar of the links of
his partner, "He's a very good player. I think our fanner
president, Mr. Ford, can take a few lessons from him. We
played nine holes and he (Marcos) didn't hit a single soul'. Mr.
Ford would have kllled four or five."

--

.

WORKAHOLIC : The pace is proving too much for roek star
Eltun Juhn . He wound up in a London hospital Tuesday with
what his record company caUs "a mystery Illness." It's oo
~ystery to the doctors. They say. the 31-year-&lt;Jld singer Is
e~usted and overworked" and will have to take It easy for a
while. John collapsed at his home with chest pains, but
coronary tests turned up no signs of heart djsease. He's pulled
a h.eavy schedule in the last month, with appearances In the
Uruted States and throughout Europe . He had been scheduled
to fly to Paris Tuesday for a checkup on his much publicized
hatr transplant, but that apparently will have to walt unW he's
rested up.

.
·
·
·
·
·
'

.
'
'
'
:
:

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978

North Gallia hopes to
end KC jinx on Friday
Unlike past years second 1978 title, The Eagles pla:v
place is at.stake Friday night wtnless Southern Saturday
when the North Gallia night in what should be the
Pirate~ battle host Kyger
final niche in the SV AC
Creek lll the season finale for championsiVp. North GaUia
both teams.
is 4-4 while the Bobcats are 4In previous years ' the '4-J.
.
wmner took all the marbles . Without · a doubt, Coach
for the Southern Valley John Blake's North Gallia
Athletic
Con ferenc e
Pirates will he out to snap the
however, Eastern ha~ Bobcats' long reign over the
practically "sewed-up" the Pirates . It has been 18

'

Gridiron rivalries
scheduled Saturday
By FRED McMANE
·UPI Sports Writer
The mere mention of a
Nebraska-Oklahoma or I.SU·
~l~bama ga me stirs up
VISIOns of college football at
its best. In truth , however, .
that panorama is largely a
myth, At least it has been
during most of this decade.'
Oklahoma has beaten
Nebraska by two touchdowns
or more in four of their last
six meetings and Alabama
has outscored l.SU by 11 or
more points in six of their last
seven games.
Now that we have laid some
statistical groundwork, let's
look at this Saturday's
renewal of both series and see
if . it helps in picking the
wumers.
There is a great deal or'
stake in both games. The
winner of the NebraskaOklahoma game will no doubt
win the Big Eight Conference
and go to the Orange il9wl.
I.SU and Alahama are still
very much in contention lor
the Southeastern Conference
title and the host Sugar Bowl
herth.
The way both teams , are
playing now we like the
Sooners to win. And, we 're
not ones to pick against
Alabama on its home turf
despite
the
awesome
presence
of
I.SU's
outstanding running back,
Charles :Alexander.

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
SOUTil BEND, Ind. (UPI)
-When Notre Dame lost its
first lwo games this season it
appeared the Irish streak of
consecutive
bow 1
appearances would end at
two.
The losses to Missouri and
Michigan knocked Notre
Dame out of the top 10 ranks
and apparently doomed any
bid to recover and qualify for
a post season game.
Last Saturday, the Irish
defeated Navy, 27·7, not in an
upset, but in proof of
rehabilitation, and the
performance earned Coach

FASHION DANCE: The models did more than just display :
the spring 1979 fashion collection of Italian designer Roherto :
ea-:alll Monday night, but then they weren't euctly garden ;
vanety models. On hand for the job at New York's Studio
were. the J~flrey ballet dancers, "Interpreting" Cavalli's ~
handiwork With dance- all to benefit the American Sephardi "
Federation, with Dionne Wanrlcke as hoetesa. Jet-eel ~
halrdrl!ll8er COve s-n and International beauty ;
consultant Ilana Harbvl practiced their art on the dancers ~
On hand for the disco extravaganza were film producer MUoeb ·;
Funnan, Melba Moore, Diane von Funteuberc and model ~
Iman with basketball star husband Spencer Haywood.
j

54'

plenty.

Dan Devine, in his fourth .
season with Notre Dame
honors as United Pres~
International's Coach of the
Week.
" It was our hest game,"
Devine said . "We put every.
thing together better than in
any game this season."
The early season defeats
were surprising, but no more
so than the recovery. Notre
Dame has been hampered by
a plethora of injuries and
goin.g into the Navy game,
Devme wasn't certain which
linebackers could play . and
which coulJin't .
But sparked by linebackers
Bob Golic and John Hankerd
the Irish turned a weak spot

:' .ci

into a strong point in handing
Navy its first loss of the
season. Notre · Dame also
scrambled for massive
yardage against the team
that was ranked No. 1
defensively in the nation
heading into the contest.
"OUr kids got themselves
up for the game," Devine
said. "They accepted it as a
chiillenge, playing against an
unbeaten team and the best
defensive team in the
country.
"I could sense during the
week that they were going to
be ready for the game. They
have a sense of the
Importance of games, and
they get themselves ready ."

New Haven Furniture has More.
More Furniture, More selection, More Value
Than any store in Meigs and Mason
county. New Haven Furniture features
I!!UCh brands as: American of Martinsville,
Broyhill, Burlington House, Bemco
Bedding, Riverside, Manor House,
Singer, Waters.

.'

'

. QUOTE OF 'IHE DAY: Los AngeleS attOrney P..r Monlllz, :
bitten and seriously Injured by a raWe1118ke planted In his '
mailbox, allegedly by members of a group he opposed In coitrt •
when asked what steps be is taking to protect himself :
~·
bought a pet mong~."
:·

You Can't Beat Our Prices Anywhere

ui

-

;

GLIMPSES: Phyllis Diller wrapped up an Atlantic City, :
N.J ., engagement and headed for a New York shopping trip (
Tuesday, visiting ~ 7th Avenue designer Clovll RaffiD ,'
Lucille llallis In New York to co-host NBC·TV's "ADler!~ '
Alive" with Jack IJDkletter : .. Joune Worley, Rollerl ~.
Jim Back.. and J;&gt;eter G111ve1 join Debby a- IIIII JOim
Rubln!llelnat NBC's color studios In Burblnk, Calif., later thla '
mooth for the filming of ''Gift .of the Magi," a .eo.mtnute i
musical special hued oo the 0. HaDry lhortllory to be aired at :
Chrlllllllastlme ... Joel Grey II rehell'llng Jerry Bermaa'• new l
musical "The Grand Tour" In New :Vork ... Jimmie Stewart •
will be honored Nov. 18 at an "All Star Trlwte" to be filmed ~
for fii~TV In Burbank, Calif ...
~

i

t .

BEMCO Box Springs &amp; Mattress
Sale Going On Now ,
01,1r Prices are to low to Advertise

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
Ph. 882-24&amp;2 ·

New Hlfln, W. Ia.
'

leads in the hard-hitting
rivalry only to see Kyger
Creek bounce back to win in
the final minutes.
Last year, Kyger Creek
held on for a 7.() victory and a
one-point win, 37·36 the
previous year. Both teams
have been somewhat un•
predictable this season.
North Gallia picked by
many to be the nwnber one
team in the SVAC lost two
early season games to nonleague opponent s before
bouncing back. They were
blasted by Eastern two weeks
ago in a big showdown match .
Kyger Creek has had its
problems. The Bobcats after
losing four straight, bounced
back to win three .in a row
before Southwestern's
stunning victory last Friday
night.
Coach Jim Sprague's
defending champions have
already set two records this
fall. Highlander victory was
the first football win ever by a
Southwestern varsity grid
team over Kyger Creek .
Earlier this year, Haman
Trace tied the Bobcats for
anc,ther first.
In Friday's only other
contest involving an SVAC
school, Coach Bob Ashley's
Highlanders will battle
Hannan, W. Va. SWHS is off
its biggest victory ever, a 44·7
thrashing of Kyger Creek.
Hannan goes into the
contest with a 6-3 record;· The
Wildcats own victories over
SV AC opponents, Hannan
Trace and North Gallia .
Saturday night, the annual
cross-county match between
Southern and Eastern will be
played on the Eagles' Field.
Unlike past years, a close
contest IS not predicted. The
Eagles of Coach Joe Mitchem
Will he out I? wrap-up the
SYAC champiOnShip and a
highly successful campaign.
Eastern is 8-1 going mto the
game while Southern 1s 0-7-1.
Southern's offense has not
scored a point all season. The
tie was a 0-0 decision with
Federal Hoekmg.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

The Midlands
Oklaboma 27 Nebraska 24
- Billy Sims and I.M. Hipp
stage a spectacular.
Iowa St. 22 Oklahoma st. 19
- Dexter Green closes in on
third straight 1,000-yard
rushing season.
Colorado 33 Kansas st. 6 _
Buffaloes are only out classed in Big Eight by
Oklahoma and Nebraska .
Missouri 30 Kansas 7 _
Tigers are up-&lt;~nd-down but "
Jayhawks are almost always
down
·
· The Southwest
Houston 20 Texas !5
Cougars heen pointing to this
one for some time.
Arkansas 32 Baylor 13 _
Razor backs seem ·to have
shaken their slump
SMU 30 Rice 6 _ Mike Ford
will pass Owls crazy.
Texas Tech 31 TCU 9 _
James Hadnot should have
fun with Horned Frogs •
porous defensive line
The FarWesi
UCLA 30 Oregon St. 7 _
Bruins have a game-breaker
in Theotis Brown.
USC 21 Washington 17 _
Huskies will have trouble
containing Charles White
Stanford 25 Arizona St.IO _
Steve Dils' passes puts Sun
Devils into total eclipse.
Washington
St.
27
California 20
Jack
Thompso~ is battling Dils for ~!~~n
1L 2~3 °6~
All-America honors.
North Gall ia 4 4 o 172 ' 126
Kyger Creek 4 4 1 104 194
Southwestern 4 5 0 153 136
Sy m . Valley 2 6 0 102 259

NOTICE

- "

trendy. They don 't even admit women, but now there's a :
Rotarian .named Alice - Allee Cooper. The singer, who was ·
named Vmce once upon a time, has heen made an honorary ~
member of the Hollywood chapter of Rotary, the only rock star '·
the Hollywood chapter ever has accepted. Cooper was honored '
for helping lead the drive - contributing thousands of dollars '
of hiS own - to restore the giant Hollywood sign a loealland· ~
mark.
'
'
•

Here's how we see the
games across the nation :
The East
Pem St. 24 North Carolina
·st . 14 -Expect the Nittany
Uons to come down a bit
after last week 's emotional
victory .
Pittsburgh 27 West Virginia
23 - For bragging rights in
the coal mines. This one is
almost always close.
Army 19 Boston College 12
- Cadets' aerial attack
grounds the Eagles.
Navy 25 Syra~se 15
Middies still have eye on
major post-season bowl.
The South
Alabama 25 I.SU 14 - Tony
Nathan ·outplays Charles
Alexander.
·
Maryland 40 Virginia 6 Back In the ACC, Terrapins
are a menace.
Clemson 30 North Carolina
13 - Tigers also hungry for
bowl bid.
Florida 20 Georgia 17 Our BEST BET. Gators end
Geor2ia 's SEC title hooes.
The Midwest
Notre Dame 30 Tennessee 7
- Irish have finally reached
preseason expectations.
Michigan 46 Northwestern
0 - Matchups like this take
away flavor of college game.
Michigan St. 26 Minnesota
14 - Spartans still have shot
at Big Ten title.
Ohio St. 32 Illinois 8 Buckeyes take advantage of
mistakes and the Illini make

DeviJJe, UPI Coach of Week

'
;

J
ROTARIAN ALICE?: Rotary Clubs are not know for being &lt;'

frustrating. years sipce a
North GaUia football squad
defeated a Kyger Creek
team. If the re~rve score is
any indication , the Pirates
should have an easy time
Friday night.
·
Earlier this season, North
Ga Uia 's reserves bombarded
KC, ~~.
During the last five years,
North Gallia has held early

Hannan Trace

2 7

89 186

Southern
0 7 I
0 237
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T P OP
Eastern
4 0 0 127 20
North Gall ia 3 1 o 84 55
Kyger Creek 2 2 I 47 104
Hannan Trace
2216453
Southwestern 2 3 0 85 59

Soulhern

0 116

Friday -

North Gall ia at

0 4 0
This week's games:

Kyger Creek and Hannan, W.
Va .
at
Southwestern.

Saturday Eastern.

Meet the Southern Tornadoes .
''

Rex Thornton
5-6, 1251bs.
Freshman End

Joe Bob Henslev

5-i,J091bs.
Freshman Bark

High school notes .••
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
high school football notes
from around the state:
MASSILLON (8+1 ) and
Canton McKinley (7-1) meet
for the · 83rd time Saturday
afternoon at Massillon with
the All American Football
Conference titie on the line .
McKinley is 4.0 in conference
play while the Tigers, who
hold a 45-3U edge in the
series which began in 1894,
are 3.().! lll the league.
WAUSEON, in a battle of
the unbeaten, pulled away
from Patrick Henry in the
final quarter for a 29-j) victory
and the championship of the

. N BA Standings
By Untted Press International

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Divi si on
W. L. Pet.
Phila
7 1 .875
NewJer sey
8 5. 615
Was h ing tn
7 5 .583
N ew York

Bost on

5

GB
112
2

7 .&lt;117

&lt;1

2 a .200
Central Di vis ion

6

w. L. Pet.

Hous ton

Sa n Ahtonio

6
6

GO

4 .600

6 .500

1

New Or lens

5

7 . 417

2

Clevela nd

5

7 .417

2

Atla n ta

4

6 .400

2

Detroi t

3

9 .250

4

Western conference
Midwest Divi sion
Denve r
Indiana

Kan Cify

W . L . Pet .
7 4 , 636
5 5 .500

6

6 .500

Milwauk e
5 9 .357
Chi cago
2 11 . 154
Pacific Di visi on

Seattle

GB

1112
II 1
31 1
6

W. L Pet . GB
9 1 .900

PhOen ix
B 4 .667
2
Gold en St .
a 4 .667 2
Los Angeles
7 4 .636 21;1
Po r tlan d
6 5 .545 31;2
Sa n Diego
6 9 .400 51 2
. Tu esday' s Result s
Washington 143, Por tl and 103
Sa n Diego 121 , New Or ins 115
Los Ange l es 112, Ch icago 111
Mi l waukee 125, Bos ton lOB
·
Wednesday's Gam es
Portland at Boston
New Jer sey at P hi lad elphi a
Milwauk ee ar D etroit
San Diego at San Antonio
Los Angeles at Indiana
Ka nsas City at Golden St ,
Clevelan d at Ph oenix
New York at Seattl e

Thursday's Games

Southern at

San Di ego at At lan ta
New York at Den¥er

Matson blasts
Bengal bosses
. CINCINNATI (UPI)
Former Cincinnati Bengal
Pat Matson complained
Tuesday that his old team
probably will not get the
"maturity" it needs to win if
club officials continue •
replacing veterans with
youngsters.
"I doubt that the Bengals
will ever see this maturity if
the same game plan is
followed each year - the plan
of trying to weed out the
team's veterans to replace
them with youth," Matson
said in a guest column in a
local newspaper .
"You can only go so far
with youthful enthusiasm "
said Matson. "The fact stlll
remains ~ team needs a hard
core, a war-toughened
veteran nucleus. It also helps
convey to the yoWlg NFL
player what it really takes to
win week in and week out."
Cincinnati , after finally
getting its first win two weeks
ago over Houston, lost its
ninth game in 10 starts
Sunday at San Diego.
~atson recalled that, ''as
was stated in a previous
obituary - jlon't get overly
optimistic about the Houston
win."

"Bodies in a morgue, on
occasion, make involuntary
movements," he said. "I
suppose that may bave heen
the case against Houston - .
an mvo'untery sign of life '
emanated from the Bengals.' ·
ancinnati nex1 tries to

"

'

·

come to life in Monday
night 's nationally televised
game against the Oakland
Raiders .

Northwest Ohio Athlet ic
League . Wauseon, whi ch
finishes its season Saturday
at Fremont St. Joseph, led 7.0
going inw the final quarter.
But the lndians' To dd
Myers raced 68 yards for a
touchdown early in the final
period and th ey added two
more TDs before the game
ended. Myers picked up 131
yards m 15 carries, while the
Wauseon . def ense held
Patrick Henry to 17 yards on
the ground.
JUNIOR ta ilback Ron
Brant raced for 261 in 21
carr ies Fr id ay ni ght in
Medina Buckeye's 42.0 win
over Oberlin Firelands .
Brant's big final ga me gave
him 1,562 ya rds on the season
and an average of 6.1 yards
per carry.
The win was the sixth in a
row for Coach
Ken
Woodruff's team, which lost
its first foW' . During the
winning streak, Buckeye has
outscored its six opponents
210-17and finished the season
with four straight shu touts.
DWAYNE Butler ran for
274 yards and thr ee
touchdowns Friday night to
spark Columbus Northland to
a 31-16 victory over Columbus
Marion Franklin. The 5-10,
160-pound
sen ior
had
touchdown runs of 5, 27 and 76
yards.
ALTHOUGH Defiance went
down to its tenth str aight 1978
loss, the Bulldogs' R1ck
Rohrer pu t on a dazzling
passi ng di splay . Rohre r
completed 16 of 19 attempts
for 340 yards and three
touchdowns in a 32-28 loss to
Delphos St. John 's. Mike
Shandle caught 10 of Rohrer's
tosses for 242 yards and all
three TDs. Going into the
finale , the Bulldogs' ninegame passing figures showed
20 completions in 72 attempts
for 243 yards.
EIGHTH-ranked
( AA)
Brookfield , paced by running
backs Darwin Ulmer and
Marc Marek , crushed thirdranked Elyria Ca tholic 33-14
Friday night. Ulmer had 135
yards in 23 carries and Marek
124 yards in 20 tries. Merck
scored a pair of touchdowns
and Ulmer one .
HANOVERTON
United,
paced by Randy Moffett's 201
ru shi ng ya rds and thr ee
touchdO\•ns, ran its record to
9.0 Friday night with a 49-9
win over Sebr ing. The Golden
Eagles, 9-1 the past two
unders under Coach Fred
Johnson , will go for a perfect
season Friday night against

•••••••••••••••••+
: NOW IN STOCK. • •

:

ARVIN

:

+PORTABLE HEATERS:
: BUY NOW WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD :

i PICKENS ~ARDWARE:+
..................
•

MASON, W. VA.

Chris Allen
~-9, 140 lbs.
Freshman Bark

Allen Pape
5·1, I06Ibs.
Fres hm an Back

Mmgo.
TRAILING 14-j] early in the
second quarter, secund·
ranked 1AA i St. Mar ys
Memorial rallied behind the
rWlning of junior Jeff Cisco
for a 28-14 victory over
Ottawa-Glandorf, clinching
at least a tie for the Western
Buckey e League title .
Cisco, whose 78-yard run in
the second quarter broke the
scoring ice for St. Marvs,
finished with 228 yards in.l4
carries . He also had TD runs
of 70 and 17 yards as he upped

hi s season's figures to l )9i
yards and 21 touchdown&lt;. St.
Marys closes the regular
season, friday night agaim 't
Van Wert.
NEWARK Catholic, the No.
1 ranked Class A team. won

Tri-County
Sport

its sixlh straight Uekin g

County League title Saturday
wit h a 10-0 win o\'er
Johnstown Monroe . Til e
shutout was the seventh in ;J
row for the Green Wa ve, wh o
look like a good bet tu be in
the state playoffs for the fi fU •
time in six years.

Our Interest is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Shop

Certificates
• Fi s hing Tackl e
and Rod s
an d Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
•Ball Glov es
Camping
Equipment
• Arch ery
• Indoor Games
• We
hav e Gilt
Certificates

:i.75 per ce nt paid on '
90 day Ce rtif icates of

Deposil.
$500 .00
Minimum..
lnteres l
Pa yable
Qua rterly .
~ substa ntia l pena lty is
Invoked on a ll

cert ificat~

accounts withd rawn pr·i o ~

to the date of maturity .

601 Mai n St.

· Pt . Pleasant. W. Va.

VISA '

The

Ath ens

County

Savi ngs &amp; Loan Co.

W. Main St ..
Across from Courthouse

PHONE
675 -2 988
'open Su nday 1· p .m .-6 p.m .
Monday thru Saturdav
~,.,. ,..... •" 8 CJ .m.

Pomeroy , Ohio

--------fSI,JC

IT'S NOT
TOO LATE!
GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS
COLLEGE
IS STILL TAKING
APPLICATIONS FOR CLASSES
STARTING OCT. 30, 1978
'

Classes being offered can be applied
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind. We ca n
give you the training that you need
to qualify for the job of your future .
We have more calls from employers
in the area for our graduates, than
we have graduates.
Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive you r
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you.

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
'
OR STOP IN AND
VISIT US AT THE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
Reg. No. 75.02-34728
'I '

.,

�•

--.

4 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978

Major
Hoople's
•
Football
Forecast

"

Jim Rice American Lea~e!s MVP;
'

By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Spdl'lS Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) Boston'sJim Rice, who spoke
softly and carried the biggest
stick baseball has seen in
decades, received a hitter's
ultimate honor 1Uesday when
he was named the American
League's Most Valuable
Player by a surprisingly wide
margin over RQI\ Guidry, the
major leagues' premier
pitcher.
Rice, the seventh Boston
player to capture MVP
honors since the inception of
the award in 1931 and the first
since Fred Lynn in 1975,
received 20. first •place votes
and efght second · place
mentions for 352 points from
the 2B voters - two from each
AL city - to outdistance
Guidry, the AL Cy Young
Award. winner, by 61 points.
Guidry, who compiled a
record-setting 2:i-3 record for
the World Champion New
York Yankees, received eight
first-place votes, 19 seconds
and one thiril for 291 points.
Outfielder Larry Hisle of
Milwaukee was third with 201
points.
Rice led the major leagues
in six categories : hits {213),
total bases (406 ), triples (15),

home runs {46), runs batted
in ( 139) and slugging
percentage ·( .600). He was
second in the majors ill runs
scored (117) and was the first
player in history to lead his
league in homers, triples and

runs batted in .
The right-llanded Rice was
the first American Leaguer to
reach 400 total bases since
Joe DiMaggio in 1937 and ·also
the first in the majors since
DiMaggio to collect 400 total
bases, 100 RBI, 200 hits and 40

homers in one season.

'"It (MVP) hasn 't hit me

yet, but now that it's over,
I'm thrilled about it," said
Rice, who had a relatively
easy time beating out Guidry
- whose figures also rate
among the greatest in major

Failure to get Blue
changed Reds' plans

theguyswho play everyday," :~
said Rice.
•:
Guidry realizes that many , .,
voters may' have s hare d .IF\• I
Rice's view about t~e '::,
qualifications of an MVP ·,-~
game winner. Hls 1.74 earned winner .
~ 1 ·~
run average was surpassed
" In my eyes, Jim Rice did ·
by a left-llander in AL history · the same thing hitting as I did ..~
only •by Dutch Leonard's 1.01 pitching ....: have an awesome ~~~
iii i914 and his nine shutouts year," said Guidry from his .
tied Babe Ruth's league Lafayette, La., home. •" I'm ·,,
record for a lefty.
his No. I bac)&lt;er. But, if
Guidry set a club record 248 you're going to exclude
strikeouts for the season and pitchers from the Most
his 18 strikeouts against the V a 1 u a b l e
P Ia y e r _
California Angels were the consideration, then you ~
most eve r in one game by an · better put an asterisk oo the - .!.
AL left-llander . He also set a award ."
club record by winning 13
Rounding out the top ten ,
consecutive games at the vote-getters were : {4) '
start 'of the season and 15 of Kansas City outfielder Amos '•
his victories followed Yankee Otis; (5) Detroit designated
losses .
hitter Rusty Staub; {6 ) New
Undoubtedly, the fact that York third baseman Graig
Guidry won the Cy Young Nettles;
( 7) California '" ·
Award hurt him in the voting designated
hitter
Don .;.;
for MVP .
Baylor; (8) Baltimore first :•..
"As long as I've been baseman Eddie Murray; (9) ·"·
playing baseball, the Cy Boston catcher Carlton Fisk; " ~
Young was choSen for and (10) Kansas City catcher "'
pitchers and the MVP is for Darrell Porter.
; ;:.
league history,
The Yankee left-llander's
25-3 won-lost recor.d gave him
the
highest
winning
percentage in big league
history ( .893 ) for a 111 or more

win 27·24. And remember,
you read it first in Hoople.
If that trio of crowd ·
pleasing contests isn't enough
to satisly you football
filberts, how about these
contests: Southern Cal vs.
Washington; UCLA vs.
Oregon Stale, and Arizona
CINCINNATI
With it, and I always will be. I pitcher iii Los Angeles .
State vs . . Stanford in the
The Reds are not alone in
memories of an ill·fated think if we had Vida Blue this
Pacific 10. And this pair in the
wanting
John's services. He
attempt to gain the services past season, we would have
Big Ten : Michigan vs. North·
was
selected
by
the
of pitcher .Vid.a Blue still won." Blue was with the
western and Purdue vs .
maximum
13
teams
in
the
fresh, Cincinnati Reds' Oakland A's when the Reds
Wisconsin.
says
free
agent
draft
and
he
President Dick Wagner' tried to obtain him in the
The Southern California
admits
his baseball club had trade later nullified by his price will not be cheap for
Trojans
Washington
to go into the free agent Commlssl·o ner Bowie Kuhn. any team.
Huskies game is the most
"I 'm not saying I will be a
He then ·went to the San
market .
important one in the Pacific
bargain
basement beauty,"
"It was the most expedient Francisco Giants.
10 this week. The loser will
John
said
iii a telephone in·
The Reds, searching for
way of doing it," Wagner said
fall out of title contention.
terview
from
his Los Angeles
in a telephone interview from pitching help, are hoping now
The Huskies are getting
"
But,
the
package my
home.
Nagoya, Japan, where the to sign free agent Tommy
better every week, but, in attorney
and
·
I
put
together
Reds are on an . exhibition John of the Los Angeles
ahem - our humble opinion
very
reasonable."
will
he
tour. "A year ago, we at· Dodgers.
(Ed. Note : Hoop~e, hum·
John said that his
"We will make every
tempted
to acquire the
ble?), the Trojans have a
"'I
negotiations
with the Dodgers
contract of a pitcher within reasonable effort to sign
more solid team and should
no
bearing
on
talks
will
have
the rules. We still feel we Tommy John," said Wagner,
win a speaker, 36-28.
were correct in what we did. who is cutting short his with other clubs. " There was
Terry Donahue's strong
"But the commissioner _Japanese visit to return to the more to the situation (with
UCLA eleven will stay on
thar. just
ruled that we couldn't have United States Nov. 20 to hold the Dodgers)
course for its showdown with Drake 15 W Texas St 13
For a smoother ride ...
.,
11
money,
John
said.
a
negotiating
session
with
the
.Vida Blue. It was selective
Southern California , by Duke 22 Wake Forest 6
The pitcher said he was
whipping the Oregon Sta.te '· E Carolina 28 Wm&amp;Mary 22 justice. I am still up&lt;P' Ahout
·'tired
of hearing how he had
'
Beavers, 311-17. And Arizona Georgia 20 Florida 14
been paid during the 1975
State will play up to its Fla St 36 Va Tch 28
season when he underwent
"
potential · in
defeating GrambUng 41 So Caro St 21
.,
surgery to repair his .
Featuring
our
FMC
Stanford, 42·24.
Holy Cross 28 Mass 1~
damaged arm and missed the
Electronic Wheel Balancer
For Michigan and Purdue it Idaho St 30 Idaho 12
whole year. Since then, John
will be warm-up Saturday as Indiana 24 Iowa 18
has come back strongly and
they whack Northwestern Colorado 35 Kan St 7
streak.
By FRED UEF
posted records of 20-7 in 1977
and Wisconsin respectively. Ky 27 Vanderbilt 13
UPI Spurts Writer
Clippers 121, Jazz 115:
and 17-10 last season.
The Wolverines and Boiler· Louisville 25 Mphs St 20
They might be ships
Uoyd Free had 29 points,
"l have heard it ·since
makers will be sharpening Miami (0) 34 Kent St I&amp;
passing
in
the
night
the
Nick
Weatherspoon 25 and 1975," John said. "Look a guy
18
35
their attacks for their head· Mieh St
Mlno
difference is the Los Angeles Coniel Norman 21 to carry in a factory gets hurt on the
on meeting, which could Miss 2l1Ulaae 20
Lakers are cruising on a six· San Diego in its comeback. job and he gets..paid. Same
dictate the Big 10 Rose Bowl Miss St. 27 Auburn 25 •
game
win11ing streak and the The Clippers trailed by 19 thing with me. I helped them
participant. We see Michigan • Missouri 38 Kansas 12
Chicagp Bulls look about points at the hall but overtook with a pennant ' the year
taking Northwestern 49-!4; Moalana 21 No Colo 14
ready to jump overboard.
New Orleans in the third before. I kept getting letters
and
Purdue
thumping Nebraska %8 Oklahoma 24
The Lakers and Bulls period.
from them telling me how
Wisconsin 36-10
Wyo 28 Nev Las-Vegas %0
crossed paths in Chicago Bucks 125, Celtlcs I08:
much
I helped . Then I had to
In so~e other games New Mexico 27 Colo St 16
. 1Uesday night and it was
Milwaukee snapped a hold out to get the money I
worthY of note, Clemson will Mleh 49 Northwestern 14
more of the same for both,
three:game losing streak on deserved."
take the measure of North Notre Dame 35 TeDD 17
Los Angeles came away the strength of 19 points each
Meanwhile, Wagner insists
Carolina, 28-7; Penn State Ohio St 49 Illinois 7
with a 112-111 victory wben by Marques Johnson and that the Reds want very
28
Olda St. I%
will beat North Carolina Iowa St
Norm Nixon made a layup Brian Winters. The Bucks much to keep their third
State, 27-15; and Pittsburgh . Arizona Z4 Oregon 10
with 15 secood remaining. pulled away in the third baseman Pete Rose from
will knock off West Virginia, UCLA 38 Oregon St 17
After dropping four of their quarter when they ran off · leaving Ciiicinnati. Rose went
24-12 in the 71st renewal of Pacific 15 S Jose St 14
first five games this season, . eight straight to take an 81J..78 through the free agent draft
their' series.
Penu St 27 No Car St 15
the Lakers are now 7-4 and lead over last-place Boston. after failing to reach an
Now go on with my Harvard 24 Penu 21
steadily regrouping.
agreement with the Reds.
forecaSt.
Pitt 24 West Va 12
'The Bulls are 2-11, have the
"We
have acted like we want
Saiurday, Nov. 11
SMU 32 Rice 14
fewest victories in the league
him
very much, 11 Wagner
Ga Tech 35 .\lr Force 18
Rutgers 42 Temple 22
NHL Stanpings
and appear very much lost at
said. "You don't make the
By United Pre!U Internationa l
Alabama 33 LSU 21
USC 35 Waoh 28
sea.
kiiid of offer we made, then
campbell
conference
Ariz st 42 Stanford %4
So Miss 28 BowUng Gr 14
Patrick Division
It looked as if the Bulls
re-adjust it for him if you
Army 25 Boston Col 10
Navy 24 Syracuse 6
·W. L. T. Pts.
were due for a . change Atlan t a
don't
want him. We do want
11
1
2
2.4
Ball St 28 w Mlch 15
Houston 27 Texas 24
1Uesday. They led 57-45 at NY Rangers
8 ' 1 3 • 19 him."
Baylor 24 Arkansas 21
Utah 14 UTEP 10
T 3 2
16
halftime and maintained a 00. NY ISillnders
Asked in Japan if he hoped
Philadelphia
5 5 3
1J
BYU 3% san otego st 21
Texas Tech 31 TCU 21
80 advantage going into the
Smythe Division
he
would stay with the Reds,
· Brown 32 Dartmouth I%
Utah St 30 Weber St 17
w. L. r . Pts. Rose said: "That was my
fourth quarter. The Lakers,
Calff 33 Wash St 21
Maryland 36 Vlrglola 18
5 2 4 U
however, held together and Chicago
'•
Val')couver
5 8 1 ll inner urge, you might say.
CIDelnnatl 24 Ohio u 20
Tulsa 44 Wichita St 2I
2 8 4
8 But I've got a deep down
with 41 seconds left Lou St. Louis
Clemson 28 No Car 7
Purdue 35 Wisconsin 10
2 9 2
6
NEW AT:
Hudson hit a jumper to pull Colorado
feeling that nothing's going to
Wales Conference
Columbia 21 Cornell 14
Yale 10 Princeton 7
them within one point, lll·
Norris Division
happen with this club. I've
W. L. T. Pts.
110.
made
up my mind not to
Montreal
7 4 2
16
Hudson then tied up Detroit
4 4 4
12 worry about it; just make the
John Fultz, Mgr.
4 6 0
8 best I can of it."
.,
Chicago guard Reggie Theus Los Angeles
E. Main, Pomeroy
992-2101
_ 700
...................
iririiiiroi...._ _ _ _
_ _ _,:
ington
2 7 J
7
and -a jump ball was called wash
PittSburgh
2 8 2
6
Adilms Division
with 20 seconds to go. On the
W. L. T. Pts.
tap, Nixon took possessioo Boston
7 2 3
17
and raced the length of the Toronlo
7 S 2
16
Buffalo
3 5 3
9
floor for his basket.
Minnesota
3
6
2
8
407 PEARL, MIDDLEPORT
Chicago then called time
Tuesday•s ResUlts ·
N.Y .IIslndrs 5, Minnesota 2
out and unsuccessfully tried
Atlanta 4, Vancouver 2
to work the ball to center
Toronto 5, St. LOUIS 0
Wednesday's Games
Artis GibJlore. John Mengel!
MinnesOta at N.Y . Rangers
f
heaved a desperation shot
Montreal at Washington
'
Colorado at Pittsburgh
from 111 feet, the buzz~r
Vancouver at Oetrol1
sounded and it was back to
"Ace is the place with
Toronto at Chicago
the drawing l&gt;oard
Phil a at Los Angeles
the Helpful Hardware Man'
Thursday's G•mes
"I thought we had it woo,"
Detroit at Montreal
said Chicago Coach Larry
wash ington at Boston
.,.;
Pittsburgh at Buffalo
Costello, whose club outrebounded the Lakers, 36-17,
but still came up short.
WHA Standings
Elsewhere in the NBA,
By United Press International
W. L. T. Pts.
Washington routed Portland
7 6 1
15
routed, 14~103, San Diego Quebec
New England
6 4 2
14
6 4 2
14
defeated New Orleans, 121· Winnipeg
6 4 1
13
115, and Milwaukee beat Cincinnati
Birmingham
5 5 0
10
5c Extra
Boston, 125-108.
Edmonton
4 6 0
8
2 7 2
6
Bullets 143, TraU Blazers 103: lndianl1polis
Tuesday's Result
Bob Dandridge scored 24
Winnipeg 2, Quebec 1
WedneSday's Games
points
to
lead eight
Indianapolis at Cincinnati
HR S. d
: 10:00 A.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun .. Thun. 10:00 A.M. til il:OU P.M. Friday and
Washington players in double
Sa1ur ay .
.
Ed monton at Quebec
Thursdly's G1mes
figures as the Bullets broke
Sat
UsAf
the
Pomeroy
Btnd
Bridge
Winnipeg C!lt Birmingham
Portland's five-game winning
Edmonton at New England

By Major Amos B. Hoople
_Peerless Prophet
Egad, friends, if the
seismographs are dancing
wildly this Saturday In the
areas around Lincoln, Neb.,
Birmingham, Ala ., and
Austin, Texas, they won't kaff-kilff - he recording
earthquakes .
Rather, it will he the liuf·
fing and puffing and thum·
ping and bumping as
Nebraska
challenges
Oklahoma for the Big 8
crown; Alabama tangles with
LSU in a big Southeastern
Conference Showdown; and
Texas jousts with Houston for
the Southwestern Conference
t itle . Jove! What dream
matchups!
OFFENSE is the name of
the game for botll Nebraska
and. Oklahoma. They score
points like a kid - heh-lleh with a hot hand on a pinbaU
machine . For the season
they've averaged better than
40 points per game.
Leading the offensive
charge for Oklahoma's
Sooners are quarterback
Thomas Lott and fleet-footed
Bill Sims. (Ohe, he can fly!)
Nebraska counters with hard·
running I.M. Hipp and passer
Tom Sorley.
On defense, the edge goes
home
forces :
to the
Nebraska. And so does the
Hoople nod . Vas, dear
readers, your Peerless
Prophet sees the Cornhuskers
turning back this great
Sooner team by a 28-24 count
- har-tumph !
Ala bama's Crimson Tide
will continue its relentless
march toward the SEC throne
by defeating a good LSU club
in another bruising battle.
The combined passing •
running attack spearheaded
by Jeff Rutledge and Tony
Nathan for Alabama will
outscore the ground attack by
infantrymen de luxe Charles
Alexander of LSU . Make it
Alabama 33, LSU 21 - ·urn·
kumph!
In Texas, the SWC' crown
wiU be on the liiie as invading ·
Houston
meets
the
Longhorns. The Cougars are
hot and - hak-kaff - when
you're hot you're hot, as the
saying goes. And your faith·
lui correspondent, having
seen the heat the Cougars can
generate when they are
moving at fuU·steam, con·
fidently predicts Hous, on will

_____________________
Meigs Tire Center, Inc.

ANNOUNCING
COMPUTERIZED
WHEEL BALANCING

LA edges Bulls

...

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA

HARDWARE

This Week's
Dairy Valley , . -

992-3662

'

.

HAM SANDWICH

PRODUCE
SPECIALS
TANGERINES
Doze.n
Ptt.EBE:'S STO~ ·E
Thursdoy, "ov. 9through Nov. 11
we uraaly Accept Foci. Food Stomp•
Mondoy lllru Fridoy
9:001117:00
Sarurdly 9:00.9:00

CLOSED

89~

GRAPEFRUIT ·

'
.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Doyle Smith . observed their
49th wedding anniversary
r ecently at their Racine,
Route 2, home .
Married on Od . 21), 1929, at
Dunbar, W. Va. , the couple
are the parenls of five sons,
and one daughter. They have
Zl grandchildren and one
great-grandcliild. Mr. Smith
is a native of Meigs County,
and his wife is a native of
West Virginia.
·
Attending the celebration
were .Mr. and Mrs. William

5 L&amp;

89~

SUNDAYS

YELLOW ONIONS
Jib.

Bag

39~

Marble top
is marred

DEAR POLLY - Can you
tell me how I can remove con·
densation marks !(on\ marble top tables? The tops .are
solid marble. Thank you for
any help you can give me. DOROTHY
DEAR DOROTHY - You
·
. might try mixing household
cleanser with hot water to
I v
I U make a paste. Apply thickly ,
cover with a piece of plastic
and leave for several days
before removing . If this does
not work you could try soaking cotton or paper towels
with peroxide a nd a few drops
universal critical and popular of ammonia , apply, cover and
acclaim, with his perform· leave for about 24 hours.
ances regarded as a highlight Some things etch so deeply in
of the musical season in marble that it is hard to
countless cities throughout restore the luster. But after
the marks are gone try buff.
the globe .
Born in Russia in 1937, he ing it with a soft cloth and
began his musical studies at talcwn powder . - ?OLLY
DEAR . POLLY - Mrs.
the age of six and two years
later entered the Central R.C.R. might try my method
Music School in Moscow,
where he . studied with the
OHIO VALLEY GRANGE
well-known
pedagogue
Ohio Valley Grange, 2612,
Anaida Sumbatian for ten· Letart Falls, will meet
years. In 1956, he astounded Thursday at the hall at 6 p.m.
the musical world by winning
Randall Roberts of the
First Prize in the prestigious Racine ER Squad will give a
Queen Elisabeth Competition talk and show slides on
in Brussels, having been safety . Each member is to
unanimously selected for the bring two covered dishes for
h 0nor by a distinguished potluck refreshments .
international panel which
The Almanac
included Arthur . Rubinstein,
United PressiDtematlonal
Emil Gileis and Robert
Today is Wednesday, Nov :
Casadesus.
8, the 312th day of 1978 with 53
Following his triumph, the
to follow,
demand for his performances
The moon is between its
grew to iiiclude tours of
f1rst quarter and full phase.
Belgium, ermany
and
The morning stars are
Holland, followed by his first
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
North
American tour,
The evening stars are Mer·
arranged .in 1958 by im·
cury and Mars.
presario Sol Hurok. His
Those born on this date are
performances, then as now,
under
the sign of Scorpio.
were received with enormous
British
astronomer
and unprecedented acclaim.
Carnegie Hall was sold out Edmond Halley was· born
well in advance of his ap- Nov. 8, 1656. This Is actress
pearance, and his debut was Katherine Hepburn's 69th
hailed as an unqualified birthday.
On this day in history:
success.
In 1837, Mount Holyoke
Vladimir
Ashkenazy's
subsequent tours in this Seminary in Massachusetts
country have been marked became the first American
with equal distinction and in college founded exclusively
· 1962, he participated in the for women.
In 1889, Montana was
Second Tchaikowsky Com·
petition, in whi~h he became admitted to the Union as the
41st state.
joint First Prize Winner.
In 1943, more than 400,000
Jn
addition
to
his
numerous concerts around Allied soldiers invaded North
Africa.
the world, he maintains a
In 1974, eight former mem·
heavy recording schedule,
continually increasing his list bers of the Ohio National
of reCordings on the London Guard were a quitted of
and RCA labels, all of which charges in the 1970 Kent State
are best-sellers and among · College shootings, in which
the most universally praised four Students were killed and
was the complete Beethoven nine wounded during an anti·
Piano Concerti, recorded war demonstration.
with the· Chicago Symphony
A thought f&lt;r the day:
under the direction of Sir
English novelist Samuel
Georg Soltl.
Ticket reservations may be Butler said, "To live is like
made at the Memorial love -all reason is against it
Auditorium Box Office, 12 and ull healthy instinclls for
noon-4 p.m., Monday thru it."
Friday or by calling 61'h194·
6807 .

LiPTON NOODLES DINNER .......... ~. ?~: .. 49'

Star Grange met

for beating eKg whites so they
a re stiff. Break eggs and put
. whites in a plate. sprinkle two
blespoons of s ugar fur each
egg over the whites, let set
until ready to use and then
use wire egg beater. GWENDOLYN.
DE AR POLLY - I learned
long ago pol to beat egg
whites in a plastic bowl. In
fact, one is warned about this
on the box that contains one
of the best known brands of
anKel food cake mix . SARAH
DEAR POLLY - Do tell
Mrs. R. C. R. to beat her egg
whites in a glass bowl and
never in plast ic. I read this

jennifer Lawrence

The charter was drapt!d in
memory of Mrs. Aim~ Smith
at the recent mt!elinJ{ ·or Star
Grange 778 held at the hall.
A turkey dinner preceded
the meetin~ with 21 members
attend ing . The b(tking contest, the Victory CakfJ, was
held with eight entri es. The
winner was I jnda Montgomery, wit h the judging being done by Ruby Rife a nd
Vicki MHI.'om!J4!r .
The annual Christmos supper was set for Dec. 16 with a
$'2 gift excha nge. The mea l
will be s~rved at 7 p.m.

EVA BIBBEE
Mrs . Eva Bibbee, former
resident, will o!Jserve her
89th birthday on Nov. 12 at
the Mark Care Center iii
McConnelsville. Friends are
asked to send cards to the
center .

Baker's

CHOCOlATE CHIPS .....................~~.~~. 99'

Jennifer Lawr e~ce ,
daughter uf Mr. and Mrs .
doing 11 find they never fail to J ames Lawrence, celebrated
beat up better.
her first birthday on Oct. 30
Perhaps some of the with a party at her home in
readers have had the pro· Syracuse.
blem of contour sheets split·
Gifts were presented to
ting open at the corners long Jennifer and ice crecun cmd a
before the sheets are worn Mickey Mouse cake baked by
oul. If so, try inserting a piece her mother wen~ 1;erved.
of the stretchy portion of a Guest s were Jennif e r 's
while sports sock . It gives grandparents , Mr. and Mrs .
enough to take the strain off Qarence Lawrence, an aunt
of the machine stitching as and uncle, Mr. and Mrs . Joe
you stretch the corner of the Johnson, an uncle, Bryan
sheet ' over the mattress. l.::.~wrence, a n i;iUnt, Mrs.
Usually just doing this to one Me lvt'n
Lawrence, a nd
corner will be all the sheet Jeremy l.::.tWlf:nce, Mrs. Danneeds . -MRS. A.W.A.
ny Proffitt and Jennifer, ami
Polly will send you one of Mrs . Robert Hysell .
her signed ll1ank-yuu
She also received gifts fr om
newspaper coupon clippers if Mr. and Mrs . John Crooks ,
~he uses your
£avorile her grandparents, an aunt,
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in Patricia Crooks , Colwnbus;
her colwnn. write POLLY'S and her great-grandmother,
pOINTERS' in care of this Mrs. Lura Crooks, Mrs ..Jack
newspaper.
Cwnrnins and THssi.

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••L.~.••s1.09
French City

.

LUNCH MI:'A'JS................................ 179
~

FRENCH CITY BOILED
Kraft

Am~rlcao

or Pimento

CHEESE ............. -~.~:·.~~.~·. 69'

HAMt;~~~

lb.

s1.291b.s1.79

4SC
YELLOW ONIONS .. ~-~?...
3 lb. Bag

s tb.

5

MARGARINE ........~~~~~~~. 69' FLORIDA ORANGES... •29

A

2 lb. ORE-IDA FRENCH FRIES ••••.•••• ~~!~. 994

1 lb. Blue Bonnet

v

Bag

bagsl

te

FRUIT COCKTAIL. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79'
WHOLE TOMATOES .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 494
VLASIC SAUERKRAUT. ••••••••••••••••••••••••.594

E

c:.n••

14'1z oz. Hunt's

$20

32 oz. Valsic

1O'lz oz. Hi It on

OYSTER STEW•••••••~····················· 21s1.29
ROAST BEEF &amp; GRAVY.•••:••••••••••••••••••• 994
12 oz . Armour

SALE

REG. 149.95

0.24 oz .

Ail the basics you'll ever need are right here
in the Fashion Mate zig·zag machine . With
15 interchangeable Fashion stitches, a 4 step built · in buttonholer, front drop·ln
bobbin and more. Model 246.
· Isn' t it lime to trade in your old sewmg machm e
for a new one? Ask about tr ade· ins on any ma~e
and modet.wheth el it's a ~ng~· machine or no t

THE FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, 0 .

REGULAR KOOL-AIDS •••••••••••••••••••••• 6/654
49 oz.

soap powder

$

BOLD DETERG ENT.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.53
4 roll White Cloud

TOILET TISSUE. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~. 99e
10 oz. Maxwell House

INSTANT COFFEE, •••. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••i::..$4.49

]

'
••

the graceful~ tiered

PAOOOA

SALe·PRICEP

CAReFREe

~

MUSHROOM
OR

TAN BARK

l'

$
ONLY

''

•
SHEET

HURRY WHILE PRICES IS RIGHTI

· Also available with 5 diamonds set
in a ring of rubies or sapphires.
· Whole

CUT-UP. .........~~~ 594

$

honey loaf, pepper loaf
or pork &amp; beef loaf.

S]9995

.CHICKENS. ..........L~~.554

YOUNG WIVES
The Young Wives Club of
Chester will have a used toy
sale Friday, Nov. 10 from
9:30a .m. to 5: 30p.m . at the
Chester Masonic Hall .
All toys are in good con·
dition and all proceeds will go
to charity.

once and since I have been

15 shimmering diamonds set in this
ultra·graceful styles raises its setting
to new fashion heights. You'll love the
look!
As seen on
Ingels TV Special!
Reg. $499.95

CRISCO SHORTENING ••••••••••••••• 3 lb. 11.99

Cleland, Pam Diddie, Shawn,
Cliad and Justin, Ma ry
Porter a nd Ma rk, Ann Layne,
Kenny , Karen Layne and
J oseph. Lucille Diehl and
Brian, Ma tth ew J ewe ll ,
Ja mey Hensler, David
McMillian , Dion J unes, David
Powell and Doug, Libby.
full ph a nd Damon Fishe r.

Turns one

•

astriking~ new concept
in ring design

Chicken, ·cheese, bHI, butter

BOLOGNA................. ~ ..... !~: .. st•
JUMBO FRANKIE$ .................. ~.~~:. 5109
:POLISH SAUSAGE ..... ~ ... .'..........~·.. gge
UVER PUDDING ................. ,.....1~·•••sl"

Angela ,, Charleston, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Chapman . Ray and Darlene
Nitro, W. VA.; Mr. and Mrs :
Ch~rl e s
Chapman ,
Chrrstopher Lee , Charleston;
Ray Wilson, Portland, and
Mrs . Ma ry Shaffer ,
Charleston, W. Va.

recently entertained with a
halloween pa rty by Damon
fisher a t the home of his
parents, I ;pby and Bob
Fisher , Racine.
The boys entered .a haunted
house w hen~ ghost stories
were told and games were
played. Rcfres hinents were
serve&gt;&lt;!. Attending were F:arl,
Jean, Marty, Tracy and Jim

ltacinc Cub Scout Pack 24:!
and Roy Seoul Troup 241 were

Polly Cramer
_..::=::c.:=.:::.:...________________

English chamber 0 -rrbest-rn
part of Artist Series
The Ohio University Artist
Series will present The
English Chamber Orchestra
with .Vladimir Ashkenazy as
conductor and soloist. The
program will be presented in
Memorial Auditorium on
Tuesday , November 14, at 8
p.m.
The English Chamber
Orchestra has been a major
Ioree in Britain's musical life
since its iriauguration in 1960,
and now stands recognized as
one of the world's leading
chamber orchestras. Its
personnel is a unique blend of
well-established
and
chamber music players and
the most promising of a
generation
of
younger
musicians, who often per·
form without a conductor,
· dlrectect by their leader. ,
The orchestra has for many
years been among the
favorite Instruments for
music making of artists such
as Britten, Barenboim and
Leppard. Britten made the
English Chamber Orch~stra
his "Resident Orchestra" at
the Aldeburgh Festival and
over the years it was used for
the premieres of many of his
orchestral works and operas,
iiicluding "Owen Wingrave"
and HDeath in Venise."
Daniel Barenboim chose
tlie orchestra for his recor·
ding and public perform·
ances of the complete cycle of
Mozart Plano Concertos, and
Raymond Leppard bas
recorded and played a wide
r~nge of Baroque music with
this enaemble. More recently,
Plnchas Zukerman has begun
to work regularly with it and
already a very rare rapport
has been established.
The orchestra frequently
appears on television and
radio, and records for all the
major companies, with many
discs winning a variety of
coveted International
awards.
It was appropriate that
during the Silver Jubilee year
of 1977 that H.R.H. The
Prince of Wales honored the
English Chamber Orchestra
Music SOciety by becoming
its patron ii1 succession to the
lfte Lord Britten.
" Long considered one of the
t)tans of the keyboard,
\(ladimir Ashkenazy has
11guiarly performed to

Boy scouts, cub scouts entertained

POLLY·s POINTERS

HISTORY

STOVE TOP STUFFING ..................~ ~.•;. 65'

RIN~

K. Smit h, Kenneth, Tracy
Renee , Chr ista Ma rie
Strongsville; James H. Sinitl;
of Lake wood ; Mr. and Mrs .
Clar·ence T. Smith, Teddie ,
Eric. Bria n, Greg, and

v ALLEI

HUNTS
KETCHUP. •••, •....., ......... ~~.~:·.~.".~ 59'.
Pork, chicken, &amp; cornDreaa

1
CARNATION
. . DRY MILK ............... ~.~~~. 2.19
lb. quorters
,
PARKAY MARGARINE....................... . 59

,

fielebrate anniversary

~'~~~ ""'" 99

ADOLPH'S DAIRY

-

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978

SPECIALS

HAM
SANDWICH

..

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY
i06 N.

"Two in One Store
2nd Ave.
Middleport ,

'

.'

�..
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978
::r,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,::,,:,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,&lt;:)

MiddJeport Church of Christ staged

il
•.:.J

Helen Help

II Halloween

\ hmTh uf Chri st staged a
halloween party fur the

R EHABILITATION OR P UNISHMENT'?
&lt;.'hildren rcecntly.
DEAR HELEN.
Mrs. Beulah Roush. Mrs:
I have a · sister who abused her two children so badly they
0t1rut hy Baker, and Mrs.
were put in foster homes . 0 11e baby was hospitalized l&gt;t&gt;rau:;t• Trudy · Williams judged the
of her beatings. He may never be quite 1\0rmal. psyd10lugit&lt;il· costwnes H\:Val'ding silver
Jy anyway.
:
doll a rs t o Cindy Stewart, the
She is barely 18 and pregna nt again . The judge only put her prettiest ; Ja red Stewa rt ,
in an institution for· a while. I t hink they s hould put t h1s krnd 111 eutiest : Li sa Hon a ker, .,.
jail and throw away the kt•y .
·
sweetest : Sherrie Cooper,
But instead my fami ly showers sym pathy &lt;&gt;n her an d treats ug liest: J a red Sheets, fun her like she is special. Why dun 't they cons ider the helpless niest; Cht~rl otte Cooper, must
children she mistr ct-~led ? Evt!n my mut hc r make:; excuses fur orig ina l, and Ali!:lon Ge rl~ch ,
her, th ough my Sister ha" said t el'l'iblt• things about Mo1n. She most clever.
at"tua lly influenced t he socia l worker so tha t my parents
Games were playl&gt;d undew·
could n' t r aise t heir gra ndchildnm.
the direction of Cathy Cooper
[l seems l he innocent kids a re pun ished doubl y while the ir
with a ll of the chi ldr·en
mother goes free.- CONCE RNE[) AUNT
reeeivinc prizes.
P.S. Please a dvise all mothers to Sl'Ck psyrhialrir help if
Favors wer~ blowouU; a nti
they feel they can 't cont rul their'tem per s and might ai&gt; use crackerjacks. Pizza and pop
t heir kids .
we n : se rved fulluwinHprayer
DEAR AUNT :
by the Rev. George Glaze.
In one sentence you say child a busers should be locked away Children Attending were Lisa
for· life. La ter you advise psyci&gt;iatr·ir help for them.
· Honake r , Stephanie See, Cin Let's look at t he double st a m!ard t hat ma kes you seek dy Stewart, Linda Chapman ,
reha bilitation for others, but onl y hars h puni shment for your Jared, Aaron and Adam
sistt! r . l s She really beyond redemption ur are yuu so bittt! r you Sheets , Sherrie and Chorlotte
want nothing but revenge'!
Coope r , Tr·ev a nd Clinton
I'd like to hear the story fi'Om drfferent points or view: your
mother's, your sister 's, t he social wu1·ker 's. Until then, I'm a
one-person hung jury - H.
DEAR HELEN.
I've been married twice and with both wives, I was unfaithful. Sinee m y las t di vorce I've been seei ng a young woman
I love very much. ·
The thing is , she also sees another mcm twice a week. When
he takes her out, he stays overnight with her. I see hel· on the
other nights. She t ells m e this is something she has to do a nd
thinks I ~hould unders tand . What can I do ? - H E A ~~­
BROKE N
DEAR HEARTBROKEN:
You can understand - how your ex-wife fell on exposure to
yo ur WJfaithfulness.
.
And if you can 't take it, as they eouldn 't, then you can do as
they did: qui t. -H.
·
DEARHE I..EN.
I was touched a nd saddened by the letter from t he 70-yearold lady who was so lone ly she welcomed j unk ma il and
wondered how to be put on adve rtisers' mailing lists.
Only moths and butterilies inhai&gt;it my mailbox too. Please
put us in touch and may be we canlielp each other 's loneliriess.
' ' -LITTLE OLD GRANDMA WITH A LOT OF SPUNK ·
DEAR GRANDMA :
, And the many othe1·s who responded to " Lonely" 1
I've sent your letters on to her . While s he can 't ans wer tllem
all , r est assured that th1s 70-year-old IS no longer lonely!
Thanks for being kind ! - H.

Pomona Graf!ge met Friday

Glaze, Pete Brick les, Chr is
and Jared Stewart, Tara a nd
Ali son Ger lach, Malt Raker ,
Matt Rrwi n , Jennifer
McKinley, Kathy Thomas.

,----~-· -·,

1·

Social

1

I Calendar!
FRIDAY
WESTERN CB Club F riday
7 p.m. a t dub ho use. Gift
exc h a n ge.
Chr ist m as
projects will be discussed . All
members urged to atten d.
MUNDAY
POME ROY PTA, Monday ,
7::«&gt; p.m . I'OO,rn visitati on.
Program, on ta xes by Ca rl
and Mary Teaford of H a nd R
Block. F ourth and fifth g r ade
parents with Corky Kennedy,
.chai rm a n of hos t esses .
Nm·ser y will be provided .
BETHEL 62, Internationa l
Order of J obs'· Daug hters,
7: :m p.m . Monday a t the
Pomeroy Masonic TeJ!lple.

Hcporl on the state grange
session Wi:I S given when
Purnona f.range met Friday
Ke lly N••ff, and Hmmit· Fry .
l.'vt•ning at the Hoek Sp1·ings
Tt·achers lw.sliug lht• party &lt;~ntll l-{t~ hall.
Wl'l'l'
OcbUie Hunakl'r.
E~abct h Jo rdan gave the
The lma
Boyc l', Sharon reputt un slate session noting
St ewart, Phylli s Baker , Betty the uwanJs and certiricates
McKinley, NOra Rice, Kat hy given t u several CWA
l'4HJ1lnr.
Ot•hhie rwerl&lt;it'h . chct irrnen and a lsn severc1l
Kati1y E rwin , and buruthy membership awards. l .u l'ill e
Rnad1.
l.e1fhe1t look fo4r1h in t he
Ot hers atte nd ing we r e :;tate in lhe cr umb cake t:onSam , Mart ha a nd Br enda tcst with · 8:! entr ies, while
F ry, Rea Stewa rt , Di na Mrs. Edna Clar·k took third in
Stewa rt, Mr. a nd Mrs. Joe the sta te fu1· her stole . In the
Clmpman and Chris; Gcm:gc contest for princess, Opal
Glaze , J im Sheets, Mrkc Dye r , Meigs Coun t y's
St ewart, Mike Gerlaeh, .Tom princes.s wa.s in 'Ule top eight.
Couper , Danny Thom as, and
Wednesday
C&lt;irin, Connie and Carol
Ba iley .
"T h e Asce nt o f
Ad ummim," know n today as
the "Ascent of Blood" (proDa bly due to the red marl ) is
the steep pass on the r oad
CORRECTION
from J ericho to J erusalem.
The Debora Russell, New This pass is 'n otor ious for
Ha ven, who posted $200 bond robberies and m urder s anli
on a petty theft cha rge that is the traditiona l s pot of the
appeared in the Da ily Sen- inn in the para ble of t he
Samaritan.
tinel was not Debra Gilman Good
1
weot to him, and
' Aod
Russell, F ourth St., New bound up his w ounds .. . and
Haven
brought him to a n inn ... " -

It was reported that !969 stuffed toys were taken to the session and that these will go to
.
hospita ls over Ohio.
Men~al Jordan gave the
l ~gisl ative repor t , a nd
Fre~nces Schaeffer was Installed as secretar y of
Pomona Grange by Pa uli ne
Atkins, Esther King, and
Mrs. Le1fheil.
Stanford St ockton presided
.at the meetirw with two ap-

PAsT COUNCILORS' Club
of Chester, Council nwnber
323, Daughters of America,
m eet Wednesday 7:30p.m . at
Lodge hall . Hostesses are
Ada VanMeter and Ada
Neutzling.
TIIURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane
Society Thursday 7:30p.m . in
Riverboat Room at Athens
CoWJty Savings and Loan. All
: 1members are urged to attend.
CHRISTIAN BAZAAR and
bake sale; 9 a .m . to 5 p.m .
Thursday at Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
ELEANOR CfRCLE, 7:30
p.m . Thursday at the Heath
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Grace Johnson and Mrs.
Marg ie Bl a ke will be
hostesses.

TIIURSDAY
!JTTLE SCHOOL of lnstnictlon for all OES members Thursday 7:30 p.m. at
Harrisonville Masonic Hall.
OHIO VALLEY Grange
2626, Letart Falls , Thursday
at hall at 6 p.m. Randall
Roberts of Racine ER Squad
guest speaker. Members to
bring two covered dishes lor
potluck .
ROCK SPRINGS Gra nge ,
7:30 Thursday at the hall.
Mem ber s are reminded to
take gifts for the Athens Mental Health Center.
HAPPY HARVESTERS,
I :30 p.m . Friday at the Trinity Chur ch. Potluck to follow.
FRIDAY
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the Ameri can Revolution, .
1:30 p.m . Friday at home of
Miss Eleanor Smith with
Mrs. Gerald Powell, Mrs.
Clinton Fisher and Miss
Lucille Smith, hostes ses .
Program on " The Fi.r st
American" by Mrs. Dorothy
Shaw, Gallipolis.
ROUND AND square 1
dance, Friday , at Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy, open to the public
with music by the Stringdusters. Admission, $1 adults,
children Wider 12 free.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem·
ceremonial, 8 p.m . Friday at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple ; ,
po tluck refreshments
following the meeting.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Friday at noon at
Meigs Inn.

Built with ple nty of power , ea~ of
ha ndli ng , int en ded fo r l ight
.
professional
use or around t he hom e or farni . Equipped wi1h an
anti-vibrat ion mounted fr ont han ~le to help dampen
vi bra1 ions and a large effective Silencer . The 65 1s .a
lig htwe ight yet po werful chain saw . (Hand guard IS

SEE OUR SELECTION .
Wilkinson Small Engine Sales &amp; Service

optiona l.)

St .

-t\

2 HOOVER SWEEPERS AND

*FREE GIFTS
*FREE BAllooNS
*FREE COFFEE &amp; DONUTS

•

.

.

,•
'

'

Photos Taken by Majestic Studios
Sponsored by : Ohio Eta P!li Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi
Sonya Ohlinger 992-2726
Patsy Ogdin 992-7487

LADIES AUXILIARY
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middlep or·t
Penteco sta l
Church will hol d a homemade
chicken and noodle din ner
Friday, II a .m. to 6 p.m. Dinners wi ll be $2 each and the
m e n u will consis t or
hom e m a de chic ke n and
noodles, green beans, cole
sla w , homemade r oll,· and
homemade pie. TI1ose who
wo uld like to place a n order
and have it delive r ed are asked t o call 992-2502. Dinners
may be picked up at t he
c hurch or eaten t here
anytime during the :;erving
hours.

Charlotte Yonker· , Del and
Ool'is Robet1s, ·F rcddk anti
Mar·y T habet, Bud&lt;ly arHI
Gladys Reynolds, Mason, W.
Va.; Earl and Maxine Fields,
Hartfor~. W. Va. :.: Danny
Sayre, Lois Young, Pam
Wi lliams. New Haven, W. Va.

A ttend open house
Approximately 150 par·ents
and teacher s attended t he
Meigs Junior Hi gh School
open house held recent ly
unde1· SpllllSOI'Ship Of the
Par·ent-Teacher Forurn of the
sehoul.
The principal introduced
the teachers and ext ended a
wekome to t hose attending.
There was a br ief bus in ess
meeting presided over by
Alan King who expla ined the
role of the f orum and listed
ac ~ompli shments of last year
a nd objectives for this year.
Refre.slurients were served .

tu the Amish country in
Holmes County. Traveling by
bus they went to Chann
where they had dinner at an
Amish restaurant and then
visrted the Guggi sbe rg
Cheese, Inc., home of Ohio
Baby Swiss Cheese, to see the
process in making the cheese.

F'r-om then• thf&gt;v

wpnf

t"

Berlin and Walnut Creek
where they visited a quill
shop and several gift shops.
The trip was planned by the
Harrisonvi lle Senior Citizens
Cl ui&gt; which has made several
trips aro und the state .
On t he tour were Henry and
Grace T urner, Eliza Powell ,
Lou ise Es he lman , Hazel
Stanley, Minnie MeGrath ,
Bessie Graham, Ardis Wag-

A Thanksgivi ng themed
program enti tl ed "Five
Grctins of Corn" was
presen ted at t he rece nt
meeti ng of t he United
Methodist Women of the
Wesleyan Church held in the
a nnex with F rances Roberts
and Rut h Wolfe, hostesses.
The program ope ne~ with
group singing of " What a
Friend We Have in .Jesus"
and a history of it by Mrs.
Roberts. Using t he gra ins of
corn , it was noted that t he
f i r s t g r a in .ca ll s fo r

gratefulness for prosperity ,
the second for peace, the
third for Christ, the fo urt h for
the power of his presence,
and the filth for God 's pardon .
There was a reading by
Mrs . Ruth Wolfe , "'Pa use
and Think, and Then be
Thankf ul. "' Mrs. Maxine
Wingett gave a Thanksgiving
prayer fro m Guideposts, and
Mrs. Wolfe read an article on
the life of E lvis Presley written by a J'esidenl of his home
town who told of his Christia n
life. Mrs. Wolfe had t he closing prayer .
For the business meeting
presided over by Mrs. Alice
Wolfe, projects were discussed and reports given. Plans

ZEN !!!:'HA~I~!D 2~!ERS AH~~ACTORY

2 TV GAMES.TO' BE GIVEN AWAYI

~

BE SURE TO REGISTER!

it\

A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE
PRESENT TO ANSWER ANY AND ALL

*FREE GIFTS
* FREE BAllOONS
* FREE COFFEE &amp; uum•"

O_UESTIONS THAT YOU MAY HAVE.

2 HOOVE!l SWEEPERS AND

2 TV GAMES TO BE G.'VEN AWAY.

·~

~

goner, Kathryn Chapman,
Ora Carsey, Kennit and Ruth
McElroy , Glen and Mae
Lambert, Loretta ' ]3eegle,
Marie Chapman, Ednirlclark,
Frances Roush, • Dayton
McElroy , Gene McElroy,
Eula
Jeffers,
Virginia
Nclsofl, Minnie Wooten, Cora
Moore , Dorothy Mc-Guffi.n,
and Edith Rather.

'Five Grains of Com 'program theme

RON O' NE AL
Ron O'Neal of WPAR
Radio, Parker sburg , W. Va.
will emcee a Meigs Junior
Higi&gt; School da nce Saturday
nig ht a t the sehoul from 7: 30
to 10:30 p.m. Admission is 75
cents and on ly junior high
school students will be admitted .

were completed for the Electio n
Day
d inner·.
Refreshments of pwnpkin
eakt!, it..:e tea , ad roffee were
Sl' rvt!d .

WESTERN CB
The Western CB Club will
meet F riday, Nov. 10 a t 7
p.m. at t he club house .
There will be a gift exchange a nd
Chr istmas
projects will be disc ussed. All
members are urged to attend.

OES MEETING
Little School of Instruction
for all OES members will be
held Nov. 9 at 7:30 p.m . a t
Harrisonville Masonic Hall.

b Roge r Bo ll e n

LADYt I CAN F=IX
'iE'F? FINE TONI~

REPRESENTATIVE
CRAIG SCOIT WIU BE IN OUR STORE THE 11TH

&amp;)T I DO~tT HA\JE
t\lOTt-IIN TO CO

TO DEMONSTRATE Tv'S AND STEREO'S BEARCAT
AND COBRA.

~11/nt

U)llH PRQ:8RAMM1~ .

REG. '799.95

~ ol'· . ·

CONSOLE STEREO
The SORROC CO •J900P-E ie·
gant Mediterranean -s ty le cabinet In a rich simu lated pecan
rin ish. Solid-sta te Amplifier ,
AM I FM/Ste reo- FM Tuner ,

TABLE

Changer. pl us an a-track ta pe
player. Te rrific stereo sound
at a tremendous price YOI.I
car~'t alfOrd to miss I

$288~

RECLINERS

20%0FF

Upright
• A ll· steel

•aitator

• Big disposabl e ba g

$100
ON 2-PIECE
LIVING ROOM
SUITES

• 4-o n -ttle-floor c 11rpe t shift

Full Time
Edge
Cleaning!

~·~

Cl'IEST

BEARCAT Ill LIH

WARDROBES

Ft.U AVEYEAR WAAAAHTY
CCHVERTilllE.CLEioHEI\ !lASE

5-DRAWER

MODEL
U4127

FREE TOOLS

The
Portapower!

SPECIAL PRICES

3 PIECE BASSEn

OR

BEDROOM
SUITES

Gibson &amp; Frigidaire

CABINET
2 GLASS .DOORS

WHITE WITH BREAD BOX,
OR MAPLE

e1 0 quart bag: upacity

WOOD &amp; COAL

~Fu ll - Time edge·tleanin g
• All aro und

deep cleans wi th double
the brushi ng &amp; grooming
action of prev ious models.

$2999~NDUP

INSIST ON
OOOVER

SOFA-CHAIR-ROCKER.OITOMAN·
3 TABLES

ONLY

ONLY 2

~48888

'11.81

Mount w/ Speaker
The DARTM OO R • Model JVO:ZP • Count!)' Style .
So lld-s1&amp;te AM I FM/S tereo FM Tuner-AmiJ!Uier. Ste·
Preci si on Record Changer . ! ·Track Tape Pl ayer.
I
II W&lt;oJ ~

Speaker System wit h t wo g- ova l woo fers ,
tweeters . Simulated wood cabinet. grained
I

.' 17.81
CAR CB ANT. TRUNK

GOOD AS IS

'9.15

"::~:~~~~":,:::,:

The LORCA
I /Model
Ji15PFM
• T
Solid
-state AM
FM/Stereo
HI F'i rler and 2.5 wall s minimum AM S
• c har~nel With no mo1ethan 1% total
lion (Into 8 ohms, 100-10.000 Hz.
1 t

i
1
Prec ision Record Changer. B·Track Tape · 1

Allegro high-performance tuned port
tem wi th two e· woorers, two 3" , • .,,.,,,
rated wood CAbinet, grained Peca r~ color

VELVET
PICTURES

disa bilities and' other handica ppin g condi t ions, will
descri be techniques he has
desig ned for co un seling
school st aff and par ents of
handi ca pp ed
ch il d r e n .
Parents, teachers, students,
and all interested persons are
invited t o attend: Ther e is no
charge a nd pre-registration
is not required.
.
The workshop is b ein g
jointly s ponso r e d by t)le
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative , the
O.U. Center fo r Human
Develop me nt , the At he ns
Co unt y Associat ion fo r
Ret arded Cit izen, , the
stuctent chapter of the O.U.
Co un cil for E xcept ional
Children and the Statewide
Parent Information Network.

,.__2'X4'

$15

88

ALL
MAYTAGS
MARKED

portable
washer
Gets clothes clean faster. Can
be cheaper

than washing in coin laundries.
condominiums, cottages, mobile

ATHEN8-Techniques for
counseling
parents
of
ch'ildren born with birth
defects and other developmental disabilities will be the
focus of an inservice for
parents and school s taff
Thursday, Nov. 9.
Dr. M. Neil Macintyre, of
Ca se Western R eserve
Medical School's Department
of Anatomy, Medicine and
Pediat r ics, will be the
featured speaker .
Two
workshops will be held : one
at Room 113 of McCracken
Ha ll on the Ohio University
campus from 3 to 5 p.m . and
another at the Hocking Valley
Motor Lodge in Nelsonville
from 7 t o 9 p.m.
Dr. Macintyre, nationally
·recognized in his work in the
area of developmental

apartments,
home.

FREE
McCALLS

ROCKERS

10 GUN

Automatic carpet
adjustment

CABINET

adepts cleaner to most
carpet. Special plush
&amp; shAg settings!

'$6888

ROCKERS , $11988

PINE OR MAPL£

Controlled rewind
for 1mooth

&amp; WHITE TV ACIDC

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANY SPECIAU.Y

\

Washes
24pounds
tnao
minutes!

Portabl•l

Convenient!

MARKED

TV
GAMES
$}988

BEDROOM SUITE

Economif811

more cteaning per bag!
V,ou 'lllike the Quick&amp;:
C'-t1n bag changer.

Soft touch cord
rewind

~NITH 12'' BlACK

PATCHWORK W/MAPLE TRIM

16 qt. bag capacity

Broad, bright beam of
fight helps ~ek out litter.

PINE

12"

LIVING ROOM
SUITE GROUP

&amp; CHAIR

PINE

NIGHT

HEATERS

SOFA BED

Twin lamp
headlight .

2 Di'SCONTINUED

'199"

your local
Get a

Sofa-Chair-love Seal

• 1.1 p eak h.p.
(.19. VCM A Ruing)

.,RISSER$

'13995

For home, auto, camper
convenience

Children s disabilities discussed

7 PIECE

STANDING WAVE METERS
'9.18

WOOD KITCHEN

LIVING ROOM
'
SUITES

MAPLE·PINE.OAK

2 ODD

AC/DC PORTABLE

Kniket·Kamel/ Jump

e A id es o n a cushio n of
air f or eff orHeu mob ility

$239~~DUP

'1 28.88

CB ACCESSOR!~

CONVERTERS

3 PIECE /NORWALK
.. ·

..

CORNER CABINETS

//

95

88
$488

CELEBRI TY AlA-R IDE
CANI STER VAC

88
$99 ANDUP

LIVING ROOM
SUITE

PINE OR MAPLE .

~

CEDAR CHEST

29-XLR

Buy No w and Recei ve ~20
w orttl ol Crys la l s FR E E
from Bearca t and Rutland
Furniture will M a tch Th a t
S'2 0 w orth ot Cr ys t als P lus
Add ,A JO% D isc ount.

TABLE &amp;
4 CHAIRS
$179

FWdtt:YEAR
ClEAHEI\ WAAAAHTY

'98.88

WE HAVE ABEARCAT CRYSTAL SCANNER FOR 'IOU:

METAL

Hoover's
Powerful
Little Sucker!
$4988

3 PIECE

COBRA 40 CHANNEL CB'S
'21-XLR

Green
Convertible

25" T.V.

Stereo Pr e ci s ion Re cord

-DESKS

4 Reg. ChaiB- 2 Captains ChaiB

$6988

00
$188
Placed on a 11" x 14"
Deco Plaque at the
MiddlepOrt Fire Station.
Two Days
December 2nd and 3rd

Hartenhach, Gallipoli s: Rill
Smith, South Point ; Susan
Pa r·ker, Mari etta; Ed and
Char·Jene Slat er, Albany :
Greg Hrtd Nanl'y ZiJ..Hl'n .
Athens; Helen Stewart.
Ralp'h Stewart, Ann and
Turley , Kim Neal , Dannv and

Several Meigs County
senior citizens enjoyed a Lrip

Great Sound! Distinctive Furniture Styling!

LOVE SEATS
•

Midd

·
R
.
,DA·Y
·
'STOREWIDE
SALE
HOOVE

edge brusher deep cleans
close to the wall.

;

Philip Werry Glenna Ellis, Jon and Connie
and Jim Stewart · recently Karschnik, Max and Judy
hosted a hayride and Wiener Eichinger, Pomeroy .
roast at their farm on SanReily Gilk ey , Geneva
. dridge near Minersville.
Shackford, Jack Surry, lkt•,
Music fo r the party was fur- Mona and Janel Neal Pattv
nished by Armand Turley and Hill, Dick Young, Ga;·y ;m;l
Olive Weber . Tractors and . Marsha Terr·y~ M,iddlejlUI1 :
wagons were furnished by John and Jea n Werry.
Br uce Myers a nd Blain Hemlock Grove; Mickey and
Milhoan. The drivers were JoA nne Williams, John
Bruce Myers and Bruce Alla n Wolfe, Syracuse; Bmre and
Myers . Kerr Dist ributing Cu. Dorot hy and · Br ure Allen
of Athens furnished the Myers, Barbara Sargent.
refrestonent wagon for the DarTell AQnstron g, Cleo
evening with Ralph Stewart DeTray, Chesler. Olive' and
a nd
Ba rbara Sarge nt F loyd Weber , Clancy, a nd
assis ting with the par1y.
Weno la Schmucke r· a nd
Refreshments for the even- da ughleJ, Blain, Tony a nd
ing consist ed of homemade Mike Milhoa n, Thelma, Tony,
vegetable soup, wiene r s, Tom and Kenn ie White, Mr.
marstonallows, deviled eggs, a nd Mrs. Will iam Wh ite,
r elish trays, coffee a nd Long Bottom; Jim and Karen
beverages.
Wer ry, Thur·ma n F ischer ,
' Attending were Harold, Racine.
J ea n, Mark, Todd and Brent
Bill and Dons Gruser , Del
Norton , Freda Harti nger, a nd Ma rie Hens ley, Chery l
J eff Russell, Max Cale, Hazel a nd Ray Laudermilt , Ray,
Sprague, J eff Morris , I .isa E ddie and Ja net Wen,
. Herald, Henry and Lois Miners ville; Harlan an d
Werry, Phyllis and Tim K ei tha n n
Wl&gt;i ll a leh ,
Adams, Bob Painter , E d and Reedsville; Bob and Viola

Meigs senior citizens travel to Charm

St•vcrat missiu11 projet.:ts
hHve bcl'll l'.fJriTicd out I.Jy the
Women 's Missionary Society
of the llysell Hull Free
Methodist Church.
The Society sent to I he mission station in Burundi,
Africa, iJ boxes of quilt
bl~k s, needles , buttons,
thimbles, and rainhats. F ive
buxcs of rolled i&gt;andages
were also sent to the mission
at Ri!vanda, Africa. At the
November meeting a work
day wi ll be carried on the
mission projects, a nd t hen:!
wi ll be a potluck dinne r .

FUNNY BUSINESS

Edge cleaning
plus...

••

Mr. and Mrs.

Right for Any Cutting Job ·

MATTRESS
' WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, Wednesday, 8
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Rose
Reynolds with · Mrs. Clara
Conroy as co-hostess. Mrs.
Sally Ingels to be the speaker .
UNIT E-D --ME'THODIST
WOMEN , Letart Falls
Church, home of Mrs. Ernest
Shuler , 6:30 p.m. covered
dish dinner. Ail women of tbe
church invited. New. officers
will be installed by the Rev.
David Harris.
- SPECIAL MEETING,
Women 's Auxiliary, Rutland
Fire Department, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at fire station.
FREE CLOTHING day by
Gallia - Meigs Community
Action Agency, 9 a .m. to 12
noon Wednesday at agency's
free clothing bank in old
Cheshire high school.

plications for membership
being read and accepted. The
fifth degree was co~ferred on
M1·. and Mrs. Wallace Brad- '
ford.
The coun t y officers
meeting was announced f 11r
Tues~ay, Nov. 21 at 7:30p.m.
at the Rock Spr ings ha ll.
Hemlock Grove served
rcfreslunents. Laurel Grange
will i&gt;e host a t the next
mcetino .

CHAIN SAWS

498

Missionary Society

Werrys, Ste1:/)art host hay.ride, roast

'

party for children recently·

US • • •By 'Helen Bottel:: d:~~~~': ':;~t ~fth~~~i~:;\~~~;;

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978

Fast!

\

ONLY 1

~

lARGE EARLY AMERICAN

$6

SEAlY KING SIH

FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE
GARY WALKER WILl BE IN
OUR STORE All DAY 'iO
DEMONSTJiATE All HOOVER

SEAlY
QUEEN SIZE

LIVING ROOM
SUITE
2 PIECE

"

PRODUCTS

I'

I

I

"

This week only!
S•we n o ott 1egui•r pur r;' hn• pric11 o l
Hoover por!a~e wnl'ler •t parMip•ll~g
de•tors l isted below. But Hurry ' Limited
ti m• ollerl

• Washes a goo::J S1/P. toad orltu sl 4 fnonu tes
• Ronses a11d ~oms d1 yIn 2 monutes
• Po1tablc ro.tt s to smk. ei\S•I~ nooks to faucet
• Comooc t ooly 29 ·114 " w100. 3 1· 1.'4" h1gh
16-1f4" deeo
• Nee&lt;ls no5pet:1at ptumbony Of Wlllfl{J
• Uses tess water and d!ltt:rgor•t
• Matching portable dryet . opltona!

Do your laundrw in the safe ty and comfort o f your own ~ wHh the
. Hoovet portable waeher., .on sal e now B1 participating dealers:

FACTORY Ll'l£ DEMONSTRATION NOV. II!

I.
..

$

Save'20

I

RANGES
AT

LOW, LOW
PRICES I

SCRABBLE - not football or basketball - is the
biggest game this year at the University of Massachusetts
In Amherst. On a 2,0lll).6quare-foot board, members of the
student newspaper staff pitted their vocabulary skillli
against those of the school's faculty and administrators.
Afterward, the fledgling journalists spelled out the
game's outcro~e .

�.

•.

'

\

8 _ Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1978

Rains drench Pacific Northwest

Former champ Tunney dead
GREENWICH, Conn . (UP!) - Gene Twmey, 81,
the former heavyweight
champion and two-time
victor over the great Jack
Dempsey, died Tuesday night
alter an extended illness.
When news of Tunney 's
de~th reached Dempsey 's
home, the former champion
was asleep.
"I'm going to tell him
(Dempsey ) very slowly,"
said Mrs. bempsey. "This is
going" to be a great shock to
him . All his friends are
gone."
Tunney was admitted to
Greenwich Hospital in late
September w.ith a foot
ailment that required
surgery . But the aging
champion's health deteri·
orated after his discharge in
early October and Twmey
spent the last two weeks of his
life in a hospital bed. It was
later learned he died of .a
circulatory disorder.
A Greenwich ViUage longshareman's son, he overcame
during his youth an
assortment of physical
handicaps and a distaste lor
violence. He was born James
Joseph Tunney on May 25,
1897, and later ·adopted the
name Gene for his fighting
career.
Nobody gave him much of a
chance when he faced
DempSey in Philade!phi a's
Centennial Stadium on the
night of Sept. 23, 1926. The
world of sports was
astounded when he won the
fight and the title on a 11).
round decision.
The secret of Tunney's
success was that he was a
thinking fighter, with a
carefully devised plan, facing
a slipping champion. Twmey
worked out for the hout by
running backwards for miles
while zinging the left jab, and
the practice served him well.
The fight drew 120,000 fans ,
and Twmey - besides the
title- got a substantial share
of the nearly $2 million gate.
When the two fighters met
for a return bout at Soldiers'
Field in Chicago on Sept. 23,
1927, a crowd of almost
105,000 paid a live gate of
more than $2.5 million to
cheer lor Dempsey to regain
his title. The cheers rose to a
. huge roar in the seventh

'

rouilil when Dempsey finally
caught up, and smashed
Tunney to the canvas.
Tunney was stunned, and
Dempsey stood over him ready to finish 'him for good
as soon as he rose to his feet.
The
referee· ordered
Dempsey to a neutral corner
under new rules that had just
been established.
But
Dempsey continued to glower
down at the faUen cham"/lion
as the seconds ticked away.
FinaUy, Dempsey realized
his mistake and went to a
corner. The referee resumed
the count, but in those few
precious minutes Tunney had
recovered well enough to
struggle to his feet before the
count of 10.
Tunney pursued his jab and
run tactics for the rest of the
bout and hurt Dempsey
several times. Once again at
the end, Dempsey was barely
abletostandandthe 10-round
decision went to Tunney.
The reconfirmed champion
got $990,000 for his exertions,
the largest purse in history up

to that time. He received a
guaranteed 1$25,000 for his
next defense of the title against Tom Heeney of New
Zealand. He knocked out
Heeney in the lith round on
July 26, 1928.
Tunney bade farewell to the
ring as an undefeated
champion a few weei&lt;s later.
For the more important of 68
fights, he had grossed
$1 ,942,382.
He enjoyed a comfortable
retirement for the rest of his
life. Shortly after his fmal
fight, he toured Europe with
author Thornton Wilder and
met H.G. Wells, George
Bernard Shaw and other
literary celelrities. After the
trip he wed Polly Lauder,
an heiress to the Carnegie
steel fo..iune. They had lour
children.
·
He was one of the few
fighters who never tried to
come back, satisfied with his
record of only one loss in a
career of 76 professional
bouts.

Christmas mailing
schedule releas~d
Meigs residents are being Nov . 28. Nov . 21 , .O ct . 28.
Green land, Dec. 9, Dec. 9,
advised by postmasters of the
.
Dec.
I. Nov. 25. Nov. 25.
county on the Christmas
Iceland, Dec. 14, Dec. 14,
mailing deadlines, to insure Nov. 30, Nov. 22, Nov. 22 .
delivery, for military and ~ Mid East, Dec. 5, Dec. 5,
f&gt;lov. 8, Nov. 1, Nov. 1.
international mail.
· South East-Asia, Dec. 6,
The schedule is:
Dec. 2, Nov. 18, Nov. 10, Oct.
Military Mail-Outbound
To assure t he timely
arrival of military mail at

overseas destinat ions. all
mail should be deposited on

Surface are li sted :

North
and Northwest
Africa, Nov. 28, Dec. 9, Nov.

Nov. 11, Nov . 10.
Alaska, Dec. 16, Dec.

18,

16,

Dec . 9, Dec. 2, Dec. 1.
Hawaii , Dec. 16, Dec . 16,

Surface, Dec. 1.
Austral ia, Dec . 2, Dec. Nov .

Nov. 11. Oct. 28.
Carlbbean-W. Indies, Dec.
14, Dec . 14, Nov. 30, Nov. 22.
Nov . 13.
Central- South
America.
Dec. 2. Dei:. 2, Nov. 18, Nov.
18,

ll, Nov. 10.

Europe, Dec. 12, Dec. 12,
Nov . 28, Nov. 21, Nov. 10.
Far East. Dec. 12, Dec. 12.

GIFTY IDEAS.

Gj/Z;;
SCARFPIN
She ' ll love showing off her
c hi ldren's bi rthmonths with
th is s mar t , cont emporary pin.
Up to Si x s imul at ed birth s t ones , custom-set in pre cious st er l ing.

Airmail Letters- Cards, and

Canac:ta-Mexlio, Dec.
Dec. u , Dec. I.

HERE AWARDS NIGHT -Walter H. Knopp, Columbus,
will be present when the 12th Masonic District awards
night is held at 7:30 p.m . Monday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. to present awards to 50,60 and 65 year
·
members.
Knopp received his honorary 33rd degree in Masonry in
1970 and is presently chairman of the Valley of Columbus
Executive Conunlttee and presiding officer of one of
the Scottish Rite bodies in Central Ohio. He is now an
active 33rd dregree Mason and deputy of the State of Ohio.·
Director and vice president of the Columbus Athletic
Club and an active golfing member of the Columbus
Country Club, Knopp is 'president and chief executive
officer of the Franklin Savings and Loan Assn. havmg
been in the business more than 25 years.
Knopp attended Denison University and Ohio State
University. He served with distinction as an infantry
captain on the Anzio Beachhead in Italy during World War
n and was awarded the Silver Star and Bronze Star
Medals.
All Master Masons are invited to attend the Monday
evening awards ceremony.

Annexation will he topic Monday

Destination, Air Parcels,

Surface are ·usted:

Africa, Dec. 9, Dec . 9, Nov .

C?Tar-~1~~-

InternationAl MloiiOUtbound

or before the following dates :
Destina t ion, Priority,

Letters, Parcel Airlift PAL,
Space Available ISAMl. and

FOR PROUD
MOTHERS

28.

second day and the National
United Press lntematloaal
Rain drenched the Pacific Weather Service said a
.front
was
Nurthwest and large portions sta tlonary
the
showers.
triggering
of the Atlantic Seaboard
The heaviest rainfall was
today and high winds howled
recorded
in the Washington
over parts of western
Cascade
Mountains with
Montana.
more
than
an inch at
Rain fell over the western
Stampede
Pass
In six hours.
portions of Washington and
Rain and showers In the
northwestern Oregoo for the
East extended from the
---~---1-- · eastern slopes of the
App8iachians to most of the
Atlantic Coast.
By Act of Congress, Dec. 15
The rest of the nation had
lias been observed as Bill of dry autumn weather.
Rights Day since 1791.
Strong winds - in some

14,

10.

Australia. Nov. 28, Dec. 2,
Oct. 28.
C..rlbbean-W. Indies, Dec.
12, Dec. 14, Nov. 13.
Central
and
South
America, Nov. 20. Dec. 2,
Nov. 10.
Europe, Dec. 9!1, Dec. 12,
Nov. 10.
Far East , Dec. 9, Dec. 12,
Oct. 28.
Mid East, Nov. 28, Dec. 5,

Racine Mayor Charles
Pyles announced today there
will be a meeting on the pros
and cons of annexatio~ in the
village of Racine on Monday ,
Nov. 13 at 7 p.m at the fire
house in ·Racine.
Plans are to e&gt;&lt;lend the

corporation limit up river
toward Yellow· Bush on SR
338 and toward Dorcas on SR
124. The Mayor urges all
residents whether they are
for or against the annexation
to attend:

locations hitting up to 82
miles per hour - blew over
parts of western Montana . .A
high-wind warning was m ·
effect for . the eastern slopes
of the Montana Rocides.
Temperatures were In the
50s in' the Northern Great
Plains but the Southern
Plains' were chillY with
temperatures falling into the
40s in parts of south Texas.
The thermometer hit the
30s in the eastern Great
lakes and the upper ,Ohio
Valley. In southern Florida
temperatures hit a balmy 70.

seminar slated
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), in
cooperation with The Hocking Tedmlcal College and the
Southeastern Regional Crime Laboratory, Nelsonville, will
present an explosives Jagging and bomb scene search
seminar, Nov. 14-15.
The elassroom session will be held at the Haeking
Teclmical College, Nelsonville, and field training will be at a
!lite near!&gt;y. The tWo day advanced explosive training is for
law enfor.cement and fire officials from Athens, Hocking,
Wasl)ington, Morgan, Gallia, Vinton and Meigs counties.
App!'Gximately 50 police and fire olficia4J from the area are
expected to attend.
The illegal use of explosives is a widespread problem that
is growing in severity. Used as weapons, explosives have
become an easy and available~ tool for those with unstable
ninds, as well as fer calculating crirnlna1s.
· Perhaps the most psychologically effective and physically
langerous use of explosives is accomplished by the
ndiscrimlnate bomber; innocent citizens are potential victims
'or no apparent reason. These bombings present a great
llreat to society; the societal effect can be greatly out of
Jroportion to the actual danger present- conunerce can be
~owed; human values are degraded; and the confidence of a
;ociety in itself ernded . It Is imperative that the utmost degree
1f concentrated effort be implemented toward bombing
nvestlgations so that we may prevent these types of
lXplosives incidents from happening.
Title XI, regulations of explosives, has placed primary
·esponsibility for control of explosive materials in interstate
md foreign commerce on ATF. It also gave ATF joint
urisdiction with the FBI for investigating the misuse of
lXplosive materials.
·
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) has
leveloped the explosives tagging system. This involves the
tddltion of chemical coded microparticles or "tags" to
:xplosives during manufacture. A substantial percentage of
he tags will survive detonation and can be recovered. The
:oded particles show where and when the explosive was made,
he name and grade of the explosive, and the size of the
ixplosive package. Investigators can then trace it from
'actory to point of sale or theft.
ATF believes this to he an important breakthrough In
10mbing investigation technology. Explosives taggants are
:oded chemical microparticles or tags which can he safely
1dded to dynamites, slurries, and other types of explosives
luring manufacture.
The coded microparticles pose no threat 1o health or the
nvironment, and they survive detonation. In effect, the
ddition olthese tags will allow us to ''fingerprint" explosives,
rhich when r.etrieved from a bomb seene, will identify the
nanufacturer and subsequent distribution.
The major objective of explosives tagging is to reduce .and
uppress crimes involving explosives. It is ATF's belief that
his innovative syslem, coupled with new investigative
eelmiques, will enable investigators to apprehend more .
-rirninal bombers faster.
Identification taggjng! will ~rovide a great improvement
n the investiga lion of illegal bombings by providing the
nvestlgator with a means of tracing the explosives from the
' nanufaclurer to the distributor and ultimately, the user. Thus,
1081-blast identification will, for the first . time, give the
nvestigator a substantial lead in cases involving bombings
· md bomb threats.
During the two day seminar, local officers will be trained
!D new crime scene investigation techniques and taggant
'ecovery methods. The schedule calls for classroom work and
;lf&amp;ctlcal exercises. It is anticipated that, if needed, additional
lemlnars in the Athens-Nelsonville area will eventually train a
.'llllliJtantial number of local law enforcement and fire officials
. jn the innovative inveStigative teclmiques and taggant
:.recovery methods.

SUGGESTIONS

We have hundreds of
for those extra special paopie
on your list. See us today!

ChrU!tmas Gifts Priced Their Lowest

DUTTON DRUG CO.
MIDDLEPORT
•

Nov. l.

Southeast Asia. Nov. 30,
Dec. 2, Oct. 28.
·
Southeast Atrlca, Nov. 28,
Dec. 9, Oct. 28.
West Atrlca, Nov. 28. Dec.
9, Oct. 28.
Dameotic Pointo
Destination, Priority,
Letters, Surface are listed:·

••

Alaska, Dec. 16, Dec. 16,
Dec. 1.
Hawaii. Dec. 16. Dec. 16,
Dec. 1.

e14 KT. CHAINS
PENDANTS
• PIERCED
EAR RINGS
• IDENTIFICATION
BRACELET
•CHARM
BRACELETS
•WATCHES
• STONE
RINGS
• DIAMOND
RINGS

Property
Transfers
Charley W. Jones, Kathryn
Jones to Homer Goodwin,
Palma Goodwin, one-third
acre, 160 acre Lot 1234,
Pomeroy.
Columbus and Southern
Ohio Elec .. Co. to Edward F.
King, Leona 0. King, .44 acre,
SaUsbury.
James Crisp, Sr., Nellie
Jarrell Crisp to ,Jack W.
Crisp, Glenna R. Crisp,
Minerals, Salem.
Theodore A. Downie,
Minnie V. Bengel, dec. to
Jack D. Sorden, Joan F.
Sorden, Lot 4, Pt. Lot 5,
Pomeroy .
Thelma
Eagle
to
Monongahela Power Company, Ease., Olive.

12" RCA Black &amp; White T.V.
('120 Value) Only '1000 With
Purchase Of Any

~ TV

... in Review

RCA or Zenith Console T.V.

OFFER EXPIRES
NOVEMBER 11, 1978

BETTER HURRYI
App~liance

.,. ,.,

992-7113
220 E. MAIN

"We Service What We Sell"

II

Sports Tr•nsactJOhs

~

.-:

Tu11d1y

:1

Baseb•ll

PRICES EFFECTIVE

Cincinnati

lf*i

-

GOnulez,

Signe-d

Tom

-. Seaver to a flwe-year contract.

PORK CHOPS ......L!·.

159
PORK CHOPS ......~·.
CRISPY SERVE

BACON .............,...~~

=:·Starrette
Philadelphia - Hired Herm
and Bob Tlefenauer

Chicken Thighs.~!~
.GRADE A

i:

·and
Jr. pitcher
to the
winterOizle
rosterVIrgil
; re.t urned
ttoracfo Plna to
C.M~Kican

Aguascallen

League) ;

assigned

·

$

ruM~

149

2 $}

9~ PIZZA MATE!.~. /
~

.

4/$1

FLOUR............. ~...S .POT PIES.....~.~ ...
GOlD MEDAL

"-

COUPON
-

-

5 LB

- -

L

J

Limit 1 Per customer
,
Good Only at Powells
-O ffer Expires Nov. 11, 1978

Limit 1 Per Customer
On!
Ip
II'
Good
y a owe s Offer Expires Nov . 11. 1978

"

Cit y

10

·

oz.

$349

Larry Jones.

.•

j

NABISCO

PREMIUM
SALTINES
LB.

2/$1

EVAPORATED M

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good O.nly at Powell's
O!ler

.13.5

WiC

;~;~ Nov.!J1iii, 19~78~

oz.

.3/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer

!

W/C

Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov . 11, 1978

"'

~

~~U~~~~~~~~~~~!~a~~~~~~E~~~~~!~~~=~=!~~~~~~~~·•!=!~

:=-~~~~lrll==~ll!l~lfii~~II!I~!Y
-II ;ji .......... ; 11
...:i:!

·
.R eleased

wide rtcelvers Elmo Boyd and llii~!l::ll!~

CUUPO N

LUUP[JN

W/C

INSTANT COFFEE

BANQUET

-

CHEER
DETERGENT
49 oz. $}29
W/C

MAXWELL HOUSE

Football
Chicago- Signed linebacker
Chris Devlin and placed line-

. ''

·

FISHER

TOWELS ............R~~.

San Fr anclsco - Announced
pitching coach Herm Starrette's

lntured
reserve list.san Franctsco

·sse

Whole Fryers ......L~~

·

--rv
~ ~~~-~~~k~c~~Hic~onN
-

.

HI DRI

·II coaches and retained· resignation to sign with Phlla """" 0'~hes Bob~v Wine. Bill• delphia.

and Tony Taylor;
added pllehers Derek Botelho,
Mack and Jose Martinez

Breasts;~

Chicken

Jae Jones and pitcher Steve
waterbury to Oklahoma

$

LOIN CENTER CUT

-

outfielder

{AA).

SJ49·

RIB CENTER CUT

2% MILK ...... :~~: ..

first baseman :outflelder · or'."

tan do

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
NOVEMBER 11, 1978

VAlLEY BELL

Kerry Dineen , first baseman

~ DeMars

POMEROY, 0.

Sunday 10 A.M. · 10 P.M.

Yellow Onions.:~:.4

., All the familiar faces can make election night at the
,J,networks like a school reunion. At CBS there were Walter
· Cronkite, Dan Rather, Roger Mudd and a couple of faces from
:t yesteryear - newly returned alumnus, Harry Reasoner, and
' coounentator emeritus, Eric Sevareid.
.: At NBC John ChanceUoc and David Brinkley were joined by
:;: Tom Brokaw and Jessica Savitch, who has been rumored a
,;:, cootender for netw&lt;rk anchor woman.
"l' At ABC Reynolds anchored, with analysis from Howard K.
:$ Smith, while Barbara Walters Interview~ like mad~ particu·
· ... Jarly.women. Ahout the ooly woman candidate she rrussed was
:!inclla•s Indira Gandhi (who won).
:: When Walter O'onkite analyzed the Ivy League scoreboard
"":of election victors - Yale five, Harvard four, Princ~ton two
:t. 110d one each for Dartmouth and Columbia -II was time to say
;::::goodnight Walter, goodnight Jolm, goodnight Frank. We'll
: read all about it in the newspapers.
;;_ By Unite" Press International

·Elliott

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M .-10 P.M.

~
BY JOAN HANAUER
::':
UPI Television Writer
.• NEW YORK (UP!) - As a television viewer, which did you
~ vote lor- Campaign '78, Decision '78 or The '78 Vote?
: Those were the catchy titles CBS, NBC and ABC gave to
~ their television coverage, which certainly was comprehensive.
• Did it matter which network you dialed? Well, if the victory
..of Thad Cochran -firSt Republican to he elected senator from
:·Mississippi since Reconstruction - was your main aim, NBC
,: was the wrong web because it didn't officiaUy call that race
o·Wltll hours after ABC projected Cochran at 7:22p.m. (Eastern
:;.·time) and CBS at 7:30p.m.
•· Choosing races at random to compare bow quickly the
.::networks reacted, with all times Eastern standard, NBC gave
;'re-election to Illinois Republican Sen. Charles Percy at 7:13,
t.ABC followed at 7:47 and CBS at 8:09. In the New Jersey
:: senatorial race, Dem~rat Bill Bradley's victory was recorded
~at8:02by NBC,B:ll by CBSand8:12by&lt;ABC.
· ~ NBC fell way behind in calling the victory of Gov. Hugh
~.Carey in New York and the defeat of Sen. Edward W. Brooke of
! Massachusetts. ABC called Carey at 9:13, CBS at 9:15and NBC
:: at 10:10. As for Brooke, ABC called l1is defeat at 8:30, CBS at
·• 9:08 and NBC at 10:08.
·
.; NBC made up for its earlier lapses by projecting California's
' Gov. Jerry Brown's reelection at 11 :05, followed by CBS and
, ABC at 11:31 .
·~ Complicating matters was a breakdown of the National
: Electlon Service, which feeds raw vote numbers to the
~ networks and wire services. NES went out at 7:21 p.m.,
~returned to "sporadic production" shortly before 9 p.m., and
. . finally went to a backup system at 10.
., ' The networks had to base their calls on sample precincts,
without raw vote numbers, which was why you saw races
.' predicted with only one percent of the vote in - at one point,
' the Iowa vote was discussed when according to the boards,
none of the vole was in.
~ ABC's Frank Reynolds apologized to his audience, saying,
~ "I'm not particularly enjoying telling you what we can't tell
~. you."

I

..'•

'

�.I

.•,.

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Nov . 8, 1978

He~e's·

Ohzo
House
results

MASON
or
POINT
PLEASANT

Tampering charges are raised
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

The implication was that a
premature and unauthorized
order to impound the voting
machines could result in
tampering with the returns
prior to an official tally or a
recount.
Tipps and Celebrezze were
accompanied by Ohio House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, DNew Boston at the 4:30 a.m.
confrontation.
· They told of a telephone
call made to Patrick Garrity,
director of the Clark County
Board of Elections asking
that the sheriff be instructed
to seal the voting machines
and impq~nd them.
The secretary of state's
office sends telegrams to
boards of election to impound
voting machines and paper
ballots in close races.
The Democrats hinted that
they thought the telephone
call came from Brown's
office, which would not be
following regular procedures.

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - TQP
Ohio Democrats raised
charges of " tampering" with
the se cretary of state's
election early today as
veter a n Republican
Secretary of State Ted Brown
was bei!lg handed his first
political defeat in ;lO years.
Before the final returns
were in showing Brown a
10,000-vote
loser
to
Democrati c slate Sen .
Anthony J . Celebrezze of
Cleveland; fue challenger an!(
Democratic State Chairman
C. Paul Tipps were at the
doorway of his office
demanding that a federal
agency be called in to
supervise any further count.
The secretary of state's
office is crucial to the
makeup of the state
Apportionment Board, which
realigns legisla live boundaries. Celebrezze's victory
gives Democrats cootrol of
"This is a serious attack
the board.
UP!Jn the integrity of how you

run this office," Tipps told

Brown. ''Are you willing to
bring a federal agency in to
s,upervise thls

election ~"

with. I'm astounded you're
not taking this seriously."
"I doo't think there's anything further we can do," said
Marsh.
"The fact is," sa id the
newlyelected Celebrezze,
"that the call was made. The
fact demands that we do
somethng more fuan send
telegrams to the state 's
boards of election. I'm very
uncomfortable. I'm playing
the game with your people in
your court. This tells me
there was someone tampering. It concerns me that

Brown said he was not.
:•We've got an election to
bring in tonight," he said .
"Bring in your complaint
tomorrow."
"This is a serious concern ,
and we 're bringing it in now/'
retorted Tipps .
James R. Marsh , the
assistant secretary of state ,
intervened and said he
believed that if a call was
made it came from a Jl(Jlitical
i&gt;arty headquarters and not the call was made." .
the secretary of state's office .
" H any other counties were
"Somebody's tampering tampered with in this
with your system," said election , we will get a call
Tipps, "tampering with a from them,' ' said Marsh.
razor-thin race that you have "We can handle our own
to be personally concerned election."

COLUMBUS (UPI ) -The
winners in Tuesday's election
in the 99 Ohio House districts :
Ohio House
Democrats 62
Republicans 37
1st District
Eugene Branstool (D)
2nd District ··
John Wargo (D)
3rd District
James E. Betts (R)
4th District
Rocco Colonna (D)
5th District
Francine Panehal (D)
• 6th District
Patrick Sweeney (D)
7th District
Kenneth Rocco (D)
8th District
Whi
Benny Bonanno (D)
9th District
Troy tee James (D)
18 Lb. CIPKIIJ
lOth District
would be summoned.
A&amp;IUifOI W1llhlr with
Thomas M. Bell (D)
"We can handle our own
FSirlcC~
11th District
election ,!! said James R.
(Continued from page 1)
Frank Mahnic Jr. (Dl
Model
LA49
Marsh , assistant secretary of
"I didn't think people would
!Zth District
state.
buy it, but they did ."
Donna Pope (R)
Lukens, the unsuccessful
Brown was a two-term candidate
13th District
for auditor,
Clark County recorder in the accused
Ike Thompson (D)
Ferguson
of
1930s and an administrative irregularities in running his
lith District
officer with the state bureau · office and attempted to get a
Mary Boyle (D)
speed
of motor vehicles before he grand jury to prosecute
15th District
made his first try for employees for alleged illegal
John Thompson Jr. (D)
office in 1944. ·
statewide
16th District
campaign contributions and
He was defeated three political work on state time.
Harry Lehman (D)
straight times by the
SPECIAL
17th District
Ferguson said the victory
Matthew Hatchadorian (R) Republican incumbent before was a "vmdication of the
WASHER-DRYER ·
he succeeded in 19a0.
18th District
employees of my office."
Celebrezze
and
Democratic
Dennis Eckart (D)
"All the allegations that
Do•~biii·Ac:ilon washing
State Chairman C. Paul Tipps
19th District
rna
de
...
the
vote
shows
were
enamel lop and
Porcelain
confronted Brown in his
Dale Van Vyven (R )
the
people
of
Ohio
see
those
lid
office at about 4:30 a.m., allegations as political
20th District
Lint IIIIer and reclrc~l atlon
complaining that a telephone
Thomas Pottenger (R)
.yatem
rhetoric.
The
people
of
Ohio
call had been made to the
21st District
Lock 'nSpln~" Safety Lid
Clark ' County Board of don't want that."
Jerome Leubbers (D)
Fllbrlc aoftene~ dispenser
Mrs.
Donahey,
70,
is
the
Elections by someone first woman ever to be
22nd District
(optional acceuory)
'
representing himself as from elected to an executive state
Edith Mayer (R)
0 Backed by Nationwide
tlle
secretary
of
state's
office.
Sure Service
23rd District
They said this was not office in the history of Ohio.
William Mallory (D)
Swept into office in 1970 on
White-Westinghouse
normal procedure ,
24th District
the
ti~e of a statehouse ''loan
Sti II Bui Ids Them
complained of possible
Terry Tranter (D )
scandal," Mrs. Donahey
They Used To•
Like
"tampering"
and
asked
that
25th District
quickly became a ticket
be
called
in
a
federal
agency
Helen Rankin (D)
for tlJe Democrats.
to clean up the election leader
26th District
William
Brown, 37, the
returns.
Helen Fix (R)
youngest
attorney
in
"We've got an election to the history of Ohiogeneral
27th District
when
he
bring in tonight," said a
Alan Norris (R)
disgruntled Brown. "Bring in was first elected in 1970,
28th District
New Haven, W. Va. ·
your complaint tomorrow." improved on his ao:i,IJOO..vote
C. William O'Neill (R)
victory
over
Smith
four
years
Brown
said
proper
' 29th District
405 Fifth Street
to the ago, defeating him by 713,000
telegrams
were
sent
Les Brown (D)'
votes.
counties to Impound ballots,
31lth Dl•trict
and that rio federal agency
Mike Stinziano (D )
31st District
Phale Hale (D)
John E. Johnson (D)
32nd District
69th District
Dean Conley (D)
John Galbraith (R)
33rd District
70th District
Don Gilmore (R)
Dave Johnson (R)
34th District
71st District
Edward Orlett (D)
Thomas Carney (D)
35th District
72nd District
Tom Fries (D)
Marie Tansey (R)
36th District
73rd District
C. J. McLin (D)
Corwin Nixon (R)
37th District
74th District
Paul Leonard (D )
Dennis Wojtanowski (D)
38th District
75th DIStrict
Robert Corbin (R)
Charles Saxbe (R)
39th District
76th .District
Vernon Cook (D)
Harry Turner (R)
Tan Smooth
40th District
77th District
Thomas Sawyer (D)
Bob McEwen (R)
41st District
78th District
Rebert Nettie (D )
Rod Hughes IR)
. 4:!nd District
79th District
Pete Crossland (D)
Larry Manahan ( R)
43rd District
80th District
Cliff Skeel! (D)
Dale Locker (D~
44th District
81st District
Irma Karmol (R)
Robert Netzley (R )
82nd District ·
45th District
Casey Jones (D)
Michael Oxley (R)
46th District
83rd District
Arthur Wilkowski (D)
Robert Brown (R)
47th District
84th District
Barney Quilter (D )
Frederick Deering (D)
48th District
85th District
Paul Garlock (R)
Gene Damschroder (R)
Brown Smooth·
49th District
86th District
Charles Red Ash (R)
\,'/alter McClaskey (R)
50th District
87th District
George Kishman (R )
Harry Malott (D)
51st District
88th District
Thomas Gibnartin (D)
Myrl Shoemaker (D)
• Bre alhi n' Br ushe d
52nd District
89th District
Pigsk in• transmits excess
Joseph Vukovich (D)
Vernal G. Riffe Jr. (D )
foot moisture.
53rd District
90th District
• Ex ira sleel sha nk support
J . Leonard Camera (D)
Doo Maddux (D)
• Long lasting nylon
When referring to standing
54th District ·
91st District
stitc
hing
•lhe lest of time Hush
Claire Ball Jr. (R)
John Bara (D)
Puppies'"
Shoes a re at the
55th District
92nd District
• Long wearing Mic rohead
of
the
class. Millions
Robert Nader (D)
Ronald James (D)
c repe "" soles
selec
t
these
shoes year
56th District
93rd District
• Easy ca re brushing
year.
T
he reason
after
Michael Del Bane (D)
William Batchelder (R)
restores good looks
could be lhe rain and slain
57th District
94th District
• Rain and Stain resistance
resistant Breathln' Brushed
James Ross (R)
William Donham (R)
tanned Into the leather
Pigskin'". the extra steel
95th District
58th District
shank support. the soft.
Tom Johnson (R)
• Perspiration resistant
Michael Fox (R)
flexible Mlcrocrepe" soles.
innersoles
59th District
9fth District
or just because they're still
William Hlnlg (D)
Edward Hughes (D )
• A pric e that's easy on
a darn good value.
97th District
60th District
your budget
Whatever
the reason . treat
Robert Boggs (D)
David HarUey (D)
yourself
to the classic
98th District
61st District
Available
HUSH
PUPPIES®
SIZES
comfort
of
Hush
Puppies•
Arthur Bowers (D)
Sherrod Brown (D)
4 )~ s y, 6 y, 7 ki 8 ~ 9 .11 1.9 _y, t1 1~ 13
Shoes.
99th District
62ild District
~•m
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Wayne L. Hays (D)
John Begala (D )
~arrow
. Com plele Selection
• • • • • • • • • • • -••
63rd District
Medium
•
•
•
Of
Men's, Women's, and
• •
• • • • • • ! • •• f.!
W1de
Ohio Senate
James Zehner (D)
• • • • • • • • • • f.!
•
•
•
Children's Hush Puppies
h i1aWide
Democrats 18
filth District
• • • • • • • • • • • •• f!'·• f!'.•
Republicans 15
Waldo -Bennet Rose (R)
1st District
65th District
M. Ben GaetlJ (R)
Robert Taft II (R)
!18th District
3rd District
Middle o! Uooer Block, Pomeroy, 0 .
9a.m.·5 p.m.
Lawrence Hughes (R)
Theodore Gray (R )
Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
87th District
5th District
9a.m . 8
Fri.
Larry Christman (D)
Neal Zirruners Jr. (D)
68th District
7th District

SALE

Open
Every
Night

MENS COLORED

1250 WATT

JUSTEN

.SWEAT
SHIRTS

STYLIST
DRYER

CURLING
IRON

"Fruit Of Loom"
Reg.

13" Value

WOMEN$ POLYESTER
SHORT SLEEVE

Values to $10 .99 . Cardigans

Solid colors, Prints,
trimmed styles .
Reducing our stock .

or

2

Pullovers. Turtle

'3"

For$500
Visit Our
New

TOYLAND
Giris • Misses

sure.
serVIce

Reg.
$}00

classics

easy on your budget
easy on your feet

DUTCHESS II

44e

..

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

POCKET
RADIO

Reg. 69'

3

$299

Save

•ro

For $100

Pr.

Save Up To •sn

OUR
-ARTIFICAL
CHRISTMAS
FLOWERS
.
ARE IN!

MENS JEANS
Our Entire Stock goes.
Includes Big Yank, Lee,
Wrangler. Pre-washed and
140z. Denim. Lay In your
winter needs noW.

Waist
Sizes $922Pr.
28 To 42

needs. Poinsettias, gree&gt;nry,

etc.

Entire Stock Reduced!
WOMEN$ BETTER

POLYESTER
PANTS
Rec.u~ar

y_alues
11

To 13
Come, Browzel
1

MENS SWEATER .
SALE
Values
. .
To '11"
Pullover or
cardigan
.

$677

.

THE BEAUTY
SALOON
All you need for
beautiful skin and nails.

Womens Thermal
UNDERWEAR

Compare
At '12"

AM·FM
PORTABLE
RADIO

Shirts or BOttoms
Be Ready this year I
While cotton, Sizes S·M·
L-XL . ·Beat the co ld
that 's coming .

Reg.

'441

$3.77

$688

•Solid State
eAC or DC
•Red
Yellowor Case

$1388

'19" Value

DOZENS
OF
NEW
and DIFFERENT
GIFTS

JUMBO
LOG ROLt

GIFT
WRAP

eGag Gffts
eNaughtr Items

gge

Come, Browze

5~ Quart

I

DEEP
FRYER
Cooks, too

~::_ $999

[

a

victories to crow about too :
Gov. James Boren ended a
string of Democratic losses to
capture a Republican Senate
seat in Oklahoma and former
professional basketball star
Bill Bradley won the New
Jersey Senateseatheld foc 24
years by the Republicans,
bea tin g New Rig ht GO P
nom inee Jeffrey Bell.
But there was no firm
ideological trend in that.
CIa rk ' s
Rep ub I i ca n
conquerer in Iowa, Roger
Jepsen, was just as
eonservative as Bell, and
another candidate of the
rig ht , Republican Gordon
Humphrey", won a Se nate seat
in New Hampshire.
In th e battle lor 36
g o ve rn o r sh ip s , t h e
Republicans picked up seats
previously
held
by
Democra ts in Tennessee,
with Lamar Alexander ; in
Pennsylvania, with Richard
Thornbur gh;
and
in
Nebraska, with Rep. Charles
Thone.
Just as the Senate lost its
on ly black · member in
Brooke, it got its first female
member elected in 12 years.

Nant'Y Landon Kassebaum,
th e daughter of 1936 GOP
presiden tial candidate All
La ndon, held the Kansas
Senate seat lor the GOP. She
is the first woman to win a
Senate term since Marga ret
ChaseSmithoiMaine in l966.
No presidential prospects
were dimm ed by the
elec tions. Senate Republican
leader Howard Baker, Illinois
Gov . .James Thompson and
ntinois Rep. Philip Crane, all
GOP' aspirants for !980, were
reelected to .the curr ent
off ices without strain.
Congressional leaders also
fared well. Along with Baker,
Se nate Republican Whip Ted
Stevens of Alaska was easily
re-elected. So were all the
House le ader s : Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill of Massac use tt s and Democratic
and Republican leaders Jim
Wright of Texas and John
RhodesofArizona.
Among the House members
defeated were several who
be came
enmeshed
in
personal or public scandals.
Losers included Reps. Joshua
Eilberg, D-Pa ., indicted just
before the election , and J .

He rbert Burke , R-F ia .,
convicted
of
charges
stemming from a fracas at a
topless go.go club.
But Reps. Daniel Flood, DPa ., under two indiclments,
and Charles Diggs, D-Mich.,
convicted on 29 counts of
payroll irregularities, came
through without trouble.
Edward Glirney, a former
Florida senator who retired
in the midst of charges he
later bea t, ·failed to win a
House seat.
Two
wo men
House
members were defeated:
Democrati c Reps. Helen
Meyner, wife of th e former
New Jersey governor. and
Martha Keys of Kansa s, wife
of Rep. Andr ew Jacobs.
Jacobs ,
an
In dia na
Democrat, wa s re-e lected.
Therewere twomajor wins
by women: Mrs . Kassebaum
in the Kansas Senate race
and Democratic Gov. Ella
Grasso in Connecticut. But
DemocratJaneEskmd lost to
~ker m Tennessee .
!'here wtll be thr ee new
wo men House mem bers :
Olympia Snowe, R-Maine;
Geraldine Ferraro, D-N.Y.,

Senate seats had good luck Reps. Cochran , R-Miss., William Cohen , _R-1\laine, Paul
Tsongas, 0-Mass ., Lar ry
Pressler , R-S.D. , Willi am
Armstrong, R-Colo., and Max
Baucus, DMonl. , al l won their
races .

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE
Do you want to sell a home?
Business? Land? List with us!
We have a complete real
estate service.

CALL 992-2342
EVE. 992-2449
BILL CHILDS -MANAGER
RODNEY DOWNING • BROKER
MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

1HIOUCiHOU1 IHI
U OIE fOI

,.ooucu
111110 ti\OW All JUST

I
I

liMIT I BAG WITH
COUPON AT RIGHT

'"" ,. '"·~
.,..". ~' ..lorm.wte" 1~---=-=:-c=---t&gt;o.
T01 Al
IIPQoJIIed 1&lt;1

ru doly avtoltlble

.., Ci!Ch l(re&gt;ge r StO P~ . e ocept ~~
•p ~c r lo call~ noted on th. a·1 II "" e 00
""' ou t ol an i o:l..-.n&gt;5e;:l ru•m . .. ~ .. ,11
oller ~ ou ~ our ' " o·ce o l .J co mpi •.lDie
otem · • he n dvar l~ bior . reflect ong th~
!.li me !o.lv&gt;nlj S OJ ~ ra onc hen w n rc h wol l
e11 111 1~ yo u to p ur chue the ad ~I!I'I &lt;Sf.d
rte m" th e .lOve., rH&lt;I pr o:" ...., lhon JO

CLOVIR VAllEY .
STUWBEIRY

Pre.serves

age
(1

Bag

-lb.

,ANIIIHIC IAYINGI
OH I IOGII NANO

~~b.

5

I
I
I
I

Copyright 1978 -

S A ! IS 'A C liON

2ND. BIG WEEK OF

I

5

I

-lb.

~~v

HB. RO'\... $2.58

li

I

~

$

I
I

Grape Jelly

I
I

I

I
I
I
I

ISAVil •
r6o· I

l-Ib.

I
I

CLOVlll VALUY

On 2Pkga.

Roll ·

PUIC~ISI

LIMIT 2 PKGS. WITH COUPON IND $7.50 IDOITIOUl
(IICLUDI!G THIS IJIIJ
liM IT ONE COUPON PER f AMll Y
CIIINIIIMIIIMf. lft SliiiU,_I . Itf 11. 1171
ltiJI:tT II~ Jll ll 1o LOCAL T.U EI

2-lb.&amp;gc
Jar
ROUND

Oil

TOP

KROGER SHERBET OR

c

Country
Club Ice ,12 -Gal
Cream
.. .... ctn.

K.ROGER

Can

$
Single
Rolls

ROLLS PlEA'E

itrNu2%
INDIAN

00

ONE PlEASE

Job
Squad
Towels .......
.... ... .
LIMIT 2
Grade A
Medium
Eggs ................ .Doz.

Florida
Oranges

·····16 c

lvs.

Miracle Whip
$
Salad •
· Quart
Dressang LIMIT
............. Jar
50 SHEETS PER ROll

.Tomato Sauce

20-oz.

KAAFT

c
Gal .

$.

Lowfat
Paper or
Milko.s•;........... ........Plastic Ctn.

RIVER

Seedless
White
Grapefruit ..... Each
Serve 'N'
Save
1
Wieners .. ... Pkg.

KROGER

•

LOWFAT MILK , CAL . Plii.STIC CTN . Sl .A9

Cooked Ham .. .... .. .

lb .

$2 99

..UHIAIIIO

Table Talk
Pumpkin Pie .....
Colby
longhorn Cheese
Fresh Baked
Cinnamon Rolls ...

,.,h$119
19
. . lb

$2

. ~~~ $119

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORES

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,

&amp;;;ei;s;alE

$

Beef ·
Rib Eye ... .... ... ......

•·

!NTHEPIECE

HOllY FARMS . U.S.O.A.. INSPECTED

Kroger
Meat

GRADE. A

Pick '0' .
Chix .... ...... ......... .lb.

Rnlnnnn

•

'

99
SLIClD

1b

FilE

OPEN
24HRS.

ADAY
Except Closed Salunl11 llidlipt Til "9 lll Sundu
llttllf Hinton . Whitt Sulphur Spri"fS

I
I
I
I

I
I

c:

IROCER CIST CUTTER .....

$

Kroger 20-oz.
White
Bread .... ...... .. ..

1
1

I

Gunnoe's
Country Sausage

I

.

' '

:
I

IROCER COST CUTTER COUNII

I
I

None sold to dealers.

0

l!Mif ONE COUPON PU FAMI LY

/:_~~'i

Pom eroy Krogers . We reserve th e right to lim it quantit ies.

I

C.W.IIIIINI.I ..... P l t i U ' - '· " ' 11.1111
IIUCl llllftXAIU lt&amp;R &amp;liCit IUU

(~- ·

Sunday Nov . s thru Sa turday Nov . 11, 1978 in Gallipolis and

I
I

Bag

IOF

The Kroger Ca. item s and price s good

I
I

Lilli ONE 8.1 GWITH COUPON UO $1.50 IOOITIOUI PURCHISI
(llCLUDING THIS 1111 )

FALL:,

GU ARA NTEE
he rylhr n lj n&gt;u tJu ~ ~ ~ I( rog er ''
g u ar ~nT&gt;IOtd l o r """ IOif l !ioi!l&gt;, l a c tron
•t1j.trd les;; o r m a nul ~ c tur,.r II ~ " " .or~
not W l•$l•ed K • r'l}~' ,... ,11 ' !lJJI,:,Ce ~0 1&gt;'
rUt m ,..,11'1 u 1e "" ~'~ !H a rK.! o r • c om
l)&amp;rabl t' b ran&lt;l or re ' " " d yo ur pur r .,uA
ro::e

I
I

I

ll. -_·.·___ ~--'

I
I
I

40'

I
I

t

l"JJ•·

and Beverly Byron , D-Md .
All thfee governors who
ran lor the Senate th is year Boren of Oklahoma , J, James
Exon of Nebraska a nd David
Pryor of Arkansas - were
successful .
House members seeking

I

SUGAR 01

L

-

both parties.
· The voters gave the Democrats control of both House
and Senat e for the 13th
consec utive .eJection, but
redu ce d ·the co ngressional .
margins held-by the party In
possession of th e Whi te House .
The Republicans 'made impressive inroa ds on two
Democratic strongholds in
both the South and North .
GOP Rep. Thad Cochran
won the Mississippi Senate
seat being vac ate~ by
veteran Democ ra t James
Eastland, becoming the first
Republican to represent the
state since Blanche K. Bruce ,
a bla ck man, left office in
1881.
Twin victories abnost as
sweet for the GOP gave the
Minnesota Senate seat held
by the late Hubert Hwnphrey
and his widow, Muriel, to
Republi c an Dav e
Durenberger, and Anderson 's
seat to the plywood magnate
Rudy Boschwitz. They will be
the
first
Minnesota
Republican senators in 20
years.
Th e Democrats had some

DOMINO ~-~ I

~ !I

Morel ·. ·

SHOPPERS MART ~ • S(».methlng New .·. Dallyl
1

the balance In Texas, where
Republican Sen . John Tower
held slim lead over Rep.
Bob Krueger in the last
stages of vote tabulating.
Anti-incumbent fever also
struck the governors. Losers
Inc lud e d Republi c an s
Meldrim Thomson of New
Hampshire, Robert Bennett
of Kansas and Democrats
Bob Straub of Oregon and
Martin
Schreiber
of
Wisconsin .
Returns on a cross-country
listofreferendums callingfor·
tax cuts or spending lids
passed or were leading in
Alabama, Idaho Ill inois
Nevada, North' Dakota' ·
Texas and two counties of
Maryland.
But Proposition 13-type
proJl(Jsals were rejected in
Michigan and Oregon ; voters
in Colorado, Florida and
Arkansas said "no" to their
tax cut referendums; and
re sidents
of
wealthy
Mootgomery County, Md.,
killed a local tax-triinming
initiative.
The election did nothing to
dim the presidential hopes of
• pr~spective candidates in

(Continued from page! )
" Noting that there is no
~ inunediate remedy to the
financial woes of Ohio's
~ largest
school district, ·
• Gallagher said the only hope
;, would be to return . tn the
~ governor and the state
' Leg~ature In an effort lo
~ come up with additional
• funds lor school programs.
~ The district had borrowed
~ $20.7 million from the
;, emergency loan fund and the
.· state Controlling Board
• relaxed the restrictions on
: tlJe loan.
~ Dayton's 8.!knilllevy, the
; tllird largest Issue in th~
· state, was rejected for the
: fourth time in a year and a
,, half.
~ School officials indicated
• cutbacks, but did not
' elaborate since the district is
,. involved in .desegregation
,. busing.
:. In Madison County, Londoo
f· voters turned down a 5.8-mill
•· bond Issue, which would have
t raised $4.4 million for a new
· ;, school, for the sixth straight
~ time, ooly this time the vote
~ was close, with the issue
losing unofficially by 42.
' • votes.
" The school district lost its
. 1 accreditaUon last spring oo~ cause of inadequate facilities .
; Kindergarten classes are
: held in a nearby church
• building and some classes are
; cooducted in hallways and in
~ janitor's rooms with wood
• covering the sinks.
• Clinton Massie in Clinton
~ County, Franklin and Little
: 'Miami in Warren County face
closures next mooth because
of rejected levies. Voters in
Deerfield Union in Warren
CountY also turned down a
levy, but schools will not
~ close since they opened late
• tllis fall.
:
Bucyrus in Cra;tford
~ County also talked about
••• cutbacks in the wake of
~ voters rejeeting an 8.11-mill
• levy, the state's second
~ largest issue.
~
St.
Clairsville
also
;;; forecasta dosing in 'light of
• defeat of a 4.15-milllevy.
~
In Madison County, West
~ JefferliOn School officials said
, fue seventh straight rejection
~' of a 5.!knill operating levy
' means the district's budget
: for the coming year will be
; cut as low as possible without
: losing state aid.
But Wolf Creek in northern
Washlngtoo County will be
4lligible for state aid for the
first time after voters agreed
to a 4.5-IDilllevy which puts
the district's millage at 20.5
mills, just over the ~ill
.; state minimum.
'
The SOIH;tudent district has
been funded tlJrough a power
·plant and a steel plant, and
school officials foresee only
transportatloo funds from the
state.
•
For the fifth straight time,
·: • voters In the Paulding
: · Exempted Village District in
• • Paulding County rejected a
! ~ bond lasue which .would have
: I provided funds foc a new high
= school.
• i Voters in Port Clinton ap: • P.oved a $1.113 milllon bond
~ lasue to repair deteriorating
: t buildings, including a 56: ; yearold junior high school.
• 1 Several of the districts
~ t certified to borrow from the
~ ; Btate'a emergency loan fund
; ; approved levies. Those
Q • Included Fairfield in Butler
~ \ County; Buckeye Central;
~ : Reading In Hamllt!ll County;
Southern
Local · in
Columbiana County and
Arcadia In Hancock County.
: North Fork In Licking
• County, caldwell in Noble
County IIIII Springfield Local
" In Lueas County defeated

., t

ON SALE!

They are selling fast, so don't
walt too long for your holiday

VALUE

•

COFFEE
MUGS

SHOP U$ OFTIN ··MANY NIW GIFT
ITIMS ARI ARRIVING • • COMI, Sffll

SALES CENTER
PUPRi~§®

AM ..

DECORATED

KNEE-HI
SOCKS

GHI:I:I~I:'S

Hu·sh

Ohio voters. •

or

cowl necks . Includes same
imperfects. Great Buys!

Come, Save.

Values To

Value!

Womens Sweater
SALE

TOPS

'. .

•

!By ARNOLD S,\WISLAK .
, United Press International
! The Democrats won
'11Jlother two-year ·tease oo
' Congress and a majority of
. tlle nation's governorships in
'TuesdaY's mid -term
~elections, but angry voters
.sent packing a long list of
."incumbents from both
: jtarUes.
' Govemorhnd senators fell
:llke ripe fruit in a high wind.
But !he taxp~yers • revolt
supposedly kicked o!f by
.California's Proposition 13
last sununer stirred the air
~ more glmUy in autumn.
, lncumbenl casualties
~ included Republican Sens.
'' Robert Griffin of Michigan
~l and Edward Brooke of
.· Massachusetts the Senate's
~ mly black· a~ Democratic
~ Sens . Fl~yd Haskell of
~ Colorado Dick Clark of Iowa
~ Wendell' Anderson of
~ Minnesota
Wlliiam
;; Hathaway of Maine and
•Thomas Mcintyre of New
,, Hampshire.
Another Senate seat was In

$344

$999

'5" $477

$509~AIR

lo

.,

18"

1

,

lflems keep control, incumbent~ sent packing

H~

1

Celebrezze

~1 - The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov . 8, 1978

THE FINAL 5·DAYS OF OUR SAVING
Plenty
Of
Free Parking

'

�12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov . 8, 1978

13-The Dally Sentinel, Middleoort·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Nov . 8, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

I ""I·

2days
3 dotys
£days

-

Word:; ur Untl.t'r
Cl\arge
Cash
I.Z5
1.00
L)O
1.90
:!.25
1.80
3.75
J.OO

~

c.·enb

pt!'l"

~r

wurd

day.

Ads ru nnin~ oUler Own c.•uJ&amp;'i.'Utiv.:
dllys will be dwr~:l'tl at the l dl!ly
r.a~ .

Ju mt&gt;morr. Card uf Th~:~nk!; !11\LI
ObilUHI'Y: 6 L't'nts ~~- wonJ. t;I.OO
minunwn . Ce&amp;sh 111 aQv;:mee.

Mullile llmne sal~ twcl Yard ~ lcs
Hrl' ac.'l•epled only w1th ca sh with
order. :!a t-ent ctwrge foc ads carry·

ing Bux Numbt&gt;r In Care uf The St-n·
tin eI.
r ~ rvb

the

d~ht

mort' than

Llfll'

UJcor-

The Publisher

tu l:'llll ur ~jecl any atb da-11lt'd o!J..
~:t w nal . The Pul&gt;ILSht!r will nul L;~·
respor ~oai ble fo r
M'I in~rtio n .

be rer"tlembered . hpec iolly . I
th ank the Midd lepor t l:m ergen cy ~Quod . Or. Hand. CC U p er
sonnet or,d th e nursmg staff at
the Holzer Medic al Cen te r . and
a ll
my
f r iend ~
w h .;&gt;

tbru Fridwy
4P.M .
Ule dl:ly ~fore pu bticiiliun

______N!!.t!c,es - ·- _-·-NO HUNTI NG or tr espossrng on
my p r oper ty Y1 tlhout perm 1s
sian . Judy McGraw.
GUN ~HOOT . Ra cine Gun Club .
l:very Sunday 1 pm . factory
ch oke guns on ly.

ARf

troubled

w ith

wdd

Southern Ohio Coal Co. to
Ohio Power Company, Ease.,

19Tf DO[)Gl: CHARG t: RSt . 10,000
m ile., . W e ll
eq ui pped .
9&lt;r.J .'JOb3 ,

l~i' 'J MONH

CAJHO . hcellen l
condi tion l ob of ex tra s, 52 700.
4'/'J .7bl:!9

NO HUNTING on !all owing pro·
per t ies day or night , Gory [)ill &amp;
Raym ond Boa twr ight prope r·
!les . Chester . Towns hi p.
.
.

~ to,•do, d .

1976 CHRVS LER
COROOBA .
Yellow . wi th wh ite leather interior . l o aded . Li k e new.
99:i -l'SY4 o r ~9:/ - 3484 .

lOST: REWARD. Blue Tick female
dog . 40 lb . lost seen near
Chesl er on fH . 24B . Chi ld's pet
a nd
hunting
com pa n1on .
662 -4351 or 662 ·4305 .

-

-

--- - - - -·. , - - - For Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE:: Home Pork
Rout e 3J. nor th of Pomeroy
L o rg~ lots Co_ll ~4~ · 7.4 7 9 ..
opt s .

TWO BEDROOM mobil e horne.
Potd ut ilities. Ad u lts on ly or
will co nsid er I child . 2 mi les aut
on SR 143. Re ferences and
deposit r equired . 99:J.'J647 or

Licensed Boiler
Operator
with State of Ohio license.

9f.f2-3tl59 .

Rotating shift. Excellent
fringe benefits. Apply

ONE BEDROOM lur ni sh ed house .
Walk ing di stance to Pomero y.
No pets . Securi ty depos it required '192 -3405 .

Personnel oHice.

HOLZER MEDICAl
CENTER
0.

446·5IDS
Wanted to Buy
CHIP
WOOU . Poles
ma x.
diameter 10" on larges t end ,
S8.50 per . ton. Bundled slab ,
$0.50 per ton . Uel ivered to
Ohio Pal let Co .. Rt . 2. Pom eroy .
942 -2089 .
TIMBER . POMEROY Forest Products. Top price for st and ing
sow timber . Col\ 992 -5905 or
~~nt_ H?n_by_. l: 4~0~ B~7? .
OlO FURNITURE , ice bo.xes , brass
beds; iron beds, desk s. etc ,
compl ete household s. Write
M.D. M ill er. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
.call. '192. -7700.
. . . . - . .
OLD COIN S, pock et watches ,
doss r ings. w eddi ng bond s,
dia monds . Gold or sil ver . Col i
_Ro_g ~r ~~~s l~y ~7~2:1~3~ . _
~

Wt: fliCK up junk aut o bodi es buy·
ing ju nk CO t §. scr ap 1ron . bo t·
te ries and metal s. Rider's
Sal vage, SR 12.ot . Pomeroy
992 -540B .
.
. ..
JU NK BA TTER IES. S2 . Copper S35
per lb . Clean aluminum $15 pe r
lb., no cons . f or limited time
.only :.. H!d~ r·~ S_oi_:.'OJ!I~ · ~ R _12~ . _

e

FAJ.IM HOU SE to rent : a good ren t
on To nner s Hun . Roc1ne . Ohio ,
Ht. 2 . 3 bed rooms in sula ted
home. o il , furna ce . garage.
garden, r umpu s room . Iorge
basem en t bo th . hot anJ cold
w at er, spring . drill ed we ll
Available abo ut Dec . 1st , 1Yi'8.
J.l ent $1::.15 . per m on th in od \/Once . Al so securi ty deposit of
5125 . To see. co il Mrs. b ther
W es t Rt . I . Phone 949· 2BBq

CAM PER TOP l or slll oll pick up .
~ xc ellent
ca nd i t101 1. S 150 .
7J:J.'J692 .
19/0 HONDA CB Red . hk e n ~ w .
ow ner 45 years old . 450 mi les .
yy;ns&lt;M or 99L &lt;l 4BY.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

COAl , LIMESTONE , sand , gro\lel ,
calcium ch lori de, fertili zer , dog
food , ond oil type s ol salt. EM·
ce lsi or ~olt Work s. Inc.. E. Mo m
St .. Po meroy . 992 -:JB9 1.
. . .
. . . . . .
BUHHOUGHS SfNSI ·MA TIC acco unting machine . Pho ne
991 -2156 . The Doily Sen tin el.
111 Court Stree t, Pomeroy ,
Ohio
GRIMl:S GOL [)t:N . Hed De l1 ciaus.
8. Go lden Deli ci ous app les. r: it l pot r ick
Orchard . SR 689 .
014 -069-3785 .
RCA MARK 1:1 solid stole stereo 8trock to pe player . home unit
wit h built · in speak er s ond ou&gt;&lt; .
fO Cks . Very good cond 11i0n.
Must se ll Coli after Spm .
9'-12 -::.1'195 .
GOOD EAR corn. $2 a b u. Model
11_ s~o tgun . 527~ . ?42-nsq.

PORCH SALE . Wed . thru Fri. 957
_Br? o_?~o'! · ~~d~lry~rt ~ __ _
GARAGE SALE . Jomes Titu s
res idence . Wat er St .. Syracuse .
two b lock s up tram pork . Ne)(t
door to Sam Arno ld . Fri . and
Sot . Nov . )0. 11.

Qll\_oil oil ,~"- $347

HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , se ll
trade or train. New ond used
saddles. Ruth Reeves , Albany .

___ . . _.

HISING STAR Ke nnel s. Boarding
ond grooming , oil breeds .
Cheshire , 3b7·0292 .
LOVABLE WHITE snow dr iH great
PYRENEES Pu p pie s. Phone
1-b 14 -667 .:J83tl .
GOI NG OUT of Bu siness Solei
Poodles, Pekingese, Pomero ·
n1 an , Tea cup, Tinies. SJS to
$125. Phonebl4 -b9b-1297.
AK C Rl::GISTI:REO collie puppi es .
SoU each . 742-2292 .

I The Poet's I
l

I:I ~D R OOM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~A RM

FOR ~ a l e Hou!&gt;9 . 2 born!&gt; ,
r,njlcr l o1ge pond . 10 ones or
Hl acres. i' 4'J L56b . •

p~

MAIN

0.

buill·i n

-- -- - --

DU STL ESS FIRl:PlACE ond ch111m e y
cl eaning . The Ch im ney Sweep .
Coli b 14 373 -605/ .
·
WILl l)0 baby sil ting 1n rny home
an~ t ime . 49:J .5j ] J

19/0 NASHUA \4 x 65 3 bedroom
l ' 1 both . underpi nning . S1500
and a!&gt;sume loon . 949·::.161:13 0 1
843.33 11

With

ONLY 521.000 .00.
NICE MINI FARM - Over
5 acres, barn and other

Good

plus a real nice 14x70 1978
mobile home with large
add -a -room and expando.
D eck i ng
a'nd
many
features . Fair value at

$48,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ALL
TYPES
OF
PROPERTIES. IF YOU
REALLY WANT TO SELL,
CALL TODAY.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
REALTOR·ASSOCIATES

Denv~r Kapple
At

MOORE'S

Muffler . Brakes - I
I
Shocks .
Tires
Battery .
I
Installation Service·

-

Ph . 992·2848

3· 15·1 fc
- -Real Estate lor Sale
ri VE HOOM house and both .
remodeled, f ully ca rpeted. May
be seen oh cr 3 pm . Ph one
W'l.·JY33.
Ht: MOOELt[) OLDEH home on ' ·,
acre. J or 4 bedroo ms. f.=ull
basemen t. Gas central heat ,
hud get $50 o mon th. De tached
garage. 99l -703b.
MOotHN J bed room house . Fully
for peted . Ce ntral 01 r. Full
ba se me nt
wi t h fir ep lace.
~nclo sed sun po1ch l oca ted on
6 1 1 acr es near Hoc in e on
blac kt op ro od Price $40 ,000.
Conloct lorry Wolle weekday s

otte&lt;l pm b14 · 949· 2~~o .

bl 4 - ~92 - 30!:i l .

J' , ACRES IN Pomeroy . Secluded
wooded ore o on top of h ill
Overloo ks R1 ver , Water and
elE-c tri c O\l odob le. 992 -Jtl!:lb .

.

-· - - -

-

RI:AI'
JY
UL •
GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.
Broker

Complete

.

lUM P HOUSt cool $3S per ton .
co~h a'! ly_. ~eljv~r~d~ 9~2: 11 ~ 26 .
FlflEWOOO FOH
sol e . $25
tru ckl oad . 992 74 89. osk lor
_Chor_le! . _ • _____ ~ •.
SIX MONTHS old k id nanny goats .
535 eac h. 742·2292 .
FIRt WOOD FOR sol e. 949-2350 .
ALLI S CHALMt RS W -0 45 diesel
tractor w ith mower. New Ideo
co rn picker . GM( 2 ton form
truck . Joe Soy re . Rt: I :~R u llo nd .
Phone 742·11JH
Rt:DUCf SAfE and tast wilh
Go8ese Tob i e ! ~ 8 1::-Vop "water
p il ls&gt; ~ ~ls~n D ~ u ~ . . • •
21 " MCCUL LOUGH chain sow .
84 3 2::.104 .
PICKUP .

$400.

HE AfWAVE WOOD burner. Ther·
mostot and i on. Call992 -i'001 .
WAfi.M MOHNING heater model
811:1, Excelle nt condition, S!iO.
Co ll992 -3301 alter Spm .
. . - . . . - . . .

SNOW
TIRE SALE .
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

Pomeroy Landmark
·~
·J•ck W. C•rHy, Mgr.

-

Phone 992·2111

Estate

service. can us for what we
have available. Listings of
all kinds wanted. Homes,
farms, commerciaL· Your
satisfaction is our goal.
Give us a try .
Associate

New Lima Ro.a d
Hutchinson Sub. Div.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003

conditioning. Convenient one floor plan with basement.
Priced for fast sale, 520,000.

· DOWNING-CHILDS
Phone 992-2342 ·
Eve. 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker

Bill Childs, Manager

c ar garage,

and

2 lots .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
LOTS - l Acr e and up near Pomeroy . ,

SDACRESFREEGAS - Good1'12sloryhousewilhfull , .
basement. Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for

have f ive bedrooms, utility room and garage . Very low

family

r oom

front porch and ba ck
sundeck on 1 acre of level

land . Want $69,900.
RACINE - 3 bedrooms,
bath ,
n ice
woodwork,
natural gas and city water.

Will sell for only Sl2,ooo.
CAMPSITES - On Rt . 124

Falcon"
actress
25 Makeup
M Dispatched
27 Gull's
relative
28 Chinese
weight

driveway.

Nowt

$10,500.

f. Gettles,

1

Roberta HuHman
Branch ~r . 698-6300
Assoc••fesl
Tom Bozlcevic

669·5063
Kenneth Crabtre'
698·6196

•

'4.88 "';~;

9' and 12' Vinyl

fJocir Covering In Stock

..

Co 11742-2211

RUnAND
FURNITURE

FRANK ANI&gt; ERNIE'$

&gt;1

1

=

-s:f''$ A Sc.~N"rlFIGo
~ pA(:,T 12 ",.
fla~,
E'2:&gt;

...
'

•.
l'

.•

,.H ;

-

Natural gas forced air heat, located In Chester.

Woe need large &amp; small Farms
and Many types of property.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Assoclaft949·331t

•

~

YoU ~
SHOUJ..D AL.WAYS pC..uG. ~
te. IN ..uo=.
•
E ~ 16'1/IO
-, .-.to
I
'f'OP .soc:.ace.T AND ift1&amp;
~
IZEPI'I~ IN
•
"r'He SO I 1\IM ONe

Yesterday's Aillwer
16 Designing
2$ Fndl
man
27 Bartered
19 Chimney
29 Gaggle's
grime
members
22 Alert
30 Golf score
23 Red in
34 Festal
the fare

24 Ocean route

Wedue•""Y· Nov. 8

38 Youth
37 Friend: Fr :,

BRIDGE

"-r.-n~~r-~ . ~~~~--~O~s-w-a~ld~J7a-c-o7b_y_a-nd~A71a-n~S~o-n~t-a_g____

Wrong res·ponse is costly

squeezed in diamonds and
spades . The one contract
that doesn't make is six
• K Q6
spades and that is the one we
• 85
played. Could you comment
t AK9141
on the bidding ? "
• Q3
This is a very hard hand to
-+-+-1-·lfnr.sT
EAST
bid.
However, South started
• 10 7
Fanner's
• J 984
· the trouble when he re•
Q
10
7
3
2
• J 964
guild
sponded one spade. He has a
• J8
• Q 10 3
31 Hgt.
very good hand and should
• 8762
+A 5
respond two clubs. With
3% Front
SOUTH
good
hands it is really impage
+ A 53 2
portant that you show your
. .AK
distribution .
• 76
North would rebid two dla+ K J 10 9 4
monds and if this hand were
played in a match point
Vulnerable : No one
35
duplicate
(even with the best
Dealer: North
37 Seaweed
players in the world) practi--.1-.J......L.-:dl Weot North Eaol South cally all South players would
38
Box .
Pass I+
It
bid three notrump and play
Pass 3 •
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it : liass 2+
it there.
A X y D L B A A X R
Pass s•
l&gt;a.ss 4+
The good club slam might
Pass Pass
Pass 6+
be reached if South tried two
Is L o N G r E L L o w
Pass
spades as his second bid and
One letter simply· stands for another. In this sample A is
North rebid to three diaused for the three L's, X for the IWO o·s. etc . Single lollors,
monds
. South could bid three
Opening lead : •4
apostrophes. lhe lenglh and for ma tio n of the words are all
hearts, North three spades,
hints. Each day t he code l etters are different
South three nolrump, at
whic h point an ambitious
CRYPTOQUOTES
Oswald Jaceby
and imaginative North
·
'
Alan Sonlal
might try four clubs to cause
QCNNV
C B B·
TL
C R Z '.:
South to bid the club slam.
· A correspondent writes In
All wishful thinking. The
ILCRG- part : "This hand has really main point is that South
XMOQMR
HYS
caused a lot of trouble In our should not have responded
THSSHX bridge group. As you can one spade.
OH
MK
XL
QCFL
see, six clubs makes easily (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . l
because a!ter South draws
(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
trump he can set up
ERN send $1 to : " Win at
dillnmy's diamonds with one Bridge •· care of this newsps·
tldf ..It also makes six no- per, 0 . Box 489, Radio City
ti'lamp because West gels Station, New York , N. Y. 10019.)
NORTH

u.a

.

33~~tisher's

;:-s:-·

..

"J,

Rutianci

CAN 1T BELIEVE

•L
YOU
RENDEZVOUSED WITH
ll10&amp;E CROOK&amp; ANCI
RI~KE'l/ YOUR

LIFE TO&amp;AVE
GARY'5 '

OWN

I 1/0N'T ll11NK MY LIFE WAS
IN ANY REAL 1/ANBER, BIRDIE.
BUT THEY &amp;liRE THREW A
&amp;CARE INID POOR ClARY

P:

CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement &amp; 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre land
and large storage building . Price S21.~ .

more extras, IO'&lt;fV heat bill with nat. gas forced air

,..em

MADAM· "r'HNI"'$ WI-IV
.J

TALKTO .
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gena Smith

.!F~R!AN~K~&amp;!E~R~N~IE;_~~~~-----------:~~~~--------------------------------,

MAJOR APPliANCES

Buy where you can come In

and see what you're gelling
- Gaod Hlttllons ~ Fully
stocked.

nalural gas forced air heal, outside storage bvlldlng.
Pr ice S27.000.

furna ce. All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location. Will go quick for $35,000.
40 ACRES of land In Sutton Twp. Nice building sites,
small barn . Priced at only $21,500.
$15,000 - Good 5 bedroom house with 2 full baths ,

Housing "
Hear/quarters

ain't much!

As Low As

equipped with refrigerator and stove, utility room ,

DON'T GET HURT BY
INFLATION. MAKE A
SOLID INVESTMENT.
Helen L. 1ealord

-

a

~~~~-

set!

the

Rubber Back Carpet

heating bill. Red barn.flke storage building . Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just off Rt. 7. ·
Asking 555,000.
MIDDLEPORT - This well cared for newer home has
3. BRs , living room, bath, mostly carpeted, kitchen Is

TWO ACRES -A beaullful4 year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eal·ln kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths. full basement with TV room. Many

Associ•tes

~~~~==~~~

All carpel Installed with
padding at no charge.
E•pert installation .

family room, and to finish this well· laid out home we

to the Ohio River . Any size
you want . Buy now before
another round of Increases .

Supo P. Murphy

•

..

SPACIOUS BI . LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. II has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets.

natural
gas
ce ntral
'heating, city water, out of

home with

___

quick sale, SAO,OOO.

stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beaut.iful dining
room with sliding glass doors . Large living room and

.thai has a fireplace and
large glass door. Large

N o.1 . You wi ll have to see
thi s 2 bedr oom hom e to
beli e ve the price. F ea1ures.
a l arge l ivi ng room w ·new
carpe tin g, ex tra large din ·
ing r oo m . Two nice lots
wit h pl enty ot s hade . N ow
r e nt inn fnr P)(tr~ IN COME!
Low Price! $12,000.
N o . 2. l 2x60 Elcona mobile
home co mpl e tely fur n ished
on a ni ce y . ai r co nd it on ed, ceme nt patio and

Realtor

$14,000.
12 YEARS OLD - Frame 3
bedroom home with bath.
town . 529.500.
I YEAR OLD - Here's a
fine spotless 3 bedroom

__

Ht:EV t: S TRADING Post, Pageville,;_
Groceries. dry goods . hardware. feed. lock sh op Spec id,t.
25 lb. of
dog--toad
• I!
·---·
-- . $3 .1:18.,__

SAVE ON
CARPETING

the pr i ce of on e or split

Janice

car garage on nice corner

lot. Just $48,500.
RUTLAND - 4 bedrooms,
bath, gas heat, fireplace , 2

-.---------- - -·--- -·-- ,

ACROSS
39 Promenade
ALLEY OOP
I Box a Ia All tO Signed over
r'MlSI!---1\1()--SC-A-J.:-'Y--....,.--...,.---:--:--r-----, r-I\Uii-i't'-BB_E_W-::E-CAN:.-:-l.-OC-A-::IIii~Pil~~-~~-!:---o:~'Tr'"ITrlMl'T!"I'T.~ 5 Lend a hand 41 Willow genus
-n&gt;.u.&amp; ,-szll!!o "II', TAl&lt;&amp;
AH1\.J SEFQin! "T!-11! ~
~
11 Lug
DOWN
U1S ~&amp;ONJiR.
; ~~~~~~~~ , - - AND "TliE't. &gt;-!Ut&gt;IT U&amp; IN~!
12 Black eye
l Footing
r
13 "What 2 Opposing
is new? "
3 Suddenly
14 Rap session 4 Caddoan
15 N .Z. fort
Indian
16 Rep.'s
5 Acquiesce
opponent
6 Jewish
17 Suffix debenediction
noting origin 7 Indian of
18 Almaviva's
Keresan
love
8 Quickly
20 Nervous
9 Portion
twitch
10 Arboreal
civet
Stack t~ese baqs 21 Source
No,but
22
"Hold
it,
in the do
Ten dolla'
job offers qreat
Dobbin!"
opportunities!
weeltt
23 "Maltese

SAVE A LOT

J bedroom home located in a nice quiet neighborhood

home, J or 4 bedrooms ,
formal d i ning , 2 baths, nice
k itchen w i th dishwasher,
garage, and 1.9 acre level

~d
.." tat
by THOMAS JOSEPH

&amp;.

on a large lot, !1DO'x 15D' I. Central heal and air

Nice 9 room

namt, tddrtll, liP COdl and mtkl ChiCkl ptylbll lo NtWIPiplrboOkl,

-------------1

___

"(I I I I r

Jumtlll look No. 12, conltlnlnt 110 puu111, 11 IVIillbltlorSt .7&amp; poetptld
from Jumbte,olothltntwtptper, Box3•, Norwood, N.J. 0754.1ncludtyour

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remod eled , cerami c til e, plum b ing, carpen try. ond general ·
ma.~n t en anc e.
13 years ex: .
perience. 992·::1685.
....
. .
PULLIN S t: XCAVA TING . Comp lete .
'• t
Service. Phone 992-:2478,

-- -

Print answer here:

LITTLE ORPHAN ANN IE

DRIVE A LITTLE

MIDDLEPORT

lot. $35,000.
SYRACUSE -

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the surprise answe r, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

"'

~.:.::..=..:::..=-==~,

196"1 lO IAl HECTHJC mobil e
home . · fu rn tshed , 3 bedr ..
w o ~ h e 1 and "dr yer A i, condi·
ti oned . I lo t, 210 h . fr ontage.
$ 1'1 ,000 . Ph one742-'1B26 .

$25,000.
STUCCO HOME - 3 or 4
bedrooms , 9 rooms, 2
baths, furnace, fireplace, 2

b.

AND MARTIN
HOWE RY
co ve tin g , sep ti c sys tems ,
dozer , backhoe , dump tru ck , .
li mc~ t o n e ,
grovel, blacktop
pa ving. Rt . 143 . Phone I (0 14 )
698·7331 '

--

Magazine 13.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8.10;
Elec . Co. 20,33.
1 :oo-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young a. the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1 :30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10 .
2:c»--ne Llie to Live 6,13: 2:3o-Doctors 3.4,15;
Guiding Light 8,10.
3:0G-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
·
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Dick Cavett 20.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4; Merv
Gr iffin 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 1S.
4:30-Bewitched 3; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Peltlcoot Junction 15.
5:00-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency
One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3G-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8: E lec. Co . 20,33: Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15 .
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3o-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:QO-Cross·WIIs 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Family Feud 8; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20: Consumer
Survival Kit 33.
7: 3G-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4; Bonkers
6: Waltons 8; SIOO,OOO Name That Tune 10: Nash ·
ville On The Rood 13; TV Honor Society 15; Mac·
Neii·Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:QO-LI'I Abner In Doqpalch Todav 3.4.15; Mork a.
Mindy 6,13; Novo 20.33; Waltons 10.
8:3G-What's Happening 6,13; Please Stand By. 8.
· 9:oo-Qulncy 3,4,15; Barney Miller 6,13 : Hawaii Flve·O
8,10; Geraldine Ftlzgerald at Reno Sweeney 33;
Duchess of Duke Street 20 .
9:30-Soap 6,13.
10:00-Davld Cassldy·Man Undercover 3,4,15: Family
6,13; Barnaby Jones 8,10: Sneak Previews 33; News
20.
10:30-5how On The Road 33 ; You Bet Your Life 20.
11 : oo-News 3,4,6,8; ,10,13,15; D lck Cavett 20; Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33 : Movie "Zorba T~e
Greek" 10.
12 :3G-News 8; 12 :40-SWAT 6,1 3; 1:QO-Tomorrow
3,.4,
1 :so-News 13.

6

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
ca ncell ed? lost your operator!'. .
license? Phone992.2143 .

Cheryl Lemley

I ', ACR ~ 1'1 x bO mobi le home
near Oexler '1'17 -!:ii:ISI:I.

G. Bruce Teaford

'

Real

12 : DO-Newscenter 3; Bob Breun ..&amp; ; America Alive 15;
News 6.10: Youn~ &amp; the Restless 8: Midday

6b

Business Services

· th e m up Owne r says sell!
Make u san offer .

HOT .Poin t dr yer in good con·
d1tion Sf:l5 . 99'1·6064 .

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
· Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

BS9

I Hu
II D

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1978
.;. 5:45-Farm Report 13; S : ~PTL Club 13.
5:55-Sunrlse semestor 10; 6:QO-PTL Club 15: 700
Club 8.
6:25-For You ... Biack Woman 10; 6:3o-Doctors on
Call 4.
·
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6 : ~Good Morning , West
VIrginia 13: 6:55-Chuck While Reparts 10; News
13.
.
7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morn ing America 6,13 : CBS
News 8; JetSQns 10.
7: 15-Weather 33: 7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:QO-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10 ; Sesame 51 . 33.
9 :0o-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15 ;
Emergency 6ne 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8: Match Game
10.
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; Fami ly Affair 10.
10 :QO-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dati ng Game 13 .
10:3o-Jeopardy · 3,4,15; Andy Grlfllth 6: Price Is
Rlqht 8,10: $20 ,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :QO-High Rollers 3,4,15: Happy Days 6,13.
11: 3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love
of Lite 8,10; Sesame St . 20; Nova 33 .
11 : 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.

6

6

4·30-.IIC.

R~AL
EST AH LOANS CAN 'T riND -==~~~~~~~~:::;
HOBS JtJ,Jt R.
MOHTGAGE MONl:Y ? We hove r
pl enty at compe ti ti \le rate~ w i th
lerm!&gt; (o 30 year s. Vete rens
ond non· wel erens VA 8. f-=HA
loon s o re a\loiloble. IRHAND
MORTGAGE CO .. 77 E. State
St ..
Ath e ns.
Pho ne

6

b

'

Real Estate ior Sale

Town &amp; Counby

1964 CI::HVV
99::.1 b!JtJ7 '

•

B u y these two homes for

ON~

lliilii::::=J

HRADFQH[) , Au ctioneer . Com · · EXC A VA TING, dozer. loader and
backhoe work : dump trucks
p le te Service . Phone 949 -248/1
ond lo· boy!&gt; for h ire; will haul
or 9A9-2000. Ro&lt;! ine . Ohi o. Criff
ldl dirt , to so il , limestone and
Brad f ord .
grove l. Call Bob or Roger Jef·
HWOOO BOW&lt;RS R&lt; PAIR fers. doy phone 992-7089, nigh t'
Swee p e r ~ . toaster s, iron!i. oil
ph_?_~ e _99_2 -~ 5~5_or.~'1..:_~~3~ : __ ·
srnoll app lian ces . Lawn mower ,
ne)( t to State Highway Goroge EXCAVA TING , dozer , backhoe
and d itcher. · Chor les H. Hat ·
on Houle II . Phone (b l4 ) 985·
fi e ld . Bock
Hoe Service .
31:125 .
Rutland . Ohi o. Phone 742-1001:1 .
Sl:WING MACHINt Repair s. ser·
Will do rooting. co nst ru ction .
vice all mak es. 992-2284. The
plumbin g and hea ting. No 10b
f.=ob r i c Sh op.
Pome r oy.
too Iorge or too small. Phone
Authorized Sin ger Sal es and
/ 42·2348 ,
~Se r \l l te . ~e ., ~,o~· P.e n_ Sc_,1s~o~ s ~

FOR SALE

bu ilding in the heart of
Pomeroy . 4 rooms up, 3
down. Good location for
residenc e and business.

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
one lener 10 each square, 10 form
·
lour ordina~ words.

o.

---·Busme5s Servtces

1

f!Rt:WOOD . a ll hardwood ~ plit
and del ivered. 535 lruck lood or
$SO a cord . 94? -6295 or
fl4.J -1933

li''i}\IN} fill' ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\!:!) ~~ ®
byHenriArnoldandBoblae

~

St. Rt. n4 tpward Rutland,

Free Estimates
P!lone 949·2862
or 949-2160
8·20·1 mo. (Pd .)

Pomeroy,O.

\. ~~gal.

.- ·

MENT~

'I• milt oH Rt. 7 bY·P"" on

New or R.epair
Gutters and
Down$pouts

'

THRE E bed room home.
h rep loce · sun deck_. ·I ' • acre
wooded lot. 667·3890, Tuppers
Plo 1ns.

992·3325
216 E. Second Street
2 STORY Business

FROM CITY HALL'
AI\ID THE NEWS IS
LDU~Yl...MOXIE DURFY

A LOAD OF
POT IN MY BASE·

GARAGE

ET
,OHIO
YOUR CHOICE

Phone 992·2181

rM NOT CAL1.1N '

DUMPED

ROGER HYSEll

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

See

N~W

.... .:!.ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Hl'/A, 'i !&gt;066SV
WHAT·s ~&lt;JEW AT
CIT'/ HALL l

11 ·3·1 mo.

10·30·c

For The Best
Price In Town

'

basem e nt, 3 bedrooms, 2
ba ths, carpeting , large lot .
Central a ir . good condition .

Kathy Cleland
CALL
992-1159-992.6191

Pomei'QY Landmark

IT'~ TH!: MAVOrt. 01&lt;1 THE LINE,
MR. V01.TA ~,-~OU&gt;JO~ 1.li&lt;E HE'S
ALL WORKED UP A80UT SUMTHII\1~

BORN LOSER

full

leona Cleland

1'1/ 0 Amhers t ~Ox I L 2 llH
1970 Champion OO:wl '1 2 IW
1965 General 60x I '}_'}_ BR
1&lt;161:1 PMC 5:/x 12 2 BR
ICI::i5 Prairi e Schoo n er L!:lxfl I BH'
I 97J Royol hnbo ss y 6flx 14 J BR
19!;;'1 Star 5UxlU '1. BH
19/IJStar60xl4LBR
1961:1 Sta r bOx 1'i_ '1. iHI
19 /0 Sylva 60x I '1 '.l BR
1408 Vi llages OOxl'l '.l 8H
1964 Windsor 51x lO :l BR
19/0 K1rkwood I 'lx60 3 BH '
ti&amp;S MOBILE H OM~ SALE S
PT PL ~ A SA N T , W .VA

10·22-1 mo .

American Slyle15; Coping With Kids 20; Big Green
Magazine 33.
7:3G-Dolly 3; Dating Game 4; Match Game PM 6;
Price Is Rl9ht 8: The Judge 10: That' s Hollywoed
13; Wild Kingdom 15; Mac Neil· Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:QO-Dick Clark's Live Wednesday 3,4,15; Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Jelfersons 8,10; Marie Curie 20.33 .
8:3G-Good Times 8, 10.

CAPTAIN EASY

PHONE 992-2772

Chester, OhiO

BoX 3

6, 13 ; L et's Go To The Races 8; News 10; love,

J&amp;L INSULATION
·JIM KEESEE

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 742-2029

'

la rge

$28,500.00.
4BV2 ACRES - More or less

- - - · - ·------r- -----·- -WA TI:R WEll drilli ng Wi l lia m l
Gran t. 14:.! -2874 .

Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginther 985·3S06

kitchen.

fully equipped . Central air .
Many, many features , i n
excellent condition . ONLY

$49,000.00.
RANCH

ReS i dentill and commercial . Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime. ,

Construction
Maintenance

room,

rec. room , family
din ing room, and

· cL~ANING

Painting

Truly

5:QO-Star Trek 3.4; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers 20,33: Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency
One 13: Brady Bunch 15.
S:3G-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co. 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:QO-News 3,4,8.10.13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6 :3G-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News .13: Carol Burnett&amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game

CEllULOSE
INSUlATION
Jti.50 per bag

SEPTIC TANK

Carpentry, Eleotrical,

•·

Thermal insulation
SaveJO pet. toSD pel.
on heating cost
Experience and
*ully Insured
Free Est.
(;alf992·1772
·
1131
.. mo.

Great Performances .33; Prisoner 20.

10 : QO-Vegas 6, 13; News 10; 10 :3G-Portralt of a Nurse
33; Turnabout 20 .
11 :QO-News 3.4.6,8.10,13,15; Dick Cavell 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Pollee Woman 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8: ABC News 33: Movie " Last Tra in
from Gun Hill " 10.
12:3G-News 8: 12 :4G-SWAT 6,13.
1:QO-Tomorrow 3,4; I : ~News 13.

WEDNESQAY , NOVEMBER 1,1978

Cellulosic !wood' fiber!

Pho"ne992·6144

J. R. Consb uction
Co.

-iiioiiiioio,.

neighborhood ,
th is
J
bedroom home
is
in
excellent
co nd i tion .
Equipped ki tche n , air
conditi on.
carpeted .

Services Offered

992-2174

~

JIM KEESEE

· Industrial
and Home

9'11-7547
1 ,10· 18 - ~ mo.

608 E,

....

J
Blown Insulation

Build!ng :
Any Tne Improvements
.To Existing Structures
All Type Concrete Work
No Contr~ct Too Large Or
Too Small
25 Years !Experience
All Work Guaranteed

eo...

fram e home 1n
MiddiC"porl. Co li C/92 3457 .

Type

Commercial

PERMANENT'
ANTf.FR.EEZE
Why poy 53.99

IAiill

Pets for Sale

1Hll ~~

$15,000.00.
NEWER RANCH -

Mqr.
Phon" 992·2181

All

~

( (111 9'1'1 7 ~ jjl .

bu r ning fireplace , carport.
3
bedrooms .
Total

Sale Pnccs
J.tck W C1r~cy.

- ·---

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

l or !. ofco·. I o&lt;r e ond
up. Mrcidlcport . near ~ullond .

pet . interest' for 30 years .
l'h story wit h wood

GE T.V.'s &amp;
Hotpo&gt;nt Appl.

---

Service,,_ the ..,.... ,,... .....

-~

$16.500.00.
V.A . APPROVED · IN
HARRISONVILLE, $800.00
down. $124.65 month. 9'1'

For All Your

and
P~ Buildels

Radiator~

HOM~ ~ Ill: S

, bu ll dlngs, fenc ing . Good l
floor plan home . Secluded.

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

ANTI -FREEZE

Corner

S30 to 535 o load .

M~mmg

EXPERIENCED

.
- Real Estate lor Sale
--·-

modern

Mobile Homes for Sale

For Sale

If= YO U hove o
'ce to offer ,
won t to buy or
, something,
oe look ing fo r work ... or
wha tever . .. you 'll get result s
ta st er with o Senti nel Wont A d .
Coli 992 ·2150

l

lb ..

74:l·l'45l.

Ph one

'J'.J\j:J or

with double fire place , large

3 ANl) 4 RM . furn ished and un
furnis h e d
'142 -5434.

Ul.l}

9:QO-Mov le " Ret urn to Macon County " 3 4 15 ·
Charlle' sAngels6 ..13; Movie " First You Cry" '8.'10;

TELEVISION
VIEWING

:;.:
. 1~·

L-----------:--l------:-------"....;____:-' , ~.
r---'---=----, r----:&amp;-=-:-L---, ...

one of the nicest homes in
the country, beautiful 2
story
colonial
in
Middlepor t , ni ce corner lot ,
garage and storage space,
3 spacious bedrooms , 11h
baths, large l i ving room.

S3U 944 LUA:J .
~ IR ~WOOO

hOH!'d

NEW LISTING -

If interested ca II 992-2347 or
992-3201 for appointment.
4~

pur"

l C'IIH I

t ohh~

o nd
)(,34

~'-&lt; '/

~ ~ ~~~ · n ·

Al -.0

POMEROY,

118 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
Started Nov. 6. 1944

. 1WO BWROOM . kit chen l urn1 sh
ed. apt. Call before tl om
992-1281:1.

HELP WANTED

( bl4) b96 : ~~Y~.

L&amp;Z DRESS
SHOP

LONG bow

Ol D

hi n t~

DUE TO ..
IU. HEAL'JH
WE ARE
OfFERING OUR
BUSINESS FOR
SALE

S HAKl: S P~AWE

WH K
.... . (1111 (''( '

Wl-MING10N 3006 otd om all(
wllh WPU V~"' ~ KJ ., , o pP onrl .,l m g
., I! OJ' , tl ' · hoxf'~ ., hPII ~ cx lro
loury waln ut st0ck S:.I JO I 'J go .
ll hm-O purnp ~ho t gun :m full
dmk e "ent r1h horre l almos t
nt&gt;w 5200 Reo I ni co:: ea r co rn .
S:J pPI bu Phone 7 4 2&lt;J3~C/ .

Ph one

196"1 f'ONTIAC HREHIRO conver to ble. Good mechanical conditi on . 9&lt;12 -3283 .

-----·---·--

Allee Edna Spencer, dec . to
· Everett Sanborn, Cert. of
trans., Pomeroy.
James R. Ingels, Elnora P . ,--.-.-----~
Ingels to James R. Ingels,
: Jr., Pamela R. Ingels, 1.893
acres, Rutland.
Harold Blackston, Helen E.
Blackston to Carl Fred
Goegleln, Frances Goeglein,
The Gravedlgger
1.24 acres, Salisbury.
the
gravedlgger
Uves
Mary L. White to C. Ed(so
near
the
valley
of lbe
ward White, N. Evelyn
shadow
),
yet,
Jeffers, R . Earl White,
Marilyn Joy Bankes, Marvin he does not fear
C. White, Virgil L. White, ( the unrelinquished passioo
Shirley R . White, Parcels, of Death) .
he waits, forever wailing
Bedford.
Charles
T.
Bissell, (for his friend to fill the openMargaret K. Bissell to Robert mouthed
E . Bissell, Sally T. Bissell, ~ sepulchre's again).
the gravedlgger lives among
acre, Chester.
the
rulna
··
James Robert Grimm,
(of
weather-tom
monuments
Janice K Grimm to James
Robert · Grimm, Janice K. and flesh !aliened maggots).
the gravedigger is
Grimm, Lot, Pomeroy.
thesubmiJsive
Catherine Powell French,
obedient
Affidavit, Pomeroy .
servant
Hugh Custer to MichaeL C.
of Death.
Custer,
12.23
acres ,
By Jim Brewer, Jr.
Salisbury.

'

5525 .

4Y1 -3i'l7 .

Lost and Foun.~d;---

Gallipolis,

ll

N~W

fl l YMOUT H lJU SHR b cyl.

l~i'l

.

(11 ) 8, 11C

. salem.

YOU

APPLICA liONS Bt:ING tok en l or
pOrt time ni ght stock clerk . :/4
hours o week to start. Con
build up senionty . ln ter\liews
Thur sd ay
1-5 .
Kr oge rs
Pom_er9Y: OhiQ..

Meigs
Property
Transfers

dr 1ve.

IYl l AMC PAm . o cy l "" '"··
P.S..
P.B.,
AM ·FM !&gt;tereo
'""""" A, k ;ng S3.700 Coil
~'17- 6352 be fore 1.30pm or after
lO :JO 10:30 pm .

G UN SHOOl . Hocine Vo lunteer
f ire Dept . brery Saturday b ::JO
pm ol th ei r build ing in Bos han .
!Coctory ch oke guns only

Friday llftt'MlOOil

The ' following documents
were received or prepared by
The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency during the
previous week . The effective
date ·Of each final action is
stated . The issuance date of
each proposed action Is
stated . Anyone aggrieved or
adversely affected by a final
action to issue. deny , modify ,
revoke , or renew a perm It,
license, or variance ; or to
approve or d isapprove plans
and spec i f ications , may file
an appeal with The Environ mental Board of Rev iew,
Su ite 305 , 395 . E . Broad St .,
Co lu mbus, Ohio 43:216, within
thirty ( 30) days of the ef .
fectlve date, pursuant to Ohio
Rev ised Code Section 3745 .07,
u nless such final action was
preceded by tne same or
substantially
the
same
proposed action . All such
final actions are so identitiecL
Such persons may request an
adJudication hearing before
The Ohio EPA on a proposed
action to issue, deny , modify ,
revoke . or renew a perm it,
license, or variance; or to
approve or disapprove pains
and specif i cations , within
th lrty {30 l days of the
issuance date . ORC 3745.07
does not pr o vide for ad judicetion hearing reo,uests
or appeals on orders, verified
complaints, or enforce ment
comp liance schedule letters.
Within 30 days o f publication
in a newspaper in the affec ted
county, any person may also :
(l l subm i t written comments
relating to actions, proposed
acfions. verif ied complaints,
or enforcement complian ce
schedule letters ; (2) request
a public meeting regarding
proposed act ions ; and -or {31
request notice of further
ac tions or proceedings . All"
requests f or .!djudication
hear i ngs
and
public
meet ings , and other com municat io ns
conce rning
pu bl ic meetings , adjudication
hear i ngs,
veriHed
com pla i nts , and regulations,
should be addressed to The
Legal Records Sl!ction, Ohio
EPA, P . 0 . Bo x
10-49,
Columbu s. Onio 43216, (614)
466 -6037 . Unless otherwise
stated in particular notices,
all other c ommunications
i nclud i ng
c ommen ts
on
proposed actions, should be
addressed either to The Air
Perm Its and Compliance
Monitoring
D i vision
or
~ermlt and Approval Section ,
whi chever is appropriate, at
The Ohio EPA, P . ·o. Box
1049, Columbus. Ohio 43216 .
Issuance of · certif ication
Jaymar Coal Company
Chesh Ire, Ohio , effective
d ate 11 -01 -78
Pertains
to
401
Cer ·
tification , Grant.

BRONCO 4-whee l
Sl450i ir m . ~&lt;I :J . 70 'J4

Business Services

Give Away

VW 7 pasl&gt; enge1 won , need!&gt; ·--"'!!~!!""!!!!!"-wor k . Sold to highe!&gt;l b idder.
owr1er reser \les righ t to reiel' t
all b ids ( all W:l 7Bt:!O, Sncior
(l lil Cns C€'nte r. to make or
10ngements to see . Bid s mu st
be ir1 by Wed .. No\1 . IS Poy·
rn ent mu st b e mode by cer t1li ed
check .

Help Wanted

PUBLIC NOTICE

S!:I){J . YY:J bO I ~ .

1~71G MC II pa s!&gt;enger va n. J&lt;n:J

Sum..lay
4P.M .

COUNTY: MEIGS

tlfbJ (HEV Jt O l~ l' VAN tustom
pomt 10h
ln~irle
co1 petC'd

Ho y~s .

NOTICE

Tuesday

H01PO!N l" ~ l ~CIW!( 1011qt • l v
1 pl l("n l 1 nnd111011
MC'rnl wCl&lt;
d1 oh&lt;' lf9'J 307 CI

Bless you .
Nell ie

opossum . beaver . e tc? ( oil the
trapper . 4ij5 . .J9fl4 . W il l co ntact
in person for s1gned permi~ SiO!l .

Mund!ly

I ~77 MONlA !:IPY DUI JUS engmrPowel' !' tee&gt;111l9 . l-'owe1 h10ket.
AM fM radio . Mcue ex tra !' . ((111
., -l 'I 'JH:lt&gt;

remembe red me w rth co rd s .
He we rs o'1 d proyen&gt; May G o d

on1mol s? fox . mrnk . rOcoon .

Noon un Saturd&lt;!y

For Sale

PH I

Phont&gt; 99'2-:! I:.G

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Auto Sales

~

YOUR KINONt::: ~S duri ng my re ·
cent hos p ita liza tion will olwo p

Ead l word over Ult' 1nt11ilnwn 15

wun.b is

Card
- --- -of -Thanks
,.--

OI CKTRACV

•

15 IN STOCK

�I .

Middleport woman
hurt in accident
One person was treated for three-vehicle collision on SR
injuries sustained during 160, one-tenth of a mile north
three accidents investigated of U.S . 35, at 3:40 p.m.
The patrol reports that an
by the Gallia-Meigs Post ,
auto operated by William
Highway Patrol Tuesday.
Officers report that , at 5 Stanton, 62, Vinton, pulled
p.m ., an auto operated by from the drive at the enMary Herald, 36, Middleport, trance to Holzer Medical
had stopped in traffic on SR 7, Center into the path of a south
four-tenths of a mile south of ~ bo und auto driven by Jack
Griffith, 24 , Ewington . ·
Addison .
Following contact, the
A vehicle driven by Orval
Kerns, 66, Belpre, failed to Griffith vehicle went left of
stop and struck the Herald center ana struck the left
front of a north bound auto
auto in the rear.
Herald displayed visible operated by George Haffelt,
signs of injury and vias trans- 21, Gallipolis.
The patrol reports heavy
ported by SEOEMS t o
Veterans Memorial Hospital, damage to 'all three vehicles.
Stanton was cit ed on
where she was treated and
charges of failure to yield.
released.
Officers investigated a twoThe patrol reports heavy
vehicle accident onSR 141, at
damage to both vehicles.
Kerns was cited on charges TR 8, at 11:05 a .m.
According to the patrol, an
of assured clear distance .
Officers investigat ed a east bo und auto operated by
Gregory Coleman, 21, Gaudville, Va ., went left of center
on 141 , just as a second east
bound vehicle driven by
Marianna Crouse, 44, Patrilt
Star Route, attempted to
pass.
The Crouse auto struck the
left rear of the Coleman
vehicle . The Coleman auto
went out of control, passed off
the left side of the roadway,
and struck a ditch.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Crouse auto,
slight damage to the Coleman
vehicle.

4tthe
[)I§CV

You've got
the moves .
Pedwin's got the look.
Tall heels . Platform soles
SIick leather.

CHAPMAN
SHOES
"Next to
Elberfelds
in Pomeroy, 0."
Le athe r 1elers to upp ers

MONTHLY REPORT
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster submitted his
monthly report to Pomeroy
Council Monday night.
The department made 63
arrests, investigated 21 accidents and drove 4,526 miles.
A total of$4,113 was collected
from the parking meters, and
1,479 parking tickets were ·
issued •
SPECIAL. MEETING
The Southern Local Board
of Education will meet in
special session Thursday ,
Nov. 9 at 7:30p.m. in the high
school cafeteria.

Republicans fail to gain control
By TIM MILLER
COLUMBUS (UP! ) -The
Republican ~ party wrested
away the Democrats' "vetoproof" margin in the Ohio
Senate, but the GOP failed to
make any gains in the topheavy Democratic Ohio
House
as
vo ters
overwhelmingly
favored
incumbents in Tuesday's
legislative elections.
The Democrats maintained
their 62-37 "ve to-proof "
margip in the House, but saw
their majocity drop to 111-15 in
the Senate. The Democrats
had held a 21-12 advantage,
with 20 votes needed to
override
vetoes
by
Republican Gov. James A.
Rbodes, who was reelected.
·The GOP had targeted five
Senate seats as possible victories, and they picked up
three one each in
Columb'us , Cleveland and
Canton.
Senate Minority Leader
Paul Gillrnor, R-Port Clinton,
Said the victories "ought to
give us more input into what
goes on in the legislature."
Gillrnor said Rhodes now
stands a better chance of
having vetoes of majoritybacked legislation upheld and
that should "bring about

more compromises on issues
such as collective bargaining
for public employees and
·
education funding."
Leading the Republican
attack were . John Kasich,
who
upset
Democrat
WORKER KILLED
WILMINGTON,
Ohio
UPI- Larry Stone, 24, 'of New
Vienna was killed in a freak
accident Tuesday at the
Suggs-Kalter Lumber and
Supply Company.
As Stone and his father
were working at the saw mill,
a log rolled off. the top· of the
truck and killed hlm .
He was pronounced dead at
arrival at Clinton Memorial
Hospital. ·

Tuesday's
•
Wlnners
at a glance

GRANTED DIVORCE
In Meigs County common
COLUMBUS (UPI) pleas court Gale Roland ·Tuesday's election winners at
Heiney was granted a divorce a glar\ce :
from Suml Miyazato Heiney.
Governor-Lt. Governor
Rhodes-Voinovlch (R )
Attorney General
W.J. Brown (D)
Auditor
Ferguson (D)
Secretary of State
A.J. Celebrezze (D)
Treasurer
Donahey (D)
Supreme Court
Chlef Justice
F .D. Celebrezze (D)
Justice
W.B. Brown (D)
Justice
P.W. Brown (R)
Issue I
(County Charters)
Approved
Issue 2
(Prison Labor)
Approved

i n cumbent Robert
O'Shaughnessy in the 15th
District in Columbus ; Paul
Malia, who beat Democrat
Thomas Corrigan for Cleveland's 25th District seat ,
which was vacated by
Anthony Celebreeze so he
could run for secretary of
state; and Thomas Walsh,
who defeated Democrat
incumbent Robert Freeman
in Canton's 29th District.
The Republicans bad five
Senate seats up for election
and held on to all five ,
including Assistant Minority
Leader Thomas Van Meter,
R-Ashland ; Theodore Gray,
R-Columbus, the dean of the
Senate with 28 years service;
and Oakley Collins, RJronton, who has served 22
years. All three won handily.
waged
an
Kas ich
aggressive campaign against
O'Shaughnessy, prompting
charges from the Democrats
that
he
distorted
O'Shaughnessy's voting and
attendance record.
But, Gillrnor countered by
saying the GOP attacked the
Democrats' "arrogance and
abuse of power" and it paid
off .
Senate Major ity Leader
Oliver Ocasek, 0-Northfield,
who easily won reelection,
said he was "surprised and
shocked" at the Senate
losses .
" I will analyze the results
over the next several da ys ," ~
said- Ocasek , "but the first
ESCAPE DEATH
SYDNEY , AUSTRALIA
UPI- Professional golf great
Jack Nicklaus and an
Australian
newspap e r
magnate Kerry Packer
Narrowly escaped death
today when their luxury
yacht went aground on a
coral reef during a storm.
Police said the ship
smashed onto the reef during
a vicious strom off north
Queenland state on the
northern coast of Australia.
NOW YOU KNOW
The ·most expensive electon
in hlstory was the 1972 U. S.
presidential campaign which
the
victorious
cost
Republican Party $49,070,000
and the Democratic Party
$4~.000,000.

thing that comes to mind is Hatchadorian, R-Mayfleld,
thai we were outspent - not upset incumbent Virginia
outcampaigned . But, we will Aveni in the 17th District, and
still have a workable majori- Charles Red Ash, R-Canton,
beat Democratic incumbent
ty."
Democratic Senators who Robert Regula in the 49th
were reelected included : J. District.
The Democrats fought back
Timothy McCormack, DEuciid; Majority Whip Harry with J erome Leubbers
Republican
Meshel, D-Youngstown; Neal bea ti n g
Raymond
Groneman
In the
Zimmers ,
D-Da y ton;
Marigene Valiquette, D- 21st District in Cincinnati and
Toledo; Ronald Nabakowski, John Bara defeating Anthony
D-Lorain; and M. Morris Webner Ill in the Mth District
in E lyria.
.Jackson, D.Qeveland.
In the 99th District, voters
On the · House side, the
Democrats lost two seats, but decided to send focmer Conpicked up two from the GOP gressman Wayne L. Hays to
to maintain their 62-37 . the -statehouse. Hays, who
resigned from Congress when
margin.
Ma t thew it was reported he bad a
Rep ubli can
mistress on the congressional
payroll, defeated Republican
George Con los by less than
2,000 out of 22,000 votes cast.
Seven defendants forfeited. The top GOP target bad
bonds and one was lined in been the 32nd District in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Colwnbus, where Democrat
Clarence Andrews Tuesday incumbent Rep . James
Bawnann left to run .for
night.
Fined
was
Russell Congress . But Republican
Robinson, Cheshire, $50 and Virginia Prentice, a vocal
costs on an open flask charge, member of the Board of
and $300 and costs on a Education, narrowly lost to
charge of contributing to the communications consultant
delinquency of a minor.
Forfeiting bonds were John
Jenkins, Belpre, $50 posted on
a charge of disturbing the
Holzer Medical Center
peace; C.W. Rice, Racine,
Discharges, Nov. 7
$50, open flask charge; Cathy
Ryan
Aldridge, Mrs .
Carleton, Racine, $30~
Charles
Barrett
and son,
speeding;
Brei Wyatt,
Bartelson,
William
Margaret
Mason, $30, failure to yield
Brown,
Goldie
Carson,
the right of way; John
Brewer,
Pomeroy, $30 Myrtle Coon, Mary Cox,
assured clear distance, and Homer Elliott, Patricia
Jerry Well, Shade , $30, Forshey, Melina Goble, Mary
Hysell , Lenora Kanniard ,
speeding.
Dorothy Lewis, Virgie May,
Mrs. Lew Moore and son,
Three defendants were Bessie Roach, Connie Sayre,
fined in the court of Mid- Nora Shepherd, Esther
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Shuler, Patsy Stanley, Jewell
Tuesday night.
Strong, Theresa Thompson,
They were George A. Linda Vaughn, Melissa
McDaniel, 31, Middleport, $25 Walker and Roscoe Walker.
and costs on a disorderly .
Blrih, Nov, 7
manner charge; Harold
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Little, 42, Middleport, $25 and Lawson, daughter, Portland.
costs, disorderly manner
charge, and .$2~ and collls on a Veteran~ Memorial Hospilal
dlsturbing the peace charge,
Admlttect - Emma Hoffand Ella · M. GrHfith, 20, ner, Pomeroy ; Edith Betzing,
Middleport, speeding, 33 Coolv!Ue; Leah McGinnis,
miles in a 20 mile an hour Rutland; Pamela Imboden,
zone, $13 and costs.
Pomeroy; Emma Hayman,
Forfeiting a $~0 bond Syracuse; Brenda LeMaster,
posted on a disorderly
Minersville.
manner charge waa Buddy
Discharged - None .
McKinney, 61, Middleport.

Mayor's Court

Assistant Majority Leader
Patrick
Sweeney
of
Cleveland; Majority Whip
Tom Fries of . Dayton; and
Shoemal\er
of
Myrl
Bournevllle, who will serve
his 11th term when the 113th
Ohio General ·Assembly
convenes In January.
Among those Republicans
retained were: Minority
Whip Alan Norris of
Westerville ; Robert Netzley
MEN ~ SENTENCED
of Laura; Robert Taft II of
Two Meigs County men Cincinnati; and Corwin Nixon
charged with forgery have of Lebanon .
been . sentenced to a penal
institution by Meigs County
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon.
MEETNOV. 15
Ronnie Williams, 25,
Members of the Gallipolis
Pomeroy. was sentenced to I
to 5 years ~ and William B. River Recreation Festival
Committee will meet in the
Ston&lt; 18, Middleport, was
sentenced to six months to not chamber of commerce· office
more than live years. Both on Wed nesday Nov. 19,
pleaded
guilty
wh en beginning at 7 p.m. to review
activities and plan for the '
arraigned.
1979 event.

Dean Conley.
Among those Democrats
returned to the House were:
Speaker of the House Vernal
G. Riffe Jr., of New Boston;
Speaker
Pro Tempore
Barney Quilter of Toledo;
Majority Leader William
Mallory of Cincinnati;

ADMIRAL
FALL KICK OFF

..._\,~

r,r .

BIG SAVINGS
ON ALL
QUALITY ADMIRAL
REFRIGERATORS &amp; TV's

WILSOM AUTOGUPHED
WALTER PAYTON
FOOTBALL
With purchase of selected
Admiral Refrigerators or tV.'s

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
CUSTOM MADE DRAPERY SALE
SAVE

30%

In Your

\. .i

i. (

~

.;',

.,

)

1

~

~

'

;)

'

Measurements

VOL XXIX

NO. 146

EPA admit
bills could
be higher
COLUMBUS (lJ.-1 )
Challenged by an Ohio Rural
Electric Cooperative Leader,
the Environmental
· Protecti on Agency has
admitted its published costs
for sulphur dioxide scrubber ·
installation at power plants
could add as much as $)0 per
month to residential power
bills.
Ohio
Rural
Electric
Cooperatives Inc. President
Robert N. Cleveland told the
state's congressional
delega tion
that
midSeptember EPA news releases stating that scrubbers
·would boost home electric
bills only 30 cents to $1.10 a
month "are not factual and,
therefore, damaging to the
total economy of the

country."
Rep. Chalmers Wylie, RObia, .sent Oeveland an Oct.
31 letter he received from
EPA Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards

'

entirely correct," Barber
Said in the letter. "For a new
power plant , the capital cost
of nue gas desulphurization is
approximately $135 per
kilowatt of capacity ... If one
assumes an average price of
25 mills per kilowatt hour, the
increase is inde ed 25
percent. 11
Cleveland said it is his duty
to "tell the public the truth
about what (air -pollution

device s)

cos t/ •

adding that they "are nonproductive."
"This type of serious error
causes us to question other
arithmetic by the EPA for
which consumers have been
charged in their electric bills
over the past several yeilrs/'
said Cleveland.
Virtually all electric power
in Ohio is coal-produced.

CRESTLINE , OHIO (UPI)-Safety forces in this Crawford
County community today began a sick-call strike in a wage
dispute . .
The fire chief, police chief and one police sergeant held over
from the third shift were the only safety forces on duty today.
· Voters Tuesday r ejected a raise in the city income tax which
would have provided for pay raises for the police and firemen.

probing

home fire

gentleman
honoree

employees get

.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Deputies

Policemen returned to work

~

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1978

SWCD banquet
speaker named

County hoard

FACE LIFTED - The H. &amp; R. Block building on E .
Main in Pomeroy has r~ived an exterior face lift .

. ,.

en tine

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Obi- la\vyer, said he would be
. oans apparently elected surprised if Brown didn't ask
Democrat State Sen. Anthony for a recount if the official
J . Celebrezze Jr. of Oeveland tally reveals the same results
as secretary of state but they as Tuesday's balloting that
won't know officially ,)l!ltil showed 1,361,967 votes for
early December if he or Celebrezze and 1,352,431 lor
Republican incumbent 'Fed Brown.
W. Brown will occupy the
Brown ,
bitterly
office.
disappointed at the outcome
Brown refused t o concede ,said he hoped the official tally
the race to Celebrezze would return him to the office
Wednesday with only 9,857 he has held for 28 years.
votes separating them.
A subdued but happy CeleBrown indicated he would brezze credited his upset win
rely on the official state vote to traveling 60,000 miles
canvass Dec. 1 before he across the state and face-towould either concede or ask face meetings with voters.
CHARLES CALL
for a recount.
Countless times during his
Roy Nichols, Brown 's travels , Ce l e breez e
emphasized Ohioans wanted
a ''visible'' secretary of state.
He campaigned from dawn to
dusk, visiting all of Ohio 's 88
counties in contrast to
Charles Call , Chief of the
Brown's s tay -a t -h ome
Di~ision o( ReClamation,
decision with only occasional
Oh1o Department of Natural
Resour ces, will be the
speaker for the Meigs Soil
and Wat er Conservation
District's annual meeting and
banquet Nov. 16. The session
begins at 7: II p.m . in the
Racine Junior High School.
Ca ll, a Summit County
fanner , has ~een r ec,ognized
by many farm oriented
organizations for his public
A lire of undetermined
service. His awards received
origin
Tuesday destroyed a
include: Oeveland Farmers
vaca
nt
house owned by
O ub Distinguished Service
.Danny
Howard,
Rt .4,
A'ward , 1964 ; Akron Beacon
Pomeroy, according to Meigs
Journal Good Neighbor
County Sheriff's deputies.
Award, 1968; Ohio State 4-H
The house was located on
Alumni Recognition, 1969;
Kingsbury
Road near the
Cleveland Rotary Club
BEN QUISENBERRY
Intersection of Horner Hill
Recogniti on Award for
Road.
The Rutland Fire
Outstanding
AcDepartment answered the
complishment
in
Incall. The incident is under
ternational Service, 1970;
investigation.
Summit Co unty Agricultural
Wedn es day, Deputies
Society Appreciation Award,
transported
Ronnie Williams,.
1975; Extension Agents
25,
Pomeroy
and William
Fir st
ApAssociati on
Stone,
18,
Middleport
to the
preciation Award, 1975; U.S.
Ohio
Correction
Medical
and
Farm T.V. Repo rt ; InReception Center, Columbus,
ternational Harvester Farm
An active Syracuse man
to begin serving their senForum Farmer Panel, 1975 ;
will
~ honored at an aptences after pleading guilty to
and the Summit County Fair
forgery charges . Both had
Community Service Award, preciation banquet to be held
jlt the Meigs Inn on Wedappeared before Judge J ohn
1977.
C. Bacon on a bill of inReserva tions for the nesday, Nov. 15 at 6:30p.m .
formation.
banquet must be made no sponsored by the Pomeroy
Williams was sentenced to
later than Monday November Chamber of Coml)lerce.
Honored
will
be
congenial
I
-5
years while Stone was
13. Tickets are $4 each and
Ben
Quisenberry
,
91.
given
six months to five
may be purchased in the
Quisenberry
is
a
ver
y
active
years.
district offic e (992-6647) or
Deputies are investigationg
from Rex Shenefield, J oe individual. He operates three
a complaint lodged by Lucy
Bailey, Roy Miller, David businesses and drives his car
Rood, Rt. I, Reedsville.
Gloeckner, Theron Johnson, daily.
He
has
operated
a
dog
tag
Mrs. Rood reported she had
Dave Fox , Boyd Ruth , Reid
attended church Wednesday
Young, Bob Mattox, Curtis business in Syracuse for 40
evening and upon returning
Balthaser, Paul Sayre, Tom years, In conjunction with his
home she discovered someon
Theiss, Virgil King, Horace shoe repair shop. In the last
nine years, he has processed
had cut the copperline from
Karr, or Warren Pickens.
and sold tomato seeds which
her bottled gas tank. One
at this time , is his largest tank was just about empty
operation.
when she discovered the
He has sold seeds in every escaping gas. The matter Is
state in the United States,
under investigation.
Holland, Netherlands, New
Zealand and Japan to name a
few .
He can be seen daily
driving friends and neighbors
to the post office, grocery

WAUKEGAN, ILL. (UPI )-William Smith won his race for
auditor of Lake County wit h only one problem-in an
accompanying referendum the voters abolished his job.
" I feel like I've gone off the diving board and suddenly found .
the pool was empty," Smith said Wednesday. ·

SAVE 30% ON CUSTOM ~ADE BEDSPREADS

."• '

political involvement in the future.
Celeste pledged to cooperate with Voinovich during the
trans1t1on period.
For now, one of Celeste's immediate concerns will be to
clean up a modest $100,000 campaign debt.
Ongmally shooting fo~ $1 .5 million, the Celeste people
actually brought in $1.6 million and spent $1.9 million .
The aim is to clear the books within 30days, he said . The first
$21
,000wlll be easy - a deposit refund from Ohio Bell.
Commtsston.
Frank Celeste, the candidate's businessman father, who has
"I will put him (Voinovich) ~work full time," said Rbodes.
Lt. Gov. Hlchard Celeste, the Democrat Rhodes defeated in already contributed some $30,000, might help out further, the
campa1gn staff indicates.
a bitterly contested race, says he will not rule out any kind of

Syracuse

Sick-call strike underway

• Bottom and side seams are blind-stitched - no visible
stitching to mar drapery's beauty.
• Cover·ed weights sewn into each corner - draperies
hang gracefui!Y• even ly .
.. Generous 5-inch bottom hems - giving the luxurious
decorator look .
• Draperies are neatly fan -folded and carefully bo xed draperies arrive ready to hand .

mcrease state aid to education by $l.l billion ove~' the next i'wr
years without increasing taxes.
The governor was fuU of praise for his new lieutenant
go~ern?r, Cuy~ga County Conunissioner George v.
VOJnovJCh, who With Rhodes, will assume office on Jan. 8.
Rhodes sa1d that between now and his inauguration as Ohio's
ch1el_execuuve, he and Voinovich will be meeting to determine
the .lieutenant governor 's duties . Voinovich also will serve
cha~a~ as of the new State and Local Government

•

, j),..:_r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_

. YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO (UPI)-Striking police in suburban
Boardman ToW)lship returned to work early today after
township trustees agreed to a new contract.
•
~e new contract gives the 34 police officers a seven percent
pay mcrease . The present base pay is $12,276 a year.
.

-.

.

,·

Brown won't concede

Director Walter C. Barber.
" Mr. Cleveland's figures
for polluti on corltrol are

control

•

Senate Majority Leader Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, said he
welcomed Rhodes' pledge of cooperation with the legislature .
Ocasek urged that a summit meeting on school finance be
held as soon as possible. Legislative leaders, the governor
budget experts ~nd state school officials ought to see if they
can at least agree on what revenue projections really mean for
educatiOn .
R,hodes said he stands by his education funding proposal
made m August at the start of the campaign. H• nronoses to

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Save 30% on Custom Draperies for Your Home or OfRce-Large
Selection of Fabrics and Colors

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

and townships."

aty

BEGINS THURSDAY NOVEMBER 9th
• 4-inch tops -are ' doubled and buckram headed - tops will
not bucklr or sag .
.
·
• Hand -set butterfly pleats are triple-tacked - pleats
hang uniformly and will not pull apart .
• Side hems are doubled- adds "body". to drapery to hang
smoothly and even ly .
eSeams are hidden behind pleats - no lines or fabrics
face to mar the drapery's beauty.

cooperation that exists in Ohio arn ong the governor, the Ohio
General Assembly, the State Board of Education and its
supermtendent and the officials of our cities villages cowllies

e

Referendwn abolished job

Bring

1

•

COULMBUS (UP I) -State Superintendent of Public
Instruction Franklin Walter says new money issues for schools
hav~ not lost favor with the voters.
He said voters approved 55 of 123 new operating levies for the
:;chools m Tuesday 's election, the third highest approval rate
m 10 years.
Walter Said the operating levy passage rate wa s " A
favorable response by the public to continuing support of
public education in Ohio."
" Tuesday 's approval rate was exceeded only by a 53.1
percent in last November 's election and a 45.1 percent
approval in November,. 1973," he said.

DECORATOR INDUSTRI
AND CORTLEY §

Window

.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov . James A. Rhodes didn 't wait
long Wednhooesda_y to start work·on the top priority of his fourth
te rm--se 1 fmances.
~s met with leaders of the Ohio General Assembl and
olftclals of the State Department of Education about fchool
fimance.
· work together until this
~ "All of us .ba ve agreed to begm
(schoollundmg) problem is solved. With the kind of mutual
trust and understanding we now have it will be solved '' sal·d
Rho deswhowon a four
. th -term In
· ' the general election
•
Tu esday .
. ~~~ vote was not just a vote of confidence in our
a mastratlon," he added . ~ ~it was a vote for the new spirit of

Walter feels issues favored

•

Congress
1st District
Willis Gradison (R) (Inc)
2nd District
Tom Luken (D) (Inc )
3rd District
Tony Hall (D)
4th District
Tennyson Guyer ( R) (Inc)
5th District
Delbert Latta ( R ) (Inc)
6th District
William Harsha (R) (Inc)
7th District
Clarence Brown ( R) (Inc)
8th District
Tom Kindness (R) (Inc)
9th Distri~ t
Thomas Ashley (D) (Inc)
lOth District
Oarerice Miller (R ) (Inc)
lllb District
J . WUliam Stanton (R)
(Inc )
12th District
Sam Devine (R) (Inc)
13th District
Donald Pease (D) (Inc)
14th District
John Seiberling (D ) (Inc)
15th District
Chalmers Wylie (R) (Inc)
16th District
Ralph Regula ( R) (Inc )
17th Dbitrict
John Ashbrook (R) (Inc)
18th District
Douglas Applegate (D )
(Inc )
19th District
Lyle Williams (R)
20th District
MaryRoseOakar(D ) (Inc)
2Ut Dllllrict
Louis Stokes (D) (Inc)
ZZIId District
Charles Yanik IDl (Inc)
Z3rd District
·
Roo Mottl (D) (Inc I

. .

Rhodes begins work _on top pr~Qrl.. ty:--schools

H - The DaUv Sentinel. MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , No~r-v_.8~,-!9_7_8----------------------------------------------•--------------,

salary hike

Employes of the Meigs
County Board of Education
were given an across the
board $500 salary increase
when t he board met in
regular session Tuesday
night .
The board entered into a~
agreement
with
the
Washington County Board of
Education for the staging of a
pre-training bus drivers
- school which is being held in
Meigs County. A bus driver's
certificate was issued to Ella
Mae Southern.
The board approved the
attendance
of
the
psychologists, James Rogers
and Sandy Jackson to a state
conference in Columbus Nov.
30 and Dec. I.
Attending the meeting were
board members Robert
Burdette, George Perry,
Harold Lohse, Oris Smith and
Harold Roush and County
Supt. Robert Bowen.

Collins margin

store, doctor 's office or
wherever they need to go.
Mr . Quisenberry has three
sons, Joe and Roger of
Florida and Don of Sout h
Charleston, Ohio.
He is a loyal and devoted
person. Quisenberry along
with Norma Goodwin, Robert
D. Roberts, both of Pomeroy,
and James M. Abraham,
Brigadier General, Asst .
Adjutant General for the
Army, will be honored.
Mrs. Goodwin and Roberts
will be honored as outstanding citizens and Gen.
Abraham for the role he
played in the Ohio National
Guard helping out in (he
v illage of Pom eroy last
wint,gr.
Ti ckets to the dinner are $5
each and reservations may
be made by calling Paul
Simon, president of the
chamber, at 992-3830 or Tam
Bfarhs, secretary for the
ctiamber, at 992-5005 Monday,
Tuesday or Friday from 9 t c
4.
.

'largest ever'

Sen.
Oakley
Co llin s
defeated Jack Hillyer by
18,377 votes according to
unofficial final results of
Tuesday's 17th Distri ct
contest .
Collins,. in a statement in
the Ironton Tribune, said it
was his " biggest victory
margin ever." ·
Final count in the II -county
district show Collins , a
Republican, with51,043 votes.
Hillyer, a Democrat, had
32,666.
Here's the final unofficial
results by county:
f 17TH DlSTR.ICT)
County
Athens

c

forays into Republican
strongholds .
Brown, on the oilier
hand '
~
credited
a
dramatic
turnaround in the waning
days before the election to
media blitz on the part of
Celebrezze forces.
" I think the people bought
his last t hree or four days
rhetoric that was heard on
the radio. He used stuff I
would be ashamed to use . He
used my age against me in

a

unkind ways," Brown sa id.
Brown is 72; Celebrezze is
37.
Celebrezze said he was
somewhat ner vous that
Brown, as chief election
officer at least until Dec. 31,
would be responsible for
guarding the ball ots and
supervising a recount.
"I beleive in the integrity of
the election system until I see

otherwise," Celeb"rezze said.
But he adqed that he would
monitor the secretary of
state's office closely until the
official votes was tabulated.
Celebrezze urged local
boards of elections to take all
lawful precautions to prevent
tampering with ballots and
voting machines in view of
the extreme closeness of the

. EXPANSION - Due to expanded membership , the
Middleport United Pelll.ecostal Church, S. Third Ave., has
purchased this six room frame home owned bv Mrs
Kathleen Manley, next door to the clm;ch. The house i;
being used for Sunday school classes for young people of
the church and will be used . perhaps , for meetings of
some of the church groups . The kitchen facility in the
_h ome w1ll he used as such for preparing refreshments
needed following meetings. The properly address is 839 S~
Th1rd Ave .

Legion program
slated Saturday

race .

Plans lor hosting a four·
Paul Patterson and Chester
unit observance of Veterans Mundry wer e report ed
Day Saturday in Pomeroy confin ed
to
Veterans
were. completed when Drew Memor ial Ho spital ; Jack
Webster Post 39, American Ambro se at the Ho lzer
Legion, met in reg ular Medical Center, and Thomas
session Tuesday night.
Ables and Denver Lane in
. According
to
plans, U n iver s ity
Hospital,
James election
, members of the four posts- Columbus.
Pomeroy,
Midd leport ,
victory was 2-1
Swatzel announced post
Rutland, and Racine- will members are asked to attend
Ron James., Proctorville,
meet in front of the Meigs the next meeting of the
Democratic incumbent 92nd County Courthouse at 10 :30 Pomeroy
Chamber
of .
District · representative, was a.m. Saturday. The program Comme r ce
when
a
reelected to his third term to will st art at i0 :45 a ~ m . representaive of the National
the Ohio General Assembly Speaker will be Ge ra ld Guard will be speaker. The
Tuesday .
Bolyard, Eighth District annual post Thank sgivin g
Final t abulati on shows Commander. The program dinner was announced for
James won 2-1 over his GOP features a salute by the firing No v ~ 21 and all members are
opponent Harold ~ Schrltter. squads. Church bells, as a invited .
James received !9,851 votes part of the observa nce, will
to Schritter's 9,863 votes.
toll from II a.m. to 11:05.
Here's the breakdown in
Following the public obthe four county area:
servance, there will be a
92nd District
dinner for participants, post
J
S members and their £amities,
County
Athens
657 563 auxiliary members and their
Meigs
3,058 1,871 families from all lour posts at
Lawrence
11,401 5,036 the Drew Webster home.
Gallia
4,625 2,393
As part of the observance of
TOTALS
19,851 9,863 Veterans Day, the district
ELYRIA, Ohio (UP! ) J -James. S-Schritter.
membership caravan wi ll Three persons were killed
visit Pomeroy Saturday . and one was critically injured
Post members who have not Wednes day night in a
paid dues for the new year collision between a tractorare asked to contact Don trailer
truck and
a
Clear tonight wit h lows
Stivers or Charles Swatzel Volkswagert on Ohio Route 18
near 40.
Mostly sunny,
befor e Saturday . Mem- in Penfield Township.
bership stands at 292 now~
mild Friday. Highs in the
Lora in County Sheriff's
low or m id 60's.
Duri ng the meetin g, deput ies sai d the truck
Probability of precipitation
presided over by Com- driven by Norman Riley of
mander Rod Karr, new Ottawa Lake , Mich., and the
near zero through Friday.
members were announc·ed car crashed in the eastboWid
OW OU
DOW and include Steve Van Meter lane a half-mile,east of Foster
The oldest known map is
Jon Kloes, Tom Betz, John E: Road at !0 :55 p.m.
one engraved on a ~lay
Werrr, R.D . Seyler, Edward
Dead on arrival at Medina
Hedr1ck and Homer Hysell. Community Hospital were
tablet, depi ct ing the
Euphrates River flowing
Clar ence Schmu cker an- the driver of the Volkswagen,
nounced that the district is Robert Taylor Jr. , 22, of
t h r o ugh n 0 r t h ern
Mesopotamia-now Iraq-in
not lith in the state as far as Grafton, and Daie Biftline,
3,000 B.C.
membership is concerned. 27, of Spencer.

· "If any irregular! ty is
noted ," he told election
boards,
notify
us
immediately."

Car-truck
collision
claims 3

Weather

N

Y

K

H

5,301 6,469
Law;ence
10,923 5,803
Ga'.lla
4,830 2.478
Me igs
3,401 1.683
Ross
11,511 6,581
Plckaway
6.048 3,393
Washington
1,894 1,08 7
Jackson
1,318
700
Fayette
735
354
Hocking
2,862 2,746
Vlnlon
2,217 1,370
TOTA.LS .
S1,043 32,666
C- Cqilms ; H- Hiliyer

'

SECTION REMODELED - The je 1ry
·
·
North SecondAv . M'ddl
has
we
sales area m the Ingels Furniture Store on
1
ye
. . j e. m.
. eport
been remodeled and expanded. The store was opened
th:'st~~~ ~~~~eu~c~~;~,g'e ~rnlture. store. It is owned by Candy Ingels. In the
Store. Pictured is the
·.
nel o~ra!Jon and known as Ingels Furniture and Jewelry
new )ewe ry section of the store . .

futnr!

.L

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="809">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11452">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50040">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50039">
              <text>November 8, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
