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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

•

�I

•
2- Thc Da1ly Scntmcl , MitldLepurt·Pomeruy, 0 , Thur:-.day~ Nuv. 9.1111olpii0
7ll;;,'- -- - -- --

\'

:'.' · IN WASHINGTON
• , ' Martha Angle and
~, Robert Walt~:_ ___ __ _ _

B~ ~t artha

Donald F. Graff

The case for walking

,\n f.!lt• ami Hullt'rt Walh·r s

"

autm1&gt;obile these days, you're probably n ght.
.
.,
The average cost of own ing a nd operating a ty p1ca l new
Ameriea rHna de car inflated during the past year a_t a rate
cxceedin,g that of the economy in general, accordtn g to a
.
s urvey by Hertz.
The auto Ieason:;, who hav,e been issuang reports on
operallng costs for the past five years, put the latest
inc rease a t 10 perce nt. This brings t~ta l c ~rrent operall!'g
costs to :J3.1 cents per mile for gasoh!le· m.l. parts , repa1rs
a nd other services: licenses, fee s a nd msurance. plus
depreciation.
·
.
.
The 1978 increase.is u't the worst the motormg public has
ex. pe n enceJ, howeve r . That ~a rne in 1974, on the heels. of
the g reat oil embargo, and h1t 18 percent. Over the enbre
fi ve-year pe riod since the embargo, operat~ng co.st
mcreases ha ve totalled 64 percent, as the study f1gures 1!,
whic h exceeds by more than a third overall cost of hvmg
inc reases.
'
.
d.
Average fig ures cited in the st~dy ap~Iy t~ an mtert:ne .•a te-sized sedan equipped with mr conditwmng •. automatic
transmission, power steering and bra kes, .dnven 10?~
mtles a nnually a nd kept three years. Operatmg costs, 1! IS
noted, may be s ubstantially less for smaller vehicles kept
longer .
Anyone for a well-used .skateboard?

says HayProsecuti ons

t llln l!" likt· tra fft l· t'd-.t's an d llHSdt• rl wa nurs.

111 tl:-- ;, T llllilll

offJt ·,•,..;

l' nu nt ~ ~t &lt;llt• \; A tt o r n~~· ·s Office.
ft iU I · \ l', tr · nJ d 11 L' IWOI' k Of L'O illlll Ulllty

lnt'a l t' (.i 111

four l 'hi('a go nc tghborh uods

·l'h t·\ ;tn '. 111 dfLTt. " .d k -111 j u ~ tlcc Lcutt.•r:-; - a pl ace where
1·Jtltt' IIS 1 ·t~n g u tn g l't ad1on on L'V~ r·y thmg from a landlordll'll. tll ! lh s pult' to.J n outbn•&lt;~k o f burg la ri es ;:~nd m uggl.ngs .
rl hlS t' an· tlw k1nd s 11 f n t .... cs that us ually ~et lost ln .the

-.IJUifit• of :1 b iJ.! l'l l! l'OU r l s ystem . Th e ~ 00 c nmmal
p ro-. toc uto r·s 111 t 'ht~..· ; • gu ha ndk 12.1100 to t:\,000 ~clon y ca~es
Pt' l \ t•a r d !HI :!OO. llOO tu :wo.ooo mis de mt.•anors. f he fe lomcs

l.'. t'l

n~tls t

tht• .lttl'n twn Un nusdcmeanor. cases. a
jlf ft• rt·nt prost' L.' Utt~r 1s a sstg !ll'd ;.~teac h s tt.•p ot the case,
n tlh lltl ltuw to ll'. lr!J tlw dctcnb . JH) tim e to mten1ew
.\ llllt':o;ses. nn Jnn·nti\'l' t tl ea r e V t'I'Y mueh about the
of

&lt;ltlllll {lh.:
rtlt \

Co miHUilll\

Pro Sl'l'llti nns Di\'I SIOll IS different.

\ \ ' li t'll' the &lt;I\ crag~· prosl' l'Ut llr mus t juggl(• 150 t u 250 ca.ses
,,t" time l; rnss m an s . Jttm·n~..·~s c&lt;.~ rry :m to ~0 . One lawy~ r

\\Ill :-,lick \\ 1th a L' CiSl' fro m beg111ning to e nd , kcepmg Ill
l •l lll h a t l'\· t: n
~t &lt;Jg t' ~nt h the complainants and the
~ niiliiJUnit ~ gro.ups c Ont'Cnl l'd about the en me in qu estion .
L' hteCI~ o · s st rong l'Onm tu mt y or gamzah ons a re ~1tal to
t ill' :-. LH.'(' t.~ ss of the program . Th ey work closely w1th the
llt' l,l.! hborhood pro~ec ut o r s, a lertm ~ them ~o pahc ular
1 mnl' pr obl Pm s 111 th e t:~ret:~ . ro undmg up Witnesses and
t ' IH l•urag mg coopera tiOn.
·1n all bad ne!ghb nrhoods : the people know a lot more
.llwut "hat 's g llt ng on tha n the cups do," G rossman notes.
\nd \\hen people S('t" that a rrests can .Indeed lea~ to
i·um JctiLJns, IJec au ~e t he ir '' ;Jrosecutor w1ll take the tune
tn nurse th•.' c a se throug h the court la byn nth , then they w1ll
l ooper alP w1th Uu• polu·e and prosecutors m a way they
llll gh t not othe r wise bot!1l'l' to do.
rt a:rt.• 's not hing cost-efficient a bout the operation. 'My
II IL' Il ami wome n ca n on lv hand le one or two 'cases per da)'.
Th a t 's cr rta inl). not ·cffJ.d ent" in dollar te rms," Grossman
chccrfull't cont.·ccles.
But "dfiC' tc nc\" witho ut effectiveness is mea nin gless,
a nd br cn~ n· in(ilealor . the personalized a pproach of the
t·nnmiun ity · pr osec uto rs IS productng re~ ults . In the
nelghborhoo{ls se rv ed by the pr og ram. c nme rates are
d0\\ !1 ami convic tions a re up More importantly, people are
pa rt of tht• c rimirwl jus ti ce system. not pawns of It:
The fede ral Law E nfor cement Assista nce Adm1mstra·
11on no"' prov ides the bulk of the program's funding , and
1,EA/\ ha s publicized the Chicago expenment widely
,
through 1ts agency news le tte r .
Ot he r dtic.s m ay soon foll ow 'Chtcago s. example .
( 'mhmunit) org amza tions 1n Cleveland , Providence and
New York are hopi ng to emula te the program here and
have alrE:e~d)' sta rted pressuring the ir own c 1ty prosecutors
to set up ncighbot·hood offi ces like Chicago's.
.
Taxpayers must foot the bill for a ny ~ nmmal JUstice
svstcm . The community prosecuttons offiCe at least lets
those who pa y for the syste m he lp determine the prwnltes
tha t system adopts .

,

HEALTH
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

Changes with
~wnility
DEAR DR . LAI\IB - What
has happened to my husband' He is 75 and for about
10 years he has been getting
worse until he totters on his
legs, looks 96 and is so hellish,
brutally mean, insulting, selfcent&lt;~ red ,
abusive, and
generally senile that it has
s poiled any enjoyment we
could ever have. He is not
happy unless he is making me
miserable.
Mv nervous System can
hardly take l h1s beating. At
l tmes I thmk I cannot live
through 1t, wtth all the
responstbllity falling upon me
while he saps my strength by
keeping me upset by namecalling, sneers, verbal abuse
a nd accusations. Even when I
am sick he abuses me. He
t hinks I am trying to do
something to him, am
dishonest , big mouth and
ab using him when he is the
one domg it a ll .
I have a kind, good disposition and have tried to help
htm, but nothing ever pleases
htm. Isn't age " hell "' I am a
few years younger than he. I
am keen, capab]e, active a nd
don't even have gray hatr . Is
there a ny help for him ' I ca nnot get him to see 1myone
abo ut it. He thinks everyone
else is crazy .
DEAR READER - I mcluded your letter in my colwnn
beca use it points up a basic
problem that older people
have and which is not often
discus~ed. Sometimes there
are horrendous personality
changes when a person
becomes senile.
Some of these changes are
directly r elated to fundamen' ta l changes in the cells of the
brain . Others a re a direct
result of poor circulat ion to
the brain caused by di~ease of
the arter ies. In either case,
the end result is a personality
change. This change can really mean 'that a person is, living with an individual who is
entirely dtfferent from the
person he or s he haiJ

•

-· ,,

.."

If vou think tt's costang you more . to operate an . , ~

''i ll'd "' Pt'l' lfh· :tll .' 111 t' tHniJ ; II tlw t ~ pt'. of tTITTll' th.at most
d llt' ;, 'll\ , l ffl'l'b. . ,llld d iSl'l l UI":lj..!t':-&gt;, v n hn ;,JT Y l'lt i Zt.' JlS
,
·1· dtHl\ L,~.., t .., 1 ~ 1'1 .til tlw ht• c~t lllnt· ~. but Uwy ·n · not
\' lwt ·s ll.llJHi rl an t .1 1 ltw !lt' l l-! h borh ood le ve L The n.'&lt;:.il
t h '-J-!. Ii"! \\ 1t h till' s \ :- kill :-i tl'llh fn nn tht• wai. It handles
l )I \ t-. lt\11 oJf tlw \ ·nok
( ; 1 u.-.~ lll.lll . 1' 11 11~ , l

"

By Dnn Graff

l ' llll .\ l:P 1 :\F .\ '
In a;. ' ll~ nf tlll!'i !'i li'.L'. \\llh tfll' us ual
qu u l.1nf 1.l Jh.'. lllL!nkl .uhl lila~ li e l n. 1! ':-. nnt t•a .s \ to J.!t•t tlw
1);,1\H ' r.s -that -bc 111 ful'l~:-&lt; l lluc ll .ltll'll lhlll ;,HI petty stn•rt
l T llllt' •'I .1 r; 1:-; IJ 11f ll'l'!l d g l ' \, tl HI. ili S!I l
It " not ,·a :-; \ hu t 11 " rill lnnJ..:t' l' impossible
t hanks W a
lllll\j l ll' ;, •mu i1al Jll "t ll 't' p 1og rd m th:1t &lt; 'h l t'~1gll has de v c ~ ­

l ll• oJ l•l ( , rn..;:- tll.tn , llt ' .Jd of tl tt' l ' n mmumt ~·

Legendary Bobby Orr retires

COMMENTARY

Community justice

prevtously known.
You are absolutely r1ght. It
IS hard sometimes to get people who s uffer the consequences of these changes to
seek medtcal attention. Fortunately, there are some
m edicines wh1ch help in these
situa tions. But they don 't help
much if you can't get !he person to see the doctor. ·
The nervousness, a gitation ,
depression and aml)ety that
some older people fe el
because of the~e chang~s can
sometimes be relieved, and
this may, in some cases,
res ult in a marked shift m
personality back toward the
person's original self . I am
afraid that we have not really
addressed ourselves as to
what to do about these problems in our society.
It 's hard to make even
young people with good heads
do things that they should do
about their health. It's almbsl
impossible to get pe~ple who
have disturbances m lhe1r
nonnal intellectual functions
to seek the help they need.
. It's hard to impose medical
examinations and treatments
on people because 1t's "good
for them" when they don'tappreciate the pomt that they
need help.
I wish that l did have a
ready answer to your questiOn . I don't , and neither will
anyone .else until society
comes to gri;JS with these
kinds of problems so we can
at least use the medical aids
that have been developed at
this point. Certainly, they
won 'l help in all cases, but
they can help in some .
On a . happier note, you
don't have to look forward to
a bleak existence m your•
later years. To give you infonnalion on where we are on
our knowledge of aging, l am
sendmg you The Health Letter nwnber 1-7, Perpetual
Youth, Aging. Others who
want thi s issue can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
it. Address your letter to me
in care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551 , Radio City Station , New York, NY 10019.

VoterS ignored labels

Demand for Mom's apple pie

By CLAY F . RICHARDS
Senate GOP leader Howard Virginia,
husband
of remained at 15.
UPI Political Writer
Baker in Tennessee and Elizabeth Taylor, and Nancy
Republicans made their
Voters in the 1978 mid-term · Republican Gov . James LandoR Kassebaum
of best effort ever in recent
elections ignored party Thompson of Jllinois each Kansas whose father, Alf, years to elect a black to the
'
labels ousted incumbents took about 50 percent of the was ' the
House, but all nine GOP
Repubhcan
with giee, and indicated they vote as did Democrat!c Gov. presidential candidate in candidates lost.
wanted a more conservative Edmund Brown of California, 1936.
Nevada
voted
advise its
overwhelmingly
to
Congress that would cut taxes who refused to speculate
Other
· t han
Mrs .
and hold the line on whether he would enter the Kassebawn, the first woman Legislature against
1980 primaries.
government spending ,
elected to the Senate since ratification of the Equal
Seven senators were
The GOP said its biggest 1966, women made few gains Rights
Amendment.
defeated and six other Senate gain was in state legislatures in the election. The number of Californians said people can
seats changed parties. Five where Republicans look 13 women in the House dropped smoke where they please and
governors lost their races and houses away from Democrats from 18 to 16.
attempts to legalize various
eight other governorships and won between 300 and 350
Blacks lost .ground with forms of gambling were
changed parties. Altogether, seats nationwide . They had Brooke's ouster, while their voted down in Florida, New
voters in 21 states decided to predicted a gain of 200.
number in the House Jersey and Virginia.
split their ballots to have
The biggest political torsomeone of the opposite party narounds came in Texas and ..• '"':::='"..:::-'":~:":=:"::::":::~·I•------"'"'
as senator and-&lt;Jr governor. Minnesota, with Republicans •
Seven teen incumbent sweeping both states.
members,
13
Texas was a cliffhanger. It
House
Democrats
and
fou r was not until Wednesday
Republicans, were defeated. afternoon tllat Republican
In the new 96th Congress, Sen. John Tower was
Democrats will dominate the declared a reelection winner
Amerlun Cancer Society · •
Senate, 59-41, as Republicans over Rep. Bob Krueger , 3!!d
cut into the current margin millionaire oilman Bill
by three seats. Democrats Clements became the state.'s
A
regular
feature, lor a distance of nearly 12
control the House, 274-159, for first Republican governor m
prepared by the American inches. Nearly two-thirds of
a net gain of 13 for th ~GOP.
105 years.
Cancer Society, to help save all colorectal cancer can be
Republicans are leading in
In
Minnesota,
the
your life from cancer.
detected in this manner. It is
two House races - one each Democratic machine Hubert
A retired engineer writes: wise for you to have a
in South Dakota and illinois Hwnphrey put together in "I have bladder cancer. The
"procto" because the in- that will not be decided 1941 came crashing down . fact that I smoked two packs
cidence
of colorectal cancer
until the official canvass, Republicans won both Senate
of cigarettes a day all of my increases after age forty and
although the opponent of seats and the governorship.
life seems to have played a this Is an Important way of
Chicago Democratic Rep,
The outcome in the two
role in my disease. Does the finding it early. - This is
Abner Mikva conceded defeat states set up a battle between
public
realize
this essential
because
apWednesday.
Minneapolis an~ Dalla~ for
association?''
proximately two out of every
While voters in Michigan the 1980 Republican National
ANSWERline: While the three colbrectal cancer
and Oregon decided against Convention.
.
association of cigarette patients could be saved (f the
There was no accounting
it II states voted measures
to cancers of the disease is found early and
f~r cutting taxes or limiting for some results. In New smoking
lung and the larynx (vo1ce treated promptly.
government spending.
Hampshire, Democratic Sen.
box) has been widely
A bookkeeper asks : "What
Two Republicans and one Thomas Mcintyre was
publicized, a series of studies are the main cost factors in
Democrat seen as possible defeated
by
ultrahave shown a correlation be- the treatment of cancer?"
1980 challengers to President c ons er v a ti ve
Gordon
tween bladder cancer and the
ANSWERline: According
Carter won re-election by Humphrey . Then voters
tobacco habit. Most recently to the U. S. Department of
landslides.
'
crossed the entire political
Dr. Ernst L. Wynder and . Health , Education and
spectrwn to deny a fourth 'Robert Goldsmith of the Welfare, most of the ~ost in
term to Gov. Meldrim American Health Foundation cancer treatment ts for
Thomson, a national leader of studied the lifestyles and hospital care. An estimated
TH E DAILY SF.NTINF.L
·
the right.
nEVOTEDTOTIIE
occupations of bladder 96 percent of newly diagnosed
JNTERF...ST OF
The casualtv list in the
cancer
patients,
both cancer patients are admitted
MEIGS-MA SON ARE:4
Senate included Edward smokers and non-smokers. to hospitals. Other costs
ROBERT HOEfi.ICH
City Edilt•r
Brooke,
R-Mass . ,
the Wynder and Goldsmith's include physicians' fees,
PLIIJ ll shcti ~&lt;Ui y l'XL'CPI SuturLiiiY
chamber
's
only
black
lly The Ohio Va ill'y Pubh shm~
work agreed with previous drugs and home nursing, if
member
since studies indicating that 48 needed.
CompaH\' · Mu!titncd l &lt;~ , hw ,
Ill
Hospital fees,
Court s·t ' PumCI IJ}' , OhiO -timm
Reconstruction ; Mcintyre; percent of male bladder however, are the main
Bu:;\rll'S:; Ofh l'l Pl10111.: 00:!· 2156.
Dick Clark, D-Iowa; IWbert cancers and 31 percent ·of problem. An average 28-day
Ed1tun al Ptwne 911:!-2157.
Seetllld class puslagt· p&lt;~id ol
Grilfin, R-Mich .; Wendell female bladder cancers are hospital stay in a community
Po mel u~ . Ohw
Anderson, DMinn.; Floyd associated with smoking
Noh una l adver·tl:-&gt;1111! l'l'Jlrcscn
hospitl\1 in 1975 cost over
Lat!Vl', Landon t\ SSUCI&lt;Ill'S, .1_101
Haskell, D-Colo ., and William cigarettes. While other $4,000 . Lost earning power
f.ue htl Avc ., Cll'\ll'lmn.l , Ohw "4 l l o~
Hathaway, DMaine.
Sub:st·l i/llllltt ralt.'!'i . 11clht·n:tl ll)
factors influence the develop- and productivity· are part of
Governors defeated were ment of bladder cancer, e.g. , the cost of cancer, beyond the
U:tl'l'ier w ~rc avtnlilblt• 75 tcnL'i per
WL'tk . By Motor Route when~ l'anlt&gt;r
Thomson ; IWbert Bennett, the occupational exposure to cost of treatment. That
Sl't VIt:l.! nut avaJ laiJic , One muuth ,
R-Kan.;
Rudy Perpich, D- certain chemicals, the "indirect" cost of cancer is.
$3:.!.1. By mai l in Oh10 and W. Va ,
Dil l ' Yt:ar, $22.00 : SU( munths,
Minn.; Bob Straub, IJ.{)re ., tobacco influence is strong . estimated at between 15-25
Sll :;o : Th ree mu tuh.s. $7 .00.
and Martin Schreiber, D-Wis. Currently there are ap- blllion dollar's yearly.·
F.h;t&gt;;:·hcre $26 OO.fcar: Sot monlh:s
New faces in the Senate will proximately 30,000 new cases
S\3 50: Thn.! t' mmtlh!i , $7 ~~ :
Subs1·dpl1U11 pnt.:c mdudcs Suntlay
include
former
Navy
of bladder cancer in the U. S.
T ltnC!i.SCll lltll'l.
SYDNEY, Australia, (UPI)
Secretary John Warner of each year.
- Police reports that golfing
A man in his late 40s great Jack Nicklaus and
writes : "I am due to have my Australl~n
newspaper
first 'procto' . How effective is magnate Kerry Packer were
this exafninatlon in finding aboard a luxury yacht which
cancer?"
went aground during a storm
ANSWERline : Very ef- were erroneous, Packer's
fective "Procto 1 ' is an ab- secretary said Thursday.
breviat&lt;!d name for a procPat Wheatley said Packer
tosigmoidoscopic exam in was ashore in Cairns; a town
which a lighted tube is passed ·in nerthern Queensland, I, 700
through the rectwn ar.d lower miles north of Sydney,
colon enabling a physician to waiting fer Nicklaus to arrive
actually see within the body at the time of the incident.

Cn'-'NCER
'

Answer line

Berry's World

A Sermonette

3- The Daily Sentinel, M1ddlepo1t-Pumeroy, 0 ., Thu1·sday, Nuv . ~ . I!178

Are America ns losing their taste for home COt?king?
S uch might be s uggested by a consumer spendmg survey · ,
t ur!lJI1g_ up the in~eres ting fact , a mong others, that ~n
mcreasingly la rge share of the household food dollar ts
bdng s pent on eating out - 27 percent currently as agamst
2() percent 15 years ago.
Mom's apple pte isn 'tat fault, however . As analyzed by a
Conference Board re,Port based on Bureau of Labor
Statistic finding s, the shift m eating ha~1ts Is not a !'latter
of home cooking but of home compos1t1on. The eatmg-out
hab1t 1s strongest among several growing categories of the
populatior. - the affluent, the well~ducated, the 25-34 age
bracket, c hildless fam11ies and ·those with more than one
.
.
wage earner.
As for Amen can ·food prefere nces, the report. fmds beef
still leading all meats, but fresh vegetables losmg ground
to the processed variety.
.
.
. . .
.
In alcoholic beve rages, whtskey lS dechnmg m popularity , down from 37 percent of liquor spending in 1960 to 24
percent currently. Wines, on th~ other hand , are on the
rise, up to 15 percent of spendmg from 6 percent m a
similar period .
.
Most of us, however, are still on beer budgets - brew IS
holding steady at half of every liquor dollar spent.

By !J:D SAINSBVRY
UPI Sports Writer
CHICAGO
(UP! )
Legendary Bobby Orr, who
has undergone six operations
on his left knee, officially
retired from the Chicago
Black Hawks Wednesday and
ruled out any future attempt
to resume his hockey career.
"! will not make another
comeback attempt ," he said.
" I know now my leg cannot
handle playing.'
Orr, 30, who has not cashed
a paycheck from the $3
million contract he signed as
a free agent with the Hawks

UP! Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev . (UP! ) Newly crowned World Boxing
Counci)
heavyw e ight
champion Larry Holm es,
getting his biggest. purse of
$1.4 million, said Wednesday
he doesn 'l want to copy
former Ken Norton and blow
the duke his first time out of
the box.
Holmes defends for the first
time Friday night at Caesars
Palace against Spain 's

WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Corner Main &amp; Butternut

NOV. 10, 11 and 12
7:30 p.m. Each Evening

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Sunday ;... 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Peopletalk !

DAVID JAY,·LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY

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CLOSE SHAVE: When Normajean Fulco trims your :
whiskers, tbey stay trimmed- for several weeks. Ms. Fusco ,
is an ex-model turned beauty expert with her Total Woman, ,
Ltd ., salon in New York, but women aren't the total of ber :
clientele. For $35 a shave, she takes care of men too -with a :
special liquid hair remover rather than a razor. She says tbe :
remover is applied to tlle brisUy face oo a strip of muslin •
which, when peeled off, takes tlle whiskers with it. Says she,
"Moor several weeks, instead of my having to shave them
every two or three weeks, it goes to five or siJ;, Men tip me :
generously because I enable them to forego a ritual they don't •

new dress "collectables'
are your perfect wardrobe
fil lerst Choose one
and two piece styles
in the latest
and loveliest soft
texturedfabrics.

i
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QUOTE OF THE DAY: Paul Enlman,·autlloc of"The Crash :
of '79'' -a thriller about global panic ancl~nomic collapse - •
in Newsweek magazine oo the prophetic aapects of his flctioo : l
"Our system has demoostrated much greater resiliency than I l
had ,suggested in the book, especially in the last few weeks, but ;
it is not nearly so resilient as some ... would have us believe. :
The crash ill not Imminent, but inevitable."
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Every day of our lives we are hc'ed with the demands upon
GIJMPSES: George C. Scolt and Trllb Van De~ere will be In ~
us for our money. Some of those ca~ which we are asked to
support, financially, we may not wholeheartedly endorse.
·New Yerk next week to promote Warner Brothers' "Movie, i
M vie'; F lllleimllDsler Fuller will deliver an addreu oo ;
(Some because there is mooey coocerned with them)
c1~uviijr Sunday titled "The Eventl 14~ Hours that Could :
Sometimes we may not be fina11cially able to support them in a
very large way. With some people, just pure selflslmess may Change Your Life" at New York's Julia Rlclunan Auditorium
... Patrick McGoobu, has joined Cllat E.twoud oo locatioo at :
cause an attitude of rebellion to rise up within them.
We lind reasons to support what we want and like. we find Alcatraz Island In San Francilco Bay.fill' tbe lllmlng of
"Good" excuses_for not wanting to support those caUBeS with Siegel's "Escape Frcm Alcatraz" ... U-llfempt-, Celled by •
which weare not In acc('l'd, Many of.our churches, at thla time blood clots In his stcmach and internal bleedlrw, has canceled •
of year, are planning budgets for 1979 and are seeking the the final leg of a four-week South American tour in Mexico :
City, returning to Mount Sinai Hospital in New Ycrt....
l
financial support of tbe 'members. Most people who support
their church feel good abeut it. They want to share in tbe
1lfinistry &amp; Mission of their church. But some avoid tbe
l
makeshift garmenta . lin- .,
support of their church. Some people may support a radio or
r swered to the name of
T.V. Ministry and allow their local church to go unsupported.
Crazy quilt coats made Of Joeeph.
. ·,
, Tljere is a favorite scriptural account for every person to
any
kind
and
color
of
cloth
"New
laraelloved
J011epll
support his local church . It is : Malachl3 : 6-12. In addition to available during the Civil more tbaD .U bla chDdrea ... I•
a heavenly blessing which you may experlence as you share In War were called Josephs. · aDd be made him a t!OIII of l
your local church, you a lao need your church. Why not support· Often the wearers of the maay colon."- Gea. 31:3 l
it, lully?- Robert T. Bumgarner

/"'*)r&amp;.:_ _lf"&lt;/J..., 1'\. _
~rr~v-ev~~

"Somehow, I think our old alienation was
more satisfying than this new alienation as a
result of property taxes!"

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MISSION , Kan . ( UPI )
NCAA
Division 1-A team statist ics released
Wednesday :
Rushing Off.
g car yds avg td yds pg
Oklahoma
9 577 3732 6.5 41 414 .7
Nebraska
9 564 30a4 55 35 342.1
Fllrtn St
9 525 2901 5 5 24 322.3
'l'e&lt; A&amp;M
8 517 2496 4.a 25 31 2.0
Tex-Arlg'n
10 604 3042 5.0 24 304.2
PassingOff.

6 2 2
5 3 3
4 3 2

14
13
10

RushingDPI.
Penn St
Ball St
Navy
An zona
UT-Chat'ga

49 34
43 43
40 36

OU's Gamble is

Mil.

g car
9 333
9 :m
8 313
8 347
9 380

204 .6
21 1.0
221.4
221.7

yds avg td ydspg
417 I 3 3 46. 3
834 2.2 3 92.7
774 2 5 4 96.7
778 2 2 10 97.~
816 2 3 9 97 3

att cmp int
88 39 6
142 61 15
124 51 11
129 55 II
164 72 10

yds td yds pg
383 2 63.8
769 3 87 .7
728 5 91.0
820 3 91.1
659 4 95 A

g
9
8

p!s
55
54
B 60
B 62
B 65

10" BAR
REG. 199.95

avg
6.1

6.7
7.5
7.7
8.1

pts ave. rt yds neta vg
:!1 43.9 7 42 42 .5
47 42.7 13 59 41.5
54 42.a 14 76 4U
47 43.4 15 98 41.3
41 43.5 19 96 41.1

player of week

Mil wauk ee 6, Kalamazoo 3
Thursdav ' s Game
Mil wa ukee at Muskegon

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Reserve
Ball
State
quarterback Mark O'Connell
and
Ohio
University
linebacker John Gamble
have been selected the MidAmerican Conference offensive and defensive players
of the week.
O'Connell, playing in place
of injured Dave Wilson, Ball
State's regular signal caller ,
led the Cardinals to an easy
39-14 decision over Bowling
Green .
O'Connell, a 6-3, 215-pound
junior from Columbus ,
rushed for 34 yards and two
touchdowns and hit 10 of 16
passes for another 165 yards .
Gamble, a 6-1, 210-pound
sophomore from Van Wert,
won tbe defensive award for
his performance in OU's 31-16

Th e ann o un ce m e nt
suggested t he Mets a re
bowin g t o t he increasing
med1a cr ihcism of the 74year-old Grant by movmg
him mto the background and
th en
accepting
hi s
"resignation" on the grounds
of age.
Grant, a senior partner in
th e Wall Street brokerage
finn of Falmestock &amp; Co., has
been criticized for a series of
trades that backfired, as well
as for fa1ling to compete with
other clubs in the free-agent
dra ft. The Me ts , own ed
ori ginally by Mrs . Joan
Payson , are considered one of
the richest clubs 1n baseball.

XL-2

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REG. 1199.95

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FOR

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REG. ~249.95

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resu lts at a
fra ction of the cost.

Toledo
Wednesdav 's Result

Super XL Automatic
20" BAR

REG. 1274.95

Friday 's Games
Flint at Kalama zoo
Port Huron at Toledo

$274 95

Sagi naw at Grand Rapid s

ST. LOUIS (UP! ) - The St .
Louis Cardinals have signed
kick return specialist and
running back Gordon Bell
and waived fourth-year
linebacker Greg Wesibrooks .
Bell was with the New York
Giants in 1976 and 1977 but
was re leased during this preseason . Westbrooks was
signed as a free agent this
year but saw little action.

HOMELITE
~

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WMPO

STAR SUPPLY CO.

SATURDAYS

949-2525
RJcine, 0 .

9 til Noon ·

• 360 AUTOMATIC
$325
24" BAR

REG. 5340.00

95

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ALL SAWS ON SALE
BIG AND SMALL

loss to Miami.
Gamble was involved in 18
tackles, including four solos,
intercepted a pass and recovered two fumbles.

A

1975 PINTO

WAGON~ •• !1295

4 cyl.. 4 sp .

1972 MAVERICK •••••••••• s695

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ot
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Midd leport, 0 .

A.UTO SALES

VISA
All Day Thurs .
til8:00 P . M.

•

GALLIPOLIS AND POM EROY STORES

Mets to 'ease out Grant'

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

•

G&amp;J

·

514 163,7 3.2 7
9 Go3 1899 3.1 a
8 503 1771 3.5 6
9 598 1995 3.3 10

" I've sparred 170 rounds
Stnfrd
Pa&gt;siug De f.
for this fight compared to the
Calif
Bos Cull
140 I sparred for th e Norton
I J&gt;g Bch St
ECarol1na
fight. I've taken this fight
Fla St
La Tech
very seriously because this
ArkSt
guy ( Evang eltsta) has
Total Off.
g plays yds avg td ydspg
Mtam1 tOl
probably worked just as hard
Oklahoma
9 728 4637 6 6 47 515.2
as I have ."
Nebraska
9 665 4346 6.5 48 4a3. t
Scoring Uef.
D es pite
Holme s'
Mich St
8 598 3754 6 3 37 468 I
Ball St
projections of a tough fight , 1 Chnsn
8 646 3580 5 5 34 447 .5
Purdue
he is a heavy favorite to
Fllrtn St
9 659 3925 6.0 29 436 I
Clemson
knock out the UruguayanNa vy
born mntender 1n Friday's
Scoring Off.
g pts avg
Mi ch
15..-ounder. Evangelista lost
Oklahoma
9 372 41 :l
a 15..-ound decision in a title
Nebraska
9 364 40.4
Net Punting
bid against Muhammad Ali at
Mich St
8 2a4 35.5
Mich St
Landover, Md. , May 16, 1977.
Clmsn
a 269 :l3.6
Texas
Holmes, who has perfect 28Mich
a 265 33. I
So
Car
0 record with 19 knockouts in
Utah St
a professional career that
TotalDcl.
g plays yds avg td ydspg
Baylor
began in 1973, jwnped mto
Ball St
9 5a7 179a 3.1 6 199.a
prominence March 2!i when
he scored a unanimous 12round deciswn over Earme
Shavers at Las Vegas.
Evangelista, 22-2-1 wtlh 18
KOs, spoke, through an inte r'
preter, to reporters after
Holmes had left the room and
NEW YORK (UP!) - The the start of the 1979 season.
"Mrs. Vincent de Roulet,
boldly predicted a victory . New York Mets Wednesday
"I'm very confident I'll disc reetly indica ted M. pre side nt , wtll beco m e
beat him ," Evangelista said. Donald Grant - the only increasingly active in the
"I think I have the style to do ehatrma n of the board in the day-to-day managemen t of
it . My intention is to take the club's t7-year history - will the Mets and at the same
heavyweight title back to shortly be eased out of the time Grant will continue to
Spain."
lend advice and suppor t ,"
picture.
Evangelista will receive
At the annual stockholders' said a statement issued by
$200,000.
meeting ot'the Mets, the club the Mets - who finished with
Also on Friday mght's card implied that Gr ant's role as a 69-93 record this season and
will be the for mer WBC chairman would gradually barely passed the I million
he avy weight champ ion , wither
awav
i nto
a mark m atte nda nce.
Norton, who is matched figurehead po~ition before
against Handy Stephens . of
Dallas in a scheduled !Grounder.
Norton drew laughter from
the crowd when asked when
R.ansey , who ayeraged over
CO LUMBUS (UP!)
the last time was that he Kelvin Ransey, ihe leading 17 pomts a game as a
wasn ' t in the main event and scorer on the Ohio State sophomore last season, had
he replied, "Any time 1 rna ke University, basketball team been suffermg from the back
over $20,000 for a fight , I h as been admitted to spasms for several days but
consider it a main event."
Um ve rs ity Hos pital with they becam e severe enough
Norton said he hopes to get back spasm s.
to have him admitted earlier
a Tematch wi th Holmes
this week.
within ·a year beca use
Mean while , sophomore
Holmes must fight the No. · I
guard
Todd Penn , who has
lnte rnatton a l Hock ey l ea gue
heavywei ght contender in
been
s uffe ring from a
United Press Inter national
Nor th
that time span and Norton
fractured bone in his foot has
W l T Pts GF GA res umed light workouts currently is the WBC's No, I
5 5 ' 1 11 53 41
Huron
contender.
5 4 0 10 43 40 some jogging and shooting . .
Flint
Also on the card will be
Ransey , besides being the
2 4 3
7 37 43
Sag
2 6 2
6 32 46 Bucks leading scorer last
Alexis Arguello of Nicaragua,
Kala .
0 9 1
1 21 64 season, was a lso all Big Ten
Musk.
\fho will put his world junior
South
lightweight crown on the line
W l T Pts GF GA as a guard .
against Artur o Leon of
Fl . Wayne
Tucson , Ariz .
8 l 0 16 44 25

Sizes.

•

Y

a

Navy
Penn St
Clmsn
E Ca rolma

at\ cmp iul yds td ydspg
29a 169 15 2224 13 276.3
34a 22117249721 2a2.6
289 165 22 2398 15 256A
278 152 10 2027 5 257.5
274 152 13 2007 18 254.4

Kcellenl selection of
dresses in
latest
styles , colors and
materials,
Both
Missey and
Half

'

Simpson, the Mickey Mantle
fh k
We feel th1's 1s not
o oc ey.
the endf of a hcareer, "but the
•1art o a not er one ..
Or w NHI r okie of the
r · as1967 • do I•ter set
year m
an ~
records for assists a nd
· g b a defenseman
scorm
Y
·
Eight times he was named
most valuable defense man in
th 1
d t
most
e eague . an wtce
I ble 1n Stanley Cup
va
..
pia ua
offs

NCAA grid statistics

Grand Rapi ds

\

~~&amp; . ' '

to the All-Star learn said he
· 'd b
was " disappotnte
ut
relieved" with his dec ision .
"This is my final decision . I
rted ka ·
said when I sta
s ltng
durmg training camp that
ld b
1 t
th1s wou
e my as
mmeback, and 1t is."
Hawks' Coach Bob Pulford
said, "We're ve ry lucky to
have Bobby , even though he
h
won 't be playing.
Hehwa sot Je
1
Arnold Pamer , t e
. .

Ransey has hack spasms

By KENNETII Jl,. CLARK
Uolted Press IDteruaUonal
JUST ONE MORE VOTE' It was a bit more than a vlctorr
speech. It came within an ace of being a proposal. New York.s
newly re-elected governor, Hugh Carey ~ednesday · .~ld his
cheering campaign workers, "I know you ve been w;!'tmg for
me to make a personal announcement for some time. He tllen
said he's embarking on a new campaign - that, "I hope it will
not he as long and as hard and as difficult as the last campaign.
1 can't tell 'you what the result will be, but it will be a good
one " Beaming at hilt side was 35-year-old Anne Ford UzleW,
daui:hoor of automaker Henry Ford n and wi~owe~ Carey's .
CQDstant companion fer months. But she wasn t. saymg if her :
smile was foc his victory at the polls or sometllmg more per· ,
sonal.

Daa :

It) 1978 Dy NEA, Inc.

Alfredo Evangelista .
champion
said
The
Wednesday he is tota lly
,
prepared for the bout.
Holmes
won
the
heavywei ght crown fro m
Norton June 9 at Las Vegas
on a split 15..-ound decision in
Norton's first championship
defense.
"I don 't want to be like a
Ken Norton and lose the ftrst
time as a champion, " said
Holmes, 29, of Easton, Pa.

all he

•
,
•

than five days ago ."
Orr said he was not playing
, .01 pam
' , nor 1.n sharp pain . It
was restrictions on what I
could do more than pain that
bother me. If I thought I could
contribute, I would go on , but
I feel our defense can
contribute as much as I can ."
Orr , twice National Hockey
League scoring champion,
three times most valuable
player, and eight times vot ed

SMU

GOSPEL MEETING

.,

MISSING THE BOAT: Golf fans can breathe easy, It seems
their hero didn't have such a close call after aU. Reports
Wednesday out of Sydney, Australia, said Jack Nicklaus and
Australian newspaper magnate Kerry Packer were on a
luxury yacht that ran onto a coral reef in a violent storm. But
Pat Wheatley Packer's secretary, says neither man was
aboard - thai Packer was ashore at the time, waiting for
Nicklaus to arrive in a private jet from the Philippines where
he'd been playing goH with President Ferdlnalld Marcos.
Nicklaus is down under to compete in next week's Australian
Open ~olf champlooship. ,_

knee and what 1 know I' m
contributing.
before
·ght not
be
t rt d I1 knew
camp s a e
mt
a ble to do some of the things I
t d to do "
wan e 83 1 ·
Orr
· d "eventually" he
uld eed a seventh knee
wo
n
operation .
" I have very little joint
It ' bo
bo and
space. s neon ne,
there are hone ch1'ps th at
break off. The doctor has told
me 1 will need anot her
operation . I
do feel
discom fort after I skate.
"I have not skated in five
days a nd it feels better now

.H olmes defends
title Friday

Spirited flights
Speaking of alcoholic beverages, a. rec~nt pr~ss release
informs that Lufthansa German Atrhnes lS agam off.e rmg
its first-class passengers a special fall treat - inflight wine
tasting.
.
.
.
Each year the products of a different growmg regto.n ~re
featured and this year it is Baden's turn. The tasbng
begins witH a 1977 Durbacher Schlossberg and proceeds
through a 1976 Obergergener Bassgeige, a 19.77 Oberrotweiler Eichberg and a 1976 Durbacher, th1s last a
Spaetburgunder Weissherbst Beerenauslese no less.
A dedicated taster could end up literally flying high.
Sorry about that .

'
in 1976, accepted a new
" downward"
pact
as
assistant coach with some
front office duties.
" I didn't play and I did not
collect my checks, " he said.
" But I was being taken care
of very well . I have no
complaint. I was fortunate to
'have the talent and to be able
to play . It was fun and I was
rewarded unbelievably for
having fun.
"It hasn't been a &amp;wner. I
felt great ·in training camp,
but the more I skated the
worse it got. My decision is
based on the fPPiin ~ in mv

AUTO
PARTS

Located on
1

.

\

w. Va. Side of

Pomeroy- Mason
Bridge (304) 773-5777

G&amp;J

AUTO
PARTS

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday , Nov . 9, 1978

I

Spurs set new mark in win
I

By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Writer
Th e run-and-gun San
Antonio, Spurs set a team
single1lllme scoring record
Wednesday night in a 163-125
romp over the San Diego
Clippers.
The victory pushed the
Spurs over .500 at 7-6, and this
st range bl end of deadly
shoo ters
and
usually
un i nspi r ed defend e rs
impressed Coach Doug Moe
with their efforts, despite the
125-point yield.
:Our defense •was there
tonight ... we've got to play
defense like this more often,''
said Moe, whose team leads
the NBA in offense but ranks
last in defense.
George Gervin scored 38
points on sizzling 17-for-20
shootin g and Billy Paultz
carne off the bench to add 28.
The Spurs topped their
previous record of 160 points
set in 1970 in the American
1

Basketball Assocl3tl0n.
The
Spur s'
major
weaknesses are defense and
rebounding, but they beat the
Clippers 61-43 off the boards.
Paultz hit 11-of-14 from the
field and said he didn 't want
to spoil the Spurs' party. "I
didn 't want to get in and play
poorly because everyone else
was playin g so well."
Gervin hit "only" 9-of-11
from the field as the Spurs
took a 76-59 halftime
advantage, and the 6-foot-7
All-Star guard followed with
an
8-ol-9
second-half
performance. He also led a
3().13 Spurs' ·scoring spurt in
the third quarter with 17
points. Uoyd Free paced the
Clippers with 26.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it
was Philadelphia 137, New
Jersey 133, in double
overtime; Portl imd 112,
Boston I 09 ; Detroit 117 ,
Milwaukee 106 ; Los Angeles

hit two free throws with 22
second~ left to P.Ut Los
Angeles back ahead and the
Lakers held on after blowing
a 19-point lead.
Suns 118, Cavaliers 96:
Ron Lee scored 24 points off
the bench and reserve guard
Mike Bratz added 20 points
and eight assists as Phoenix
placed six players in double
figures en route to victory
over Cleveland.
Kings 105, Warriors 95:
Otis Birdsong scored six
points in the final 2:35 to lift
Kansas City over Golden
State and snap the Warriors'
sixgame winning streak.
Koicks 104, SuperSonics
100:
Bob McAdoo scored 31
points, including eight of New
York's last 10 points, to lead
the Knicks to a victory over
Seattle, snapping a Sanies'
17-game home winning streak
dating back to last season.

113,1ndiana Ill ; Phoe ni~ 118,
Cleveland 96; Kansas City
105, Golden Sta te 97 ; and New
York 104, Seattle 100.
76ers 137, Nets 133:
Do ug
Collins,
held
scoreless in the first half,
po ured in 27 points after
in termission to spark
sluggish Philadelphia to 'a
double overtime win over
New J ersey , whi ch was
plagued by eight technical
fouls.
Trail Blazers 112, Celtics 109:
Dave Twardzik , Maurice
Lucas and Tom OWens combined for· 64 points as
Portland handed Boston its
ninth loss in II games.
Pistons 117, Bucks 106:
Successive thr ee-point .
plays by Bob Lanier and M.L.
Carr gave Detroit a fourthperiod lead it nev er
relinquished.
Lakers 113, Pacers 111:
Adrian Dantley , who
scored a g am~igh 34 points,

UPI leaders finish with perfect marks
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cin ci nnati Princeton,
Wyoming and · Newark
Catholic, which have all
finished with unbeaten
regular seasons, continue to
hold th eir No. 1 positions as
Press
the
United
Intern ational Ohio High
School Board of Coaches
football ratings head into the
final week.
Princeton, which wrapped
up a 9.() season Friday night
with a 4().8 win over Hamilton
Garfield, received 27 of 30
first place votes for a 296-251
margin over runnerup
Cincinnati Moeller in Class
AAA .

Zanesville, which closes its
regular season Friday night
aga inst Newark , finished

third again this week with 182
points , while Massillon ,
which takes on Canton
McKinley Saturday, jumped
ba,ck into four th place,
dropping Miami Trace to
fifth.
Cincinn ati Elder,
Barberton , Lakewo od St.
Edward, Hilliard and Clayton
Northmont , a newcomer ,
round out this week's AAA
top ten.
Wyoming, which won its
loth game witl)out a Joss this
season and 21st straight
overall with a 211-ll decision
over Reading Friday night,
can also sit back and relax.
The Cowboys of Coach Bob
Lewis hold a comfortable 206166 margin over runnerup St.
Marys · Memorial, which
closes out its regular

campaign Friday night
against Van Wert.
Th.e big jump in Class AA .
was made by Brookfield,
which leaped all the way
from eighth to third after its
convincing 33-14 decision
over Elyria Catholic. In the
procfSS, Brookfield dropped ·
New Concord John Glenn , 1().
0, from third to fourth .
Columbus DeSales again
finished in the fifth spot and
was followed , in order, by
Ironton, Paulding,
Loudonville , Elyria Catholic ·
and Millbury Lake.
Newark Catholic's lead
over No . 2 West Jefferson in
Class Ais just about the same
as the other two leaders:
_The Green Wave, who fin-

week ' s Uni ted Press In ternational Ohio High. School

Board of Coaches football
ratings (wi th first place votes
and w an. losf
parentheses) :

Team

record s

ClassAAA

in

Points

Cin . ·Princeton 27 (9-0)296
2. Cin. Moeller 18-tl
251
3. Za nesv ille 1 (9-0)
182
4. Ma ss . Wash . 18-0-l)
117
5. Miami Trace (9-0)
97
6. Ci n. Elder (8·1)
96
7. Barberton 1 (8 ..1)
87
I.

8. Lak ewood St. Edward

17-1)
9. Hilliard (10-0)
10. Clayton lllthmt. 19-01

84
71
50

Second tem : 11. Sandusky
47: 12. Groveport -Madison

.,..

43; 13. Cleveland St. Joseph
33 ; 14. Centerville 28 ; 15. (lie)
Toledo Bowsher and Youngs.

;::

town Cardinal Mooney , 24
each ; 17. Newark 19 ; 18. (tie)
Ca nton McKinley and Loui s-

' . ville, 18 each ; 20. (lie) Solon
North Ridgeville . '14
, " and
ea ch .
ClassAA
Team
l. Wyoming 8 (10-0)

Points

206

Nicklaus escapes
injury in mishap

John Gl enn 2 (10·0&gt;
5. Co. DeSales 1 110·01
l. Ironton 1 18-01
7. Pauld ing 2 ( 10-0)
8. Loudonville ( 10·0)
9. Elyr ia Cath. l8·l·ll
10. Millbury Lake (9-0)

54

47
44

Team

Points
254

Ill

46 ;

12 .

(l ie )

Liber1y Salem 26; 15.
Jackson·Milt on (1) 17 ; 16.
(tie)

Cr oo ks v il le

ished I().Qwith a 1().0 win over
Johnstown Monroe, received
17 first place votes and 245
points to 201 points for West
Jeff.
Covington , recovering from
a mid-season loss to
Versailles, climbed back into
the third spot with 143 points,
follow ed by
unbeaten
Crestline in fourth and
Patrick Henry, a 29.() loser to
AA Wauseon last Friday
night, in fifth .
Cory Rawoon,despite a 2().0
Joss to Liberty Benton Frid~y
night, still only dropped from
fourth to sixth, while Middletown Fenwick, Versailles,
Lorain Clearview and Liberty
Benton rounded out the top
ten in Class A.

and

Ashtabula St. John, 16 each ;
SYDNEY, Australia, (UP! ) . 18. Bradford t•; 19. (tiel
w as Catholic ( 1).
- Reports that golfing great Tuscara
Eastern Meigs, Cedarvill e
Jack Nicklaus and Australian and Lancaster Fisher, 12
newspaper magnate Kerry each .
, Packer were aboard a luxury
, yacht which went aground
, durin g a storm were
' e rr o n eo us, Packer's
• secretary said Thursday.
··~ .
The
secretary,
Pat
•• Wheatley, said Packer was
ashore in Cairns, a town in
northern Queensland, 1,700
mil es north of Sydney,
waiting for Nicklaus to arrive
at the time of the incident.
Police reports had said
Packer and Nicklaus were
aboard the $1.4 mUlion yacht
Melita when it went aground
during a violent storm in the
Great Barrier Reef during a
marlin fishing expedition.
Wheatley said Packer was
waiting for a private jet
carrying Nicklaus from the
P hilippines to arrive at
Cairns when the Melita went
aground in 81 mph winds . She
s;Ud Nicklaus and Packer
boarded another yacht later
in the day "and joined the
marlin neet. "
Nicklaus is in Australia to
compete in next week;s Australian
Open
golf
championship at Sydney.

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$70

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throughout the District's ten
counties to explain the services that will be provided.
For additional information,
Ms. Steele can be reached at
(614) 245-S353, Ext. 226. Ms.
Sievers can be contacted at

BY REMINGTON, WINCHESTER,
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VISITORS
Mrs. Gertrude Miller and
Mrs. Carl Roach and son,
Darin, spent the weekend at
Fo11 Knox, Ky. visitmg with
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Miller
and family.

Acros s from

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family / friends on the-road . Noise limiter . 21 ·1540

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA'

POMF:ROY,

•
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Mon . thru Thurs., 10·5
Fri. &amp; Sat . 10-6

A Young Career Contest is
again being sponsored by the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club.
The contest is for women
from 21 through 30 who have
worked on a job at least one
year. During the contest
which 18 scheduled for 7:30
p.m. on Nov. 20 at . the
Colwnbus Gas Co Office in
Middleport, the contestants
preaent a five to eight minute
talk on their careers. A panel
of three judges will select the
winner who will represent the
Middleport Club In District
Competition.. Young women
lntereated in entering the
contell' should contact Mrs.
Alwllda Werner, Middleport.'

Most items
Radio Shack
Dealers.
Look for this

' InTO HARTENIIA\:H
Otto Hartenbach, Miners-

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DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE
Do you want to sell a home?
Business? Land? List with usl
'

We have a complete real
estate service.

CALL 992-2342
EVE. 992-2449
RODNEY DOWNING - BROKER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Wi th a ll the new looks in active

bet you're looking foro bold
spo(ly casual to put it oil
together. Now add the unfa ir
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Triple-Play Minisette.:v -IV by Realistic ®

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THE SHOE BOX
Middleport, Ohio

SAVES30

Young career contest I::::;;;.,.

also available al

1ign in your

U.

Dorottly ' s

Beautv Shop in Svrrcuse .

Forever
With a Portrait

sportswear this sea sOn. we·u

Mr. and Mrs. Frank B.
Samatorvitz II, Middieport,
are announcing the birth of a
son, Frank Brandon Ill, Oct.
9 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
five pounds, II ounces an was
19 inches long. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
B8rr, Middleport, and Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Samatorvitz
I, Calchester, Conn. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Roscoe Hollon, Chester,
and Mrs. Flora Barr, Leon,
W.Va.'

·m CltRI'HMA.$

Most Stores Open Sunday Afternoon . , .
til Christmas

7ND FOR SHOPPif\H,

'·

(614 ) 773-5173. Additional
information can also be
obtained by writing the Area
Agency on Aging, P.O. Box
9'18, Rio Grande College and
Community Colleg e, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.

Keep Smiling

Hush Puppj,!~
sporting
propOsition

Blessed by son

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LUNVENIENCE
•

V.I.S .T.A. volunteers in
establishing an advocacy
network for nursing home
residents.
Both Ms. Sievers and Ms.
Steele will be making contact
with various nursing homes

lor
that unusual
handmade gift ite m .

lhei r 25th wedd mg anniver- Bryant, and Mr. and Mrs.
sary Tuesday night with a Trell Schoenleb.
turkey dinner al the home of
Mr. and Mrs. John Werry,
Hemlock Grove .
A tlecoraled wedding cake
wa s made and presented to
lhem by Mrs. Pa ul Taylor.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Scull Van Vranken, Amy and
from
Clay, Athens, Matlhcw Van
Vra nkcn . Mr s. Tra c y
Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. Pa ul
(Bob Hoeflich)
Taylor , Mrs. Lucretia Werr y,
109 High St.
Mrs. Charl es Werry, M1·. and
Pomeroy
Mrs. Jeff Werry . Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Werry , Janie

Mrs. Samatorvitz
and son

'

MOORE'S
MAIN OR W

LIN-DEE'S CRAFT
BOUTIQUE

Deborah Sievers

DOGIE II

"Stop In During
Hunting Seasons"

:,r,;

RIO GRANDE - Two new
staff members have been
added to the Area Agency on
Aging's District 7.
Barbara .Steele, currently
located on the campus of Rio
Grande College and Community College, and Deborah
Sievers, currently working
out of the Chillicothe office,
will be working with nursing
homes.
Ms. Steele, as nursing
home trainer - health planner, will be responsible for
the development of training
programs for nursing home
employees and social service
agencies~ She will provide
insight to spec~alized care
and sensitivity to gerontology.
Ms. Sievers, as nursing
home ombudsman, will be
responsible for programs
dealing with concerns of
nursing home residents,
residents' families . and
friends, personnel and administrators. She will also
work with community and

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES}

MASON, W. VA.

,•..

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national

COMPLETE

MONTREAL (UPI) - The
Montreal Expos Wednesday
they had acquired
• announced
th e
Calgary,
Alberta
franchiie to be their new
;: farm team in the Rookie
~
League.
;:; ' The announcement was
made jointly by Expos Vice
President Jim Fanning and
Russ Parker, president of the
Calgary team .

•

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•
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Barbara Steele

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Armes of
Minersville and Mr. and Mrs.
Oris Hubbard, and drove to
Rutland to visit Ernes l
Quillen, a shutin .
The Rev. Dale Bass of the
Syra cuse Naza rene Church
in vi ted lh e Rev. Mr .
La rimore, who spent nine
years in Syracuse, to be the
guesl speaker at the Sunday

Agency to assist in nursing home development

PLACE: .
I

The Rev . M. C. Lat imore of
Newark was a guesl of
George antl Alice Freela nd
. several tlays recently. He

Estill Moore. The decorated rught church services. The
birthday cake made by Mrs. minister m&lt;:tde many fri ends
Morrow and encircled with d ur in ~ his time in SyrHcuse.
red, while and blue candles
was served with ice cream .
The youngster received a gill
Visit
fl'om his gra ~dparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Morrow,
Syracuse.

~f
•

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63

Columbus Ready and WoodS·
f ield ( 1) .42 each ; 14. West

Crouch, and an aunt, Mrs.

•'

N. Second Ave.

. PHOTOGRAPHERS HOURS 11 AM TIL 7 PM

77
72

Second l en : 11. Mechanics -

Matthew Morrow, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Morrow,
cclebratetl his first birthday
Wednesday at his home in
Newark. Going up especially
fur his birthda y were his
grandmother, Mrs. Rulh

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10

201
143
138
109.
91

9. Lorain Clear v iew 1 (8-2) 67

burg

'
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Middleport, 0.

DATE:

LaBrae , 13

10. Liberty Benton (9-l)

·)

Turns one

•

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No age limit
Limit 1 Per Person
One Special Per Family
Single or Groups Taken

El y ria West 19 ; 17. Olmsted
Falls 17 ; 18. Orr v ille 16 ; 19.
Wauseon 14; 20. (tie ) Twin sburg
Chamberli n
an d

1. New. Cath. 17 (10-0)
2. West Jeff. 119-1I
3. Cov i n~ton 3 (9-1I
4. Crestllne1 I10-0I
5. Pa1rlck Henry (9.1)
6. Cory Rawson 1 (9.1)
h Mid. Fenwick 17·2)
8. Versailles 1 (9.1)

TIRE SALES

FREE

83

Class A

From

IN LIVING COLOR

98

Second len : ll . St . Clair s-

Leavitt sburg

(~pjNERAL

gracious t• ustom of upen
chu rch will be observed.

Recent guest
was a lso a supper guest uf

BUY NOW
BEAT THE WINTER
PRICE HIKE '

Snow Tires

wedding of Cindy
Price, Cheshire, and Frank
Hoffman, Middleport, will be
an event of Sa turday, Nov . II
al 7 p.m. al the Middleport
Fi rst Baptist Church. The.

•

IMJ!11)@a§~~

8 -X 10

131
100

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van
Vra nk en , Spri ng Ave.,
Pomeroy, were surprised on

.,•

liET
READV
fOR

·

Wedding Surprised on 25th anniversary
planned
The

;;:::==:;,

Retread

'

'

rest of the team. He had
seven strikeouts and gave up
six hits, incliJding a hmte run
to !sao Harimoto in the fourthinning. Seaver was replaced
in the eighth by Doug Bair.

PHOTO SPECIAL

ville (3) 36; 12. Waynedale (1)
29 ; 13. El ida 28 ; 14. Ha mi lton
Badi n 21; 15 . Perr y Ill 20 ; 16.

each .

Driessen's two-run triple . .
Seaver hurled the first
seven innings in his last
appearance in Japan before
his scheduled departure for
home Friday ahead of the

•

2. St. Marys Mem . 4 (9-0) 166
3. Broo kf ield 3 (9-0)
137
4. New Concord

TOKYO ( UP! ) - Tom scored Junior Kennedy with
Seaver tossed a six-hitter the Reds' first run in a twoover seven innings and Dan run third . Oester then scored
Driessen capped a three-run on a run-scoring single by
ninth inning with a two-run Seaver.
The Reds took a 3-0 lead in
triple today , leading the
louring Cincinnati Reds to an the fourth inning and opened
8-4 .victory over the Tokyo · the lead to iH&gt; with two more
Giants.
runs in the fifth , one when
The Reds' triumph at , Pete Rose scored on a wild
Toyama Stadium on the pitch by Kazuaki Fujishiro .
Japan seacoast upped their
The Giants launched a
record to six wins, two losses comeback effort in the fifth
and a draw .
inning, scoring four runs, but
Roo Oester 's RBI triple they were held scoreless for
the rest of the game before a
crowd of 22,000.
The Reds wrapped up their
• PIITSBURGH (UP!) - victory
with three more runs
The Pittsburgh Pirates in the ninth inning, including
Wednesday named former
pitching coach Don Osborn to
resume that position in tti
JOCKEY INJURED
1979 season.
NORTH
RANDALL, Ohio
Osborn, 70, of Torrance,
Calif., .joined the Pirate ( UPI I - Jockey Steve
organization in 1958 and had Bruder suffered a fractured
retired following the 1976 skull when tossed from his
season. He replaces Larry mount during the first race at
Sherry, who accepted a job Thistledown Wednesday.
He's confined at Suburban
with the California Angels to
Community
Hospital.
be closer to home .

~!he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 9. 1978

j

0

UPI grid ratings
COLUMBUS (UPI! - This

Seaver tosses 8-4 Reds win

)

vtlJe realdent, is a medical
~ter. Cards may be sent to
RoOm 404 .

BUILDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
·PRICES. QUAL.ITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.
CASY&amp; CARRY
PRICES

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CORPORATION o.

8995

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SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY . .. MOST STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS ' TIL CHRISTMA S

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MOST STORES OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOONS TIL CHRISTMAS

~ alers .

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Middleport,
992-2709 or 992-6611

Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon.thru Fri .
. 7:00toJ:OO Saturday

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M;;g;·c;~;;;y Garden Clubs announce commit
Committees for the 1978
Christmas flower show of the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
Association to be held Dec. 2
and 3 al the Pomeroy
Elementary School have been
announced by Ms. S.Uy Ingels and Mr s. William
Buckley, co-chairmen.
Tiley are Mrs. Curtis King,
Mrs. Stacie Arnold, and Mrs.
James-Carpenter, judges and
clerical ; Mrs. Dale Machir
and Mrs. Donald Mora ,
scheduling ; Mrs. Roy Holler,
Mrs. Richard Koblentz, and
Mrs . Wyatt Chadwell, staging ; Mrs. Ralph Turner, class
name cards; Mrs. Leonard
Erwin, Mrs . Reid Young, and

Mrs. Randy Young, show theme of the show whirh is Ther·e is no advant"e registra:theme decor ; Mrs. Howard open fur public exhibits. lion lor the snow entries and
Nolan and Mrs . Wilson
Carpenter, registration ; Mrs. :!(::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::m;
Charles Kuhl, horticulture ;
Mrs . Richard Barton, horJi
jij.
ticulture, senior citizens.
Mrs. Robert Lewis, Mrs.
Virgil Atkins , and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp, hospitality ; Mrs . Bert ~:
~:
Grinun, Mrs. Andrew Cross,
CAN FRIENDS EFFECT CHANGE?
classification and entries·;
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Mrs. Chadwell and Mrs .
My best fr·icml ami r'O&lt;Krunate f~ datin~ a 36-year-old man .
Pearl Mora, publicity; Mrs.
Sht,.s only 18 and was very protected at home . It's the first
Edison Hollon and Mrs. Allan
timt• she's gone with anyone, and she thinks she 's inlov~. but
Harris, awarcts and ribbons ;
not totally.
Mrs . Koblentz, junior secI think she should enjoy life with guys her own age now she is
tion; Mrs. Alice Thompson,
awav from her super-strict folks . Instead she spends all her
educational.
tim~ with this dull old party, and at his parents' home I where
"Christmas Is .. ." is the
he stilllives i. They hanlly ever gu out. Her personality has
changed. She's not the bubbly, fun-loving person she recently
was but mm·e like she used to be while under· her· parents'
......_.~.,
thm~bs. How ca n I convince her he's not what she needs 7
-D. D.F .
P.S. She says she doesn't love him enough tu marry him but
if she goes out with other men site " might lose him."
DEAR D.:
FRIDAY
Best way tu convince a girl that she only thought she was in
WESTERN CB Club Friday
love is by introducing her to an attractive, personable, eligible
7 p.m. ·a t club house. Gift
gU)' who shuws a lot of interest in her .
exchange . Christmas
Doit 1 -SUE
projects will be discussed. All
members urged to attend.
D.:
MUNDAY
Your friend may feel comfortable with this older man and
POMEROY PTA. Munday, Ius parents because they 're a continuation of the restrictive
7:30 p.m. room visitation.
family life she recently left. Even though she no doubt
Program on taxes by Carl
resented it, she miglltmiss the protection and security she had
and Mary Teaford uf Hand R at hume.
Block, Fourth and fifth grade
If Mr. 36 is a transition, she'll soon outgrow him . Not to
parents with Corky Kennedy , worry.- HELEN
chairman of hostesses.
Nursery will be provided.
DEAR HElEN AND SUE :
BETHEL 62.' International
I'm 17, female and have a gay male friend . No, I'm not in
Order uf Jobs' Daughters , Jove, but I wony', as he wants so much to be straight.
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
I'm the only one who knows. He has never had a homosexual
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
experience , ur any sex with girls either. But he says he's only
attracted to men. At first I couldn't believe it as he is very
rmcho in public.
·
The Alamaliac
He keeps telling me he can't change, but he must. What can I
United Preos International
atlvise ? - H.H.
.
Today is .Thursday, Nov. 9,
Your friend needs professjonal counseling. A therapist can
the 313\h day of 1978 with 52 to probably determine whether ·ur nul he has real desire and
follow.
ability tu change. If not, then he must accept his homosexualiThe moon is between its ty. -HElEN
first quarter and full phase.
The morningp stars are NOTE FROM SUE: Being his advism· is lou big a job for you!
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. Ca ll the local Mental Heallh Association, describe your
The evening stars are Mer- friend's problem, and ask for a referral.! Keep in mind that
cury and Mars.
many states require parental consent before a minor can
Those boln on this date are receive psychiatric L'Ounseling.)
under the sign of Scorpio.
American acb'es&amp; Marie RAP:
Dressler ("Tugboat Annie")
On the juvenile curfew cuntruver:sy: this is freedom sacrificwas born Nov. 8, 1673.
ed in search of elusive security. Government should not proOn this day in history:
hiibit its citizens from leaving their homes after certain hours.
In i953, the U.S. Supreme Such r·cstrictions come close to martial law and tyranny . - APCourt ruled that major league PRECIATOROFFREEDOMAOFF:
•
baseball did not c&lt;me within
Even fm· kids under16 7 - HELEN AND SUE
the scope of federal antitrust
laws.

Generation Rap

,

By Helen and Sue Bottel

r--··- ·--.. . -----....- ........
l

Social Calendar

THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane
Society Thursday 7:30p.m. in
Riverboat Room at Athens
County Savings and Loan. All
members are urged lo attend.
CHRISTIAN BAZAAR and
bake sale, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Thursday at Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
ELEANOR CIRCLE , 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the Heath
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Grace Johnson and Mrs.
Margie Blake will be
hoslesses.
UTTLE SCHOOL of Instruction 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 for
potluck.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7'30 Thursday at the hall.
Members are reminded lo
take gifts for the Athens Mental Health Center.
HAPPY HARVESTERS,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the Trinity Church. Potluck tu follow .
FRIDAY
RETURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American Revolution,
1:30 p.m. Friday al home of
Miss Eleanor Smith with
Mrs., Gerald Powell, Mrs.
Clinton Fisher and Miss
Lucille Smith, hostesses.
Program on "The First
American" by Mrs. Dorothy
Shaw, Gallipolis.
•
ROUND · AND square I
dance , Friday, at Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy, open to the public
with music by the Stringdusters. Admission, $1 adults,
children under 12 free .
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem ·
ceremonial, 8 p.m. Friday at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple; ;
potluck refreshments
following the meeting.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Friday at noon at
Meigs Inn.

I

EVANGELIST
TIM &amp; AUDREY ILES
&amp; FAMILY
Presents
VENTRILOQUISM- ''Come and Meet Ricliie."
TRUNK ESCAPES AND GOSPEL MAGIC
SATURDAY • 10:00 A.M.

Middii!D~rrt

BEFORE WINTER ARRIVES

•A lumlnum Door Strips
•Aluminum Door
·Bottoms·
•Felt Weather Str.pplng
•Self..stlcklng Foam
Weather Stripping
.
•VInyl Foam Tape

Aaron Davis

Turns seven
A party was held in
celebration of the seventh
birthday of Aaron Joseph
Davis, son of Mrs. Mindy
Seymour, Page St., Middleport, recently.
A halloween · cake, ice
cream and koolaid were served to his aunt, Mrs. Marilyn
Miller and her daughter,·
Jody, his brother Cory
Seymour, and grandmother,
Mrs. P hyllis Young .
.Gi fts were presented lo
Aaron by his cousins , Derrcck and Ashley Brooke
Whitlatch and his uncle, Ken·
ny Young. Later in the
eveninq Aaron went to a sur·
prise birthday party held at
the home of his fatl]er,
Richard Davis, and Mrs.
Davis in Pomeroy.

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

MAIN ST.

PH. 992·2811
•

POMEROY

M... OE !Nu S A

•

" Eiiperience the Difference '"

I

.,.,
I

Auditions' super sport boots are

}
•

as versatile as you. Wear them
with skirts or pants or jeans or

,.·'

gauchos. They're ready to go
when you are . See these and other

·:
.'•,.

Auditions boots, today. Choose

l

••

•'

the styles that are right for you!

"1
••

•'

·' '

,,•r'..•

'

~·~

'

CHRISTMAS
CANDLE &amp; RING

'l

'

:

1:•

:
~

tj·,
'~

•"
.,

. with each deposit of ssoo or more in a new
savings account. 1 candle per family
please.

~

''

1

,,•
'\"'

.,.

:.,1•••
•
•

•
TOPOOWN .,
'

.1!

t

•

.J

(Candles locafly made by Herbert Evans,

•'

7 Ohio Ave., Athens, Ohio)

t

'

••'

i:.

t

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

PH. 992·2644

BEm OHLINGER

Pom-.~roy

----·---y,." .. I= TO Flor;.-. t

E: MAIN ST.

:'

POMEROY

I_ ~.'

1'\Jrsuant 10 lhe reQ uir um'!nt~ o r
Section &lt;1909 19 ol the Oh• o ~. · \'t'!H.H1
Code. Ohto Power Com otuly hcrc b~
gives not ice !ha t on June JO. ISIS, "
ftled Wl!h the PuDII C U tt h lt C: ~ Con,
mission o f Ohio an ilpp loc~r o on tor
authorization to amsnd a no to tncrc ase
substant ially all ol Its tile!! larill s .1nc1
' terms cmd condittons o f servoce h•· n ~J

ra1es and charges lor etec l• ic •h
lh11re a11&amp; no rcu e changl:'s Pt'l·

ott he revosoon5 pro ·

rom~~ w~~~~~~~~~ge~a~s~s'1"t1 ~; ~~Y ~~~:

hOnored

c hec~ re cei~ed

in

pa~ mt)lol

of"

bo ll rend ered by the Company , u n iP.SS
I he customer shews that I hr. b&lt;~nk was
in error No such charge is matl'l under
edstinQ tarills.
In Seclion 5. Changeol Addre ~.'i hy
Customer. thB IOIIO W1n g p111&gt;1!.rOn 1S
atlded : " It i s I he respons1bilrly 'l lan c ~
lsl!ng cus1omer to nc t1 ty the r.ompany
when se1vlce Is to be disco nt +nued, ,; nd
l o provide a marling addu~s~ l or the
final b111 :·
In Section t O. Comp3ny 's lrabilrl y
the lotloo,vtng p ro~ls ton Is acll:lml ' The
Compan._-'s liabili ty to thfl customm tor
dama!es re1uiUng fr om interrupuor.s:
rrregu ar i!les . delays or any o thm cnr dt
lions o f aen ·ic e Cilused by thol ncq·
ligence ot the Comp.tnv . shJII nnt ~.t
ceed 1wo t imes the ilpplic:;J!;ifl tilrdl
charges tor tile serv1ce tor thtl pl!rioo ("I I
1nlerruplion . lrregul ar rty. dela y 0• I'! her
harmful coflcllllon ot servicP. ·
In Sec lion 13. E. tension ol Rural
Lines. tl'le rural li ne m1nimu m C!':~_rge
per customer is Increased hom li~OO
10 S43.75 per month tor up 10 51 16 o t a
mrte. and trol1) S6.50 to $1750 om
month for each add i tior~ilf 116 lf)rle or
l ract ron thereof. The minimufT'I aggrc·
gate of such cha.rQOS for each line i ~ In·
creaseCI !rom ISO.OO 10 $140 00 per
month per trne. No minimum chargl!
s~all belen than $43.75-per montn. an
increase flam $t5.00. The gross annual
revenue lrom all customers on a 11 n ~
necessary to etimlnalo all minimum
charges under th is J;u itf rs oncrea::;ecl
from $1500 to 14200 per mrll!.
In Sec !ion 14. Temporary Gervrce.
the file d ,harge l or temporary se r~r ce
reauirlng &amp;lly readlng·lo and read ing :
ouT an el isting mehH Is rn crl:'asm.l lr om
S7.75 to 110.00, and the charge l or
single phl!Se 120/240 volt SP-rvice from
parmanel\1 source. up 10 100 amper e
capa clly Is rncreased from $47.50 to
S65.00.
Tho~

e~isting

Set.tion 17. Meter
Regisuat ion. and Sec t ion 16. Moler
Tested Upon ReQues t , are rearran ged
Into Section 17. t.teter Rf!Gistrat ion and
Tasting and Section 18, BlltlnQ Cor·
1ection~ . Proposed Section 16 provides
that II the amount ot energy consumed
Is not prooerly reg lslered b~ a meter tor
any reaso n or is riel properly charged to
the cuatomer's 1ccount , the Company
will . for the period of t ime that incorrect
Olllings can be estaolished. adtust the
meter readlnga and bi llings to refl ect
all available lnlormat ron concernrng
the aCiual use b~ the cuslom e~ .
In S.c!ion 19. Unmetered Service.
1 provlalon Is ar:kled permltlln[l un·
metered Hrvlce only where l h(! Com·
pany determi nes that a met er in~lallil ·
lion would be difficult and econo~c·
&amp;lly lmpr&amp;cth:al. It is also add(!d tha t
where a customer na ...ing an L.tnmelered
service lo~ll s lo ootil)' the Compan~ ol
an Increase In toao . tl'1e Company may
refuH 10 pro..-lde iH'Imelered service to
any or thlt cuttomtr's dell~ery points
ther111ter. rathef than jusJ IO l~e par·
licul.lr dallvery point .
Section 20 . Power Fact or o t
Lighting EQuipment , Ia deleted fr om the
Terms and COnaltlon• ot Se r ~ l ce .
In S.cllon 22. Denl'a l or Olscontlnuanct of Serr~lce . renumbered In !he
proposed llrl!ls as Sect 1on 21, II provided that !he Company ma~ dr &amp;con·
llnue to serve an~ customer 10 ptevenl
tiMIII from the COmpany . Also In tt\i :s
aect ior~ . !ht reconnection cl'1 l tgo dur·
lng normal working hours Is lncr11ased
hom 111 . 1~ to 112.50. and out~old e o!
normal wort1:lng hours IS Increa sed fr om
$2 1.50 to 123.25. The charge tor pay
men1 ol detmquen1 amounts 10 a Com ·
pany_ emr,loyefl . perlorm mg a drsco11·
nec11011 s ncreaaed !rom S6.00 to

!S

TARIFF R.S.
(RESIDENTIAL ELECTRIC
SERVICE)
Tne charges tre incrP. utH1 by
• adding a customer cherge ot !i&lt;4.50 per
month. end combinrnv the lrr !lt thrc~

btlli ng b loc~s of lh e t,rst JO i(WH pe.
mon t h al 6 .40c per KWH , IhE!' ne~ t 40
KWH per month at5. 1Jc per KWH. a11d
the ne•t 130 KWH per month &lt;it 2.97¢
per KWH into a single br lh ng blOCk o r
the Hrst 200 KWH per monlh at 3 16t
04H KWH .
l hll rema ining monthly charges
are increased as foll o ws:
T/'l e ne•t 600 KWH I tom
1.97¢ to 2.74¢ per KWH
·The ne~t 700 KWH 110m
I 67¢ lo 2 32¢ per KWH
AU ower 1WO KWH !1om
1.:m: 1o 1.91¢ per KWH
The charge lor KWH u~ed under
th e water healer ser~l c e proviSion rs rn
creased h om 137c toA .91¢. per KWH
The mrnimum monthly charge o f
$2.50 rs elr mlnaled . The min1mum bill
under the proposed ta riff Is the $4.50
customer charge
The charr~es lor c•penmen!al ener·
Qy sl orage service are 1ncreasect as
follows;
The

mo n lhl~

serv rce charge !rom
$200 l o S2M
used du11ng " oil -peak
from
0.34!!: tO 0.-47t per KWH
usetl durrng " on·peaM.
from
534C to 7.43C per KWH
The charg-es lor optionel servi ce
l or residen ces p11marlly neatcd by olec·
trltity are increas l'!d as follows:
fhe month I~ service charge from
$720 to SIO .OO
Tho!&gt;e KWH used durr ng me montn
111 eKcess of 400 trmo s the monlhly
b111ing demand r,om
0.80¢ I O 1.1 1C per KWH
Those KWH used durrng !he peak
lo arJ p!!riOd
Frrst 500 KWH from
2 50rt l o 3.484; per KWH
All o~er 500 KWH !rom
2.00¢ to 2.76( per KWH
All addit ional KWH used dur ing
the mooth l rom 1.00C to $1.39 per
Energy
ho urs "
\
Energy
hou rs "

KWH

TARIFF G.S. ,
(GENERAL SERVICE)
Tne charg es are rn creased by
adding a cu stomer cn,; rRe o f $4.50 per
mon tfl . and combinmg ! he KWH equal
to the first 50 trmes KW or monlhly bill·
rng demand from two bi ltr ng bl oc ~s ot
the lirst 30 KWH .1t 6 .5911: per KWH ano
the KWH over JO at &lt;4 9811: ner KWH i ~1o
a sing le billing l:llo c ~ a t 6 29rr per KWH
Tne rem a1nrng montrlly charges
are rr~crea:sed as 1ollow:s
KWH equal 10 the neot 150 l imes
KW a t monthly billing demand ·
Firs! 3000 KWH from
3.30C to 4.59e per KWH
Ove~ 3000 KWH hom
2.15c to 2.9!k per KWH
KWH In excess o t 200 times KW ol
monthly bllling.demanalrom
I 44C to 2.00¢ per KWH
The minimum month!)" charge lor
separate service to welders , X ray machines . etc .. is Inc rea sed fr om $1 45 to
$2.02 per kilovolt -ampere ol lns l allod
lransformer:s capacity . The minimum
monthly c h~r~e s tor customers ha~lng
other sources of'energy su pply are In·
crused Irom $14 .40 lor the first 3 KW
or frachon thereof of contrac t demand
and 52.\10 for each KW of con tract de·
mand in e~cess ot 3 KW to 128.10 tor
the first 5 KW or fracl ion thereof o t con·
trac t demand and $4 .051or each KW ot
contract demand in e~cess ol 5 KW.
The minimum monthly cha tge ol
$2.50 Is elim inated . The minimum bill
undet the proposed tar iff is the $.6 .50
customer charge
Th e c redit for the cus tomers la King
service at primary voltage i s Increased
!rom 184 to 25C per KW of monthly bill ·
rng demand.

TARIFF E.H .G.
(ELECTRIC HEATING ·
GENERAL)
The moQtn1r charoes are Increased as
follows:
The llrst 200 KWH !rom
3.92c: to 5.53c per KWH
The next 6800 KWH !rom
I
1.94c to 2.70. per 1'\WH
All over 7000 KWH from
1.75¢ to 2.4Jc per KWH
For demand In excess
ol 30 Kw. !rOm
11.80 to 12.50 oer KW
Tne minimum monthly charge tsin·
creased 11om S8.30 plus SI .80 per KW o t
· demand rn tm:es:s o f 30 KW to Sf. I 55
pi\JS S2 .50 per kw ol demano rn e~r.ess
of 30 KW

TARIFF L.P.
(LARGE POWERI
The monthly charges are lnqeascd a:s
loltow s: .
Primary Port ion: From
5.1Wc: to 7.85c per KWH
Seconcta1y Portion : Hie first
2.000 KWH from
3.29c: to 4,57c pe1 KWH

Th'! nPt l 8 000 KWH lrom
nt•~t

~ft t; to36 3cpe r KWH

90Jl00 KWH from
1,9-tc to 2 704: per KWH
All o~c r ' 0 0.000 I&lt;W H hom
U9c to 2 07c per KWH
b cP. o;~. Port ron. The fir st
200.GOO KWH hom
0.94rt 10 l.31C:
All over 200.000 KWH Irom
0.64c: to 0.8911: per KWh
The mini mum m onthly charge rS in·
creased l rom $ 1.69 to S2.35pe r KVA n l
month ly ortlrn g demand
Th e c ptonn l or the billing demilnO
to be mea Gurerl J .s the a~et.lge ol tno
three hrghcs t 15-ml nu te rrilegrated
peak s in ki10W'l !I S as measured by a
15-mln uie inleg •atr"'O meier IS chan ged
to be mea sun.-'d as !he highesl single
30 mrnutr, irr t o ~ra ted KW demand as
mtl'a:sur ed by an inr egrating mele•
!'M llHl nl hl'f billing ClemanO lor
crt~ l o me r s p &lt;,~ rcnasing lheir entrre re·
Q u t~ ernt!rtl!i fo• etec trrc righ t. heat and
powc1 i..r nrl '!r th is tarflf is changed so
thai 111 &lt;J.ddrlion to no! being less than
50 K'JA. i t ~ ~&gt;au also not be less lhar'l
6-0"'• o t the !J• eal.:-r ol (a) the GIJSIOme•:s
contrar t r. ;&lt;pacrty or (blthe customer s
highe st om.u:; usly established mont hi~
billing d~mand du ring tne te1m o f the
contrac t.
Tru' c•r&gt;r111 s lo1 the cus tomer tak ing
scr~rce
a: p rrmary ~oltage are rn·
c'rea sed !rnm S 16 to $.25 and from S.JO
tO $.42 per KVA o f .monthly Dilling de·
mand tr, r rlel&lt;ver~ voltages of 2300 to
12,000 vol ts anr1 23.000 or over van s, re·
The

socctr vr l~ .

TARIFF L.P.O.
(LARGE POWER OPTIONS)
· Tn&lt;'! t;uill is made 8vailable l o•
(.:Ommorcral ::~s welt as inllustrr al ser·
YICI!

Th e monlhly cha rges are In
cr eased as lo llc.ws:
Prnmuy Pu•lion. The !i rs! 5.000
KVA tr om
59 .050.00 to $12.5!KHlO
All OYI!&lt; !J.Oo6 KVA 1rom
$1.49 to S2.06 per KVA.
Secondary Po rtion : Th e fir st
100 .000 KWH !!om
2 06ot to 2.94( per KWH
The nil ~ I 350,000 KWH ltom
1 27ot to 1.77&amp; per KWH
All O ~IH 450,000 KWH lrom
0.75c to 1.()4( per KWH
Ex r.~ ss Po nion: From
0.62&amp; to 0.!16c per KWH
Thr mmi mum monlhly c h a r ~e rs ill·
per KVA ot
crea sP.d !roll• \2.47t o
mont hi~ llti hllg demand.
Tne creorl ror !he customer tak inl:l
sc•vtcc at pflm ary ~oltage is increased
!rom$ HI 10 $.:15 Del KVA o f monthly
br llinu t;~emaM .
The tetm of con trac t r:s cha ngeo
!rom an Initi al term o t not less th an l ive
years with self·r enewal provisions f()f
successrvc 1-!0IIod:s of three years to an
Initial term o f th1ee years with sell ·
renewal pro,.isions lor successl~e
periods ol two years.

n.•4

TARIFF I.P.
(INDUSTRIAL POWER!
The monthly charges are increased as
follows:
Pt imafy Port ion: The llrst 15,000
KVA from
$3.45 to $4.80 per KVA
All over 15.000 KVA hom
$3.19 to $4.44
Sec;ondary Portio11 : From
S0.004 161o $0 .00578 per KWH
Th e_ charge lor late payment I&amp;
changed from ln!erest on the total
amount Drlled at the rate of 6°!. pet an·
num to interest on the unpaid crmounl
et the rate ot 8% per annum :

. TARIFF H.L.P.
(HIGH LOAD
FACTOR POWER)
Th~t monthly charges are Increased as
follows:
·
Primary Portion : Thtt first '
50.000 KW from
$4.454 lo 18.20 per KW
Th e next 50.000 KW from .
14.303 10 $5.99 Per KW
All over 100,000 KW !rom
$4.152 to $5.77 per KW
Secondary Pori ion: From
•
$0.00l19to $0.00443 per KWH •
Reactive Oitmand Charge. From
$0.357 to so . ~97 per KVAA.
.The cflarge l or late payment is
changed from ir~terasl on the total
amount blltea at the rat e ol6% per annum lo intere:sl on the unpaid Bmount
Bit he rale o t 8% per annum .

TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIBLE POWER)
Tfle monlhl y chariJoa are Increased' u
follows :
. ·
Demand Cl; arge:
From $0.993 to S1 .392 per KW
FrO"! $0.3!181o $0.498 oer K\IAR
Energv Charge :
From 0.44c to 0.61&amp; par KWH
The reduc11on in the demand
c,arge ~ue l o capaCity bei ng avall11ble

CERTIFICATES

NOW
FORMING!

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN E'LECTRIC RATES
TO WHOM IT MAY
CONCERN:·

NEW
"MONEY MARKET"

CHRISTMAS
CLUB

'

FLORIST

-'

1979

•11-•
I

352 E. Main,

ou!

0

Meigs Branch
Athens County Savings &amp; Loan • • • •

••
•••

I

$6.50.

Ebersbach Hardware

~~Ill ••••••••••

I·.,

"

TERMS AND CONOrTIONS
OF SERVICE

o.

!
•
l' ·
..
I•

Your "Extra Touch"
Florist Since )957

The sub stan ce

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

stmas

••
••

auditions®

·-·-

j)Osed in the Company's appioc tu•1&gt;n as
It led on June 30. 1978, ts as follows:

SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.

FRisky SpoRTS

Ll. and Mrs. Karl R.
Russell, the former Linda
Smith, and children, Melissa
Lynn and Kenneth Roy , were
weekend visitiors of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell of Racine, and
Mr. and Mrs. f!oy 0. Smith,
Pomeroy ..
11. Russell recently returned from a year's lour of duly
in Okinawa and the Orient
with the U. S. Marine Corps.
He is now stationed at Camp
LeJune, N. C. and will attend
the University of North
Carolina at Wilmington to
complete his hachelor of arts
decree. Lt. Russell is on the
captain promotion list for the
spring of 1979.
The Russell family resides
at Tl Vandergrift Dtive,
Jacksonville, N. C. 28540.

...

: 7-The Dail Sentinel, Muldlt~pur1-Pomt•roy, 0 ., Thursd&lt;ty. No\·. ~ ~. i~I7H

I

Weekend guests

ally referred 'o in the lollowlnQ par a·
graphs.

Pastor- William Knittel invites the public to attend.

South Jrd Ave.

are l'llcouragt'd not ·
only frum garden dub
members, but those who du
nul belong to a club.
In addition to the 19 classes
in the horticulture divison,
there are 20 artistic arrangement classes, some open to
only beginning arrangers,
some to those under 16 years
uf age, and others to just
senior citizesn.
There will also be a number
of non-competitive displays.
Entries are tu be taken tu
th• sehoul before nuun on the
opening day of lhe show, Dec.
2, and must remain in place
until 4 p.m. on Dec" 3. Oral
judging will begin at 1 p.m. on
Slllurday.

••
••
•

•
:•

c_xlulut~

posed . other than in the tanll 5 5IX!t. tlt c

NOVEMBER 10, 11, 12

FRIDAY - 7:30 P.M.

)

.--•
.-••.---·

tor less than ~72 hours per month Is In·
croase&lt;l trom .174C to .z.-zc ger KWper
h our.
t,"' '
The cnarge for tale pavment Is
changed !rom Interest on the total
amount tlllled at the ra !e of 6'1o per an ·
num to interest on the unpaid amount
at the' rate ot6•1o per ar~num

I

%*

182 DAYS
$10,000 MINIMUM

BONUS

'

I

r

.5 0th
PAYMENT

TARIFF S.S.
(SCHOOL SERVICE)
The monthly charge is Increased
Irom 3.26c to &lt;4 .!.&lt;4c per KWH lor !he !lrl§l
300 KWH used per monlh tor each tOOO

• .25%_ over the weekly average yield on Treasury bills matunty.

interest pard on .

sQuare feel ol enclosed area and !rom
0 .87c to 1.2tc pt!l KWH lor the balance
o t tho KWH . The minimum monthly
charge 15 increased !rom $10.70 10

\1.t 90

There's an extra Christmas gift tucked into your 1979 Christmas Club at
Athens County Savings and Loan. It's a free ~50th payment. No~­
micks! Nothing to buy! To qualify for your "bonus" all you need to do 18
make all the first 49 of the scheduled payments in your Christmas Club
coupo11 ·book. We will the~ add the' 50~h paym~nt as a "bonus." It's our
way of saying "thank you for completmg the f1rst 49 payments.

TARIFF O.L.
(OUTDOOR LIGHTING!
The ra tes per month lot tamps are in·
creased it'S follows:
2.500 lumen 1ncandesce111 trom
S3.80 to S5.20
4,000 lumen incandescttnt from
S4 .t5 to S5.10
7,000 lumen mercury from
54 .95 to S6.75
20.000 lumen mercury !rom
17.15 10$9.80
20.000 lumen me~cury
llood light lrom
58.55 to S11 .70
50.000 lumen marcury
fl oodlight trom
S12.T5to 117.45
7,000 lumen mj[lrcury
po st ·lop from
S6.00 to 11!.15
The charge lor a pole ar'ldlor one
soan of :secondary circuit no! over 150
teet is Increased hom $.75 per month to
$1.05 p er month The cl:targe l or under·
ground circuit longer .than 30 teet tor
po:st ·top lighting sePtlce is Increased
trom St.~ to 11 .75 per too t II Plidln ad·
vance or !rom 36c to 551 l or each 25
tee t or traction thereat If paid monlhly .
The dellnition ot eJce:sa coat of trench·
ing and bilckfltlino is increa~ed lrom
40c to 50c per foot ot total trench
leng fh.
The 2.500 lumen and
lumen
in candescent lamps are placed lr'l proc·
ess of elimination •nd •re 1101 alo'aflabla
tor new Install allons .
The lime allowed to replace
ourneo out tamps after nolillcatlon by
the cus tomer Is changed lroni 48 hours
to two worKing days .

•'

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s t.oo

s:I:M
s
s 5.M
srnM

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$20.00·

•

YOU PAY
s -2~.50
$ ~9 .00
s 98.00 ·
$147.00
$245.00

WE ADD
s .50
$ 1.00
~ 2.00
s 3.00
$ 5.00

$~90.00

sto.oo

$980.00

$20.00

SPECIAl.

YOU GET
S 25.00
$ 50.00 .

I

BONUS

s 100.00

FREE Christmas Album by
Arthur Fielder Boston Pops
Orch. with each '79
Christmas Club opened.

$ 150:00
$ 250.00
s 500.00
$1000.00

no\
in· .
•substan enolty
terest d t~r eorly
require
or time
withdrowa 1
deposits .

l
'
1

8 YEAR MATURITY
$1,000 MINIMUM

1
l

i

1

HERE'S MY APPLICAtiON WITH MY
FIRST DEPOSIT TO THE CLUB CHECKED:

'

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49 Weekly Deposits @ •.•
Check (wilh Bonus)

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~~~~c~~at

OHIO POWER COMPANY
By C. A . Heller
E~ecutlve VIce Ptesldent

WEEKlY ClUB

s

The Prayer ol the AppllcaUon re·
Quests the Public Ul ililies CommisSion
ol Ohio to do I he l oltowlno':
(II Flna that the appUI:ellon and
e~hiblts are filed In accord ·
ance with Section 41100.18,
Ohio Revised Coda. 1nd the
ruin ot I he Commluloo;
(bl Accept the IPPIICIIIOn ai'\CI
e~hibll!lfor filing :
(c) Approve the form ot thll
!he pre H nt ratu are
ln!lullicient to yield reason able comoensallon tor the
ser... lce renaered anti are un ·
just and unreasonable: .
(e) Find that the lncreutct rates
and charges and aml!f1ded
terms a11d corrdltlons of l&amp;r•
vice proposed in Ohio Power's
Appl ication ara just and rea·
sonable ana 1pprove the
same:
(I)
Approve the tiling ol the new
schedules lr~ the form propos·
ed herel11: aflCI
{g) t.take such new schedulet et·
lectlve as soon as II Is prac·
Ileal ana tawtul to ao to.
The proposed amendedachedules
shall apply In all territories Slflltd by
Ohio Power.
It Ia estimated that the repretanta•
live residl!r1llat customer's bill will be
Increased annual!~. based on the calen·
dar year 1978, by 23"1•: the represent•·
live commercial · cualomar '• bill by
24"1• : and the repreeentatlw lnc!UI1fil l
customer's bill by 16'/o.
The Company Ia unable to Pftcllct
what , II any , Chlnges, Including
changes in amo..ml or form, may be
made by the Public utilities Com·
mls&amp;lon ol Ohio In I he propos ed tarllfa ,
and tha Comptn~ Ia unlble 10 J)l'ldi&amp;t
what. 11any.lmpacl auch modifications
may have upon cuslomer blltl11gS.
ANY PERSON. FJFIM , COFIPOFIA·
liON OFt ASSOCIATION MAY FILE.
PURSUAtH TO SECTION •1101.11 OF
THE OHIO AEVJSEO CODE. AN OBJEC·
liON TO THE INCREASES PROPOSEO
BY OHIO POWER. ' WMtCH MAY Al·
LEOE TH AT TME COMPANY'S APPU.
C ATION CONTAINS . Pf'OPOSALS
THAT ARE UNJUST AND OISCRIM·
INATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
Thl form or this no!lce hll been
aopro~ed by tl'le Pt..ibtlc Ulllltln Com·
mlsalon of Ohio.

.

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PRAYER

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HIGH YIELD CERTIFICATES

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'1268" 11372" '1485" '1608" '1740" '1884"

6 Years

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'1258"' '1359" '1467" '1514"

4 Years

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-STOP IN AND PICK UP A FREE 1979 CALENDAR

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Meigs Branch

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

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. ~I............-......~..............~"~L~a~~~e~E~n~o~.~~h~-1~~(~11S~e~r~"~~·~~~o~u~Y~e~t~[~~~•:a~U~E~n~o~·~I~·~~~~~~~K~,~~~o:w~Y~o~u~"..............................~............
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POMEROY, 0.

RICHARD E. JONES, MGR •
992-6655

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'

�li- The Daily Stmtind. Mid&lt;.lleport-Pumeruy , 0 ., Thur&gt;tla y. Nuv . 9, 1978

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Violets need
brush off
DEAR POLLY - Does
anyone know what to use to
brush the dust off the leaves
of African violets?
When peeling unions hold a
match between your lips. It
helps.-MRS.V.C.
DEAR MRS. V.C. - I am
sure our gardening experts
will have many more ideas
but the ol)ly thing I know to
use for brushing the leaves of
African violets is a very soft
artist's paint brush. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - The
easiest way I have found to
have a nice shiny kitchen
floor is to add a small amount
of • pre-soak laundry powder
lo a slightly sudsy bucket of
water. - RUBY .
DEAR POLLY -Instead uf
w;ing strips of foil over the
edges of a pie crust to keep it
from getting too brown I cut
piece of foil big enough to
cover the pie, then cut out the
center section almost to the
edges. No more strips falling
off my pies.- EVELYN
DEAR POLLY - When a
friend said she had to dean a
messy oven as frlllt pie had

-

Anniversary celebrated by
'
Winding Trail ·Garden Club
The 30th annivernarv uf the
Winding Trail Garden Club
was observed Saturday night
with a diMer party at
Napoli's inBelpre.
Charter members of the
club attending were Mrs.
Wilma Terrell and Mrs. Iris
Kelton. They were presented

boiled uul mto the oven, I told
her to cut a two-inrh wide
strip from a brown paper
bag, hold it under the water
faucet until wet and then pin
it around the pi e tin. As the
pie bakes the paper shrinks
and is tight so the juice stays white s ilk carnHti nn&lt;: ~lunt'
in the pie. li does not end up
in the oven. - M.B.
DEAR . POLLY - Keep
those coupons that are guod
for several months together
in une envdupe. Mark the
name' uf the items in
A humem"de chicken and
alphabetical order on the out- noodle dinner will be served
side, as well as the expiration by the Ladies Auxiliary of the
dates. This saves time when Middleport
Pentecostal
shopping as well as the em- Churrh Friday from II a.m.
barrassment of handing in
one that has expired.
My Pet Peeve is with those
chain stores that have a
coupon in the paper that
states " Save 30· cents" I.'Jj
without giving the regular
pric-e. Often I have found such
items selling in other stores
Shannon Lee Nitz, sun of ·
for less without a coupon. - Mr. and Mrs. Hoy Nilz, 156
DOU.
Pearl St., Middleport,
Polly will send you one of relebrated his third birthday
her si gned thank-you on Oct. 21 with a party at his '
newspaper coupon clippers if home.
· she uses your favorite
Cake, it-e crea(ll and KooiPointer, Peeve, or Problem. Aid were served. Gifts were
in her column. Write POL- presented to Shannon. AttenLY'S in ra re of this ding were Nann and Chrts ·
newspaper .
Nitz, Nora Nitz, Vicki Schaeffer, Debbie Carl and Shannon's grandmother, LoUise
Queen, his brotner, Shawn
Allen.

. Built/' 11 a .m . Nov. 9; "How

:Theater-TV-Film May Be
•Considered a Collective Art
:Fonn," 10 a.m. Nov. 10;
Home Work for a Role,"
•noon Nov. 13.
: 10 - Rodney · Barbour,
:organist . Huntington
· Chapter, American Guild of
:Organists, 8 p.m. Trinity
; United Methodist Church ,
•Portsmouth.
: 10. Humanities and the Arts
; in the Curriculwn. P)lblic
·symposium presented by the
; Marshall University Institute
for the Arts. 7:30 p.m. MU
;Smith HaD Room 154.
12 - The Picture of Dorian
;Grey. Fall film series, 7:30
p.m. Huntington Galleries.
13 - Irish Chamber Orchestra . Marshall Artists
Series, 8 p.m. Johnson
Memorial Methodist Church.
13 - Dec. I - Marshall
: University Senior Shows. MU
·Art Gallery.
14 - Joe Pass, jazz
guitarist . Mini-concert
presented by MU Student
Activities Committee. 8 p.m.
MU Smith Recital Hall.
15-18 - Tobacco Road.
Marshall University Theater
with Conehatta Ferrell. 8
p.m. MU
Old
Main
Auditorium.
16-17 Marshall Orchestra
Youth Concert for Cabell
County Schools. 10 a.m. MU
Smith Recital HaD.
19 - Mass for Today.
Presented by Musical Arts
Guild, composed by Dr. Paul.
Whear, 7:30p.m. Fith Avenue
Baptist Church.
20 - Nutcracker performed by The Pittsburgh
Ballet Theater. Marshall
Artists Series, 8 p.m. Kelth
Albee Theater.
21 - W. Va. Percussion
Ensemole. 7:30 p.m. Pt.
Pleasant Jr. High School.
21 - Marshall Community
Orchestra. 8 p.m. MU Smith
.. Recital HaD.
·
21 - Tommy Dorsey Orchestra. Buddy Morrow,
director, 8 p.m. Paramount
:Arts Center.
•.. 28 - University Singers, 8
· p.m. MU Smith Recital HaD.
•

41

,

Shirley Beegle were gue&gt;W.
Members attending besides
Mrs. Terrell and Mrs. Kelton
were Mrs. P;~t Thoma, Mrs.
Addalou Lewis, Mrs. Cora
Beegle, Mrs. Ruth Moure,
Mrs. Margaret Parker, Patty
Parker, and Mrs. Alice
Thompson.

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Nuv. 9, 1978

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterau Memorial Hospital

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Nov. 8
ADMITTED - Charles
Frazier, Jr., Cheshire;
An\hony Bihl ; Thomas
Jeanie Roush, Middleport; Brown ; James Buchanan;
Anna Wheeler, Racine; Ora Suzette Burdett; Clay Burns;
Nelson, Long _Botto!Il: Vera Mrs. Donald Canter- · and
Kreimer, Parkersburg; Paul . daughter; Burl Carmon :
'lease, Pomeroy.
Elizabeth Cheney : Carrie
DISCHARGED - Waid Dale; Margaret Gilmore;
Humphrey.
Mrs. John Grate and
daught•r: Betty Hill; Ella
~ollingshead ; Homer Huddleston ; Iva Hutchinson;
Glenn lt-enhower ; Gregory
ASK TOWED
Marriage Licenses were James; Albert Keefer ; Mary
Issued to Okey Ray Meadows, Kelly; Barbara Klein; Mrs.
36, Middleport and Sharon William Lewis and son;
Ruth Steele, 32, Middleport; Shirley Minton; Leona
Errol Ryan Roberts, 28, .Rt. 2 Mullens; Ernest Mull;
Pomeroy and Christina Kay Joseph Ohlinger; Celia
Buzzard, 22, Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Roush; Joe Russell; Paul
Barry Moore Smith, 20, Saunders; Irene . Shaffer;
Charles Stewart; Clinton
Racine, and Melinda Sue Tucker;
Chad Vanco; AmanDailey, 17, Portland; William · da Van Maire.
Everett Kennedy, 23, Rt.4,
Births, Nov. 8
Pomeroy and Tana LyM
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Akers ,
Burbridge, 18, Rt. 2, Albany. daughter, Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Canter,

SHOP.

MASO.N FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS ·
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

Kristin Torres

tu 6 p.m. Resident,; may place
their uruer by telephoning
992-2502 and ask for delivery ,
may pick it up at the church
during the serving hours, or

carried out with cake and ice . •
cream being served. Holly
·Hobbie candy ba~ and sur·
priile toys were given to the
neighbors and friends who attended.

MASON FU8NITURE
OPEN:
Mon .. Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til5:00
Thursday Ti 112 Noon
Friday UntU 8 P.M.
Herman Grate
. 773-5592
Mason, W.Va.

may eat at the churc.h. The
A party honoring Kristin
pric-e is $2 and the menu conMarie
Torres on her first birsists of homemade chicken
thday
was held recently at
and noodles, green beans,
the
home
of her grand·
cole slaw, roll and pie.

uas birthday

smoking for a day on Nov. t6.
The "Great Anlerican Somke
Out" is being observed
throughout the United States
on Nov. 16.
Pledge cards are at aU
junior lind senior high schools
in the county, post offices and
banks for those who wish to
pick one up and fill out and
mail to The American Cancer
Society.

TYLENOL

Prices cut

24 Capsules
Reg. $1.64

Throughout
the store!

29 - MU Wind Symphony

Concert. 8 p.m. MU Smith
Recital Hall.
30- Tri D' Aceordo. String
ensemble. Marshall Artists
Series, 8 p.m. MU Smith
Recital Hall.
36-Dec. 2 - Voice of the
Turtle. Play presented by
Community Players. Time to
be announced. Huntington
·
Galleries.
Continuing exhibits:
Exhibition I. Sponsored by
Wayne County Arts Council.
First Bank of Ceredo .
Through Nov. 18.
MU Student Art on Paper.
MU Art Gallery. All month.
Von Gerichten Art Class
Company stained glass.
Huntington Galleries.
Throullh Dec. 31.
"Dialogue" and "Works on
Paper." Works by David
Shapiro and Christopher
Wilmarth .
Huntington
Galleries. Through Nov. 30.
Junior art exhibit, First
People Here. Huntington
Galleries through Nov. 19.
Daywood
Collection.
Huntington Galleries.
Through the month.

PHIWPS

spg

AMERICAN GREETINGS

CHRISTMAS
CARDS
·
Of

PANTY

By
All American

HOSE

BOX

ONLY

40

r
'

llec:GngtiSiant
Cough Mixture
6 oz.

19.

REG. '1.98

Reg. $3.72
Only

ONLY

By EDWARD K. DeLONG

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter today
signed tite comprehensive
energy legislation he pushed
through Congress and
claimed It as a victory, even
though the final package only
vaguely resembles the one he
proposed 19 months ago.
Coogress passed the fivepart program - covering
conservation, • industrial
conversion from gas to coal,
natural gas pricing, utility
rate reform and energy taxes
-on Oct. 15, the final, hectic
day of its session.
Along ·the way, however,
Congress di$!arded the president's $45 billion tax on crud•

·-- ---

inks energy bill

oil, the $20 billion tax (II
Industrial UBe of oU and gas
and $50 billion In taxes m .
·gasoline to discourage use.
Eventually, the estimated
savings of 4.5 mU!Im barrels
of oil a day by 1985 were
scaled down to between 2
million and 2.5 million
barrels.
The energy package was
the keystone of Carter's
domestic
legislative
program, and he once called
his fight to get the country's
energy use under control ''the
moral equivalent of .war."
The linchpin of the energy
plan :... and the focus of one of
the biggest and longest
battles of the 95th C';,ner""s -

was the natural gas pricing
biD, which will mean higher
gas
prices
almost
inunediately and an end to
federal controls on the
production price of new
natural gas by 198li.
It took nearly a year lor a
House-Senate conference
committee to come up with a
pr i cing co mpr o mi se
acceptable to both sides. The
Senate
had
wanted
deregulation, while the House
had supported Carter's plan
of higher ceiling prices.
Qlrter originally bitterly
opposed deregulation of gas
prices, but last spring he told
House and Senate leaders he

would settle for almost any
compromise they could rea ch
in order to prod the rest of the
package through .
Under the conserv ation
portion of the package ,
utilities will be turned into
one-slop places for insulat ion
in form a li on, gui da nce.
installation and even loans.
The
coal
conver sio n
legislation is an effort to pusl1
industry away from natural
gas and oil.
Friday , Nov . 10

United Press International
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat says peace talks with
son , Thunnan.
Mr. and mrs. Philip Hen-' Israel may be suspended but
SOVIETS WIN
ISraeli Prime Minister MenaKENT, Ohio (UPI) - A neman, son, Wellston .
chem Begin vows " we wiD
Soviet
Union
touring
make peace."
basketball team downed Kent
BOOK
SALE
One potentially disruptive
state 80-$ in an exhibition
A
new
organization,
development
came
gam~ Wednesday night, the
Friends
of
the
Meigs
County
Wednesday
when
Israeli
fourth straight win for the Libraries, will stage a giant
Soviets on their current book sale . Friday and bulldozers began expanding a
settlement on the occupied
American tour.
from
10
a.m.
to
5 West Bank. Construction
Saturday
' Burrell McGhee of Kent
p.m . at the Middleport workers beat up a television
!!late led aU scorers with 22 Ubrary
in observance of
l!jlints,
while
Sergei American Education Week, crew trying to film the work,
which has angered President
Ji!arakanov and Vladimir
Tkachenko paced the Soviets Children's Book Week and Carter.
. Be-Goo-To-Yourself W~ek.
A television crewman said
With '14 points each.
Books
wiD
be
10
cents
each
or
the
government was trying to
:·The Soviets never had any $1 a bag and the Friends
carry
out the work on a road
wore than an eighl'!lolntlead group will even furnish the
to
the
settlement of Maale
11:48 in the second half. bag.
Adumlm
in secret and said
when they got a couple of
the
work
was
begun at3 a.m.
cjuick baskets for an 11-point
ANNUAL TEA
under
darkness.
ltad which they maintained
The Annual Tea of
In Washington, peace
tjlroughout the game.
Preceptor
Chapter
of
BETA
tr"!l
ty negotiations between
• The Soviets, with a I!J.game SIGMA PHI Sorority will be
Egypt
and Israel have
&amp;nerican tour, play next at
held
at
7
this
evening
at
the
snagged
over the wording
J:(otre Dame.
home of Roberta O'Brien.
that . would link the -pact
•
between the two nations to a
overall Middle East settlement.
The Jerusalem Post said a
12-word sentence setting out
the linkage was holding up
progress in the talks - which
began Oct. 12 - based on the
Camp David accords engineered by Carter.
The snag sparked a report
Monday by the Middle East
"
News Agency that Secretary
"
of State Cyrus Vance would
'
go to the Middle East to iron
•
out the dispute. ·But the State
Department denied a trip was
plaMed.
"There is a possibility of a
break in the negotiations,"
Sadat said Wednesday in an
interview with the Kuwaiti
newspaper AI Siyassah. /
"But I am confident thai if
LARGE SELECTION
this happens the Israelis will
come back within one month
·· FROM NOVELTY TYPE
to resume the dialogue."
But Sadat said Carter sup-

WITH

TOBOGGANS
FROM
THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

ports his demand for a
withdrawal from the Golan
Heights
a remark
observers said was sure to
anger the Israelis at this
stage in the negotiations.
Begin, who recently shared
the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize
with Sadat, was optimistic
about peace while repealing
his hardline positions about a
Palestinian state and a
reunited Jerusalem during a ·
talk In Montreal, which is
part of a six-&lt;iay official visit
to Canada.
There will be no more
11

war, no more bloodshed,' '

Begin tnld :!,000 supporters.
"We will make peace."
But he also said he would
never allow the creation of a
Palestinian state on the West
Bank for security a~d
religious reasons . "To this

danger we say simply, and
with sheer determination no."
14
Jerusalem," he said, 11 is a
reunited city. II is the capital
of the Jewish people for as
long as they live - and the
Jewish people will live
forever .''

The United States does not
recognize Jerusalem as the
capital and · regards East
Jerusalem - annexed by
Israel after the 1967 Middle
East war - as occupied
territory .
Washington also regards
the settlements in occupied
territory as illegal and an
obstacle to peace and Carter
sent an angry message In
Begin after the Cabinet last
month voted to beef up
settlement on the West Bank .

First winter
storm brewing
United Press International
The first real winter storm
of the season is brewing in the
Northern Rockies, the
National Weather Service
said today.
Alow pressure system over
Montana and colder air
moving south from Canada
are combining to create the
storm, the NWS said .
Western Montana had snow
"by early morning.
The snow, expected to
become heavy later in the
day in the northern Rockies,
was spreading into the
Dakotas, northern Wyoming
and parts of Idaho. Near-

TO SKI MASKS

blizzard condltlons were
predicted over northwestern
Wyoming and southeastern
Montana .
A winter storm warning
was posted over Montana
with a heavy snow warning
for northern Wyoming. More
than 6 inches of snow was
possible

in

---

--- --·Notices
= ="----

I WAN I TO rhonK c~t e r y one l or

NO HUNTING or trespassing on
rny properly wtlhoul pe rm is,
i.ton . Judy McGraw .

th e1r - p r over ~ the m.ni sten.
' ••e- nd.. orrd ne1ghbors w ho
tarn P t o see me w h1le I was o

G UN SHOO T ~oc i ne Gun Clu b .
~ v ery Su nday 1 p m . Fact ory

pOII E;' n l 0 1 H o f1cr HOSOI!O f. Fo r

th e rn ony beo ull ful cord!. tind
fl ow ers f han lo. s to Or Ti gmon
Or ~rnrll an d Dr . Burner Al -..o
to rhc n ur ~cs 011d n UI :OCs ordes
l or !her r many a ct:. o f kr ndne&lt;o s
Ma y Go d rrc hly ble c;.s ea ch an d
('v t..•r y o rr ~;: o f you
Mr ~ A n n o M oh ler

chok e gum only .

ASTRO• GRAPH

~ ~JJIJJIJ

-~~lfuwr1u1J
November 10, 1978
A little m o r e dra ~ a 'cou ld en ter
into you r li fe th rs year . Thi s
might incl ude a lhf ill1n g romantic episode, impressiv e lrr end s
and , 'perhaps, a sen sat1 onal
social ca lendar.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24- Nov . 22) The
obvi ous conce rn for th e wel lbeing and com fort of o the rs
th at you di spl ay Ieday endear s
you 10 th em . F r~ endshrps wrll
be deepened Like to find out
more about your se lf? Send fo r
yo ur co py o f Astra -Graph Letler by mai li ng 50 cent s :or eac h
an d a long , se lf-addressed ,
stamped envelop e to Astra Graph. P.O. Box 489 , Rad ro Crty
Stati on N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth sign .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov . 23- Dec .
21) The fam ily and their needs
lake pri ority for your attention
today . This is th e wa y it sho uld
be .
CAPRICORN (Oec . 22-Jan. 19)
Guard aga inst beco m ing los t rn
yo ur dreams tod ay . You ' l l have
a tendency to fa ntas ize ra th er
th an face iss ues sq uarely .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)
Yo u co ul d easi ly be tak eh in by
a sad tal e today . .Your heart and
you r purse are so w rde open
that you leave no doub t you ' re
will ing to give
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) A
leadersh ip role becom es yo u '
tod ay, ·b ut timid ity does not.
You 'll win respec t o f you r peer
group by being asse rtive and
unafraid to take the helm .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You
may fee l re c lusive and a bit
with dra wn today . T here won ·!
be any thi ng wron g , yo u '·re ju st
rec harging your en erg ies .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Bei ng wit h fri end s is im po rt ant
to you tod ay , b ut you 'll need to
pick pals wh o aren ' t toud · o r

BY REXALL

1101)-E. Main

59

ONLY

Hours:
MIHl . thru S.t.
9 : :10 to 8:00

REXALL
VITAMIN C

PERMANENTS

Pomeroy, Ohio

...

,,, ,,..

AU. STRENGlHS

AH I:; YOU troubled with wild
on unol s? Fo" . min k racoon .
o po ~s u m . bea ver , et c? Call th e
llappc r , 9!;! 5·J9!jA Wrll co nt act
rn per son for s rgn c d permi s·

Not ic es

'&gt; rO n

f.JO H U N I"INC o n f oHowrng pro
pt•rlrc~ do ~ or n rg ht G ory Drll &amp;
~o y rnond Hoo twrrght pr o pe r
ll t' '&gt; qlC'&lt;; ICr ToWn~ h r p

PROBATE COURT OF
M E I GS COUNTY , OHIO
E ST A TE OF WILBUR E .
BAKER , DECEASED
Case No . 22532 Docket 12
P ag e 18
NOTICE OF

I' A ~ I T I M~ Oppo11unr t y ov odobl e
l o r hou ~£' wrll' N eed1n g h our s
l o r rn tC'r vi ('W ~ Call 449 2tiOJ
or nrgh t on 111y p rope rty wi thou t

" ""en

°

0

A P POINTMENT
OF FUOUCIARY·
On Nov emb er 6, 1978, in t h e
Meigs County Pro b a te Co ur1,
Case N o . 22352, Pear l 1.

(o r I f'111dl 1ng' " "'"""
~ HOI G UN

~ L UG

M ott h

ever y

~rmdoy rn Novcrnbe r a t Isaac

Walton f. orrn ncar Ches ter .
lpr11
·Ham'..
turk e y s o the r
rneot s
~ h r.&gt; l h n vO rlobl e. All
gou g e &lt;.

Baker , Route 1, Reedsville ,
Ohio wa s ap p ointe d A d ·
mi n ist r atrix o t the esta t e of
Wilbu r E . Baker , d eceased ,
la te of Route 1, R eedsvi ll e,
Ohio .

do m1neermg . Yo u won 't be
able 10 hand le these types .
GEM INI (May 21 -June 20) Asce nd the ladder stow ly and
unobtru si vely today The less
noise you make , th e more ap t
vou are to ge t what you want.
CAN C ER (Jun e 21 -July 22) Yo u
won·\ let yourself be press ured
today into decisions on th ings
you 'd like to dwell on a bit
long er. You'll set your own
pa c e and r efuse t o be
flustere d .
LEO (July 23- Aug . 221 Ge lli ng l o
th e bot tom of things i s yo ur cup
of tea today Yo u ' ll have an
rnsti nct lor solving puzzles .
VIRG O (Aug . 23 -Sept. 22) S11ua·
lion wh e re you can bounce-oft
rde as w1\h ot hers today co uld
be esp ecia lly rew ar di ng for
you. Thi s 1nl erre lati onship of
th ou ghts brings out your best.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl . 23) You 'll
be able to Drodu ce a great deal
today If yo u work only on
c ree~tive . imaginative projec ts .
The mund ane wil l turn yo u off .
!N EWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN. )

Mann ing D . We bster
Probate J ud ge . Ci er k

(1 1) 9 , 16, 23 , Jlc

Middleport

*WESTERN
TRADITIONAL
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Personalized
Cards
Also Available

SEE THE NEW
CONCEPT ONE
CLEANING SYSTEM
And all the other
line Hoover Cleaners

AT SALE PRICES
BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.·k extreme

northwestern Wyoming, the
NWS said.
A travelers advisory was in
effect through the night for
locally heavy snow over the
Washington Cascades and the
western foothills. The snow
was expected to end by late
morning, after 41nches fell on
some mountain highways.

1

2

PRICE

you worm

Frld1y

This boot shows you the ins and outs of
rozy comfort because it's fleece lined from
top to toe. This Winter, cuddle up
Then, don't go o~t without itl
In camel

KIDDIE SHOPPE

KODAK

FILM

C-110-12 or t;-126-12

2nc:l

St.

POMEROY,O.

•
the_gracefui!Y tiered .

ONLY

PAOOOA

99~

heritage
house

-

OF SHOES

ERASABLE IOND

IN BOTH
DENIM AND CORDUROY

TYPING

*~NIT

TOPS
*JEANS
*SKIRTS
*BLAZERS

40 SHEETS

30%

O.-eLY

49e

OFF

*VESTS
*BIG TOPS
*SWEATERS
*BlDUSES
MANY SJII,ES AND
COlDRS

ANACIN
.. 100 TABLETS
REG. '2.77.
ONLY

$157

Lay
Away
Now!

,.m.

SALE PRICES
EFFECTIVE
NOWTHRU
SUNDAY.
NC\VEMBER 12th

astriking!y new concept
in ring design

CANDrS ClASSICS

ONLY

53~

TIL 8 P.M.

$399

DEODORANT
'

INGELS FURNITUR.
&amp; JEWELRY
"Two in One Store
106 N. 2~d Ave .
Middleport,

. . . Nlghlltlllf

0.

OPEN FRIDAY

15 shimmering diamonds set in this
ultra-graceful styles· raises Its set-t ing
· to new fashion heights. You'll love the
look!
As seen on
95
lnqels TV Speciall
Rea. S49P.95
Also available with ·5 diamonds sei
in a ring of rubies or sapehires.:

TUSSY
'
or STICK

Navy, Grey, Green,
Rust,
Mauve.
Burgundy, Brown
Available in
Missy and
Junior Sizes

0,... Friday 111 •••

PAPER

LIGHTERS

Choice of

Mid~leport,

LAY
AWAY
NOW
R

We
this day to remem.ber all the brave
veterans who have defended our freedom
against attack. They have sacrificed everything
for an ideal - the survival of a strong, independent democracy. Their determination has
kept us alive and thriving.
In Honor of Veterans, We'll
Be Closed Saturday, November 11

-

A Home Bank For
Meigs County People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
Racine. Ohio

I

•

I,
•

'
'
Vol un teer ,

.,..

GUN SHOOT ~o dne
1
Frte Dept ~ v e t y Sotutdoy b :JO I
pm at th cr r buildrng In Boshon . '
For to ry choke guns o n ~y .

·fleece inside

.

. .··.
.

•

..

NO HU N I INC or rr c&lt;..p o &lt;..:;rng day
~~=~:o---::=--::c==

Bernice Bede Os ol

·Talks could be suspended

--

Card of Thanks

--

All sizes for boys and girls . TWJm &amp;
Dad, we have a size for you too.

fAST. HOME

992-7034

26 OL
Reg. $2.59
Only

MODULAR
HOMES

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

MILK OF
MAGNESIA

WAIM · AIIIACIO

FOREVER BEAUTIFUL

MEETS
•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
•FHA &amp; VA
SEE OUR LOT
MODEL TODAY

~resident

wiU

RUTLANDPTO
Dan Morris, Director of
Curriculum in the Meigs
Local School District, will be
speaker when the AMual
Open House of the Rutland
PTO is held at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in the Rutland
gymnasium.
Plans will be made for a
Christmas Festival to be held
on Dec. 2 and all parents are
asked to attend.

Arts Forum calendar
NOVEMBER
.9 - Marshall University
Marching Band Concert, 8
:p.m. MU Smith Recital Hall.
. 9-11 - The Oldest Living
·Graduate and Last Meeting
-of the Knights of the White
:Magnolia .
Community
; Players and Performing Arts
-Guild, 8 p.m. Abbott Theater.
: 9, 10, 13 - Workshopa
•conducted by Conehatta
:Ferrell, artist-In-residence at
:Mu . "How the Circle
; Repertory Theater Was

.

w1th tim other two rharter
member• whu were unable to
attend , Mrs. Faye Prall and
Mrs·. Dora Heaton.
F&lt;um
the
Belpre
restaurant the group returned tu Pomeroy for dessert at
Crow's Steak House. Mrs.
Martha StruhhiP and Miss

LiJdies ' AuxiiW.ry plans noodle dinner Has birthday

American Smoke Out
scheduled for Nov. 15
In observance of the
"Great American Smoke
Out" sponsored by the
Anlerican Cancer Society,
Meigs Unit, volunteers wiD be
distributing literature, stop
smoking pledge cards and
buttons at aU banks in the
county on Wednesday, Nov.
15, Bernadette Anderson,
president, aMounced today.
The Cancer Society is
asking all smokers to quil

parent,;, Mr. arid Mrs. Joseph
Delgado, Hamilton St., Middleport. Kristin Is the
daughter of Nonna Ann and
Ramon Torres, Middleport.
A Holly Hobbie theme was

�--

. .

.. . . . .

~

~~

..

·-

--

--~

... .

10- The D";ly Sentinel. Mitldlc purt-Pum e roy . 0 .. Thursda y. Nuv. ~.

-.

~---·~

II - The Oaily &amp;!ntincl , MiddJcp\ll:l·Punwruy, (I .• Thurstlciy. 1\,; m !1, ;:liH

1 ~78

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items ·Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
I ~ Wunll·l'l' l 'mkl

(',1.,11
I till

11 l.t ~

'! 1l,t\ ·'
lt\ 1 1~ ...

I

;)(I

1 l!ll
J .l ~ l

litla~~

PO St li O N S A VAilA!::IL I:
Tht_• C a lh o Mf' tg b (o m m un tly Ac
tt o n Age nc y ·~ '&gt; I?P~mg a p
pltconr~ l01 the l ollowmg p o'&gt; •

! 'h. u ~ t'

I

11011'&gt;

'

1) (o u tl~e l o • Thts pet son wtll
b~ du ect ly respons tble lo1 th{'
d ay 10 d oy COUI\St:; lmg o f ( I::T A

:!~

I ••l
~ !j
1 ;_,

llt'r 1\lll'd lit'! 1 \.1 ~
1\ tb rum tmj! ulltt•rt h;m t'UII"I'I'IIII \1'
d &lt;! ,l i- nill lot• dJ.H~' nl at tlw I 1lil.l

ltti P. I Wo r k 1:- •pert e nce 1-' ro
91om porll ctpants Dull e s rn
elude coo rd nlO tmg the hiring
a nd plo ceml't1 1 of qualified op
pl tconts ut to mea ntnglul wo rlo.

r.o h •

e l( p et rcncc

Fowh "urtl ll\'1'1

t i lt · lll11U11HIIf\ \j

W tol' d~ 1:- I l 't'lli ~

Ill IIW U ilJI'~ , (',111l 11f T I M Ilk" .I Ilii
Olutuan· li o't'll b p t 'l' ~~~ I' d ~:1 1-1
1111 111111Ui11 l;t.~h Ill lUI\ illll'l'

Sal ary

stt ua tlon s.

lo t tht s post li o n

t S SGI ,iq!::l

:J ) f ro tner lhe fr a mer w dl be

re spon.,ible

to

the

lra_t n t~ g

(oord lfw lo t a nd w tl l o ss tsl m

th e sc hed u lm g o f troi nm g lor
t he CU A Tttl e Ill (VET P) Pro
g ra m p o r t t C tp o nt ~ Salar y fo r
t h t~ po sitron tS $9 .298 .
J) Troming Coordt nol or (YC

:\ol t•lHit• Hm lll' ~ a~~~ &lt;1 1UI Y l ll d ,,,I,..,
.11'1 ' ;ll'l' l'pll'tl t oll I ~ " 1\ li 1 .t,ll IHi h
ul dt'l 151 1'11\ t' hal'j.!t' fur ml;. l 'd ii' ~ ­
Uit.! II11X Numbt•r In C.U't' 1•f rtw St•uILi tt•l
. .

(II-' )

Tl u· Pu tJ I!~ Iw r tt·st·rn ·., llh' tlt.:llt
tu 1·• \1\111' f'l' )t'&lt; t am at ls 1\t' t'!lll'l l t•h·
J•'• 'lWIL&lt;II. Tht· Pubh~ h t•l "dl11"t IJI'
l'l'~ j}U I\ S t b ll' fu1 111111'1" \lti:tlllllll' 1111 ul'•

The Coo rd ina to r wtll be

re!&gt;p onsi bl e

l o r p r og ram im
pl emontotion . ~che du l111g an d

II'!'\ 111-"l'l l lllll

Ph1&gt;1it' ~t!-2 1 54 \

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mundi.!~·
~tlt l f ll iii S&lt;J itud H .I

Tm•sd;n
111111 r. uia ,l
~ p M.
I lit' tl:tl' llt.'flll't' llllblil ',ll h•ll
.S unrl o~~

4 1'.M.
Fnd&lt;JY afti' I"/Hil•ll

Lost and· Found
LOS T· Rt:WARO . Bl ue T1ck fema le
dog. 40 19. l ast s;~ n , near
Chester on Rt. 248 . Chdd s pe t
and
hunting
compa n ro n .
002 -4351 or bb2 -4305 .

Auto Sales

Lost and Found

Help Wa_nted

coordinating th e Special Ti tl e Il l
You th Conser vatiOn and Co m·
rnunl!y Improvem en t Prog ram
Kno wledge
ol
Ag r 1cu lture
B u~ 1ne ~~
~o re'&gt; f ry
Mon ogernen l
and
A gr1cu lfurol
ChenHc ol A ppl icoi iOil !'o w o uld
be be n ~hCI O I Sala ry fo r th1 s
p OS II IOrl IS S9. 'l55
A ppl.cor1ts l or th e above posi tr ons shoul d possess a degree
111 Psycho logy Soc ial Work
~duc ot ion .
Business Ma11agement 01 ot he r re l ated liel ds
Prcl er com b• noti on ol deg1 ee
and re lated wor k ex pen e nce .
App liCOIIons fur ther inf orm ot•on 1'&gt; ovo dobl c fr om th e Oh io
Jobs Se11'ice Offi ces or th e
C. A .A Olt.ce s in Ches h1re of
94'1 -'lOOO 01 :J67 -i'341
M o•l
t es umes to Dov 1d ~ Gloec kne1.
M anpower l&gt;l r('cto r . P.O . Box
'[12
Chesh ire . Ohio 45610 .
Oeodline l or o ppl iC Otl ons is
Novem ber[/ 19 71::! TH e Gall10
Mt.•1gs Commu ni ty Acf1 on Ag en·
cy is on ~qu a l Oppo rtun lly
~m pl oye 1 M -F
MA TURE 1-lf S PON S tBl~ baby sitt er
nee ded. P1 el er so meone to li ve
Ill . 992 -:JS 11

PUBLIC AUCTION
NOVEMBER 10,
FRIDAY EVENING 7:00 P.M.
SOUTHERN AUTO SALES BUILDING
BIDWELL, OHIO
Christmas toys. tools , furniture, Wearever .
cookware, other num ero us items , not
responsible for accidents, t e rm s of sale
cash, or chec k w -posi tive I. D.

AUCTIONEER: Bill BROWN

10~1

~I ~A Y ~ U

01 '-do iP n
M11110tU1e
rnO IO ) ( hnaUT{'I
Tt' l(0 ~
commu 111 t y
(a ll

~HJ

JY&gt;'I
L0-~1 BO ~ Of ~ co l liu , b 1own an d
whdc 1n t o ngs.v ll lc oreo. mo le .
f-'honc7 4'J30 1'1or "/41 ·1S"'I .

. wanted_l_11_ ~uy __
CHIP
W OO D
Po l es.
max .
d1omcle r 10" o n la rges t end .
$1:1 50 p er ton . Bundl ed slob .
So .SO · pe r ton . Deli ve red to
Oh1 o Po lle t Co ., Rt. 1. . Po m ero y
942 -'J6fN .
TI MB~R .

POMtROY r ares t Pro·
du cts . To p pri ce l or stan ding
~ow t imbe r
Call 991· 59b5 o r
Ken t Ha nby . 1-446-!:1570.

OW fURNITUR E. ice bo)(es , bra ss
beds 1ron beds. d es k s., etc .
co m ple te ho useho lds. Writ e
M D. M ille r . Rt . 4. Pom e roy or
co li 4q'}_ . Tl bO
OLD COIN S. poc ke t wat ch es .
class r ing s. weddin g bon ds .
d•omo nd s. Gold or silve r , Coli
Rog er W am sley 742.'J33 1
Wl: PICK up junk a uto bod ie s buy ·
"'9 junk co l!&gt; scr ap iron . bo_t·
te r ies and met a ls. R1de r &amp;Sal vag e , SR 1~4 . Po mer oy .
&lt;/92-5461:1 .
JUNK BATHRit: S. $1 Co pper $35
per tb Clea n alumi num SIS per
lb .. no ca ns. ~o r limited tim e
M l y. Ri der 's Sa lvage SR 124 .

Yard Sale
IF YOU have o serv ic e fa offer ,
wont to buy or se ll som ething ,
oe loo k ing fa r w or k
or
w hatever ... you II gel resu lt s
fo st er with a Sentinel Wont A d
Co f1 9q2-L1S6
1-'0HCH SA Lt: . Wed . thru Fn . 45 "/
Broadway Middleport .
GAUAG I:: SAL!:
James T1tus
re s1de nc e . Wa ter St .. Syracu se.
two bla ck s UR lrom pork N e)(l
door to Sa rti Arnold . ~ri . and
!lt;:~t . Nov. 10 -11
FOUH ~AMIL V Yard Sa le . Fr 1
Nov . lOth . O ne day only 522
Grant Sl
Middleport . Von
Coo ney's. 10 to 3. Something
fo r all. Rom conceits .

Pets lor sale

(bt4) b9H: J19q. _ __ . _ .
RISING STAR Kennel s. Boar ding
an d grooming
oil breeds.
Chesh1r e. 3b7· 0292 .
lOVABll:: WHITt: sno w d r ift great
PYI-!I:::NEtS Pu pp tes . Phone
l -614 -b6l -3838 .
GOING O UT of Busin ess Sale I
Poodles. Pekingese. Pomeranian . Tea cup . Tmtes. $35 to
$125 Pho ne bl4 -696-17.97

-·-------- - -

AK C H ~C!SltRtO collie puppi es.
SbO eac h . 7 47-2292 .

-. - --- - -Auto
- - --Sales - - ~ -·

19e;7 PONTIAC fiRI::BIR O conver ·
ta ble Good mechaniCa l condi tion . 992 -371:13.

CHRYSLER

Local 1 owner &amp; only 11.000 miles, AM-FM rad io, power
windows &amp; 0 . locks, cruise control, tilt st. w hee l. air

con d ., digital clock, 305 V-8, P .S., P.B., and sharp car,
silver with red vi nyl top.

1977 PINTO 2 DR .••••••••••••• '2995
Local owner. clean inte rior, AM-FM CB radio, good
tires.
. _

-1976 MUSTANG II CPE..........s2795
4 cyl. , automatic, good tires. blue f inish, radio, good ·
econom y &amp; real sporty!.

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON ..... !2295
-4 cy'l. , automatic trans. , good t ires, good economy &amp; a

loca l 1 owner car. Radio. color white.

1974 MALIBU CLASSIC CPE•••• s2695

POMEROY
LANDMARK

For Rent

3 ANO 4 RM . furni shed and un
l urni sh e d
opt s.
Phone
991 -54:J.t

~ ARM

HOUSI::: to r en t : o good ren t
on Ton ner s Rur1. Ra cine . Ohi o
Rt '1 . 'j bedr oo m s in sul ated
hom e. orl furnace , g arage ,
garden . rum pus roo m Iorge
basem ent . bot h. hot and cold
wa ter
spr1ng . drill ed well.
Available about Dec. !s t . 1978 .
Rent SIL5 per mon th in ad ·
van ce A ls o security depo sit o l
Sl 25 . To see, call Mr s t sth er
West R!. l. Phon e 94c,l -28!:19.

For Sale, Rent or Trade

CORDOHA .

Yellow . with whi te leather in terio r . l oad ed . like new .
992 -2594 or 992 -34!:19 .
1965 FORO VAN , 6 cyl. . auto .
$400.
Irons, , low m ileage
742 -30"/4 .
1975 CUTLA SS 350 engrne . auto
on fl oo r . swive l bu ckets . ai r
sharp . fled and white . 1 owner .
197 5 f -250 fr od 4)(4 , block . 4speed , 14~&lt;3 5 wh i te spo k e
w heel s. good shap e Phone

~-

....0

-

.,
_,
"
I'

,.

.·,.'

t
t

l
;
f
t

l
t

.j

Ot:LTA TIRI:S . Quality and persole now.
fo r mance . On
l4:.! -2J1tl
RI:'MINGTON MODt:l 31 11 go full
ch oke . Rcm ingl on model 10 12
go . full choke. very good cond t·
li o n Phone /42,2934 .
TWO SWIVH ro cker s. Rust Scot chguord upholstery . ]4 )(22 ft .
olive green . 1-'fush woo l l ee' s
carpet 2 lamps 949 -2661 o ffer
Spm .

"Your Chevy Deafer"
992-2126

.

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til8 :00 p.m .

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At
Brakes
Muffler
Tires
Shocks
Battery.
Ins! a II a lion Service
1'1&gt;. 992 -2848

H. L WRITESEL

ROGER HYSEll

ROOFING

. GARAGE

3-15-tfc

~---

Real Estate lor Sale
HOMI:SITE S lor sole , I ac re and
up . Middleport , near Rutland.
Coll992 748 1

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

E.
MA IN

6

. . . .:!_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Pomeroy Landmark

·- ·•
....

·-~ck W; Carsey, Mgr.
. . . Phone 992-2181

-·

SIX MONTHS old k id nanny goa ts.
S'JS each . 7 42.2292 .
FIREWOOD FOR so le. '1i49-23SO .
ALLIS CHAL M ERS W-D 45 di e$el
tra cto r wi th mo wer . New Ideo
corn picker GMC 2 ton form
truck . Joe Soyre . Rt . 1. Rullo nd.
Phon e /&lt;12 -2138 .
RtDUCf SAFI: an d l ost vw 1!h
GoBese Tab l ets 8. 1:: -Vo p · wo1er
ptlls". ~ e_l s~n_D ~u~ .
21 " MCCULLOUGH chain sow
843-2264
----· -· ··
$400
1%4 CI:::HVY
PI CKUP
qq2 .b{J67
HEATWAVI:: WOOD burn er . The rm os tat and fan . Ca ll 992-7001 .

- - - - - - --·

WARM MORN ING hea ter model
BIB. Exc ellent condi t ion. SSO
C~l l ~~1 · ::!.-39 1 of~e~ Sp ~ __ _

19b9 OLDS CU TLASS CONVER fABLE P.S.. 0 B.. pu sh button
lop con t ro l. In dash factory Hlroc k tope player . Good r unn·
ing cond i t ion . Coli after Spm

FIRI::WOOD . $30 to $35 o lo ad .
/42 -2451.
CAMPt:R TOP for smal l pick up .
bcellenl
co ndi t ion . $150 .
i4 'J-2692 .

Phone 992-2181

'1'11 -29'/S .

WATt:R W!:ll dnl ling . Wdltam T.
G rant . 742 -2879.
OUSTlt:SS flfUPLACt: and ch 1mney
cleanin g . The Ch1mn ey Sweep .
Co li t114 -37:HXl57
WI LL 0 0 baby S!lhng 111 my home
_anx tim.e ..'/~2 -_53?7~ .

Give Away
FIVE MONTHS o l d long haired
golden male cot, litt er !rain ed
l ov able . Also block kitten s
Meig s
Humane
Soc 1e t y
992 -2592 or 992-'lb39.

Mobile Homes lor Sale
19"/tl NASHUA 14 x 05 3 bedroom
l ' 1 both. underpinning . $1500
an d assume loon . 949-2bf:l'J or
H43 -:J3 11.

1' 1 ACR~ . 12 K 60 mobile home
near OeJoeter. 992-5858 .

- - - - - - - ----

-

CRESlWOOD
STATION WAGON
Power windows, am-fm
radio, a.c., ideal family
wagon .

OH .

1975 OlDS
SUPREME

:R~a~

:.

Truly

one of the nicest homes In
the country, beautiful 2
story
colonial
in
Middleport, nice corner lot,
garage and storage space,
3 spac:ious bedrooms. 1112
baths, large living room

Esla!e_lo_r_ Sa!_e_

- - -- - -- - - . - MODI::RN 3 bedroom liouse

1976 AMC
GREMUN
Auto., a.c., power steering,
·wire wheel covers, rally
side stripe .

covers.

dining room , and large
modern built-in kitchen,

fully equipped . Central air.
Many, many features, in

excellent condition. ONLY
$49,000.00.
RANCH
With full
basement, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, carpeting, large lot .
Central air, good condition.

ONLY $21,000.00.
NICE MINI FARM - Over
5 acres, barn and other
buildings, fencing. Good I
floor plan home . Secluded .
$16,500.00.
V.A. APPROVED - IN
HARRISONVILLE, S800.00
down, S124.65 month, 9'1&gt;
pet. interest for 30 years.
1112

story

with

wood

burning firep lace, carport,
.3
bedrooms.
Total
$15,000.00.
NEWER RANCH - Good
neighborhood,
this
3
bedroom home is lA
excellent condition.
Equipped kitchen, air
condItion,
carpeted.

$28,500.00.
4Btf,ACRES-Moreor less
plus a real nice 14x70 1978
mobile home with large
add-a-room and expando.
Decking
and
many
features. Fa ir 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
Leona Cleland
Kathy Cleland
CALL
992-2259- 9'12-6191

&amp; tB:·

~~~
992-3325
216 E. Second Street
2 STORY E\usiness
building in the heart of
Pomeroy. 4 rooms up, 3
down. Good location for
res i dence and business.

$25,000.
STUCCO HOME - · 3 or 4
bedroo m s, 9 rooms , 2
bftths, furnace, fireplace, 2
car garage on nice corner

lol. S35,000.
SYRACUSE - Nice 9 room
home, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
formal din ing, 2 baths, nice
kitchen with dishwasher,
garage, and 1.9 acre level
lot . Just $48,500.
·
RUTLAND - 4 bedrooms,

ba lh, gas heat, fireplace, 2
car gari!lge, and 2 lots .
$14,000.

12 YEARS OLD- Frame 3
bedroom home with bath,
natural

gas

central

"heating, city water, out of
town . $29,500.
1 YEAR OLD ~ Here's a
fine spotless · 3 bedroom
home with family room
lhal has a fireplace and
large glass door. Lorge
fron t porch and back
sundeck on 1 acre of level

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

Will sell for only $12,000.
CAMPSITES- On Rt . 124
to lhe Ohio River. Any size
you want . Buy now before
another round of Increases.

DON'T GET HURT BY
INFLATION . MAKE A
SOLID INVESTMENT.
Helen L. "Teaford
G. Brv~e Teaford
Supe P. Murphy
Associates
" . -

FOR THE FINEST IN QUALITY USED CARS
THERE IS ONLY ONE
RIVERSIDE VW-AMC-JEEP

to ..

bt4 -592-J051.
3

ACRt:S IN Pomeroy . Secluded
w ooded area on top of h1ll.
Overlooks H1ver. Wat er and
o lectr ic: avo ilob le Y92 - :J8~b .
. ( .
NEW THRt:E bed1oam home.
Fireplace . ~ u n deck . Jl . acre
wooded '" ' b6"f·3H'1f'. ! Pppers
PIOIII S

UPPER ROUTE 7
GALUPOLIS

'BORN I.OSF.R

RI0HT Al.lD 'ttlJ KOO\\J IT, 0l.AfXS.
I AM RI0HT,
I?

10 oo-Oavid Cassidy Man UndercoOJer 3,4, 15 ; Fami ly
6, 13 : Barnaby Jones B. 10; Sneak Previews 33; News

20.
10 : 30-Show On The Road 33: You Bel Your Life 20.
11 :QO--News 3,4,6,8; , 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias,

AM,AR~~'T 1 1 bl.AD'f~!

News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10 ; Not For- Women
1 :JQ-.:...Oays of Our Lives 3,4,1S i As The World Turns

8, 1,0.
'
1:00-Qne Life to Live 6,13; 2. 30-Doctors 3,4,15;
Guiding Light B. 10.
3:QO--Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3· 30-Mash 8: Jo ker' s Wild 10, You Bet Your Life 20.

4: 00-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4; Merv.
MCIRE "TU.D.t..! A~

"

WELL, M'l.l " · AHHIE··,
AND LISSA ••, COME
IM ••• WHAT CA11 I DO
FOR. YOU?

service
,_
..._
...........
..,
-.. ·

Print answer here:

....

WEll 'IJW ··· THAT'S Ye sterday's
FIHE ·" HM · M " ·
BUl TI'I&gt;T WILL

I NEfD ADVICE "·
AHD I'Ll PAY FOR
IT "· I WAMT TO
EIUILD A HOME
~OR ORPHANS • ·•

REQUIRE

''[IJ-[I]-t X I

I

Jumbles : BUSHY

DRYLY AGHAST

i\I.I.EY OOP
I NFO~ EVERYONE
OUT -;JI" :5161-!T UNTIL

~Ey , ,.

.

" BRASS"

J825 .

t:XCAVATING , dozer , bac khoe
and d 1tcher . Char les R. Hotfi eld , Bo ck Hoe Se r ... ice ,
Rutland , Ohi o. Phone 742 2008.

do

m' ten
doll a'

HOWERY

week?

covoting
sep tic syste ms ,
darer backhoe, dump truck.
li meston e . grovel , b lackto p
paving, Rt . 143 . Pho ne 1 (61 4)
b98· 7331 .

in

a bank?

earn

WILL do roofing , construct ion,
plumbing Ond heating . No job
too Iorge or too sm all. Phone
742-2348 .

E•-

put

What am
I s'pose
,t'

(•'

,.d/i,,

1/h:tl

\\_

' "'IJ

'liiJI'

a

11 Sahib's

a biqqer

fool than I
thouqht! ,,v--2§;

29 Matronly
title
32 Pitch
- - hitter
:13 Glossy
~=-..,..-=--------finish
35 Close,
as a lock
6
• 36 Plunge
~ 37 Layman in a
~
monastery

BA THROOM S AND
Kitchens
remodeJed , ceram ic til e , plumbi ng , corpentry, and general
maintenance . 13 years ex perience. 992-3b85 .
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Comp lete
Service. Phone 992-2478.
--~ --~

ARE . You ANO'T'HeR
GERM,~ PAP01" OF

~t:t:VES

TRADING Post, Pogeville.
Groceries. dry goods , har dwore, feed . tack shop . Speci al

2S ib. ol dog food . $3.88 .

~ oRC::.ANI'J.AT'ION?

AUTOMOBILE "IN SURANCE been
ca ncell ed? lo st your operators•:
license? Phon e992 -2143 .

11-,
: WINNIE

FOR SALE

WINNIE 5LIMMIE AND THE
, WINKLE WRINKLE
YOUR CHOICE

showy
nowers

maidservant
12 Country
home
13 Grand Prix
or Sebring
14 Pack
15 Ca ll it quits
. e nan
·
1", .N u~
,; h: C!Or
LL.::::.=:::~~:::...JL:::.....::.;..=__ __l_AJ_ _ _.:::._:lo._....l 18 Kind
of closet
19 Gazzara
Wh4 don't 40u
20
Flail
it
22 Stevedores'
Wlion
23 Bull's-eye
24 Ruler :
\abbr.
27 Recent
" 26 Late
Chinese

Sweepers . toa sters , irom. all
smo ll appliances . Lown mower.
ne)(t to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (014 ) 985st:'WING MACHINt Repo1rs, ser .'
vice , all makes. 992-2284 . The
f abri c
Sho p .
Pomeroy.
Authomed Singer Soles and
Service . We sharpen Sc i ssors.
. ---------~---EXCAVATING , dozer , load er and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
ond lo ·boys for h1 re : wil l haul
lill dirt , to soi l. lim estone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Hoger Jef fer s, day phone 992-7089 , night
phone ~2 - 35~5 or 992 - 5232 .

E)(CELLENCY ?~ ..:iET 11-IEM, ONE WAY 01&lt;:
AN01J..IeR, COMMANDE;R !

~""'\

CREAM .

Buy th ese two homes tor
price of one or sptit
them up . Owner savs self!
Make us an offer.

'.
GARY WAS RIGHT . YE.f&gt;, BUT WE
YOUR NAME 15
MUSTN'T FOR LIKE MONEY
GET ONE
IN iHE BANKj
iHIN6 !

5:00-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbillies 8: Mister
Rogers 10,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency
One 13; Brady Bunch 15 .
5:30-News 6; Sanford 8. Son 8; Elec Co. 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15: ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20,33.
6 . 30-NBC News 34,15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easv 20.
7:oo--Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6.13; News.lO; Love, American Style 15; Consumer

Survival Kit 10; Big Blue Marble 33.
7:30-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 4; Family
Feud 10; Bonkers 8; $100,000 Name That Tune 13:
Pop Goes The Country 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Repo~t
10, 33.
8:0o--Different Strokes 3,4, 15; Boxing 6, 13; Wonder
Woman 8, 10; Wa shington Week In Review 20,33 .

ACROSS
I Prodigality
6 Large
amoWJt
r-W_H_I':r_I_F_ IH
_ E'I
_ _OO~N-,-T-,"'
:s.-IT_M_A-~-re-~-S-N_O_T_!;--w-E'_W_I_
LL..., 10 Herb with

.

-

FABLED

Answer: What you would ex pec t to find plenty of in a
military band composed mainly of officers-

8:30-Who's Watching The Kids 3,4,15: Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9:00-Rockford Flies 3,4,5; Incredible Hulk 8, 10;

-~
~by THOMAS JOSEPH

992-2174

r

(Answers tomorrow )

SMITH NELSON
·MOTORS, INC.

- -

Petticoat Junction 15.

Now arrange the c•rcled leners to
form the surprt se answer as suggested by the above car1oon.

Re~dlator.....--..~

MA RTIN

Griffin 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Hollywood Squares 15.
4:30-Bewifched 3; Gill igan's Is . 4,8 ; Brady Bunch 10;

115 C:ON5;'fRI

-I.J'rfi.F: ORPHAN ANNIE

AND

12 :QO--Newscenter 3: Bob Braun 4; America Alive 15;
News 6,10; Young 8. the Rest less 8; Midday
Magazine 13.
12. 3G-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 ;

Only 15.

00W C.A.kl I
Wlt.J AIJ
AR0UMeiJT, IF
SH~ WOIJ'T

hLAD'YS '? ,...,-----

4-30-IIC

BOWERS REPAIR

9. 30-Bradv Bunch 8; Family Affair )0.
10 :oo--Card Sharks 3,4,15; Dating Game 13; Edge of
Nighl 6; All In The Family 8,10.
10 :30-Jeopardy 3,4, 15; Andy Griffith 6: Price Is Right
8, 10.
11:QO--High Rollers 3,4r15; Happy Days 6, 13; Elec . Co.
20 .
11 · 31&gt;-'-Wheel of Fortune 3,1 5; F amtlv Feud 6, 13; News
4: Love of Life 8.10 : Sesame St . 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.

E lee. Co. 33 .
1:QO--Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13;

16l.OO- EVeN IF IC.E
15 LARGELY USED IN

• MORE ROYALlY CHECKS ... Ff?!JM
_nil: WINNIE·WIENER , THE _ _.,.,

ARE: YOU GOINGTO 1/ICTATE
A LETTER
OR G IVE

A

LECTURE?

Congressional Outlook 20,33.

9:30-Turnabout 20; 10 :00-Eddle Capra Mysteries
3,4, 15; American Girls 8, 10 ; News 20; Faces of
Communism 33.
10 :30-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20; 11 :QO--News
3,.4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Sounrtd~nP .1 3. .
11 :30-Johnny Crason 3,4, 15; Bar etta 13; Movie "The
Bounty Killer" 6 ; Gun smoke 8; Movie "Cry of the
Banshee' ' 10.

39 Uganda's
. strongman
40 Off one's feet
U Fearing that
42 Melville

12 :QO--Monty Python 33 ; 12 :30-Juke-Box 8; 12 :40-

novel
DOWN

lronside 13.
1:00-Midnight Speclal3.-l,f5 ; News 8; Movie " Horror
Rises from the Tomb" 10.
1:46-News 13; .2:30-News 3.

1 Ne'er-do-weD

2 PeMSyl·

3:00- Movle "Q ueen Bee " 3; 5 ·00- Movle
Yesterday's Answer
vania city
" Homicidal " J.
10 MiMesota 27 Feel remorse
3 ColeTblll'ldlty, Nov. t
iron rarige 29 Reward
t Utile one
16 Hoity-toity
for valor
5 Large
set
:JOResin
pitcher •
31
Ossie or
20 Embar·
6 " That's
Amore" man
rassment
Bette
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
7 Swiftly
21 Tiny fiddle 34 Bewildered
8 - bleu!
24 Take origin 35 Word with
9 Bishop
25 Sea cow
dash or sticl
of:...TV.:...:,.;::;;...--,;26::..:.,;:
38 Turhan and North is delighted to
pass.
NORTH
Just how many notrwnp
+ K 10 9 3
South makes depends on
what line of defense is adopt·
• A4 3
• A Q 10 7
ed. Alter the heart lead,
• 65
South is 88llured of two
hearts, one spade, one diaWEST
EAST
mond and five clubs, but
• 8 52
+ AJ 7
when he runs the clubs there
• 10 6
• KJ985
will be tremendous pressure
• J 52
• K 984
on East even though East
+98743
• 2
gets to discard after dum·
SOUTH
my.
• Q64
The defense will surely get
• Q7 2
the ace of spades In addition
• 83
to the king of hearts and
+AKQJIO
should get a third trick
Vulnerable: Both
somehwere.
Dealer : North
Wen
Eaat Soulb m~ 'lli~

BRIDGE

Qn res·ponding .correctly

$t :&gt; :u:t.l

Pass

p..,

"

Pass

2.

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Opening lead : • 10

~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
By Olwald Jacoby
One letter simply starids for another. In this sample A is ud Alau Sootaa
used Cor the three L's. X Cor the two O's.· etc. Si ngle l etlcrs.
North's two-spade rebid
apostnphes, the l ength nnd forma ti on of 1he words are all
over South's two-dub rehints. Each day the code letters are different.
sponse is not a true reverse.
CRVPTOQUOTES
It merely says that he,
North,. would have rebid one
WR
PIQZ
FZOWNJYWGRS spade If South had responsed
one heart to the diamond
RV
I
YUGEF
0 J N i,
H G LZ
UGP opening .
In other words Jt shows
four
and what might
JSCIWYUZF
EGAZNWK
I Y W Z N weD spades
be a minimum hand.
South's jump to three noFINQ.
U.
C.
AZZYUZN trump shows that he wants
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: LET •S ALL BE HAPPY AND UVE to play in notrump, but is
WITHIN OUR MEANS-EVEN IF WE HAVE TO BORROW only interested In a slam If
MONEY TO DO lT.- ARTEMUS WARD
North has a really good hand

wuz

© Ur78 Ki.nc Feature• Syndkaf.ll', lat.

No . t. You will have to see
this 2 bedroom home to
believe the price . Features
a large li~ i ng room w -new
carpeting, e)(tra large I
ing room , Two ni ce
with plenty of shade. Now
rentl no fon:•wtr"' IN COME!

B!IRNF.Y

Low Prlctl $12,000.
,
No. 1. 12x60 Elcona mobile
hOme completely furnishe~ :

3 bedroom home locoted In 1 nlct quiet neighborhood
on o large lot, (IOO'XI50'1 , Central hoot and air
conditioning. Convenl..t one floor plan wllll basement.
Priced for fasf sola, $20,000.

1

,

-

9:30-Soap 6,13.

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

ELWOOD

6; Hogan ' s Heroes 8; Match Game 10.

I KJ

- -----

Fully
... carpeted . Central air. Full
basement with fir e pla ce .
t:nclosed su n porch . l oca ted o n
b ' , acres near Racine on
bi.Jcktop rood . Price S40,000.
Contact larry Wolfe weekC:foys
. _?f~e~ 7_pm . 61~:~49..:_2~-~ ---­

'2595

B066~ ! ... U~UALL¥ HE 'S

9:QO--Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Emergency One

YIZZD

HotJsing '
Headquarters

REAL ESTATE LOANS. CAN"T FINO

'3795

FREE ,OVER AN OPSN
LINE! THAT AIN'T LIKS

8:0Q--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame S. 33.

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one tener to each square, to form
'
four ordinary words .

81-!ADFORD, Auct ioneer . Co m ·
plete Service. Phone 949· 2487
or 949-2000 Racine . Ohio, Crill
Bradford .

---.

MORTGAGE MONEY? W e ha&gt;Je
plenty at competitive rates with
terms to 30 years. Veterens
and non-vetlirens VA &amp; FHA
loons ore ava ilabl e . IRHAND
MORlGAGt:
77 t: . State
S t , ' Athens .
Phone

HE $0UNDED
"q
SCARED, AL L RIGHT-S UMTH IN TE-L~ ;. ME
I BeTTER NOT TA KE
ANY CHANCE5. ...
~OU GUY5 COMS
WITH ME !

o.

~~

News 8; Jetsons 10.

7: 15-Wealher 33; 7:30-Schoolles 10.

lf'iJ\tl.\.ft ®11 ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
'\9 ~~~ ® ~yHenriArnoldand Boblee

Business Services

RI::MOOELED OLDER home on 1/ 1
acre . 3 or 4 bed r ooms. Full
basement . Go ~ cent ro! hea t ,
budget $50 a month . Detached
garage 992-7036.

•3995

'2895.

engine, auto. trans.,
a .c ., am-fm , V-top, rear
defroster, wire wheeled

--

-·

AUCTION , Fri. and Sal.. 7pm . l ots
of Chri stmas items and other
mi$C items at Ohio ~iver Auc·
li on . 537 High St .. Middl e po r t .

carpeted and paneled
inside, 4 speed , local car .

., NEW LISTING -

0.

with double fireplace , large
rec . room, family room,

Seryices Offered

~

loolol~;.;.;..l

POMEROY,

,c.(c, $347

Town &amp; CountJY
Pomeroy Landmark

MAV&amp;S, I!UT HE
WAS TALK IIO' AWFU L

mile oH Rt. 1 by-pass on
St. Rt. T24 t9ward Rutland,

...

6·2s-Soc:iet ies in Transition 10; Columbus Today " ·

6:45-Morning Report 3; 6: 50-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:QO--Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13: CBS

Mindy 6,13 ; Nova 20,33; Waltons 10.
8: 30-What' s Happening 6, 13; Please St and By B.
9·()()-Quincy 3,4, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13 ; Hawaii Five-0
8,10; Geraldi ne Ftizgereld at Reno Sweeney 33 ;
Duchess of Duke Street 20.

LEGAL LOGIC
Real Estate lor Sale

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1978
5:45- Farm Report 13; 5 :50-PTL Club 13.
5:55-Sunr lse Semestef 10; 6:QO--PTL Club 15; 100·
Club 8.

~

.

fARM fOR sol e. House. 2 borns.
trail e r l arge pond . 10 oues or
!:12 ocres. 742-256b .
fiV!: ROO-M - ho u~;·--o~d-bo~
remode led . fu lly c:prpeted. May
be seen after 3 pnl . Phone
991-3933 .

\. qqcgal.

&gt;i4

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
8-20-1mo. (Pd.)

Pomeroy,O.

MAVSE HE
FIGURED THEI&lt;E
WAS NO ON:;
AROUIOD

Pl_ENTY CAGEY!

11 ·3·1 mo.

New or R_epair
Guttets and
Downspouts

MOORE'S

IT'S LATE -

PHONE 992-2772

10·30·c

PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay $3.99

01\_o'fl o-il

446-9800
.,

'

Chester, Ohio

Bo)C 3

THE MAYOR CA~lEI'
I'll!: &amp;Y NAME •• ,F IRST
TIME HE'S EVER DON:;
THAT OVER THE
PHON5!

J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

Phone 985·3806
Jack G•nther 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

i'APTAJN EASY

CEllULOSE
INSULATION
'6.50 per bag

ReSidential and commer·
Call tor estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day ,
anytime.

ANTI-FREEZE

--;

v~

'

THHI:E BI::DROOM fr ame ho m e in
M~~l :_p~r t.: Cal ~99'1 - 3~~ _

SNOW
TIRE SALE

1 owner, good tires, V-B, automatic, P.S., P.B.,_ ra_dio.

f POMEROY MOTOR CO.
'

PLA STIC 81:' 0 l1ner fo r piCkup
I ru ck . Alter b . 698-3!:109 .

Auction

See Us, We Have New
Suburbans, Vans, Conversions,
Mini Homes, E, Ce~mlno Pickups,
4-Wheel Drlva and Regular lri
Stock

.

3.4.
1 50-New s 13

Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8:QO--Li ' l Abner in Dogpatch Todav 3,4,15; Mork B.

...

~ial.

Carpentry, Electrical,
Painting

19'/6 HONDA C8 ·Red , lik e new ,
o wner 45 years o!d . 950 miles.
99'.1 2594 or 992 -3489 .

.1976 GMC % TON ......... •• •.'3695

1976 CHEV. T.E.C. MINI HOME

lully Insured
Frea Est.
calf992-2772
11 -3·1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

J. R. Cons1ruCtion
Co.

PhlliW 997 2181

Sport Pickup. 350 V-8, automatic trans ., P.~., P ..B.,
radio, like new tires, bed reils, orange with wh1te tr 1m .

V -8, auto .. good tires . See it now . Only

10-18-1 mo.

THEM ...

'

Greek " 10.
12 :Jo-News 8; 12 :40- SWAT 6,13; I :QO-Tomor-r-ow

7:00-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Family Feud 8; News 10; Love. American
St yle 15,· Hocking Valley Bluegn!lss 20; Consumer
S4r-v lval Kit 33 .
7. 30-Holly wood Squares 3 ; Dating Game 4; Bonkers
6: Waltons B; $100,000 Name That T une 10: Nashville On The Road 13; TV Honor Society 15; Mac -

TO THINK
:THAT ONE OF

'

1967 TOTAL Elt:CTRIC mobile
ho me , fu rnished . 3 bedr ..
was her an d drye r . Air condi ti oned . 1 .lot . 210 fl. fro ntage .
$ 12,000. Phone 742-21:126.
~
- - - --- - . ~
1912 HOll YPARK MOBILt home. 5
ft . tip o ut . 65 x 12 . 992·6637 9
til 4 weekdays . after 4.30
w9eken ds Co li 614 -367 -71SO.

1969 CHEV. 1fz TON PICKUP. •••••s595

Phone.992-6144
l92-7547

BEST.

Experience and

All Work Guaranteed

11-9·1 mo .

Mqr.

--- -

For Free Estimates

FOI'ICE OF
THE P.O.'S

Cellulosic !wood' fiber) .
Therma llnsul~tion
Save 3D pet. to 50 pet.
on heating cost

25 Years Experience

Phone 742-2029
10-22' 1 mo.

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

--

· 1~dustria l

All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small

Reasonable Prices
References Available

1970 Amherst SOx 12 2 tiR
8~3 - 27J4 .
HOTPOINT Ht:CTRIC range . h - 1970 Champ ion 6Ux 12 2 BR
cellen t cond it ion . Metal war · . 1965 General 60x 12 2 BR
1972 SCOU T &lt;l · Wheel dt . new
drobe 992 -3079
1961:! PMC 52xl2 2 BR
tran s. Very good shape. $2300
19SS Prairie Schooner 2f:IK8 l BR
NtW
Rt:MING
TON
3006
automatic
or best o ff er. 992 -571::!4 .
t'-173 Roya l t:mbassy 6f:lx14 3 tiR
- . - - - -with Weaver KJ scope and sling
19tl'/ CUTLASS , good cond1tion .
strop . 5 ' , boxe $ shell s, e :oilro 1959 5t ar 50K10 2 BR
5300 o r best off er , q92 -5784 .
1973 Star bOK14 2 BR
fancy wa ln ut st ock . $330. 12 go
1968 St ar 60x11 'l BR
lthoco pump shot gun , 30" lull
19"/ 0 GALA.X It 500 2- door sedan .
1970 Sylva 60x 12 2 BR
choke . ve nt rib barre l. alm os t
A 1r conditioning . P S.. f' .B., AT .
19M:! Vil lages b0x 12 2 BR
new. $200. Rea l nic e ear corn ,
Good condition in side and out .
196.4 Windsor Sh lO 2 BR
l:::x ce llent gas mileag e. Good
~2-~r_bu.: ~hc~n~ ~42_- 2359 . .
1970 Ki r kwood 12)(003BH
tire s Mu st drive to op prec1 ate .
SHAKESPEARE LONG bow . 45 lb ..
U&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALE S
~~I I of~er Sp~. ~~- 2-~5 _ ~$30. 949-2042 .
PT . Plt:ASANT. W. VA .
•

Type

Gunsmoke 8; ABC News JJ; Movie " Zorba The

TH.URSDAY, NOVEMBER9, 1978
6:QO--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC Ne ws 6; Zoom 20.
6.30- NBC News3,4,1 5; ABC Ne ws 13; Carol Burnell B.
Fr iends 6;. CB·s News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.

ELITE STRIKE

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Commercial and Home
Building
AllY Type Improvements
To Existing Structures

220 E. Main Stroot,
Pomeroy , O.
Calll92-7013

Sale l-'1·1cr'S
Jack W. Clrscy.

For Sale

1976 CHEVROLET............... s3495

'•

GETV.s&amp;
Hotpo111t Appl.

fWO BWROOM k i tche n furn rshed . op t 1Coll before 8 om
991-11BB
ON!:: HWROOM fur mshed house .
Walk ing dis tanc e to Pomeroy .
No pel !&gt; Securi ty d epo s•t re·
quired . yq2 -340 5

EUJOTT
APPUANCE li

All

-

WAS MY
BABY-AN

J&amp;L

Mourning and
Price Builders

Construction
Me~lntena nee

For All Your

COUNTRY M081lt Home Pork .
Ro ute :J3 nort h of Pomeroy .
Lorge lot s Co ll 99'1-7479.

Fully equipped .

.,·,

BUR ROUGHS SI:'NSI-M A TI C 0 (
cou ntm g mo chi 11e
Ph onf
W 'J 2156 fh c Ooify Senflne .
I II Cou rt Str ee1. Pom eroy .
Oh io .

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

TELEVISION
VIEWING

UNIT

·•

L--~-----------_:-~---------'----:------'-li

19"/'J GMC 11 passenger vo n. 11/TJ.
G RIM!: ~ C.OlDt:N . t-I ed Del iCIO US.
VW 'I passe nger von . need s
~G ol den Oelrc iou s appl e!&gt; . fitrwork . So ld ... to h ighes t bidder .
pa t !IC k O rchard . SR M:19.
own er reserves r ight to re je sl
tl l4 -66'-I·:J7!;15
all bui s. Co li 992,-7tl86 , Sneior
c.ti tens Cen te r to mak e Of· fiRI::WOOO , a ll hardwo od split
ron gernenl s to see . H1ds mu st
ond de livered. S:J5 truck food o r
be in by Wed No v . 15 . Pa)lSSU o cor d. 991 -b195 or
84:J -29'J3
m ent rnu st be rnad ~ by cerlified
chec k
ON I: HOT 'Pomt drye r in good con ·
lYT/ AML PACER . 6 cyl auto ..
d dtor\ . SbS . 992 -606'1.
P.S
P. B
AM-FM ste r.e o
LUM P HOUSt: cool. $3S per !o n .
cossen e . A ski ng $3200. Ca ll
co sh only . del1vered . 992 -l 12tl .
'1'1 2·6:.1 52 be fore 1:'JOpm 01 oil er
HRI:WOOO
fOfo!
sole . $15
10 30 IO .JO p m .
tru ckload . 992 -7489 , ask for
1'-1"1'/ OOOG I:' CHARGI:'R SI:: . 10.000
Ch orley .
m1 l es . W ell
e q uippe d
992 10b'J .

HOOf HOLLOW Ho rses. Buy , sell
trade or tr ain . New and used
saddl es . Ruth Reev es : A lbany .

t 97b

drive.

UM~S rONI

COA l
•.an d gro vel.
r aJ • 1wn chl orid l'. !01 l rhHn . ctog
fond an d all types o f .,olt . b:
C(• h101 Salt Wo1 k!o. . Inc ~ M n1!l
~~
Pomeroy . 992 3891

---------

1911 PlYMOU TH DUSTER 6 cy l.
St a ndar d,
$525 .
Phone
99::.! ·311'1

1978 IMPALA COUPE ••••••••••• ~95

B~ O NCO 4-wheel
$1 450 firrn 997./ 0!l4.

J:OR IUNT or sole . 6 room home,
all electric . Ca l l 992 -:271 1.

19'1 5 MONH CARLO . hcellenf
conditi on. l ots of e)(!ra s. S2700 .
992-7b!:l9 .

Lt qht otu e with w h . vin yl lop, L3 1 V o enginc, l u ll pow_c r
I nc l. w 1n dows · &amp; d oor loc k s, A ~ FM_ ~l e r ~o rr~d1 0,
cru 1se, t i lt st . wh eel, rn dial w stn pe 11r cs, n1r con d ,
lo t s of oth e r ex trfls . Dea l er D emo SA V E

t 9b4 CHEVRO l t:T VAN , cus to1 n
po ul t 10b . ln.,niro car pe ted .
S B~U . 992-b01 5.
lYi' l

~

1978 MONTE CARLO LANDAU .•••'6695

1~20

l 41

Business Services

For Sale

197'1 MONl A ~P Yot:R :JO~ engine .
P o w~"' ' sl t..•e&gt; 11119 flower tu a k e~ .
AM j: M ro rh o Mo r e cw tra s. Co li

Yoga &amp; You 33.
IL30-Johnny Car son 3,4,1 5; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;

lllf'K TH .ll'Y

DOWNING-CHILDS .

on a njce y. air condlton•
ed, ce ment patio

driveway . Now! · $10,500. ·

- Jinii:• l:"Gitilis,
RttHor
R®erto HuHmtn
Br•nchMtr. 691-6300

Alsocl•tt• L

Phone992-2342
E¥1. 992-2449

Tom Bollct¥1c

11oclney Downing, Broker
Bill Childs, Ma""gtr

Kenntlll Crutrea
-- 691-61,.

....st6J

t -.

I

•J
L
'

,.

.

\

I

t

You hold:

+ AJCQU4
• J 2

• A 54

• Q6
A Maine reader wants to
know the correct rebid after
partner responds one n~
trwnp to your one-spade
opening.
We favor three notrwnp.
We prefer to let partner try
for nine tricks instead of
going after 10 at spades and
we do want to be In game.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. )

(Do you have a questi'&gt;n lor
the eKperts ? Write " A!k the
Experts,'' c•re of this news~·
per. Individual questions will
be answsred if sccom,.nled
by stamped, self-Bddres,.d
envelopes. The most Interest·
mg queslfons will be used In
this column •nd will rec•l~•
copies of JACOBY MODERN .)

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday . Nov.

i

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

.........."'11'11111111111~111111-...-------------,

9~,~19~78~.---------------------------------.:..~111111

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Area Deaths 1

the MarY Rutan Hospital.
Mrs. Rice had been a
resident of the Huntsville
area for the past several
years. She was born July 26,
1919 in Hartford, W. Va.,
daughter of the late Burley
and Ruby Board.
Surviving are her husband,
John F. Rice, Sr., Huntsville;
two sons, Clyde K. Board Qf
Huntsville, and George Board
of Columbus; a stepson, John
F. Rice, Jr., Huntsville; 12
grandchildren ; five
stepgrandchildren ; two
brothers, Burley A. Board,
Jr., and John A. Board,
Crooksville, and three
sisters , Juanita Knapp,
Columbus; Thelma Filson, '
Point Pleasant, and Mary . ·
Roush, Letart, W. Va.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Friday at the
VanHorn Funeral Horne ,
ANNABELL RICE
Mrs. Annabell Rice, 59, Main St., Lakeview with the
Huntsville, formerly of Rev . Jack Reprogle of·
Middleport , died Tuesday at ficiating.

MILDRED SPENCER
Mrs. Mildred F. Spencer,
61, Ormond Beach, Fla .,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday in Florida.
Born in Pomeroy, Mrs.
Spencer moved to Daytona
Beach, Fla., 22 years ago.
She Is survived by her
husband,
Otis;
two
daughters, Mildred Jane
Cullum and Betty Ann Pat·
terson, both of Ormond Beach
and five grandchildren. She
was a member of the
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church.
Funeral services will be ·
held at the Haigh-Biank
Funeral Home in Ormond
Beach and burial wUI be jn
Florida.

Artist Rockwell
dies Wednesday
STOCKBRIDGE, Mass .
(UPI) -Norman Rockwell,
whose hundreds of homey
pointing&amp; depleted the fabric
of American We like no other
artist, died at his hmne late
Wed~!!!sdaY . He was 84.
Rockwell, who drew 317
covers for the weekly
Saturday Evening Post, was
in failing health fll' two years
and had been unable to work
in the studio he kept In the
Berkshire mountain town of
Stockbridge.
On the easel at the time of
his death was his last
painting - an unfinished
depletion of Stockbridge.
Rockwell's personal physl·
clan, Dr. Franklin Paddock,
said the painter died at 11:15
p.m. EST, of an undisclosed
illness.
The funeral was expecte&lt;j
to be at St. Paul's Episcopal
Church with burial in the
town cemetery.
"Norman Rockwell as a
man was very much like his
paintings, :• said Paddock.
"He had a mOill deliglltful
and charming peraonallty
and .was a wonderful person.
Bufln addition, beneath that,
he was a vety well..-ead man
of much greater depth than
his illustrations would appear
to show."
If he was !OIIietimes dismissed as a panderer to
sentiment -one critic called
· him the "Lawrence Welk of
painting" - he alto was
praised as "America's Rem·
brandt" and its favorite painter.
His gaunt figure, wavy hair
and everopresent pipe were
as much his trademark as the
signature that appeared on
One Table
"Fashion Fabrics"

%Price
Lay-a-way your
White or Elna
Sewing Machines
Desk or Console
Cabinet Now!

On !he T
Middleport, 0.

hundreds of his works. He
.consistently referred to
himself as an "illustrator" or
"a storyteller" but not an
artist, although an original
Rockwell fetched $27,000 and
he was once asked to make an
even trade of one of his own
paintings for an original
Andrew Wyeth valued at
$50,000.
"If you can tell a story in a
picture and if a reasonable
number of people like your
work, it is art," he said.
Born in New York City Feb.
31 1894, Rockwell dropped out
of high school at 16 and on the
strength of a few months'
education at the ·Acaderny of
Design, began illustrating
youth magazines. In three
years he Was art director of
Boys Life Magazine.
He sold his first painting to
the Post when he was 22 for
$50. It showed a young boy
reluctantly pushing a baby
carriage and marked the
beginning of an era.
"I'm
really
almost
religious about the Post," he
once said, although he also
was the illustrator lor the
Annual Boy Scout Calendar,
· the Top Value Stamp and ·
Franklin Mint catalogues.
Over the next four decades,
he turned out throatcatching, eye-wetting scenes
that caught Americans being
American a doctor
patiently examining a little
girl's doll, a barebottorned
boy ready to receive a shot, a
family solemnly giving
thanks before dinner, Rosie
•the Riveter doing her psrt for
the war effort, an Army
veteran's homecoming.
"I didn't set out on purpose
to paint a sunny America,"
he said. But gentle humor and
charm characterized the
Rockwell style until the
troubled and divisive 1960s
drove him to comment with
his paintbrush.
"For 47 years, I portrayed
the best of all possible worlds
- grandfathers, puppy dogs
-things like that. That kind
of stuff is dead now," he said
at age 7S. "And I think It's
about time .
In place of Uttle Leaguers
and soreopawed puppies appeared a portrait of three
slain Southern civil rights
workers and a wide-eyed
pigtailed black girl on her
way to a segregated school,
nanked by four u.s.
marshals.

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
Save On Order•
For Chrilltmas

.

SPECIAL SALE PRICES
MEN'S WRANGLER
TURTLE NECK SHIRTS

.,••

·Cfearancef Just 20

HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS

SO Pel. Cotton 50 pet. Polyester . Sizes small (6-8). medium (10-12) ,
large (14-16), extra large (18-2). Inside layer next to skin is all
cotton. outside layer is polyester.

.s3.99 Thermal Tops .............................................. '3.45
s3.99 Thermal Bottoms .........................................s3.45

•

BOYS $895

WEST BEND

TWIN BURGER COOKER AND
SANDWICH GRILL REG. 34.95

FLANNEL SKI PAJAMAS

SPECIAL
PRICE

Sizes 8 to 18. Boxer style waist bottoms with
cuftlet ankle, pullover crew neck top with
cufflet wrist. colorful patterns .

•7••

Make hamburgers one side or make
sandwiches or more on the other side. non
stick cooking surface.

SALE

$1995

TWO DAY SALE

ELECTRIC DEEP FRYER
.
Perfect size for ·couples, singles, students.
Uses 2 cups of oi I to fry one or two servings
in a few minutes.
I

Plastic cover and slotted frying spoon
included.

REG. 27.50

PORTABLE PHONOGRAPHS
.

Wildcat Automatic Phonograph·-

Drop down full size Changer. Ploys 33 and 45
RPM records; 2 self contained speakers. tone
control, headphone jack, chalk gray in color.
11

Big-Big" Pol1able

Separate volume and tone control
Front Speakers
.
3

speeds with built-in

45

/

Record Adapter

Sulfcase cabinet with case.

, 3 speeds with 45 record adapter Volume, tone, and tuning control
Front speaker
Leathe~-look case with" handle

COTTON FLANNEL
36 inches wide · fast color · solid
colors and prints.

SAl£

PR~E $1

28
10.

ONE SPECIAl. GROUP

WOMEN'S DOUGLAS MARC
COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

Match,i ng skirts, slacks. sweaters in green, blue, and bayberry. Sizes
5-6
17-18.
P·!~ .............................................SALE '14AO
~~~~-!~" ......................................
SALE '16.00
I ••••

••••......••.•.....•..••••.•........•.•..

EUREKA $9995
UPRIGHT SWEEPER SALE PRICE

Chrome beater bar brush
roller, 6 position height, edge
cleaner, light.

'7995
With free tools

PLAYTEX CROSS YOUR HEART
SOFT SIDE COTTON BRA
BUY ONE AND GET ONE FREE
Offer .good until Dec. 31, 1978. Stop in lingerie department on the
second floor for details.

CHILDREN'S

TWO DAY SA I.E

_

COORDrNATE SPORTSWEAR

JUN lOR DRESSES
This sale includes our entire stock of junior dresses in sizes 3 to 15.
Excellent selection.
Ready to Wear - 2nd floor

In sizes 2 to 6 and 7 to 14. Our entire stock included for this sale;
sweaters, tops. skirts, slacks, jackets.
Famous names like Russ Girl, Girl Town, Buster Brown, Bottoms
-and Tops.
Save Friday and Saturday •.

SALE PRICES

SALE PRICES

MEN'S $8
PAJAMAS

$pedal Sale Prfcesf

Coat style top, adjustable gripper boxer waist
bottoms. Full cut sizes A .(small) , B (medium) C
(large) D (extra large) . Solid colors or pattern'S .
Polyester cotton blend .

New selection, solid -colors and neat patterns.
Four-ln-harid ties and ready tied ones. Two
days only .

95

MEN'S
WEM BLEY TIES
15.50 WEMBLEY TIES ................... SALE '4.20
'6:50 WEMBLEY TIES ................... SALE '4.90
17.5o WEMBLEY TIES.................. SALE '5.20

OPEN SATURDAY '9:30 TO 5 'P.M •.

You can't beat our price11

POMROY

NEW HAVEN FURNITURE
112·2462
I,

Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland promised that a set·
aside prog ram would be
announced in mid-October , a
month ahead of the Nov. 15
legal deadline, but it has yet
to be announced because of
delays at the White House.
Department officials said
alternatives varying from a
10 to 20 percent production
cutback were on the
president's desk. ·
At a news conference two

hours before that crop report,
President Carter reaffirmed
support for a " moderate set·
asi de" in response to a
questioner who asked if
production curtailment was
inconsistent
with
the
pr~s id e nt 's
anti-inflation
effort .
This year's record crop
carne despite a feed grains
set-aside , partly because
farmers' participation was
less than hoped for and

GALUPOL!S, Ohio (UP!) necessary to protect the
- An attorney with the Ohio rights of the residents
Legal Rights Service has involved.''
Ms Haller said the depart·
accused Gallipolis State
ment
was :
Institute and the Department
Putting
residents in
of Mental Health and Mental
nursing
homes
which do not
Retardation with violating
meet
federal
standards.
the law in placement of
- Putting residents in
Institute residents into
nursing
homes when they
nursing homes.
.
Kathryn Haller, in a letter have no physical problems
to Department Director Dr . , requiring nursing horne care.
- Using state money to pay
Timothy B. Moritz , said
Gallipolis officials ·had placed for these placements instead
70 to 80 residents into nursing of federal Medicaid funds.
- Failing to consider the
homes across the state within
traumatic effects of sudden
only six weeks last spring.
"I am dissatisfied with the moves on the retarded resi·
Department's handling of . dents.
Ms Haller also said many of
these placements," she said,
th
e
residents relocated need
"and its continuing failure to
physical
a nd occ upational
correct
these . illega l
·
therapy
and
the homes had no
conditions and prac~s, I
therapists
on
the staff.
shall take whatever action is

favorable weather increased
yields beyond the previous
record of 97.1 bushels set in
1972.
Officials said yields also
were boosted as a result of
less productive land being
taken out of production under
the set-aside.
The Crop Reporting Board
estimated that total feed
grain production of corn,
sorghum, oats and barley
would be a record 21Lrnillion
metric tons, 5 percent more

'-·-·-

'•

hobbies include photography,
tnusic, tennis, writing,
cabinet making, reading and
public speaking among
others. He is listed .in Who's
Who in Ohio.
.
His wife is Meryl Riley
Abraham , registered and
certified schooi psychologist,
certified guidance counselor
and certified secondary
teacher.
They have two children;
Michele Diana Abraham, 23,
who was ''Miss Petite USA"
in \973-74 and graduated from
Bowling Green University
magna cum laude, and
Daniel Nolan Abraham, 21,
student at West Liberty State
College, letter winner in
soccer and on the dean's list.
Others to be honored will be
Ben Quisenberry, Syracuse,
Norma Goodwin, and Robert
D. Roberts, both of Pomeroy.
Tickets are $5 and reser·
vations may be made by
calling Paul Simon, president
of the chamber, at 992-3830 or
Tarn Bearhs, secretary to the
chamber, at 992·5005 on
Monday, Tuesday or Friday
from 9 to 4.

Generllffor the Ohio National
Guard Brlgad.ier ·General
James M. Abraham, will be
one of four persons honored
at an appreciation banquet
Wednesday, Nov. 15 at the
Meigs Inn. The event,
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, will
begin at 6:30 p.m.
Brigadier General
Abraham Is being honored for
his role in the Ohio National
Guard's snow removal work
in the Village of Pomeroy last
winter.
Gen. Abraham was born in
Athens Nov. 21, 1922. He is a
registered profess ional
engineer and has his own
firm at Gahanna which was
established in 1964.
Gen. Abraham graduated
from Athens High School in
1940, received a BSEE degree
in 1943 at the age of 20, BSIE
in 1948 and MSPM in !950, all
at Ohio University. He was a
graduate assistant at Ohio
University from 1948 to 1951.
He was the owner of the
Athens Appliance Company
from 1951 to 1963. The corn·
pany became the mo st
/ •
successful business of its type :;:;:::::;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
in Athens County,
He ser'led in World War II
HOME DESTROYED
The Delbert Fridley
with General Patton's Third
United States Army in · home on Union Ave., was
destroyed by fire about
Europe, He was a Fire
1:Z6 a .m. Friday. The
Marshal in post-war Europe
Pomeroy Fire Department
in charge of Western Europe
and a graduate of the resident
was on the scene along with
a tanker from the Mid·
course of the United States
dleport Department.
Army Command and General
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Staff College in·l963.
Charles
Legar was called
The honoree was instructor
again later Friday morning
of ROTC at 0. u. from 1958 to
when the fire threatened to
·1961. Executive officer of the
break out again. Canoe of
73rd Infantry Brigade which
the fire and monetary loss
had just been reorganized in
were not reported this
1968. Commander of the !66th
morning.
Infantry Battalion with
perhaps the greatest amount
of riot experience in the State
of Ohio from 1969 to 1970.
He graduated from the
United States Army War
College in 1973 and became
asalatant ' Adjutant General
lor the Army, State of Ohio on
· .tan. 13, 1975.
.
Gen. Abraham bad his own
dance orchestra while a
student at Ohio university.
ThJa campus band, which .
followed Sammy Kaye after
his graduation, was given a
rating by the 0. u . Post as
CLEVELAND (UPI) being the better performer·
This week's winDing Ohio
He has · been an avid
Lottery numbers:
photographer for many
Gold nomber ....! 1.
years.
White nomber - 26.
In addition to other
.Blue nomber - 971.
teaching . experiences, he
.Wln-A·Tbon
taught electronics at East·
13048.
land Vocation School. His

Fiftee n Cents
Vol. 29, No. 147

than a year ago. Grain
sorghum produ ction was
estimated at 704 milli on
bushels. a I percent increase
from last month's prediction.
The latest estimate for
soybean product ion indicated
a record crop of 1.81 billion
bushels, I percent above last
month's forecast .
C.o It o n
produ ction
estimates rose 1 percent from
last month to 11 million
bushels. The crop is expected
to be 24 percent smaller than

last year.
Ohio's corn production was
estimated at 371.2 million
bushels, or 104 bushels per
acre, down 3.5 million bushels
from last month's forecast
and B.B·million bushels lower
than la st year's production.
The soybean crop in the
Buckeye State was estimated
at 119 million bushels, or 32
bushels per acre, duplicating
last month's estimate but
950,000 bushels lower than
1977 production.

"

traveling west.
Smith was cited on charges
of left of center.
There was severe damage·
to the Holter auto, moderate
damage to the Smith vehicle.
Officers investigated a twovehicle mishap on Hannan
Trace Rd. , seven-tenths of a
mile east of Lincoln Pike, at
8:45a.m.
The patrol reports that
Anthony
Salyers ,
21,
Waterloo, was cited on
charges of left of center
following an accident involving a secon d auto
operated by James Addis, 45, .
Crown City.
The patrol was called to the
scene of a one-auto accident
at 9:50a.m. on Rodney-Cora
Rd ., at the junction of
Starcher - Hambrick Rd.
Officers report that a
southbound auto operated by
Linda S. Gillespie, 17, New
Haven, went off the right side
of the roadway and struck an
embankment.
Gillespie claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated. The auto incurred
moderate damage.

--~

By ROBERT KAYLOR

WASffiNGTON (UP!) - A
just completed test showed
U.S. forces would face
shortages of equipment and
ammunition if they had to
fight a high-intensity war in
Europe for more than a few
weeks, defense SOUf\'es said
today.
The sources said Exercise
Nifty Nugget 78, as the test
was ca lled, also showe d
serious manpower problems
and difficulties in using
civilian airliners to transport
troops to mobilization points
and overseas in a crisis.
The test ran from Oct. 10 to
Nov. 8, based on a scenario of
a major European war that
fo!lowed months of increased
tensions with the Communist
bloc, thus providing adequate
warning of attack.
Although about 600 reserve
units underwent bri ef
mobilization alerts, the test
was conducted mainly at
headquarters levels and did
not involve large numbers of
troops in war games. Instead,
it tested administrative and
logis t i c mob iliz at ion
requirements.
In an announcement of the
test's completion, Gen. David
· Jones, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, said it
"revealed a number of shortcomings in examined categories." Defense sources said
those
included
the
fo!lowing :

-shortfalls in major items bring mobilized units up to result in getting planes where
such as armored troop full combat strength and they were needed in time to
fill requirements.
carriers, trucks and some · replace early casualties,
Sources said these types of
-Although there are
types of artillery ammunition
stockpil ed for use until enough u .S. commercia l problems had been expected.
wartime production could he jetliners of transcontinental They said a similar test two·
geared up . The sta tus range to meet firs t years ago showed serious
indicated they "were not mobilization needs, available deficiencies among reserve
sufficient to sustain a long numbers would drop sharply WJits in meeting mobilization
war" after losses that could because of main tenance schedules, but these were
be expected in the first few requirements as fighting considerably improved this
sta rted. Problems would year.
weeks.
- Because the mothballed
draft system would not be
able to produce recruits for
110 days and a reserve pool of
filler personnel is at rqughly
half of the 400,000 men
required, there would not be
enough trained troops to

Board seeking
advance draw
In order to meet the Nov.
lOth payroll, the Southern
Local Board of Education
Thursday night authorized its
clerk , Linda Spencer, to
request an advance draw on
the December tax settlement.
The request goes to Meigs
Co un ty Auditor Howard
Frank .
The board set the next
regular meeting for 7:30 on
Nov, 24 . Attending the
meeting were Dallas Hill,
David Nease, Shirley
Johnson and Sue Grueser,
board members; Supt. Bob
Ord and Mrs. Spencer.
GIVES CHECK - Mrs. Rachel Downie on behaU of
the Meigs County Pleasure Riders 4-H Club presents a
check to the Canters Cave upgrading fund to Mrs . Jean
Spencer, right, 4-H assistant of the Meigs Extension
Service. See P..'i for additional pic;)"res and story .

Deputies check
minor accident
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Investigated a
two-car accident on the Meigs
High School parking lot
Thursday morning.
Debra
Jewett,
17,
Pomeroy, was traveling· east
on the lot when her car
collided with a vehicle driven
by Elaine Barnhart, 17, also
of Pomeroy, who had pulled
from a parking place. There
, was slight damage to both
vehicles and no injuries.
QUICKENS TALKS
Israel decided today to
quicken its expansion of
settlements in occupied
territory but Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat
vowed to impose Palestinian
rule on the same lands,
setting the nations 1 on a
collision course that could
imperil their historic peace
talks.

fa cility, as well as all other areas of the high school, may
be toured by parents, patrons, and the p&lt;~bli c on
November 14 at 7:30p.m. Refreshments will be served. at
9 p,m,

Forces would face shortages

Four mishaps ·.
probed by Qs.'P
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, investigated
four accidents Thursday.
Officers report that at 7 a.m.,
autos operated by George A.
Scott, 25, Albany, and Debbie
K. Hill, 25, Racine, met in a
curve on U.S, 33, two-tenths
of a mile north of CR 37, in
Meigs County.
The patrol said the north
bound Hill auto was forced off
the road by the south bound
Scott vehicle, whi ch was
traveling left of center.
The Hill auto passed off the
left side of the roadway into a
sign post.
Hill claimed injury, but
was not immediately treated.
The Hill auto incurred
moderate damage. Scott was
cited on charges of left of
center.
At 8:30 a.m., officers were
called to the scene of a second
Meigs County accident on CR
26, one and one-tenth of a mile
west of SR 7.
The patrol reports an east
bound auto operated by
James H. Smith, 17, Racine,
came over a hillcrest left of
center and sideswiped a
vehicle driven by Jeffrey
Holter,
20,
Pomeroy,

·-·-·-

PUBUC WELCOMED - ·One seldom-seen area of
Meigs High School which will be open to the public during
open house is the school 's language lab, being used here
by Spanish instructor Fred Baloy's Spanish II class. This

'

SALE '67.88

REG. '76.95
Deluxe Monaural

Guard·leader ·
to be honored
; '!!lie . 8-sststan\ -~ !lj utan t

Phooo with built-in AM Radio

1

'759"

Brigadier General Abraham

1

-

WEST BEND FRYETTE

Reg. price '1.59 yd.

$1375

S, M, L. and XL sizes, zipper . front coat
style, drawstring hood, · warm thermal
lining , muff pockets, solid colors .

enttne

at

accused of
violations

MEN'S $1495

BOYS HANES THERMAL UNDERWEAR

'1540".. :................~14991
'1386 11 ..................~739"
Order By NoHmber 15 Onlr
STOREWIDE SALE

'

•a••

•

G·SI, state

•a••

Sizes 8 through 18, 100 pet. cotton, heavy
weight, colorful plaid patterns, permanent
press.

TWO DAY SA LEI

Regular '549" .. ........ X-MAS '35991
Broyhill Living Room
Sofa, Love Seat &amp; Ch•l.r

..

'7"

Men's 511.95 pre-washed Denim Jeans. Sizes 29 to
38 waist, sale.

yield per acre will also be a a rate of 10 percent.
For farmers, the record
record - an Impressive 101.2
keeps up pressure on the
bushels per acre.
The huge crop could help administration to annoWJce a
slo'w the rise in food prices, 1979 feed grains program
since it wlll add to the supply which will take land out of
of feed grains and moderate · production, thereby reducing
the cost of producing feed grains -supplies and
propping up prices.
livestock and poultry.
The crop is ~xpected to be 8
The record crop does not
gua rantee lower prices, percent larger than last
however. Record crops were year's record 6.4 billion
harvested this year also, but bushels . Last month's
food prices have increased at projection was 6.82 billion
bushels,

BOYS SIZES
$1095 ALASKAN FLANNEL SHIRTS ·

MEN'S WESTERN DENIM JACKETS
True Western style Wrangler, 14 oz. blue denim .
Sizes 40 and 42 only . Regular price $15.95.

WASffiNGTQN (UP!) The Agriculture Department
says the nation's corn crop
will probably add up to a
record 6.89 billion bushels
this year, a development that
· could provide some down·
ward pressure on food prices.
In its latest report on farm
producton, the department
Thursday increased it s
estimate ofthe corn crop by a
full I percent oyer last
month's report .
The department said the

Sizes S, M, L, and XL. Two snap flap
pockets, snaps on wrist cuffs and front.
colorful pla id pattern s, well known
brands .

Assorted solid color, machine washable.
Sizes small ; medium, large, and extra
large. Special sale prices.

e

••

Record crop could.slow rise in food prices

MEN'S $11 95
WESTERN FLANNEL
SHIRTS

$795

H1ndcr1ft1d, All Wood-

·New Hoen

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, November 10, 1978

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10th &amp; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11th
·oPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Grandfather Clocks

Regular '1441 11.........X·MAS

. I

Two youths charged

•
POLICE OFFICER OF THE YEAR- Edith Sisson, dispatcher for the Pomeroy Police
Department, center, was named Officer of the Year at the Gallia-Meigs Fraternal Order of
PoliCj' Banquet held Thursday night at Middleport Fire Station. Pictured with Mrs. Sisson
are,left, Larry Hudson , pr osident and Ray Manley, secretary ·treasurer. Mrs. Sisson was
presentro a Smith and Wesson revolver.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Two
14-year-old boys were
arrested ·early today on ·
charges they set a fire that
killed six people, including
two children, at a two-family
house in the South Bronx •
Wednesday police said.
The boy~. whose names
were not released because of
their age, were each charged
with six counts of homicide ,
one count of arson and one
countofburglary,pollce said.
Bronx
District
The
Attorney and a Family Court
judge will decide whether the
boys will tle'&lt;,;rosecuted under
a tough new juvenile law,
which allows youths who
commit violent crimes to be
sentenced as adUlts.
The boys were being held at
the women 's detention

facility at Rikers Island.
The blaze began in the
basement of the South Bronx
hous e about 4:30 a.m .
Wednesday and raced
through the structure, killing
Josephine Rodriguez, 50,
Lydia Rodriguez, 16, Kim
Lucas, 6, Michael Rodriguez,
5, Eddie Johnston, 15, and
John Rodriguez , 18. .
Seven others ,were mjured
in the blaze that investigators
originally thought was
caused by spontaneous
combustion .

Weather
Mostly clear tonight, with
patchy dense log and lov- 1 in
the lower 40s. Partly cloudy
Saturday, with highs in the
low or mid 60s.

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