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10-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleP?rt-Pomeroy. 0., Monday . Nov . 1:1. !978

•t
Co
. mmumy
Comer

Seventh ·slasher victim located
m

the latest victlm wa.s ~.
He said the man, dressed
together for protection.
''You bet if this was work clothes, had not been discovered . In front of IIi
wilding, unaware of what
happening in Beverly Hills identified. '
Police at the scene refused was going only a few feet
they'd call out Ule National
Guard," one old man said to give any details, but away , three old men passed a
Saturday outside a downtown' S\!!phenson confirmed by paper bag attempting to keep
telephone that the killing is warm irl the unseasonably
rescue mission.
cold night.
"I'm no different than similar to the sill others.
"We 1re not afraid, man,"
At
least
a
dozen
detectives
anyooe else," he cootinued.
''I get up in the morning and and several uniformed ooe of Ulem said pointing to
put oo my pants. I wash every patrolmen were at the rear of Central Division
once In a while. Why don't Ule rundown wilding where headquarters. "'!be police
they protect !De?"
"Damn it, I'm scared."
Capt.
Walter Stephenson of
No. ~.
the
Homocide
Division said a
And on street corners in
Skid Row, the number of man in his mid 2fl! had been
COLUMBUS, Ohio I UPli McNeil's body was found in a
unshaven, disheveled men stabbed several times in the
Donna McNeil, 31, Colwn- pool of blood near his pickup
has grown in the last three upper torso and was probus,
was arrested today in truck when repeated calls tu
weeks . Like frightened nounced dead in an empty
connection
with the shooting an answering service failed
animals, they are banding parking lot behind an East
Sunday
of her husband, to t'Ontact him.
death
Fifth Street building.
A deputy Franklin County
police said.
coroner
said McNeil had been
Police said the woman has
stabbed
in the head about 10
been accused of hiring two 17·
times,
and
;lisa shot in the
year-old
boys
to
murder
her
EXTENDED FORECAST
Find l)pholsterl!d
shoulder,
but
said a stab
husband,
John,
39,
whose
Wedn es day through
Furniture
wound
to
the
brain
appeared
body
was
found
early
Sunday
Frid!ly, showers possible
to
be
the
death
wound.
a!
a
busines.s
firm
where
he
Wednesday. Fair ·and
The deep-seating , long .
cooler Thursday and worked as a security guard
lasting
comfort
of
CLAYTON swEEPS
Friday. Highs will·be In the on the city's far east side.
Flexsteel's fi ne furn iture
and
Arthur
Gary
Ford
starts with · the unique
COLUMBUS (UP!)
50s Wednesday and In the
Flexsteel springs, formed
both
17,
have
been
Suber,
Northmont , the
Clayton
40s and low 50s Thursday
from the finest wc!tch·
charged
wiih
delinquency
in
Dayton
district
winner, won
and Frtclay. Lows will be In
spring steel.
the 30s Wednesday mor- connee lion with the crime. Ule third annual state high
ning and In the upper 20s Deted.ives say Mrs. McNeil schOOl soccer championship
Flexsteel craftsmen insist
on materials of the f inest
and low 30s Tbursday and claims her husband had by ·defeating Cincinnati
a•saulted her.
quality t o match their
Anderson ~ Sunday on the
Friday.
sk i lled workmanship .
Officers say the ·resulting artificial grass at Franklin
Frames eire of top quality 4~(((:~::: :::::~:::::~:~:::::: :;:::;:::::;:::::::::: :: murder was apparently the County Stadium.
kiln -dried
hardwood ,
result of that assault.
The Clayton Northmont
double -dowe l led
and
had
litUe trouble during its
corner blocked for extra.
EYESORES
. g~mes, opening
weekend
strength and stability. The
POMEROY (UP!) - Fire
MARRIAGE LICENSES
beautiful upholstery . of
with
a
3-0
Saturday
semifinal
Chief Charles Legar says
Fiexsteel furniture is · the
Donald Gene Little, 43, and · victory over Parma ·Padua,
there are some buildings
result of expert attention to
which are eyesores and Elaine Sue Currence, 23, both Ule Cleveland district finalist.
detail , deft handling of the
of Middleport.
The Cincinnati ·area entry
line Flexsteel fabrics, and
sl!.ould be tom down.
Thomas
Hoskins,
36,
Route
had advanced to. the finals
skillful tailoring .
But Mayor Clarence An3,
Racine,
and
Mary
A.
with a 3-1 win over previously
drews says this southern Ohio
Hoskins, 36, Chauncey.
unscored upon Worthington.
community can not raze them
because there is not enough
money. '!be village is offering
FLU SHOTS READY .
TO END MARRIAGE
the buildings to the residents
Flu
Shots will be· given
Charging gross neglect of
if they want to tear them
from
9:30
to 12 noon Wedduty and extreme cruelty,
down.
nesday
and
Thursday at the
'!be village is also trying to Orville L. Phillips, Route 4, Meigs County Senior Citizens
obtain federal funds to Pomeroy, has filed suit for Center · in
Pomeroy.
divorce from Theda Phillips,
demolish the buildings.
Middleport, o.
ReSidents
who
have
Columbus, in the Meigs
registered
already
will
Co\mty common pleas court.
receive
the
shots
to
be
adCarlos E . Stepp, Midministered
by
the
Meigs
dleport, and Loretta Joy
the graceful~ tiered
Stepp, Harrisonville, have County Hdalth Department in
filed dissolution of their conjunction ·with a program
staged by the Ohio Departmarriage in the court.
·
ment of Health.

LoS ANGELES (UP!)
Someone who police say
"takes pleasure in killing"
has stabbed seven Skid Row
residents to death since Oct.
23. The seventh victim was
discovered early today
across the street from
Central Division police
headquarters.
Detectives
were
lrivestigating another Skid
Row stabbing later in the
morning that could become

Wife charged

Flexsteel

BAKER FURNITURE

PAOO~

,,,

'I~

--:;.

;

' -''
I

•

a striking~ new concept
in ring design
15 shimm~ring diamonds set in this
ultra-graceful styles raises its setting
to new fashion heights. You' ll love the
look!
As seen Qn
95
Ingels TV Special!
Reg . $499.95
Also available with 5 diamonds se t
in a ring of rubi es or sapphires.

$399

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY
"Two in One Store
Middleport,

106 N. 2nd Ave.

Anniversary
(Continued from page 6)
pears to present·her personal
experiences in the field of
religion.
The Women's Aglow
Fellowship is an · interdenominational,
world1"ide
organization
of
charismatic women and its
purposes are:
"To help women praise and
glorify God in every area of
life.
"To win soul5 for Jesus
Christ.
"To share the gospel of
Jesus Christ.
"To pray for spiritual unity
among
all
Christian
believers.
"To supply a means for
__lpiritual unity in Christ
among women of all
denominations.
"To encourage women to
he members of and participate in their local churches.
"To teach women about the
boundaries, creative opportunities and the freedoms
in their roles and relationships according to the
Scripture."
.
Edith Martin, Dayton,
treasurer of the state
organization, was speaker at
the anniversary meeting.
Meetings of the group are
open to the publ!c.

H!IDQDIIT!IS
BUY NOW WHILE
THE SELECTION
IS BEST

FOR

CHRISTMAS
.

\.

NEW YORK. CLOTHING HOUSE

126 E. Main Sl

.

Pomero,, 0.

REPRESENTS POST
RACiNE- Elmer Pickens,
a past commander of Racine
American Legion Post 602,
represented the Racine post
at the Veterans Day observance Saturday.
Mrs. Pauline Wolfe, a
member of the post, was
credited with the late last
minute work in reaching its
membersl!ip goal.
SQUAD RUNS
'!be Emergency Unit of the
Middleport Fire Department
was called to 249 N. '!bird
Ave., at 3:28a.m. Sunday for
Ben Davidson, who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted as a medical patient.
Sunday afternoon the
SEOMS Unit took Zelia
Copplck from her home on S.
Second Ave., to the Holzer
Medical Center.

are right across the street."
Police said earlier Sunday
that although there is no
"hard" evidenee linking the
first sill Skid Row stabbing
deaths the murders may be
related.
'!be series of murders of
Skid Row area residents, all
men, began with the deaU! of
Jesse Martinez, 50, whose

School officials
release proposal

body was found in a parking
lot.
Police discounted the
possibility of a mass
By Charlene Hdeflich
murderer, rut said all bad
been stabbed in the upper
torso and all had apparently .
Back in Middleport after several years in TennesSee are
been caught off guard.
Carroll
ami Katie Swanson. Both are retired now and will be
Except for one, all the
spending
some time in their mobile home on Mill St.
stabbings occurred oo or near
You
noticed
we said "some" of their time. We understand
a. weekend.
they really plan to be gadabuuts . In fact they just returned
from Alaska where they visited a daughter, and .are already
thinking about trips to visit their other children.

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Officials representing Ohio's 614
school boards Monday
propoaed a state funding plan
based on pupil need rather
·than dlstf\buling f!late money
equally to wealthy and poor
districts;
Delegates . to the O)lio
School Boards Association
meeting Monday said · a
"pupil - weighted"
distribution method would
provide Ule ' funds to avoid
school closings.
They
voted
over·
whelmingly to support
associat io n r ecommendations
for
the
Legislature to adopt the
complex system that would
place a 20inill tax ceiling on
local districts, with the state
providing fWJds to finance
' schools over that amount.
Delegates debated for
hQurs before adopting 15
proposals, augmented by one
that would direct the state to
Insure local control of state
money.

'

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Emily Kuhn , Vinton ;
Kenneth Millins, Chshire.
SATURDAY
DISCHA1WES
Jean
Roush, John Hunnell, Sr.
Leah McGinnis, Charles
Frazier, Jr.
SUNDAY ADMISSION Alice Rairden, Long Bottom;
Clifford Icenhower,
Pomeroy; Ben Davidson,
Middleport; George Cum'
mins, Racine ; George
Warner, Pomeroy ; Barbara
Blankenship , Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Va.; Joann Justus,
Vinton ; Mary Roush, Racine.
SUNDAY DISCAHRGES Richard Demoss, Edward
Martin, Lee Wood, Brenda
LeMaster.
Holzer .Medical Center
Discharges, Nov. 10
D!SHARGES, Nov . l-10
Arminta Ball, Edith
Bischoff, Holly Boyer,
Barbara Carpenter, Flyd
Case, Jr ; Ellis Cook, Grace
Donaldson, Dollie . Drake,
Melissa Hoffman, Warren
Kimbal, Jackie Merrill,
Lillian Monrie, Beverly
Morgan, Grace Mullins,
James Null , Gerald Patterson, Althea Pruitt,
Lester Rapp, Goldie Rice,
· Hilda Riddle, James Simms,
Pearl Smith, Barbara
Wallace
Discharges, Nov. 11
Carolyn Addis, Donna
Broscious,
Leland
Bumgarner, Mrs. Eddie
Canter and son; Marci
Carroll, Margaret · Dobson,
Luster Hale, Billy Harden,
Jason
Hart,
Everett
Hughes; Mrs. Larry Johnson
and daughter ; Janet Johnson; Mrs. Chales Lawson and
daughter; Helen Manring,
Fredrick Maynard, Adam
Meek, Phillis Morris, Roy
Moses, Judy Norman, Albert
Puerce, Lillie Randolph,
Effie Stievers, Rosemary
Tigyer and Jeremy Tucker.
Blrlb, Nov. 11
Mr. ahd Mrs. Willie Keeton,
son, Jackson
Mr and Mrs. Frank Martinko, daughter, Gallipolis
Mr. and Mrs. Martin

(Continued from page I)
their teachers and other
professional school staff."
'!be intent of these activities, Bowen explained, is
to collect identification infonnation about children who
are suspected of being
handicapped through an
initial survey of homes,
schools and community
agencies.
After all potentially han·
dicapped students have been
identified, a committee of
school personnel will meet in
each district to review
available data and determine
which children suspeected of
being handicapped have need
of educational assessment.
" The home survey Is very
important because through
knowing the handicapped
children and the learning
problems they have, the
districts will be able to plan
an educational program best
suited for the child. This is
our goal - the best possible
education for cblldren With
handicapping conditions."
Any resident with questions
regarding the survey, or any
resident who did not receive a
survey form in the mall and
have children who may hav~
a· potential learning problem
tnat aren't enrolled in achool
should contact: · Joyce
'!borne, Southern Local
Dilltrict Coorclinator at 949- ,
2700; Mary Price, Eastern
Local Dllllrict Coordinator at
985-4292; Marlha Vennarl,
Meigs Local Dilltrlct Coor. dinator at 992-2158; or Jim
Ragen, Meigs County
Coordinator at 992-3883.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DIS CHARGES :
Mrs.
Junior Tucker, Qrimms
Landing; Mrs. Okey VanMeter, Mason; Robert
Williams, Rutland, 0. ; Mrs.
Manford Blessing, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Clayton
Hager, Albany, 0. ; Mrs.
Gerald Pullins, Pomeroy;
Donald Ohlinger, New
Haven ;
Jake
Wallis,
Gallipolis Ferry; Michael
Hawley, Pomeroy ; · Mrs.
Jerry Webster, The Plains,
0.; Mrs. Lowman Jones,
Poin~ Pleasant; Jennifer
Sayre, Point Pleasant ;
McKinley McDade, Leon;
Donald Bandy, Huntington;
Robert
Baker,
Point
Pleasant; John Cook, Henderson; Patricia Candee,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. John
Hughes, Galljpolis Ferry;
Mrs. Kelly Marcum, Vinton,
0 .; Donnie Johnson, West
Columbia; Mrs. Harold Wray
and son, Crown City, 0.;
Ronald Lyons, Mason; James
Culpepper, Gallipolis;
Geraldine Varian, Mason;
Mrs. Glendon
Faulk,
Pomeroy; Tommy Blake,
Ashton; Jody Hall, Northup,
0 .; Ida Brubaker, Jackson,
0 .; Mrs. Fred McComb,
Point Pleasant; Welch Crum,
Lakin; Mrs. Cecil Young,
Mason; Watson Upton, Leon.

Volleyball

17 die

All..· ••

Wallace, daughter, Jackson
Discharges, Nov. 12
Mrs. .ioe Akers and
daughter, John Ambrose,
Alyine Bruce, Mrs. Merrill
Detty and daughter ; Verna
Gibbs, Mrs. Philip Henneman
and son ; Walter J:lyatt,
Odella . Kearns, . Gilbert
Lucas, Effie Mahle, Otto Schweichkart, Dennis Searles,
Ada
Marsha
Walker,
Wasmer and Leta Wiseman.
Bb1hs, Nov. 1%
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Young, son, Wellston
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Griffith, daughter, Mid·
die port
Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Griffith, daughter, Cheshire
Mr. and Mrs. James
Stewart, daughter, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
Kimbler, son, New Boston, 0.

(Continued from page I)
Girard in Trumbull
County.
Sunday
t:olumbus : Patrick J.
Jones, 21, and Tanunie Jones,
19, boU! of Columbus, ldlled
when their pickup rammed a
gas pump and burst into
The Meigs High School
flames.
girls volleyball team was
Georgetown: Toni E. eliminated from district
Griffith, 40, Lynchburg , . tournament play when the
killed In a onevehlcle team was defeated by
accident on Ohio 131 in Brown Waverly Saturday evening at
County .
Waverly.
Canton :
Michael J.
The Waverly team was
Reinhart, 21, Louisville, defeated by Unioto in Ule
killed in a onevebicle finals of the Class M District
accident on a Canton city competition.
street.
Unioto (21-0) will now move
Findlay: Tracy ~ilson, 11, on to the Regionals to be held
Findlay, killed in a one- at Dayton.
The Meigs girls, who had
vehicle accident in Hancock
County.
previously won their Sectional championship, finished
CLINIC CWSED
the season with an imThe
Meigs
County pressive 18.6 recqrd. Coach
Tuberculosis Clinic will be Karen Walker comments that
closed all day on Tuesday and she is very proud of the team
Wednesday due to Tuberculin · and is looking forward to next
s1t1n testing being conducted season.
in the Meigs Sch~ls.

.squad is

nellr

eliminated

Family

"-----,

RaisinG money is not an easy task but hanging right in there
trying to come up with Meigs County's share for the Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp project are Diana Eberts and John Rice, extension agenll; .
·
· And they again remind us that there are county appreciation
awards for donors. Up to $99 the award is a certificate ; up to
$499, a camp booster cap, up to $999, a 4-H paper weight, and
up to $9999, a wall plaque . .
Another appeal from the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society for you to submit. your family history for the
history book.
.
The IJ9ok committee emphasizes that there is no fee for having your family history included in the book. You are nut even
required to purchase one. Just tell abuut your family in 500
words or les.s and send along a picture to the Meigs 'County
. History Book, Pomeroy. '!be committee suggests that the
story be typewritten but even this is not required.
In the next couple of weeks, Margaret Parker will be conducting workshops in the county to assist residents in getting
their history down. The book committee suggests that you
write abuut special family things, include pioneer tales and
current activities.
Their slogan- "Preserve Yesterday and Today fur Tomorrow !"
If you don't, who will ?

Placed &lt;!n a 11" x 14"
Dec;o Plaque atthe·
Middleport Fire Station .
Two Days
Dec;ember 2nd and 3rd

Photos Taken by Majestic Studios
Sponsored by: Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi
Sonya Ohlinger 992-2426
Patsy Ogdln 992-7487

.FHA releases rumual report .
Farmers
Home
Ad·
ministration has released a
report on its volume of
business for the fiscal year
ending September 30.
'!be agency contributed a
grand total of $143,141,690 in
loans and grants in the state
of Ohio this past year, including $36,3661,750 ·in Farmers
Programs,
and
$44,454 ,420 in Housing
Programs, Balance of funds
have been spent on various
Community Service
Programs,
in c ludin g
Business and Industrial

e

1976 SV AC cfiAMPIONS - Coach Joe Mitchem's Eastern Eagles are
the 1978 football chamions of the Southern Valley Athletic Conference.
Eastern completed its 10 games schedule Saturday night crushing
Southern, 68-0. '!be win gave Ule Eagles a 9-1overall record and :;..o mark
in theSVAC. Team members are , front row, left to right, Kenny Larkins,

•

at y
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Following a t wo-hou r
discussion on a proposed rate
hike by the Po inTView
Television Co. on cable
television service in the town,
the entire matter was tabled
until the next meeting when

The World Today

(Continued frorq page 1)
The reporter f&lt;r Cairo's AI Abram newspaper said he was
shown the coffin by monks at an ancient Christian monastery
in Egypt's western desert. He said the monka told him they
were confident it contained the remains of John, whom
Christians venerate as the precursor of Jesus.

By ROBERT SHEPARD
". ' 'W"ASH!NGTON (UP! ) Retail food pri ces will
probably increase next year
at a rate of between 6.percent
and 10 percent, and will stay
slightly above the inflation
rate for Ule rest of the
eco nomy, the Agriculture
· Department said today.
Retail food prices Ulis year
are averaging . about 10
'
percent above last year's
l veterans of Meigs County were' on hand for
level and are exceeding the
~tUrday's observance of Veterans Day held by American Legion Posts of Pomeroy,
overall rate of inflation . The
Middleport, Racine and Rutland. The group includes: front row, I tor, Albert Hoffner,
increases this year were
Walter Bunce and Raymond Whaley; back row, I to r, Fred Goeglein, E. J . Hill Lincoln
concentrated primarily in tbe
Russell and Crill Bradford. All are members of Drew Webster Post, Pomeroy, except
first
half of 1978.
Bradford who belongs to Racine Post 602, and Bunce, a member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128
The incr eases ste mmed
Middleport.
.
'
mainly from reduced beef
supplies and strong consU!Der
SPECIAL MEE.TING
demand ; a situation that may
develop again next year .
A meeting of all Meigs
J. Dawson Ahalt, acting
County Parents Interested
chairman
of
· th e
in · the establishment of a
departm ent 's Food and
nursery school has been
Agriculture Outlook Situation
called for 9:30 a.!ll.
Board, also noted prices this
Wednesday at the home of
OOLUMBUS,Oblo (UP!) -As 30,000Columbus bus riders
Mrs. Robret Buck, 129 year were pushed up by
vie for limited downtown parking spots, the Central Ohio
higher pro cessin g and
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Transport Authority has told its striking drivers and
.marketing costs and excess
mechanics that it ''reaffirms" the wage and benefit package
Parents who are in- rains in California that {(a.
they say is inadequate.
.
terested but cannot attend maged fresh produce early in
OOTA will meet with the workers in the presence of a
are asked to phone Mrs. Ule year .
federal mediator today.
Ahalt said beef supplies
Buck as to their Interest at
will
drop further next year.
99%-3883. Children may
Much
more poultry and
accompany parents to
NEW ROCHEJ..LE , N. Y. (UP!) -)'lew Rochelle police
possibly
pork later in Ule year
tomorrow's meeting.
today announced the arrest of a stage hand in connection wiU!
should
stabilize
total meat
the bludgeooing death of country and western singer Linda
"Charl,e" Scott in her New Rochelle mansion.
Police said they arrested Michael Spearman, 21, who told
police he lived in Miss Scott's $150,000, Tudor style mansion,
and charged him with second degree murder,

Youth held on murder charge
ATLANTA (UPI} - A 19-year~ld Atlanta youth was
charged Sunday with the kidnapping and murder of an ~ory
University coed and with killing his alleged accomplice to
silence him about the death.
Homicide Lt. W. K. Perry said George Edward Burnett
was arrested early Suooay, questioned and then charged with
two counts each of murder, kidnapping and armed robbery. He
was held without bond.

Annstrong's finger severed
- - --

i~~~~)~r_h_e_w_or_fd_To_d_a_y....,

LOUISVTI..LE, Ky. (UPI) - Although the blood supply to
the reattached ring finger of former astronaut Nell A.
Armstrong has been restored, Jewish Hospital officials said It
would be several days before success of the ope~ation could be
determined.
.
A surgical team, led by Dr. Joaeph E. Kutz, stitched the
severed finger of Armstrong, the world's first man on the ·
moon, Saturday night. It was ripped off Friday when he
jumped from a truck at his sut.Jrban Cincinnati home and his
wedding band caught on a barn door.

COTA considers offer

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

ELBERFELDS

Murder suspect booked

NQrthridge teachers strike
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)- Teachers in the suburban Dayton
school district of Northridge went on Strike today in a contractdispute after votlllg 84-46 to reject a new contract.
Superintend~! Clarence Jarboe says the propoSed twoyear pact, offered wring an eight-hour negotiating sesllion
Monday night, provided for an average salary hike of more
than $3.100 over the life of Ule contract.

Delinquency charges filed
AKRON, . Ohio (UP!) - Charges of delinquency, ·
mailalaughter and dispensing drugs have been requested
against a 17-year~ld Cleveland girl in the drug death of her
.c:owlin.
Summit County· Sheriff's deputies said Bonita Bradford,
13, Highlald Heights, died Oct .. 25 from a drug overdose taken
during an Oct. 22 rock concert at Ule Coliseum in Richfield .

••••••••••••••••••••••••
• • FROM YOUR. COLOR NEGATIVE •
•••
•
••
••

•••
••
••.
•

only age each

............... •·•........
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY.
..•................•....•,.
. 'OFFER EXPIRES: DEC•.1ST;
•

'.

.

Greg Scarbrough, Tony Kennedy, Dennis Durst and Jeff Goble. Second
row, left to right, Rus;;ell Starcher, Ray Werry, Rodney Keller, Randy
Browning, Tim Dillon, Greg Hayman and Greg Wigal. Back row left to
right, Don Erwin, Danny Spencer, Brian White, Randy Keller , Greg
Guinther , Rusty Wigal, Brian Bissell, Mike Hayman and Mark Norton.

en tine

~

Fifteen Cents

Vol.

~9.

No. 149

Opinion varied among question why services wer~
council members last night. being
chang ed
when ,
Some said they had public perhaps, cust omers are
indications that subscribers presently satisfied with the
wanted the change to be services they are now
made. Others said residents receiving.
want the service to remain as
After the lengthy "pro and
it is.
con" session, council voted 4Another counc ilman in· 2 to table the matter until the
dicated people oppose the next me•tine . Walters and
increase in rates and felt they
1Continued on page 10)
could get al0ng with two
channels blacked out. The
company has reported that
would happen if Middleport
does not go along with the
price hike.
Mr s.
Mary
Skinner
Meigs Co unt y Sheriff
averag e rise in retail food protested the removal of
supplies.
" However , inflationary prices could be as small as 6 Channel ·l. Mrs. Skinner said James J. Proffitt reported
she bought cable television Terri Lyn ne Williamson,
pressures will continue to percent."
push up the costs of the
"Orr the other hand, if service because of the Ohio alias Nicole Jones, 25, Route
which
were 1, Kenova, W. Va., entered a
processing, and marketing of weather fails to help and sta tions
prom
ised.
She
said
she
gets plea of guilty to an indictment
food after it leaves the farm. inflatio(l worsens, food prices
This component accounts for could rise as much as 10 good reception on Channel 4 charging her with passing a
forged prescription when she
roughly 60 percent of the final percent for the year," he and wants it to remain.
On the other hand, another appea red before Judge John
value of food ."
said.
"At this stage it seems resident, Don Mullen, point ed C. Bacon in the Mei gs
Ahalt told the Food and
Agriculture Outlook most 'likely we will see a year- that cable service is a luxury Common Pleas Court MonConference that if total food to-year advance somewhere item · and indicated that day.
Ms. Williamson was given a
supplies are abundant next between the two extremes, residents can do without if
year and if inflationary but probably at a rate slighUy they don 't feel the changes to six months to five years
pressures on processing and abuve Ule rate of inflation for be made are right for them. sentence in the Ohio Women 's
Solicitor Bernard Fu lt z, Reformatory at Marysville.
marketing costs ease. "the the rest of the economy."
who met with co uncil
Mrs. Williamson had been
regarding the matter, after so ught by Ohio Authorities
heari ng aspects of the since her indictment by . a
proposal, pointed out ttle Meigs County Grand JurY.
increase being asked is about She was recently arrested in
0
j 17 percent. He suggested Mason, W. Va. and waived
By United Press lntematlooal
·.·. council ask who requested the extradition.
- Washington : The Agriculture Department reports retail increased services and to
food prices probably will increase next year at rate of 6
percent to 10 percent, and stay slightly abuve the inflation rate
for the rest of Ule economy.
-Olicago: The First National Bank of Chicago, the nat ion's
eighth largest hank, hikes its prime rate by 0.2a percent, to II
percent.
- New York: The Dow Jones industrial average hits a sevenmonth low of 792.q1 on Ule New York stock Exchange as a hike
in Ule prime rate fuels investor fear of recession .
-New York : Barry Bosworth, head of the Council on Wage
Pomeroy's beloved Norma there during her long career
and Price Stability, warns the nation will be hit by a recession Tracy Goodwin, a Pomeroy with the help of her four
even lflOre severe than the 1975 slump if President Carter's business woman for 50 years, children . The children were
new program fails to moderate inflation .
will be among the honorees at called upon to help in many
- 'fokyo: The dollar remained virtually unchanged against a dinner meeting to he staged · ways including deliveries and
Ule Japanese yen in ' Tokyo today, closing at 188.65 yen, by the Pomeroy Chamber of two of the sons even used a
Commerce at 6:30 p.m. canoe to make deliveries
compared with 188:80 at Monday's close.
Wednesday 8'1 the Meigs Inn . . across the river.
An av id sender of greeting
Although flowers were
cards and remembrances for inexpensive (roses $.1 a dozen
all occasions, Mrs. Goodwin and corsages for 25 cents),
has touched the lives of Mrs. Goodwin kept her
hundreds and hundreds of family together and did well
Meigs County residents. In in the nora! business. During
her fl oral business, she her 50-year career, she
always "tossed in a little prepared fl owers for two
something extra" for the celebrities including Alvin
customer.
York. World War I hero who
Mrs. Goodwin, who retired was entertained by Capt. and
from business in 1974, is a Mrs. Tom Jones in Middaughter of the late Daniel dleport and for 0 . 0. Mclnand Blanche Tracy and grew tyre, famed writer, when his
up on a farm on Ball Run in body . was return ed to
Meigs County . She drove a Gallipolis for burial.
horse lind buggy to attend
Mrs. Goodwin was a loyal
Pomeroy High School and supporter of the Pomeroy·
was a 1911 graduate.
F ire Department
and
She first became involved Emergency Squad through
in the flower business with the years serving for more
her late hu sband, Elmer than 10 years as a volunteer
Goodwin, who built a green- dispatcher . She is a member
house in a partnership on of Pomeroy Chapter 172,
Mulberry Ave ., and Mrs. Order of Eastern Star; Mary
Goodwin was put to work. Shrine, White Shrine of
However, the greenhouse Je.rusalem, and the Meigs
went into receivership and Temple Pythian Si~ers .
was sold in 1931. By this time,
Her eldest son died in 1969.
. Mrs. Go odw in had four The other children are Tracy
children and. her marriage who resides in Cincinnati;
had ended Lo divorce.
Mary Goodwin Bartels who
Alth ough physically lives in Stevensville, Mich.,
handicapped since childhood, and David, Brick St .,
state officers. Attending were left to right, Lowell
Mrs. Goodwin purchased a Pomeroy, with whom she
Ridenour , Rhonda Reuter, Jeff Daniels, and Dorsel
home at Ill E. Second St., makes her home. Mrs.
Thomas.
and operated her business Goodwin is 86.

Middleport Village council $5.25 for senior citizens and
met in regular session disabled persons. The firm
indicated that Channel 4,
Monday night.
Columbus,
would be removed
The company recently
and
the
two
local channels
proposed a rate increase of
would
be
combined
into one.
from 16 to $7 a month for the
serv ice to subscribers in ·Two 24-hour channels would
Middleport and from $4.50 to be added to the service.

Retail food prices
•
expected· to zncrease

HAVEANICEWEEK.

E

systems, community facility
loans and Rural Development
Planning Grants.
The Farmers Home Ad-'
ministration office
in
Pomeroy, which conducts the
agency's busfness in Meigs,
Athens, and Vinton Counties
contributed a total of
$2,070,170 in fin anc ial
assistance to these three ·
counties. This figure includes
$382,500 in assistance . to
fa rmers, $607,670 in housing
programs, and $1,080,000 in
Comm un ity
Service
Programs.

Cable TV hike issue tabled

.,

$fi15

president, said schools need a
new source of funding
determined "by the needs of
children and not by the
wealth o( the school district. "
He said the differing needs
could be reflected by
indexing factors, with a basic
student allocation amount
(Continued on page 10)

Pomeroy-Middlep()rt, Ohio
Tuesday, November 14, 1978

~oiliiruU
ONLY

CAll

It doesn't seem possible, what with halleween hardlv over, .
but already everyone seems to be looking toward Christmas.
Decorations are out, parades are being planned, tinsel and
baubles are going into store windows, and special activities
are being planned.
.
It was nice to learn that again this year the Middleport
Garden Club and the Middleport Amateur Gardeners will be
staging a home lighting contest. Through the years the contests have contributed significantly toward inspiring residents
to decorate, thereby making the village more festive for the
season.
Then being resumed this year is the Extension Service's
"holiday happening." It has been set for'Nov. 28 at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church and will include a variety of holiday hintsfestive foods , holiday cake decorating, crafts, toys, and
decorating tips.
There will be both afternoon and evening sessions to fit into
most everyone's schedule.

The amendment was introduced by Abrams Ottolangli
(cq), president of the
Worthington School Board.
He said it would assure
schools of state nioney "wiU!
no strings attached. Local
control makes our schools
what. Uley are," he added.
' Bryce . Kendall, OSBA

Violence frustrates attempt
TEHRAN,Iran (UP!)- Violence from !he Caspian Sea to
the southern ollflelds in frustrating the shah's attempi to
t:estore order and is threatening Americans and other foreign
workers who hold eriUcal positions in Iran's economy .
Soldiers fired on a rioting crowd at Lahijan Monday,
ldllln~ two youths and a 4-year~ld buy and injuring 22 others.

'

Plans
moving.ahead
CX&gt;LU.MBUS (UP!) - '!be Ohio Rail Transportatibn

J

~

Ailthorily Ia moving ahead with plans to ooy a 3:knile stretch
of ~banclooed rail line part of which runs by the Honda
Motorcycle Plant beiilg constructed near Marysville.
The authority, at its meeting Monday, voled to award
three contracts to appraise the real estat~ and fixtures 6n the
track that Erie Lackawanna abandoned in 1976.

ATTEND FALL CONFERENCE - Four students
representing Ule DECA class at Meigs High School
attended the Ohio DECA Fall Delegates Conference in
Columbus on Ckt. 10and 11. They were there to elect the·

Woman given
prison tenn

\(\(' 'i~~:~·:;;:;:;;::::;;:::;::;:i l
a

Former florist
will be honored

•

�-~

• - · 'l'h•

•-

n..nv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Nov. H, 1978
\

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

COMMENTARY

Wff~ \CVR{? IN\ERE?T
R~e~ ...T\11~ I~ J\t..t,
\VE Cf\~ t&gt;.ffo\(V

Donald F. Graff

A smoldering issue

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters

By Don Graff

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. ( NEA) - The massive hulk
stands on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean, a
monwnent to the bad faith, arrogance and IIICompetence
that have become the hallmarks of the controversy over
the future of nuclear power.
Officially, 11 IS known as the Diablo Canyon Power Plant,
a Pacific Gas &amp; Electric Co. ( PG&amp;E) generating station
that houses two nuclear reactors, each capable of
produciiig about 1,100 megawatts of electnc1ty
Unofficially, D1ablo Canyon - located almost exactly
nudway between Los Angeles and San FranciSco - has
become a symbol of everything that can go wrong III the
IIIcreasiiigly acrunoruous nationwide dispute over the role

Lawrence

GETIING MORE CALCWM
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would like to ask 1f beef
bonemeal w1th calcmm,
phosphorus, traces of zinc, ,

pota s stum ,

copper,

magnesmm and manganese
ts a good medicme to take 1f
the body needs more
calcmm ? The dosage IS two
tablets per meal,or a total of
stx tablets per day. And this
provides a daily take of 982
mgs of calcmm and 441 mgs.
of phosphorus.
Could these' tablets be
harmful to one w1th
diverticulosis? They don't
dissolve very qu1ckly, and
there IS a gramy res1due qwte
a while before 1t all gets soft
How long should these be
taken and would there be any
s1de effects?
DEAR ~ADER- I don't
have any obJections to a person who needs calc1wn using
these. One of the 'important
pomts m taking calciwn IS to
use substances that contain
more
calcium
than
phosphoriiS, and these do
Many of our foods contam
an equal amount of calc1wn
a nd phosphorus, or actually
more phosphorus than
calc1wn.That's why some of
these foods don't help much
In preventing bone loss from
the skeleton
I see yoij'd be gettmg about
one gram ol calcmm a day
and that's a good amount,
particularly for an older person who wants to prevent
softening of the bones
You ra1sed a good question
about diverticulosis We are
always concerned about
anything a person swallows if
that person has these little
pockets of the colon The
danger IS that something Will
lodge in them. And there are
a number of pills that are
prescr1 bed, or that people can
purchaSil for themselves, that
don't dissolve very qu1ckly
and may, m fact, pass
th1 ough tbe entire digestive
system Without ever dissolvmg. That also means that
some of those p1lls don't do
much good - at least for the

:'J
u(

.,.

..l
Take 16, 24, II and 8 and what do you have'
•
The Great American Smokeout, reviSited.
November 16 1s the date on wh1ch the American Cancer
Soc1ety 1s agam askmg the smokers of the coWltry to e••
abstam from their (Choose One: habit/VIce/pleasure) for
a day.
•
One day - b1g deal Why bother'
,
Because, as the ACS repeatedly puts 11, anyone who can .:;
quit for one day has taken the first step toward qulttmg for ~ '
good
.
Last year's Smokeout, by ACS reckoning, bad 24 percent · '"
of light smokers, II percent of moderate puffers and 8
percent of the heav1ly hooked swearing off for the 24 hours.
What percentage of these may actually have taken a nett ,,.
step, and then another and another, 1s quest10n probably , ,,
answerable q,nly by smokers and ex-smokers themselves. . ,
But some people out there are takmg steps The smokers
1n the population are reckoned to have declmed since 1966
from 40 to a current 33 percent.
Ant1-smoking pressures are clearly having an effect. ~
Constder
:::
• Research mto the consequences of smokmg contmues, .and the conclusiOns contmue to be pretty much 1n line with
the 1968 U S surgeon general's negative verdict. Just this
year, the American Medical Association ended a 14-year
study of the questiOn, comnusswned by the tobacco
mdustry, w1th the eonclus10n that smokmg IS indeed a
health problem.

-·

""

of atomic energy as a source of conunerc1al power

'

Loan request back to lower court
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
state Controllmg Board, confronted With a request fer an
$8 6 million loan to Columbus
ctty schools, has tossed the
ball back to the school
distnct's court.
The board refused Monday
to approve the loan until the
Columbus
Board
of
Educa'tion formally agrees to
accept the strmgs attached
by the state, or outlines any
changes needed
After two hours of
discusSion, the Cootrollmg
Board directed Columbus
school board President Paul
Langdon to return next
Mooday with official consent
from his members
"We can take care of that
tomorrow afternoon," said
Langdon.
Langdon said he was
"fairly certain" his board
would approve the payback
conditions,
but
the
Controlling Board wanted it
tied down.
Rep Myrl H Shoemaker,
DBourneville, a Controlling
Board member, told Langdoo
to brmg With h1m any
variations m the terms and
hmitat10ns of the loan
requested by the school
board
Langdon had asked for
"fiexibility" for the school
board to curtail services m
the areas 1t sees f1t.
"We want to see some
specifics on the fiexlbUity to
request," said Shoemaker
Meanwhile, the Controlling

Board unanimously approved
a $138,973 loan to the Paint
Valley Local School District
III Ross County, averting a
Nov. 16 closing of that
district's schools.
Columbus Schools Superintendent Joseph DaVIS told the
board schools in biB district
would have to close Nov. 22
unless the state loan were
granted.
If the schools were to close,
Davis said, the district would
face an additional $7 mlllion
bill in the ferm of unemployment compensation and overtime costs fer makeup time
"I see this loan as a stopgap
to keep schools open through
December," said Davis.
Columbus schools will
begin receiving new local tax
dollars to pair with thell'
normal monthly state subsidy
as of Jan. I.
DaviS
said
he
is
recommending that another
new operating levy be tried
next March to gam money to
repay the state loan and to
keep
schools
gomg.
Meanwhile, he sa1d, severe
cuts are being made III school
budgets.

John M. Parsons, executive
director
of
school
management assistance w1th
the state Department of
Education, said the loan
would
"get
Columbus
through 1978 and give them
time to go to the voters and
get a levy, which iB their only
true answer for 1979."
Columbus has lost four new
tax levy attempts smce 1970
and has made $14 milllon m
spending reductions since
1976, acoerding to Parsons.
He sa1d 86 mere teaching
poSitions could be eliminated
before the district reaches
the absolute state minlmwn
standard
The spending reductions
seemed to draw a favorable
reaction
from
some
Controlling Board members.
So d1d the strict repayment
reqwrements, which call for
the loan to be - repaid in
installments between June
1979 and June 1980, at 5
percent interest
The mterest rate 1s higher
than Cleveland was forced to
pay for its loan ,' and the state
iB not allowing I percent
leeway in spending for

Columbus as 1t did for
Cleveland.
Some Controlling Board
members were upaet that
Columbus bas joined the
Cincinnati school district in
challenging
the
constitutionality of the state
loan fund while trying to
borrow from it at the same
time.
"This iB the epitome of
effrontery," said Sen. Harry
Meshel, D-YoWlgStown. "I
would not want you to do
anything unconstitutional, so
I would suggest that you not
accept any of this money."
The Paint Valley loan went
through easily . It was
presented by Parsons and
liloemaker's son, Ronald, the
former Paint Valley district
superintendent.
liloemaker said the district
will be able to live with the
terms of repaymg the loan,
though he conceded ''we'll
have a devil of a time passing

• Economtcs are also involved. Business is conunencing

to see smoking as bad busrness. A Wall Street Journal "
survey c1tes nwnerous mstances of firms banning smoking
altogether or restrictmg it to designated areas Something
like 30 percent of all bUSIIIesses now limit smoking in some
respect, accord10g to one survey, and 3 percent pay ~
employees not to smoke. Some have ceased hiring ,

smokers

• The prmc1pal reason is that smoking IS commg to be ·•
v1ewed as an added busmess expense, boosting hous~keep- •
mg and personnel costs. The annual cost of work absences •
and premature deaths of employees, frequently at their ~
per1od of greatest value to their compames, IS put at $19
billion by the Department of Health, Education and
Welfare Another $6 billion Is charged against health-care
costs attributable to smoking-related illnesses.
.
• The most noticeable decl10e m smoking is taking place
not 1n the offfce and shop but on the campus, however. The
falloff vanes from school to school, but surveys indicate It ~
1s general amon~ the college population. At Princeton, a '
check earlier thiS year put smokers at 7 percent of the ·:
student body, down in a decade from 45 percent.
•'
• The campus trend, however, is to a degree offset by a
noticeable mcrease m smoking among high school students, particularly girls.
• This development could eventually contnbute to
another set of statistics. Increased smoking among women
COIIICides w1th a doubling of their IWlg cancer rate in tess
than a decade, accord10g to an American Health Insurance
Institute report, while the rate for men remains relatively "
stable. The female-&lt;&gt;ver-male longevity advantage is ·;
decreasing and, according to one researcher's reading
sometime after the turn of the century men could bo! •
a levy."
outlivmg women on the average.
A 7.3-mill levy was passed
• Desp1te the proportional decline in the smoking
in 1977, but some of that real population, cigarette consumption bas been rising up
estate money was rolled back almost 100 billion III a decade to total sales of 573.4 bill~n in
by state law, cutting the 1977. The explanatiOn, however, may lie in the bulging U.S.
population profile in the 25-44 age group, the post-war
distnct short
babies and the heaviest smoking cate~ory. As they drop off
in the coming decades, a corresponding drop in coliBwnption may be anticipated.
So it's going.
,
On the very eve of the Great American Smolt:eout, the
anti-smokmg forces would appear to have lost a big one in
the defeat by California voters of a statewide smokingout fer a drive, parked behind limitation referendwn. But as California went in this
a Burlington synagogue,
rtlcUiar instance, the nation has not been going in the
drew a revolver and began
ng rii.II. Twenty-two states already have have laws to
shooting her daughter.
some degree restrictmg smoking m public places.
Defense atterney Olarles
Tetzlaff asked Gibson fer a
suspended sentence Mooday,
saying a prUIOn term would
serve no purpose except
"pure, naked punlslunent for
the sake of revenge on the
part of society."
Psychiatrist William Woodruff compared the case to "a
Greek tragedy." He said the By KENNETII R. CLARK
siaymg was the culmination United Press International
G-RATED: If anyone in show biz ls squeaky clean these
of one minor catastrophe
after
another.
He days, It's the brother-&amp;ster team of Donny and Marte Osmond
recommended that Mrs. Dietl - and now somebody has recognized the fact. The laurels
came Mooday night in New York from an ~rgar.lzatlon called
not be jailed,
"I would anticipate that if "Mocallty in Medla.'' In citing the Osmond.,, along with
she is placed in a prison humorist Sam l.evenoon, the Rev. Morton HID - group
setting, some of the president - said, "They provide the American people with
catastrophe will overwhelm perfocmances grounded In a sense of values and a sense of
her because she will have family." Marie couldn't make it to the (ll'!!sentatlon, 80 Donny
scme tlme Ill think about it," did the hooors for both. Past media morality laureates Include
Ed Salllvan, Helen Hayes and ArlhiD' Fiedler.
:Woodruff sald
ON 'lHE HOOK: Olarlie McCarthy and Mortimer 5nerd
Orlttenden County State's
Attorney Mark Keller had were more than jilst dununies m the bo118ehold of the late
asked for a zero-to ~year Edgar Bergea. Candice Bergea says as a toddler, llhe thought
term and recommended that they were her brothers. They breakfuted with her every
Mrs. DieU be required to mormng, telling her w!It up straight and eat her cereal while
actually spend some tlme in her ventriloquist father sat at the table in apparent silence . .•
New York magazine says the rude awakening came one day
prison.
Mrs. DieU was told to when Candice opened a closet door and found slJ: replicas of
report Wednesday to the "lx-other" Charlie - hanging on hookll. The magazine says
Chittenden
County that story - and many more - will be told In a book she's
Correctional Center to begin writing about life in a home with more voices than people,
ONE-TAKE CARTER: That Southern«awl sheriff viewers
serving her sentence.
will see when a fllm called ''Flatbed Annie and Sweellepie
Female Truckers" hits TV screens in January is no refug~
from a "yawl in a heap a trouble" ccmmerclal. That's BWy
Carter - jn his firll dramatic role. He was visibly nervous
rehearsing oo locatim at the Lazy 3 Cafe - a truckstop in
California's Mojave desert. But director Robert Greeawald
says he's "very cooperative, very am:loUR to work and in the
tradltim of all actors, he's already adllbblng." Called back to
proceeding witnout tne repeat a scene for doaeups, Bllly performed flawlesaly. EJ:.
perrnlssloo of the trial court. claimed "costar" Arthur Godfrey, ''OnHake Bllly" - and
Vlolaters may be fined up to the first brother grinned a familiar grin.
f100 or jailed for up to slJ:
AQUI SE HABLA ... : M.A.S.H star Lorellll Swll speakll no
mmths.
Spanish. Her Mexican houaelteeper speaks nothing elae, and
The law was challenged thai makes fer something of a cuomunicatlons problem.
when the Olarleston Gazette Solutlm: Michel 'lbooaa1 -language mentor to the stars for
and the Otarleston Dally the past 30 years. Mlas S~ and her housekeeper are laking
Mall printed lleries Feb. 10 leseons in each other'• llmguages under TIKmaa' Hollywood ·
naming a 14-year-Gid youth tutelage. In the past, his students have Included Gnee hlly
wbo had been charged with Woody Allen, Rllqael Welch, Aall Baaeroft and Carl Reiner:
the fatal shooting ol another
GLIMPSES: Curie Fllller wlll holt the Nov. 18 edition of '
student at a junior higll NBC-TV's "Saturdliy Night Live" In New Yerk ... Red IIIUou
acbool.
will be in New Yerk next week to pmnote Warner Brothers'
In the same day's editim, "Movie, Movie," In which he ccstarswlth o.rp C. leGit ad
the Gazette 'tan an editorlal 1'rllb Van Devere ... The Onema Malteup AIM:Iatlon in
explaining 118 declslon to Hollywood has picked five sets of what it Clllla ''tbe 1J1011t
Jllli'POIICif violate the statute, llypootic eyes In the wocld," and they belong thll yur to ·
which i! said was "unwise Sophia Loren, fashion model Cillllaa FeJTare l'riDeell
and poaalbly lllepl."
Grace, CBS-TV llpClr1acaater JOe Kft!MIIy mid Frendl '
"My own feeling Ia that the recording star SbeDa ... A lady cop named GlGrla ~ Meillday
public interest In being in- became warden
the Broo11 Ho1111e of Detention for Men
formed of acts of violence in making her the flrat 1llm8D em- to bead 111 all~
schoola outweighs the correctional facility In the city of New Yerk ... Elletl . ..,.,
BIDIIIII 11111'1 wbo "
undellrabWty of brealtlng a Jllelt len • and L&amp;au
law, particularly a bad one," llhowed up Monday at a ~ followilw a special Nft Yerk :
screening ol the flbn vet'llon of "Same 'llme, Next Year" ...
wrote editor Doo Mar11h.

Mother denied mercy

begged fer mercy. But a
judge denied her request and
sentenced Mrs. Dietl to a
maxunum 15 years in pi'ISOn
for second-degree murder.
"I feel I gave up m&gt;: life so
that she would be saved, and I
E. Lamb, M.D.
didn't care about giving up
my life for her," a sobbing
Mrs. Dietl told Superior Court
person who takes them
Judge Ernest Gibson.
If the pills really don't
"But now I do," she said.
dissolve very readily, I would
Mrs.
DieU's husband and
I MUST NOT LOSE
suggest grmdmg them mto a
four
surviving
children- IN MEMORY
MY SAVIOUR
powder and puttmg the p1lls
three
daughters
and
a son OF MOTHER
mto a httie b1t of nulk or . If I should lose a loved one,
wept
on
a
courtroom
bench
By Anna Marie McHaffie
water and drmkmg the sol u- My heart 1\'0Uld feel much
behind
her.
After Glow
pam,
tiOn That would certamly
G1bson conceded Mrs. Dietl
A small rose bush grew
prevent any posstb1hty of But if I kept my Sav1our,
was
not a threat to society
and gave to the world
small undissolved portiOns of He'd br10g relief agaiii.
and
he acknowledged a
the pill lodging ms1de one of If I should lose possessions, Fragrance and beauty, anew.
prison
term would not bring
the httle pockets of the colon .
My friends and even health, It slowly formed a bud
back
her
dead daughter,
And then gradually a roseTo g1ve you more mform- If I st1ll kept my Saviour,
Judy
shown.
tion about the diverticulosis I'd have the greater wealth.
But, he said, a suspended
Its fragrance was carried by
that you have, I am sending
sentence
and mere probatlm
the Wind.
you The Health Letter But if I lost my Saviour,
"would faU to accomplish
Its beauty was soon known
nwnbere !Hi, DtvertiCulosls. I don't know what I'd do,
punishment "
And then one day the
Other readers who want this For life would be a failure
"Each person must live
mformabon can send 50 cents Wtthout His love so true.
beautiful rose faded
their
own lives and make
w1th a long, stamped, soli- If I should lose my Saviour, The bush was left desolate,
their
own
decisions," Gibson
addressed envelope for 1t. Ad- My heart would be so sad,
alone,
,
S8ld
before
Imposing the
dress your request to me m There'd be no one to comfort, For the wmd even took the
sentence.
care of this newspaper, P 0
petals away,
No one to make me glad.
When pleading guilty in
Box 1551, Radio City Station, •
But there remamed the after
September,
Mrs. Dietl told
New York, NY 10019
glow, that day
If I should lose my Sav1our,
the
court
that
Judy had
DEAR DR LAMB - I have I'd dread each passing day,
become
mvolved
With
a pimp
trouble getting my food down
A small g1rl grew
I'd be afraid of dying,
in
Bostoo,
where
she
was
It goes down for a while and And debts I'd have to pay;
And gave the world
attending
school.
can't go mto the stomach and If I should lose my Saviour, Honor, good character and
She told the court of the day
comes hack up. Is there a How sad would he my end,
charity, true.
la.'ll
May when she took Judy
cause for this?
Wtth no one there beside me, She cared for tile sick, the
DEAR READER - Yes , No one to be J11Y Friend.
chlld,
you have an obstructiOn of
The lonely, the sad, the blue.
some type. E1ther m the If I should lose my Sav10ur, She worked for her ,family's
esophagus (food tube), or at I'd face an endless mght
well being,
the place where the Somewhere
in
outer Never complaining, she
esophagus JOinS the stomach.
taught her children wisely,
darkness,
This may be a sunple muscle Without one ray of light;
too.
By CYNTHIA MILUl
spasm It can be due to scarr- Yes, I'd be lost forever,
Praymg and duty and helping
WASHINGTON (UPI)
mg of the lower part of the And lose the blest reward
others
Supreme Court today
The
esophagus or 11 could even be Which has been freely offered Were a few of the things she
agreed
to examine the
a maltgnan c y of the To aU who love the Lord.
d1d do.
constltutimallty
of a West
esophagus
Slowly the years went by,
Virginia
law
barring
Your doctor will have to ex- If I should lose my Saviour, And this grand lady grew
newspapers
from
pubUshlng
amme the esophagus and up- I'd loile that Home above,
older;
the names of children
per stomach area to see what I'd lose my soul forever,
Her footsteps slowed in pace
involved
In
juvenile
1s causmg the obstructwn And lose God's wondrous The Holy Word she read
proceedings
without
first
1tself. I would urge everyone
daUy, always.
love,
getting
the
judge's
approval.
who has such a history to For m the day of Judgement, Deeds of kindness filled her
West Virginia's top court
have an urunediate medical He'd say "depart from me/'
days.
baa
lll'1lclt down the statute
exammat10n: Only in this way And I would have to suffer
Lovihg and kind were her
"because
It creates an
can proper trealment be Thru --~ eternity,
ways.
lmpermiJslble
prior rettralnt
started.
And then she was called away
m
the
freedom
of the p-eu,"
I must i &gt;t lose my Savio~, Those left were sad and in a ,
The
Supreme
Court will
Tuesday
daze.
I must k, &gt;ep close to Him, ·
bear
argwnents
and rule
The friendship of Dav1d I must not get dl!courag~ Yet m their he~ they knew,
later
thls
term
m
an
appeal
and Jonathan will always be E'en tho' the way grows dim. They would ever rtllllember
by
Kanawha
County
the
love
the class1c example of an He'll always stay beside me,
Of their mother so good and- Prosecuting Attorney aetua
mseparable relatiOnship be- If I will watch and pray,
Hanley.
tween two men
true.
And trust in Hun completely
At Issue Is a West VIrginia
"... Tbe ooul of Jonathan To guide me day by day.
For she gave them an after
law
forbidding
any
was knll with the soul of
glowComposed June 19, 1965,
newspaper
from
publishing
David, and Jonathan loved
by Mrs. R1ley Pigott, Long For she loved them so.
blm as bls own soul." - I
the name of a chUd In
Bottom,
Ob10 45743.
S.m. 18: 1
connection wtth any juvenlle

HEALTH.

While the Bengals did make
the game mteresting with
thell' desperation raUy, they
also handed Oakland every
advantage lt could want by
losing three fumbles and
throwing four interceptlms.
Oakland,
by
contrast,
surrendered no fumbles and
had no passes intercepted.
Four of Oakland's five
t.Quchdowns were the direct
result of Bengal turnovers.

..

I

The Diablo Canyon hulk

Because the Califorma coast 1s laced w1th sub-surface
fault lrnes, the utility company conducted extensive
geologiC and seiSmiC surveys 10 1965 and 1966 to search for
underground rock fonnat10ns that nught someday produce
an earthquake.
No faults were found, but PG&amp;E never conducted any
offshore tests - even though the plant IS located directly
on the coast. The Atonuc Energy Commission (AEC)
1ssued construction permits for the two generatrng uruts 10
April 1968 and Decembet 1970.
In January 1971, two geologists employed by the Shell Oil
Co to search for offshore petrolewn deposits published the
results of the1r work in a scientific journal. Among their
fmdmgs the ex1stence of a fault line beneath the ocean
floor less than f1ve miles from the nuclear power stallon.
Although an earthquake IS highly unlikely, the possibility
nevertheless exists that a maj' or tremor could severely
damage the Diablo Canyon p ant In the "worst-case"
scenano, substantial amounts of radioactive material
could be released 10to the atmosphere.
The AEC was supposed to closely monitor and regulate
aa nuclear actiVIties to safeguard the public against
potential hazards Yet more than 2'h years after the
exiStence of the fault hne was diSclosed, federal off1c1als
were totally unaware of 1t PG&amp;E says It didn't learn of the
new evidence until late 1972, but even then it contrnued
construction of the plant for almost a year without making
any mod1flcat10ns to provide additional protection against
an earthquake
In August 1973 - a month after PG&amp;E formally
requested a federal operating license for both Diablo
Canyon generating units - the company fiiially mentioned
the newfoWld fault lme to the AEC.
That touched off a round of additional inve~tigations,
preparation of supplemental safety reports (eight have
been ISSued to date, a record unmatched by any other
nuclear power plant m the country) and exteDSJve
reconstruction that contmues to this day.
.
PG&amp;E origiiially estunated that the generat10g station
would cost $610 million. The current cost-to-completion
projection IS $1.4 billiOn and the plant has become a
grotesque example of worst-case planning gone berserk.
Inside the facility are solid concrete walls, floors and
ceilmgs 2 feet thick, laced w1th steel remforclng rods 2'h
inches in diameter. Heavy structural,-eell-beams, some 4
mches th1ck, protrude from every unagmable angle to
provrde bracing and buttressmg for p1pes and conduits.
Although the company has made a heroic if belated
effort to retroftt the plant, its crit1cs remain dissatisfied.
Mothers for Peace, the Sceruc Shoreline Preservation
Council and other environmental organiZations banded
together as the Abalone Alliance will be satisfied with
nothing less than abandonment of D1ablo Canyon.
After more than a decade of plannmg and construction,
the plant has yet to generate a smgle watt of power. The
blame for that Wlprecedented delay must be shared by all
the part1es mvolved - conservation groups, the utility
company and federal regulatory agencies
'

3-The Pao;u Sentinel,Middleport-Pcmeroy, O., Tuesday, Nov. 14, 1978

BURLINGTON, Vt. (UP!)
Marilyn , DieU took her
teen-age daughter out for a
drive last May and shot her to
death to keep the gll'l from
hecornmg a prostitute.
Mooday, Mrs Dietl, 41,

-

Poet's Comer ·

r.::

Peopletalk

Law ·will be examined

or

a.c.n ,....,

"Our defense played well,
created the turnovers and the
offense took advantage by
scoring 1 wlth them," sa1d
Madden. " Other than that,
there was not a heck of a lot to

young players made a lot of

nustakes.''

To try to make up for the
mistakes by the Bengal
youngsters, veteran Cincy
quarterback Ken Anderson
passed, passed, and tben for
it."
Rice had to agree With that good measure, passed some
and he also noted that the more
When 1t was all over,
three fwnbles the R111ders
converted into touchdowns Anderson had passed 50
were given up by a pall' of times. He completed 30. Two
rookies - David ~~Deacon u went for touchdowns. But
lour were intercepted.
Turner and Don Bass.
" We thought we could
~~we had rookie-lUst'' was
the way Rice put 1t "A lot of throw the baU and we had a

------------,
i Pro I
!Standings I Penn State climbs
NFL Standings
By United Press lnternehonll

American conference

East
W L T Pet
830727
New England
8 30
727
M1am•
6 50
545
NY Jets
s 60 455
Baltimore
3 80
27 3
Buffalo

Ohio grid standings
Capital
Marietta
Muskingum
Otterbem

Oblo College Football Re&lt;ords
By United Presa IDteroatlonal
Mld-Amerlcao Conlerace
Conference
AD Games
W. L. T.
W. L. T.
BaUState
700
910
CentraiMich
710
820
Mianu
520
721
WesternMlch
530
730
Bowling Green
340
460
Ohio Univ
240
270
Toledo
260
280
Nor Dlino1s
130
450
Eastern Mich
150
360
160
370
Kent State
Oblo Conference
(Red DlvlsiOD)
AU Games
W. L. T
8 0 I
5 4 0
4 4 I
3 5 I
4 4 I
0 9 0

(Final)

Conference

All Games

W L T

W. L. T

5 0
3 2

Wittenberg
Wooster

0
0

8
6

0
3

I
0

NEW YORK IUPI) - The
U n 1 ted Press International

Board

of

Coaches'

records

l~erentheses

top

20

colleoe footba ll ratings, with
first place votes end won lost
Te-.nt
•
1. Penn St. C32l 110 Ol
2. Nebraska m 19-1 l

3 Alabama Ul {9-11

Oklahoma (9 1l
So Calif IS 1)
Houston 18 I)
Mlohlgan C8-l)
8 Georgia 18-1)
9 Texas [6·21
10 Notre Oeme 17 2)
11 Maryland 19 1)
12 Clemson II I)
13 Arkansas (6-2 )

A.
S.
6,
7.

14 LSU

15
16
17
II

16 2)

UCLA CB 2)
Purdue C7-1 1)
Ohio St C6-2·11

Points

575

SIB

201
184
172

W

112

57
SO
"
31
29
23
11
11
with the

Pllllburgh 17 2)
19. Georgia Te&lt;:h 17-2)
20. (tie) Stanford 16-A)
20 (tiel Iowa 51 17 31
Note: By agreement
American Footblll Co1ch11
AstoelaHon. tHml on probation
oy !Itt NCAA oro lntlillblt tor
top 20 and national champion·
lhiJ COitlldtratlon lty the UP I
IHrd of CHChel. Tholl flall'll
currently Oft probation are:

M 1 c b 11 a n Stolt. Oklahoma
Slota and Grambling.
adv for 4:30 1.m. •st today

4
4

0
0

5
3
2

4
5
6

0
I
I

paz':lngs

touchdowns, why can't they.
We better get another one "'
Hlzyes said he feels his
team, which now lias woo
four in a row and stands ~1
oo the year, "is lmprovmg.
But, how much, I dm 't know.
"Our passing was a lot
more consistent last week,"
he added. "We'll probably
pass more the rest of the
year. At least we'U werkon lt

in practice."
Hayes said defens1ve back
Ray Ellis, who mjured a
shoulder m the W'ISCoosln
game, IS ''probably lost for
the year," but on offense,
"we thmk we'll have
everybody" for the Indiana
game.
Hayes put m another pitch
for the use of instant replay in
dec1d1ng controversial
decwons by offiCials, saying,
"why let a good official make
a bad call."
Asked about Indiana,
Hayes said, "I nev,er like to
build up a team too much. But
they have the ability to play
good football, as evidenced
by their recerd. We won't go
out there and regard them
lighUy."
Senior Joe Hornik, a
converted defenSive end now
playing both middle guard
and tackle, was selected the
"buck of the week" as the top
defensive ·player against
Dlinois.
"Joe bas got great
quickness and experience as
a football player," sald
assistant coach Dave Adolph,
"and he's a tough guy.''
Unebacker T&lt;m Cousineau

released
MISSION, Kan. ( UPI)
Playoff teama and pairings
for the NCAA DiVISion lli
football championship, which
will be determined Dec 2 at
the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl
m Phenix City, Ala., were
announced Monday.
Minnesota-Morris, 1~. the
top-ranked team in the
division poll, will hol!t St. Olaf
College (Minn.), &amp;-1, and
Wittenberg
(Ohio)
University, 8-0-1, will face
Ithaca College, 9-1, in Ithaca,
N.Y., in one-bali of the first
round games played Nov. 18.
In the other half of the first
round, Carnegie-Mellon
University, 8-1, w1ll host
Dayton (Ohio), 9-1·1, In
Pittsburgh, Pa., and St.
Lawrence (N.Y.), 6-1, will
face Baldwin Wallace College
(Ohio ), 8-0-1, in Berea, Ohio .
Winners in each half of the
btacket will meet Nov. 25 to
determine the bowl berths.

By MIKE TIJLL Y
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)- The
diligent
and
low-key
Central
W L T Pet
approach of Coach Joe
9 2 0
818 Paterno paid off today with
Pittsburgh
7 40
636
t-touston
s 60 455 Penn State bemg named the
Cleveland
1 10 0
091 country's top college football
Cinclnnetl
west
W ~ T Pd. team by the United Press
7 40
636 International
Denver
Board of
7 • 0
636 Coaches, the fll'st tune III the
Oakland
s 60
455
Seattle
5 60
455 N1ttany Lions' 92-year history
San DteQO
2 9 0
182 they have been No. I III any
Kansas City
maJor poll
Nltlonal conference
East
A 19-10 VIctory over North
W L T Pd
Carolina
State, combined
B 3 0
727
Washington
J 40
636 With Oklahoma's 17-14loss to
Callas
650545 Nebraska, ended a series of
Phtladelphta
5 60
455
NY Gtants
3 80
273 frustrations that included
St Louis
Central
1969 when then-President
W L T Pet
R1chard
Nixon proclaimed
7
4
0
6
3
6
Green Bay
7 4 0 6 3 6 Texas No I, although Penn
Mtnnesota
4 7 0
364
Tampa Bey
4 70
364 State also had a perfect
Detrott
3 80
273 record.
Chtcago
West
BeSideS pavmg the way for
W l T Pet
Los Angeles
9 2 0
818 Penn State's advance to the
Atlanta
7 4 0
636 top, Nebraska's VICtory also
New Orleans
5 6 0
455
San Franclsc
1 10 0
091 placed the 39 voting members
Monday's Result
of the board in a quandry
Oakland J.t, C1ncmnatt 21
over
the rest of the top four
sunday's Games
They fmally gave the secondBuffalo at Tampa Bay
New England at New York place nod to the Cornhuskers
Jets
Ph•ladelph •a at New York With five first-place votes and
Gtants
Alabama, which received two
St LOUIS at Washington
first-place
votes, held thll'd.
San Diego at M•nnesota
Atlanta at Ch tcago
The Sooners tumbled from
Cleveland at Baltimore
~st place to fourth and did
New Orleans at Dallas
not receive a first-place
Seattle at Kansas City
C•ncmnatl at Ptttsburgh
nommation. Penn State
Detroit at Oakland
corralled 32 first-place votes.
Green Bay at Oenver
Los Angeles at San Franc1sco
Paterno has carefully
Monday's Game
avOided
making any bold
Mt&amp;mt at Houston
Thursday, November 23
pronouncements on the
Denver at Oetroit
relative strength of his team,
Washington at Oaltas
preferrm~
to call It
"competitive" and work on
NHL Standings
By United Press lnternattonal making 1t awesome. He has
campbell Conference
succeeded, and the Lions
P~trick Dlvls1on
W L T Pts currently boast a 1~ record
AtiiJnta
12 2 2
26 Even in the moment of
NY Rangers
9 3 3
21
NY Islanders
9 3 2
20 tr1umph, however, Paterno
Pht ladeiphia
7 5 4
18 mamtained a low profile.
Smythe Division
"We're a long way from
W L. T PIS.
Chicago
6 4 4
16 being No. 1," Paterno sa1d
Vancouver
6 10 1
13 Monday. "The only poll that
St LOUIS
3 8 4
10
Colorado
2 11 J
7 counts IS the one at the end of

.

had 18 tackles against
Dllnois, giving him 187 for the
year and breaking his
previous Ohio State record of
185.
freshman
Offensively,
quarterback Art Schlichter,
who scered three touchdowns
and bit 9 of 15 passes, was.
selected back of the week for
the Dllnols game, whUe tight
end Jimmy Moore was picked
the top offensive lineman for
the second week In a row.

Ellwood, staff
fired Monday
at Marshall. Of those nme
victories only one came
against a team - Akron in
1976 -that went on to have a
winning season.
s~lt''tldtversit~' ~It' • Ellwood and his staff ofsix
D!rectoc Joe McMullen an- assistant coaches will coach
nouilced ;erday that ~ the final game against East
Foofball,. llcb Fr•
.tJj Carolina. Assistants on Ellwood~ · !laff bad been wood's staff are Carhn
dismissed effective at the Carpenter, Don Arthur, Bob
conclusion of the current Brown, Lee Thompson, Don
season.
Caldwell and Bill Gary.
The dismissal came as no
The Thundering Herd,
surprise to close follo•vers of which ended the 1977 season
the Thundermg Herd football with eight consecutive '-asses,
program. The Herd, which posted ita only victory to date
finishes the season Saturday this year over Toledo in the
night at East Carolina, ls 1-0 opener, 17-0. In four of this
on the season and 9-34 overall season's losses the Herd led
under Ellwood, who Is with flve minutes to play only
completing his fourth season to wind up losln~

HUNTINGTON Citing
that there is "no way we can
&lt;4~
425 show or demonstrate any
398 signHlcant progress made in
357 th~ WOJI·loss, record" Mar288

520

I
I

5 4 0

• •

with unpredtability

College ratings

0
0

Division III

Woody impressed
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
CXJLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)"The longer I coach," said
Ohio State's Woody Hayes,
"the more I become
impressed
with
the
unpredictability of the game
of foqtbaU.''
Hayes was talklng about
the unexpected help his
Buckeyes got Saturday from
Wisconsin, which rallled .
from an 111-polnt, fourthquarter deficit to tle Ieagueleadmg
Purdue
24-24,
vaulting Ohio State back into
the Rose Bowl picture.
That tie means the Boilermakers must win ll' tie at
Michigan Saturday if they
bope to represent the Big Ten
in the Rose Bowl.
A Michigan win, coupled
with an Ohio State win at
Indiana Saturday, would set
up
another
BuckeyeWolverine batUe Ill' the bowl
trip the following week In
Columb\18.
"What happened in the 1881
three minutes at Madison you
wouldn't believe If somebody
wrote it in a script," satd
Hayes, who left the stadium
after the Buckeyes' 49-7 over
Dllnola thinking Purdue had
wm. "But, it was enough to
tie a football game."
Hayes said the Wisconsin
IDJleback from an 18-polnt
defldt "makes you wooder "
"When yoU get tbree or four
touchdowns ahead," said
Hayes, ''you say to yourself,
'If we can get that many

2
3

x-Kenyon
x x x
3 6 0
x-Oberlm
x x x
0 9 0
x-not competing for title
Hoosier-Buckeye Conlerence
Conference
AU Games
W. L. T . W. L T.
800
900
Findlay
6 2 0
6 2 I
Hanover
620
630
Def1ance
440
540
Wllmington
440
450
Manchester
440
540
Anderson
260
270
Bluffton
260
270
Taylor
170
180
Earlham
Others
w. L. T.
9
I
0
Youngstown State
I
I
9
Dayton
6
2
0
Hiram
6
2
I
Ohio State
4
0
5
John CarroU
5
0
5
Akron
4
5
0
Cmc1nnall
7
0
2
Case Western
7
0
2
Central State
2
8
0
'Ashland

(Final)

Conference
W. L T.
5 0 0
Baldwin-WaDe
3 2 0
Ohio Northern
3 2 0
Denison
Ohio Wesleyan
2 3 0
2 3 0
Mount Union
0 5 0
Heidelberg
CBiue Division)

3
2

I
'

'· .. -.,

to top of poll
nmth , and Notre Dame,
winner of seven stra1ght,
moved into loth.
Rounding out the top 20 are
Maryland, Clemson,
Arkansas, LSU, UCLA ,
Purdue,
Ohio
State,
Pittsburgh, Georg1a Tech,
and III a tie for 20th, Stanford
and Iowa State

and 10 yards to Archie
Gnffin. But the Bengal!' nelrt
two drives ended w1th
mterceptions - the last one
setting up an 11-yard Mark
Van Eeghen TD run with just
2 16 to play to lee the Oakland
win&gt;
Altbough Stabler was Oaltland's star with three TD
passes and no 1I1tercept1ons,
he had no comment on the
game for reporters.
"I don't have anything to

chance , but mistakes killed

us," said Anderson.
Mistakes like Turner's first
quarter fumble that Neal
Colue scooped up and
returned 32 yards for a TD
Then came a Bass fumble a
few seconds later that led to a
five-yard Ken Stabler to Ray
Otester TD pass and a 13-0
Oakland lead .
The Bengals pulled to
within 13-7 on Pete Johnson's
fouryard TD burst, but then
Oakland sez1ed a 20-7
halftone advantage with one
of tts famous two-minute
drills - Stabler ramrodding
the Raiders downfield with
passes of 21 , 29 and 25 yards
to Dave Capser, the last one
good for a TD
Oakland's lead shot to 27-7
midway through the thU'd
quarter
when
Turner
fumbled agam to set up
Stabler's thll'd TDpass of the
rught - an 11-yarder to
Morns Bradshaw
Then came Cincy's early
fourth quarter rally, with
Anderson shootmg TD passes
of 25 yards to Isaac CurtiS

say,"

CXJLUMBUS (UPI) - The

AthletiC
ASSOCiatiOn
computerized
football
ratmgs, w1Ut pomt totals :
Class AAA
Region I
I
Berea, 140 93; 2.
Lakewood St. Edward,
130.34; 3. Willoughby South,
125.88; 4 Elyria, 124.16; 5.
Warren Harding, 122.45; 6.
Cleveland St Joseph, 122.02;
7. North Ridgeville, 120.25; 8.
Solon, 119.00; 9. Strongsville,
118.76,
10.
Cleveland
Kennedy, 116 25
Regloo 2
I Sandusky, 156 45; 2 Hilliard, 144.33; 3. Toledo Bowsher, 14144, 4 GroveportMadison, 134 33, 5. Gahanna
Lincoln, 125 55; 6 Columbus
Wainut Ridge, 119 52; 7.
Upper Arlington, 113.72; 8.
Sidney, 11258; 9. Findlay,
111 45; 10. Oregon Clay,
109.63.
Region 3
I. Zanesville, 185.80, 2.
Barberton, 161.00; 3. New
Philadelphia, 147.04, 4.
Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney, 146.11; 5. Newark,
140.75;
6
Macedonia
Nordonia,
140 33;
7,
Louisville,
140.05;
8
130.68;
9.
Wadsworth,
Masslllon Washington ,
129.67; 10 Canton GlenOak,
124.33.
Wales conference
Region 4
Ule season."
Norrts DIVISIOn
I. Cincinnati Prmceton,
Standing between Penn
W L T Pts
200.06; 2. Cmcmnati MoeUer,
10 4 2
22 State and an undefeated
Montreat
oetrott
5 6 4
14
176.62; 3. Clayton Nocthmont,
Los Angeles
6 7 0
12 season are No 18 Pittsburgh,
155.83, 4. Centerville, 150.00;
F'tltsburgh
3 9 3
9 7-2, and, if the Lions pass that
Washmgton
2 10 J
7 test, an oppooent in a major
5. Cincmnati Elder, 143.88; 6
Adams DtYISIOM
bowl. Paterno has indicated Clncmnati Colerain, 126.00; 7.
W L T Pts
8 J 4
'20 he 1\'0uld like to face the No. 2 Kettermg Fatrmont East,
Boston
Toronto
7 7 2
16
122.77; 8 West Carrollton,
Buffalo
"' 5 5
13 club in the bowls.
Mtnnesota
5 7 2
12
"The
national 117.58; 9 Dayton Carroll,
Monday's Game5
championship should be 116.79; 10 Miami Trace,
(No games scheduled)
decided oo the field, not m the 113.00.
Tuesday's Games
Colorado !t N Y ISlanders
Class AA
polls,"
Paterno
has
Atlanta at Wash ington
Region 5
reiterated, setting up the
Los Angeles at Sf Louts
I. Brookfield, 131 20; 2
Wednesday's Games
definite possiblllty of an
ChiC"QO at N Y Rangers
Olmsted
Falls, 116 .72 , 3
Orange Bowl showdown
Detroit at Atlanta
Catholc,
103.39; 4.
Elyria
Buffa lo at Toronto
between Penn State and
washtngton at M 1nnesota
'Orrville,
91
00
;
5
Twinsburg
Nebraska If the Nittany Lions
Montreal at Colorado
opt foc a wmter tnp to the Chamberlin, 89.50 , 6. Elyna
West, 86.00; 7. Apple Creek
WHA Standings
beach.
By United Press lnternattonal
Waynedale, 83 70; 8 Perry,
USC
retained
fifth
place
WLTPh.
a
drubbing
of 82.11; 9. Ravenna Southeast,
cmcinnat1
9 5 1
19 with
Quebec
9 7 1
19 Washington, while Houston,
79.50; 10. Akron St VIIIcentNew England
8 4 2
18
St. Mary, 78 04.
Winnipeg
6 7 2
14 With a 11).7 upset of Texas,
Birmingham
6 6 0
12 climbed from eighth to SIXth.
Region 6
Edmonton
6 8 0
12
I. St. Marys Memorial,
M1ch1gan
remained
in
Indianapolis
2 9 2
6
128.11;
2. Millbury Lake ,
Monday's Games
seventh, Georglll inched from
(No games scheduled)
123.77;
3.
Oregon Cardinal
lOth to eighth, Texas feU to
Tuesday's Game
Strttch,
116
80 , 4. Columbus
New Eng land at Blrmmgham
DeSales, 116 04; 5 Elida,
W•dnesday's Games
New England at Cincinnati
104.22,
6.
Columbus
Winnipeg at Quebec
Beechcroft,
104.18;
7.
Loudonvtlle,
96 .55;
8.
N BA Standings
By United Press International
Columbus Independence,
E11tern Conference
87 32; 9 Bellville Clear Fork,
Atlantic Division
86 II ; 10 Wauseoo, 83.00.
W L Pet
GB
Phlladlph
10 I 909
The Me1gs alumm of Region 1
1
New Jersy
10 6 625 2 12
I New Concord John
Washingtn
7 7 500 41h _pomeroy, Middleport, and
New York
1 B A61 5
Rutland are prepa.ltlg for 1ts Glenn, 116.00; 2. Ironton,
Boston
2 12 143 9 112
annual ThanksgiVIng Day 102.63; 3. St. Clairsville,
Central Division
W L Pet. GB football nvalry. The football 86.65; 4. Maysville, 81.50; 5
Houston
7 5 583
game, sponsored by the
Atlanta
1 6 538
'12
san Antonio
a 1 533 '12 Meigs Athletic Boosters, will
New Orlens
6 8 429 2
he held on November 24 at 2
Detroit
6... 10 375 3
Cleveland
s 10 333 3'12 p.m. on the Middleport f1eld.
Western Conference
The Pomeroy-Middleport
Midwest Division
series
now standa at 2-2, and
W. L Pet
GB
the fifth game rubber match
Denver
9 5 60
Kansas City
a 7 533 1112 IS certain to be hard-fought.
Indiana
5 8 385 J'h
Mllwauke
6 11 J53 A'h In his fifth year as coach of
ChlcaQO
2 13 133 71fz the Pomeroy team, Bud
Pacific Dlvltlon
W L Pet. GB Stivers will be caUing the
Seattle
10 2 833
shots from the sidelines for
LOS Angels
10 4 . 714 1
PhOenix
10 5 661 W2 the upriver crew. Also m his
filth year at the helm, Dave
GOlden Stat
9 5 6.43 2
8 6 571 3
Portland
Ashley wlll be coaching

stated

" No

FINAL SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L T PDP
Eastern
9 I 0 311 65
North Galha 5 4 0 190 132
Southwestern S 5 0 171 136
Kyger Creek
4 5 1 110 212
Hannan Trace
2 7 I 89 186
Southern
0 8 1 0 305

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L T POP
x-Eastern
5 0 0 195 20
North Gallla 4 1 0 102 61
Hannan Trace

Computer ratings
final 1978 Ohto High School

he

comment at all I just don't
have anything to say."
Madden spoke up for
Stabler, though, by' simply
stating the obvtous, "He was
good tonight."

22164

53

2 3 0 85 59
Bridgeport, 78.88; 6. Navarre Southwestern
Kyger Creek 1 3 1 53 122
Fall'less, 74.77 , 7. (tie) Heath Southern
0 S 0 0 184
and Plckeriiigton, 70.50 each;
X- SVAC champ&gt;on
9. Uhnchsv1lle Claymont,
70.00 , 10 Canton Central
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Catholic, 69.58.
~EVOTED TO THE
Region 8
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AR~
l. Hamilton Badin, 140.86,
ROBERT HOIII'LICII
2 Cincinnati Wyoming,
~UyEdJll.lr
Pubhllhed~uily e~~:tepl Sllturday
140.76; 3. Trenton Edgewood,by The Ohio VHIIey Pubhshmg
122 00; 4. Milton Union,
Company·MLLltnnedill., Inc,
Ill
CXIurt St , Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
104 II;
5.
Cincinnati
BIL!ilni!SS OffiCI! Phone 992· 2156
McNicholas,
99.18;
6.
Editonal Phunl! 992·2157
Loveland Hurst, 87.83, 7.
&amp;:cond class posl..ll.~ e pa1d 1n
Pomeroy Ohi o
Goshen, 79.61; 8. Cincinnati
National " dvtrtunng represen·
Reading, 79.50; 9. London,
!.aliVe, Landon Ast;ocJaiJos, • 311}1
Euchd Ave Cleveluml, Ohio 44115
77.55; 10. Dayton Oakwood,
Subst:r1pt10n niles Delivered by
77.11
carnl!r where available 75 t-ents per
w~k By Motur Route where camer
Class A
servu:e not av1nllt.b!e One month,
Region 9
SJ 25 By maul rn Ohio and W Va ,
I. Loram Clearview, 97.00,
One Year, $Z200, SLX months.
Sll 51} Thn:e months , S7 001
2 Ashtabula St. John, 80 46;
Elsewhere 126 00 year , StK months
3 Jackson-Milton, 76 06; 4
Sl 3 50 , Three months $7 ~0
SuJ»;c'hpUon price mdudes Sunday
Mogadore, 70.50; 5. ColwnTuw:s.&amp;nlmt:l
blana, 59.55; 6 Monroeville,
56 25; 7. Cardington-Lincoln,
54.50;
8.
Middlefield
THIS WEEK'&lt; SPECIAL
Cardinal, 51.41; 9. Gates Mills
Hawken, 48 99; 10. Burton
Berkshire, 45.89
Region 10
I. Fremont St. Joseph,
.
91.50, 2. Hamler Patrick
Henry, 76.88; 3. Crestline,
USED CARS .
76 27; 4. Tiffin Calvert, 74 25;
.
5. Carey, 67.00; 6. Montpelier,
63 33; 7 Gibsonburg, 59.63; 8.
Milford Center Fairbankll,
5U5; 9. Fostoria St.
Wendelin, 50.75; 10. Findlay
Liberty Benton, 49.22.
Region 11
I. Newark Catholic, 96.50;
2. New Albany, 80.94; 3.
Crooksville, 79 72; 4 Brllllant
Buckeye North , 66.05; 5.
Woodsfield, 61.38; 6. Glouster
3 seater , power wtndows,
Trimble, 55.61; 7. Lancaster
power seat, power door
Fisher, 54.75; 8. (tie) Beverly
locks, atr am fm rad10 ,
Fort Frye and Colwnbus
now tt r e s Luggage rack
Ready, 53.00; 10 Bellall'e St.
John, 51.87.
Reglua 12
I. Middletown Fenw1ck,
100.22; 2. Covmgton, 84.22, 3
West Jefferson, 83.94; 4. Versailles, 82.50, 5. Bradfocd,
You'll Like Our Qua lily
69.13, 6. Portsmouth Notre
Way of Doing Business
Dame, 62.94; 7. Cincinnati
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Country Day, 57.84; 8. West
Open
Eventngs
'1116
:00
Liberty Salem, 56 55; 9. PikeTll5
p.m Sil.
ton, 55.61; 10.
Mechanicsburg, 52.55.

·~l·
1975

CHEVY

CAPRICE
ESTATE

WAGON

'3495

Karr &amp; Vanlanclt

Annual turkey
bowl, Nov. 24

San Diego
6 12 JJJ 7
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
Denver at New York
Philadelphia at New Jersey
washington at Cleveland
Lo&amp; Angeles at Milwaukee
New Orleans at Portland
Indiana at San Otego
Wednesdav•s Game·
Denver at Philadelphia
Milwaukee at Washington
Chicago at Houston
Phoen ·x at San Anton10
Atlanta at Kansas City
Los Angeles at Oetro1t
New Orleans at Seattle

Middleport
The annual contest has
been a very successful fundraising event for the boosters
with last year's actlv1t1es
netting nearly nine hundred
dollars.
Plan to support the Me1gs
Boosters this Thanksglvmg
Day and come see the
alumni accumulate their
yearly bumps and bruises.

See Bill Chtlds -- He

Work~

For You!

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. _

~~M~id~d~le~po~r~t,~0~·--------------------------~~~~~1

•

. .. '

'

'

,

�•
4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Nov. l4, 1978

Rock Springs Granger"G;;;;;ti~;R;Pl ,;,;;:~
·nsents
gifts
)~ By Helen and Sue Hottel ~:~: ~f1 ~:~th~:~ ~~~
P1i

Happy Harvesters Class ,names officers

1

II

:::: gradlllg period.
.
.. · Making a grade of "B" or
THROW THE RASCAL OUT
above in all their subjects to
DEARHELENANDSUE
:
be listed on the roll were :
Gifts for the Athens Mental tiona! Grange and thank you
.1 have a grown-up brother 118) who is driving my parents
Grade 9
Kristin
Health Center Christmas notes from Mr. and Mrs. Tim
were presented at the Thurs· Mas~y and from the L'Om- WJld. All he talks about is himself and his unhappiness. He ex- Anderson, Jim Boyer, Tina ·
· day night meeting of the Rock mlttee on the corrununity peels the perfed job, even though he didn 't apply himself in Bradford, Mark Cllne, Denise
school. And he won 't accept anything less: But he's very un- Cobb, Pam Crooks, Susan
Springs Grange held at the Halloween party.
Danner, Phyllis Davis
Dr. Raymond Boice was confident.
hall.
The
minute
he
gels
up
in
the
afternoon,
he
starts
blaming
my
Melanie Dillard, Mik~
Members were reminded reported ill. The program on
mother
for
all
hi~
trouble~.
He
takes
advantage
of
us,
then
Edwards,
Tanuny Eichinger,
that anyone having ~ills for Thanksgiving was given by
swears
at
us
if
we
don't
jwnp
to
his
demands.
He
won
't
speak
Brenda
Fry,
Angela Harmon,
the patients there sbould lecturer Mrs. Ethel Grueser.
to
relative~
when
they
come
over.
Mary
Beth
Hawley, Trlna
leave them either with Mrs. Members sang "Count Your
My
parents
had
to
c'Ome
back
early
from
the
first
vacation
!Jayman,
David
Hoffman,
Barbara Fry or Mrs. Frances Blessinqs" and Mrs. Beuna
they
'd
had
in
10
years
because
he
got
drunk
and
in
trouble.
Robert
Houdashelt,
Tracy
Grueser
read
the
IOOth
Goeglein by Dec. 5.
Mom
i~
very
depres~d'over
her
"failure
with
him.
·•
~ysell,
Tim'
Jarrell,
Urecka
Psalm.
Mrs.
Morris
read
The annual Christmas
Whatcanlheydo? -AGITATED
Johnson, Dicky King, Lynn
potluck dinner was set for "Thanksgiving Day", Mrs.
DEARAGITATED:
Kloes,
Kall Knapp, Roger
Dec. 14 at 6:30 p.m. at the Nancy Radford, "Along the
·
It
appears
your
brother
is
capitaljzing
on
'his
"failure."
He
Hovalchik,
Mark McGuire
hall. There wlll be a while Way", Mrs.:Helen Blackston,
needs
an
ultimatum,
as
in,
·'Clean
up
your
act
or
leave,
·•
and
Randall
Murray,
Lynn~
elephant gift exchanqe at that "Giving Thanks Always",
parents
who
won
't
cave
in.
When
your
mother
substitutes
Oliver,
Kathy
Parker,
Kim
William Grueser, "I Can't
time.
righteous
indignation
for
guilt
she
may
even
yet
turn
this
spoilPatterson
,
Lisa
Robson
Patty Parker was received Believe I Ate the Whole
Thomas T. Simmons, Hele~
into membership from the Thing", and Sue Ellen Fry, ed boy into a man. -I-IE LEN
Slack,
Laura Smith, Lorri
Pomona juriior grange by ''Thanks ."
Snowden,
Greg Thomas
Several numbers were AGITATED :
Luclile Leifheit, past master.
&lt;:r A,T,. WINNERS - These girls were the winners of West
in state
Denise
TUmer,
Fred Young:
Mrs. Nancy Morris was in- presented by Ray and Lisa . Thai ultimatum might include, "Gel a job or learn a trade at
competition
of
the
Na~onal Baton ~irlers Association held Saturday at Wahama High
Grade 10 - . Tammy
stalled as Flora by Master Pullins vocal arid guitar, L'Qnununjty colle~e." If part of your brother's meanness
Scbool under the direction of Mrs. Gloria Buck Wallace. From the left the state winners are
Adkins,
Connie Bailey, Joyce
Fred Goeglein. Mrs. Fry, there were safety hints by comes from being disgusted with himself, he needs finn handlLisa Hayes, Mason,~. twirllng; Karen Bare, Cllarleston, 7-11 division, both in twirling and
CWA chairman, thanked Arland King and Rollin Rad- ing to break the lethargy. I hope your parents can manage it! Baker, Rick Baker, Robert
str11ttlng;
La Ron ·Langdale, Weirton, 11-14 division, both in twirling and strutting, and
Davis, Tina East, Li'nda
those who helped with the ford, and a safety quiz by ltte -SUE
Pa!ge
Carney,
Scott Depot_, 1!&gt;-20 age group, both in.twirling and strutting.
Eason, Sheila Fetty, Teresa
trustees dinner. William Rad- lecturer. Mrs. Morris had a
Not pictured is Sharlyn Russell, Martinsburg, W.Va., who was state high pointwinner.
Fetty, Jerry Fields, James
ford gave the ·legislative' turkey quiz, and Mrs. Lottie RAP:
To
wm
th.at award M1ss Russell had to place somewhere in the top three places In hoop, flre
report. A contribution was Leonard, a prayer of · You'll probably receive this letter too late to print before Gheen, Kevin Gibbs, Tim
baton,
mllit.~ry strut, best appearing military, two baton, flag, knife, advanced fancy strut
Halloween, but I want to tell you I don't think "Trick or Treat" Gore, Araka Grate, Katrena
made to the Ohio Loan thanksgiving.
· parade majorette and advanced soland modeling. The only three winners in the state eveni
Hale, Robert Harmon, Scott
is
strictly for little kids like some of my friends say.
were
served
Refreshinents
Association. There was also a
from this area were Lisa Hayes, Mason, Lisa Starcher, West Columbia, and the RavensI'm 14 and still like to put on a costume and visit other houses Hartinger, ·Sally Hayman
conununication from the Na- by Mrs. Agnes Dixon and
wood Dance and Twirl Team.
·
Robi~ Herald, Jayn~
in the neighborhood - it's like a masquerade party.
Susie and Ray Pullins.
But the trouble is most of the older kids out on Halloween are Hoefbch, Floyd Holliday
Horky,
Donn~
into vandalism or scaring the little guys, so it gives us who just Sheila
Hysell,
Joyce
Jan•v
.
want to have fun a bad name.
Cheryl
Johnson,
Angela
If you enjoy something, why do you have to "outgrow" it]The nine contestants of the dleport. Music will be by the Meigs Inn or from any conKennedy, Brian King, . Linda
TEEN-AGER WHO'S STILL AKID
Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss Meigs High School jazz band testant. Advance tickets are
Kovalchik, Anita Lee, Ed
DEAR TEEN.
and
their parents or · directed by Alan Hunt and $1 for students and $1.25 for
pageant
Because som_ething better usually comes along. Even though Lester, Terry Mayes, Chris guests were feted at the Randy Hunt.
adults. Tickets at the door
you may not thmk so now, we'll bet this is your last for TriCk or McKinney, Patty Mitchell, annual parents-sponsor
will he $.50 for students and
Tickets
for
the
finals
may
Carol Morris, Steve Ohllnger,
Treat.- HELEN AND SUE
buffet
at
the
Meigs
Inn
be
purchased
at
the
New
$1.75
for adults.
Bety . Perrin, Laura Rupe,
Sunday.
York
Clothing
House,
the
·Polly Cramer
NOTE FROM ·HELEN: Trick or Treat is becoming less Cindy Smith, Tammi Stobart,
Attending were Sherri
popular wtth the young crowd too; or, rather with parents who Camille Swindell, Tonya Rishel and Mr. and Mrs.
don't want their children on the streets after dark. Perhaps the Taylor, Barbara Thomas, James Rishel; Debbie
When your plastic wrap custom may someday he as ouirnoded as - well - Maypole Jeff Wayland, Jeff Welch, Pickens and Mr. and Mrs.
IJFJ'SGUMFROMHAffi
sticks to itself, simply put it dances or the "T.P.ed" (toilet-tissue-draped~ teen-ager's . Brian Wilcox, Darlli Wilcox, Carl Vanover; Cindy PatBy Polly Cramer
David
Wilkes,
Darla
in the refrigerator for a house.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
terson and Mr. and Mrs.
Wllllamson.
DEAR POLLY - An easy while.
Corbett Patterson; Lori.
Grade
11Nathan
Arnold,
Renew the usefulness of DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
and effective way to remove
Chapman and Mr. and Mrs.
gum from a child's hair is to that old broom by dipping it
In your list of where young people can ~o to discuss pro- Sonia Ash, Tonia Ash, Tim Robert Chapman; Becky
put a spoanful of peanut but- in boiling water and baking blems, you omitted "family doctor or pediatrician." Frequent- Baker, Angela Barton, Belli Crow and Mr. and Mrs.
ly kids come talk to me and I try to help or steer them toward Bartrum, Carrie Bearhs, Alfred Crow.; Bunni McGraw
ter on the gum. Massage it soda. Then dry !tin the sun.
Shawn Bell, Julie Biron,
DEAR POLLY -A reader's help. And I don't tell their parents! -DR. D.E.H.
around and then the gum and
Q. We are geHing married in about two months ' We
Brynda Black, Linda Black, an,d Mrs. Laura· McGraw;
peanut butter Slide right o~t. Pel Peeve concerned having DEAR DR. H. :
. al~eady have received many nice wedding gifts; siiver,
Janice Carnahan and Mr. and
John
Byer,
Dan
Carman,
We stand corrected. -HELEN AND SUE
You won't have to cut out any towait for those who take so
c~ma , etc. Is there a way to insure our gifts while on
Betty
Carsey,
Bob Mrs. James Carnahan; Dollie
dosplay at the bride's mother's home?
hair. Shampoo the hair and long getting on escalators. A
Chappelear, Natalie Clark, Rousey and 'Mrs. S. L.
have no more gum or peanut person with poor vision has to
A. Yes. A Tenant~Homeowner's Polley can be ~rltten
Kenny Cook, Gail Corbitt, Yoakam; Carol Morris and
exercise more caution in dobutter.
~lth
an endorcement attached to the policy. The
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
Morris.
Larry Cundiff, Melinda
Is their a simple way to ing this and naturally takes
E~gaged Couples ~ndorcement" requires no
others
attending
~ere
Mr.
Demosky, Linda. Donahue,
ad~1tlonal charge. It provides coverage at any
open windows that have been more time. All of us may need
and Mrs. Gary Norris
Regina
Dorst,
Charlene
res1dence
or plac~ of storage where wecktlng presents
to
slow
down
a
bit
and
painted or varnislled closed?
CHESTER-Mr. and Mrs. ingrath gardens and home, Goeglein, Edna Greene, representing the Racine
or
personal
property o,f either party may be kept for a
some
P.,ople
need
remember
- REGINA
period not to exceed 90days from the wedding.
Delmar Baum and Mr. and designated as the charm spot Andrea Grover, Richard Hlll, Home National Bank, Bar. DEAR REGINA - A putty more time. -C.K.
Mrs. Rex Bailey bave return- . of the . deep south, near
bara Chapman and board
DEAR POLLY - I was ed from 2,330 mile trip Mobile, Ala. The Bellingrath .Ed Holter, Mark Hood, Vicki members,
knife. will usuall cut right
Ralph H. Werry,
Hood,
Janet
Horky,
through. If the paint seems amazed that no reader sent in throuoh 13 states.
home houses tlle Bessie ' Rosemary Hubbard, Bruce president; Joyce Qulllen,
too hard, try a sharp paring the method I use for prevenAmong the places of in- Morse Be!lingrath collection
vice president; Calista
knife. If carefully inserted ting shrinking pie crust. terest which . tlley visited of antique furniture, priceless Hysell, Penny Jacks, John Searls, secretary .. treasurer,
just over tbe opening, it Prebeat the oven to 475 were The Moses Cone Man- silver, fine china and rare Jacobs, Tracey Jeffers, G~ry
Pauline Reuter, a new
should be a fairly neat job. degrees before baking the sion and Park in North porcelains. The Boehe!D Jones, Usa Jones, JaneU and
board
member.
The Insurance Store
How about this, readers, do crust and reduce the heat to Carolina; the Chicamaugba Gallery located near the Kelly, Robert Klein, Joyce
·214 E. Main
Pomeroy,o ..
992-5130
The
finals
of
the
Junior
Lambert,
Rena
Lefebre,
35Q
while
it
is
baking.
.
you know of a better way? ~
Chattanooga
National home displaye~ the largest Marla La gar, David Lewis, Miss program will be at :1:15
POLLY
LENORE
Military Park, w~st of collection of Edward Mar·
Polly will send you one of Lookout Mountain in Ten- shall Boehem's porcelain Cherie Lightfoot, Margo p.m. Sunday at the Meigs
DEAR POLLY - To
her signed thank·you nessee. The park com- · sculptures on public display Martin, Paul Matson, Junior High School in Midremove ballpoint ink stains
dip a sponge in sour milk and newspaper coupon clippers if memorates the Civil War bat- in the world. The Six Seasons, Tammy McDaniel, Michael
vinegar. Repeat if necessary. she uses your favorite tles with over 1800 markers an outdoor · selling, has McGuire, Brian McKinney,
Wrinkled hair ribbons can Pointer, Peeve or Problem in and monuments,. battle lines become world renowned for William McMillian, Sandra
be easily pressed by rubbing her colwnn. Write POLLY'S of both sides indicated and the ever-&lt;:hanging colors at Miller, Lyle Moon, Karen
them over a hot electric light POINTERS in care of this historical tables telling the the Bellingralh Oardens. The Mould, John Nlclnsky,
Noel, Jackie
newspaper.
bulb.
couples also visited the estate Herbert
complete story.
Ohllnger,
Jennifer
Ohlinger,
They also visited the Bell- of Elvis Presley in Memphis. Randy Oliver, Linda Partlow,
Ray Patterson, Batbara
Peyton; Peggy Pugh, Kathie
S. Quivey, Mark Riggs, Kellie
Rought, Shelly Roush,
'
D
eborah Smith, Gena .
ville;
Mrs.
Stella
Peacock
Relatives from a distance
Snowden,
Don .Snyder,
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
attending funeral services for and three sons-in-law of
Charlie
Stone,
Paul Sturgeon,
HARRISONVIlLE Chap.
MIDDLEPORT Literary Mrs. Eula Bracken of Mldlaml, Pa. ·
Kelly
Thoma,
Daniel
ter 255, Order of · Eastern Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at Midland, Pa. at the Letart
others attending were Mr.
Thomas,
Cindy
Thcmpson,
Star, regular meeUng and the home of Mrs. Robert Falls United Brethren and Mrs. Earl Peacock of
initiation, 8 p.m. Tuesday at Fisher, Middleport.
Church were: the· Rev. Tan New York; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Larry TUcker, Greg Walker,
the temple.
Norris and son, Wilford Norris of Junction City; Mrs. Kim Warner, Matt Weaver,
THURSDAY
Rick Wllliamson, Blair
MEIGS CHAPTER 53,
GRACE EPISCOPAL Norris of Rome City, In- Opal Zerkle, Carroll Norris, Windon, Terri Yeauger.
D.A.V, meeting 7:30 ·p.m. Church women meeting at diana; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norris of
Grade 12 - Ray Andrews
TUesday at chapter h&lt;m~e, home of Miss Eleanor Smith, Ray of Lancaster; Mrs. Syracuse.
Carin
Bailey, Elaine BamButternut Ave., Pomeroy. Thursday, with a luncheon at Mildred Gathers, Mrs. • The Rev. Freeland Norris
District ~cmmaPder will be 12:30 p.m. and the program Adalea Burgess of Columbus; conducted the funeral ser-, hart, Greg Becker, David
present and auxiliary will by Mrs. Dottie Maull of the Harold Hayman of Wester- vices, with interment in · Blake,. Vickie Blankenship,
Bruce Carman, Robin Carter,
serve refrealunents.
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Episcpal Church Board.
Tina Coleman, Shari Colmer,
RACiNE LODGE 461
writing family history for the
Mary Colwell, Joyce Cook,
F&amp;.AM Tuesday. Election of
MAGNOLIA
CLUB Meigs History book, 7 p.m.
Deborah Danner, Carol
officers. All members urged meeting 'lbursday, 7:30 p.m. F,riday in the Long Bottom Shower for fire
Delong,
Patty
Dyer;
to attend.
at home of Cora Beegle, . Methodist Church basement.
Christina Evans, Beverly .
victims
scheduled
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday Racine.
Faulkner, Theressa Fish,
MARCIDNG BAND Con7:30p.m. Program "effective
A miscellaneous shower Brian Grindstaff, Robert
cert
Friday,
8
p.m.
in
parenting." Babysitting
wlll be held Saturday at 7:30
WRITING WORKSHOP for
High School for Jim and Mary Wyant Haggy, Judy Hall, 'lbcmas
service available. Everyone anyone with questions about Southern
Hawley, Beverly Hoffman,
~uditorlum, Racine; public Haning, Albany, whose home
welcome.
writing a family biJtory for UlVl(ed.
David Horton, Richard
was completely destroyed by Hovatter, Jamie Johnson,
omo ETA Pm Chapter, the Meigs History book, a REVIVAL
AT
MT. fire.
The shower will be at the Mary Johnson, Tammy
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
Chester
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
HERMON U.S. Church 7:30 Pageville town hall.
_E.Iementa_
ry
School.
Tuesday night at the Meigs
Johnson, Bill Kautz, Kevin
p.m. through Nov. 26., Rev
Office of the Athens County
BRADBURY PTA, 7:30 ·' Richard James, Bellefon- Household items are King, Julie Kitchen, Keith
Savings and Loan Co.
Thursday, at the school. Pro- taine as evangelist. Special desperately needed by the
Krautter, Steve Lambert,
family, it is reported.
gram
on
drug~
by.
Carl
music
by
Gospel
tones
and
Dianna Lee, Melvin Lee,
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Hysell,
Me1gs
1uvemle
of,
others.
Rev.
James
Leach,
Keith
Lynch, Valerie Mataon,
Club, 7:30 Tuesday at the
Werrys entertain
fleer.
Chtldren
are
encouragpastor,
invites
the
public.
Roo
McGrath;
Jo McKinney,
Meigs Museum. Slides on ed to attend.
Daleanna
McKnight,
Beverly
Chfistmas decorations you
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Werry
MIDDLEPORT CHILD SATURDAY
·
.
McLain,
Donna
Metheney,
can make. Margaret Parker Conservation League 7:30
MEIGS COUNTY Rettred entertained with a family dinand daughter, Patty, will be Thursday Columbia G~s Co., Teachers Assoclallon.• Satur- ner precL'Iiing the Eastern- Tina Miller, Shari Mitch,
Ernest Mitchell, Lisa Nash,
hostesses. Everyone is in- witb Betty Newton giving day noon at the Me1gs Inn. Southern football game.
Billy O'Brien, Sherrie
vited to attend since it is an cooking demonstration. Ann Luncheon, busmess l'!'eetmg
Attending were Mr. and
Os~. Kimberly Payne,
open meeting.
Colburn, program; Helen and guest speaker, MISS Ann Mrs. Eddie Fischer and Tim,
Vicki Pickens, Ruthanna
Blackston, devotions.
Bradbury, Gallipolis. Reser- Reylioldsburg; Mr. and Mrs.
WEDNESDAY
Plants,
Gary Priddy,
EMMA
SMITH
CIRCLE
·
vat1ons to be made by Toes- Arthur Tatman, Crissy and
MEETING AT Meigs
Stephanie Radfocd, Rhonda When youtal
· . k're makirig an a&lt;;kbtlon (of any kind), or rieed money for any gOOd
Angie, Portsmouth; Mrs. · Reuter, Lowell Ridenour , reason,
County Muaeum, 7:30 p.m. Reorganized Church of Jes~ day at 992~ or 992-li1~.
to us at The City
Company, WheD major~·
·
Wedneaday
to
advise Christ of Latter Day Saints, • SAUSBURY PTO annual Barbara McLaughlin, Eric
David R. Riggs, Dollle largt;r amounts, we can arrange a HomeoWner Loan quickly~~
repr mn'latlves of all Meigs 7:30 Thursday at the Racine- fall cam1val. Servmg to begm and Arnie, Wheelersburg ;
Rousey, U8a Scaggs, Robert COilSJde'rattOn.
·
at 5 p.m. Saturday, country.' Mrs. Maxine Beasley,
County civic clubs and PortlandBnmchchurch.
Seelig, Mandy Sisson, John
THE ROCK SPRINGS Bet- store and bazaar to open at 6 Sciotoville; Mrs. Helen
organlzatlma on bow they
Snyder, Russell Starcher,
Stewart and Ralph, Annand
might have their club or terHealth Club, 1:15 p.m. at p.m.andgamesal6:30p.m.
John Stout, Craig Swick,
Turley, Mason, W. Va.; Miss . Randy
ocganlzatlonal sllry in Meigs the Rock Springs Church,
Tackett,
Fred
Dorothy Russell and Jeff, Mr.
History Book; all interested Thursday. Mrs. Mary SchaefThomas, Melba Thomas,
SUNDAY
and Mrs. Henry Werry,
group · representa lives fer, hostess; Mrs. Phyllis
Mark Venoy, Rita Vining,
REORGANIZED CHURCH ·Pomeroy; Janel Neal, Mid·
SkinnPr, pro ' ram,- Mrs. ~~ Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Invited.
Jackie Wagner; Roger
125 E. Main 'St. • 992-2171
dleport, Ray, Eddie and
ANNUAL INSPECTION of .Susie Pullins, (Ontest.
Wamsley, Nield Wil!Jon, Lori.
Saints, potluck dinner im- Janel Werry, and Jim
Bosworth Counctl 48 Royal
Wood.
mediately following the wor- Stewart, Minersville.
and Select Muters Wednes- FRIDAY
ship service Sund"Y ·
Following the game the
day. All companions invited
WRITING WORKSHOP for Members are lo take a group returned to the Werry by ~verat Easttm piayero
to attend. Work in select those with questions about covered dish .
hnme \dlf'l't' they wen~ ininf•d for refreshmenls.
muter degree.
·
1t1

Office•·s fu•· the 1978-79 vcw· meru.tatiun thot the i'ii'llnt.! ofnamed at a meetirig uf fi cer~ be rctainc&lt;.l for another
the Happy Harvesters Class yca.r.
S•.~ve ret l prujt!cls were plan -,
of Trinitx Church held Friday
ned
included a special church
afteruuon at the dmrch.
renovation
activity. The anP.lccted were Miss Frma
Smith, prcsldnet; Mrs. Neva nual Christmas party was set
Seyfried, vice president : fur Friday, [)ec. I at 6 p.m.
Mrs. Ella Smith, ~ecretary; The dinner wl!l be held at the
and Mr s. Genevieve Mei gs Inn followett"by a party
Meinhart , treasurer. Mrs. atthe church.
Vanilla i~ for sale by the
Stella Kl""s and Mrs. Wilma
Terrell reported for the L'O m- dass and it was noted that
mitlee and made the recom- cookboOks are still for sale by
the Friendly Circle. The pantry food project was •·eported
going well . The dlUITh choir
is ~!ling pecans.
W('J't.'

:::;

Southeast Ohio contestants feted ·

POLLY·s POINTERS

JIIUI·II!IOI_RB

of Progressive Mothers' League; back row, Peg
Houdasbelt, Middleport CCL; Merle Howard, President of
Rio Grande Mothers' League; and Mary Louise Hennesy,
Pre$1dent of Toddlers to Tassels Mothers' League. The
meeting was well attended and a potluck dinner was
enjoyed by all.

ALL THE PRESIDENTS -The all-league meeting of
the Southcentral OCCL Ohio Child Conservation League
was held in October at the Kyger Cre.ek Employees' Club.
Sho"!l are, 1-r, Jean Glllespie, District President; Mary
·Kreats, State President of OCCL; Cathy Wray, President
niFirat-&amp;epMothers' League; Nanette Moody, President

Racine Social Events
I
.'

By Mn. Francis Morris
The Bertha M. Sayre
Missionary Society met for
the November meeting at
First. Baptist Church Monday
evemng, Nov. ·6. A turkey
dinner hosted by the Esther
Circle members was enjoyed
by thirty with two guests and
Rev. and Mrs. Walker. While
all were around the table,
Mrs. · Helen
Simpson
presented a program on
· ~Five Grains of Corn"
followed by grace by Rev.
Walker. ·
.
" Mrs. Mary K. Yost,
president, preside(! at the

Beegle and Gretta Simpson
were . in charge of the
meeting and opened with program for the Baptist
- devotions, titled "Thank God World Day of Prayer. Theme
for Life." Hymn "Take My was "Lifting the World."'
Life, and Let It Be" was sung After opening remarks by
with Mrs. Lillian Hayman at Mrs. Mary K. Yost , hymns
the piano. Mrs. Yost read were sung, scripture and
scripture, Psalm 107 :8 and a readings and prayers were
poem
Thanksgiving" given. Mrs. Barbara Gheen
closing with prayer. Liv- sang " The Lord's Prayer."
ing
examples
was Alter the offering "Blest Be
the
subject
of
the the Tie that Binds" was sung
Love Gift Dedication by Mrs. and the closing prayer was by
Nondus Hendricks. The of- Vera Beegle.
fering of the Circles was
Those coming fr om a
$163.55 presented by Ollie distance for the fun eral
Mae Cozart and Frances services of Francis Morris
Wilcoxen. Prayer was by included Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Mrs. Hendricks. Mariha Lou Schroeder and Mae Fern of
14

Fayetteville, Ark.; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Swift and Mrs.
Michelle Kinnett of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Gould of Nelsonville: Captain
Steven Schroeder of WrightPatterson Air Force Base,
Dayton; Ron Schroeder,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
William Lake, Lori and Sean,
and Mr. and Mrs. John Glab
of Athens County; Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Sayre, Bowerston,
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris,
Athens.
Among those coming for
the funeral services of Mrs.
Mabel Cleland were Kenneth
Cleland of Kingston, Ill.; Mr.
and Mrs. .led Pickens and

~SH LEAN

USDA CHOICE

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST

BROUGHTON
LOW FAT

$149

2% MILK .

·i

~

l-

!.

ungratefulness of the healed
lepers, Songs included "All
Hail the Power of Jesus
Name" and " Come Ye
Thankful People, Come."

The Public Uliiilies Comm1s·
s•on ol Ohio has set for pub·
lie hearing Case No. 78-629·
EL·FAC 10 rev1ew the luel
procuremenl practices and
policies ol lhe Ohio Power
Compa ny. the opera11on ol
11s ~u el Cost Ad1ustmem
Clause . and related malle• s
This hearing is scheduled to
begin at 9 30 a.m on De·
cember 11 . 1978 . Council
Olfice. City Hall . 218 Cleveland Avenue S.W .. Camon .
Ohio 44702 .
All interesied persons wil l
be given an opporlulllty lo
be heard Further inlorma·
lion may be obtained by con·
tacting 1he Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILI TIES
COMMISSION Of OHIO
By: Richard L Smilh .
Secretary

Given a speda] weleome at

the meeting was Mrs. Ruby
Erb who has been unable to
attend fur the p~st year. Mrs.
Freda Duffy was pianist for
1

sol o, "How Great Thou Art. "
Members s"ng "Happy Birthday" to Ada Holter and Grace
Pratt. Members sang "Blest
Be the Ti e" to close · the
meeting. A covered dh;h din~
ner was served fulluwin15 the
mt:!eting . A Thanksgiving
motif was C(! ITied out in the
decorations.
Th e d ass will se rve as

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon .. Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8: 30til 5: 00
Thursday Ti1 .12 Noon
Friday Until8 P. M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason, W. Va .

GROUND CHUCK .............~~ ..$
59
CHUCK STEAK .................~... }
29
SLICED BACON..............~z.~ ..~ }
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

_

SUPERIORS

25 lb Ba

WE HAVE
AlARGE SELECTION

PLAIN GOOD TEA BAGS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• }.0.0.~~~t.'1.29

79t;

Broughtons

PLAIN GOOD TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.f~~~.69~
PLAIN GOOD ~APER TOWELS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••1•0.~~~.~~~~ 49~

GLAD TRASH CAN LINERS•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• }~.~t 99~

'1 09

6 ,. t;

GRADE B LARGE

EGGS.........~~.

FOR .YOUR
HOLIDAY
NEEDS!

ARMOUR POnED MEAT••••••••••••••••••••••• u.4 3 oz. cans'1.00
VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL ................................... QT. 69~

Cottage Cheese
· 24 oz. Ctn.

*TURKEYS
*HAMS *DUCKS
* CO~NISH HENS

PLAIN GOOD FACIAL TISSUES ••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.~t~.~!.. 49~

BUnER MILK
'h GAL.

-~.OF

PLAIN ·GOOD LIQ. DETERGENT•••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~.~;.~~1; •• 39~

VAUEY BEL..L

79

$}39

HYLAND DOG FOOD •••••••••••••• ; •• ~•. '3.49

Welendahand

\.

LEGAL NOTICE

.

Chunk Style

Attend Pennsylvania funeral

'
fI

Reported ill were Mrs. E1~1a
Reibd and Mrs. Bunny Kuhl.

STEW MEAT......................~.~ }

.

· ~

The October meeting of The
Rose Garden Club met at the
home of Mrs. John Arbaugh .
The meeting was opened by
the president, Mrs. John
Rice , with a devotional
reading by Mrs. James Stout:
The Lord's Prayer was sung
o·n a recording by J im
Nabors.
A new member, Mrs.
Harley Rice, was welcomed
into the club. Mrs. Harold
Massar, program chainnan , .
introduced Ms. Evelyn
Cullum of the Novelty Craft
and Gift Shop of Belpre. Ms.
Cullum dem onstr a t e d
Macrame hangers ar.d different yams to use were on
display.
The door prize and
traveling prizes were both
won by Mrs. James Stout.
The hostess served lovely
dessert refreshments to 10
members and 5 guests.
·
The November meeting
wlll be at 7:30p.m., Nov . 15,
at the home of Mrs. Doris
Koenig.

house of Franef.'s Florists.

the rareity of its expression ,
and commented on the

Lhe meeting and a lso hC!d a

Rose Garden
Club met

hostesses fo r the Dec. 3 open ·

FRESH LEAN BONELESS

&amp;ums, Baileys return from trip

Loan

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Howard
and family of Shelby, N. c.;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McMurray
and family of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb
spent a week with their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Foster and
family at Lavonia, Mich.
Wilma Riggs, Lizzie Woode
and Romaine Frederick
spent a day in Columbus
visiting Mrs. Mary Rollin.
Mrs. Ellen Arnott spent
overnight Saturday with Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Weaver at
Mason, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace
and Mrs. Pearl Adams
visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Brace at Parkersburg.
Mrs. Earl Powell of '
Torch and Bob Birch
spent
a
of Bellevue
couple of days with Mrs. Elza
Birch and visited Mr. Birch
at the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. James Brace
and children of Crown 'city
spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Brace.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams
attended a birthday party of
thetr granddaughter, Melanie
Adams.

Mi ss Smith had the prayer
to open the meeting , and Mrs.
Meinhart gave devotions o&gt;ing scripture from Eph. 5 and
a meditation on thankfulness .
She spoke of the importance
of the grace of gratitude and

HOLSUM
Unclassified .

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KING SIZE

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Loaf

39~

ONIONS

20 LB.
BAG

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8 PACK

16 oz.

~tis

Thurs. Only

99~

&gt;

RC or DIET RITE

MAXWELL HOUSE

INST. COFFEE.
10 oz.
JAR

8 Pk.

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10
We Accept Federal Food Stamps - We Reserve The Right To Limit

16 oz. Btls.
'Plus Deposit

e

DR. PEPPER
8 Pack
16 oz. Bottles

99¢

Plus

�..••

Past Councilors· nominate officers
Ada Bissell prestdcd at the
offin•rs WHS held Hl the meeting which opened with
Wednesday night nieeting of the IOOih Psalm. thr• T"f'l''
tlw · ·rast Councilors' Club, Prayer and the pledge of
Chester Council 323, Dauqh· allegiance in unison. To roll
tcrs of America, held at the call members answered by
lellinK things IIley have been
hall .
Nominated were Thelma thankful for during the past
White, president: Goldie
Mae McPeek gave the
Frederick, vice president,
Enna Cleland, . secretary; secretary 's report, Leona
Betty Roush, ·trea surer; Hensley, the treasurer's
Marv K. Holter. new:&lt; report.
The annual Chri stmas par·
rcpoiter : Ada Van Meter,
sentinel ; and lnzy Newell, ly was set for Dec. 13 with a
dinner at Crow's Steak House
flower chairman.
at 6:30 p.m. and a meeting
CHESTF:R-Numinatiun of

following at the lodge with a
$2 gift exchange . Those'
members not present at last
week's meeting are asked to
advis~
Erma Cleland
whether they will be going to
the Christmas supper.
Thank sgiving readings
were given by Go.ldie
Frederick, lnzy Newell, Bel·
ly Roush, Mae McPeek, and
Leona Hensley. A committee
of' Mrs. Roush and Ethel Orr
wils named to .prepare the
1979 hostess list.
Ada Van Meter and Ada
Neluzling were hostesses for

Annual Christmas visit planned
Plans for the ann ual
Christmas· visit to the Meigs
County Infirma ry were made
during a meeting of the Missionary Soeiely held at the
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church Thursday night.
The meeting followed a
potluck dinner at 6 p.m. For
the infirmary pa rty ,
The New Hope Singers who will be at the Pomeroy
~urch of Christ this weekend include front, 1 to r, Sue

Howard and Susan Vaughan; back row, I to r, Bob
Reisinger, Daphne Jones and Chip l.Dper .

CHARLES LEMLEY
Charles M. I£mley has
l't!turned to his home in Point

New Hope Singers to entertain
The New Hope Singers from the college that go to
from the Cincinnati Bible congregations in Ohio, In·
College will be at the diana , Kentucky and West
Pomeroy Church of Christ, Virginia, besides other
212 W. Main St., Pomeroy states , on weekends to
Friday through Sunday. ' ' present a gospel message
The New Hope Singers are through song and teaching.
The Singers will be in·
one of several ensembles

volved with a "life lock-in"

with the young people of the
church Fri da y night and
Saturday. They will be at
Sunday school and morning
worship on Sunday.
The public is invited to hear
the singers. Sunday School

Pleasant, W. Va. aft er spending the past three weeks at
the U. S. Public Health Servict:: Huspila l at Ballimore 1

Md. fu r observation. He will
begins at 9:30 a.m. and be entering Pleasant Valley
morning worship at 10:30 Hospital this week for possia.m.
ble surgery.

members will lake cookies
and punch along with a gift
for each resident. They will
return tu the, ch.urch for a
business meeting.
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner
presided at the meeting
which opened with a · poem,
"Spirit · of Thanksgiving."
The love gift dedi~atiun was
by Mrs. Margaret Bailey, and
Mrs. Hariett Sterrett had the
program on the . Women's
Department of the Baotist
World Alliance and the Bap·
tist World Day of Prayer. •
The group sang "Open
Mine Eyes" and there was a
message from the Alliance
president with the program
title being " Lifting the World
Off its Hinges." Taking pari

were Mrs. Ellen Couch,
"What is Prayer?", Mrs.
Maria Fosler with "The Dif·
ferent Prayer of the Old
Testament", Mrs. Bailey
with "Prayer is a Source of
Vision and Creativity"
Georgia Watson , "The Book
of Psalms and What It Speaks
to Our Hearts." Mrs .- Caryl
Cook ' read "The Lord Invites
Us to Present our Requests to
God." An offering was taken
for the Alliance.
Others attending were Burton Smitp, Audrey Young,
Betty Wiles, with two guesls
for the dinner, William Wal·
son and Orval Wiles.
A circle of prayer for Cad·
die Wickham and the Spencer
family closed the meeting.

•

the meeting . Mrs. White and
Mrs. Holler had charge · of
entertainment. Mrs. Orr won
the door prize. Others Utere
were Goldie Frederick,
Laura Mae Nice, Mabel Van
Meter, Letha Wood, and Ada
Morris.

Matthew Milliron
Mr . and Mrs. Fred
Goeglein o spent Friday at
Millersport visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Karr.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Will
were in Zanesville Sunday
where they were the dinner
ouests of his sister and her
•husband, Hazel and Vernon
Longshore. The two couples
celel&gt;rated their wedding anniversaries and exchanged

Turns one ·

·
Matthew Milliron, son- of
Jim and Rhonda Milliron,
Reedsville, celebmled his
first birthday at the home of
his "orandparents, Marvin
and Eva Milliron , Route I,
Middleport Sunday.
A di nner was served with
the honored guest receiving a
,,g.._if_ts_.- - - - - - - - ' shaggy dog cake from his
BIG BEND CB'ERS
great-aunt , Bonnie Rife .
The Big Bend Ci,lizens Band Other family members allenRadio Club will have a ding · were Mrs. Marie
Thanksgiving dinner for Milliron , his paternal great·
members and !heir families •"randmother·, Mrs . Bertha
on Sunday, 4:30p.m. at the Rife, his maternal great·
;Rock Springs Grange hall . grandmother, Diane and
Each member is to take a Tami Milliron, aunts ; Mrs ..
\:overed dish . The turkey and Belva Mohler and son, Tony.
·11 be Middleport, and Mrs. Alice
'ham and beverages wt
' J&gt;icubs and children, Crystal
•ptovided. There will be a door ami Gene. Minersville.
prize awarded .

'·

'
....

~

•

A

•

..-,•
~

..•
~

w

,c
~

Flexsteel

••..•
••
...•
~

Find Upholstered
· Furniture

~

..••

The deep-sealing, longlast lng

comfort

.of

•'

Flexsleel's line lumlture
starts with the un iq ue
Flexsteel springs. formed
from the finest watchspring steel. ·
Flexsteel craftsmen Insist

on materials of the finest

qualify fo match their
skilled workmanship .
Frames are of tOp qualify
kiln -dried

hardwood ,

double -dowelled

and

corner blocked for extra -

strength and stability . The
beaufllul upholstery of
Flexsfeel furn iture Is the
result of expert affentlon fo
detail, dell handling of the
line Flexsfeel fabrics, and
skillful tailoring.

BAKER FURNITUR
Middleport, 0.

Three local girls enter Southeast
Ohio junior Miss contest, Nov. 19
POMEROY - Three high ' M, school paper, choir, FHA, - 15 percent; Poise and
school senior girls from head majorette and featured appearance - Routine in
Gowns 15 percent;
Meigs County are the three twirler of the souUtern band.
latest entries in Ute 1978-79 For a creative and perlor· Scholastic - based on each
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss ining arts division of the girl's first 3 years of high
Finals to be held November program she will present a school - 15 percent ; and the
19 at the Meigs clunior High baton solo. She is sponsored judges interviews - in·
School Auditorium , Mid· by the Racine Home National terview with each contestant
for (10) minutes. The judges
dleport, beginning at 3:15 Bank.
Other
contestants
who
have
interviews ,
and
the
p.m. They are:
.
are:
Carol
entered
the
finals
scholastice
judging
is
done
Miss Dollie
Rousey,
daughter of Hugh Rousey and Morris, Southern High prior the fin a ls of the
granddaughter of Mr s. School, sponsored by the program.
Tickets lor the finals are on
Kathrine
Millikan
of Racine Home National Bank,
Pomeroy. She attends school Lori Cha pman, Southern sale at the New York Clothing
at Meigs High School and is High School, sponsored by the . House, Pomeroy, and the
active in the marching band, City !.Dan of Pomeroy, Sherr! Meigs Inn of Pomeroy,
Rishel, Vinton County High besides , each contestant is
concert band , pep band,
School,
sponsored by Elliott sellin g ticket s. Advance
national honor society,
Appliance
II, Pomeroy, student tickets are $1.00 and
student boOsters, the yearBecky
Crow,
SouUtern Hl~h ·door price is $1.50. Advance
book staff, has received a
School,
sponsored
by The adult tickets are $1.25 with
Biology Award and in 1978
Inn
of
Pomeroy,
Meigs
the door price being $1.50
she received an Ohio
Debbie
Pickens,
Southern
Uni v ers ity
Summer
Scholarship. She plains to High School, sponsored by
attend Ohio University and The Meigs Inn of Pomeroy,
become a teacher. For her Janis Carnahan, Southern
talent she will present a High School - sponsored by
clarinet solo and she is being the Racine Home National
sponsored by the Meigs Inn Bank.
Each contestant will be
Pizza Shack.
judged
In the following
Miss Belind·a (Bunni )
categories
: Creative and
McGraw, daughter of Mrs.
perfonning
arts - talent of
Laura J. McGraw, Racine is
the
girl's
choice
and is 20
a senior at Southern High
·
percent
·
youth
fitness,
Schoo1 where she is active in
in
spurts
wear
Routine
done
the F; A. •.:hoir, ECHO staff,
art e.·;r, of the yearbook,
flag co. p and band and she
received first place in the
Bicentennial test. She plans
to attend Marshall University
and is planning a nursing
career. She is being spon:
sored by Francis Florist of
Pomeroy and will present a
comedy dance routine for the
creative and prefonning arts.
Contestant nine is Miss
Cindy
Lou
Patterson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Corbett L. · Patterson of
Syracuse.
She is · vice
president of the pep club,
treasurer of the st udent
council, yearbook staff,
national honor socielv. TRI·

'

..•

&gt;

SO GOOD, SO FRESH
PURE liAN
RDME
. &amp; WINESAP

~~~~.~~...........~~ 109

buck
here.

8-16

Ch k
un

BOLOGNA........ ~~~-

CUT

SAUCE

YAMS

it?
The guy who sits behind this desk
has a lot of important decisions to
make. Hes )OOI' employer. One of
the most important of those
decisions is how to provide you and
~ fumily with first-rate group
health care protection. More
employers decide upori Blue Cross
. and Blue Shield coverage than any
other kind. And there's a reason for
it value. The dollar that goes
towards ~ coverage not only buys ·
top health care protection for
you and your family... but

PUMPKIN

oz.

29

FOR

1._ COL,IPDN_

NO. 105
42 OZ. CAN

NO. 155

$}69

limie one please with this coupon
coupon Expires Nov. 18, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov. 18, IY78
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

j

.

5 LB. BAG

49~ W/~

Li. IJI.i).~ne please with this cou_!lon

Coupon Expires Nov. I
TWIN CiT

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
. NO. 305

· LB. CAN

II Altl'-lt,.O lroltrU lh.le Cr'* A..ociMio n
3 ' f'ellltttftd ltNice Marlll 01 ttte Natlo~
AIIOciatlan ol 81.,. lh'-ld l'tMt

Co urt St .

'

.

I.

.

99~

W/C

'$219

COUPON

' 9 oz.

39~

!.

90Z.

BOXES

W/C

Limit one 11Juse.witb this coupon
coupon Expires Nov. 18, 1978
TWIN CiTY GATEWAY

r.o u ~uN

.

,

NO. 105
13 OZ. BOX

59~

W/C

1'---- COUPON _ ,.

'

BLUE BONNET SOFT SLEEVE

2 age
IO OZ.
· PKGS.

Limit one plea se wnh thJ.uoupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 18, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

C OUPON

Limit one pie;Jse with this ~oupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 18, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

CAULIFLOWER OR BROCOOU
NO. 155

Limit one ple!Jse with th~ coupon
Coupon Expires Nov. 18, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Limie one please with this coupon
•
· Nov. 18, 1978.
,_.,TOo-.llY

-

HOT ROLL MIX

. BIRDSEYE

W/C

l_

PIE CRUST MIX

'-

COOL WHIP

j

~-~

7
g~
2

W/C

limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 18, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

PILLSBURY

j

BIRDSEYE
NO. 105

W/C

1978
Y

59~

NO. 105
24 OZ. BOX

PILLSBURY
NO. 305

Litlliloo:eR~.u.s.e wifl:t.t.!lis r;oupon

coupon Expires Nov. 18, 1978·
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.

-

SWEETENER
NO. 155
6 OZ. BTL

W/C

c oyPoN

-j

-J

CORN MEAL

limit one piease with this ~oupon
Coupon Expires Nov. 18, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

SWEETIO

PILLSBURY FLOUR
NO. 255

CO U PO N

2 LB. BOX

_c:[) IH'!lN

QUAKER WHITE or YELLOW

NO. 205
W/C

W/C

CO U P ON

AUNT JEMIMA
COMPLETE PANCAKE MIX

$155

35 OZ. BOX

~~~-,~~ r~~~l

COUP O N

j

DISHWASHER ALL

SPRY SHORTENING

Value added.

oz.

CAN

L_C: DUPON _ j

also.goes towards Blue Cross and ,
Blue Shield programs aimed at
helping people ~ healthy. What we
can oositive health care strategies.. ,
programs that are going to pay off ·
by cutting down on urmecessary ·
health care rosts. It's one 'MfJ we
make sure value is added to }WI'
employers h~ care protection
dollar. Why should you care?
Because every dollar he doesnt have
to .spend on health care protectidn
is another dollar he might
be able to share with }00.

79.....~. 89
,. Sliced

LIBBY'S

40 OZ. CAN

BOmES

STORE
Pomeroy , 0 .

FRENCH CITY

DIET RITE COLA

Blue Cross ~
Blue Shield.
JEWELRY

79¢

CRANBERRY
15 OZ. CANS

OR

99
• ,.

GOLDEN ISLE

GOLDEN ISLE&lt;

R.C. COLA

~

SLAB BACON .......•...........~~-.

APPLES........~~.. .

l

GOESSLER

. 3 lb.

BY THE PIECE

.,

WIC

MARGARINE
POUND
59~
CTN.
Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 18, 1978
TWIN -CITY GATEWAY

,.

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ptmeroy, 0., Nov . 14, 1976

'

-

R- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 14, 1978

DICK TRACY

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
IN THE

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~l!JI]

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF RICHARD
DONALD BROOKS ANO
TONYA RENEE BROOKS

No . 21,514

~ GJ~lflllli~W\1

-NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION Dona ld R1chard Walker ,
whose las t known address
was
Rlverv1ew
Or~11e ,
Albany, Georgia JHOl , but
whnse address and place Of
res1dence are otherwise
unknown, will take notice
that on the 27th day of Oc
tober , 1978, William Perry
Brooks , ttled a Petition for
Adopt1on of Rtcha rd Donald
Walker II and Tanya Renee
Wlliker , and tor a cha nge ot
the 1r name ro Rtcha rd Dona ld
Brooks and Tanya R:enee
Brooks It has been a lleged in
the proceedmgs that yo u have
tai led wtt hou t lustlfia ble
cause to cornmunicat e with
the said minor ch t\dren and .to
prov1de for them the ma1n
tenance and support as
reQUired by taw and that
therefore your consent to the
adop t1o n is not r equ 1red ThiS
Pet 1tion wt ll be heard in the
P roba te Court of Me igs
County, Ohio, at the Court
House in Pomeroy, Oh10 , at
10 oo A M on th e lOth day of
Janu ary, 19 79 , You are
requ ir ed to answer th 1S
Petttion wit h 1n twenty e 1ght
days
after
the
last
pu b11c a t1on

November 15 , 1978
Lady Luck w111 prove to be a
rather staunch ally for you thiS
commg year, c areerw1se , espemally 1n s1tuat1 ons whe re you
merit her a•d Take full advantage of the breaks .
SCORPIO (Oct. Z4-Nov. ZZ)
Heed the advice of s hr ewder
heads m bus1ness matte rs
today . If you act too 1mpuls1vely
you cou ld suffe r a toss where
you should make a profit. Fmd
out the secrets of gettmg along
wtth others by sending for your
1979 copy of Astra-Graph Leiter Matt 50 ce nts fo r each and a
tong , self-addressed , stamped
en\le lope to Astro-Graph . P 0
Box 489, Radoo C1ty Station,
NY 10019 Be sure to spec 1fy
b1rth s1gn.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. Z3- Dec.
21) For reasons known only to
yourse lf,yo u may be tempted to
do so me thm g today that opManning 0 Webster ,
poses your better JUdgment
Judge and Ex OffiCIO
Clerk , Probate Cour t
Th1 s could be an enormous
of Meigs County, Ohio
blunder
CAPRICORN (Dec . Z2-Jan. t9) (10 1 31 11117 , 14 , 21.'" (121 5.
You ' re not apt to put you rse lf 12. 7t
out today for others unl ess 1t IS
advantageous to yo u m some
spectflc manne r Such an altiIN THE
tude wil l do l1ttle for you r
COMMON PLEAS COURT
1m age
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
AQUARIUS (Jan ZO- Feb. t9) Do
RICHARD E . PHILLIPS ,
Plamt1ff,
somethmg fun today w1th a
vs.
buddy who has bee n he lpful to
BARBARA G. PHILLIPS,
you m th e past Go the who le
Defendant.
ro ute, even 1f 1t means grabbNo 17002
Ing the tab
-NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION PISCES (Feb. ZO- March ZO)
Barbara G . Phil l tps, whose
Th 1s can be a very p rod uc tive
la st known address was Box
day but it co ul d also be fraug ht
92 , Middleport , Oh10, who
w1th cha llenges
You ' re a
may hav e been reSiding 1n
match fo r anythtng you have to
care of Edna Jordan, Digen
Stree t, Jackso nv ille , F lorida
co nt end w1th , so be of stout
3205, whose address 1S
heart
otherw1se unknown Wtll take
ARIES (March Zt-Aprll t9) The
not1ce that on the l4fh day ot
hostile mann er o f another w1ll
October. 1978, Richard E
have s ma ll e ffec t upon you
Ph ill ips , as P laintiff , f1fed a
today when yo u turn the ot h e r comp latn t charoing gross
ne glect of duty and extreme
cheek Go your merry way and
cr ue lt y against he r in which
le t h1m grumble alo ne
the relief dema nded is a
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
d 1vorce and other rel1ef and
Th e re is ma tenal opportunity
that this case may be heard
twenty .e.lght days after the
aro und you today , but It'S also
poss tble you may not de¥elop 11 last publ1cation of notice
which wilt be ma de on the
to the full es t Don't waste your
28t h day of Nov ember, 1978,
good s h ots
a nd that the final hearing has
GEMINI (May 2t-June 20) Be bee n set for 9 00 a .m . on
December 30, 1978
wolllng to s ha re lh e good thai
You are requtred to answer
befalls yo u today If you re
th1S comp1a1nt by not later
hght·f•sted where you s hould
than
twenty eight days
be generous you may re ce1 ve following the last publication
like trea tm ent at a later date
of th1 S noti ce or judgment by
Cr.NCER (June Zt-July Z2) Be defau lt may be taken agamst
you
r'
ca relul today that money
doesn t become a nasty tssue
Larry E . Spencer ,
betwee n yourse lf an d o ne
Clerk ot co ur t
you're la nd 9f Fnends htp ts
Co mmon P leas Court,
Meig s County, Ohio
more tmportant than the Sli ver
Involved
(lQ) 17 , 24,31 (11) 7, 14, 2 1. 28.
LEO (July Z3-Aug.Z2) You re 71
lucky today m thmgs you pe rsonally manage but be wary of
ruffli ng feathers 1n the process
The Alamanac
lnsp tre yo ur followe rs, d on t
United Press International
mc 1te th em .
Today is Tuesday, Nov . 14,
VIRGO (Aug. Z3-Sepl. 2Z) Keep
that partic ula r goal m mmd lhe 318th day of 1976 w11h 47 to
loday , or you could b e s lopped follow.
by the fi rst obstacle Your
The moon is full.
mot1 ve s mus1 be greater than
The mormng stars are
the menace
Venus,
Jupiter and Saturn.
LIBRA (Sepl. Z3-0ct. 23) TacThe evening stars are Mertics that are too assertive w1ll
produce a dilatory re sponse cury and Mars
today The oppos1te Will be true
Those born on lhis date are
if yo ur approach IS warm and
Wlder lhe sign of Scorpio.
JOV Ial.
Robert Fulton, Amencan
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

STOREWIDE
SALE PRICES
ON AU. MACRAME, ART
SUPPLIES, _DECOU PAGE,
BEADS, ETC.

Stop In and
Register To Win
SALE PRICES GOOD THRU
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22

WANT AD
CHARGES

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice rs hereby Qt'olen lhl!t
0!1 Gatnermo Cor
poratton 1t has flied an ap
plicat ion wllh the Public
Ut i lities Commiuion of Ohio
in Case No 78 -1092 PL -ASN

Ohro

tor

author~tv

to abandon the

following pipelines together
wrth such pumpmg stations

as

mav

be

ancillary

or

I 25

I ~ t !, l ~ "

,( d.ll ..

IM

!~

1\1&gt;11\-.
1\• h

I !&lt; ~ ('\'11\" pt'l 'AUld j ~~t.• l tlot_~ 11111111/L~ uthl' l
ull:&lt;t'l U\11' 1

ll1.an ,

tl•• , ~ 1'1 111 ht· • h.u ~ ··• l.ll tlk' l

1la1

r.ll t'

lu

tll11lllll'

mm1mutn

max

cl ror rw l('r 10 on lorges.t end ,
~ per ton
Bundled !&gt; lab ,
S6 SO per ton Oelrvered to
Oh to Polle t Co lh 'J. , Pomc:&gt;t o y

'l'f.l

For The Bnt
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

'J~Y

Yard Sale _ _

tj';)

l .. uh V.l&gt;ltlll\t'l. tiM · lllltultnllll l ;i

I 1111111111~

Po les

I •11.1

·' '" )

hd. l~ ~

WOOD

I .11 d ul ·11umk:-&lt; 1111d

h. t 'l'lll ~ 1M. I V.illtl , f:llM I
·r.u,;h m.l tl\&lt;lllt , .

Mo•lult· llnnlt' :-;Hit·~ &lt;tiKI Yurd S&lt;tlt::;
,ut• rlttl'jlh•d tllll\ Wtlll l'.l!ih with
111 dtt .!5 t t•ut 1'11&lt;1.1 ~~· fu1 ad ~ tan~ ·
Ill)' Ilox Nut1 1bt•1 In Ciln' ttf 'l'hl' St•n·

If VOU ho ... e o ser"Lce to offer
wont to buv or sell someth1ng
oe looktng lm work
or
wha tever
vou Jt get results
fo ster wtth o Senti nel Wonl Ad
Coil W'l '215b
C.AIMG~ SAlt Wed and Thur~
10 t1ll dark
Tent electrtc
heater m1sc , clot h.ng Turn
nghl 01 Memory Garde ns
Cemetery, turn r1ght ol neK t tn
terseclton 2nd house on nght

YARD SAH 2 lomt ly at lew1s
Hudson res1dence , on Eag le
lht· Pubhslll't II'!Wtvt•s ll w 11 ~h1
R1dge ~d Co untv Rd 32 !-=rom
(11 t•th l Ill II'Jl'l I Hfl\ atls dt't'llll'll 11lr
Me mory Gardens Cemetery
•
l
lulli11
Tlu
Publlsht•t
wtll
nnt
llt•
11
3rd house on r1ght Wmter
fl'o;lfUIISII.Jit• f llf 111111'1' lhHIIIIill' 1111 1'1 •
ciolhes, eKcellenl cond1hon
!l'lllllSI'Itlllll
boots shoes, clot h.n g and
Phu1w ~l-:!156
I · m1SC 11ems Wed 9 td l 4

I IIIII

NOTICE
WANT-Ab
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mom.lcn
N•w•flllll S.tiLJ id a~

Ttlt'!'id,l\
liH U rrlda \'

4p M
th1 d;n lk·furtlpuUllutllnll

MOORE'S
Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Baltery.
Installation Service
Ph . 992-2848

Pomeroy,O.

J. R. Consbuction
Co.
Carpentry, Electrical,
Painting

YARD SAL ~ Rom or sh1ne ol 32d
Beec h Sl M1dd leport , Oh 1o
Wed l51h lbth , 171h lOom
For Renl

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

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lorge lois Co~ l ~9~· ~479
J AND 4 RM fu rn 1shed and un·
lur n1shed
opts
Ph one
992·5434
TWO 8fOROOM, k1tchen furmsh ·
ed opt (all be fore 8 om
~92 2288

'p M

- -- ----

--

GUN

o.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
PhODe
-5682

m

4·30-ttc •

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Type

Building
Any Type

lddustrial
Improvements

To Existing Structures
All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small

2S Years Experience

Pels for Sale

Camping Equipment

HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy sell
trade or trom New an d used
sadd les. Rut h Reeves Albany
16~ 4 ) 698_]~-- - - HISING STAR Kennels Boordmg
and groom1ng. all breeds.
Ches htre 367·0292.

1977 17 WILDERNESS camper Ful·
ly self · con tamed
$2800
985 3806~:.__ _ __ _ _

.

- -- - - - - - - --

1974 STARCR AFT GAlAXY . fo ld
down , ha rd top camper Sleeps
8, new gos furnace 3 bu rner
range, ownmg and poles, 2 gas
bottles, e~~:celle nl cond ttton .
s1950 992-2786
~

Rea 1 Estate for Sale
Auto Sales
1977 MONZA SPVD~R 305 eng1ne
Power sfeeong Power bra kes.
AM· FM rad1o More extras Call
742·2826
1975 MONTE CARLO E~~:ce lle n t
cond1lton l ots of extras , $2700
992.76!19

HOMESITES fo r sole 1 acre and
up Mtddleport , near Rutland
Coll992 7481
THREE BEDROOM frame hom e m
M1ddleport 'Coll992 ·3457 ,

CAPTAIN EASY

A!' THe MO~STIOR ENTERS
MAYOR 60665' MANSIOtJ --

~·AST VOU,
5 066.5~ YOU

LET ME WA LK
iNTO TH IS!

Your HeadquarteiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

'i1 lrlf'\.\ilt

1]}1} ~ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~&lt;.!:1~ ®
byHenrtArnoldandBobLee

APPUANCE II

Unscramble these fo ur Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordmary words

· 220 E. Mlln Street,

Pomeroy,O.
tall f92·7013
For Free Esllmates
11·9· 1 mo.

CEllULOSE
INSUlAnON
'6.50 per bag
J&amp;L INSUlAnON
JIM KEESEE

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2298

SI100GUT
ltl~

TH~
C~R'{

WI-lAI A GOOD MAKe·
UP .:::TO&amp; 15 WO!'Ii:.TH .

WPAIIJI DtDIJ'T
'{DJl

Now arrange the Circled letters 10
s urp r~se answer as sug·
geste d by the above cartoon
fmm the

PHONE 992-2772
11 ·3·1 mo.
BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com·
ple te Service. Phone 949-2.487
or 9.C9· 200Q Roc1ne, Ohio , Cntt
Bradford
ELWOOD BOWERS REPA IR Sweepers toasters, trans , all
small appltonces . lawn mower.
nex t to Stole Highway Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·
3825. _ _=::-::-.,--SEWING MACHINE Repotrs, ser·
v1ce, all makes. 992-2284 The
Fobr~c
Shop . Pomeroy
Authonzed S1nger Sales and
Serv1ce. We sharpen Sctssors.
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and to-boys for h1re. w1l l haul
ft!l d1rt , to !Od limestone ond
grovel Coli 8ob or Roger Jef·
fers , dov phone 992.7089, night
phone 992-3525 or m . 5232.

F1re Dept Every Saturday b 30 ,:::7:4:2~2~45~1;;;:::;::;::;;;;:.,
FARM FOR sole. House . 2 barns, EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
pm ot the1r bUIIdtng 1n Boshon
trotl e r large pond lO acres or
and ditche r. Charles R Hot·
Factory cho ke guns only
82 acres . 742·2566.
fteld
, Bock Hoe Serv1ce ,
SNOW
ARt:- VOU .troubled w1 th w1ld
Rutland, Ohto . Phone 742-2008.
1976 CHRYSlER CORDOBA
R&lt;AL ESTATE l OANS CAN'T FIND
ommols? Fox m1n k racoon
Yellow w1th white leather 1n·
MORTGAGE MONEY? We hove WILL do roofing, construction,
TIRE SALE
opossu m, beo\ler etc? Coli the
tenor
loaded
l1ke new
plen ty at com pet 1t1ve rote~ 1 wlth
plumbing and heating. No job
trapper, 985·3984 Wdl contact
. 992·2594 or 992·3489
terms to 30 years. Veterans
too Iorge or too !imall. Phone
1n perso n for s1gned perm1s·
and non·veteren s VA &amp;- FHA
SNOW TIRES
742-2348
I972 SCOUT A· wheel dr now
stan
loa ns ore avodoble. IRELAND
ON SALE AT
Irons Very good shape $2300
MORTGAGE C:O . n E State HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
PART TIM~ Opportun1ty ovotlobl e
POMEROY LANDMARK
or best offer 992·5784
covot ing, septic system5,
SL
,
Athens
Ph one
fo r house wde . Needing hour s ·
SERVICE STATION
dozer. backhoe, dump truck ,
1967 CUTLASS, good cond1t1on
fo r mter . ,. 1ews Coli 949.2803 .
bl4-592 3051
limestone, grovel. block top
$300 or best offer 992·5784
HUNTING or trespassing da y
NICE OLDER HOM£ 1n good
pov1ng. Rt 143 Phone I (bl4)
i 9"70 GAlAXIE 500 2·door sedan.
or mght on my pro perty w11hout
neigh borhood m Pomeroy
698·7331
A1r conditioning. P S , P 8 AT
Some recent remodeling Cen·
wnllen permi SSIOn .
Good cond1t1on 1ns1de ond out
trol he atmg 3 or 4 bedrooms. BATHROOMS AND K1tchens
Carl F111dling
9.~ck W. Carsey, Mar.
remodeled ceramic tile, plum·
Excellent gas mileage Good
992-7074
POMERoY-i.AD't' ~~~~ ~t ~th ~o
Phone 992-2181
b1ng, carpentry , ond general
11res . Must drive to opprec1ote .
!Ients 1n home or hosp1tol
NEW THREE bedroom home.
maintenance. 13 yeors exCall aft e r 5pm 992·2995 .
F1reploce, sun deck , l s;. acre
992 b198 .
penance. 992·3685,
i9o9 OLDS CUTlASS CONVER·
wooded lot. 667 ·3890. Tuppers
197b HONDA CB Red, lrke new
PULLINS
EXCAVATING Complete
TABlE . P.S, O.B , push button
Plai ns.
owner 45 years old 950 mi les
Los! and Found
Service. Phone 992-2478.
top control In dash factory S__:!92 2594 or 992 _348~9'----c­
trock tope playe r Good runnREEVES TRADING Post, Pogeville
LOST BORDER collt e brown and
Ing condtllon Call after Spm ,
Grocer1es, dry goods hard·
wh1te , 1n Longsv1 lle orea, mole. OU TA TIRES Quality and per·
992-29'15
formonce . On sole now
. wore, feed, tack shop Special
Phone 742·3019 or 742 2571
742 2328
. 251b of dog lood , $3.88.
1975 DATSUN PICKUP Good con·
LOST EN GLIS H Blue T1ck coon
low mileage Step
d1tion
1970
FORD
IJ, ton or 19b7 Ford 1
AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
dog m o~eo of Keno and Locust
bumper. Truck mirrors Pnced
to n stake, dual whe els $1000
cancelled? Lost. your operators
Gro ve Rd If foun d please con
to sell. 985-3979
or best offer 992-7656.
hcense? Phone 992·2143
toct Terry Congo at qB5·39b5 or
843 2701 Rewo rd
EXCLElENT RIDING horse. 8 years 19b8 FORO 4-door sedan Good
FURNACE CLEANING
Coil
work cor . $495 992·2429
old Been used for 4· H Glen
992·5587 .
FOUND BLACK and wh tt e young
991-3325
Deeter long Bottom , Oh1o
dog m Pomeroy oreo w1 th col·
1976 PlYMOUTH VOlARE Road
216 E. Second Slreel :
lo r 992 2174 ' J 0 "
Runn er . 992·5724
MIXED HAY for sole Phone
Services Offered
NEW LISTING· :.::-3 year
698 807_2-c' - - - - --,-1978 Z28 Cornaro Red, Corm1ne
FOUND SMAll m1xed breed dog
old 5 bedroom home. Has 5 WILL CARE' for the elderly in our
wd h pup Family Black and APPLES. FITZPATRICK Orchard
v1nyl automatic , co~sole . Cra1g
home. Pl'lone992·7314,
bedrooms, walk·ln closets,
AM-FM stereo 8 style trim
wh1te w1 th brown markmgs
Stole Rt 689. Phone Wllkesvtlle
large
faml)y
room,
dlnlng,
Rustproofed
985
3928,
Gar
WATER
WEll drilli ng William T
Call985·4244
669 3785.
- - - - --c--c--sun deck and 2 car garage
fte ld residence.
Grant 742 2879
HECTRA LP Red Sunburst w1th 2
on large lot. $65,000.
hum buck tngs Hand case Ex· l9b5 FO RD VAN Auto tra ns,
Help Wanled
MIDDLEPORT
4 DUSTLESS FIREPLACE ond chimney
low mileage. $AOO 742·3074
cleaning . The Chtmney Sweep.
ce lle nt
cond 1t10n .
$225
bedroom brick &amp; frame .
PAYROll CLI:RI&lt; lor cons truction
Call614-373 6057
304 ·67 5 6276 Room 238,
1'12 baths, natural gas heat,
{10 ) 24, 31 (1 1) 7, 14, 4tc
off1ce at the Mountomeer
equipped kitchen, 2 car WANTED. CAY time baby sitting
Plan t, New Ho ven . Send 1976 SUZUKI RM 250 11 mo . old
garage with shop over.
1ob. Prater pre schooler.
Excellent
condit1on.
247-3861
,
resu mes
Asking 523',000 .
949 2854
PO Box 478 , Par kersburg WV ALTO SAXOPHONE wtth 2 cases ,
POMEROY Business
hke new $275 . 992-5565.
26 101:~·--:--,----­
Real Eslate for Sale
building, approx. UxBD, air WILL DO baby sitllng in home in
Roc1ne orao 843·2255 .
conditioned, oHice, loading
CAR HOP ond wo1tress at once .
inventor of lhe stesmboat,
App ly m person, Crows Family
dock, city utilities. and out
was born Nov. 14, 1765.
of high water. Wont WJ,OOO.
Restau ra nt. Pomeroy Ohto
Give Away
ANTI-FREEZE
RACINE Good
4
On lhlS day in history:
DI:PENDABLE BAR hel p , Must be
SMAll PURE wh1te poodle pupp)l .
bedroom, air conditioned
In 1832, lhe first horsePERMANENT
a v oliobl e
n 1ght s
and
needs good home. 992-2912.
home.
Natural
gas
furnace,
ANTI· FREEZE
weekends occOSIOnol days
drawn street car made Its
bath,
eat. )n
kitchen,
All
WHITE lovable adult mole cat
f1ve Points Grill. Rt. 7
Why pay $3.t9
appearance in New York
basement, and .66' of an
Utter trained Also block k1f·
-~~
acre. 525,000.
carried
30
City.
It
tens Me1gs Humane Society
011\.o'fl
o'fl
,&lt;.
'
&lt;
RUTLAND
~xBD
992·2592 or 992·2639
passengers.
NEW
LISTING
-..: ,~~'gal.
business building with
Established for many
In 194D, German planes TiMBE R POMEROY Forest Pro·
bath, kitchen, natural gas,
years. Bar and res1aurant
duels Top pnce for stondmg
Mobile Homes for Sale
dropped 225 tons of bmlbs oo
&amp;
c:ltv water . Now only
In Mlddleport. 2 buildings,
sow limber Call 992-59&amp;5 or
$11,000.
Coventry ,
In
southern
197b NASHUA 1-4 x 65 3 bedroom
several rentals . Call for
~.!_n t_HonbL2 446'-'~5:c7.:0_:_._ __
IN THE COUNTRY- New
England, destroying or
11/ , bath, Uf1derpinmng, $1500
informaflon. $55,000 .00 .
3 bedroom fashionable
ond assume loon 949·2683 or
damaging 69,000 of lhe 75,000 OLD FURNITURE 1ce boxes , brass 9 .. .:!.•ck
Carsey, Mar.
NEW LISTING In
home. 3 bedrooms, Z baths,
beds, non beds desks, etc ._
843·3311
Pomeroy, 1'12 story, part
buildings m lhe city. ·
nice
kit
.
with
bar,
dining
complete house holds Wrtte
Phone 992·2181
basement . 3 bedrooms,
1970 Amherst SOx 1'2 2 BR
overlooking the country
In 1972, for the first tbne in
M D M1ller Rt 4, Pomeroy or ~ ~·
garage. ONLY $11,900.00.
1970 Champion 6011l'2 2 BR
side
.
Plenty
of
fire
wood
co11992
77b0
its 71&gt;-yesr history, lhe Dow
RANCH 3 bedroom,
1965 Generol60x12 2 BR
and lots of country road.
FlOOR
FURNACE
.
(B
lowe,)
.
Cold
Jones Industrial Stock Aver- OLD COINS , pocke t watches ,
Iorge nice kitchen. 1.10
1968 PMC 52x12 2 BR
WJ,OOO. May take less.
01r
duct
system.
Removes
cold
acres. Carport, excellent
do ss rtngs weddmg bonds
ages closed above 1,000.
1955 Prairie Schooner 28x8 1 BR
MOBILE
HOME
LOTS-2
01r replaces by heat register
d1omonds Gold or Sti ve r Call
condition,
close
to
1973 Royal Embassy 68xl4 3 8R
already for your trailer.
In 1975, Spain agreed to
992·5247 .
Pomeroy. V.A. $29,500.00.
1959 Star 50x10 2 BR
H~g ~~~~"2_sley ?~?~?~------ -~------:-::-Wafer taps, septic tanks
abandon Spanish Sahara,
FARM - 70 acres, ranch
1973 CHEVROleT ,,, ton V-8 4·
1973 Star60xU :2 BR '
and electricity, on hard
WANT
TO
buy
old
45
a
nd
78
opening lhe way to C(Jllrol by
type house. bam, other
speed trans Also ntce 9 mo
1968 Star 60x12 2 BR
roads ...
pllo nogr oph rec ord s . Call '
bulldlngs, river frontage.
old He 1fer · Block Angus · Pol l
Morocco and Mauritania .
1970 Sylva60x12 2 BR
POMEROY- Want o good
~2 - b370 or Contact Marlin FurBELOW ·FAIR MARKET
ed Hereford Cross Phone
1968 Villages 60x12 2 BR
boy tor 516,500. We have a 3
niture
VALUE . $33,000.00.
992·2826 after Spm
bdroomer, bath~ new 196-4 Windsor 5lx10 2 BR
NEW HOME - 1 acre, In
1970Ki,kwoad 12x603 BR
natural gas furnace,
REDUCE SAFE &amp; fost w1th GoBese the country, family room.
B&amp;S MOBilE HOME SAlES
basement,
yard
out
of
high
Tablets &amp; E Vop "water pills"
dining room, deck, l'f2
PT PlEASANT, W.VA.
water for you. Aluminum
baths, basement, wood
_ ~_!I son 0!~~9:..·- - - - -siding, storm windows and
burning
fireplace .
FOR R.N.'s AND L.P.N.'s
doors.
1•;, ACRe . l2 x 60 mobile home
$51,500.00.
WE HAVE NO OTHER
near Dexter. 992·5858.
NOW
FEATURING
SIDELINES. ALL OF OUR
ALL SHIFTS ON CCU. 01,
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
1967 TOTAl ElECTRIC mobile
TIME IS SPENT SELLING
AS A SALES AID.
home, furn11hed , 3 b.c:lr.,
PROPERTY. IF YOU
REA\.TORS
AND MEDICAL-SURGICA'L
washer and dryer Air condl·
WANT IT SOLD TRY US
Henry' E . Clellond
t1oned. 1 lot, :no ft frontage.
AT 992·3325.
Competiti.ve salary, excellent benefits, shift
Honry E . Clelalid, Jr.
$12,000 Phone 742·2826.
'
VIRGIL B. SR. AND
differentia 1, and
tuition
assist nee
REALTOR·ASSOCIATES.
GORDON
~
ARE
1972 HOllYPARK MOBilE homo. 5
Leona Cleland
program.
REALTORS
&amp;
ft tip out 65 x 12. 992·6637. 9
Kalhy Cleland
APPRr.ISERS. HELEN L
til 4 WMkdoys, af1er -4:30
CALL TODAY
TEAFORD AND SUE P.
weekends. Call614·367·7150. •
992-2259 992-6191 992-2561
Contact: Holzer Medical Center, P . O . Box
MURPHY
ARE
197• SCHULTZ 12x65 , Total elecASSOCIATE REALTORS.
280, Gallipolis, Oh.
tric. Full~ furnished . Household
'
446-5105
Housinq
furnlshlnga For sat.. S8500.
An Affirmative Action
Con I&gt;*
at 825 S. 2nd.\
Ave., Middleport.
He;ultfll· nters
Equal Opportunity. Employer

Pnntanswerhere:

NO

- ~---

~---

.

Yesterd ay

ORPHAN ANNIE-EMPIRE BUILDERS
IT 'S BEAUTlFUL ···
PERFEC"T Ill EVERY

AND WE'lL BUilD
A TOWJ'I .. ·CHURCH
WA'i ... I'LL GET THE ···SCHOOL"'
STORES ... AND
REAL ESTATE BOYS
00 IT AT ONCE ...
WOI~ IR~I,!L_L 11 TIE

I KNOW JUS"T

Jumble Book No 13, containing 110 puules,isavallabletorS1 .75poatpa1d
!rom Jumble, cloth Is newspaper, Box ~. Norwood, N.J 078•8. Include your
name, address, zip code and make chacka payable to Newspaperbook s

THE ARCHITECT
" ' B!'ST I~ THE
BUSINESS . ..

ACROSS

••n

- --

i

I

I P1:t

Hl
lot J('i J 41t•\

'!

~ it •r

4 ('OPljJ &lt;i ~S
d1r e1 twn

t reat
:~inJ

v!

5 Ha!J.-1n

e .~ 1 k

.~ c hooi bag

m onc ~

6 Anecdota l
&lt;''1lh:ct1nn
7 Ut.:strlhnte

1tem

!~~~~~~~~~~~~

GASOUNE ALLEY

15 Str ·t.u

8 Honwn
Sight

16 Adj ust
17 Extract
gna t
19 -2nd-year

11 Symphon oc

student
20 Exclude

catcher

9 Terre~trlal

wolf

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1978
5 4~Farm Report 13; 5 : 5~PTL Club 13 ; 5 : 5~
Sunrise Semester 10.
6 oo-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 8 ; 6:25-Chrlstopher
Closeup 10.
6 : 3~News Conference 4; 6 · 4~Mornlng Report 3;
6 5D-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13, 6 : 5~
Chuck Whole Reports 10. News 13
7 O~Today 3,4,15, Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10
7 !~Weather 33; 7 3~Schoolles 10
8:DO-Capf Kangaroo B,10; Sesame St 33
9 00-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15;
Emergency One 6, Hogan' s Heroes 8, Match Gam e
10.
9 : 3~Brady Bunch 8, Family Affa ir 10
10. oo-Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8, tO ; Dallng Game 13.
10 : 3~Jeopardy 3,4,15; Andy Griffith 6; Pnce IS Rfght
8, 10, $20,000 Pyramid 13 .
11 :DO-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 20
ll · J~Wheel of Forlune 3, 15 ; Family Feud 6,13; News
A, Love of Lile 8,10 , Sesame ST . '20,33
n·ss-,-C BS News 8. House Call 10.
12 OQ-Newscenter 3; Bob Braun .4; America Alive 15;
News 6,10; Young &amp; 1the Restless B, Midday
Magazine 13.
12 3D----Ryan 's Hope 6,13, Search tor Tomorrow 8,10;
E lee. Co. 33.
o·oo-Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not For Women
Onl y 15
1 30-0ays of Our Lives 3.4.15 ;
2:oo-Qne Life to Li ve 6, 13; 2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15;
Guiding Llghl 8, 10
J .OD-Another World 3,4, 15 ; General Hospital 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3:311-Mash B. Joke r 's Wild 10.
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Battle of 1he P lanets 4; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame 51 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13, Hol lywood Squares 15 .
4·311-Bewitched 3; Gilligan ' s Is. 4,8, Brody Bunch 10;
Pefllcoat Junction 15.
5 oo-Stor Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbill ies 8, Mlsfer
Roggers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle. USMC
10; Afterschool Special 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:30-News 6 ; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co. 20,33; Mar y
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15 .
6·0~News 3.4, 8, 10, t3, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6 . 3~NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20
7.oo-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Sha Na Na B; News 10, Love American Style
15; Coping With Kids 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7 3D-Do ll y 3; Dating Game 4; Match Game PM 6;
Pnce is Right '8 ; The Judge 10; That's Ho llywood
13 ; Wild K m~dom 15; MacNeil · Leh rer Report 20,33
8 O~D1 c k Clark 's Live Wednesday 3,4, 15; E •ght Is
Enough 6,13, Peanuts 8,10; Elctlons '78 Prelude to
'80 20,33.
8 J~Bugs Bunny 8,10.
9.0Q-Movte " Bud &amp; Lo u" 3,4, 15; The Word B. 10, Great
Performances 33; Pr isoner 20.
10 OQ-Vegas 6,13 ; Race War In Rhode sia 33; Ne \v )r'J
10 311-Tur naboul 20
11 O~ News 3,4,6,8,10, 13 ,15; Lilias, Yoga B
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Pollee WOP· r'ln c. . ~·,,
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie ' 'T t · Bos•un
Strang ler" 10.
12 ·3D-News B. 12 4~S WAT 6,13.
I OQ- Tomorrow 3,4.
1 50-News 13

v,._ :·.

3 ( 11 \-'i,l •:n

Yc!.terday's Ans'Yer '"
15 Gran J 27 Hackneyed
pa re n t al
30 Musical
18 O&gt;erweight
poece
19 Cull
31 .Just a
trace
22 Prop tor
Bette Dav1s 32 Aquatic

Tuesday, Nov 14

- - ----;--, - - - - - -·-- --- --

ammal
23 Mollusk
24 "Brazilian 34 Extremely
Bombs hell" 37 Major : mus.
38 Cadence call
25 Turf

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Another Stayman example

21 slipper
Lady's
(~~~~;:;-;~...,..lj:;;:)i::;o;;T";:;;;:~~
due in an
this to Rufus'
hour' Help me
22 Desert
with the baqs!
crosser

You can·

Papa.
~his

NORTH
11 -14-A
+ A9
¥ K J g
t AI064
+AI0 53
EAST
• J 10 4
¥ AQ54:1

25 Eucharist

is
insane!

plate

It

WEST
• Q2
• 10 6
• Q~ 753
t K .1
+ K J B6
• Q 74
SOUTH
+K !765J
• 872
• 82
• 92

27 Wone's des-

won't
work!

c riptive

28 Beware : Fr
29 like:
33 Chicken

·\,~~~~~~~ 34 -Cistern
king

•
FRANK&amp;ERNIE

DON'T

MISL.INDE~S,..I\ND

Mt, eRNIE.·. WHE'N ::t
~~ID MY -r'l\lC.C•HoMe PFtf

AL-f¥109r r•LLS R c.~elt'f
d\IZ,., :t M&amp;8N,. Wtr-H

G.ROG!RIE:S!

•. 35 Tiny bird
36 Poem
Quest
Stand
40 Advantage
e 41 Lachrymose
_.~ 42 Gaze

~

~

•
J

Wes t

Pass

• t:tJN'T WORRY1 WENDY.
YOU'LL GET ANOTHER
ACTING' JOB ::CON .

unlucky. Both h eart honors

were wrong The man with

North East

South

I NT

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

UNDERBTUDY?

BOWHAT? ITo
IT ?
AND IT GIVES YOU

WORK, ISN'T

11-1!: CHANCE OF
BEING SeeN!

I'~' NOT SURE
THAT1S ENOUGH

ANYMORE,

uOEY!

short trumps got in a ruff
and t he defense had no way
to go wrong in either diamonds or clubs

You hold .

11-14

Openmg lead :

+K2

• to

Here's h o w to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

¥875 43

• QJ 8

UAJWSTVL - b1d a game . invite a slam or
bod a slam If yo u want to
play
m a part score you can
VDD
LNVL
HZ
UWSLTHJAZ
HS
always pass, but fr equentl y
yo u ha ve a bad hand that is
HJLATAZLHJO
V T A
I A J
rea lly uns uoted to notrump.
Today's South hand is a
0.
B.
S N A Z L A .T L W J
KIND OF good example He knows
Yesterday's Cryploquote: CONTEMPT IS A
th a t tw o s pades will be a
GANGRENE WlUCII IF IT SEIZES ONE PART OF A better contract than one noCHARACTER CORRUPTS ALL THE REST BY DEGREES.- trump and if h e plays Stayman h e responds t wo
SAMUEL JOHNSON
s pades. North is supposed to
© 19'18 K1ng Futures Syndicate. Inc:.
WP

VDD

A Ca nadian reader wants
to know what we b1d in
response to p artner's stand-

ard one-notrwnp

I THOUGI-IT1I WA5,

DIIM13 I{ESTERDM... IM
REALLI( DUMB TODA't'!

MMBE -mE CUSTODIAN

HAS SOME JUMPER CA8LE5
WE CAN BORROW, SIR

HE 'S GONE
TO TH'

MOVIN'
PITCHERS,
JAMEY

ii

1NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN I

(Do you have a quest1on for
th e experts? Wnte " Ask the
Experts. " care of thiS newspaper IndiVIdual questions w1/f
be answered if accompamed
by stamped. self-addressed
envefopes The most mterestmg ques t1ons w!fl be used m
th is column and WJJI recetve
cop1es of JACOBY M •JDERN 1

•'

CAN JUGHAID
COME OUT AN '

PLAY ?

opening

bod
We JUSt pass The odds are
that he Will make one notrump a nd the re is no reason
to try t o improve to a very
doubtful two hearts .

BARNEY

CAN J UGHAID
COME OUT AN '
;:'~AY, MIZ SMIF ?

ll·H·B

• Q 10 5

One letter simply ~tan ds for another In thas sample A is By Oswald Jaco by
used for the three L's, X for the t wo O's, e t c Song le le n ers. and Alan Sontag
apostrophes, the len.gth and formaL~ on of the words are all
When your partner opens
hmts Each day the code letters are dafferent
one notrump you can tell
CRYPTOQUOTES
ea&gt;~l Y if you want to play a
PHTZL

SUf&lt;SA WALK-ON
A Bl l PART? AN

what 1s p layed from dummy .
East wons the troc k , cash es a
second heart and g 1ves West
a hea r t ruff The defense w11)
stoll get one trump trick as
well as one in each mmor

One notrump would go
down two so South has saved
something. He was also very

part score , mv1te a ga me;
WINNIE

mg lead . It doesn't matte r

SUi t

Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer : North

6+--+-t-+-t-

pass and does JUSt that.
He does not make h1s twospade contract. West se lects
the 10 of hearts as h1s open ·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

I

!i

11-1 4

· Town &amp; Country ·

-

DOWN

1 "Second hand

S]47

.

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

!Aiil

Pomeroy Landmark
w.
!Aiil

s

Jumbles AUGUR SYLPH LACKEY HAZARD
Answer It requ~res an effort of w1llto leave 11A LEGACY

6Lu-.~

Pomeroy Landmark

------

r I XX1]
(Answers tomorrow)

---- --

--·

ITS(X XX]

LJTTLJ;; ORPHAN ANNIE

-·---- ----

---

;

IVANKan
I I

TOOK 'lf\5

a

804 We:st Main Sl

l.OU~Y

NECK!

JMMIDJATI OPINING$

Ladies Handicraft

ARM T ' SAV~
YOU((

--

Crafty

WHAT WAS!
SUPPOSED TO
DO~ LET Hll.\
5REAK MY

WIOfT

All Work Guaranteed
Phone 9n-6144
992·7547
10· 18·1 mo.

LOVASLE WHITE snow dnft great
PYRENEES Pupp1es
Phone
I 614-667·3838

save 30 pel. to 50 rt·
on heaflng cas
Experience and
·
Aully lnsurad
Free Ell.
calf99l·2772
11 -3-1 mo.

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

BoX3

H.C,RD.

Cellulosic (wood' fiberl
Thermal insu~tion

anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginther 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14,1971
5 DO-Star Trek 3,4, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mlster
Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Gomer Pyl•. USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bun~h 15 .
5: 30-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co 20,33 ; Mary
•
Tyler Moore 10. Odd Couple 15.
6 :DO-News 3,4,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Feeling Free
20 .
6 . 3~NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:DO-Cross·Wits 3; PM Magazine 4 ; Newlywed Game
6,13; Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10; Love,
American STyle 15; Lock, Stock &amp; Barre l 20;
Economically Speaking 33.
7 3~ Hollywood Squares 3; Let' s Go To The Races 8,
Daflng Game 4; Candid Camera 6; Price Is Rlght
10; Donna Frgo 13; TV Honor Society 15; Mac Neil ·
Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 · 0~Lifellne 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Paper Chase
8, 10; Soundstage 20; Cily Notebook 33 .
8 Jo-Laverne &amp; S h~rley 6t13; When The Boat Comes In
33.
9:00-Movle " LAdv of the House" :l.A 1'&gt; · Three's

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Hour Service. Any day,

All

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC. -

J&amp;L

R:eSidentiil •nd commercial. Call for estimate. 24

Commercial and Home

In Memory
IN lOVING memory of Max·
For Sale
Manuel Jr , who left us two - - --''-"-'-'==- - - years ago today No" 14 197b
COAL liMCSTONE , sand grovel,
J ust why God calls a lo"ed one
calc•u m chlor1de. ferhl1z: er dog
home
lood , a nd oil types of soli Ex ·
We con no! fully know
cels1or Salt Works , Inc ~ M01n
But even 1n our deepest gnet , os
Sl Pomeroy 997 3891
btlter lear d rops flow
l:IURHouGHs- S ENSi MATt( - ~c ·
Our l011h be hold s o bnghter day
cou ntmg moch 1ne
Pho ne
In thai eternal land
992 . 2 l5b, The Do 11y Sent1nel
Where we sha ll meet lhose dear
111 Court Streel , Pomeroy,
to us
And there we II understand
Ohio
Sadly m1ssed by w1fe , chdd ren , HREWOOo- -oil h;,.dwood spil t
grandchildren , sts ters and
end del1vered $35 truck load or
brothers
S5U o co rd
992 6295 or
l:l43·2qJ3
- ~Notices
Nfw REMINGTON 3006 automot1c
w 1th Weav er KJ scope and shng
NO HUNTING or tr espossmg on
slrop 5 17 boxes shel ls e~~:tro
my property without permls
Ioney. walnut stock $330 12 go
s1on Judy McGraw
1thoco pump shot gun 30 full
GUN SH00T- Ro~t~e -G-u~dub
choke, v~nt nb barr e l al most
t:ve ry sunday 1 pm Factory
new $200. Real n1 ce ear corn ,
choke guns only'~-----,$2 per bu Phon_: ~42_ 2~~~ __
SH-OOT Rac1ne Volu nteer fiREWOOo~$30 to $35 a load

St. Rl. 124 "word Rulllond,

Mourning and
Price Buildets

RENTERS ASSISTANCE for Sen1or
(1t1zens Vou may be able lo
l1ve m ou r opartmenl for less
then SSO V1lloge Manor Aporl
ments 992·7787

F11dm afil'llll)llll

'f• mile off Rt. 7 by.pess on

3·15·tfc

Construction
Maintenance

Sum !&lt;~~

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

Company 6, 13; The Word 8.1 0; Bill Moyers' Journal
20.
9·30-Taxi 6,13
10: DO-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20; Sude"t Affairs
Inquiry 33.
10 :3~ Like It Is 20, Arto Showcase 33.
11 DO-News 3,4,6.8, 10,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33 .
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, lS; Movie " Deliverance"
6, 13; Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33. Movie " Those
Oaring Young Men In Their Jaunty Jalopies" 10
12 3~News 8
1 DO-Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1:3~News13 .

TELEVISION
VIEWING

MY NAME's .JOHNNY.
. .JOHNNY WINTER.
WHAT'S YOURS?

YES-I WAG
WORRIED
ABOUT' HER.
THE
DIVORCE
HIT HE'R
PRETTY

.

SH

!till
l :}&amp;1

I ! d.ll

thereby

between Syracuse Statton,
Meigs Co unt y, Ohio, and Joy
Sta tron , Morgan County,
Oh iO
B One three 1nch {3" ) line
between Chester S ta l!on.
Meigs Countr , Ohio. and the ,
l1nf descr bed
in sub
paragraph A. abo¥e
C One Line, co nsi sttng of
various segments of two inch
{2"), three 1nch (l"l and tour
1nch (4") 11n es , between
Honey
Cre ek
Station .
Hocking County , Ohio , and
Hayde nville Stat 1on . Hock.ng
Cou nty , Oh 1o;
[) , One two Inch (2") l1ne
be tween Star Station and
Hone y Creek di!charge !m e,
both 10 Hockmg Cou n ty,
Ohio;
E One line, consisting of
various s,egments of two tn ch
(2") and three mch (3")
lines, between Ew ing Sta l1on
and Haydenydle Station, both
10 Hocking County, Ohio,
F One three inch IJ" J ltne
between Carbon Hlll Slatton
and Haydeny dle discharge
line , both in Hoc king County,
OhiO,
G One four inch {4") be
tween Clark Stat.on, Motgan
Co u nty , Ohio, and the Fisher
Kauffman
Jun ct1o n
diSC harge line , Morgan
County , Ohio ;
H One four inch (4") li ne
betw een Murray S tatiOn ,
Hock mg County / Oh10, and
the Hay denv ille discharge
Ltne, '"Perry County, Ohio .
1 One four 1nch (4 "l lm e
between Greer Station, Knox
County, Ohio, and the Bri nk
ha ve n d1sc har ge line , in
Holmes County, OhiO ,
J one line, conSISting of
various segments of two inc h
(2 "), three 1nch (3") and four
tnch (4") lines, betwee n
Mochtcan Stat•on, AShland
County, Oh10, and Greer
Station, Knox County, Ohio,
f&lt;. One line consis ting of
various segments of two 1nch
(2") and four mch (4") ltnes ,
between Berry Sta tt on and
Moreland Station , both m
Wayne County, Ohto ,
• L o ne tour tnch {4" l line
between Millersburg Station ,
Holmes County, Ohio, and the
Berry Moreland Sta tton . line
referred to m subparagraph
K, above ;
M One four 1nch (4") line
between Berry Station and
wooster Station, both tn
Wayne county, Oh10 ,
N One six inc h (6") line
and one four inch (4") line
between Shreve Junction.
Wayne county, Oh 10, and
Wooster Staflon , Wayne
County , Ohio ,
0 One li ne, consisting of
vartou s segmen ts of four mch
(4") a nd six 1nch (6") lines,
and one four in ch {4 " ) line
betwee n Wooster Station,
Wayne County, Ohto, and
Lodl Station, Medina County,
Oh10 ,
p one line, consist•no of
vanous segments of tour mch
(4") and s ix Inch (6") lines,
and one four inch (A") line
between Lodi Station, and
Berea Station , both tn MedIna
County, Oh10,
Q One four inc h (4") line
betw een Homan Stlltlon and
Lod• Station, both in Medtna
Co unty , OhiO,
R One four in ch ( 4" ) line
fr o m
Killbuck
Station,
Holmes Co unty , OhiO , nortl'1
to Shreve Junction dis charge
11ne, Wayne County, Ohio ,
and
s Pumptng st~t1ons ~t
Syracuse, Chester, Honey
Creek, Star, Ewmg , Carbon
Hill, Clark , Murray, Greer,
Moh tc an. Berry and Homan .
The co mmission will hold a
pub lic hee ring in this matter
beginning at 9· 30 A M E .S T
November 15, 1978 at the
off1ces of the Public Utilities
Commission or Ohio, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Oh10
43215
For
further
in ·
format ion concerning th1S
applicat ion, please contact
Ohio Oil Gather~ng Co r
porat1on I I , Suite AOO , 201
Kmg of Prussia Road ,
Radnor, Penns ylva nia 19087
or the Public Util 1ties
Co mm ission of Oh io
OHIO OI L GATHER ING
CORPORAtiON II
BY ·
J
Raymond
Proha sk a , Attorney at Law

CHIP

1;1 W11rti" 111 \Jmk I
t ·h,u ~~·
C'wd1

related thereto together with
the
serv rc e
rendered
A One three mch (3") line

Business Services

Wanled lo Bu_}' __

Case No . 71 · 1092· PL · ABN
Appendix B

-

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday , Nov. 14, 1978

Two steelhauling rigs hit by.gunfire today
By JOHN T. KADY
United Press !Dtemailonal
Two steelhauling ·rigs were
struck by gunfire early today
in northeastern Ohio and 14
trucks were hit by l,lricks
thrown from overpasses in
Ohio and Pennsylvania in a
strike by
independent
steelhaulers.
The
strike by
the
Pittsburgh-based Frat~rnal
Association of Steel Haulers
Started at midrlight Friday
and has since spread

throughout Pennsylvania and
Ohio and into Indiana,
Alabama and Maryland. It is
being defied by the giant
Teamsters Union .
However , the nation 's
major steel producers report
only minor inconveniences
caused by the strike.
A steelhauling truck was
hit by ·a shotg\in blast. near
East Liverpool, Ohio, tOOay
and another rig was struck by
b~llets from a high powered

rifle in Mahoning County,
Ohio. Five other trucks were
struck by bricks near Warren
and twoby-fours with nails
were also thrown optq. a
highway iti northeastern
Ohio.
Pennsylvania State Police
said nine trucks were
damaged by rocks and bricks
thrown from overpasses
along the Pen·nsylvania
Turnpike early today.
In Ohio Monday night a
trucker r ecei\' Pti ·A f1 e~ h

rate investigation would be
needed to determine if one of
the bodies is that of John . He
said all he knew about the
find was what he read in the
newspapers.
AI Abram, which originally
broke the story Monday,
carried a second article today
announcing the discovery of
the second body below the
church at the 1,600-year-old
St. Makar Monastery, 60
miles northwest of Cairo.
AI Akh bar today quoted
·Father Youhanna , the No. 2
man at the monastery, as
saying the bodies of John the
Baptist and the prophet
Elisha were discovered two
years ago "intsct, undecayed
and unccrrupted by time."
The discovery was kept
secret
until
proper
preparations were made, the
priest was quoted as saying.
The bodies were found
during renovation work on
the ancient mOJlaslery, the

collective bargaining for
independent truckers. It also
wants independent drivers to
be able to work for major
steel shipping firms, without
.having to join the Teamsters
Union.
"The handwriting· is on the
wall," F ASH President BUI
Hill told a group of
independent truckers In
Cleveland Monday night,
... Either we correct it now or
we're going to die off slowly.
We're I!Oing to get ·in a

position to have our own
trade . W)ion and give our
people
co II e c t I v e
bargaining."
.
" Hill is asking Teamster
members to engage in an
Ulegal strike," a spokesman
for the 140,0IJO.rnember Ohio
Cooference of Teamsters told
UP!. "Hill is engaging in
extraocdinarly irresponsible
actions. The Teamsters
deplore this violence and the
only one who stands to gain .

Sheriff gipes
information
Mei~s
County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt advises his
department has received
requests wanting to know
what color of lens are legal
for auxiliary driving lights
used on four wheel· drive
'pickup trucks.
The Ohio Revised Code and
the specifications and
regulations prescribed by the
Director of Highway Safety
specify that only white,
yellow or light amber can be
used, sheriff Proffitt reports.
Any other color would he in
violation of state law.

SI.!U AD RUNS

The Emergency Unit of the
Middleport Fire Department
answered two calls on
Monday. The squad went to
Brick St., at 3:12 p.m. for
Debbie Deren berger who had
received an ankle injury in a
fall.
She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Af 10:02 p.m. the squad
went to 334 Palmer St. for
. James Haggerty who was
taken to Holzer Medical
· Center.
SPECIAL MEETING
A special meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM,
Olester, has been set for 7:30
p.m. Saturday. Work will be
in the Master Mason Degree
and aU Mater Masons are
invited.

HOSPITAL NEWS

School

Cable•••

1•

,.

...

._.._.._.._..~._.

MONEY

THE CAVALRY

DOESN'T GROW
ON TREES! ...

WITH US

IS RIDING
NOW.

In fa ct, Christmas trees and everything that goes with them take more
cash than you need at any other
time of the year. That's why you
need something to back you up
•
Our Christmas Club account makes
sure you have money when you
need it mo~t'

No w w e can cover your
insurance territory better
tha'n ever, because now, we
can provide you with fine
products from the Kemper
Insurance Companies . We'll

find the right auto ,
homeowners , bu siness and
other insurance coverages

to meet your needs .

Walk-Up Teller Window
And Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m .

Re~resenting :

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

THE FRIENDLY BANK

l:ilitens l'alional Ba·~...

,.,

f

t

DAVIS
INSURANCE

Social
1 Calendar

AGENCY

Bill QuickiC

!( Across

from

the ,

thouse in Pomeroy ''
UU ' I . ,J, 7"J

WONDER COAL
WOOD OR COAL BURNING HEATER

ONLY

a

Joanne Starcher

Member F. D.t .C. Deposits Insured ID$40,000.00.

I

Weather

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FOR EACH CLUB MEMBER WHO MAKES
49 PROMPT WEEKLY PAYMENTS, THE
BANK WILL MAKE THE 50TH PAYMENT.

&amp;b'

headquaitered l~
Middletown, Obi(); the
Wheeling-Pittsburgh steel
Co. ; and ~ Weirton steel
Corp . in Weirton, W.Va., all
said there had been no letup
In shipments of steel.
The·Bethlehem Steel Corp.,
headquartered
in
Philadelphia, said steel is
being lillpPed in reduced
quantity and production had
been trimmed at its plant In
Baltimore, Md.

cour ·

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC ST.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

(

' \

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 15, 1978

at y

/

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 150

Strike violence spreading
United Preos International
The impact of a violencepunctuated
strike
by
independent, steel-hauling
truck drivers, now in its fiftll
day, continues to spread. Two
more steel companies report
a drop in deliveries.
Representatives of the
Corp .,
Republic Steel
Cleveland, and Armco Steel
Corp., Middletown, Ohio, said
delivedes were lower than
normal Tuesday because of
the walkout.
A Republic spokesman said
shipping was reduced for
plants in Ohio, Chicago and
Buffalo, N.Y . Long-haul
shipments were particularly
lower than normal.

Non-union mine
will be target

W~RAW

! Area Deaths l

newspaper quoted Father
Youhanna as saying.
"What made us confident·
that the grave contains the
body of John the Baptist is
that the old fathers, in their
manuscripts, said this grave
was marked by a small pillar
on top of it as a distinguishing
sign," he said.
"We ascertained that these
are tlle bodies of ·John the
Baptist, the prophet Elisha
and some other saints," the
monk said.
John the Baptist was
believed beheaded between
25 and 30 A.D.

from the violence is Hill."
Pickets turned hack shipments from a U.S. steel Corp.
plant near Phlladefphla
Moo day, but production at
the plant continued. Pickets
also appeared Mooday at the
entrance to · the U.S. Steel
facility in Birmingham, Ala.,
but a c&lt;mpany spokesman
said the F ASH pickets did not
affect the plant's operatioos.
RepubUc Steel Corp., headquartered in ·Cleveland; t})e
Armco
Steel
Corp . •

ORDERED
NAffiOBI, Kenya (UPI.
·- President ldi Amin
today ordered the Ugandan
army
to withdraw from
I
,
I
captured Tanzanian
Roush, Aurora, Ill.; two
MARYS. ROUSH .
territory, Radio Uganda
Mary Shain Roush, '84, grandchildren · Joey and
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Olarleston:
said. ·
"The union can only
Route 2, Racine, died Monday Courtney Roush; her father.
"I wlsb to Inform your . (UPI• - An ·underground
evening · at
Veterans. Fred Shain, Racine: an . excell~ncies I ba"e ordered
coal mine in Mingo County, respond as their duty,"
uncle, John Joseph Shain,
Memorial Hospital.
where workers hlive spurned MaSsey said. "That's their
my army to withdraw to
Mrs. Roush was a member Racine; three aunts, Gretta
the
United Mine Workers, Is calUng card- to organize aU
tbe recognized borders of
of Racine American Legion Carnahan, Mary Circle and
expected
to become the non-union mines."
Uganda .. and Tanzania,"
The 100 or so employees at
Post 602 Ladies Auxiliary and Hattie Powell, Racine, and
of
a
fierce recruiting
target
tbe broadcast quoted AmiD
the
Marrow Booe mine·deslre
several
nieces
and
nephews.
the 8 and 40. She was a
drive by the union.
as saying.
Funeral
services
will
be
non-union
. status because
member of the East Letart
UMW President Arnold
AmiD's de-.lsion set the
they
get
higher
wages, bigger
held
at
I
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
United Methodist Church
Miller told The Huntlngtoo
stage for a quiet ead to the
benefits,
an
incentive .
Ewing
Funeral
Home
with
·
Women's Group. Mrs. Roush
HeraldDispatch Monday that
111-day-old war whfcb at
program,
and
a
better ·
the
Rev.
David
Harris
ofwas preceded in death by her
he just couldn't stand to see a
times threatened to piUDge
retirement
system·
,
Massey
ficiating
.
Friends
may
call
at
husband, Virgil, her mother
nonunion mine operate within
· the entire area Into a wider
the funeral home from 2 to 4 confiict.
20 miles of the union's told 'the newspaper.
and a sister.
Massey warned that the
international organizing
She is survived by two ·sons and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
Marrow Bone mine might
and daughter-in-law, Mashall Burial will be in the Letart
office.
The drHt me, owned by turn into another StearnS· "H
and Debbie Roush, Racine, Falls Cemetery.
LOCAL VISIT SET
and Terry and .lAcqnPlyn
Marrow Bone Development · the union has anything to do
TIFFIN - Alice A. Mit- Co. mine, is located just east with II."
chell, an admissions coun- of Naugatuck.
"Because," he said,' "that
selor for Heidelberg College
Is
the on)y way they (UMW)
"We know what they're
here, will visit the guidance doing down there," Miller can get people who have a
counseling office of Meigs told the Herald-Dispatch. free choice - violence and
High School, Pomeroy, at "We're ready." .
intimidation. That is a simple
Holzer Medical Center
Veterans Memorial Hospital
8:30 a.m. Wednesday, ·Nov.
statement of filet."
The
UMW's
international
Discharges, Nov. i3
ADDMITTED Earl
22.
Massey said the mine · is
ocganizing office was moved
Lucille Bearhs; Jenna
Griffith, Middleport:
Miss Mitchell will tell · to the . WUliamson ·area last expected to increase its
Catherine Mees, Pomeroy; Berkley: Bertha Combs; counselors
and
pros- year as a boost to its payroll to 250 miners mce
Alice Kautz, Pomeroy; Rctha Criner: Della pective
stu- ocganizing effocts.
college
operations
reach
full
Evelyn Wood, Long Bottom; Hughart; Hazel !son; Mrs. dents about Heidelberg's
projectioos. N~ year, It
"That
nm-union
mine
is
in
Esther Smith, Racine; Lena Mark Moyer and daughter; academic programs, ad- my home district (l'i)," should produce 500,000 tons of
Howard, Pomeroy; Betty Maudle Persinger; Edna missions procedures, Miller groused. "I won't steamgrede coal, and 1.2
Rollins ; Maggie Rosenkranz;
Bailey, Vinton.
financial aid packages, off- tolerate that kind of insult." million by 1980.
Howard
Roush; VernnerSee ;
DISCHARGED - _Gladys
campus study progri!Jlls, and
If an organizing campaign
Nicholson, Paul Nease, Pauline White.
social opportunities. Heidel- takes shape, there exists the
Births, Nov. 13
Clement Cooper, Emma
berg is in its 129th year as a
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Hols- co-educational liberal arts possibility o{ tension similar
Hoffner, Dorothy Wright.
to that which has occurred in
inger, son, Ray.
college. It offers about 25 a three-year standoff at the
'
.
majors
and
10
pre- mue Diamond Justice mine
(Continued from page I)
professional
programs in Stearns, Ky., scene of
Man's skeleton found near road
by
the ·
with wide options for in- numberous acts of violence .. established
male aged 18 to 23, was found dependent study, internships,
CHARDON, Ohio (UP!) legislature.
It
should
E. Morgan
Massey,
The skeleton of
an near the end of a road at the and off-campus study op- president of Marrow Bone's recognize the differences in
unidentified young ·man was . partially completed portunities in the United parent, A.T. Massey Coal Co., the·cost of educating various
found Monday in a new development . The county States and abroad.
Inc., pointed out that the student levels, including
housing development in coroner estimated that the
issue was ralaed by a news kindergarten, grades1·12, the
Munston Twp., Geauga victim had been dead for 12 to
reporter last week in handicapped, vocational and
disadvantaged.
··
County Sheriff's deputies said 15 months.
PICTIJRES TAKEN
Foul play is suspected and
'•In other words," the a,..
today.
David Keller Produ~ions
soc!Btion stated, "a district
They said the body, investigative help from the
could receive more mooq
described as that of a white CUyahoga County Coroner's were in Pomeroy Monday
making movies of the Ohio
SQUAD CALLED
office has been requested.
per pupil because of •
River and buildings of the
The Pomeroy Emergency pupil-weighted formula."
community in conjuction with Squad was called to West
Acmnbinationof~lll
TilE COURIERS
a film being prepared for the Main St. at 9:15p.m. Monday local funds would ,.,.Y .. .
"The Couriers", a gospel Ohio Historical Society.
·.for Jeff Hawley who had
costs, with ~
(Continued from page
singing group, will be presenPomeroy will be one of a facial lacerations apd districts not having . .
Mullen voted no.
ting services at the Rock Spr- number of towns and cities abrasions. He was taken to
lt is expected that a ings
United Methodist included in the film which Veterans Memorial Hospital. much on local r
taxes.
representative of the cable Church, Thursday, Friday, will in time be avilable
At 8:40 a.m. Tuesday the
At the heart of the p~
firm will be present at the Saturday and Sw1day even- through the Ohio Historical squad went to Mechanic St.,
is
the 20 mlll millimwn with
next session.
ing, 7:30p.m. Thursday noon Society.
for Shane Petrie, who was Ul. each district having the
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene they will perform at Southern
He wss taken to Holzer authority to vote tax
Grate read a letter from High School, and Friday marMedical Center.
increases to provide for
Ashland Oil noting that as of · ning at Meigs High School.
education
beyond that
Nov. 2, all grades of gasoline That afternoon they will have
defined
as
meeting
state
MARRIAGE
LICENSE
increased one-cent a gallon a program at Meigs Junior
minlmUiliB,
the
assoclatioo
Olarles
Eugene
Smith,
19,
and the report of Mayor Fred High School. The Rock Sprsaid.
Hoffman for October showing ings Church is located on old Route . 1, Middleport, and
JOINT SESSION
John s. Rue, chairman of
Terri
Lynn
Vining,
18,
a collection of $2,174 in fines Route 33 near the Meigs
The New Haven Rotary the Cincinnati Board of
Rutland.
and fees and $110 in merchant County fairgrounds.
· wUl meet with the Education,'&amp; finance
.._...._ Club
police collections for a total of
Middleport-Pomeroy, Rotary committee, was among the
$2,284 was approved.
Clqb Friday evening at Heath delegates who drew up the
Mayor Hoffman reported
United Methodist Olurch in proposed plan. He said there
he and · Councilmen Martin
Middleport.
·
would be no further need for
Showers or thundershowers
Kelly, Allen King and Dewey
additional'
local school tax
Horton had met with today, ending this evening,
levies.
Pomeroy Village with highs near 70. Mostly
The 20roUI base plus state
BAKE SALE
representatives regarding cloudy and colder tonight and
aid
would 888111'e achoola of
The
Women's
Auxiliary
of
TUESDAY
the two communities joining Wednesday, with lows tonight
keeping
doors open since
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
MEIGS
High
School
Open
to apply for HUD grants. in the upper 30s and highs
many
districts
that need
will
hold
a
bake
sale
beginHouse,
7:30
p.m.
to
9
p.m.
Mayor Hoffman said he has Wednesday between !iQ and
addltiooal
funds
mUll now
ning
at
9
p.m.
Friday
in
the
Parents,
patrons,
the
public
secured an appointment with 55.
tap local taxpayers, or go
basement
of
Trinity
Church,
jo
meet
the
teachers
invited
the Ohio Director of HUD
with9ut, he said.
Pomeroy.
and tour the building.
Dec. I. Representatives of the
EXTENDED
FORECAST
two towns have set a meeting
Thursday through
for Nov. 30 for Middleport
Saturday,
rain Thursday,
and Pomeroy Village officials
ending
Friday,
wllh partly
to nail down their plan for
.
.
cloudy
weather
Saturday.
making the HUD application.
Highs
will
be
In
tbe
mid
or
The mayor extended a vote
upper 40s Thursday and
of thanks from the fire
Friday and In the upper tts
department to council for
to the middle 50s Saturday.
help given in passage of the
Lows will range from the
fire department levy at the
Nov. 7 election. He described · upper 20s to the middle 30s
Thursday and In the mid
.an auction of State Highway
Department equipment held ZOs to near 30 Friday and
*THERMOSTAT CONTROLLED
in New Philadelphia recently . . Saturday.
Council refused to approve
a request for a c-1 license to
* FIRE BRICK LINING
sell beer and wine at a
carryout operation on Locust
* HEAVY CONSTRUCTION
St. Council requested a
hearing with the Ohio
JAILER REHffiED
* POWE IFUL 2-SPEED BLOWER
Department of Liquor
MEDINA, Ohio (UPI)
Control on the matter. The Medina County has rehired
refusal to approve the former Sheriff Steve G. Helli,
request stemmed from the who resigned this fall aa the
closeness of the establish- county's chief jailer after the
dismissal of charges of
ment to two churches.
Council President Kelly sexual battery lodged against
brought up the dangers iitvolved in truck parking near him by two female · jail inmates.
Hell!, 60, lileriff of Medina
comers In the toWr! and
passed along a request for the County from 1956 through
grading of an alley between 1964, will receive $10,000
Hamilton and Lllcust Sts.
·year as a security officer.
Officials attending the County Commissioners Mark
meeting were Mayor Hoff- Whitfield and Charles Clark
man, Clerk-Trt·asurer Grate, voted to hire him Monday.
and Councilmen William . Commissioner John
Walteh, Charles Mullen, Oberholtzer was not present .·
Dewey Horton, Carl Horky.. at the meeting.
Allen King and ·Kelly.

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

Monks open coffins
By W.G. KffiOLOS
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!.
Egyptian newspapers said
today monks at a remote
monastery unsealed the
coffins of St. John the Baptist
and the prophet EUsha and
found the bodies "intact,
undecayed and uncorrupted"
by almost 2,000 years.
At least one of the bodies
stiU is attached to its head,
discounting the possibility it
is the remains of John, the
beheaded hermit who prophesied the COOling of Jesus
and then baptized Him, the
newspapers said.
However, the
Cairo
newspaper AI Akhbar said
the monks recognized the',
other coffin as John the
Baptist's by a distinguishing
mark clearly described in
ancient Christian
manuscripts.
In Vatican City, Monsignor
Giovanni Papa, a Vatican
· histocian said today an accu-

wound when he was hit by a
small caliber bullet in Huron
County in Northwestern Ohio.
The powerful Teamsters
uqion is bitterly opposed to
tlle strike and has ordered its
cjrivers to continue with scheduled deliveries but Ill
exercise caution, avoid truck
stops and drive in caravans
where possible.
FASH has laid down a
series of 10 demands,
including the right nf

•

Republic transports !iQ per- Corp. said their shipments
cent of its steel by rail , which are being restricted .
has not been hampered by the
At· least 80 pickets at the
strike.
\
U.S. Steel plant· in Fairless
At Armco' s Butler, Pa., Hills, Pa ., Tuesday stopped
plant , shipments have all shipments.
dropped and some customers
U.S. Steel's Lorain; Ohio,
are hiring rigs to transport plant also reported shipment
steel tllat would have been reductions . A company
carried by the independents. spokesman said the firm will
Although both companies use rail transportation to
report a drop in deliveries, make up for them .
tlle reduction has not been
Bethlehem Steel said
se rious enough to cause Tuesday shipments from its
produc t ion slowdowns. Baltimore plant
were
Pickets were not at any curtailed.
Republic or Armco factories
The strike was called last
Tuesday.
Friday by the Fraterna·l AsBesides Republic and sociation of Steel Haulers, a
Armco, the U.S. Steel Corp. Pittsburgh-based
and the Bethlehem Steel organization of drivers who

own their trucks. At stake is .a
series of demands, including
the right for independent
operators
to
bargain
collectively and not be forced
to join tlle Teamsters union .
The Tea msters, whi ch is
opposing the strike, has told
its driver s

to continu e

deliveries but to do so with
caution , warning them to
drive in caravans whenever
and
avoid
possible
truckstops .
Incidents of shootings, tire
slashings, intimidation and
vandalism have occurred on
highway s
in
Ohi o,
Pennsylvania and Indiana.
The
latest occurred

Tuesday in Indiana. Police
said three FASH members
and as many Teamsters were
involved in a confrontation
wit h guns at a Gary
truckstop.
Three men, who identified
themselves as Team sters
busine ss represe ntati ves ,
said th ey wer e held at
gunpoint by the other trio .
One claimed the F ASH
members sla shed t heir
automobile tires.
The tires were cut, but none
of the three F ASH members
were carrying guns. Police,
however, said they found
guns in a search of their car
but did not make any arrests .

Citizen
march
planned
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Pledging to "march to the
plant gates" if necessary, a
labor-citizen group coalition
is
launching
a
campaign
in
23
states to prevent utility
companies from shutting off
heat to consumers who
cannot pay their biUs this
winter.
At least 200 people have
died in recent winters after
their gas or electricity was
shut off, the groups contend,
and thousands more suffer
silently, some going without
food or medication to pay
ever higher utility bills.
The "Citizen-Labor Energy
Coalition" demanded
Tuesday tlle Department of
Energy implement the Public
Utility .Regulatory Policies
Act of 1978 which, it said,
provides that each state
public utility commission
should
adopt
policies
l
forbiddlng shut-offs - during
NEARING COMPIETION-{;onstruction on the 1,000 ft. smoke stack at the Kyger
severe weather. The law also
Cceek Station of the Ohio Valley Electric Corp. near Oleshlre is expected to be
gives tlle energy department
completed,by the end of this month. Work on tlle structure, which currentlv .tanri• at. 700ft..:
the power to make sure tlley
be(lan on Aug. 25. When completed, smoke from the three towers pictured to the right will
·do so, it said.
be channeled into the single 1,000 ft. stack. Except for the operation of the control rooms
The
coalition
said
which are located at the base of the towers, use of the three original stacks will b~
Wisconsin, Maryland and
discontinued. Pulhnan Power Products serves as contractor for the new structure. (Larry
Rhode Island already have
Ewing Photo). ·
banned winter shut-offs.
William Hutton, director of
Eastern board
the National Council of Senior
Citizens, said, " I think some
of the utilities are going to see
meeting Friday
us marching to the plant
gates" unless shut-off
The Eastern Local Board of policies are changed.
Education . will meet in
Many older people are
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP! ) - Syrian forces and Olristian special session at 6:30 p.m. being forced to make "life
militiamen exchanged machine-gun, mortar and rocket fire Friday _'at the high school. and death economic choices
today in downtov'll Beirut and its southeast suburbs, leaving Members will be discussing ... in fact they've had to make
six persons dead in one of the heaviest !!refights since a cease- financial matters, con- the cruel choice of heating or
sidering a letter of eating in many cases, "
fire in mid-October.
The Beirut independent daily An Nahar quoted a security resignation from tlle Chester Hutton said.
source as saying that six people were killed and 18 wounded in special education teacher,
He said the figure of 200
acting on the matter of ap- deaths, ·which came from
the clashes during the past 24 hours.
poi.nting Debbie Rose as press reports, is probably
Clerk-custodian of the "just the tip of the iceberg. "
school's activity accounts He Sllid in 1976 there were I
VATICAN CITY (UP.. -The Vatican mails said today and ·considering any other million
senior
citizen
they will issue a series of stamps commemorating the 34-&lt;lay business that may come households with annual
before the board.
reign of Pope John Paul I.
incomes of less than $2,000
It said 1.45 miiUon series of four stamps each will be put on
who "spent over 50 percent of
sale starting Dec.ll. The stamps, worth 70,120,250 and 350 Ure
their income on winter ruel.~~
(8,14, 30and 40cents), wUI show the late pope sitting in throne,
Bernard Veney, executive
Lows tonight in the lower director · of the National
smiling, walking in the Vatican gardens and blessing. They
Probability
of Clients Council, which
w.ill bear the dates of his reign, Aug. 26, 1978 through Sept. 28, 40s.
is
90
percent
precipitation
1978.
represents lowincome people,
today and 80 percent tonight
(Continued on page 12)
and Thursday.
•

••

...

'

~-

1--

-

~~..:;_,_rh_e_w. . o......rl_d_T_od_a_y_

. Gunfire.excJ:tanged today

Pope John I stamps coming

Weather

Otase eligible for parole

AWHITE ELEPHANT ~??-Residents of the Bedford
community will meet Nov. 24 to discuss what should be
done with the concrete block building once used for a

Bedford Center has problems
By Bob Hoenich
The Bedford Youth Center
has turned into ·a white
elephant, and at this point , no
one knows what tc• do about it.
The 40x90 concrete block
· buUdlng- located on fOl'ITl~r ·
Route 33 was constructed in
1959 through the hard work of
Bedford residents who staged
all sorts of money-raising
activities over a long period
to establish it. The operation

The Middleport Poli ce
Department is receiving
numerous complaints
regarding the dumping of
diesel fuel, kerosene, motor
oil and other substances into
the sewers of the town, Police
khief J. J . Cremeans said
today. Those substances are
causin g strong od ors in
basements, bathrooms and
kitchens resulting in complaints, the chief stated. He
warned that an accumulation
of these fwnes could be explosive.
Chief Cremeans said his
department will check with
all gara ges and service
. stations in an effort to

COLUMBUS (UPO- Documents filed in Franktin County
Common Pleas Court claim Cuyahoga County Republican
Chairman Robert E. Hughes' consulting firm received $18,300
from ·a partnership mentioned in a law suit chaUenging the
award of Ohio Lottery contracls.
The charge was made in papers filed by attorneys for
Scientific Games Inc., of Atlanta which bas claimed favoritism
and· political innuence played a part in awarding $2.3 million
cootracts to MCA Games lnc., of Westport, Conn.

Experts begin investigation
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) - Egyptian experts have begun
investigating the reported dlacovery of the rema~ of St. Jqhn
the Baptist and the prophet Elisha, but they say It's too early to
offer any conclusions.
One scientist, Abdel Rahman Abdel Tawab, examined one
of the coffins In a cave below !Ill ancient monastery 60 mUes
northwest of Cairo where Coptic monks say they have
dllcovered the bodles of the two reUglous figures.
NEW BUSINESS- New to the area is the Kingsbury M·•h1le Home AccessorieR store
· located in Minersville in the old Provicn Feed und ov1 ·s i-: 1·~ , ''Uildlng.The ac~ssory store
WASI:IrnGTON (UP!)-Attorne~ foc the NAACP asked wUl 'offer a complete line of mobile home accessories P1ct~red IS the 1nterwr With
the SuJI'eme Court Tuesday to reject an appeal by the
salesperson Sherry P•tterson holding he1 &lt;t a u~hter, Mindy PatterS&lt;•n. .
J,
(Continued on page 12)
It
I

tJ

For the past several years,
the structure has been rented
during the surmiler months
by the Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly which owns the
nearby Bedford Scool
bullding. The Assembly has
utilized the former youth
center as a part of the
summer camping facilities .

However, the utilities and
upkeep on the structure are
gradually gnawing at the

•
warning regarding d umpmg

Otarges finn rec~ived funds

sough~ ·

went well, when there were

funds to function. There were
dances , roller skating,
ba sketball and other activities for the young people.
And then, apathy set in.
c.veryone lOst Interest. Tbe .
building was often locked and
it was difficult to get a key to
open it. Rather than hassle
getting
a
key,
over
sometimes the building was
forcibly entered. ·

Middleport chief issues

OOLUMBUS (UP!) - A Worthington man, who pleaded
guilty tO tlle 1974 slayings of his mother, father and brother, is
eUgible for parole because he has already served 1,747 days in
jail for an earlier conviction on tlle same charges.
Clifford Chase, 23, was sentenCed Tuesday in Franklin
County Common Pleas Couri to seven to 25 years in jail on
three counts of manslaughter. Due to time already served,
CUffocd Qlase,.23, is Immediately eUglble for parole. He was
coovicted in 1975 of one count of murder and two counts of
voluntary manslaughter.

Appeal' rejection

youth recreation center. Presently the structw·e is not
used and has been hit by thiev es. Financially, 1ts upkeep
is depleting funds set aside for its operation.

remedy the situation. The
chief points out that residents
are sweeping dirt in~o the
sewers and this practice is
also ca usi ng bl ockage
problems. He requested
resident s refrain from
sweepin g any ma terials
whatsoever into the sewers.
The department is also
receiving calls opposing
parking that is occurring at
the village garage during
business hours at a local
auction sale.
Chief Cremeans said the
garage must serve on a 24
hour basis at a refueling
location for fir e and
emergency vehicles as well
as other village vehicles.
The chief warned that
warrants will be issued to car
owners who block the garage
and pumps. The area is
clearly
marked
" no
parking, " the chief con cluded.
Cremeans reported 58
arrests were made by his
department during the month
of October.
Heading the list was
disorderly manner with 12
arrests, while driving while
intoxicated was second with
10 arrests. There were nine
arrests for speeding, three
for no operator's license,
three for rwming stop signs,
two for assault , three for
criminal trespass, two for
disturbing peace, two for bad
ctJecks, and one each for
reckless operaton, assured
clear distance, possession of

controll ed substance, and
A.W.O.L. Five cases were
dismisse d;

two

cases

transferred to county court
and one case had dropped
charges.
Parking meter collections
for the month totaled $700 and
the police cruiser was driven
4,370 miles during the month.

small reserve funds set aside
by the tr~stees of the center.
The time has come when

som e action must be
forthcoming . What action
becomes a bit of a problem! A
public me et ing has been
called for 7:30p.m. on Nov. 24
at the center at which time
residents are to offer their
suggestions.
The trustees who have not
elected officer s in a nwnber
of years have consulted an
attorney and have been
advised that if the buildlng is
to be sold, proceeds should be
used in some way to benefit
youth-si nce the structure
originally was built for young
people.
Bedford residents serving
on tne board ot trustees are
Elmer Bailey, Ralph and
Sadie Carl, Helen and Hilber
Quivey, Russell and Addie
Cullums.
Denver
and
Florence Well, Leota Hawk,
Ola St. Clair, Donna Morris,
Kenneth
Chaney ,
Joe
Stanley, Sy lvia Midkiff,
Helen Swartz. Olan Harrison,
Robert Pickett and Audra
Well.

Five injured in
four-car mishap
l

Five persons were injured
in a four-vehicle accident
Tuesday in Meigs County on
SR 7, at the junction of SR
124, at 4:20 p.m.
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, reports that
a north bound auto operated
by Jacki e Frederick, 29,
Middleport, had stopped in
traffic on SR 7.
A seco nd north bound
vehicle, driven by Diana Lee,
18, Pomeroy, was unable to
stop and struck the Frederick
auto in the rear.
The Ioree of impact pushed
(he Frederick vehicle into the
path of a south bound auto
driven by Earline Wilson, 23,
Parkersburg.
The Wilson auto went left of
center and struck a vehicle
operated by Ralph Saunders,
62, Chesterland, 0 ., head-on.
Lee was admitted for
treatment to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A
passenger, Cathy Lee, 15,
Pomeroy, was treated and
YULE PLANS TOPIC
released
at
Veteran's
Tbe Middleport Chamber of Memorial.
Commerce will discuss plans
Frederick was treated and
for the Olrlstmas holiday released at Holzer Medical
observance when it meets at Center.
6:30 p.m. "Thursday at the
Wilson was treated and
Meigs Inn. The chamber will released
at
Veterans
have a dinner and following Memorial.
the liusiness session will sack
Saunders was treated $nd
candy in preparation for released at Holzer Medical
Santa's visil tr. ~he town.
Center .
. llj.

The accident is st ill under
investigation.
The Gallia - Meigs Post
investigated two other accidents Tuesday.
David Davis, 17, Rutland,
was treated for injuries
sustained in a one-vehicle
accident on SR 124, one-tenth
of a mile west of milepost 15,
in Meigs County, at 4:45p.m.
Officers report that an east
hound auto operated by Davis
went out of control on 124,
passed off the right side of the .
roadway and struck a bridge.
Davis was transported, by
a family member , to Holzer
Medical Center where he was
treated for a mild strain in
the area of the right elbow,
and released.
The patrol reports heavy
damage to the Davis auto. No
citation was issued.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-auto collision
at I:3fi p.m. on SR 160, one
and four-tenths of a mile
north of U.S. 35.
According to the patorl, a
vehicle operated by Donovan
James, 52, Sciotovllle,
traveling north, had stopPed
in traffic on 160.
A second north bound auto,
operated by Ray Shockey, 19,
Rio Grande, was unable to
stop and struck the J &amp;mtl
vehicle in the rear.
(Continued on page 12)

v-

.

.

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