<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15655" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15655?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T17:37:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48777">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7ebf3aa7ed84dc19329db9cbc24502a9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9fe4ab9d5c237c18988e19037deb5e72</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50173">
                  <text>tO- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O..'l'uesday, Dec. 5, 1978

•

,

Man with many personalities found innocent
OOLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) -

His trial is over, but the
search for William Milligan
goes on .
Milligan - a 23-year-old
man with brown, shoulder·
length hair and an engaging
smile - stood accused
Monday
of
raping ,
kidnapping and robbing four
young women In the fall of
1977.
He admitted three of the
crbnes. But Franklin County
Common Pleas Court Judge
Jay Flowers found Milligan
not guilty by reason of
Insanity because evidence
presented by the defense and agreed to by the state showed that William " Billy"
Milligan has 10 distinct
personalities.
·
The personalities include a
3-year-old girl who draws
charming
pictures
of
butterlies and a 9-year-old
boy who does nothing but
scream and bang ·his. head.

There is also Arthur, a poet
with a decided British a ccent ,
who is a good influence ,
Ragen, 22, who is evil and
Danny 14.
Flowers ordered Milligan,
of Lancaster, Ohio, to be held
by the county sheriff until it is
determined where he will be
sent for therapy.
"There is no alternative
the
evidence
from

presente,d," Flowers said,
"but Ill find this man not
guilty by reason of insanity .
In a case of this type it is
always difficult to determine
if the defendant is faking
illness. B~\ every bit of
evidence discount s that
conclusion .''

Flowers said Milligan will
have w " undergo extensive
therapy ,'' and he may be sent
Ill the Athens, Ohio, Mental
Health
Center ,
which
employs .a trained specialist
in multiple per sonality
disorders.

Milligan ' s
attorneys
waived the right w a jury
trial and the defense and' the
state agreed to a trial by
stipulations, · allowing the
evidence surrounding · the
rapes and Milligan's mental
history Ill be entered into the
record without the necessity
of calling witnesses or
challenging testimony .
Milligan , dressed in a
threepiece blue suit with a
white tie, sat quietly
throughout the proceedings,
smiling occassionally at
friends
and
relatives .
Testimony from three of the
victims pictw:ed MiUigan as
confused and nervous. After
assaulting one of the women,
he stood up and shouted:
"Bill, what's wrong with you
- get yourself t 0gether .'·'
Milligan admitted three of
the four rapes with which he
was charged.
Flowers
dismissed one rape count
because of lack of evidence.

22 survive crash
By DANIEL CHISZAR
WALDEN, Colo . (UPI) Rescuers using snowcats to
travel
over
five-foot
snowdrifts reached the
wreckage of a twin-engine
Rocky Mountain Airways
airplane irl the northern
Colorado mountains today
and found all 22. petsons on
board alive. ·
"Everybody is alive,"
Grand
County
Sheriff
Houston · Henderson said.
"There are at leAst 16 who
need medical treabnent, and
the other six are okay."
The DeHavilland Twin·
Otter disappeared on a 56minute flight Monday night
from the Steamboat Springs
ski resort to Denver after the
pilot radioed the plane's
wings were icing up.
Ambulances were rushed to
the scene on a small

mountain road to carry tlle 20
passengersand two crewmen
to hospitals in Steamboat
Springs and Kremmling.
Searchers used snowcats
and snowmobiles Ill push
through five-foot snowdrifts
to reach the plane. The
wreckage, near the Grizzly
Creek Campground , was
located by an emergency
radio lieacon.
A specially equipped Air
Force C130 was flown into the
search area from Illinois to
help pinpoint the signal.
Eight helicopters were on
standby, in case high winds
and s now stopped long
enough for them to fly .
Rescuers
from
four
counties,
along
with
volunteers, searched through
the night for the plane, which
was on a 5().minute flight
from the Steamboat Springs

Toy pick-up places listed
J .R. Runnel, Jr., chairman
for Toy for Tots and Bobby
Haggy, co-chairman an·
nounced today toys may be
left at numerous places in the
area . They include Hartley
Shoes, Swisher and Lohse,
Riverfront Diner, Stifflers,
Powell's Super Valu; in
Middleport , Twin
City
Gateway, Village Pharmacy,
Mark V; Racine, Racine

Home
National
Bank;
Rutland, Rutland branch of
Pomeroy National Bank.
The Meigs County Jaycess,
who are sponsoring Toys for
Tots, extend thanks to Shirley
Hubbard , Angie Hubbard,
Edna and Velessa Hunnel for
wrapping boxes.
For pick up ca ll J.R.
Hunnel at 992-5191 or 742-2029.

ski resort area to Denver
when it "disappeared.
The pilot had radioed about
a half-hour after takeoff that
the plane's wings were icing
up and he was returning to
Steamboat Springs.
Jackson County sheriff's
dispatcher Marianne SwaY"e
said two searchers were
injured slightly during the
rescue efforts. She said

rescuers

Were

severely

hampered by the weather.

Public drive
underway for
Meigs student

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

1

Area Deaths

Jaycee project hegins

···

A public fund drive has
been started for Steven Fife,
Meigs High School student,
w)!O was shot recently while
hunting. On Saturday, Steven
underwent special treatment
at University Hospital alter
which tbne he was returned
to the intensive care unit of
Children's Hospital
in
Columbus.
Containers are at the
Heiners Bakery, Young ' s
Super Mark et , Middleport
Department Store, Citizens
National
Bank
and
Vaughan's Cardinal, all in
Middleport, and the Pomeroy
National Bank, Nelson Drug
Store, Pomeroy, a nd at the
Meigs High School.

TBRELAX AND

Most of the testimony
Milligan 's step-father,
"He knows · what he 's
Monday came from psychia·
doing," said the man, who Chalmer J . Milligan of
trists who examined hbn at
refused to be identified . Lancaster, in a notarized
tlle South West Community
"Now he could get out in statement to a Columbus
Mental Health Center and the
three months or so. It's not newspaper, denied abusing
Central Ohio Psychiatric
Milligan as a child.
fair, it 's just not fair. "
Hospital, where doctors say
his per ~onalities were
"fused, " enabling hbn to
stand trial. ·
The testbnony described
I
Milligan as tlle object of great I
abuse from his step-father,
HENRY ERVINE
Fl emin gsburg, Ky.; the
Chalmers
Milligan .
Henry Ervine, · 83 , died Goddard United Methodist
Testbnony showed that he
Monday at his home on Church in Fleming County,
was repeatedly beaten by his Cherry St., in Racine ..He was Ky., and he was a veteran of
father, who also constantly
a son of the late William and World War .
wid hbn that the youth was
Dee Brown Ervine. Besides
Funeral services were held
responsible for his natural
his parents, he was preceded at 2 p.m. today at the Ewing
fath er 's suicide ; which
in death by his first wife, Funeral Home with the Rev.
occurred when William was
Hester Jaines Ervine.
Don Walker and the Rev.
3.
Surviving are his wife, Duane Landreth officiating . .
Milligan 's
step-sister,
Garnet Hoback Ervine; a A second service will be held
Kathy Jo Morrison, . said,
step-daughter, Maxine Shain, at.2 p.m. Wednesday at the
"Billy was always being
Racine, and several nieces Goddard United Methodist
beaten. Our stepfather used a
and nephews.
Church and burial will be in
rubber hose on him and he
Mr. Ervine was a member the church cemetery.
woUld beat him with his fists
of Fleming Lodge 11 2. F&amp;AM,
at least once a week.''
Milligan's step-father once
buried him underground with
on!¥ a ~all pipe providing
The annual Meigs Jaycee Jaycees at Box 603, Pomeroy.
all".
R esident s, knowing of
Ms. Morrison said she was program to provide food
aware of Milligan's multiple baskets for the needy and families needing help for the
personalities when he was toys for the children is un- holiday season, shou ld
complete the form below and
only 9 years old, but " We derway .
send
it to the Jaycees. The
Residents
who
wish
to
didn't know what it was. We
date for receiving
cutoff
to
the
food
contribute
money
just saw that he could become
applications
is Dec. 15.
project
should
send
it
to
the
different people."
Despite constant problems . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
in school and with juvenile
authorities, it wasn't until he
.Javc•t•t• Christmas Pro1-&gt;Tam
was arrested early this year
·For l l mlt•rprivilt·~t·rl
and charged with the rapes
ihat Dorothy Turner, a
psychologist, discovered that
Name of Family ........•. ... ......... ..
he was suffering from
"hysterical neurosis of the
Number in Family .. . ..... . . ..... . .. • , ..
· multiple personality type ."
Dr. Cornelia Wilbur ,
Names of wife , husband ................ .
LeXington, Ky., an authority
'
oo persOnality disorders and
Give number and list names, ages, and sex .
tlle psychiatrist who treated
" Sybil," the subject of a best·
...................... 1: . . .. ' ..... . .. .
selling book, is convinced
Milligan could never fake the
&lt;:~~i~t~· ~~d· ~~;~· i~; ·-r;,~ M"~igs
complicated memories and
stories of his body-mates.
Jaycees
Dr. Wilbur said earlier she
' P .0 . Box 603
had met five of the
Pomeroy, Ohio
personalties and explained
45769
they tend to "come out" more
in front of women, 11 Who he
feels he can trust. "
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Dr. George Harding, an
Admitted - Edna Russell, Sports calendar
expert
on
multiple
Rutland;
Clyde Henderson ,
personality disorders who
Dec. 5 - Meigs at Logan,
Pomeroy
; Christine
has worked with Milligan,
GB.
said, " This is a very O' Donnell, Pomer oy ;
Dec. 7 - North GaUia at
significant case. It is of great Dorothy Wright, Rutland.
Eastern
, F.; Eastern at
Discharged - None.
psychiatric significance. His .
Waterford, JHB; Kyger
condition is very rare and
HEREDEC.18
Creek at Southern , GB ;
what we learn from treating
The next visit of t he Athens at Meigs , GB;
Billy can perhaps help us a Bloodmobile to Meigs County Southern at Hannan Trace, F.
great deal in helping others will be Dec. 18, at the
Dec. 8 - Athens at Meigs, ·
suffering from this disorder.'' Pomeroy Elementary School BB; Southern at Kyger
But at least one person Creek, BB.
from 1:30 to 5:30.
the husband of one of the
Keys:
GB
Girls
victim's remained
Basketball; F - Freshmen;
unconvinced.
ASSISTED SUNDAY
JHB - Junior High Boys; BB
Assisting with the open - Boys Basketball, Varsity.
house at Francis Florist
Sunday were Geneveive
Schneider and the women of
ACTIONS FILED
the Happy Harvesters Class
In
Meigs
County Common
of the Trinity Church.
Pleas Court Rebecca L.
Carson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy filed
for support under the
MEET THURSDAY
Past officers club of ·Racine Reciprocal Agreement Act
Chapter 134 OES will meet against Terrence L. Carson,
Thursday Dec. 7 at the Shrine North Lauderdale, Fla.
Stanley E. Bennett, Jr. ,
Club House at 7 p.m. There
will be a gift exchange and Coolville and Susan D.
each member is to bring a Bennett, same address, filed
for dissolution of marriage
covered disJ!.
and Debra K. Hill was
granted a divorce from .
SQUAD RUN
Charles Thomas Hill.
The Pomeroy emergency
squad answered a call to Ann
St. at 6:32 p.m. Monday for
Mrs. Christine O'Donnell. A
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
IMPORTANT MEETING
Hospital where she was
There will be a meeting to
admitted.
make plans to obtain a day
care and child . nursery
MEETING PLANNED
Wednesday, Dec. 6 at 9:30
A meeting of the Meigs
a.m. at the home of -Mrs.
County History Book Com·
Martha Graves at the church
mittee will be held at 7:30
parsonage located between
p.m. Tuesday at the' Meigs
the church and the old senior
Museum, Butternut Ave.,
high building.
Pomeroy. Anyone who helped
in any way with the book is
invited (o attend.

·

·

·

ENJBY WITH 't\\\\l

CHRISTMAS CL
CHECK

•

·

··

I

The step-father called
Milligan un " habitual liar"
and said the accusations are
"completely false.
·
" Furthermore, none of the
. psychiatrists or psychologists
who examined William for
the r~port prepared for Judge
Flowers interviewed me
prior to that document's

preparation and release,"
said the stepfather.
" There is no doubt in my

·. Settlement
is reached
Ohio Public Workers
United (OPWU) and the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
today reached a settlement
over the issue of payroll dues
deduction for Union dues in
the department.
The department agreed to ·
accept payroll dues deduction
requests signed by state
workers for OPWU and to
permit OPWU to exercise aU
dues deduction rights in an
equal manner with other
·labor organizations in the
department.
OPWU, in tum , agreed to
drop a suit filed in a Federal
District Court on behalf of a
member. The suit concerned
denial of constitutional rights
over the dues deduction issue.
The Department resisted
OPWU .payroll deductions
beginning in July. Other
departments had permitted
the deductions in concert with
a decision by Richard
Jackson , Director of the Ohio
Department
of
Ad·
ministrative Services.
OPWU Executive Director,
Mike Clifford, said, "We will
now provide Gallli&gt;olis State
Institute workers their
needed and deserved expert
representati o n
and
guaranteed legal · service at
the lowest cost in dues.''

GOLD STAR WINNERS
Monday, winners in the
Gold Star drawing sponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce were Edna Ables,
Syracuse, $10 gift certificate
from Pomeroy National
Bank ; Pam Powers, 133 N.
Third Ave ., Middleport, $10
gift
certificate
from
Marguerite Shoe Shop; Bill
Joe Evans, Gallipolis, $10 gift
certificate from Swisher and
Lohse.
Certificates may be plcked
up at the office of the
chamber.

r

$. 2.00
$. 3.00
$.5.00
$10.00
$20.00

..

..
''"

r

'&lt; ~

1011 00l£ ~T

- ~ ·,';(.

.

-~ . .·\.

\

;:

*
· ·.,1

Mem be r
F.D. I.C.

,_.,_,:• Deposits Insurance
ToS40,000

'

·---'·

agr~ment."

Egyptian Prbne Minister
Mustafa Khalil, who left
Washington Monday after
relaying a message . from
Sadat to P.resldent Carter,
said, "Everything now
depends on the Israeli reply
to President Sadat's letter ."

Free ·Hallmark Date Book

-

1!&gt;-&lt;.W. '

"

j

J

"

•

"

"

"

"

"

"

___ __
,. -

....., .....
..,.,.., ,.......... ,._

---·---

...

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

RECEIVE
$25.00
$50.00
$100.00
$150.00
$250.011
$500.00

(Continued from page I )
AI Abram made it clear
Egypt was sticking to its
position.
"Regarding the question of ·
linkage
be\ween . the
Egyptianisraeli peace treaty
and the establishment of
auwnomy in the West Bank
and Gaza, Egypt believes the
proposed treaty is part of an
overall settlement and should
be linked to movement in the
West Bank and Gaza," the
newspaper said .
In addition to setting up a
timetable for Palestinian au·
tonomy, Sadat's letter to
. Begin called for a revision of
one article in the proposed
treaty ' to reiterate Egypt's
commitment to assist other
Arab states if they face a
military attack.
In Washington , State
Department spokesman
Hodding Carter said, "The
question is not whether there
will be further "negotiations,
but when.
"It seems clear to us that
further talks are necessary
on the treaty package. We are
not able to say when the
•resumption
can
be
accomplished," Carter said .
Monday.
His·use of tbe term "treaty
package" bnplied that the
United States ~cts further
talks on the language of the
treaty itself. But Israeli offi·
cials have said they see
nothing more to negotiate.
AI Abram, which ususally
reflects the . government's
thinking, said, "Egypt has
expressed readiness to
resume the negotiations. It
does not consider the text of,
the draft treaty as final,
particularly since it has
expressed . reserva lions
against certain point:s. These .
reservations are not new arid
the introduction of amend·
ments should not be difficult.
" The two sides should
respect their ccmmitments
and carry them out with good
will. ·This basically depends
oo Israel encouraging the ·
inhabitants of the West Bank
and Gaza to participate in the
implementation of the

Come in today and pick up your free copy of this
helpful memory-jogger. The purse-sized Hallmark
Date Book includes monthly calendar pages for
all the dates you' ll want to remember in 1979.

YOU MAKE .PROMPT
PAYMENTS AND

$ ... 50
$. 1.00

Latest

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

. 'b.

INVEST

wiillam has lied
repeatedly "and extensively to
those who have been
examining hbn," said the
step-father. '
mind that

Big -screen viewing at Its brightest

and clearest. Era 11 -llilodular Color
System with Negative Black MatriK
Picture Tube for ease of servicing .
" Equal Ease" UHF -VHF tuning.

E.astern board adopts new discipline codes
Eastern Loc.al School District's Board of Educa lion has
changed the student discipline code to clarify procedures to be
followed when students become involved in the use or
possession of drugs, and alcoholic beverages.
According to the new policy, students· shall not possess, use,
be under tlle influence of' transmit or conceal any alcoholic
beverages, narcotics, cr drugs unless prescribed by a doctor
and communicated to school officials.
First offense penalties include a three-day suspension and
parent notification procedures. Students will not be permitted
to participe te in any school extra curricular activities if
involved in a first tbne infraction of this pOrtion of the
iliscipline code.
Second of!ense penalties inc Jude a ]().day suspension and
third tbne offenders will be subject to automatic

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday , December 6, 1978

recommondation for expulsion. Pen.alty procedures will be.·
accum] lative through the duration of the students'
attendance in school.
The board also has been advised tllat the district has been
notified by the State Department of Educa lion that the
learning disabilities classroom be moved to a more acceptable

room.

Supt. Clark Lees reports he plans to move the class to a
room in Ute Tuppers P lains Elementary building after the first
of the year .
Expected enrolbnent. increases in the area are one of the
reasons for findin g a larger, more suitable room, Lees reports.
Supt. Lees said extensive repair work ,has been started by
Columbus Heating and Ventilating Co. Improvements have
been made to the heating systef!lin each school and repa ir of

·e

leaks in the heating lines at tlle high school will need to be
finished tllis school year .
The board has been advised tllat Archie Rose, sc hool bus
coordinator, has, in accordance with a board directive ,
ordered $2,000 worth of necessary parts and supplies for the
transportation deparlment of the district.
The board has "named James Huff librarian , to serve as
coordinator of federal programs and the board has agreed to
apply for Title IV federal funds upon Huff's recommendation .
Federal money will be used to buy library books and other
supplementary reading materials. Children in the district will
also participate in a rea d-a-thon contest this month and in
January .
The board has also received information from Eastern
High School Principal James Page concerning new student
requirements in the area of school attendance and will be

•

at

studying new attendance procedures and acting on tbe
development of a new and more effective policy in the near
future .
The board recently met at length in executive session with
Robert Ledain, field representative of the Ohio Association of
Public School Employees .
It added Stephanie Ash and Susan Dye to the substitute
i&lt;lachers list and approved Betty Osborne as a substitute aide
and s ubstitute costodian .
The annual organizational meeting has been set for 6 p.m .
on January 2.
Sue Thompson has ·been named girls' track coach and the
clerk has been authocized to borrow $30,000 to meet end of the
year financial obligations.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 164

New viol~nce reported
in steelhauler strike
By JOHN T. KADY
Indiana State Police
United Press International
reported that at least 43 truck
A mob of striking steel· tires
were
punctured
haulers attempted to storm overnight along the Indiana
an
entrance
to
the toil road near Elkhart, Ind .,
Pennsylvania Turnpike today causmg an estbnated $8,000
and fired into three trucks damage .
before being dispersed by
Authorities in · Indiana ,
state police. Nine persons Pennsylvania and Ohio also
were arrested.
reported shots fired at trucks
Authorities in Indiana
reported at least 43 tires on
steel hauling trucks were
slashed and a striking steel·
hauler was shot in the face in
Cleveland.
Pennsylvania State Police
sald between 40 and 50
vehicles gathered at the New
Stanton interchange of the
Pennsylvania Turnpike in
Western Pennsylvania and
about 100 persons attempted
stop traffic.
Slots were fired into three
trucks and when the mob
dispersed it went to a nearby
truck stop where truck tires
were cut and one state
policeman wa~ struck in the
back of the head, state police
'said.
The nine persons arrested
were charged with a variety
TPR. ROD .COOK
of flreariiJB viola lions and
conspiracy.
Police
confiscated two · pistols, one
rifle, one shotgun, several
knives, pipes and assorted
other weapons.

w

Tpr. Cook

Loss set
at $35,000
Losses were unofficially set
at $35,000 as the· result of a
fire which destroyed the two·
story frame home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Richards, 112
·-· vale st:, Pomeroy, _ about
10 !49 p.m. Tues~ay.
.
Chief
' Pomeroy Fire
Charles Legar said Mrs .
Richards was watching
television in the living room
when she saw a · blaze in a
bedroom . She called t he
emergency squad first which
delayed the fire department's
arrival. The fire was
breaking through the win·
dows of the large home when
firefighters arrived.
All of the , family's
possessions were lost. Cause
of the fire bas not been
determined. Chief Legar said
thls morning he does. not
know If there is irisurance
coverage. Firemen were on
the Scene until about 2 a.m.
Wednesday.

Investigators ·
•
•
examme
slle
NORTH PERRY, Ohio
(UPI) _ Investigators from
West Virginia were to
examine scaffolding here
loday at cooling towers of the
Cleveland Electric
illuminating Co.'s nuclear
plant, a facility similar to
that involved in the collapse
of. a scaffold that killed 51
W&lt;l'kers in West Virginia
·
earlier thlll year.
The
West
Virginia
inveagtigators are looking for
dues as to what caused the
AprD 'll collapse during the
building of a cooling tower,
CEI officials said.
Wcrk on the cooling tower
at North Perry has been
baited, to await findings from
the
West
Virginia
investigation.
· The saine coo1ractor, Re·
!tearch Cottrell Inc., of New
Jeraey, was Involved in-build·
ing both tow!rs.
-\

chosen as
top officer

Gallipolis Ohio State High·
way Patrol Trooper Rodney
C. Cook has been selected
1978 Trooper of the Year at
the GaUia-Meigs Patrol Post.
This is the third year that
· Trooper Cook has received
this honor.
The award was presented
to Tpr . Cook, 31 , in
recogniti on of outstanding
service during 1978 at the
GaUia·Meigs Patrol Post .
Selected by fellow officers
stationed at the 'Gallia·Meigs
post, the decision to choose
Tpr. Cook was based on
leadership
abilities,
professional ethics, courteous
rreatment of others, en·
thusiastic work attitude, and
cooperation with supervisors,
peers, and the public. Tpr.
Cook is now in contention for
the District and State
Trooper of t\it Year Awards
to be announced at a later
date.
Tpr . Cook joined the. patrol
in 1971 and has served at the
Ironton and Gallipolis Posts.
Originally from Gallipolis, he
graduated from South·
. western High School, before
serving ' in the U. S. Navy .
Other Patrol awards
received in the past include:
Five-year safe driving
award, Post Trooper of the
Year, Ironton Post - 1973
and Gallia-Meigs P ost
Trooper of the Year - 1977.
Tpr. Cook and wife, Charla,
live in Gallipolis with their
children·: Melissa Rae •. 6, and
Joshua Charles, nine months.

and missiles tossed at tlle rigs Hospitjli and was released.
as violence escalated in the
Kudri n sa id the truck
strike by the Fraternal driver started shooti ng, ·
Association of Steel Haulers. without provocation, at abo ut
Cleveland police are 15 pickets outside the . J&amp;L
investigating the wounding of plant. He said the driver fired
a F ASH piCket as he stood on through tll e closed passenger
a picket line at the Jones &amp; window of his own truck cab,
Laughlin Steel Corp. plant in · shattering it.
Cleveland.
Meanwhile, a reward is
Gilbert S. Kudrin, 39, of being offered in connection
Lakewood , said he was hit on with one shooting since the
the chin by a bullet fired from strike by F ASH began Nov.
the second of two trucks that to.
were driven through the
The pr esident of a
picket
line
Tuesday Pittsburgh sleet-hauling
afternoon.
company offered a $5,000
Kudrin received 30 stitches reward for information
at Cleveland Metropolitan
(Continued on page 16 1

Gallia commissioner
I

CONCERT SOLOISTS -These are the soloists of the
Meigs High School vocal department who will be taking
part in the Christmas concert to be staged by the high
·school and
. junior high school groups at the high school,
.

injured in accident
Gallia
Co unty
Com·
miSSioner John L. Belville,
45, Crown City, was treated
for injuries sustained during
a one-vehi cle accident
Tuesday, at 2:40p.m. on SR
141, at milepost 13.
The Gallia • Meigs Post,
Highway patrol, reports that
an east bound tractor·trailer
operated by Belville failed to
negotiate a curve, went off
the right side of the roadway,
and overturned.
Belville was transported to
Holzer Medica l Cente r,
where he was treated for a
laceration of the scalp, and
chest and rib pain , and
released.
The patrol re ports the coal
truck operated by Belville
was demolished.
No citation was issued. The
accident is still under . in·
vest igation.
Two persons were treated
for injuries folloWing an
accident on CR 3, in Meigs
County, at 7:50a.m.
Officers report that a west
bound auto operated by
Freda Durha m , 54, Mid·
dleport, swerved to avoid an
on-coming unid ent ifi ed
vehicle which was traveling
left of center.
The Durham auto went off
the right side of the roadway
into a ditch, recrossed the
roadway, and went off the left
side, striking an em·
bahkment '
Durham and a passeng er,
Troy. Durham, 14, were trans·
ported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Freda Durham was ad·
milled for observation.
Troy Durham was treated
·and released.
The Durham vehicle in·
curred moderate damage.
Mitchell Seranak, 20 ,
Columbus , was cited on
· charges of DWf following a
one-vehicle accident on U.S .
33, at the junction of SR 681,
in Meigs Co unty, at 9:30p.m.
According to the patrol, a
vehicle operated by Seranak,
traveling north, went off the
right side ol the roadway and
struck a ditch .
There was severe damage
to the vehi cle.
At 8 a.m., of!icers in·
vestigated a one-vehicle
mish ~ p on SR 325, at the
junction of CR 31.
According "to the patrol, an
auto operated by Janet
German , 37, Langsv ill e,
tra veling west on 325,
swerved to avoid a dog on the
roadway, went off the left
side of the road and struck a
fence.
The German vehicle in·
curred slight damage.
The patrol investigated a
one-auto accident at 11:45
a.m . on CR 3, live-tenths of a
mile east of SR 554.
Officers report that a west
bound auto operate d by
Ronald Denny, 31 , Vinton ,
swerved to avoid an oncoming unidentified vehicle
traveling left of center ,
struck a rock, and passed off
the right side of the roadway.
There was slight damage to
the Denny vehicle.

Sun·day. fncliided are :
Ill r,
Eason, Jayne Hoeflich ; standing, front, I to r , Vickie
Boyles, Jo McKinney, Herb Noel, BiUy Colmer , Greg
Thomas, Greg Bush; standing at rear, I tor, Jeff Nash and
Lee Lewis.

Major snowstorm .'hits Rockies
United Press International
A
m a jor
snowstorm
pa cking blizzard conditions
and winds of up to 1110 mph
surged through the Central
Rockies and onto the Plains
today, stranding scores of
motorists, closing dozens of
schools a nd businesses and
prompting dramatic rescue
mission s.
The storm kept search
teams busy Tuesday rescuing
21 survivors of a 'commuter
airplan e cras h atop a
mount ain near Steamboat
Springs, Colo. · One person
died in the crash. Rescuers
pu sh ed
through
5-foot
snowdrift s to reach t he
wreckage of the twin-engine
Rocky Mountain Airway s

LOBBYIST HIRED
Michael Roush has been
employed as lobbyist for the
National Federation of Small
Businesses, Wa shington, D.

c.

Roush was formerly em·
played by Sen. Dewey
Barlett,
Oklahoma .
A
graduate of Ohio University,
Roush received his master's
degreein economics from the
University of Oklahoma . He
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford (Pat) Roush, Racine.
Roush and his wife, J ean,
reside at Falls Church, Va.

plane.
.
"If you'd been up here a nd ·•
seen the weather we h8d,
you'd be amazed that they
s urvived ," sa id Grand
Co unty Sheriff Houston
Henderson.
Another six pe ople, including a 2-year-old child,
were rescued after spending
Monday night stranded in a 4· .
wheel-drive vehicle near
Jeffrey City, Wyo.
They s urvived beca use
they did not leave the vehicle,

said Richard Thompson , 45, a
member of the group , who
said he was $\randed once
before while working on the
Alaska pipeline.
"No matter how good the
weath er looks, don't leave
that rig, because you can
start to walk to a place and
the damn' thing could start
up again and you'd lose yo ur
way and you'd lose your life, "
Thompson said.
" We la ug hed , we · tofd

stories we told jokes, we
made s ure the baby · was
comfortable. We made the
best of a bad situation,
knowing ·that sooner or later
somebody would be there.''
Cold air also moved into the
Southeast, setting off thun·
derstorms and turbulence. A
tornado to uched down at
Dade City, Fla., ·injuring two
people and damaging . two
t railer homes. A twin-engine
plane flying through high
winds crashed near Sebring,
F la .,
killin g
three
passengers.
Light snow . spread. over
New England and the Great
Lakes and rain fell in the mid·
Atlantic region. · A 111id·
aft ernoon snowfall of 3 inches
in Chicago snarled rush·hour
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The president of the Ohio Farm traffic and caused minor
Bureau Federation said today legislation is needed to protect delays at O'Hare ·. In·
farmers from risks involved in receiving sewage sludge for ternational AirJ)ort.
Steady snow, measuring 6-ll
land application and to demand more careful monitoring of
inches,
piled up in Denver,
such applications.
ca
usin
g
num ero us school
Wallace Hirschfeld .said the Farm Bureau would propose
today . Highwa ys
closures
such legislation in tlle upcoming sessio~. of _the General
were
reported
snowpacked
Assembly "before things get out o! control, notmg that some
thro
ughout
Colorado
an d
Ohio ·farmers are prese ntly receiving sludge from vanous
Wyoming
and
visibility
was
municipalities.
extremely limited by blowing
and drifting snow.
" We are trying to
a
TEHRAN, Iran (UPH- Imperial troops were ordered to disco urage traffic,"
resume a low profile today as reports of the gun battle slaytng Color ado state police spokes·
of a powerful religious leader brought a dangerously quiet man said . "The mountains
are fairly quiet but we have a
cabn to the capital.
Anti-shah demonstrators virtually abandoned their post· lot of overdue parties since
curfew forays into the streets during the early morning hours. you double the time it usually
But thousands of citizens climbed to their rooftops during the takes to get anywhere.
Howev er, it seems most
night to chant slogans against the regbne.
people have decided to sit this
one out. "
Heavy snow spr ead !rom
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI ) Hoping to shield the Northern and Central
themselves from the turmoil caused by the falling dollar, six Plateau across th e Rockies
nations have set up a European Monetary System to support and into Nebraska and Iowa.
tlleir currencies against fluctuating exchange rates. But the Winter storm warnings were
group that announced creation of tlle monetary system in effect fo r parts of Wyoming
Tuesday failed to persuade England, Italy and Ireland to join. and Colorado and storm
The members initially include West Germany, France, watches or travel advisories
were posted from Arizona
Belgium, the Netherlanda, Luxembourg and Denmark .
and New Mexico to Kansas
and Nebraska .
Wind-whipped snow closed
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Ohio Board of Regents, meeting
major truck routes across
in a lengthy executive session Tuesday afternoon and evening,
Wyoming, leaving truck stops
did not name a new chancellor.
packed
with
stranded
Regents Chairman Richard Krabach said a decision on a
drivers. Interstate 80 - a
successor to James Norton was "close at hand and could be
major tr uck route between
made wlthin days.'' He sai-l the lengthy meeting was designed
Los Angeles and Chicago to inform four new board members of the progress a search
was closed for 1110 miles becommittee had made ~nd to evaluate candidates.
tween
Laramie
and
Rawlings, Wyo ., for several
hours.
"I'm real itchy to go . We're
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) - A strong earth· just not used to sitting too
quake- rocked San Salvador early today, rocking high rise long," said stranded trucker
buildings and sending people inw the streets.
Leonard Grantskl of Beaver
No damages were imm\l(liately apparent and there was no Crossing,. Neb. 11 You··can't
immediate information oo the strength of the quake, which harass waitresses too long or ·
lasted for several seconds beginning at~ a .m . (7 a.m. EST ), or they'll throw you out. That
·
its epidenter .
takes all the fun out of it.."

The World Today

Fanners need legislation

Low profile ordered today

Nations set-up own system

No new chancellor named

'Quake rocks Salvador

PRESENTED GIFT CERTIFICATE - Mike Wolfe, left , production foreman at Foote
Mineral Company; is shown presentinc Mary Roush with a gift certilicate for heine th P.
winner of a recent safely contest. Mary has been with Foo\e Mineral since Aug. 29, 1977. ~-:'"
is a ge.terallaborer in the production department.
·
'
!

,..

'

'·

�...

I
•

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 6,1978.

Cincinnati and ·Pete .Rose---End .of an era

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., WecJno:sday, Dec. 6, 1978

Washi;ngton
By Clarence
Report Miller

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

'J'rade is essential to a for reasons of public poliCy
strong economy. For years other than national security.
many analysts pointed with
·This is not to imply that we
pride
at
the
large
trade
as
Americans should not be
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
surpluses our country en· concerned about human
joyed with other nations. rights in other nations, about
WILLIAMSBURG, Va . I NE A I · The nation's Republican
However, all that has the protection of the world's
governors. emboldened by their- gains in last month's
changed In recent years. Our environment, about con·
elections are already looking for ways to mflu ~ n ce the
choice of' the GOP's '1980 standa rd bearer.
..
. present International halance sumer safety' and about the
Presidential politics dominated the corridor chatter here
of trade is bad and getting curbing of International
Nov . 26·28 as the Republican governors, their ranks
worse. The Commerce terrorism. But we need to ask
swollen from 12 to !8, a ssembled to assess their 1,78
Department recently an- hoW these considerations are
election successes and their potential role in 1980.
nounced a 2.1 billion dollar . to be balanced with our
Only one of their number , Illinois Gov. James Thoml'"
trade
deficit for the month of nation's need for foreign
son , is considered a possible presidential conten~er at th1s
October.
The projected an- trade opportunities. The
juncture. But the rest of the governors want a ptece of the
nual deficit stands at a record export sector has inaction as well - at least in their own states.
29.8 billion dollars. With an creasingly become the in·
Most of the talk centere&lt;l on the importance of using the
patronage power and prestige of the state house to build up
anticipated increase IIi OPEC strwnent for the pursuit of
local party organizations whic h the governors could_then
oil prices and with our such pu'blic policy goals. I am
"t:ontrol in 1980 primaries and party caucuses.
decreasing edge in the export very much concerned about
A parallel theme. dominating private talk ..among the
of
advanced technology this trend and about the
GOP executives was the need to "stay loose and avotd
products,
the future looks impact export denial has had
commitments to particular pres idential candidates during
· on the domestic economy and
bleak indeed.
the coming months.
Such deficites also POrtend , on the competitive position of
The only candidate likely to suffer from such an
approach - if the governors indeed pursue it - is Ronald
further problems lor the U. S. firms abroad.
Reagan, who is widely viewed as the curre nt frontrunner
strength of the American
One out of every· five
and may try to nail down early support.
·
dollar abroad. As our trade manufacturing jobs in the
But Michigan Gov. William Milliken, a leading advocate
_. standing suffers the dollar United States ·produces
of the "stay loose" approach, insisted he was not trying to
K
k
J
'T
ac
-·
can be expected to plununet something over and above
mount any "stop Reagan" drive. "It's much too early to WHY CHRISTMAS ALMOST WASN
talk in those terms," he said.
~;';;~~~~7'7~~~~~'re:u;~\-7~oo~~;-;;;;;;;-·17~tF~11\~~~"-~~~co~e:T~AJJ;~~~wome..~
· ~-:-further in foreign money our domestic needs; and one
l'U. AA'If.11:1~0P IMKI/JA · markets. As the exchange out of every four acres
Few of the GOP governors seem likely to jump on a I 140\11 DID You ftl-lC
I'OMl:. t:&gt;'ei.NI:R\B~ AAP
Irate suffers the inflation rate produces a g ric ult u r a 1
Reagan bandwagon in any event. Republicans who con~rol 11.'1! WI&gt;.Y Ul' 1\'e.RI:.
O!'elol "'!lei-F· ~t:.RVIC~
at home accelerates because products
beyond
our
the state houses in vote-rich industrial states from ~:~J't.~e.i
Coe-'11'Eo~!
of it.
·domestic needs. In order to
Pennsylvania to M~nnesota are mos.tly moderates and E&gt;A,_.'TA? .
liberals with little ideological affection for the former
In
September,
the keep our production force
California governor .
·President announced a working we must sell in the
• ; { program for increasing world market.
Who'll be consulting whom?
-:.£~American exports. 1 welcome
I fully recognize and
~r.his
expressed
intentions
in
support
the need .for export
Reagan's 1976 campaign manager, John Sears, was one
•
this
regard,
but
at
the
same
controls
to protect u. s.
of several political consultants prowling the halls at the
time
feel
compelled
to
national
security
and in fact
GOP governor's conference, listening to the talk and
of
the
·
auihored.
and
introduced
question
other
aspects
sharing intelligence.
.
Administration's policy along with 77 cosponsors, a
It is not yet clear, however, that Sears w11l be at the helm
of a 1980 Reagan campaign . There is a power struggle
.,......, which work at cross purposes bill at the close of last session
-~···"
."
going on within the Reagan camp that could lead both
l'--.;";.'•"'-".;".".;·.'"'-·--"'!'¥_\-.....&gt;_with the stated objectives for which would tighten up our
Sears and another key 1976 Reagan aide, Charles Black,
export expansion. At a time procedures in this regard.
now political director of the Republican National Commit·
when the need for export American business Is willing
tee, to bolt to another candidate.
.
growth
has never been to forego market opSen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nevada, is expected to re~e~t his
e
greater,
our
government is portunities where it . is
1976 role as titular leader of the Re~gan team, but It IS_not
taking actions that in· determined that the sale of
certatn who Wlll serve as campaign manager. Besides
creasingly inhibit U. S. sales products or of technology
Sears and Black, at leasi two other Reagan associates are
jockeying for position m the coming campaign. They are
HOW TO ENCOURAGE YOUR C!liLDREN
abroad. .
would be detrimental to our
press spokesman Lyn Nofziger and public relations
•
·
TO USE DRUGS ·
In some cases, export in· national security and to out
advisor Mike Deaver.
·
In1970,ourwholenationroseupinindignationwhenfour centives common to our world standing. But I
Sears it is understood, will remain with Reagan only if
.
~tudents were killed in ~ studenl rio~ at Kent ~te University foreign com~etitors are seriously question whether
given clear-cut authority to call the shots - as he did in
lll Kent, Ohio. But few, if anyone, crted out m dismay over the denied to AmeriCans. In other American business should be
1976. A number of other candidates, including 1976 vice
tragedy of 17 young people,just one week later, dying iri New cases, and these are subjected to overly idealistic
presidential nominee Robert Dole, are bidding for Sears'
The
population
count
for
The
following
census
in·
York City because of a drug overdosage.
becoming increasingly .export restraints aimed at
services, and if he can't run the Reagan op~ration he's
fonnatlon Is condensed from Columbia Township acThousands of American lives were lost In the VIetnam war burd.ensome, A.merlcan achieving desired political
likely to take charge of someone else's campatgn.
the original handwritten cording to the Bureau of the while the entire country clamored for the Unl!ed States to get exporters are denied markets changes in the internal
record of the Division ailott.ed Census report Is given from out and stop tbe slaughter. However, during this same period
policies of other natio115.
Not too excited ... yet
._.._,._._...,._.._.,_.~._......._.._._....
to Stephen Strong. This copy 1820 through 1970 inclusive. of time, more than three times 88 many deaths OCCWTed in the
Doug Bailey and John Deardourff, the premier political was · made from microfilm The first census report lor · United States because of drug abuse. Why hasn't there been a
advertising consultants for the GOP, are even less certam found in the Ohio University Columbia Township was that public outrage against 'drug abuse and something more
of their 1980 plans than John Sears. B~1ley &amp; Deard_ourff, library. The state library of of 1820. The following effectively done about curbing the drug traffic•
who ran President Ford's ad campa1gn agamst Juruny Ohio also has microfilm population
count , was
· Have we, as a nation, settled for an indifferent and smug
Carter two years ago, are being wooed by nearly all the copies of the U. S. census.
through
the
courprovided
By Alma Marshall
attitude
that drug aoose Is normal and there is nothing.we can
potential 1980 GOP contenders. But as of now, they see no
of
Meyer
Zitter,
ehief,
.
tesy
.
The
·census
form
was
do
about
it?
II
drug
abuse
Is
normal,
then
everyone
who
does
•
one who excites their professional interest.
simple compared with those Population Division, Bureau not indulge in drugs is abnormal!
OAK GROVFJ, W. ya.- A Thanksgiving service was held •
used in 1970. Occupations of the Census,
recently at Oak Grove United Meti)Odist Church with the
II drug abuse Is normal, here are some suggestions on how
were agriculture, commerce
It can be noted that the you can encourage your children to use drugs.
Reverend Robert Fulton, delivering an inspirational message
and manufacturing. People peak population was reached
text Isaiah 55:2. Thanksgiving to God and Country, was the
1. Never do things together as a famUy and keep the home
were classified as slaves, free in 1880 for Columbia Town- in a state of confusion. Don't eat together, or have any weekly,
theme of the program. Sue Icenhower led in the Pledge of
colored people and white ship. New ground was being monthly, and annual family traditions that your children can
Allegiance to the Flag, the Christian Flag and to the Bible,
exhausted, !ann machinery look forward to. When you have a choice of either spending
people.
with Allen Icenhower holding tbe Bible. "The Road Back
Only the name of the head was being improved which Ume or money on a material pursuit or on a family activity,
Home," was read by assistant superintendent, Florence
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
of the family was listed. required larger acreages of always choose the material objective. Always be too busy with
Cullen.
others were counted by age more fevel land. Alo!lg with oosiness, civic, or social life to spend Ume with your children.
The congregation sang many songs including, "America,''
groups. The males were the changes in agriculture Or, if you do have time, watch television, instead.
"Count Your Blessings, "Let's Just Praise the Lord," "Break
abOut this condition and see a counted in one group and the came tile development of
Thou the Bread of Ufe" and more songs.
Undermine the sanctity ol marriage in the home, but stay
Cause of
neurologist or jw.t .let well females
another group. commerce and manufac- together f&lt;r the sake of the children. However, if you do get a
On December 17, a Christmas Fellowship Dinner and gift
dizziness
enough alQne .
The male groups were under turing in areas outside divorce, let it be a scandal and make sure that the rna Iter of
exchange will be held following the morning service. The date
. DEAR READER - By t~ 10, 10 and under 16, between Columbia Township. People child custody is a perpetUation of fear, jealousy, and hate.
and Ume of the Christmas program will be announced later.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Sud· bme you hear from me your 16 and 18, (counted . two left Columbia Township to
It was reported that historian, Naomi.Yeager, assisted by
2. Dat't teach your child any moral values, especially
denly I developed dizziness. I problem may have resolved times), 16 and under 25, 25 take better paying jobs when they are young. Wait untU lhey are old enough,to learn to
Lucy Cullen and Florence Cullen are brglnging the history of
noticed it first after having a itself. Dizziness can be caus- and under 45, and 45 and over. ~Isewhere .
Population decide right or wrong lor themselves. Leave moral training
the churCh up to date.
.
sinus head cold. The dizziness ed by many different things. The female groups were declined until 1950.
Revival"Bt
the
church
closed
recently with Communion on
and development of your children to the church and tbe
was particularly bad when I If you have a true false sense under 10, 10 and under 16, 16
It is quite possible that a schools. Expect your child to achieve, to win, but don't teach
Sunday evening, with several of the congregation going to
went to bed at ni.ght. My bead of motion, it is called vertigo. and under 25, 25 and under 45, new upturn in population is in him the' principles of We. Let him or her learn that on his or her
Bellmeade United Methodist where members from this
would just swim around. That is usually associated and 45 years and older.
the making. The mining of own, oot upbold them before your friends, the ·school, and the
church, Vernon Oturcb, and Oak Grove shared in baptismal
When I'd get up from lying with the balance canal
The total count Is 66 coal shol\ld help. Develop- law as ·"not my little boy!"
rites.
down, I would sit still for system in the ear, or circula- males and 65 females making ment of some large scale
The· congregation at Oak Grove serit congratulations to
·3. Den 't bother to try to communicate with your children.
several minutes before I tion to the brain.or ears. A lot a total of 131. Deducting three lal'l)ling would also help. Never listen to them, just scold them and make them feel as
Mr, and Mrs. Ray Thompson on their Golden Wedding
started to walk, or I'd walk of other people have dizziness males. that were counted Improved water systems also though they are failures or unimportant. Always tell them to
Anniversary, and extression of sympathy to Pat Friend, due to
which is really an onset of twice because of the overlap encourage growth. Improved "do as I say, not as I do!" They will soon learn that it Is all
sideways.
the death of her father.
My doctor gave me An· fainting .
O!bers recuperating from surgery and remembered are
of one male group we arrive roads and transportation right to lie, to cheat, and steal.
The respiratory infection at 128 which Is reported by should help develop · a
tivert which didn't help . Then.
Supt. Glen Icenhower and Clarence Adkins, Letart, W. Va.,
4. Always pick up after your children and never let them
he said I didn 't breathe pro- you had may have c~used in- the Bureau Qf the Census for bedroom community . and experience reality. Don't make them .clean up their rooms.
both are patients at Holzer Medical Center.
perly. I'm 64 and have a blood flammation of the balance 1820. Sixty-four people or increase population growth. Always solve their problems yourself and make their decisions
Mr. lves King, a faithful member of tbe Oak Grove
pressure reading of II0/70. canals in your ears. In thai exactly· one half of the
Church,
was remembered, and now resides in Florida. His
for them. Never let your children experience cold, fatigure,
I've never had high blood case, the condition is. usually population was engaged In
·address
Is
Box 3185, Fort Pierce, Fla.
·
adventure, injury, risk, challenge, experimentation, !allure,
cOlumbia Township
pressure. My doctor said I self limited and will disap- agriculture in 1820.
1970, 619 ; 1960, 579; 1950, frustration, discouragement, etc.
had good circulation to my pear in time . We call it
It will be noted in the 695; 1940, 6-40 ; 1930. 699; 1920,
MASON - The Mason Extension Homemakers enjoyed
5. Let yolD' child believe that drugs can cure anything by
748 ; 1910, 789; 1900, 1,016 ;
labyrinthitis.
Antivert
and
head.
following list of heads of 1890,
dining
at the King's Table in Huntington qn Monday and
your
example.
Be
sure
!o
take
a
"pick
up"
pill
in
the
morning
1880, 1,116; 1870,
It seems . this dizziness is other anti-motion sickness families that we get the 1,286;1,087;
shopping at two different malls, East Hills, and at Putnam
1860. 1,286; 1850. ~7; to get you going arid take a "relaxant" at night. Always take,
worse when I close my eyes. I type medicines are comnion- family names wh.ich provide 1840, 672; 1830, 360; 1820, 128. something for your nerves, the slightest headache, and any
VIllage, enroute home.
always feel extremely tired ly used in the treatment of names for Ogden . Run,
Several of the homemakers were unable to go because of .
kind of stomach upset, And, when Y.OU are disappointed about
in the mornings upon such disorders.
Sharp's Creek and the Castor - By H. E. Throckmorton something, drown your disappointment ·and frilstrations with
lllness.
If you are continuing to cemetery.
awakening. I have a thyroid
Making the trip were Mrs. Clara ·WUUams, Mrs. Laurene
alcoholic beverages. Alcohol is a drug, too.
deficiency associated with an have dizzy spells, ask your
Drugabusels an abnCFmalhabit ..It is a cop out on reality,, Lewis, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Mr. and ·.
COLUMBIA
TOWNSHIP
CENSUS
t820
enlarged gland determined doctor to refer you to a
(From Ohio l.!niversity Library)
and so Is indifferent, irresponsible parenting, What the
Mrs. John Marshall.
neurologist. If you were
by scan.
.;
children
learn
or
do
not
learn
in
the
home
has
a
direct
31
31
I take a five-grain thyroid ·below 50 years of age, then I
MASON - The Junior Choir and Youth Fellowship of
~
·"' influence on society at large, f&lt;F the home Is the basic unit of
might
suggest
that
you
see
an
E
l,.
E
tablet daily and a vitamin
Na.-Name
Mason
United Methodist Church under the direction of Mrs.
.e any society.
.t :
tablet daily. I also take ear, nose and throat
Jackie Sisson, and Mrs. Cecllla Harris, will present a ChristDestroy the home We and you destroy society, If drug
Valium when extremely ner· specialist· first. There is no 1. Alvin Ogdln
4
6
mas musical program on Sunday, December 17 at 7:30p.m. at
1o
7 abuse is the norm ioday, then dare to be different. Be
3
3
vous, but I have found that I rule that applies to everyone, 2. George Wood
·
the church.
~
~
abnormal
ahd
teach
your
children
moral
values
by
precept
Joshua Wood
3
4
am more dizzy when I lie but older people more often J.
The
children's
choir
will
provide
special singing, while the
and
elUilllple.
They
will
then
grow
up
to
be
abnormal,
too,
and
4. Hezeklah Castor
4
I
5
2
down if I am not taking have dizziness from problems 5. John Wood
3
4
7
2 not indulge in drug abuse.
Youth Fellowsihp with handmade puppets of camel, donkey
Valium than when I take it. I related to circulation to the 6. William McKinster
5
1
6
2
and sheep, etc. will portray how the animals viewed the birth
I
2
3
2
have never taken more than brain or ear. Younger people 7. Jame Davis
of Christ. Everyone Is welcome
George Davis
4
6
J
2
. ' to i!ttend.
three a day and generally just are more likely to have a pro- 8.
9. Oavid Graham
2
4
2
6
blem in the ear itself. At any tO. William Graham
take one at night.
4
5
9
3
MASON - An old fashioned Christmas program will be
GIFT CERTIFICATE
ERROR NOTED
age
certain medicines can ·be 11 . Thomas Brooks (joint)
Please tell me if you think I
3
2
5
2
held
on December 17, at the Cbrlltlan Brethren Church,
RECIPIENTS
NAMED
The grand champion twirl12. Henry Ross
2
3
5
2
should be more concerned a factor .
Mason,
at 7:30 p.m.
Recipients
of
gift
cer·
13.
Abraham
Zlnn
I
2
J
2 off winner pictured In
I am sending you The
'lbere
will be special singing by the Senior Otolr at "
Solomon Philips
tHlcates as a part of the gold
4
2 ' Monday's paper from the
2
2
Health Letter number 9-10, 14.
15. James Townsend
I
5
throughout
lhe program. The children's choir will' ;
Intervals
6
5 N.B.T.A. Baton competltlori
star program of the Pomeroy
ntE DAILV SENTINEL
Dizziness and Vertigo. Other 16. Solomon Townsend
1
J
4
2
also
take
part
In
singing
and recltatiooa.
,,
merchants on Tuesday were
,DEVOTED TO TilE
readers who want this issue 17. Henry Mace
5
3
8
2 held Sunday at Wahama High
INTERF.ST OF
Playlets,
"Jimmy's
Gift"
and
"Tidings
Over
lhe
Hill
Top".~
Barney'Napper,
Pomeroy,
a
..
5
5
10
6 School was Mindy Skinner
can send 50 cents with a long, 18. Jonathan Brooks
MEIGS-MASON A.REA
3
2. from Lancaster and not
19. Jonathan Brooks (joint)
I
certlll'cate from Powell's with nativity scene will also be ~resented with the women ol "
2
ROBERT HOEFLICH
stamped , self-addressed 20. Thomas Brooks
4
1
·
·
::tly Edlwr
5
4
Super
Valu; Barney Ught· the church in charge of_ the program.
envelope for it. Send your re, 21. David Shidler
Publlllhed~Hy t:xcepl Saturdlty
4
2
6
2 LangsvWe as was reported.
foot,
Minersville,
a
ceroJ)' Tht! Ohio Valley Publishing
She II an Ohio State and
quest to me in care of this 22. Thomlls Sharp
5
5
10
6
MASON - The 87th birthday ol Mrs. Clara Redman was
Company-MuJUmedla, Inc., 111.
tHlcate from the G. and J .,
TOTAL
65 ·131
64 National champjon. The
P.O.
Box
1551
,
newspaper,
Court St., Pomeruy, Ohio o4S76 ~
Obaerved
on December 3 when the family gathmd at her .
and
·
Dorothy
Brewer,
Port·
contest was sponsored by the
8ulinesl Office Phone 992.· 21511,
Radio City Station, New
home en Fourth St .
.
land,
a
certificate
from
Ec.Ut.oriMl Phone 992·2157.
Wahama Athletic Boo!llers.
York, NY 10019. It will exSecond c11:1ss postagt! p~:~id at
A birthday cake baked by Judy Redman wu 11erwd along '
Landmark. No purcltase Is
plain to you the different
P~~neroy , Ohio.
,
with ice cream. Attending were the hoooree, Mr. and Mn. •
required
lor
participation
In
Ntttlonad wdvertl,tng represe: n~
forms of .dizziness and causes
Wtlve , t..~utOOn AMSOCiHies , 3101
Richard Redman, Mr. and Mrs. Dent!ll Newell, Mr. Homer .~
CONFmM APPOINTMENT .. the program.·
which can occur . As you will
Euclid Ave ., Clevehmd, OhJO Hl \5.
Redman, Mra. Jean llllvla, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Canon, Mr. ,
OR! .ANDO, Fla. (UP!) SubstTipUon rttles: DeilverOO bf
see, it is not a simple proand
Mrs. Homer Newell.
:'
::arrlt:r where MY .. ilable 75 t:ent.s per
The
Minnesota
Twins
If you uappeu Lu IJc L~"'""'
most a person needs, even
blem.
wM. By Motor Ro~ wl!t!rc carrier
four
other
managers
in
their
Mrs.
Radman
received
aeveralllftl,
·
·:·
!
Tuesday
confirmed
the
I'm concerned about your without a thyroid gland at all , an exL-essive amount of
~~ervit.~ not av&lt;~ilable , One mooll'f.
organization.
.
1
MMoalllld-~
•
reappointment
of
Cal
Ermer
p .25. By nmil In Ohio and W. Va.,
story of taking thyroid . ' If is about three-and-a-half thyroid, that could contribute
Enner managed the Mud
One YeMr, 122.00 : Stx months,
Mrs. Helen Barter t!pellt tbe··Tbanbgiving holidays with ~.
your letter is correct, and you grains. Most people with low- to your nervousness and diz· as the manager of their Hens to third place with a
fl l. SO ; Three moQ.L iu;, $7.00'
~r
grandsonl, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Barker and family,
Toledo
fann
club
in
the
Tn·
ziness.
Also,
I'd
hate
to
see
El~~ewtlere f2UO ytU!!i'. Six !nonthf.
are taking five gruins of thyroid disorders .d.o very
of
7~
this
past
record
Marmet,
W, Va., and another grantlabn, Robert Bafker,
.13 .50; Three month s, $7 . 5~ .
ternatlonat
League
tor
•·
•
,
t
you
bel'ume
habituated
ti&gt;
thyroid a day, that is an enor- well on two to three grains a
Sub:tcrlptlon prk~ imtludes SmKI1:1f
Olarleston,
W. Va,
,
season.
season
along
with
ntlr
,Ing
d~y
.
.
Valium.
., r~nllutl ..
moUS' amount. Usually the

By. RICK VAN SANT
.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cincinnati's love affair with Pete
RoSe blossomed through 16 years for one main reason - he
was a local boy who made good through hard work. ·
"He doesn 't have all the natural ability that a lot of Major
Leaguers have, " a baseball scout noted long ago, "but he more
than makes up for it with his hustle. "
He became Cincinnati 's "Charlie Hw;tle" - running to first
O!l walks, daringly rounding first on singles to turn them into
doubles and belly-flopping into bases with his famow; headfirst slides.
Rose simply explaiited, "I work my tail off. "
The Reds and Rose linked up iminediately after Rose
graduated from Cincinnati's Western Hills High School and ""

GOP govs get it together

.a
·d

0

Consensus given

r

I Mason County
1
I

HEALTH

m

.

..

·~

"

•

News Note·s

doubles and so it was during the middle of Rose's career that of the summer as he continued to hit safely in game after
he surrendered much of the national spotlight to power-hitting game, finally winding up with 44 straight games to claim the ·
National League hitting streak record,
teammate Johnny Bench.
Still, in Cincinnati, Rose was always the favorite over Bench.
Aild , early in the season, on a cold night in early May ,-Rose
"I can't believe it," an out-of-t~wner once said.at Riverfront cra cked his 3,000th career hit , illustrating just whete his great
Stadium. "Alii heard about back home was Bench, but every- consistency had brought him .
body at tbe park just talks about Rose ."
What did the spunky Rose say right after belting No. 3,000?
But as Bench's power waned in recent years, Rose became
" I think I've got a good shot at 3.600 hits, " he declared,
Clncy's best known player across the country.'And, it was this meaning he 's after Stan Mw;ial's National League career hit
·
past season, which was to be· his last with the Reds, that record of 3,630. •
brought htm more national attention than ever - for two
And, asked at the time if Hit No. 3,000 was dedicated to
anyone, Rose said in what now seems to be fitting irony, " I'd
reascms.
•
Rose riveted America's attention on baseball in the middle hke to dedicated it to the fans of Cincinnati. "

~~ ·

-----:'

c0 Iumb Ia Twp.. Th.e..Open .R.

spent tbree years in the Minors - hillin~ .331 and .330 hls
last two years - before coming up lor his first Major League
season in 1963.
It took him a couple of years to get used to Major League
pitching - he hit just .273 and .269 his first two seasons with the
Reds - but in 1965 he began to hit with consistency - which
was to become another Rose trademark.
·
Year after year, Rose set - and usually achieved - two
difficult goals : get atleasl200 hits and hit over .300.
Starting with that springboard 1965 season when he first
achieved both goals, Rose went on to hit over .300 in 13 of the
past 14 seasons and to top 200 hits nine of those years.
. But home runs get bigger headlines thiln •in Plo. and

1966

CINCINNATI
-Despite the departure
of big · drawing card
Pete •
Rose·.
the
·Cincinnati Reds can at
least expect sellout
crowds the weekend of
June 1-:1.
That's the first time
Rose's new team, the
Philadelphia
Phillies,
come to town tdplay the
Reds.
The 1979 schedule
calls lor Philadelphia to
play
in
Cincinnati
Friday night. June I.Saturd~y
afternoon ,
June 2, and Sunday
afternoon, June 3, lor a
doubleheader.
The Reds also host
Philadelphia on Aug. 4·
5, in Tuesday and
Wednesday
night
games.
Because Philadephia
is an Eastern Division
team, the Western
Division Reds only play
them six home games.

1967

Pete Rose
I.

I

:
1

o;

~ ••

il

.· . .
1970

Rose now ·top salary player
By FRED McMANE
UP! Sports Writer
QRLANDO, Fla . (UP!) Pete Rose ended his "cloak
and dagger" search for a new
team Tuesday by signing a
fou r-year, $3.2 million contract with the Philadelphia
Phillles which made him the
highest paid player in
baseball history.
The
37-year-old
exCincinnati Reds. star said he
was off ered more lucrative
contracts by four other teams
- .Atlanta, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Kansas City - but
decided on the Phillies
because Philadelphia was the
place he had " always wanted
to play."
Rose's $800,090 a year

contract pushes him ahead of president 1 drove me to the a flying circus, said Rose,
• Mike Schmidt, his new team· airport last Sunday, he told . " but we never asked for
mate, who ea111s $560,000 me he had some other id~as anything. The offers just
annually . Larry Hisle of and that he would get badk to came pouriQg into us. We
Milwaukee makes $525,000 a me. They called me Sunday never once told some we
year and Reggie Jackson of morning with a new offer and would call them and then not
the New York Yankees earns we decided to go with them." do it. We never once made an
Rose said the other offers appointment that we didn't
over. $400,000 in· salary.
he
had received were keep. I'm very proud of the
It appeared for a while that
way we negotiated." .
staggering.
the Phillies were out of the
"I
don't
want
to
go
.
into
The three-time National
running for Rose. Last Thurs·
detail
about
how
much
money
League
batting champion, a
day they announced that
I
was
offered
but
if
you
took
legend
in
Cincinnati, said he
negotiations had broken off
all
of
it
and
piled
one
on
top
had
some
regrets about
but they never removed their
leaving
the
of
the
other,
a
show
horse
town
where he
offer from the table and when
grew up, but indicated the
they upped the ante last couldn't jump over it."
Rose said that at no time . Reds could have signed him
Sunday, Rose made up his
during his negotiations with to a lifetime contract last
mind to go with them.
"Everybody thought the the five clubs did he or his May for about half of what he
Phillies were out of it and I agent, Reuven Katz, ever put will be making with the
Phillies.
q.id, too/' said Rose. "But _ a figure on the table.
people
say
we
were
"They (Reds) could have
''Some
when Bill Giles (Phillies
signed me to a career con·
tract in May/' said Rose . "It
was Pete Rose Night in
Cincinnati and they were
thinking of giving me a
lifetime contract at a home
plate ceremony. They could
have had me for a little more
than half of what I got f,·om
Philadelphia. It would have
terrible . It's terrible. I just feelings on the team and
been a non-guaranteed
can't believe it. I kept hoping probably hurt the team.
contract in which I would just
right up until the very end
"As strange as it may continue to play until! felt it
that he was going to say, sound, I think Pete and
'Surprise, I'm going to stay Sparky Anderson leaving the was time to retire."
The reluctance ofthe Reds,
with the Reds.'
team will help. I thiijk Cin- however, to give Rose
''But," she added, " Pete is cinnati needed a change."
anything more than a two·
going to be great no matter
But Jurgens couldn't make year contract prompted him
where he plays. It's going to a believer out of other Cinto ~eek free agency, He
be good when he comes back cinna tians
like . Joyce reflised to bad mouth the
into Cincinnati to play. He's Sprecker.
Reds' organization but was
going to get a lot of applause,
"I want to tell you I am not looking forward to his first
not many boos."
very'happy today," she' said. game back at Riverfront
Of course, there were HPete Rose was 'Charlie
Stadium next spring.
Cincinnatians not nearly as Hustle' - just like his nick"I'll let you know June I
moved as the employees in name says, always hustling, how it feels at 8:05 p.m.,"
Pete's Restaurant.
always trying.
said Rose. "I'll be the first
"I've seen 'em come and
"I think the Reds should batter - maybe. I'll probably
go," said Charlie Jurgens, have offered him more
who figured he's .been a Reds' money to try to keep him in freeze in the batter's box.
fan 49 of his 59 years. " And town . I'm a Reds' fan, but Danny (Ozark) better hit me
I'll tell you the truth, I think it right now I'm pretty down on
was time for a change.
them."
" Pete Rose was a hustler
and I loved him for that. But,
as far as fielding and hitting
ill the clutch goes, he was way
down on my list. lfthere was
a man on third base, there
were a lot of other players I'd
rather see at the plate.
HJ'm a team man and l
think Rose became too in·
terested in his individual
accomplishments in the last
few years," added Jurgens.
"I think it caused some hard
11

Philadelphia souvenirs
are big sellers Tuesday
CINCINNATI (UP! I -:Philadelphia
Phillies'
souvenirs were big sellers at
the Cincinnati Reds ' Gift
Shop Tuesday.
It was a sign of the times:
Pete Rose had wilted in
Cincinnati, but flowered in
Philadelphia.
"It's kind of strange," said
Reds' Gift Shop sales clerk
Sue Wolfer. ·'I've never seen
us sell souvenirs for another
team like we're sellin g
Phillies items today . The
bu siness on Philadelph ia
pennants is pretty good."
Individual Pete Rose items
also were selling better than
usual.
" Rose posters and T-shirts
are popular today, but really,
the atmosphere in here is not
too good today," said Wolfer.
"It's a sad day for Cin·
cinnati. tl
That was a comment heard
a lot around the city Tuesday
as hometown hero Rose
ended a 16-year career with
the Reds and annoWJced he
will play for Philadelphia
next year.
Over at the Pete Rose
Restaurant, waitress Susan
Whitaker was moaning_, 11 It's

eighth or ninth that night. "
Rose said he felt he could
be the key player the Phillies
need to win the National
League
pennant.
Philadelphia has won the NL
East title the previous two
years but has been beaten
both times ln the playoffs by
the ws Angeles Dodgers.
' 'I think the only reason the
Phillles have missetl winning
the pennant is because of the
lack of an everyday player
with playoff and World Series
experience," said Rose .
"They need leadership. I'm
not saying that I'm a great
leader but I'm the type of guy
who does things I say I will do
and doesn't just talk about it.
With the ball club the Phillies
have, I think I can get them
over the top."
The Phils probably will
play Rose at first base - a
new position for him after 16
seasons - but he also gives
them depth at both third base
and the outfield.
"If the third baseman gets
hurt, Ozark can replace him
with an all star third
baseman. II the left fielder
gets hurt, he can replace him
with an all-star left fielder.
I'm going to try to be an all·
star first baseman.
" "I don't know what position
I'm going to play most. They
know ·1 don 1t want to pitch
because I don't want to play
every four days."
Rose's problems with the
Reds began prior to the 1977
season when he negotiated a
huge contract and they
escalated during the 1978
season when the veteran star
contended that he was the
best player in the game and
wanted to be paid accord·
ingly.

Phils get lots of
clubhouse spirit
CINCINNATI (UP!) - In
losing Pete Rose, the Cin·
cinnati Reds not only. parted
with a gritty player, but also
sent a lot of clubhouse spirit
Philadelphia's way.
Rose was a peppery rascal
in the Cincy clubhouse.
While some player.s liked to
chat about non-baseball
topi cs, Rose's rapid·fir e
commentary for reporters

and anybody else lu cky
enough to have nabbed a
clubhouse pass was virtually
always about baseball .
'I love the game," he said.
"It 's my life ."

Rose, " what a mind . n

To illustrate that Rose' s
And , talk about en·
brain surely must be baseball thusiasm. How about the time
· shaped, take the non-stop
answer that Rose snapped off
for a reporter who on the last
day of the 1977 seaso n
casually asked him about
getting 200 hits for the ninth

498 Locust St.

992-3092

commercials threw a swanky
dinner for its star.

"This should have been my
lOth season to get 200 hits but
I missed eight games in 1972
· because of the players' strike
and I got only 196 hits," Rose
began.
"I didn't get that good of a

%

*

Sport
Shop

Foster says Pete

will do good job
CINCINNATI (UP!) George Foster says former
Cincinnati Reds' teanunatl!
Pete Rose will rna ke Philadelphia a better ballclub, but
he also issued a challenge to
Rose and the Phillies.
"He'll give them leadership
and they'll be a better team
for it, but they know when
Uley get to the playofs, they
will have to contend with
Cincinnati," said the Cincy
slugger.
"No matter where Rose
is," noted Foster, "he will 00
a good job. He would enhance
any team. He has charisma
and he leads.
"I hope our club makes
some deals," he added . "We
need someone on third base. ''
Said Reds' pitcher Fred
Norman of Rose , "I played
nine years against him and
five years with him, and
those five years were a
delight.
"I wish him well. He has
been a tremendous player
with Cincinnati, and I know
he will ' be missed greatly.
Cincinnati just has to go its
own way and be its own team.
"Pete was energetic and be
put that energy into other
people's bodies,'" added
Norman. " Cincinnati will
have to find a different means
to motivate. The players
should turn to selfmotivation.''

INTEREST

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
e Ball Gloves
Camping
Equipment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gift
Certificates

High Yield Certificate

with 11,000
Minimum Deposit
8 Year Maturity
Substantial

Interest

Penally Required tor Early

Withdrawal
Deposits.

on

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

VISA'

W. Main St.

- Across frOm CourthouSe

Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE
675-2968

--·---------

'open Sunday 1- p.m .-6 p.m .

Monday 1hru Saturday

9",...

•.,&amp;p.m.

---G BC

~~Q,
..a~~

~,...f~

,.,-

l't.fi ..f/1)

PROVIDES

THE TRAINING YOU NEED
FOA THE BUSINESS WORLD
Months

Not Years Prepare You
To Earnl

For Day

Or Evening Clnses

CALL&amp; (614) 446-4367
•
NOW ENROLLING
FOR NEW TERM
monlh1

Anocillt. Ot;rH !n htclllilll&lt;l
l"tlnell Protrtmt.

Busin~n Administration

lltl,f,

'

~Nero,

'1 00

Executive Secretary

-..ESttRtt

Secretary

Time

601 M&lt;tin St.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

f tnd 12 montht ClrHr Protr•m• 1ncl 11

EFFECTIVE THIS DATE WE Will BE
CLOSED All DAY THURSDAY AND
AT NOON ON SATURDAY

Sales &amp; Selvite

Rose was voted the National
Leagu e's Most Valuabl e
Player for 1973?
"I started jumping up and
down when I found out about
it ," boomed Rose. " I'm the
happiest guy in the world."
And , Rose on his White
Hou se
meetin g
with
President Carter : " He
seemed ·genuine. He knew
some statistics. "
Rose didn 't mean anything
like unemployment statistics.
He meant baseball stats.
After Pete's 44-game hit·
ling streak this past season,
the shaving lotion company
for whi ch Rose does TV

Tri-County

season .

N-0-T-1-C·E

WILKINSON SMALl ENGINES

start either. I only got a totai
of 309 hits my first two years.
If I could've gotten 2\'z more
hits a year, I could've had
3,000 in 15 years ..
"And, this was a bad luck
year. I remember slumps of
IHor-8, 0-for-8 and 0-for-10."
Just as a search lor cue
cards was about to begin ,
someone asked Rose about
cutting his 200th hit close to
the end of the season.
"One year I only had 195
hits by Sept. 25," he im·
mediately replied .
Muttered a reporter to

Jr . Accounting
General Office

I
I
I

I
••

51. ,.._n .n-04nl

NAME----------------t

OFF ANY BOX OF

SHOTGUN SHELLS
.

'

-.

,

�.

•

l"=~;;;;;;=~~=~~~::~~r·surprising
· :.:\,'.:.·, .s ·v
.

orts CDarade :
1

.·:·
}
:·:·
:':'
)

···
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPISportsEdltor

l"'\

..
&gt;&gt;

}:

ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) - Don't ever let anyone tell you it '
doesn't pay to bustle.
Pete Rose, baseball's newest overnight multimillionaire, is
perfect proof it does.
Backinl962,juslbeforecomingupwithtbeCincinnat!Reds,
bewaswithMacon,Ga.,oftbeSouthAtlanticLeagueandthey
were paying him $400 a month.
Now here it is 16 years later and he has just gotten himself
more than $3 millioo from the Philadelphia Phillies.
Basically, Pete Rose is only doing what every other player in
baseball should do. He's hustling. The fact nobody else hustles
as much as he does makes him stand out in the manner he
does.
'
Rose is anything but your picture ballplayer. He can't run
and can't throw. His swing, as be sometimes says himself,
. looks as if it were made in Japan, and at 37, be obviously has
passed his peak.
Yet, Ruly Carpenter, the Phillies' president and a man with
ordinarily good sound business sense, shelled out $3.2 million
over four years for him and when you take everything into
account, Carpenter seems to have gotten himself a splendid
buy .
·
"I sat down and analyzed all the facts around Pete Rose ,"
said the Phillies' boss following Tuesday's special news
conference at the winter baseball meetings, where the former
Reds' third baseman was unveiled as the Phillies' newest
member.
"I considered what he could mean to the future of our ball
club, to the future of our TV and radio contracts and to all the
other aspects of our operation ," Carpenter went on. "Skillwise, there are better l)allplayers tban him when lt comes to
his ability to run, to throw or even to swing the bat, but he has it
over all of them in ooe other respect. They don't have that
inner substance he has."
Ruly Carpenter never said any truer words.
Rose never quits hustling . He never quits running, either.
He's the' only player in the history of the game who keeps
trying to beat out a base on balls.
"I try to make the guys tired just watching me play," he
said, wearing his new ocr)mson Phillies' cap at Tuesday's
session.
Rose has made his extraordinary hustle pay off to such a
degree tbat be 'll make nea,rly as much next year as Babe Ruth
earned in bls entire career.
With his new cootract, be's now the highest paid player in all
baseball history from the standpoint of salary in a single
season, anyway, and when asked how he felt about it, he said:
"I don;\ know if .I am. If you say I am, I agree with you. I
played with some great players, Clemente, Mays, Aaron and
Maricbal, and It took me a long time to get to the top of my
profession. I want to be paid right. If the other guys are getting
it, I' wanna get it, too."
Rose shied away ·from saying precisely how much he would
be paid by the Phillies.
"All I could tell you is you could stack it up and a show dog
couldn't jump over it," be laughed.
.
The ?billies were Rose's first choice from the start after
they were one of the 12 clubs who claimed him in last month's
reentry draft. It looked as if they might not gel him, though,
after they met with Rose and his exceptionally capable attorney, Reuven Katz of Cincinnati,last week because the Pirates,
Royals, Braves and Cardinals all were offering more money.
This past Friday, though, Katz rece.ived a call from
Carpenter.
.''Maybe we can make some adjustments and cbange a few
things," Carpenter said to Katz. "What do you think?"
"Now you're getting there," Katz encouraged the Phils'
owner. ''I'll tell Pete and we'll get hack to you."
On Sunday, Katz called Carpenter and told him what Rose
would settle for .
·
Carpenter listened and said he'd call back. An hour later, he
did and Rose got on the phone. Now it w.as his turn to do the
listening.
All it really took was 30 seconds or so. Mte~ bearing
Carpenter's revised terms, Rose happily exclaimed :
"That's it. I'm all yours!"

TlWSday's high school .scores
Fairland

Southwest Gall Ia

62

53

Farrell (Pal 47 Yo ungs
Mooney 45
Finneyl9wn 62 Reading 45
Franklin 68 Valleyvlew 57
Frontier 12 Meadowbrook 50
Ga hanna 74 Upper Arlington

Mogadore 108 Streetsboro 53
Mt. Healthy 81 Norwood 52
N Ridgeville 70 Olmsted Falls
69 (otl
,

Garrettsville 67 Rootstown 56
Green Twp 59 Ironton 51 Joe

Navarre · Fairless 73 Canal
Fulton NW 50
New Concord J G 59 River
View 52
New Le• ington 69 Morgan 65
Newark 78 Mount Vernon 61
Newcomerstown 61 Tusky

4.1
Groveport 101 Franklin Hts 48
Hill iard 72 Grove City 70
Hudson Western Rsv 85 Bath
Old Trail 52
Indian Valley S 76 East Kno•
62
.

North west Scioto 63 Western .
Pike 61
•
Northwood 69 Emmanuel
Baptist 49
·Oak Hill 49 Al exa ndria 45
Parma 78 Parma Valley

69

.

Jefferson 91 Grand Valley 39
Kent Roosevelt 54 Tallmadge

51
Kef Fairmont E 100 Carr oll 78
Ket Fairmont W 61 Day
Belm ont 60 (ot )
Kings 73 Made ira 59·

Lakeridge Acad 39 Br un-

nerdale 37
Lak ev iew 70 Niles 53

Valley

By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Wrlte.r
The Kansas City Kings ,
perhaps the NBA ' s most
surprising team, coasted to a
105-92 triumph ove~ the New
York Kmcks last mght after
building an 80-48 lead late in
the third quarter.
The Midwesterners embarrassed the Knicks behind an.
aggressive defense and
sweet-shooting guard Otis
Birdsong.
Birdsong, the se!!()nd-year
pro from Houston , scored 34
points and shot l&lt;k&gt;f-21 from
the field as he continues to
reap the benefits sown by
playmaking rookie guard
Phil Ford, who had nine
assists.
. " We went through a
frustrating year (31-61) last
season, but this year is so
different ,'' said BirdsonR.
who scored 12 fourth-quarter
points to stifle a belated
Knick CQmeback bid.
Trailing, 28-24, ~Iter the
opening quarter, the Kings
capitalized on a 20-rninu.te
breakdown in the Knick
to
grab
an
of(ense
insurmountable lead. Kansas
City, in first place .in the NBA
Midwest Division with a 1-h'l
record, outscored the Knicks,
29-10, in the second period as
New York hit only &lt;k&gt;f-15
from the floor and cOmmitted
10 turnovers.
"We didn't have much
motion or good shot
selection," said New York
Coach Red Holzman, whose
team slipped back to .500 at
13-13.
The Kings, ahead 53-38 at
the half, poured it on over the
next eight minutes to grab a
32-point lead that threat~
to inspire a mass fan walkout.
But before disgruntled fans
could reach the exit doors,
seldom-used guard Mike
Glenn cranked up hls right
arm and pumped new life into
the New Y&lt;l'k offense.
SPrinQfield Local 58 Beaver

Local 39
Stow 63 Akron Springfield 56
Taylor 60 Harrison 58
Tipp City Bethel 68 Twin
Valley S 44
Tol Libbey 70 Tot Central
Cath 48
,
Tol Whllmer 43 Tot Wood ·

Hillman auded 16 pomts
apiece for the Kings .
Elsewhere in the NBA ,
wa s hington rou te d
Cleveland, 117·102, Boston
edged Detroit, 114-112, Los
Angeles beat New Orleans,
114-102, and Chicago defeated
Philadelphia, 96-91.

.

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Runn.ing back Ken Roundtree,
who led unbeaten Princeton
to a sta t~ championship
season, and Cincinnati
Moeller tight end Tony
Hunter head the 1978 United
Press International AllOhio
Football Team.
Roundtree, a S.9, 167i&gt;&lt;&gt;und
speedster, who gained 1,151
yards in the Vikings' nine
,regular-season games, was a
solid choice for back of the
year honors in a vote by
coaches from around the
state. Hunter, a 6-5, 21S.
p6under with the agility of a
halfback, was voted the
lineman of the year.
"He is a real outstanding
young mari, a leade~." is the
way Princeton Coach Pat
Mancuso, voted the top AAA
coach, described his latest
back of the year.
"One of the things that
made him a good football
player is he worked so hard in
practice," said Mancuso, who
also coached Mike Gayles,
the top back in 1972. "When it
csme time to play, he was
re~dy. He IJas tremendous

leadership qualities. When
the other kids saw him
working so hard, they felt
they had to also."
Roundtree averaged 6.6
yards per carry during the
regular season and scored 13
touchdowns , but Mancuso
claims he is "an excellent
blocker" and "had he · not
been so valuable to us on
offense, we 'd played him on
defense, too."
Hunter, who captains the
football, basketball and track
teams at Moe_ller, is called

Rossford 62 Delta 50
Salem 71 Struthers 65

N 2nd Ave.
PRODUCE
California

2/25~

'

Yellow

Pl:tEB£.'5 STORE

ONIONS
Jib . bag

39~

SUNDAYS

Head

Par kay

L-EIIUCE

MARGARINE
.......
~.~~.~~~~......~~..4f
Valley Bell

MILK ........................~.a. :.. $l
1

hea~ 39~

59
'I

•

;' *-'
..

. "'... .

Q

Offenbecher broke every
Massillon passing record
except one in leading the
Tigers to a 9~1 record the
past season.
He completed 104 .of 182
attempts for 1,322 yards and
11 touchdowns, three less
than the one-6&lt;!3son TD mark
held by Joe Spanna.
"He's a dynamic young
man," said Currence, "the
kindyouliketogetupinthe
morning and work with. He'
has total dedication to the
game."

VE HI,M A

SINGER INTRODUCES
THE TOUCH-TRONIC 2001

l EGAL NOTICE

tf:l

•
......

· The Public Utilities Commis·
sian o1 OhiO has set for pub·
lie hearing Case No. 78·629·
EL·FAC to review the tuel
procurement practices and
policies o1 .the Ohio Power
Companr · the operation ot
its Fue Cost Adjustment
Clause, and related matters.
This hearing is scheduled to
begin at 9:30 a.m. on December 11 . 1978, Council
Office, Cily Hall , 218 Cleve··
land Avenue S.W., Canton,
Ohio 44702.
·
All interested persons will
be given an opportunity to
be heard . Further informa·
lion may be obtained by con·
tacting the Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Rtchard L. Smith,
Secretary

REMINGTON
CHAIN SAW
. FOR CHRIST

MEMORY MACHINE

GREAT
IN
KIDS
CLOTHES
BRANDS
WE
CAN
DEPEND
ON

SINOI!R

-=..f

\+ffe .......··-

''

FEATURES TO&lt;)

NUMEROU·S-·. : _~
TO:..:±M~EN~TI0
oN

Scouts feature pro

\\\

MAlTAG

CUT $2500

$19995

NOW

.

• CHAIN BRAKE
• AUTOMATIC OILING
ANTI -VIBRATION

steel cab1net • Set t-clean1ng was hbasket

MAYTAG BIG LOAD DRYERS
• 26°/o more capacrty !han prev1ous mOdels • [ • .:;~~-s~~~

Stream -of-Hear'" dry1ng • M ult1-cycle select1on • f a~t
energy-efficient operation • Dura-Cu::;h10n "drun. t1n1st,

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main St.
992 -2164
Pomeroy
The slore with All Kinds of Stuff

.. +

f!IAYTAG HEAVY DUTY WASHE RS
·Dependable heavy duty construC1!0il bu 1tt to la ~i lunwJ'
and need lewer re pairs • Uses less hot wate1 than any
other llke s1ze top load1ng washer • Long life quad coat

WITH

REG.
'224.95

The perfect gift
M~ytag dependability!

RUTLAND FURN ITURE
Rutland . Oh io

.

Quasar
5-QUART CROCKER COOKER-FRYER

••'

'

Reds victory ··

''

'

Middleport, 0.

Starting
As low
As

•
'

• Aslow'cooker - a regular cooker
- adeep fryer
• Crockery vessel plus low heat
settings for versatility
' Removable crock ca n be washed
in dishwasher

ggc

•

•'

BAKER FURNITURE

l
FOR HOME •••OFFICE
WHENEVER YOU GO
;,

··---------------~
··
Save 40¢ on Savarin. 40C 1

151 ·1992

140e
... __

BETTER FOOD BUYS

AXION ........................ ~ ........ !~ -~~-; . 9'

·
Mr. Grocer : Each coupon entitles your custom ·
er to 40C off to wards thepu rchaseof Savarin Coffee. For each
coupon you accept as our authorized agent, we will pay you 40C ,
plus 5C hand ling charges, provided you and you r customers
have com plied w1th the term s of this offer. Any other applicat ion co nstitutes fraud . Invoices showi ng your purchase of sufficient stock t o cover a ll coupons m ust be shown upon reques~ .
Void if prohi bited. ta xed o r restn cted or presented by o utside
age nc ies, co upon brokers or others who are not reta il distributo rs of our merchandi se. Cash val ue 1/20 of lC . Coupons will
be redeemed by mail. Send to S.A. Schonbrunn &amp; Co. In c.,
Pa li sades Park N.J . 07650
COUPON EXPIRES DECEMBER 31, lf79

Savarin. tt's New York's home town coftee.

0

Pork or ~ornbr~ad

STOVE TOP STUFFI"G ..... ,.............654
KEEBLERS CRACKERS ....... ;.; .... ~~:. 59' · ·

N. 2nd Ave.

- "'
'
' ;
• :.
..,
:~
• ·-

conn1e®
unmistakably

Glv~

him the
TIMEX®of his life!

Register For
Free Gil1
Certificate
To Be Given
Away Weekly!

DAN THOMPSON
GIFT
WRAPPING

Black case . Brushed

..

'

Middleport, 0 .

QUARTZ TRAVEL
ALARMS

' '"

'

WERNER .RADIO

EBERSBACH HARDWARE

'1

KNOCKWORST
LB.

•

alu minum sunburs1 dial.

$37.95

'

'••"
•
'' ..
"
•

.
..·~

Use Our Convenient Lay-away Plan

Goessler's Jewelry Store
992-2960

Y•

..
.I

Pomeroy, Ohio

- ---·-'

Time will tell you it's a TIMEX ®!

heritage house

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Middleport. 0.

New Haven . W. Va.

N. 2nd Ave .

lANDMARK OFFERS THIS
DEWXE
HOTPOINT MICROWAVE
.
.
COOKS 3 .WAYS INSTEAD 0~ ONE

Phone 992-2196

Middleport, 0.

The

See Rocky Hupp, Da rre ll Dod ri ll or Pat Hill, Gener al
Manager, for a Good Deal :

attrac1 ive ly

RCA

XL-100
19"
aiagonat

des igned Va lue Pack

inc ludes 8" pink ing
and
d r essmaker
shears . Or der now
(or Imm ed iate sales

resu lts .

19

Ideal t or gift givi ng
Perfect for home
sewer s

Attractively

PORK

S~ARE RIBS
' $129

Middle port. 0.

461 S. 3rd Ave .

SCISSORS
II

59

'1

FORD

A Touch of Fl ash

CUBE STEAKS

2 0

OXYDOL ....................... _...:........ $2.79

BULOVA.

.

I
I •
I ••••
I .,•
40" I ..
4

L"·-· " ··----------·---~

.·

LB.

DEL MONTE KETCHUP............~~. .':. 4!r
POLMALIVE LIQUID ...............~ 51.09
Idaho
•
INST.
POTATOES. ......... :............
.'?:. S!r
Krall
·
BARBECUE
SAUCE
.......,..........:~.~~: S!r
King St . ·
,

1
1

,

+

POMEROY, 0.

Middleport, 0 .

If your taste i!1 coffee craves something that isn't wishy-washy,
try Savarin.®
.
Savarin is richer.
It has a taste that on ly comes from taking premium selected beans
and deep roasting them to bring out all the flavor in every bean.
A taste so rich and hearty, New Yorkers have niade·it their hometown
coffee. And have been enjoying it for over 75 years.
But even though. Savarin has this unique taste, it .doesn't cost more than
any ordinary coffee.
So nexttime you're shopping, try a can or jar of rich ~avarin
coffee. But don't forget to use the coupon below.
That way, you'll be a little bit richer too.

19" Quasare
'

diagonal

PORTABLE COLOR TV .·

''

•• : :

5th &amp; Pearl

..

.LAY AWAY THE GIFT
THAT BEST SAYS
"I LOVE YOU ..."

ORANGES

CLOSED

advantage~

Los Angeles took
of a cold-shooting third ,
quarter by New Orleans en :
route to victory over the Jazz. •
Bulls til, 71en tl:
.
Artis G~re 8C&lt;!"ed 11 of
his game.lugh 29 pomts In the ;
fourth quarter . to ,pace
Chicago over stqmbllng ·
Philadelphia, which bas Z
dropped six of its last eight. •

Recalls 19-17

DUTTON DRUG CO.

64

Thursday, Dec. 7through Dec . '
We Glodty Accept Fed. 'Food Stamp&gt;
Mondoy thru Friday
9:001it7 :00
Saturday 9: oo.p:00

•

"probably the best athlete
I've ever seen" by Moeller
Coach Gerry Faust.
A two-year starter at
Moeller, Hunter, caqght 34
passes for 66lj yards arid 10
touchdowns the past season,
and, at 6-5 and 215, returned
punts, including one for 40
yards and a touchdown.
The quarterback on the No .
1 offen sive team is
Massillon's Brent
Offenbecher, a 6:1, 175pounder and two-year starter
for Coach Mike Currence.
·

SHOP
EARLY!

Vall ey 60 Perry

Shenan1oah, 63 Caldwell 57
Solon 81 Brush 58
Southinpton 61 Ledgemont 18
Sprlnqfteld S 54 Tecumseh 52

·

so

Portsmouth Clay 67 New
Boston 58
Portsmouth E 80 Lucasville
Valley 72

Shaker Hts 67 Maple ·Hi s 31
Sharon ( Pa) 67 Youngs South

·

•
•'

;:::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::;:;:;:

WILL END
.DEC. 10, 1978

Piketon 82 Hunt ington 65

Lor ain Clearview 69 Elyr ia

Barnes with 32
remaining lilted Bostoo to its
third straight triumph and
sixth in 10 games under
player-&lt;:oach Dave Cowens.
Lakers 111, Ju~ 102:
Jamaal
W1lkes
and
Ka reem
Abdul-Jabbar
combined for 50 points and

.

CINCINNATI (UPI) Pete Rose has a more vivid
memory of his new team's
former ballpark tban their
current home.
Rose, who signed Tuesday
Urbana 45 St Paris Graham
38
w1th the Philadelphia
Vermilion 46 Avon Lp ke 43
Phtllies, was asked earlier
Warren Harding 93 Howland
this
year to list his "most
73
Warren Western Rs v 97 memorable moment" in an
Champion 48
the major league parks he 's
Warrensvil le 77 Youngs played in.
North 51
Said Rose of Philadelphia's
Waterford 70 Fort Frye 64
Waterloo 60 Crestwood 46
old Connie Mack Stadium:
West Branch 52 United Local "A diving catch of a John.ny
40
Callison liner in the ninth
Wes1 Muskingum 63 Sheridan
inning with the base• loaded
58 (ot)
Woodridge 78 Windham 72
and two out in a Sunday game
Wyoming 72 Greenhills 65
the Reds won 19-17."
·
Xenia 65 Fairborn Baker 46
But
responded
Rose
about
Xenia Wilson 62 Ohio Deaf 52
Youngs Ursuline 77 Yo ungs · the Phillies' present Veterans
Stadium h&lt;me: ''I drew a
Chaney 59
Youngs Wilson 83 Girard 72 blank there." .

Forge 70
Pettisville 56 Tinora 48
Pickerington 40 Ham ilton
Twp 38

so
Pymatuning
so

sec~nds

Hldlets 117, Cavaliers 102:
Elvin Hayes scored 13 of his
16 points in the third quarter
to lead Washington to its loth
win in the last 11 games. The
Cavaliers now have lost 17 of
their last 20 games.
Celtics 114, Pistons ·112:
Two free throws by Marvin

R 0.. un d. tree,
· Hunter
top
grz•d p· laye...

54

Leavittsburg LaBrae 48
Maplewood 47
Lebanon 53 Miamisburg 37

Cath
61
Lordstown 69 South Range 58
Marysville 52 Fa irbanks 41
Mathews 79 Bloomfield 47
Maysville 74 Ph ilo 49

Kings. rip NY Knicks

'

ward 33
Trotwood -Madison 70 Brook ville 68
Uniontown Lake 73 Man chester 66 (2 ot)

Preble Shawnee 63 Bradford

Little Miami 77 E. Clinton 71
Logan Elm 58 Teays Valley 46

~e

New York scored
final
12 pomts of the quarter to pull
within 20, but )Jirdsong's
pmse proved.too much.
Spencer Haywood paced
New York with 19 points and_1
Glenn scored 14 of his 16 m
the second half . Scott
Wedman and
Darnell

·'•

LB.
Tastee

79~

'

BOLOGNA' " •••~• $169.,

$50.00
Discount

.
'

t

'
i

'
i'

t

POMEROY LANDMARK ·
E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

FREE: '90.00 Worth of Merchandise ·

pr iced

ROll

of Any

with the Purchase
Radarange•

'

VALUE PRICED
AT ONLY
Limited Quantity

"A New Era

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELRY

irr Cutting
Comfort"

"Two in One Store"
N 106 N. 2nd Ave .

ELLIOIT
APPLIANCE II
.

220 E. Main

h

•

992 -7113

'

Pomeroy , 0 .

�------------,

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Dec. 6, 1978

!

Pro
I Tiger
!Standi:r:tgsl

ace
f may be
f•I.DISh e

N BA Standings
By United Press 1nternational
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
w. L- Pet.
wash
17 8 .680
Ph ila 1 •
13 8 .619
New Jrsev 1
1.5 10 .600
New York.
13 13 .500
Boston
8 16 .333
Central Division
W. L. Pet.
GB
Atlanta
13 9 .591 -

Houston
SanAnton

10
11 .476
10 12
.455
1.0 17 .370

New Orlns
De tr oit ~

9 16 .36;0
Clevelan d
7 17 292
Western Conference

o;v;s;on

M;dwest

. FIFTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS at Letart Falls Elementary are, front, Jill Arnott ;
back, 1-r, Roberta Greene, Teresa Shuler and Joy Spaun . Kay Hill and Cheryl Wilson are
~advisors .

l

7

W. L. Pet.

GB

Denver

12 13 .480

"M il wauke
lrWiana
Ci1'11:ago
Pacific

11 16 .407
8 IS .348
8 16 .333
Division
W . L- Pet.
11 6 .739
17 8 .680
17 9 .654
13 11 .542

3''
51r,
1

Kan Cily

14

9

636

'-&amp;II

51 ~

6
7

1

GB

seallle
Los Ang
1
Ph oenix
l' '1
Portland
4' '2
Go lden St .
13 11 .5&lt;2 ' "'
San o;ego
11 16 ·407 8
Tuesday's Results
Kan City 105, New York 92
Wash 117 , Cl eveland 102
Boston 114 , Detroit 112
Los Ang 114 , New Orlns 102
Chicago 96, Phila 91
Wednesday ' s Games
San Diego at Boston
Washington at Houston
Los Ang at San Antonio
Ne"w Jersey at Denver
Portland at Indiana
Ph il at Kansas City
Milw at Golden State
Atlanta at Phoenix.
:rhursday's Game
Cleveland at Detroit
NHL Standings
By United P.-ess International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T . Pfs.
~Y Islander s
15 3 s
35
Atlanta
15 10 2
32
NY Rangers
13 6 4
30
Phdadelph1
13 9 4
30
Smythe Division
W. L. T . Pts.
24
Vancouver
11 13 2
Chicago
9 9 s
2J
St. Louis
6 16 4
16
Colorado
4 18 5
13
. Wales Confe.-ence
Norris Division
W. L. T. Pts .
Montreal
17 6 2
36
Los Angeles
12 9 2
26
Pittsburgh
8 13 4
20
Detroit
6 12 6
18
Washington
6 17 4
16
Adams Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Boston
16 .4 5
37
Toronto
13 10 4
30
Buffalo
8 10 6
22
Minnesota
7 14 2
16
Tuesday's Res.uns
Pitt 3, NY lslndrS 3, Tie
Boston 5, Toronto 1
Washington 4, Colorado 1
Vancouver 3, Atlanta 0
Wednesday's Games ·
St . Lo uis at NY Rangers
Montrea l at Detroit
Toronfo at Pittsburgh
Los Angeles at M innesota
Thursday ' s GJmes
NY Rangers at Phila
St . Louis at NY tslndrs
Detroit at Boston
Los Angeles at Buffalo
Chicago at Vanco uver

ORLANDO, ~" Ia . (UP! ) .
, h
f
The Detroit T1gers ope or
1979 - the return of a healthy
Mark Ft"drych to the pitching
lineup - has been dashed .
Fidrych who was ;;idelined
for the second half of 1977
with tendonitis and missed all
but his fir&amp;'t three starts of
1978, probably will not be able
to pt"tch again until1980, if at
all, doctors said Tuesday.
That was th e consensus of
members of the Association
of Professional Baseba ll
Physicians, who examined
"the Bird" and evaluated the
condition of his ailing right
shoulder.
They prescribed an extensiv e
prog ram
of
rehabilitat ion, including
weightlifting and exercise,
but predicted it would take
months for Fidrych to build
up strength in his arm and
shoulder. They also said the
right arm and shoulder has
shrunk in size from disuse
during the year and a half he
has been sidelined.
" He ·can'i pitch until he-has
buill up st rength in his arm,"
said Dr. Harvey O'Phelan,
the Minnesota Twins' team
physician and chairman and
chairman of the doctors'
association.

HONEY, PEPPER, &amp; PORK 'N BEEF LOAF ••••• !~-•••• s1.79

1

French City

JUMBO FRANKS •••••••••••••••••••••••• JP •• S1.39
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD .•••••••••••• !~·.. s1.09

1

KRAn
Reg . Pimento

3 lb.
. bg . Winesap
.

.

·····•······~
CHEESE········ .. f.k~ •.$} 39 5APPLES·
lb. bg. Florida
·
Lb . King Queen

Quarter

MARGARINE··········

49e

.

ORAN~ES ••••••••••••

oz.

$}09

bg.

4 oz.

REG. KOOL-AID·································

9Y'l · 5l7~

Syracu5 e, 0 .

Potted Poinsettas
Sl.OO to 56.50
Hanging Poinsettias
Tubs, 30 plus blooms
$10.00
Foliage Plants
3" to 10" 50c to $5.00
HANG(NG BASKETS 4"to
lU "

SWEET BRIAR /

HOTNCH0coL(NEWYORK - --

2 lb. Pops Right

YELLOW POPCORN ••••••••••••••••••.•••••••~~-•• 65~
153/s oz. Chef's

CHEESE
PIZZA······················~ ........ ~~~.
·Campbell's

89~

CREAM OF CELERY SOUP•••••••• ••• •••••• ··-2/
10 oz. Castleberry's
.HOT DOG CHill ............................... 2/69~

'

j

I
i

I

12 ox.

ARMOUR ROAST BEEF•••••••••••••••••••••••.$1

3 oz.

IN ST. NESTEA •••••••••••;;.~ ••

... :~:}1.99
I

Vikings take
•
•
overtime wm
Senior guard Brent Miller
tossed in six of his 20 points
during an overtime Tuesday
night to lead the Symmes
Va ll ey Vikings to a hardearned 62-57 win over Hannan
Trace. The loss left the
Wll,dcats with an 0-3 slate this
season.
The victory goes as a non·
conference win for Coach Jim
MrKenzie"s Vikings. Symmes
Valley is no longer a member
of the Southern Va lley
Athletic Conference.
. Alsu scoring for Symmes
Valley du ring the · overtime
was Bennie Taylor with three
of his 11 points fo r the night .
Trailing 12-8 at the end of
the first qu art er , Co ach
Donnie Saunders' Wildcats
took a 25-23 lead at the half
and held a 42-40 lead going
into the final stanza only to
see Symmes Valley tie the
score to send the game into
overtime .
Senior forward Ted Payne
was the big man for Symmes
Vall ey connectin g for 23
points while grabbing 14
rebotinds..
Pacing the Wildcat attack
was senior Paul Shaffer with
17 points. Ca rlos Campbell
an~ Ron Pack added 13 points
each while Mike Webb tossed
in 10 points.
Harman Trace hit 13 of 26 at
the foul line while Symmes
Valley sank 16 of 'l/ .
The Vikings took the
r"!lerve tilt, 46-36. Hannan
Trace plays at South~rn Dec.
12.
College Bas.kerball

Res~ ITs
Unitl!d Press International
Tuesday
East
Ade l phi 93 , CC NY 71
Boston U. 71 , Mass. 63
Brdgpt 79, Tr en tn St . 70
Colgate 86, Bu cknell 79
Columbia 84 , Manhattan 7tJ
USCG 67 , Wesle yan 51
Cppn St. 70. Hmptn ln st: 65
Del. Val. 91. Dr ew 68
Duqu esne 82, Niagara 69
Esn . Naz 99 , Curry 65
Fordham 87 , Yale 77
G" Wash . 81 , Oicknsn l.d
Hartford 63 , Suffolk 62
Hofstra eo , Lehigh 78
Md . 99, King's Pa . 78
M i! lrsvl 65, Th iel 58
Oneonta 57 , Ithaca .45
Ph il a. Pharm 71, Lncl ~ 61

sv

Mmphis Sf. 95. Ky . Wslyn 74

Pmbrke St. 51, St . Andrws 50

Tenn . 89, E . Carolina 71
Va . 99, Randolph -Macon 60
.,Midwest
Ashlend 99, Capital 88
Anderson 86, Taylor 70
Aquinas 56, J . Wsl v 49
Creighton 88, Neb .·Om 67

Ferris St . 93, Mercy 39
Grace 75, Goshen 56

Sox Score
Hannan Trace {57)

Shaffer 6-5- 17 ; C. Campbell 61-13 ; Webb 5-0-10 ; Pack 6-313; Bea'ler 0-2-2; Hite 0-1.-1
and Clary 0-1-1. Totals 22 -1357 .
Symmes Valley {62) Sl ack 3-0-6; Brent Miller 7-620 ; Taylor 2-7-11 ; Pay ne 10-323

and s·a unders 1-0-2. Totals

' 23-16 -62.

By quarters :
HT

sv

8 11 17 11 4- 57
12 11 13 17 9----{,2

WHA nanamgs
By United Press 111;ternarionat

\

W. L.. T. Pts.

Cincinnati
U
9 3
New Eng land
12 8 5
Quebec
13 9 2
Edmonton
12 9 0
Winnipeg
10 11 3
Birmingham
9 12 1
Indianapolis
4 16 2
Tuesday 's Result
New Eng 2, Cinci 2, ot -tie
Wednesday's Game
Edmonton at Quebec
Thursday's Games
winnipeg at tndiananolis
Edmonton at New England
rin&lt;&gt;innati at B irmingham

31
29
28
24
23
19
10

Ii
!

Il l inois 69, M issouri 57
Kansas St. 72, Min n 62

UMKC 98, Central Mo . 84
Upper Ia 91 , Ia . Wslyn 71
Urbana 65 , Kenyon 6.t
Val paraiso 13 , Bait 62
Walsh 92, J . Carroll 63

Wartburg 90, Coe 69
Wheaton 77, Millikin 73
Wlbrfrce 60, Tiffin 59 1
Southwest
Ab Chris 70, Tex . Wslyn 64
Austin 61, St . Edwar ds 60

S. D . St . 77, San Fran 75
Sea ttle 110, Idaho St. 87

s.

Oak . St . 50

l!l BEN FHANKLIM
III \\e bring variety to life!
992-3481

'

Middleport, 0.

NOW OPEN NIGHTS TIL
8 P.M. THROUGH SAT. DEC. 23

*··. *.. *-·.
.

The Christmas sock contents, about $100, will be
spent on needy children, it
was decided at a meeting of
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society of tbe Middleport
First Baptist Church meeting
there Monday night.
Mrs. Freda Edwards, Miss
Rhoda Hall and Mrs. Mary
Brewer were named to the
corrunittee for the project.
Mrs. June Kloes reported
on clothing being collected

J

·

Skits were presented by
Dens one, two· and three. The
Cubby winner was den one.
Awards presented were
Bobcat patch, Greg Rager,
Carlos Stepp, Tony Heaton,
Richard Long, David Acree,
Jeff Hood, Stanley Broome,
Billy English, Ed Kitchen,
Steve Caqell and Pat
Shrimplln; ·Wolf patch went
to Ed Bae(Darrin Drenner,
Jeff Nelso~ and Jay Buskirk;
Gold Arrow to Ed Baer, Jay
Buskirk and Scott Hamlng;
SUver Arro11' to Don Stein;
two year -pin to Tim Cassell
and one year pins to Jay
Buskirk, David Dodson, Scott
Hannlng, Troy Glaze,. Don
stein and Darrln Drenner;
recruiter patch to Ed Baer,
Tim cassell, Darrln Drenner
and Jay Martin.
In closing, the scouts sang
"Goodnight Cubbies". The
next meeting will be Dec. 21.

We now have a lull selection ol Toys, Gift Sets,
Christmas Gift Wrapping, Cards, Tree Trims,
Stocking Stu Hers (and the stockings tool as well as
our usual big assortment of Candies, Wreaths, Fall
&amp; CHristmas Flowers &amp; Picks, Decorative Candle
Rings and Candles . We also have our usual big
selection ol hosiery lor the whole family and warm
gloves, scarves, hockey caps and -children's rubber
footwear !or the cold days ahead!

RALLS

.

~----

WEDNESDAY
REGULAR MEETING
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM;
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. with
new officers to be installed.
UNITED METHODIST
Women Leta~t Falls Church,
famil y dinner at the com- "
munity hall, Wednesday, f&gt; :30
p.m. Mernber.s to take
&lt;.'&lt;lvered di:-;h.
.JUNIOR AMERICAN
Legio n Auxiliary. Drew
Webster Post 39 Pmnemv .
7::10 Wednesday ewnin~ ~t
the home of Mrs. Veda Davis.
Mt·mhei'.S to prep-a~·e
Chri!-;ttnas paekagcs (or·
vdt•r-ans C:lt the AUwns Mena
tal Hea lth Center and ihe Ar(' ~llia Nursing Home .
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
ThurS&lt;Iay. 7:30 p.m. First
Uniled Presbyterian Church,
with Mto . Jack Coleman and
Mro. Dwight Wallace in
eharge of Christmas playlet.
·· Mcmnl'ies": Mrs . Guy
Harpet·. devotional leader, c
and members or Group II

membet·s, Mrs. Fishet· and
Mrs . Grueser rurnished
l'OOkies, and Mrs. Dorothy
Smith. sandwiches for the
show sale table.
A report on the therapy proqram at the GSI on Nov . 16
was given by Mrs. Betty
Milhoan.
Mrs. Smith presided at the
meeting which opeqed with
Mrs. Fisher giving devotions.
She used ·· J Will Share My
Resources " brom the Upper
Room, and read an article
··What to be Thankful For"
and gave the thought for the
day.
The program was by Jane
Harris who had a demonstration on how to make a
Christmas wreath using a
hanger, bent into a -circle,
with pine leaves wired into
place on the hanger. She used
a large red bow althe top and
red artificial apples around
the wreath. Mrs. Harris also
showed a straw wreath
decorated with colorful straw
flowers at one side .

Mrs. Evelyn Hollon mad!'
tht• arrangcnwnt or tht•
mont h. ·· Let Us C.iw
Thcmks " usillg a eornil'npia
with a variety of fruit s and
small mums on a braided
naturHl straw mat. She also
used a ·black wooden vase
with boxwood and red snap-dt·agons along with praying
hands on a black wooden
base.
Mrs . Ada Holter displayed
yclhiw and white mwns in a
tall blue container. Blue ribbons wel'e given un &lt;Jll of the
arrangements.
Mrs. Smith presented
gardening tips nuling that
now is te time to cover
t"llsebeds with leaves and hill
up the dirt aro~nd the routs.
She se£id that roses can now
be cut uff sinee they are dor mant , and suggested that
garden tools be lhoroughly
cleaned and treated against
t•usting.
Cookies, sandwiches, eupa
cakes, homemade candy and
tea were served.
hostesses .
FRIDAY
RF.TURN
JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter. Daughters of
the Ameril·an Revolution,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the home
moth~rs, and Heather McPhail , silver arrows
of Mrs. Emerson Jones , who
McPhail were &lt;Jlso in Indian
Jocelyn Bailey and Unda will havt:! the program on·earattire.
Gt·indley served re- ly American Christm::Js
The Order of the Arrow freslunents. Attending were customs and musit.'. Mrs.
composed of Dan Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roger Luekcydoo. Mrs. Nan
Mark Casto, Randy Murray, Deemer,
Chris and Moore, Mrs. Jcnnes Brewa
Greg Thomas, Bret Bolen, Kcvin,Tral-y Hubbard, J. L. ington, and Mrs . Irving Karr,
Terry Snowden , Mike Jeffers, Mrs. Corbitt Patter- cohostesses.
Fdwards, John Morns, and son and Mike, Mr. and Mrs.
LONG BOTTOM CommuniCharlie Stone presented In- Greg Bailey, Chris and Andy ty Association, combination
dian dances. Thev arc from Baer, Mrs. Jerry Aleshire bake sale ~nd bazaar Friday
Troop 249 and the Order of the and Jerry, Mrs. Helen Jef- beg innin g at 9 am.
Arrow 457 with Frank Casto, fers , Todd and Tara Wolle, Homemade pies, cakes and
advisor.
Frank Cox, Frank and Brian, breads, along with hand
The pledge of allegiance Mrs. . Roger Grindley and c rafted ite ms all at
opened the meeting with Chris, Mrs. Allen Davidson, reasonable price.s.
Chris Baer and J. L. Jeffers Todd and Lois, Mrs. Pearl
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
in charge of the opening . Knapp, Mrs. Jim Adams, and Chapter, Daughters of the
Awards were presented· to Todd,. Mrs. Jeanette Duffy American Revolution
Todd Adams, Brian and David, Mrs. Clarenc'e meeting at 1:30 p.m. Friday
Freeman, David Duffy, and Frank, Jeff and John , Mrs. at horne of Mrs. Ernersun
Jeff Frank, outdoorsman and Gary Freeman, Brian, Dean- Jones, Middleport, with Mrs.
naturalist; Chris Baer and na and Gary, Mr. and Mrs. Jones
presenting
the ·
Todd Davidson; gold arrows; Hugh McPhail, Scott and program, "An Old Fashioned
and Chris Baer and Scott Heather.
Christmas". Hostesses are
Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Nan Moore,
Mrs. James Brewington and
Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo.

L'EGGS®REGULAR PANTYHOSE
RETAILER As our agent occepl th rs coupon for 15C on lhe pur chuse at
any LeggS: Regular pan tyhose producl L'eggs wr ll redeem for 15C plus
5C lor each coupon yqu so accepl Gel re1mbursement by mallrng th 1s
coupon Ia l 'eggs Hos rery. Box 1002. Cllnlon. lowo 527 311. 101 redemptiOn Thrs oNer VOid rn any slote or locohly p10111bllrng hcensmg or reslrr cl
1ng th ese couponS The consumer must pa y any soles IO)( Cast1redemp

11on value 1 20 o1 1 cen r. ONLY ONE
COUPO N MAY BE REDEEM ED PE R
PACKAGE PURCHASED fRAUD UAUSE
Any Oltl BI opp llco11on ol 1h rs coupon
~.:on s lltuls s lroud lnvorces pravrng re1o11
sale. w11h1n me los t 90 days. of sut11C1ent
slack 10 cover coupons presented fo1 redempllon must be mode uvotlable upon
"ques t REDE EMABLE ONLY AT SIOR ES
CARI.IYING L EGGS COUPON EX PIRES
JU NE30 1979 Store coupon good only

-

mU S

$100 to be spent on needy children

Cub".

Christmas
Will Soon
Be Here!

~. -

A program on Indians co!J1·
plete wilh awropriate
costuming highlighted the
Thursday night meeting uf
the Syracuse Cub Scout Pack
242 held at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
The wolves and bears were
in Indian costume and wore
rattles, bell leg bands, and
paper rnache Indian war
masks '-with spears and
tomahawks to.complete their
attire. They used Indian sign
language to tell a story, then
Indian pictures, and did an
Indian dance and a skit about
Indians. They concluded with
singing ''Ten Little Indians''.
In addition to the kiOs in
costume, Hugh McPhail, cubmaster; Martha Mc?-dhail
McPhail, Diane Davidson,
and Donna Aleshie, den

Middleport Cub Scout Pack
245 met recently al Middleport Legion Post home.
New cub scouts opened the
meeting with the pledge of
alleglence followed by dens
two and three and the
Webelos singing "HI There,

65
Weber St. 80,

Holiday activities including
the traditional dinner party
and remembrances for the
sick and shutin were planned
during a rel'ent meeting of
·the Wildwood Garden Club at
the Morning Slar Church.
Mrs. Doris Grueser, Mrs.
Marcia Arnold, Mrs. Mary
Nease and Mrs. Virginia
Fisher were named to
prepare the Christmas
baskets for the sick and
shutins. The annual
Christmas dinner was set lor
Dec. 14 at Crow's Steak
House at 6:30 p.m. and from
there the group will go to the
home of Mrs. Carrie Grueser
for a party and gilt exchange.
An invitation from the
Gallipolis State Institute to a
Christmas and recognition
dinner held yesterday was
read . The dub discussed the
annual Christmas flower
show of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Assoc\iationxxMrs.xPe Association . Mrs.
Peggy Moore worked from 3
to 4 on Sunday and club

Cub Scouts met

Centnry 106, Doan e Colt 87
New Mex . 97, Lamar u . B.t
Oklahoma 71. Te)(as 65
sw La . 94, Tulsa 84
Sui Ross 75, Lbbck Chris 66·
UTEP 68, New Mexico St. 65
West
Adams St . 70, Santa Fe 66 AlA 96, Colorado 13
Lng Bch St . 74, Lyla -Mrymt

0 . Wslyn 91, Hope Mich. 74
Tark io 70, Peru St . 69

~

I

Grinnell 63, Simpson 58
H anover 69, DePauw 67
H iram 76, Mt Union 63

MacMrry 94, Monmouth 74
NW Missour i 92, Park 65

:Dec.6, 1978

Cub Scouts feature program on Indians

game."

I

SIXTH GRADE CHEERLEADERS at Letart Falls Elementary are, front, I;-, Monica
Hill, carissa Hill, mascots; back, Mandy Hill, Melinda Hill and carol O'Brien .. Advisors are
Kay Hill and Cheryl Wilson.
·

DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday

I

103/•

Hubbard's Greenhouse

n.:

WtldWOOd Garden Club ·makes 1 Soci~-1
plans for Christmas activities I Calendar I

;I

French City

e

;,·.
,'
;J

7-

'•

Visit nursing home

Beller natured.
Notbiffer.
l

.Eastern High School
Future Homemakers· of
America went to the Arcadia
Nursing Home with
Thanksgiving favors for the
patients on Nov . 22.
The favors were placed on
their dinner lrays Thanksgiving Day. The girls then
visited the patients.
In the group were Janice
Kestner, advisor, Cindy
Pitzer, Donna Bennett, Barbara Wells, Brenda Ballard,
Cindy Crites, Teresa Dailey,
Dehble Dailey, Margery
Myers, Helen Myers, Diane
Rit'e, Kathy Pierce, Alisha
Bisaell, anci-'Tamrny Curtis.

© 1978 l. ~;;ggs Produ~

lor the Dayton Christian used in Latin Amenca .
Mrs. Sarah Owen opened
Center and noted that it will
be delivered there sometime the meeting with an article on
before Dec. 15. A report on Williamsburg at Christmas.
the white cross project", The vrogram by Mrs. Clara
"share a book" lor the Philip- Bell Riley of the Electa Circle
pine project was given by consisted of readings and the
Mrs. Katheryn Metzger. She singing of Christmas carols.
also iold of how the money is The love Joy circle members
were hostesses · and had
asmorgasburd.
NINA CRADDOCK
Mrs. Nina Stiles Craddock,
Middleport, in confined to the
intensive care Wlit at St.
Joseph
Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va . The
family reports that she is in
slable condition and can
receive cards, although
visiting is limited to
members of the immediate
family. Mrs. Craddock· was
injured in an automobile accident a week ago at Hartford ,
W. Va.
RECITAL
PLANNED
Pupils of Miss Mercedes
Condon and friends will present a recital Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m. at the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Portland-Racine Branch .
There will also be special
guests who will entertain by
singing carols in Spanish .

BUY NOW
SAMUEL ZONKER
Samuel Zonker, patriarch
evangelist, Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, will hold services Saturday evening at
7:30 p.m. at the PortlandRacine Branch. He will also
have the regular worship service Sunday morning at the
church.
THE REV. MINNIS
The Rev. Calvin Minnis,
Jnem ber of the MI. Carmel
Baptist Church of Bidwell,
has been called as pastor ·of
the Mt. Moriah Baptist
Church, Middleport. The
minister has served as in·
Lerim pastor for several months and began his regular
pastorate this month. He and
his wife, Polly, reside in
Bidwell. Installation services
will be held at a later date .

AND $AVE!

MUSHROOM
OR

TAN BARK
HICKORY

$

•
ONLY

SHEET

PRE-CUT STUDS
2"x6"v0'
C... I:
A 12" Zenith Black White TV thai
&amp;

works on AC or DC current. Also as a
special bonus you'll receive a $34.95
Bean Bag Chair .

WHY NOT MAKE IT •••

Both Upright &amp; Canister Now in Store

773-5583
Mason, W. Va.
"Your Christmas Shopping Headquarters"

•

J
• •

PARTICAL
BOARD
4'x8' SHEETS

PICKENS HARDWARE

'

No. 1

EUREKA

Coffee doesn't have to b.e bitter.
Sunrise®instant coffee mellowed
with chicory isn't bitter.
Because Nestle found a way to
blend fine coffee with chicory.
Chicory brings out coffee's better
nature. And it leaves the bitter taste
behind.
So try Sunrise today. The coffee
isn't bitter. And the coupon is sweet

LR -01 5-00NP-127 8

ONLY$

.99
EACH

�9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

o.:Wednesday , Dec. 6. 1978

Fun with Food--or what's cooking for Christmas?
I

DO YOU KNOW A 'THROWAWAY KID'?
DEAR HELEN :
.
l work at a drop-in c"'nter for runaway kids. But that's a
misnorm!r: almost half of them are ·throwaways." These
young people, sometimes pre-teen, are people nobody .wants. A
typical story:
•
Carol's mother moyed in with&lt;t man who also had his eye on ,
Carol . He nearly rape&lt;\ her, but the mother said it was her fault
and she'd have to go to her father. She put her on the bus, but
didn 't tell the father. When Caro l called him from the station ,
he said there was no room ftu• her . Carol is 14. She's now at a
,
temporary shelt¢r.
· Then there's Bob, who has been on .. chickenhawk alley·· for
six months, He doesn't want to be a male hooker, but at 16,
what else is &gt;here' After the last big fight, his parents threw
him out.
These kids aren't bad. They might amount to a lot with tile
right kinds of homes. But where are such places: They'll go into foster care Iii they don't keep running-,, but this is usually
impersonal. Only the lucky ones are made to [eel wanted.
I wish ever)- city had a good home for throwa ways, where
they'd get loving care and assurance they weren't ready for
the trash heap. Too oft en they're simply warehoused. How do
we get things going here?- VOLUNTE-ER
DEAR VOLUNTEER: .
You made a start ·when you wrote to me. Now, contact your
local news media, Give reporters human interest stories, facts
on how many throwaways stop at your c-enter each week.
l.t:arn where they go frorn there, wh.at facilities are available,
how they 're operated.
If you establish the need for a good young pc"ple's home -and
get it documented via newspapers and TV - someone with
tnoney and-&lt;&gt;r authority is bound to join the crusade. Then.
keep pushing •
.
May you be the home's first director! -H.

DEAR HELEN.
This is for elderly people who liv.e alone and fear an accident, with no one to come to their rescue. It's too Dad "Harry''
must cheat Ma Bell to reassure his sister long-distance that he
is well I two rings, then he' hangs up ). .
. The Conununity Health Services in our city sponsors a
Friendly" Visitor' and Telephone Reassurance Program. As a
volunteer, I visit or telephone homebound seniors at regular
i~tervals. The services are free to anyone over 60 who
qualifieS by being alone; handicapped or chroneially ill.
Statistics indicate that by the year 2020 the old will outnwnber the young. There is an evergrowing need for such servic-es. -S.McT.
DEAR HELEN:
An alternative to Harry's foolin g Ma Bell : My gra ndmother
employed a neighbor child for 10 cents a day to knock on her
door esch afternoon. If no one answered, she was to alert her
~oth er. It made the little girl feel important, and Grandma
feel secure.- AREADER

1 :! t'UP bultt.•r ur oh~u . Mi:'l unBy Charlene Hof.'fli&lt;·h
So what's cooking [or til cnmi!Jly on low spt.•t•d uf
Christmas'
mixer . Pres~ into a n ungrcasFrom Rose Reynolds ed 1:1 by 9 inch pan. Bake in a
comes two recipes and while 350 degree oven fur 15
we haven 't tried either yet, minutes .
you can bel that if Rose
Then mi X2 eups pmnpkin. I
recommends it, it's good!
e&lt;:m cvapnroted milk , 2 eg~s ~
At a recent garden club 4 cups s u ~CJr, · ~ tcaspiKHlS
meeting she and other ~alt . 1 teaspoOn dnnamun, 1 :.:
hostesses served pmnpkin teaspoon ginger, ami =.,teasginger squares and then gave poon doves ! ground l. Com the recipes t0 the members bine the ~lmve cmd beat. Pour
for favors. They were a hit unto bakt:tl crust a nd bake a t
and she shares the recipe . :l50 degrees ful' 20 minutes.
with us.
Mix together, ~~ c up dlUpPUMPKIN
pet.l peca ns, 1 :.: cup lwown
GINGER SOU ARES
sugar, p&lt;:~eked, and 2 tablesMix in ·a bowl - 1 cup sifted poons butte•· or oleo . Sprinkle
flour, 1'2 cup quick oats, 1 :! over p wnpkin filling ~md
cup pe1cked brown c.:u,l ':. r ;.~nd

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD

DECEMBER 8, 1978

Polly Cramer
. '

Odor in
cedar chest

$

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

. .

Ann Hemsley was installed
as worthy · matron, and
Thomas Edwards as worthy
patron, in ceremonies conducted recently by Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Location of the installation
was changed due to a lack or
heat in the Pomerov Temple
and by special dispensation
from SuSanne Pci:lrl, worthy
grand matron.
Installed in addition to Mrs.
Hemsley and Edwards were
Pauline Hysell, associate
matron ; Dale Smith ,
8ssociate patr on; Marie
Curd, Secretary; Dorothy
Woodard, tteasurer : Judy
Morris, conductress: Beth ·
·Vaughan, associate conductress; Sylvia Midkiff,
'chaplain ; Don Vaughan,
·mars hall; Helen· Wolf ,

}79

ROUND STEAK ..~·.. '.
USDA CHOICE

.

. 8 $}99

TIP STEAK........ ~ ~

••

/

·SUPERIOR SLAB

.

BACON................ ~; 7

~

RUMP ROASI ..;s...

organist ;

..

.

.

. .

1

DEAR POLLY- I bought a
cedar chest (circa 1910 ) that
is in excellent condition except that the previous owner
put moth balls in it. Even
after using a room deodorizer
and airing it the odor re!llains. How can I renew that
pleasant cedar odor and get
rid of the strong mo.th ball
smell ' -NANCY
DEAR NANCY - .It SOWids
as if the previous owner was
extra cautious. Crumple old
newspapel' until you can
, practically fill the chest,
. close 1t and leave for a week
or two. Repeat if necessary.
Hopefully the moth ball odor
· will have disappeared. You
can put cedar chips or shavings (get at a lwnber yard ) in
· the chest, close it again and
leave until the cedar odor has
penneated the wood. Good
luck. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - To keep
from getting stabbed fingers
stick the sharp point of your
ice pi ck into a large cork.
Then it can be safely kept in a
drawer . - MARJORIE
DEAR POLLY -If you lose
your eyebrow pencil and do
~ not have time to look for it
strike a match and let it burn
for a few seconds. Blow it out
iet it cool and then gently
. __break
., ....,, ...,, off the head. Softlv
Pacing the Wildcat attack
was senior Paul Shaffer with
17 points. Carlos Campbell
anq Ron Pack added 13 points
each while Mike Webb tossed
in 10 points.
Hannan Trace hit 13 of 26 at
the foul lme while Symmes
Valley sank 16 of 27.
The Vikings took the
reserve tilt, 46-36. Hannan
Trace plays at South ern Dec.

WlEN ERs...~~.~.p:~~- ..7

CRIS.PY SERVE

strok.e this old-fashion ed
brow pen cil on yo ur
eyebrows. I think you will be
quite satisfied with it. It also
lasts a surprisingly long time.
-GLORIA
DEAR POLLY - When frying anythi11g where grease
will be flying put extra pan
lids or pie pans over the other
burners so they do not catch
the grease that is flying
through the air.
When baking a casserole
dish such as scalloped
potatoes or anything that
tends to boil over place the
casserole dish in a pan of
water and then the drippings
do not get in the .oven to burn
and smelL (Polly 's Note Many casseroles benefit from
qeing put in a pan of water so '
they do not get too crusty on
the bottom.)
My hubby comes home for
lunch and ca n only stay about
15 or 20 minutes. I have hi s
food ready about 10 minutes
ahead of time , put it on a
plate and to keep it warm
cover the plate wi th a pan lid
l have heated on a burner.
This keeps the food hot until
he arrives.- MRS. F. V.
Polly will send you one of
her signe d thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column . Write POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspa 1&gt;er .
I

'lll~

Stocking
our usua
&amp; CHrist
Rings ar
selectior
gloves, s
(ootwear

MEDIUM YELLOW

ON IONS........,.. .. ~8~.
JOAN OF ARC

NO"
8 P.M.

-¥

{' hr istillil:-i

alll l

with

S l'I"YC

rainbn\\

rt~C(llllllll'lld vtl ~~-~ Allllll'

l'liU(whip.

.t';du ·
Muon

and M.n·U·· ('[ark , nutrition

of · rtidt•s. \\ hu gavt.• a demunslr&lt;-1But tion 1:11 tht• ren•nt .. 1/ints for
Rust• also sent us a reci pe ami llll' Holid.:tys" pmgnun ett St.
iL really sou nds like lm·all Paull.utheran Chun:h.
. CHR ISTMAS
pudding with pint.•apple. It
RAIN HOW ('1\KF.
goe::; like thi s:
I packa14e l l\\'O lilycr size 1
Mix in a howl. 1 ~ c up buttt.• r
ur olen, 11 ~ cup sugar. 1:! cup l"&lt;tke mix, I package 1 thrct.•
raspberry fl;wu r
milk , :1 eggs. I largt.• em1 oU ilCC
·
gela
tin
,
I
p
acka~l' lilill' flavur
l'J'Ushcd pincBJ)p}e 1 not drain gl'la
tin
.
two
cups boili ng
ed 1 and :1 cups bread t•uhes.
Mix (I ll together. put into a wall•r . and I nint.•-ounee collgreased pyrt.!X dish about ta iJit'r pn_·pw·t.•d whipped to()nine by nine inches , ami bCJkl' ping.
Ami

whucv~r

~t'tt lluped

heard

pineap(Jic ~

1

the de corated

pl~ced

on thl'

ta bles.

Mrs.

Hemsley presented each of
her officers with a gift
re presenting
Bartlett, resembling the emblem of
Albany, Racine, M&lt;1te1moras, their offiee. Gifts were also
New Me1 rshfield , Minectr, given to the lnste1lling ofHarrisonville, EvC:~ngcli n c,

m~n:ters

and 62

41

visitor~.

dl ,.

JILL\

l;t~t · r

.1

o111u lilt' !lr.'-'1. Vrostlht ·

lilrt•&lt; ' lt•d 01 1 p ;ll" l-.it !-:1', b ; t ~ I ll )~

lop &lt;lnd

i11 IWU \\ t• Jl-) :rl ·;t Scd ,1 •d
flou!'Pd !ll llt'- llld1 l;ty~·r p;u :..;
at .l~l dl'gl'et•s fur ~5 l11 :ln

1\"lllppt·d top pi111~,

I

sides Willi !'t'lll&lt;J ining
Chill. CotrII 1'\'1lh naLtcm·tl gllll\dl'l!jJS

('IH) I ifl p~lll..._ ~ ~
minult•s. pokl• wi th fork 11 1
un t·-llalf int' h intervals . l )o

l'llt to n•semhiL' hully.

Sinn· s \i(lnn~ is a tradi - with f'mx ls:· We'd love to
twnal Christmtts custom. hear from yuu.

IIIIJIUh•s.

not

l'l'll luVt'

fl'(llll

pan s.

Dissol.~T

t'n&lt;'h parkagt.• nf
gelatin scp;uately in oH4' t' 1p
b o i l ing w&lt;1 tt.•r . P11111'
rasplwrry gplatin over Olll'
l&lt;tyt·r . l llll l' ovt·r tilt.&gt; (ttlwr .
('hill four hours . Unmolt.l orw
1&lt;-iy&lt;·r onl u ~erv in g plai.P, top
wi th mw &lt;'liP uf the whipped
topping . u 'nlllulcl secund

CANDLES &amp;
THINGS

This Week's
Dairy Valley

~I)JH~J~
FISH TAIL
&amp; FRIES

FISH TAIL

On Rt . 7
At Chester, 0.

$}14

Open Wed., Thur .

fit•t•r s. Specia l l"l:'t'OJ~ IIilio n
v..·as given Ella Smith for 11P.I'

&amp; Fri.
12"noon to 5 p.m .

ADOLPH'S -DAIR'f VALLEY

faithful work in the l'lla11ter .
Tlw sun shine !lffi'CJ'lng colh.·ctl!d Uy Mabt•l Moore ami
Pam Massie, was tlunettcd to

Saturday 10:00 A.M.

H RS . : 10 : 00 A.M. tilll : 00 P .M. Sun.-Thurs. 10 :00 M.-,, ;, Til12 : 00 P.M. Friday
Saturday ,
•
See Us AI the Pomeroy Bend Bridge

to 5:00 P.M.

U:" ~~ ndowmenl fund . ·

Mm·ia h, Valley , ,~urclius. a nd

Gall ipolis. F.ach member and
guest was presented a yellow
robbun pinon as he m· she

registered. Handling the
registration were Ella Smith,
Myrtle Sisson, ami Evelyn
l..anning.

Great Value
Style
Quality!

Presented were Roberta K.
Mind ling , pa st gra nd
matron ; Howar·d l. Shull ,
past grand patron, both
honorary members of the
Pomeroy Chapter: Lois

0

0

Pa ul ey, dep ut y g rand
1natron; P;-d Wilso n, grand
rep rese n t~::~ tive to Kcmsa s.
Louise Stewart , qra nd

to
Adah; Joann Kautz , Rut11 ; rep r esen t a ti ve
Kay Logan, Esther; Pam Washington; 13 visiting worVauqhan, Martha; Kathryn t hy matron.s and fi ve wort hy
Windon, EJecta : and Dick pctt r uns; Pomeroy pa.st
Vaughan , sentinel. Ziba matrons, Ella Smith, F.ve lyn
Midkiff will be inst~lled as Lanning, Margaret Blaettnar, Sue Soulsby, Mabel
warder at a later time.
. l .ois Pauley was the install- Goeglem, Fl orence Well,
ing officer and was assisted Sylvia Midkiff, Ma1·ie Curd,
by Thomas Edwards, inviting and Dorothy Woodard; and
marshall ; Sue Soulsby, in- Pomeroy past patron s.
sta llin g marshall i Ella Thomas F.dwa rds, Dale
Smith , ins ta ll ing co n- Smith, Fred Blaettnar, all
ductress; Margaret Blaett- Knights of the York Cross of
nar, inst~lling ~fli-ed Blaetl- .. lfoiwr. ilnd 'J·aitieifSo\ilsby.
Also presented were Jim
nar, sentinel ; und Linda
Mayer who sang " Prayer is Mildren, 33rd degree masor1;
the Key to Heaven, But Faith Earl Linton, wo rshipf ul
master of Vinton Lodge, and
Unlocks the Door."
Serving as honorary sta r Paul Darnell and Tom Mills,
points were Dorothy Terrell, Knights of the York Cross or
Adah ; Linda Russell , Ruth; Honor. Others recognized
Rada Skidmore, Esther; Jo were pas( matrons e1nd past
Ann Mahaffey, Martha ; and patrons· of other ehapters,
and Louise Stewart, di strict
Donna Johnson, Electa.
Ruby and Di ck Vaughan, vice president, Dorot hy
Sherida n, district secretary,
and those with former gra nd
a pp oi n t me nts. J ames
Parents
Soulsby served as escort tu
East.
Without Partners theMarie
Curd, chapter
sec
reta
ry
presented the
The local chapter of
junior
past
matron
and junior
Parents Without ,Partners
past
patron
with
their
past ofwill meet Thursday , Dec. 7,
ricers
jewels
in
behalf
of the
at 7 :30 p.m. , In the
chapter.
Installation
Multipurpose Room of the w~re announced by the dates
worCommunity Mental Health thy ·matmns-elect present
Center. An introduction and
"recognition of new officers and there were con gratulatory J'emarks and
will be held.
The second half of the good wishes from several.
Mrs. . Hemsley extended
·meeting will include a dance
thanks
for the Middleport
which begins at 9 p.m. sharp.
Masonic
Lodge for permitWomen are asked to bring
ting
Pomeroy
to use its facilisnacks and men to provide
ty .
soft drinks.
Refreshments were served
in the dining area by Georgia
Watson and her committee,
VISITORS
Caryl Cook, Elizabeth Well,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Judy Jewell, Doris Snowden
Meifert (Mary Eynon i of and Chl orus Gaul. Favors of
Dayton, were in Sy1·aeuse nuts and mints in minie1lure
Monday visiting friends.

Early American Luxury
by Bassetf
Tl.-bo-..ryi,inil.·~k"'KSpecial offer for
-a limited timet

0

••

0

~-

j : : : = l

•

••

Tavern
Road

Door Triple Dresser Base, 6 drawers, 1 door, 2 trays
~s:]l~ Hutch Mirror
Night Stand, 2 drawers
CannonbaJJ Bed
Chest, 5 drawers .

s ui1e of $599 ,95 and up , you ' ll receive a Free
Christm-aS Gift from Rutla nd Furniture.

A 12" Zenith Black &amp; Whil e TV that
works on AC or DC current. Also as a
s pecial bonus you ' ll receiv e a $34.95
Bean Bag Chair .

JENOS FROZEN

Chicken Broth...4/$} PllJ.A••••••••••••••••••• 7
MIRACLE WHIP
32

89~ w;c

oz.

Limit 1 Per Cusrom ~r
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Dec . 8, 1978

•• •
'

CO UPON

l

COU PON

WELCHES

ZESTA

GRAPE JELLY

CRACKERS

480l ,gg~
Limit 1 Per ~,;usronrer
Good Only at Powell's
Off e r
·
Dec. 8,

·

2

$}00 W!C
,BOXES ·
I LB.

Limit 1 Per Customer
.Good Only
at Powell's
.
.
fer E
Dec. 8, 1978

..

PLENTY OF
RECAPPED
TIRES
IN STOCKI
Studding Available

25 LB.
Limit 1 Per cvstomer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Dec. B, 1978

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John P. Fultz, Mgr.
992-2101
Pomeroy, 0.

.

perhops you have a favorite.·
rt.·dpe to pttss ttlong to "Fun

Marietta, Belpre, Athens, Mt.

SHEDDS TUMBLE WHIPPED

COLLEGE INN ·

Duquesne 82, N iagara 69

Hofstr&amp; 80, Lehigh 78
Md . 99. King's Pa . 78
M &lt;llrsvl 65, Thie l 58
Oneonta 57 , It haca 45
Phil&amp; . Pharm 71 , Lnc l161

Ruby ' Vi:lughan,

patron, presided at
meeti ng attended by

Kidney •Beans.. 2!~$} MARGARINE:.o;.
KRAFT

992-3481

Slllli:II'CS

i' l'qH II"I

With the purchase of any 3 or 4 piece bedroo m

COUPON

Del. Val. 91 , Drew 68

Esn. Nez 99, Curry 65
Fordham 87, Yale 77
G . Wa sh . 81. Oicknsn 34
Hartford 63, Suffolk. 62

,.
'
·,
·{

LETTUCE ..............

East

Colgate 86, Bucknell 79
Co lu mbia 84, Manhattan 76
USCG 67 , wesleyan 51
Cppn Sr . 70, Hmptn Insf. 65

.

~

By United Press Internatio nal
Tuesday

Boston u . 72, Mass. 63
Brdgpt 79, Trentn St . 70

.

BACON.......;.........~] e

Co ll ege Basketball Re,s un s

Adelphi 93 , CCNY 71

If ·' lilt Wil!lllo )~' ' n·;tl 1'11 1• ·1'
ful, \ ' Oil llll g ht tn ••

worthy matron and worthy bClskels were

' 13oz.

12.

!1•1 · ill It ' 1111111' ; 1t ' l !lr\,!f· g n·• ·~

n•tum tu oven for iJ lu :!II
nunult's un1il pumpkin flllmg
is wt·ll :-wt. Cool iiJHI t'lll mto

Eastern Star installs officers

FRENCH CITY

POLLY'S POINTERS

.

~

il nd

�'

If our job is, so fascinating ,
why dun 'l you slop admiring
it and pitch in and help us?

PITISBURGH (UPI ) Armco Inc. announced a $SO
million project to further
modernize
its
Butler
specialty steelmaking facility
and
st rengthen
its
commitment
to
the
southwestern Pennsylvania

town.
The expansion, announced
Tuesday ,
will
involve
installati on of a .ero nd

.

••
•••
••

•'

'outrageous, outlandish and.
exocbitant' to describe the
pay raise," said Mrs.
Pappas.

continuous slab caster in the
Butler w&lt;rks, allowing faster
and more energy efficient
production of .electrical and
stainless steel.
The slab casters produce a
continuous ribbon of molten
steel from 6 to 8 inches thick
and 24 to 52 inches wide. The
new caster is scheduled for
start-up late in 1981.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio ( UPI) Fuzzy T. Direct heat out
Rusty Gold by a nose in a
photo finish Tuesday night to
win the $12,000 condition pace
at Lebanon Raceway.
The winner; clocked at 2 : ~
1-S, paid $11.40, $3.60 and 2.20,
while Rusty Gold returned
$3.80 and $2.20. Catha's Bret
paid $2.20 to show.
A 4-4 daily double combina·
tion of Kentucky Coal and
King Darby was good for
payoffs of $25.80.
· The 1,122 fans bet

e

.....
.,_..

8

ON

MANY
. NICE
ITEMS

•
..'•
'

•'

••
•
'
.,'

~

STOP
IN

$136.118.

;

'

,.

NOW I

Girls

Ohio High School

Baskelba II Results

United Press International
Antwerp 61 Llncolnview 45
Holgate 68 North Baltimore

32

Hilltop 51 Patri ck Henry 41
Bellevue 47 ·Shelby 40
Gallipolis 63 Waver ly 48
Lancaster Fish 4.1 Millersport
48

8

=
I

JN_I~ OUlOO NO 010:1 ONY 1n0 11nd
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, . _ _ _ _ _ _

PULL OUT AND FQLD ON ,DOTTED LINE

IN APPRECIATION

~F

VALLEY BELL

2% MilK

•

gifts. We can offer our customers the following items: groceries, meats,
I

BPAK

99$

frozen foods, birthday cake, ice, clothing, shoes, boots, feed, gas, oil,
hardware, hunting and fishing licenses, ammunition, tires, batteries,
auto accessories, notary serVice, pattened medicine, and small

Plus Tax
&amp; Deposit

DR. PEPPER
FROSTIE
64 oz.

89$

HOME GROWN

'IRISH POTATOES
10

appliances for Christmas gifts with lay-away plan.
~

lb. ''119

-•
.. ..
.
.."
'

'

"

BULK
PEANUTS

BULK
HRISTMA

CANDY
LB. 39• AND UP

BONNfE

DOG FOOD

,

PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOnED LINE

..

In appreciation we are ·having sales and drawingS with free

I

R.C.

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

c I

OUR CUSTOMERS WE'RE HAVIMG OUR 1ST

have helped us in any way to make Curtis Grocery's first year a

PEPSI
DR. PEPPER

L

it

We, Mr. Denver and Mrs. Neva Curtis, extend our thanks to all who

success.

JNI1 OUlOO NO 0'10:1 ONY 100 110d
~----------------------. --- ·

ANTI-FR·EEZE
GAL

'335

~

' "
' '
·'
d

·~

�)3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer.oy, 0., Wednesday,

Dec.6, 1978

~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~ ~~~

·Ocasek attacks Carter for pay hike criticism ·
, By TIM MILLER
: COLUMBUS CUP!) ~ Oliver Ocasek, president pro
: tempore of the Ohio Sena t.e,
; Tuesday attacked President
. Carter for his criticism of the
: pay raise state lawmakers
· voted themselves last week.
: Speaking ·to the County
'. Commissioners
and
·, EJIIIiineers A•sociations of

Ohio, Ocasek said the
president should be " as
concerned about prices as he
appears to he about pay
raises.''
" I'm willing to tell the
president of the United States
that I'm worth a raise every
fo~r
years," said the
Nort hfield Democrat .
"Where was President Carter

when Congress voted itself a
raise ? And even
the
presideQt 's p'a la ce guard
received a raise."
Carter
has
strongly
criticized Ohio's lawmakers
for granting the raise to
members of the legislature,
elected state officials and
certain county officeholders.
· Carter says Ule raise -

which averages abou t ;lO
percent - violates his volunta r y wage and pr ice
guidelines. He has asked
workers to limit raises to 7
percent.
" If you' re goin g to control
inflation, " said Ocasek, "you
must also control prices. I 've
~en milk go up 7 percent in
just the last week. And

Hersey bilrs are going up
with nv thing more b ~ ing
~dded tietween the paper.
"We have never had an
~&gt;verpald official in the state
,f Ohio in all my years . It's
time to quit being so cheap . U
you want cheap, part-time
goverrunent you 're · goin g to

~

~

CHRISTMAS TREES

tl

~
c;UT YOUR OWN AT
luncheon, Lt . Gov-€ lect
George Voinovic h, said he is
looking forward to organizin g ~
the
State a nd
Local ~ PRE-CUT TREES A \ 'AILABLE
Commission ,
Government
loca1ed on Cherry Ridge , turn eas1 at Darw in onto Rf.
which was created under the
5
68l , go4'milestoMilepo st IJ, turn southonqrave lroad
law that ca lled for th e. ~ 11 m iles to grove .
1
governor and lie utena nt ll
WATCH FOR SIGN S
governor to ru n as a team . I(
Hou rs , 10 Ti I Dark

~

~
Q

BRADFORD'S GROVE

W

~
W

i

~

!(

W

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

get it. ' '
The main speaker at the

ALL KROGE~ STORES

....

...

8
-n..,.
-.,.

n

- !!I

m,.
zCl
.,.

C ')

--z

~ ,.,
c:

:::a

r1oouCn
lifo liD IlL OW *II JUU

0

.....
:::a 8

'"
'"
....

OPEN.24
HOURS.ADA,Y

UOII fOI
·-HfASTIC foAVIHGl
OH lliCGU llANO

5

-lb.

((_~ '

,.z .

Bag

~~

,..,.,

LIMIT IllC WITH COUPON AND S7.50 lDDITI Om
(EICLUDINC THIS ITIM)

Preserves

sgc

n ('
~
~L~

DF

ADVERTISED ITEM
Each of t.tl&amp;M .:lvertiMd item• i1
requirlldtO ~ readily IYtiLelN lor IIDie
in NCh· Kroger Ston1, tu:ept "
tpeeifictlly notao in thil ad. II we do

TOTAL SATISFACTION
GUARANTEE
E\18t'V'thing you buy at Krover is
~tnteed

run out ot an edveniMd item . - w1U
ofttr yoo your chOice of 1 comparable
item , whtn 1111ilable, reiWtcting rile
ume Nvrngl ore raincheek which will
entitle you to purct\ale the ldvenised
item et the advtrtiMd pr~ce w•thin JO

for your total u t illtaction

regardlell of

m~nuttcturll/ .

It you I re

not Ntitfiecl , ICroge.- will replace yoor
rtem with the ume bftnd or a com •
perl~l

Drlnd or relund your purchl•

&lt;O.

Grape Jelly

.

::69c

-.-'
'

l

BeHy Crocker .
Cake Mix ............. .

( \

;: ·

q~~

For

KROGER

Vegetable Oif

JNil OJllOO NO 0'10.:1 ONY .LnO lliid
~·; ~.:.~-~------------------------~---..-· ---------.;.-~----------------.------------------~~-----~------~--------t_~
_JN..~.~ OJllOO NO 010.:1 ONY .LnO llnd

PULL OUT AND FOLD 0 -N DOTTED LINE

J399

PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOTTED L,INE '

I

..
'

( '

fi~~t-'~
ffoiJ;Li~

......

'*····
j

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.

White Bread ....... .

3

Spotlight
S
Bean Coffee .... ~~!~

KROGER

.'
,.

I

Tomato Sauce

1

12

1

VG

...
U1

1'

i
;

'

n

r

:. \ (

''

~~qc\Wt
·
.. ---·

.

I

I
:

I

I
'

OF

...
en
ti

I

,.

,..r-Q

.

.

I

1
I

~
"':

Ottly l1 Stores Wi11t Deli Otpartltttllts
Not Foocls ha~ablt II AI Til 7 PM

CHOPPED OR SHAVE D

""CAPTAIN 'S CHOICE-·

Chopped .

Bucket Of
Fish

. $199

lb.

Cheese Balls . . . . ,.

$4~.~.-·

$3

19

PAIYYYUYS

Hove o beH•r time ··

U.S.D .A. INSPECTED

I

·- ''
..

I

I

:!: 1•I r

:.
"

I

8Pak

08
PLUS DlPOSIY

Mixed
Fryer Parts

ALL VARIETIES

Kahn's
Bologna

Hb.
Pkg. •

HOlLY FARMS U.S .D.A.
A

JNSPECT~D GRADE

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

,..
·I

'

\;.'. .

:

•

1

.,'
.

'

,,
~·

I

~ 'iffl Of lottu
'" fiP , l -1\ .

eow u... All4

. LET THE DELI DO IT
I

;,I·--•.

~

baiL!~

A 1m11 " " ' """

Sprite or·
Cola

I
I
I
I

UlJI CT TD •miCUlf STIH &amp; lOCU lUES

lll'll Hll, YOU I'UN

I

1

TJetiww&amp;eat S,ecit~~

I

'

:

••aauaaaauua••• ••••••• ••m e

I

.

•

I

c

'
'

1

I

I
. I

,•

..

1

I

8

.

Sausage

Lot tho O.U do It 1·
Kro11er l'orty Tray• .. .
Mony vorl.tiH t11 choot•
from ...Mode oppetlll ngly
w+tft ......" ht....ctl...tt

g:~a

'

'. .

LIMIT 2 ROLLS. WITH CUUPON AND $7.50 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(!lCLUDINC THIS ITEM)
12
LIMIT ONE COUPON PE Rf AMil y
It£
CGIIPOIGODDIIINtHC . lHIUUTIIUA101 C ! . 1911
~-

AVONOAI.E

'

..

~

1-lh
Roll

I

~

I

.

Gunno~'s

SLICED . . . LB. 99 '

·I

I

$ 29

:

Whole
Smoked Picnics
Old Carolina
Sliced

I
I
I

I

Ham .

CD

I
II

2 -1.8 ROI.t. . . $2 .58

Cou

'I

.c.o

I

~:

1~1 1

lltO&amp;Eit COST CUTTEII COUPM .

I

$

I

I• " I

1
I
1

16-oz.
Cans

a

COI'iliCOOQS~ IOll Ol t J UIU 51 TUDl! 0[( 9
SUII(Cl TO .,,liCULt SUit l lOUl lUIS

I

Can

•

c

I

1·01.16 c

I
I
I

liMIT ONE COUPON P.ER FAM II Y

·a_.

]Kroger
Applesauce

I

LIMI T1BTl. WITH COUPON AND S1.5D ADDITIONAl PU RCH AS!
lflClUDING THIS IHM J

L d'

•;, .Gal.

•

·16-oz.
Btl.

I

Kroger
Gelatin .........·...... .
Country Club
Ice Cream .,.....c'"·

I

Revlon Flex
Shampoo

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

CLOVER VAllEY

i'

PU~ C hl'

LIMil ONE COUPON PU FA.MII v
Cti"H'"SI..11MC )T .. I UTMUAl ~H ~ t tll
snnct n &amp;I'PI.ICAIU nan &amp; tou t ru n

12

CLOVER VAttEY
STRAWIERRY

2-• .
J.llf. .

SAVE

,.

�I

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Dec. 6,1978

-" WANTAD
CHARGES

wantedtoBuy
CHIP

WO O D

e ,. le ,

IU

ri iOI H E!I ('I

011

"' " "

lo• 9t&gt; S. I

PIH~

i

:

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

0

:

••

Sl:.! p&lt;'r ton Bu o• di Pd '- IC'l b SIO

..

I:J Woott l""' l lnth ••
( ", ,:-,h
l'h,ugo ·

I ti ll)

]1 ~1

2t l ;ll~

I f'.t\

'I d11i"

IM

11,,,,; '

I

pf' r ton Dt•ltv(' rPd
Rl
I
l 'cr llt•l Co

I ~•'

1~1

1-:.H' II 11'1 ' 1'11 11\' !•r l h t· 111111111111111 ]~
, ... ~ (' til l'- \'lt ' l l\lltd j!&lt;' l d.i)
1\ t h l llllllltl)! Ptllt 'l lh,m I HI I:&gt;('( l! ll\ 1

1--or&lt;&gt;s l Pro
lop prr C'e for srondrnq
~ ov-. tn nbcr Co li yrn 51ib5 or
KPnl Hanhy 1 -l4b tl~'IO

V. tlllh

&lt; llt~ Jo. will LJol

di HI )!I'tl ltl l ht• I d ;o\

I IIlo'

In

1-, ,,,,

tUt mur ~.

\\l l tlll;tl\

li tl'tl h

,,r

Tho~nk :-

jll'l

..

tt ll llltlllll ll ·c,~ il n l:orh ,uu,

\ looli! Jt· lil ollll' :.ll]t ~

&lt;ill! I\

.u1d

O lU f-URNilUH!: rC(' b0)(£&gt;&lt;.; b1os!'
bf'd) uon berh dt=&gt; sk '&gt; etc
complete hou:,('hol ds . Wn tc
M lJ MoiiPr 1-ft 4 . Pomeroy or
~o il

~!Ill!

\\\ &gt;I'd

C OII'l~
, Ia.,~ 1111 9 ~

poe kr l woiChC&gt;.,
wodd rng baod c,
dro mond ~ Gold or !&gt; rl vC'I Ca ll
1-foq e• Worno;ley 7 4? i3J I

,uti ,, lit "

·11' ' OH't ljl lt•tl 11111\ \l' ilh t. o-.11 11 1111

,,,, II• 1\ \/tnulot•l In l ·,,,, uf

C'l o·n·

1'1 11

I ll WI

T lot• Puli li "ltt't rt ~ t · t · • ·~ ilh rr t..hl
In t olr t &lt;~ I 1o;•·• I : trt ~ .uh ,j, o·rru t! ,j,.

!lutMI 'llw
r t ·~ p.o n .. rblt• ftn
n•;· trr·M•rtr"ll

nw

OLD

••l'llt I ! 5 1'l' llt dt: )l'l.! t' l•ll ,ld'- 1 ,Ill I

Jt'r

f.jq'J

l'u iJ tr ~ llt' l' \ \ Ill nut IJt
llh!lt ttr:m ,,,,. mt·nr-

WAN1 ! 0 buy o ld 4 ~ ond / tl
phonograph r eco rd ~
Ca ll
Y'l'l to:\10 or Cor1tac! Mor trn ~ur
1\ r!UIC
CA~ H

I ON tun k

~PIV I C P

Phurrt

(jil~·! iCJI,

~ty e ~

Wrecker
Nu tl ond Ohro
( OI S

'/J '} ~081

.

W l- f'I CK up-junk au to borlres buy

"'9 11mh car s sc ra p

ba t
rc r ~~·~ ortd melo l ~
fl•der s
~ ol v age
SR 1') J
Pomeroy
'¥'1'} 5408

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
j&gt;,1t•lld.ll
Nuun till S,rl rnrl,l\
l'ttt·~ t lil \

I hr 11
~

tl't• •1 1, I" •t

~-,

ul,,,

,,

;• L11 It

VOU have a serll'rce lo otfer
wo ror !o buy or sell sornet hmg
Ot:' loak tng l or wo rh
or
~·, h otn vC&gt; r
you' ll ge l resu h !&gt;
!a-:;tcr wr th o Sentrnel Want Ad
Coli '-f1l II Sb .

TV . ~ weeper
qoft s an d Llems ,
nu~c
Hou c, c nex t to Stole
Hrghwoy garag e HI 'I 10-5
w ,,t1 fhu1 s ~ rr .

HA !:li: M~Nf

p .'\1

,r r11 •TI

li On

- ---- - Yar:&lt;!_Sal_!! ___._
1~

~ ALE

l h r 1 ~ llll O~

".1 , I'
~I ~1
f' I' I lid ~ ;r fkt'JlU"il

Pets fo r._,s,.,a::.:I::::.
e __
_

In Me_!!!_O t:_Y. _ _ _

M~ MOflY

IN

ol Harold 0

H OO~

HOL LOW Horses Buy, sell
trcrde or trorn New and use d
"crddiP'\ Rut h fle ell'es . Alba ny .

Evan s.

wh o dr ed Dec ember b 1qn
We olterr thrnk of bygone days

When we we r e all together
lhe Fornily t hor n rs br oke n now
But rnerno r res lo11e lorever
To u~ he ha s no t gone away
No r has he tra veled lo r
Ju-; r EH1 Joi'cd G od' s eterna l home
And Je ll th e gat e a1ar
Do no t ask us il w e rn rss hrrn
There i~ such a voconf place
O ft wP. thin!.. we hear ,hr s
f oc rsteps
An d ~ ee hi s sm rlrng face
Day s of sadness still come over us
T ~ors rn srl en ce oft en I low
M en1ory keeps hr m e\l'er near us
Th ough he le ft one year ag o
Oyr thou ght &lt;;; and love ar e wrl,.,

yo u
Alt hough we or e opor I
We w rll always have you do-.e to

us
Hecou se you're rn our heart s
Sadly !llrS'&gt;ed by w rf e chrl drcn
and grandc h r~dren

Notices
NO HUNTI NG or tre.-. po ~~' "9 o n
'"Y' prope rt y wi thout perrnt s·
sron. Judy McGraw
G UN SHOOT Roc1ne Gun Club
!:very Sunday 1 pm Foe tory
c h o ~e gun s on ly
Rocr ne Vol un teer
h re Dept !:very Sa turday b 30
prr. .1 1 rhe rr buildrng m Boshan
Fac tory choke quns on I )I

161 &lt;1 ) 098 ·3'190

HI SI NG ~TAR Kennel s Boordrng
an d groorrung
oil breed s
Cheo; hrre 361 -0'ln
AK C RE GISH RW Bo &gt;:er puppres .
6 week s old A nrcc Chmtm o s
gi lt $1!5 ea . Ca 11 992 272b

Auto Sales
1905 ~A L CO N '}d oor std shrft .
Good work co r Runs good
body rough' 9q:_;l 2995
1969 PLYMOUTH ROAD flunner 4
speed, 4 bbl. , 11 wheels SBOO
992-33 10
19o8 CHE VY IMPA LA.
shape 992 7020

Make Your Own Holiday

Candy the Easy Way .

Fun! Delicious!
For Free Demon stration

CALL : THE

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
317 N 2nd Ave .

Middleport
992·6342

CH·· diMAS CAKE
WORKSHOP
Morni ngs a nd evenings!
Call in to register . Classes
held Dec. 9, 11. 12 , '78.

-

Lost and
-----·

Found
- - - ---

$5Cr REWARlJ for moss rng Iorge
rn ole rlork ches tnut lr rs h Set
te r Mr s.-. mg from 1ar_l nPrs Run
r e ~ rd en c e srnce Nov ernber 28
Chrld s pet Co!l9r! O 2870

t.OSr

,;1

Che ste r
Fr ve 1-'ornt s
area Ol d lo rgG b rglr -. h Bl ue
Tre k dog with co llcH Dog rs
fotTtrly pe t An yo'lC&gt; wrth rn
forrr1o tron plea se (Oil 7-!2 2315

------

- - _ _!i_elp wante&lt;!_ _ _
NEE D PERSON ro dr.ve my car and
toke rne to rur1 c ~ron ds Phone
9CJ'} '}q3b

IMM f DIAfE OPE NING S I.N +:&gt; II pa y
you t o learn Cucr,&gt;nt"'e d trornrng Coli Ar my N( rng col lec t\ ·

(614 ) 593 ·3022

Good

Q UALITY CONDITIONI::D rnu:ed
hoy Wr ll deliver Q92 -'120 1

For Sale

OLD HOU SI: TO be torn down AH
l r)(!u res , w indows and doors ·
or any •t ern s to be sold rm·
mc drotely
Contact
Bou rn
lumber Co . Chester 985 3301 .
WOOD~N

PICTURI:: Window . 5'
)(5· S50. 992 29tJQ or see ·
Rr chor d Stew art . J mde s south
of Mrddlepor t

REDUCf SA~E and last wr th
GoSese Tabl ets &amp; ~ - Vop " water
. prll5 Nel son Drug .
TRU CK f'OR sal e 19b4 Chevy
prckup . std . sh rft
$375
992 -b0b7
1976 CH~VY SPOR T 4-wheel drive ,
short bed step side. 350 .4 bbl. .
ou to tran s.. 35 ,000 mi les . Very
good co ndrt1on. Lots of e&gt;: tros .
Alter 5 pm qn-77 86

COU NTRY MOBILE Home f'ark
Rou te 3J north of Pomeroy
large lots Coli 992 -'/ 479
J ANIJ 4 RM fur nrshed and un
l u ril1s hed
o pts
!-' hone
991 -5434
TWO IUDI-fOOM . k rt chen lurnrsh
e1L op t Col i bt"t ore B om
99'1 22B8 .
RENHR S ASSI STANCE for Semor
CitrLen s You rncr)l be chle lo
!r ve m ou r oportm en t for less
tha n $50 Vrll oge Manor Apart ments. 992 -7787
TWO BEDROOM trorl er . por tiol ty
lu r ni~ h e d
Pr ovo l e
lot
991-27 d9
THREE BEDROOM un lurnrshed
house lor re nt rn N ew Holl'en
New built -m kit chen livrng
room drn 1ng room 2 co r
gora gC&gt; Coli 882 -2b8tl betw een
and 11 or' d 1 pm or alt er 5 pm
l or furth er de totl ~ . 5 mtn from
Mountor neer Power l'ro1ect
Al'l S IN Mrddl eport Rr11ersrde
Ap ts 1 bedroorn 5 11 3 mo pl us
Pl ec tr1 u ly
Monthly leosrng
~qua l
Oppor tu nr ty Hous rng
Caii9Q2 T/21 for opporn tm ent

Auction

---

SNOW
TIRE SALE

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

·-~ck W. Carsey, Mgr.

·- ·

. . . . Phtlne 9'11-2181

Real Estate for Sale

SIJ ACWES Of land I ' 1 mrles out
of Rut land Phone 742 2 11i'

1/5 ~A l f S 0~ wheat straw $1 .25
bole 9Htl-35 1()

UNIQUf ASSO RTM ENT ol ' specio t
grits' · cl othing. pott ery, wok s,
leather wa l leT s bog s belts,
hots
We ste rn felt
hots ,
1ewelry . A ta ddrn lamps Blue
Flame hea ters and much more
Stop rn · we'll be glad Ia he lp
Mountain Leath er and General
Store 104 -lOb W. Unron Sl .
Athen s, Ohr o 014 -592 -5478

606 E.
Pomeroy,

NICE HOME to live in. 3
bedrooms , dining, bath ,
nice kitchen . 2 mobile
homes to rent . Let the rent

pay it off. $29,500.
1 BEAUTIFUL ACRE Lovely mobile home , 12 x
60, 1974. Large concrete
pafking area. Meny other
features {Near Mines ).

LOVELY HOME- Co..ner
lot . 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
lovely

kitchen,

all

¥ery

modern. 527.500. Budget
gas bill 569.
3 YEARS OLD- Lovely 3
bedroom home, 2 baths,
nice kitchen , dining, utility ,
mud room, carport, 1 acre.
1 year guarantee on works manship and mat'erlal.

JUST 533,000.
KIDS GONE? -

Need o

Renovated. $9,500.

Christmas

Headquarters
for all your G. E. T .V .' s &amp;
Hotpoint Appliances.

' · . SALE PRICES
- ",~ JACK W.
't

•
1

CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-2 181

We have several business
places for sale . To work for
yourself, call about these.

CLELAND' S - WHERE
REAL ESTATE IS A
BUSINESS
NOT
A
SIDELINE .
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
Realtor .
Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
Associates

992-2259. 992-6191
992-2568, 992-6009

---

BI G C HRI ~ TMA'S Au&lt;lr ons ~rr
and So l ntg ht 7pm. loto, at
toys Chr rs trno s rlcom s and m osc
at Ohro Rrver A ucl•on. ~3'1 Hi gh
St. . Mrddleport . Ohro

Rea I Estate for Sale

FOR SALE

lj WHK~

OLD blo ck kr llen wi th
wh1 tc feet and mor k mgs Has
shab lff'l 'l':J'-1'1 pr &lt;19'1 7080

MOBIL!:: HOME l'l )( ~5 on 1 acre
orrd 3 burld111g ~ or I ive P o r n! ~
f.lY'J J&lt;/H4

1 HH !: E

MO NTH
old heal thy
houccbro k en k rttons
lrger
strrpcd and blo ck 94Col1d21

GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.
Broker

Complete

Housmg
Headquarters

~~!~~~w
I,
992-3325
216 E. Second Street

BUSINES~

On Main St . .4 rooms plus
half bath up. Good chance
fo.. smal l bu si ness with
residenc e ove r . Asking
125,000.
LARGE OLD HOME -

$40,500.
RUTLAND- Reasonable 4
bed-room
home , bath ,
fireplace, 2 car garage, and

lot to.. a garden . Only
$14,000.
POMEROY RURAL About 13 years old Nice 3
bedroom home, new nat .
ga s furnace, city wafer ,
modern kitc hen on a good

level lot. 529.500.
WOODLAND - Country
location for spac1 ous new 3
bedroom hom e . 1,775 sq . ft
of space. Real nice family
room room with wood
bu rning f ireplace a.n d targe

floor length glass windows,
a 2 car garage and
wonderful acre lot . $69,900.

NEW

THE SWEEP

19th Century Service with
20th Century Know. How .
Specializing in
Woodstove, Oil Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flue5
Phone : 742-3110
Kim White, Proprietor

LISTING

2

, bedroom trailer 10 x 50 w ith
gas furnace, bath, on .55 of
an acre of land tor only

56,000 .
BUY SOMETHING THAT
WILL INCREASE
IN
VALUE
FOR
YOU .
REALTORS HAVE A
GOOD KNOWLEDGE OF
THE FUTURE OUTLOOK .
TRY CALLING 992 · 3325
FOR
MORE
INFORMATION .
GORDON B., HELEN L.
AND SUE P. MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES .

Housing
Headquarters

~ction

Co.

All

Type

Building
Any Type Improvements
To Existing Struc:tures

ReSidential and commercial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime.

Phone 985·3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

CLEAN ING

HONAKER'S CB and eleclronrc
equrpmenl Rt33 506 2nd St ,
Ma son , WV 15260.
ATT ENT ION HOME owner s End
)'O ur poinlrng worries
Le t
Gollra Home Improvement in sta ll so lrd vrnyl siding on yoU r
home wi th th e amazmg Styro
~oo m lnsu lotron. Comes wrt h 40
vear wa rrenty Free es trmo tes
~ all3b7 - ~~9:.. G_o l !ip_ol~s ~O~ io .

WILL CARE l or the elder ly in ou r
home Phone 992 -'1314
WATER WHL drlllrng . Wrll1om T
G rM l 74 7-21:179

;,, mile oil Rl. 7 by.pass on
st. Rt. n4 toward Rutland,

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
Ph story house, mostly carpeted with 4 bedrooms,

...,

di n ing roo m and lau ndr y roo m . Also almost new 2 car

healed garage. This home is nicely located In Portland
. and PR ICE D FOR QUICK SA LE at 522.500.
1 Acre and up near Pomeroy .

3825
- -·-

''\

Print answer hera:

'·

'·

. '..
1...::5::!-..J Yc,Sie•·da•(s

' ''
r'

'.'

ASK ED YOU TO
GUARD 11? IT'S
MY DOUGH "· t

.

Well buill older home that has been completely
upstairs wilh hardwood floors and, a modern bath.
Stairway, living room and d ining room has rich 'thick
carpeting . Kitchen is complete with built in cabinets,
range , d ishwash er, disposal and even the breakfast $et
goes . For your convenience there Is a half bath off the
kitchen . And you II love the basement family room . It

\

\

t

- ·-~-

..
GASOIJNE AJ.l..EY

DRIVE ALlffiE
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

Lif t.h' box a tad. Ru-fus.
so's I it. in slip th' r1d
under 'im'

EVENINGS 992-2449

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE
Rodney Downing, Broker .
Bi II Chi Ids. Manager

Miss Elva's

papa? ~'C""'~

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4.88 'sq.1:yd.
up.
9' and 12' Vinyl

-

, Floor Covering In

St~Q

Call742-2211
. TALKTO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

been
ca nce lled? Los! your oper at Ors
hcense? Phone 99:2 -21-43 .

742-2211

WOVEN

more extras, low heat bill with

nat.

gas forced air

furnace . All this and two nice acres of land In a good
location . Will go quick for $35,000 .
We need large and small farms end many types of

property .
CALL JIMMY DE EM, ASSOCIATE 90-lJH
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCI/ITE 9~9-2654

C.OT A IJ\W~ER ·· ·
TO PROTECT ME !

SIMPJ..E AS THAT--

NOT QUil E A5

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
46 Undies
fabric
6 Tropical
47 Watched
f1sh
48 Athirst
Lady of Spain DOWN
Dangerous
I Know
emotion
2 Undertake
~~~1!Jl1BJJ;]U§[!1j;0~~;;,~;:--::--12 Frazzle
3 Obtained
13 Theater
4 Sporting
group
place
P ub quaff
5 City in Texas
lf-.?.'115 FOR prom1se 6 Food f1sh
Shooting
7 Crete's
match
capital
18 Dea n Martin 8 Product
film
from roses
9 Adminattrachon
istered
10 Concerning
government
24 Vladimir
16 Skin
nuisance
Ilyi ch
Ulyanov
I speck
hi 5 26 One of the
Spirit C&lt;'lllin' frotn
Golden
th' qreat stair~,~~ell
Horde
30 " Blue
in th' s\1.4!
knight "
32 Snow field
I10U 33 Mme . It.
'7
36 Bravo
f00\S! or Grande
38 One-third of
a dog's

DAILY

Yesterday's Answer

21 "Old"
English
mstltotion
23 Beach
tone
25 Thames
estuary
21 Balcony
28 Pi lot
29 Milk
coag·
ulator

31 Pittsburgh
player
33 Billiards shot
34 Tooth
filling
35 Do penance
37 Musical

work
40 Troublesome
plant

44 Offshore

Ani mal s 33 .
7 : 30-Holl ywood Squar es 3: Oa t 1ng Game 4, It Can't
Happen To Me 6 ; Walton s 8 ; S\00,000 Name T hat
Tune 10 ; N ash ville On The Road 13 ; Doll Y 15,
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33
8 :QO-Proiect U . F 0 . 3,4,1 5, Benji 's Very Own
Chrtstmas Story 6. 13 : N ov a 20,33 ; Waltons 10.
8 · 30-Pink Pant her'sCh r istmas6 ,13 , Please Stand By
B
9 :oo--Qui ncy 3,.4, 15, Barney Miller 6, 13 ; Country
Christma s 8, 10: Duchess of Duke St reet 20; Arts &amp;
Business 33 .

9o311-Soap 6, 13.
10 :00--D avid Cassidy -Man Undercover 3,4, 15 ; Family
6, 13 ; All Star Tri bute to J lmmy Stewart 8, 10; Sneak
Previews 33 ; Membersh ip-Pledge Drive 20
10.30--E li za bethan Christ mas Celebration 33; News

20.
11 oo- Ne ws 3,4,6,8 , 10, 13,15; Movie ' 'Six of a K ind" 20 ,
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33
11 · Jo--Joh nny Carson 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13,
Gunsmoke a, ABC N ews 33, Movie " F 1re c reek " 10.
12 30--News 8; 12 · 4Q--SWAT 6, 13; 1·oo-Tomorrow

3,4, 1 50--News 13
We dn esday. Ot&gt;(' . 6

BRIDGE
-

Rlitllnd ij

Explaining the Bath coup
th e dummy l1ke a bndge

NORTH
• 5
• K J 9 :1

WEST
+ K J 10 0 4
•84 2
• 5

+ K Q 10 3

• A Q 10 7 5
t K 43

I

·-

1

I ~

.,
'

.

..

15 IN STOCK

.,

The Valley

Wis ... ,-. .;.,; :~ ....:. : ·- :. •a t e Age ncy, GallipOliS,
44b -3b43 .

••

• J 62

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

East

I

~

I

••

l~

I CAN'T

BELIEVE

1HATYOU1RE
HOME: W
STAY.

YES, PERHAPS MY
DECISION 11J COME
HOME WAf! AN

OMEN.I HAVE. A
FEELING MOM

tYEePS ME!

DON'T TALK AI30UT

OMfNS 1 YOUR MOM
HAD ONE SEVERAL
MON1H5 AGO A~D
IT !"ROVED TO

13E A 17Ul7.

X MJ T Z

'THIS ISN'T A

c./1/N/EI so

FINALLY
HONOR US

wrrn THE

PLEA:;URE OF

YOUR COMPANY!

11 SOCIAL!' CALL.

.litf HERE
STRICTLY ON
fJV.SINEr5S/

ZTLMSJ

J

T DJ

CD XL

SW

ML

ZBZE

LYZ
MX

vz

1•
Pass

EZTSROJ

South

4•

Opening lead : +K

z R z _ By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

W A- ·

expert F1vc

h eart s

was lay

club w1th dummy ' s ace, led

+A 6

AXYDLBAAXR
I. 0 N G F E J, L 0 W

player. not a mumb lety-peg
down ."
South had won the first

EAST
t Q9 7 3 2
• 6
• Q J 10 8
+974

CRYPTOQUOTES

•

MAKES A '
BED FOR
YOU
SEE OUR
REDIIEiliS

12-6

SOUTH

C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's h o w Co work it:

LY Z

___

"-:--"'---:,---

_ __O_swald Ja~oby and Alan Sontag

tA 97 62
+A 8 5

Is

'

~.

In

Slyle 15: Di ck Cavell 20 , Wild, Wild World ol

2~£~-rlHJ.e:JI~p~.

WINNIE

Largest Selecti~

Friends O; Sesame St . 20, 33; Ba1man 10; Dinah 13.
.4 .30-Bewi t c hed 3, Gilligan's Is 4,8, Brady Bunch 10,
Petticoat Junction 15.
5.QO-S tar Trek 3, Star Trek d , Beverly Hillbillies 8,
Mister Rogers ' N eighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; Brady Bunch 15 .
5 : 30-News 6, San ford &amp; Son 8. Elec Co 20,33 , Mary
Ty ler Moor e 10; Odd Coup le 15
6·011-News 3,4,0, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6 . 30-NBC News 3,4,15, ABC News 13 , Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 0.10. Over Easy 20
7 : 0()-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magaz ine 4, Family Feud 8,
New ly wed Game 6.13 ; N ews 10, Lov e, Amer1 c an

One letter stmpl y sta nds for ano1 her. In this sumpl e -\ is
u sed for the three L's, X for the two O's. et c. Sin gle Is tters,
apostrophes, t he length and for matl?n of the w or ds af'e all
hints. Each day the code lett ers arc d11Terent

•

OWNER MUST SELL- The owner of lhi~
charming 2 s tory stone home in Middleport
must sell now s o s h e IS · offering this fine
home for a low. low pr1c e of $20,000. There
are 2 bedroomS ( 1 IS extra large), SpaCiOUS
liv1l1 q room w -firepl ace, formal dining, e.atin kitchen . b~th w · s ho we r , garage II. a kmg
sized ya r d . G()od toc~tion on Mill St. Call the

DINE R AVOWA L BRIDLE

Jumble Book No. 12, containing 110puzzles, is arvallabte lor$1 .7Sposlpald
from Jumble, c/o !his llfiWSpaper, 80.11 34,Norwood,N.J.07648. 1ncludeyour
name, address zip code and make chects payable lo Newspaptrbooks.

IN THf: MII&gt;DLr: I!AST •••.'

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

AUTOMOBILE ,INSURANCE

AH, YES ·-- VVEl l,
YO U' LL FIND IT'.S

CiJOol&gt;
Ne.w5
A TReA,.....
1-ti\S ftEN 'SIC:.NeP
---

- .~.-,""'----i

- - - - - - - ---

"(I I I I 1 j"

A

39 Belg1an city
41 Operated
42 Plum for
rrF!R~A~N~K~&amp;~E~R~N~'I~E~--------------------------------~~~~~~~------~--------~ gin
43 Make effervescent
P1~ST' TH~
45 " All
there"

Buy where yOu c1n come in
and see what you're geHing
- Good selectiOns .::... Fully
stocked.

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled cera mic til e, plum bing, carp entry , end general
maint enance. 13 years e~~ - jl!_l'_rence . 992 - 3~8~. _ _ _ ~ _
PULLIN S EXCAVATING Complete
Service. Phone 992 -2478 .

Guiding Lig ht 0,10.
3 Co-Another World 3,4,15, General Hosp tta l 6, 13 ;
Lilias Yog a &amp; Yo u 20.
3 Jo-M ash 8, Afternoon Playhou se 10; Di ck Cav ett 20 .
4 OQ-Mi st er Cart oon 3; Battl e of the Plan ef s 4,
Hollywood Squares 15, Merv Grif fm 6, Porky P ig &amp;

name

Ex·

cova li ng , se ptic s ~ stems ,
do1er backhoe , dump tru ck ,
limes tone, grovel, biOcktop
paving . Rt 143 Phone 1 (bl4\
b98-7331

LA'US'?"SURE ...
THAi'S WHT I'VE

room. bath, most ly ca rpeted, kitchen Is

ha s a washer and dryer that also goes with the hoUse.
And th is solid home Is located on over Jf• acre. Shown

Home as trade-ln .

40u sa4
som'thin',.

1

has deep pile shag carpet and paneled walls with a
wood or coal burning Ben Franklin Stove. The laundry

by appointment . $35,000 and will consider a Mobile

YOU FORGE'T
TI&lt;ERE ARE LAWS
GOVERNI I\lG SUCH
MATlcRS · ·

I'OUMD 1-r ...

I::XCAVATING dozer , loader on d
backhoe work dump trucks , All carpel installed with
paddiil~ at no charge.
and to-boys l or hrre, wi l! hau l
Expert Installation.
fi ll dirt , to soi l, limestone and
groveL Colt Bob or Roger Jef·
fer s, day phone 992-7089, nrghl

WILL do roo fi ng, conslruc l ion .
plumbmg and hea ting . No 10b
too Iorge or lao 5moll Phone

I .Jumble s

IJTII.E ORPHAN ANNIF.

'

'

· 3D-Days of Our Lives 34 .15 : A s The Wor ld Turns
8, 10
2 00-0ne Ute to Live 6 , 13 . 2 3D-Doctors J 4, 15;

An swer . How lhe81u mber felt after a hard day's
w o r k ~" RAINED"

WELL, WHO

SAVE ON
CARPETING

dozer backhoe

E lee Co 20,33.
·CO- Hollywood Squares 3; All My Ch 1ldren 6, 13 ;
News 8 . Young &amp; the Re stless 10 , Not for Women

(Answers tomorrow)

This wet I cared for newer home has

TWO ACRES- A beautiful 4 year old, 2 bedroom· home
with large eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement wilh TV room . Many

12 : 00--Newscenter 3, Bob Braun 4; News 6, 10 · Young
&amp; the Restless 8; MiddayMagazfne 13, Ame ric a
Alive 15
12 JQ-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10,

Now arrange lhe Circled !etters to
form the su rpnse answer. as suggested by the above car1oon

'
'

ba sement and 2 bath s. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and la rge storage building . Price $21 ,500.

remodeled . 2 story with full basement. J bedrooms

1L5&gt;-CBS News 8, House Cal l 10.

.'

natu ral gas forced alf heat, outside slorage building ,
Price $27,000.
CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house with full

MIDDLEPORT

11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 , Family Feud 6, 13, News
4; Love of L1 fe B, l Di Sesame St. 20 : No va 33

Onl y 15.

equipped wtth ref ri~erator and stove, utility room,

~--

0, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :00--High Ro ll ers 3.4,15; Happy Days 6. 13 .

I

I

Kangaroo 8. 10: Sesame St. 33.

9 0()-Merv Griffin 3, Phil Donahue 4, 13.15-, Hogan's
Heroes 8.
9 J()-Brady Bu nc h 8 , Fa mily Affair 10
10 00--Card Sharks 3.4, 15; Edge of N1ghl6 . Al l In The
Family 8, 10, Da1ing Game 13
10 30-Jeopardy . 3. 4,1 5; Andy Gntf1Th 6, Magar1 ne

''

r-----~-·;.

_ph_~ne 99~~~_35_3r_9~?:.. 5~33 ~-

13.
7 · QO- Today 3,.4 , 15, Good Morning Amenca 6, 13, C BS
Ne ws 8 ; Jetsons 10 .
7 15--Weather 33 , 7 3Q-Schooltes 10

o Oil-Capt

WHAI MIXIN0 UP
TRAIN5 Mlo&gt;IT BE
FOR A TRAVELER.

Sweepers , toa sters, rrons , oil
sm al l applronces lawn mower ,
nexl lo Stat e High way Garage
on Ro ute 7. Phon e {!i 14) 985 -

-

-·-

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

01

------- -------HW60D BOWERS REPAIR -

SEWING MACHINE Repairs . serYrce . at I mak e.$. 9Q2 228.4 The
~obrrc
Shop ,
Pomer oy .
Aut horized Singer Soles u :i
Service We sharpen Scis sor :.

AND

~ ~~ ~

I URSOE

BRADFORD . Auctroneer , Com·
' plete Servrce Phone 94Q -24B7
or 949-2000 . Rac rne , Ohro, Crr tt
Bradford

SALES REP.
FOR
SUN DINS HAMMOND
ORGANS
Racine. Ohio
Phone 949-2118
AlterS P.M.
11 -26·1 mo.

HOWERY

r!!)

Virg rnia 13, 6 55-Chuck White Report s 10 ; News

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

I I

'

11 ·3·1 mo .

PETE SIMPSON

- - -MARTIN

Call 4
6 . .45-Morn i ng Repor t 3; 6 so-Good Morning , West

IALYM~

PHONE 992-2772

HAMMOND&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES&amp; SERVICE
CNEW&amp; USEDI

-

6 25--For You .. Black Woman 10 ; 6 3D-Doc tors on

'ftllll'iMt ID'il

ASTERN! I'IUT FIRST
'IOU GET THE HONOR

J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

4-38-

742-2348

6 011- PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,0

Price is Right 8, The Judge 10: That 's H oll ywood

LAND'S 50 MILE 5

ASHOR6!

•

- -~-----

THE NEARE5T

''

0.

EXCAVATING ,

LIKE~

5 ·55-

13 ,

15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Big Green Magazine 33

7 .311-Doll y 3; Dat ing Game 4; Mal ch Game PM 6,

\

-----·--- -- ·

Services Offered

WE PEMANfJ
T' &amp;6 PUT

5 50-P T LCiub

6,13 : Sha Na Na 0; News 10, Love , American Slyle

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one tetter to each square , to form
~------ \ '.1 tour ordrnary word s.

CEllULOSE
INSULATION
,;.so per bag

Co lt

FI-IOSTY S ( 8 r'Odto equrpm enl.
btery thrng rn lwo-wciy rad io
antenn as and occes Phone
Por tl and 843 21Bl Open even rng s trll B 00 Sunday 2 00 trlt
b 00.

OR WALK, IF YOU "''Il

1~

GARAGE

10·30 c
992 -5587.

WILLIN6LY!

MORE-

Report 13 ;
Sunrise Semester 10 .

I&gt;J PERSON!

t'Omeroy, 0 .
, l lL· - - - - - - = - 3·_1_s._tt_c..J
' :

ROGER HYSELL

Chester, Ohio

1-= URNA ( t:

D0E?SIJ'T PROVE?
WE- CAME ABOARD

wor·s

OF MEH I&gt;J5

Ph. 992-2848

Aute&amp; Truck
~epair
·Also Transmission
Repair
Pho.oe 9'12 -5682

Jack Gmther 985.3806

5TILl-

5 45--Farm

CAPTAIN MAKO

~10~·=18~-1~m~o:.::::::::::::;

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

T~iAT

A 5HIPl

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
··-•lallation Service

All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small

ond ditcher. Charles It Hat
fr eld , Bock Hoe Serll'rr::e.
Rutla nd , Ohto. Phone 74'1 -2008

livln~

TAKS A GOOD LOOK .
'IOU SWASS~ NOW DO
VOU K&gt;JOW VOU'R6 ON

MOORE'S

25 ¥ears Experience ·

11 -3·1 mo.

('APT AIN F.ASY

For The Best
Price In Town
·· See
, Denver Kapple
At

hlduslrial

, · All Work Guaranteed
Phone 992 _6144
992-7547

THURSDAY , DECEMBER/, 1978

6 : 3()-NBC News 3,.4, 15 : ABC News 13, Car o l Bur ne1t &amp;
Frien ds 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Ea sy 20 .
7 · 00--Cross -Wits 3, PM Magazine 4, New lywed Game

11 -17· 1 mo .

Commercial and . Home

tall992-~712

6 oOo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2 160

Mourning and
Price Builders

J&amp;L

lully insured
. Free E~t.

.,

New or Repair
· Gulters and
Downspouts

11 16·C

on heating cost
Experience and

.•

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

Phone 742-2029

Cel.lulosic (wood· fiber!
Thermal insul~tion
Save 30 pct. toSD pet.

I

H. L WRITESB.
ROOFING

Reasonable Prices
References Available

BloWn lnsulatioo
JIM KEESEE

'

Pll. 992·2174

"GIVE U&gt; A TRY"

BUILDING

MIDDLEPORT -

Mobile Hom es for Sale
-----

.•

Estale

farms, . commercial. Your
satisfaction ts our goal.
Give us a try .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
New Lima Road
Hutchi nson Sub-01v.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742.2003

3 BRs,

l!J /'1 VINDAL!: 1-l )I 70 'l bedt oorn
tota l plrt trt'( w 11h and c,r no&lt;'!
un riP!pt rllllll CJ f u r nJ· ~hf'd rr U' l
l u • n r~h ..d I.J&lt;./i' 1M!'· nf'•·r '-.pr ·

Real

service. can us for what we
have available. Listings of

i

Construction
Maintenance

Ca II .

Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 , Gomer Pyle , USMC
10 ; Afferschoo l Spec1al 13; Brady Bun ch 15.
5 · 30--News 6 ; San lord &amp; Son 0, E lee. Co. 20,33. Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Carpentry, Electrical
Painting

Don ' t let a chimney f ire put
a damper on your- lite

•

.,

Goly Grail " 20 .
10 00-Vegas 6, 13 , , John ny Cash 8, 10, Spirit of
P unxsutawney 33 ; Love, Ameri c an Sty le 15.
10: 30--Membership -P iedge Drive 20 1 10. 50-News 20.
11 cOO-News 3,4.6,8, 10. 13, 15; Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 33
11 : 20--Movie " K londtke Ann ie" 20 .
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Pol tee Woman 6, 13;
G unsmok.e 8; AB C News 33 . Movie " Ran cho
No1or tous " 10.
12 :30-News B; 12 . .4()-- SW A T 6,1 3, l .OD- T om orrow
3,4; 1"-5()-N ews 13

4 :0o- Mister Cartoon 3. Battle of the ~tanets 4; Merv
GriHin 6; Hollywood Squares 15; Porky P ig &amp;
Friends 8 ; Sesame St. 20 .33 , Batman 10, Dinah 13
.4 . 3()-Bewitched 3: Gill igan ' s Is . A,8, Pet ticoat June
t1on 15 ; Brady Bunch 10.
,.
5 :0o-Star Trek 3.4 ; Beverlv H il lbillies 8; M is ter

L-----------------JLI------------~---

Sw!eps Guild
Insured

· •~

-·

11 -9·1 mo.

J. R.

~~~::~:·

~

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

t-or Free Estimates

11 ·28·C

••

ServiceProM the ....... TNCII er h ......
,

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy. 0 . ·
Call992-7tt3

20 Yrs. Experience
Ca II : Tom Hoskins

heating bill. Red barn -like storage building: Located
about ten minutes north of Pomerov just off Rt . 7.
Asking 555,000.

g10wn

1

Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling
lile
Free Estimate - all work
guaranteed

·

Radiator c:::!!::::a.

EUJOlT
APPUANCE II

Roofing, guHers. new and

949·2 160

EXPERIENCID

Arms1rong Carpeting

repair.

Nf W THI-fH bedroorn horne
f ireplor P sun dec h I •, acre
woo deo:ll ot 614 bbi -3!:JqU, Tu pp N S 1-'lorns

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

:•
••
:'
I'

-,,

9 oo-Movie " The Steel Cowboy" 3..4, Char lie's A.ngets
6, 13; Great Performances 33; B ina Crosbv -The
Christmas Year s 10, M ovie " Monty Python &amp; the

WEDNESDAY , DECEMBER6, 1978

0

~

0.011-Dick Clark 's Live Wednesday 3,4; Eight is
Enough 6, 13 ; College Basketball 0, 15 ; Rudolph Ihe
Red -Nosed Re i ndeer 10; Prisoner 20; Africans 33 .

TELEVISION
VIEWING

•

'

~--~~----~~~~------------Your HeadquarteiS For

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors. Large tlvlng room,nd
family room , and to finish this well -laid out hom we
have five bedroom s, uti l ity room and garage. Very low

14'! b NA~HUA 14 x 05 3 bedroom

Mann ing D . Webs l er
Pro-b ate Judge ·
Cler k
(II ) 22,29 ( 12) 6, 31C

Rl:A l fS TAlt LOANS VA
Nn
r•t o n e y
d ow n
l •&gt;lrq,hi P
VPtrrcns ) ~HA As lnw n•. ' !, _.
down (oil non V0ter cns nnd
gC' ncrol publr c) lo pu1 chase
;Pol es ta te or rel rnan ce JU
Yl:Af-1~ Tl:t-fM S IRHANO MOl-l
1GAG !:: co
'I! f= ~ tat £' ~ ~
Athnr' ~ Ph one0 14 59') 3U5 1

.-•

L,-------------------------------· -----&lt;1&lt;. ....-·..•·

50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'h story house with full
basement. La rge pond stocked with fish . Priced for
quick sale. $40,000.
SPACIOUS BI -LEVEL - This may be your dream
home. II has a large kitchen with lots of cablnels,

1- lkhourtd 8 week s old Nrce
qd• lor ( hrr ~. lrn O:&gt; 1/92 J 382

Wt ARE tok rng op plrcotror1s tor
t 1 bath underp tnmng S1SOO
£'m pl oyrn en t No phone coli~
on d a o;~u r ne l('lon 949 Jb83 or
please O hro Volle y Manufo ctl 43 3J I1
lu r rn g Corp
Tup pe r ~ 1-'l oms
I r,t/ U Amhpr st ~0 :.-17 ') I:IR
Oh io
1r..nu ( hon1pr on oOx 1') L'I:IR
I Yt;o'.J Genera! bOx 1'J 'J BH
14bfl !-'M(52x l 'l 2BR
l l.i':J 5 1'rarrt e 5chopner :.18)(8 1 ~R
147:1 Royal bnb o ~s y 61:1 )( 14 3 l:!R
1454 St ar SOw I 0 '1 BR
PROBATE COURt OF
t9/ 'J~ torW,.I4'1 8R
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
I '-loll !:! ta r W11 12 2 BR
ESTATE
OF MARY S . 1910 Syl 11o b Oll 12 2 BR
ROUSH , DECE-ASEO
19bfl Vol loge!&gt; b(j)( 1'l 2 BH
Case No . 22542
1CJ04 Wrnd )or 51 ..-1 0 1 BH
NOTICE OF
JC.f/0 Kr rkwood I 2xbU J BR
A PPOINTMEN T
~ ) M O I:Hl f HOME ~ Alf" ~
OF FIDUCIARY
PT P l~A S ANT W VA
on November 17, 1978, in
the Me igs County Pr obate
I 1 AC R~ 17 x bO mobi le homl2'
co ur t. Case
No . 22542 ,
fl£'0 ' De:w ter . 49') SB58
·Ma rsh ell R Rou sh , R . D 2,
Rac ine . Oh io 45771 w as ap. 19t7 rOTAl H~ C f RI C mobile
'p o i nted E xecu t or o f the
home
lurn i.-. herl . J bedr
es1ate of Mary s . Roush ,
wmhcr or1 ci dry er . Air ro ndr
dec eased , late of R D. 2,
tr olled . 1 lot :J\0 II tronrog P
Ra ci ne , Ohio
::01 ') UOU Phoroe 74'1 2~(ib

til

Mlddi i'J10rt Coll4'17 34'&gt;7
I·At-fM t-OH "ol e Hom.e ") horn..,
tto d!"' t Larg&lt;' pond 10 or t&lt; •" .,,
tl{ OHCS '/ d'} /560

LOTS -

TO GOOD horne· par! co llie ond

hall

HI:OHOOM h orne hnmc •

JUST LISTED - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Good

GJvei\wa_y_ _ _

TWO S H~!-'ARD ~
997 bJ) I

I H ~H

Has new bath, 3 or 4
bedrooms , dining , full
basement, modern kitchen ,
garage for several cars and
extra large lot tor garden .
All in good condition for

smaller home? Here It Is. 3
bedrooms, bath , utility,
basement,
small
lot .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

«' all CJ(j'J 14tH

Pomeroy Landmark.

L&gt;ININC. ROOM sui1e , drop l eaf
tabl e 4 chor rs . co rn er hutch 2
ex tra s leaves tabl e pod rnduded 992 &lt;14f.HJ alter 5

10J INTERNA TI ONAL COMBINE
wit h cab 13 h . platform , 2 row
corn head . '304-6'/5 0908

"I'

:.•

Business Services

\, ,, ~ol e' 1 or o&lt; nn rl
M rrldlqno rt nC'Cl r l-It Httnd

I H) M I- S I1~ ~

all kinds wanted. Homes,

Mf(HA NI C" S TOOL box . 6 NI:: W HOUSE for sole . noT com
piF&lt;tely fin 1shed ftnrsh yourself
drawer , lock rn g, wrth stand on
and save Neor Mergs Mine 1
wheel s. Nrc e (hm tmo s pre &lt;/97-"II q1 aft er Sprn
sent $6500 99'2 -5390.

LOWREY GEN I ~ d4 Perf ec t condr llon. All extras 992-32 15.

l=or Rent

OICKTRACY

i

Real Es tate for Sale

CO AL L IMl: ~l'O N t .,,,cj qoov o·l HU I LAND HA~O WA fH· H'N M1111
c ni t ourn t hf ar rcle 1.=- r r ,J ,,,~ , dog
~t
14 { J') )'1 Mnrlf' rnr o, tr c woorl
load and oil ' YP"" ("\1 .;all b:
.,rove
lrf't' ... tortciinq
npf'r t
cco l ~ r o r ~air Wofl,.., i•
I Main
l rH!p lo crc!f' m ru t . , 1o ntr nn
St Pome roy 4Y'] JH&lt;or1
tl1odf' l
5 6~
Kon g 0 Ht•nt
stove!&gt; wood 01 cool 0 ooo •• •
DHlA flfo' f~ Oun lrly and pe•
sr1 e, new . $1'14 9 ~ Ad justobl £&gt;
k orrnan co
O n ~Oif' no w
stN•l ba sement pas t 5 to 8
7 42 7J'l8
510 Ob
WC !&gt; ttllg hous e ho t
AP!-'Li:S HI ZPA HUCK Or r ho rd
wol e-r lan k . new 5 yoor wor ren
Stott=&gt; H1 bH« Phnn(' Wr fl.o e.,vill e
'Y slrght dent m outf'f 1ock et
Ob4 J'IH':J
S17'J 9 5 AI L e lectr rr .. moll ap
pl oon r es woth thP tw st prires in
14'/U I- O RO Pt(K U!-' Gnou ,,mdr
l OW II wrJI b{l I edLH (•d Oil mid i
11 0 1\ $800 4&lt;1 2 '/':JI:I J
ljonal 10, ... Tool bo)( S K toob .
C HI-I I S lMA~
1RH5 .Morrr
Jl p c wr th tool ·bo :w . $49 '115
~·
Rutland
lr l et11ne worren ty b'l pc &lt;ir op
forgccl :.r t wr th 1ool box
1-fUllANlJ HAf(lJWAH!: . !l72 Morn
S49 l15 One 9J pc se t d1op
St 741 n~':J Mod ernr stK wood
l org Pd tools wrth tool box
.,tov£1 , c!Pmon:&gt;t rat nr rn ode l
S4!i 95
565 Used auto woocl stove
wrth bl owe1 S'l8&lt;/ NPw eler t1 rc 1WO N~W 130 bu McCurd't' g ravr
hot wat er rank slrghtly benr ,
ty bo )(e- S otl 10 lon run nrng
Sin 95 foo l b e )( , ~ K tools 3 1
gears wt!h e ode-ndobl e longu e ~
pc wrth tool bo)(
$4 &lt;/ 95
and 1l l llototron rmpl ement
lrte!i rn c worr enty b'l pc drop
rrr es 1 new 11/5 bu M cC urdy
l01 ged se t w1t h tool box .
grovrty bo:wes One 9 h John
S49 95 One 9J pc se t drop
Deere d1 sc. Geht '-10 grrnder
forged tool s wrlh tool box
mrx er TWo 1r,l74 and 1972.Ford
549 95
t: 150 pt cku p!&gt; 1 1'114 ~o r d f 250
p t(kup 1 1Y l5 lnlernalronal ) •
t907 T-1:\fRD P ~ 1-' B A C AM
ton prckup On e 1964 lnlerna·
1 adr o.
trlt ste er rng Uprrgh t
tr onol '} ton wi th catt le ro ck s .
prono Qq[.J884
Case 4 1b bottom plows Minn ·
COl f'Et r AB l ~ and two end
Molrne co rn sheller Portable
tahle s
dor lo. pine
l:: orly
roller m rll . 985-3341 .
Arne rrcon sty le Ex cellen t con·
cirt ron $190 Coli Su":&gt; r€ A bbott
992 -01 14 or 992 -2377

PO NTIAC 197:l Gra t~dv il le 4-door
EAR co rn . $1
bu.
hard top Ex cell en t con do t1 on . CHOICE
'14'1 2359 '
Loaded wrlh ex tra s 742 2880
1'1175 DATSUN PI CKUP Good con- HREWOOD , $30 toad . 17 ga .
Ithaca 37 Vent rib barre l , ltke
dit ron Low mrleoge Good
ncow $'200 . 7.42-2359 .
tires Step bumper Truck rn tr ro n. 985 3q7q
19'14 DA TSUN PICKUP '37 000
mrles AM -FM radio . A uto ..
1 Q'/1 CHf VY 350 auto . new tin~s
Irons , truck mr r ro rs step up
banery . brakes 142 2300
bumper ~xce ll e nt condi lr on .
flhone99'J -7b12

GU N SHOO T

FRI:E CAN DY mak ing cl asses.
Ho lrd oy
co k e de ro ra tr ng
work shop . Om. 9 SS fee To
rte gr stcr call The Carou sel Con·
t ec t oone r y
Mrddl e p o rt .
OCJ f -63 4:?

For Sale

I-' C1 nt() I OY

t' OM~I-10¥

13; Wild Kingdom 15; Mac Ne ri -Lch r er Report 20,33

J

10 O h tn

CJ!i'l /otlr,t

liMHt:R
dud.,

· 15- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Dec. 6, 1978

Io

a d1amond

toward h1s hand

w1t h the hope of leltmg West
win the Cr ic k, buL East h eld
a ll t he h1g h diamonds and
South would gam nothing by
playmg h1s kmg . East t h en

led a cl ub to give hi s partner
two club tncks .
South should have let West
hold Lhat fir st club . Had he
made that play West wou ld
have been helpless .
A club conhnua twn would
be allowed to run around tt
the ja ck, any othe r lea&lt;
would g1ve South tune to set
up dummy's fifth d1amond
f or a club

d1scard .

In cidentally the play of
ducking the kmg lead when
yo u hold t he a ce and Jack of
the s uit is one of the bridge
plays that go back t o the
game of wh ist . The play is
called the Bath coup after
Che English to wn of Bath,
wh1ch

was a

most

popular

res ort town in the 19th centu-

"Co uldn)t you have dou- ry .
i NF:WSPA I-'EH I:~ NTF.BPHI SE ASSN r
bled four spades ?" asked
LAEZ .
GDFZX
V E I T Z South. " Why take a loss
!For a copy of JACOBY MOOYesterday's Cryptoquole : MORE WONDERFUL THAN THE when we had a s ure profit ? '' ERN. send St to ·W 1n at
" Four spades wo uld only Bndge. · care of th ts ne wspaHEAVENS SEEN THROUGH A TELESCOPE IS THE EYE
have been one down, '' re- per. P 0 Bo~ 489 Radio City
AND BRAIN THAT SEES THEM .-C.B. JOHNSON
plied North "Why not play Sta tiOn . New Yo rk . N. Y t00 79)
@1978 King Features Syf\diuLe . Inc .
MJ

XYD CMJU

LYZ

BARNF:Y

WHV DON'T VOU
FEMALES GO OUT
INTH' VARD ·NITH ALL
THAT HOT-AIR TALK?

MAYBE IT'LL
BURN OFF
TH'DADBURN
FOG

�--------------------·------

16-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. U., Wednesday, Dec. 6, 1976

! Area Deaths ! Dental review

Meigs' ·girls beaten, 42-31
An unproductive second
quarter last night caused the
visiting Meigs Marauders
girl cagers .to fall to hust
Logan, 42-31.
Logan's experience showed
as they placed two girls in
double figures while Meigs'
inexperience proved costly.
After a close first quarter

that saw Meigs,. trail\ng just
14-10 at the buzzer, the hosts
outscored Meigs 1H in the
canto for a 26-16 lead at the
half that was ioo much to
overcome. In the second half
Logan outscored Meigs by
just one point.
Dodie Chapman was
only Meigs player to

APPEARING
WEDS., TIIURS. &amp; FRI.
AT THE

MEIGS INN

I

double figures nett 111g lO Vickie Debord 3, Lynn Oliver
2, and Deena Neese I.
points.
Meigs (31) - Anderson I 0Tern Wilson and Chapman
2 ; S. Ash 1-0-2; Barlrum 2-0·
each had eight rebounds, and 4; Chapman 5-0-10 ; King 2-0
Beth Bartrum was credited 4; Rigg s 0~ 2 - 2 ; Wilson 3-1-7.
Logan (42) - Kuhn 6-7-19 ;
with playing a fin e game
Jamison 3-3-9 ; Kellar 5-0-10 ;
coming off the bench.
Hawk 0-1-1.
Kuhn was the big gun for Cassady By1-1-3;
Quarters
Logan. She dominated the Meig s
10 6 9 6- 31
14 12 9 7- 42
boards and poured in 19 Logan
points. Teammate Kellar had
10 and Jami son had 9.
Logan's man-to-man press :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.
was responsible for that fir st
EXTEN DED FORECAST
half spurt .
Snow flurrie s Friday,
The reserve game was a
ending
Saturday, with
thriller that saw Logan make
mostly
fair
weather on
a last minute comeback for
Sunday
.
Turning
cold er
an exciting 19-16 win.
the
period,
with
during
Big Kim Kellar poured in 14
highs
in
the
40s
Friday
and
of the Logan points, her final.
in
the
lower
or
middle
30s
one being a foul shot with just ·
and
Sunday.,
Saturday
one second left for the margin
Early morning low temof victory.
peratures will be generally
Meigs led 14-10 going into
in the 20s.
the last quarter, but Logan
netted nine fourth period ·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;::
points for the win. The first
half was a slow one as the
buzzer sounded with the hosts
leading 4-3.
Next ga me for the
Marauders is Thursday night
Cloudy tonight. Rain or
when Athens comes to town freezing
rain possible. Lows
at 5:30.
in
the
lower
30s. Rain ThursScorers for the Meigs
day
,
possibly
mixed with
reserves were Laura Smith
sleet
or
freezing
rain during
and Susan Zirkle 6 each,
morning. Highs will range
from the middle 40s to near
50.

Weather

3 Piece Band from
Parkersburg, W. Va.

YES II

We're still taking
senior class portraits.
Traditional
and
scenic_settings ,
·call us for
your appointment,

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich)
109 High St.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Freda
Durham, Middleport; Louise
Cross, Langsville; Eric
Ta ylor, Racine; Becky
Eichinger, Pomeroy ;
Richard McHaffie, Portland.
DISCHARGED - Dorothy
Wright.

.~&lt;;~~·~,.~~~,~~,.,.,~~
-~

.

A HO...HO.. WHOLE ~

•

LOT OF
EXTRA
SPECIAL
GIFTS!·

I

IIEEH B. CHARY
Reed B. Crary, 73, Reedsville, died Tuesday afternuun
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Krary was burn Nuv.
19, 1905 the son of the ' late
John and Louis Theiss Crary.
He was also preceded in
death by two brothe rs,
George and Howard and one
sister, Anna Shumaker.
Mr. Crary is survived by
his wife, Linnie Richie Crary,
one daughter, Mrs. Grant
(E lizabeth ) Smith, Reedsville; one son, Senior Master
Sgt. John Crary stationed
with the U. S. Air Force at
Wichit a, Kansa~; three
sisters, Mrs. Pearl Mora, and
Mr s. Gera ld Wildermuth,
bot h of Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Norman Fisher, Senecaville,
fo ur grandsons, two granddaughters, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Saturday at 3 p.m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Robert McGee officiating.
Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home at 7 p.m.
Thursday.
LORRAINE F. DAVIS
Lorraine Ferne Davis, 26,
Coleridge Ct., Columbus, died
Dec. 4 at 10:40 p.m. at the
Mount Carmel East Hospital,
Columbus, from injuries
sustain ed when she was
struck by an automobile Dec.
1, just a couple of blocks from
her residence. She was
employed by the Treasurer of
Ohio in Columbus.
Surviving are her fiveyear-old daughter, Oleta
Joyce; her father, William R.
Davis and step-mother,
Nellie Brown Davis of Oak
Hill ; four sisters, Barbara
Kegley of Wallingford, Ky.;
Viola Aldrich and Virginia
Cooper of Jackson , and
Michelle Davis; Oak HilL
Two brothers, Robert
(Dickie ) Davis, Mt. Sterling,
Ky ., and Sammy Davis, Oak
Hill.
Lorraine is also survived
by her very dear friend, Jim
Overmier, Columbus; two
step-brothers, Jeff Brown,

Westerville and C. J . Brown,
Oak Hill and many aunts,
uncles, nieces, nephew,
cp usins and very dear
friends.
L&lt;Jrraine was preceded in
death by her mother, Opal
Sinclair [)avis, and both
paternal and maternal
grandparents.
Funeral services will be
Thursday at 1 p.m. at. the
Kuhner -Lewis Fune ra l
Home, Oak Hill, with burial
at th e Rock Spri ngs
Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Visiting hours will be
Wednesday from 3:30 to 9
p.m. at the funeral home.

Mayor's Court

They've shopped high and low to bring you the best selection
of Christmas gifts and the best values ever. You 'II find all of

'

A PUBLIC SERVICE .OF

THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 COURT STREET
POMEROY, 0.
PHONE 992·2156

:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

•

.

I'

(Continued from page 1)
leading to the arrests and
convictions of the persons
who wounded one of his ·
drivers during a shootout
Saturday night.
Clyde P. Bailey, an
attorney and president of
Carroll Transport Inc., said
driver Lonnie Lawver, 26, of
Brownsville, Pa., had to have
"seven pieces of steel"
removed after the shooting.
He was listed in good
condition
Tuesday
at
Allegheny General Hospital.
Bailey says occupants of
another truck fired at
Lawver's cab, leaving 20
holes in it. Police said
Lawver returned four shots
with a .357 magnum revolver,
but was uncertain whether he
hit anyone ,
Bailey said Lawver had
been off the road for a week
because of the the F ASH
strike, but returned to work
"to feed his wife and two
children."

w

EVACUATION BEGINS
TEHRAN, Iran (UP!) U. S. companies launched a
large-scale evacuation of
their American employees
and their dependents from
Iran today and diplomats
predicted "big trouble"
over the next five days.
Several
hundred
Americans, mostly wives
and children, immediately
left the riot-plagued capital
by plane and the American
School aooounced it was
closing its doors until Jan.
6.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

I

POINSETTIAS
Christmas arrangements for

the
?1 home. Artificia I potted plants and
~ baskets.

W

w
w

_ .•.&lt;-~..

i* Yards &amp; Yards of New Garlandr. ....i
w*C~ristmas Arrangements
· ·
·
If!* L1ve, Permanent &amp; Silk
g* Door Wreaths
u*Swags
W*Candles &amp; Candle Rings
W*Poinsettias
W*Potted Plants
1
If!* Terrariums

w

!.(

.

.

I MANY EXCELLENT GIFT ITEMS
w

•

~

W
W

~

w
w
.i
~

tf!

g

M

W
W

~

W

w

~

~ POMEROY FLOWER SHOP ~

SQUAD RUN
The Middleport ·w
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Emergency Unit of the Fire W Phon 992-2039
106 Butternut Ave. W
Department was called to · W
992-5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
W
Route 143 at 4:53 p.m.
Tuesday for Charles Burk a
medical patient, who .;as W We accept all major credit cards and we
M
taken to Holzer Medical ~ wire (lowers everywhere.
M~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Center.
·

i

!

ACCESSORES-2ND FLOOR
Styles for men and women, Choose the
favorite style and color . Make ·up a set of 2
or 3 pieces. You're sure to ple_ase. Airway
Is everything you've always wanted In
casual luggage.

Shop all day Thursday
Till 5 p.m. Friday and
Saturday night til8 p.m.

Mem~rs of the auxiliary

of
the
Middleport
Fire
Department are to meet at
the fire stMion this eveninJl at
6:30 to travel to the HobO:a j'
Inn for Christmas dinner

!

i

MEET TONIGHT
·

i.b~~~~N:·~~+k~~~tts~~~,
'

New •••

w

TRIAL SET
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
6th U.S. Circuit Court ·of
Appeals ruled today that a
federal court trial scheduled
to begin next February in the
Beverly Hills nightclub fire
case may start as scheduled.
A Kentucky state court
trial in the case, in which
relatives of the 165 victims
are seeking some $2 billion in
damages, also is scheduled to
begin next April.

too! This Christmas, do all your shopping at Home !

.

mendation of the Health
Systems Agency, and the
project application itself. The
State Agency's decision will
be made by January 5, 1979.
The public will be notified of
this decision and the reasons
for it.

Virgil P. Phillips, 27,
Middleport, was fined $15 and
costs in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night on a charge of
speeding, 40 miles an hour in
a 25 mile zone. Richard S.
Culver, 26, Hartford, was
fined $25 and costs on a
charge of failing to have his
vehicle under controL

... That's what's waiting for you at your Hom etown Merchant.

the popular gifts of the season, and many one-of-a-kind items

NEW HAVEN On
Novem ber 22, the State
Agency released a ·notice of
review process concerning
the application of the Bend
Area Medical Center, Inc, of
New ~aven, to operate dental
services in the existing Bend
Area Medical Center.
The State Health Planning
and Development Agency has
accepted for review an application from the Bend Area
Medical Center, Inc. of New
Haven, to operate dental
services in the existing Bend
Area Medical Center. This
project will be funded
through a Rural Health
Initiative grant and staffed
by National Health Service
Corps personnel. This applicat~ Jn has been completed
and the review process began
on November 22.
Any person affected by this
project has the right to
request a. public hearing on ·
the project. A public meeting
will be held by the West
Virginia Health Systems
Agency in the area sometime
during the review cycle as
part of their review, Any and
all interested persons may
attend this meeting in lieu of
a public hearing, The public
will be .notified by local newspapers of the date, location,
and time for the public
meeting. The West Virginia
Health Systems Agency will
conduct a review of this
project and submit a formal
recommendation to the State
Agency on or before
December 21.
A final decision will be
rendered by the State Agency
after it has reviewed the
contents of the public hearing
or meeting , the recom-

W. LARRY TURNER
W. Larry Turner, 43, 206
Main St., Mt. Cory, Ohio, a
·former Meigs resident, died
Tuesday afternoon while at
his employment in Mt : Cory.
Death was attributed to a
heart attack.
Mr. Turner was a son of
Henry and Grace Swearingen
Turner of Guysville.
He is also survived by his
wife, Barbara Combs Turner; a son, Jason, and a
daughter, Nancy, both at
home; two brothers, Roger of
Lahgsville, and Donald of
Albany, and a sister, Mrs. Joe
(Janet) Bolin of Rutland,
Born in Meigs County he
was a welder for Conrail. He
was
a
member
of
Harrisonville Masonic Lodge
411, F&amp;AM, and attended the
BONDS FORFEITED
Mt. Cory United Methodist
Omitted from the Meigs
Church. He was an army
County Court cases were two
veteran,
persons who forfeited bonds.
Funeral services will be
They
were James Soulsby,
held at 1:30 p.m. Friday at
Pomeroy, $360.50 on charges
the Bigony-Jordan Funeral
of OWl and Robert Edwards,
Home in Albany with the Rev.
Beverly, $353, DWI charges.
Olan Ha,vey officiating.
Burial will be in the school lot
cemetery. Friends may call p~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-ft
from 7-9 this evening at the ~ DECK THE HALLS WITH ~ESTIVE W
Basinger Funeral Home in
Buffington and· .from 7 to 9 - ~
p.m. Thursday at the Bigonyw
Jordan Funeral Home.
Masonic rites will be con- ~
w
ducted by the Harrisonville w
i
Lodge at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Albany Funeral Home,

Nine defendants forfeited
• bonds and six others were
fined in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were
Michael ,Taylor, Middleport,
$250 posted on a charge of
reckless operation ; Donald
Stobart, Pomeroy, $350,
I driving while intoxicated;
John M. Fultz, 20, Middleport, $30, failure to yield
the right of way ; Henry Hill,
Racine , $50, disorderly
conduct; Marilyn Gagnon,
Mason, $29, speeding; David
Herdman, Pomeroy, $50,
squealing tires ; George
Holman, Chapmanville, W.
Va., $36, speeding; Mary
Harris, Mason, W, Va., $350,
driving while intoxicated;
Minday Seymour, Middleport, $200, petty theft.
Fined
were
Ronnie
Pickens, Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, intoxication, and $250
• and costs, harassing phone
calls; Homer Blessing, West
Columbua, W. Va., $350 and
costs, driving while intoxicated, and $50 and costs,
no operator's license; Montie
Hart, Racine, $25 and costs,
• speeding; Reba Sarver,
Middleport; Mary Warth ,
Middleport ; Herman Staats,
New Haven, $200 and costs
each, all on charges of petty
theft.

I

dates amended

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="810">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11453">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50175">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50174">
              <text>December 6, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6000">
      <name>crary</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="789">
      <name>turner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
