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_____
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.1
1)-12- ThC SundHy Tmws-~,·nlln&lt;•l. Sunday . lk•·· Iii. I!l7R

people down;iver lo drink ... yet we a"' to believe 1ha l such as
1 these are going to [ollow all of the E , P. A. Clean Air~ l ean

I~ aad· Letters

·----"""-----""'------"""----"""----------------··
~

-Water Rules and Regulations??????
Our objections have a familiar SOWid simply because they
are the same objections that would be heard (rom any
community in this United States of America put in
I be withheld upon publlcaUon. However, oo request, similar circwnstances.
1 umea wW be dlaclosed ..Lelters should be In good taste,
We all realize that we live in a coal producing area, and that
1
Mdresliag lsoues, not personalities.
coal is the key to our present energy crises. We also know that
I
there are many other suitable places to gel this coal processed I
1
. Ll~.- ~
and into barges that would not Ioree all of us to pay this terrible ~
1
;o~
price so a lew might profit by it.
&amp;
I
~,z.
•
Col. Bicher of the Corps of Engineers stated thai President
Carter had put the highest prjorl.ty oo the production of coal. 1
·
cannot believe' however, that our President would so flagrantly
BEGINNING MONDAY, DECEMBER 11TH WE WILL IE OPEN
disregard tbe individual rights of so many people in this W
EVERY WEEKDAY NIGHT TIL 8 O'CLOCK
a
community if he had the ability to "Stand In Our ~OeS," and
am sending a copy of this letter to his office for his review and
r-·~--~.~-~~~~~~~~~~-·-~--~=~,~~·-!··,-····~·--·,·······~~~~
understanding . - Sincerely, Charles R. Landon, Box 62, 1
SHE'Ll LOVE. . .
FOR YOUR MAN
Crown City, Ohio Crown City, Ohio 45623.
December 7, 1978
I
Dear Sir:
Your recent story regarding the proposed coal processing
facility near Crown City, Ohio tends to be a bit misleading. The
Star Spangled Banner has the same familiar lines, and story to
In Nylon
leU, as it did when first written - but still stirs many hearts. Dear Sir:
Wrap up fhis lacy bodice
'n!Ough our protests may be the same, and familiar, we feel
Last year at the 1977 Christmas parade there were many
and tr im long set. In white
they are valid as follows:
people from Gallia and Mei1111 Counties and part;; of West
and pastels, S, M, L.
1. .It pollutes the atmosphere with dirt.
Virginia attending the annual Christmas parade. As you know,
Visit the women ' s lingerie
· 2. It pollutes the environment with noise .
many of the GSI resident;; are in the Christmas parade every
department 2nd floor.
3. The local roads and highways are not built to withstand the year which really make them feel like they are someone. Even
You'll like all the s!yles In
Solid colors - many,
women's gowns. pajamas,
lOads and increased traffic that this would ca\ISe ,
though somewhat limited, they really love something like that.
many
neat patterns.
robes, slips, panties, gown
: 4. There is no money available to upgrade the roads _and Last year, many people from Gallia and Meigs Counties
New
popular
widths.
and r obe sets. Let us help
referred 1o the GSI resident;; in an unkind manner. I, for one,
highways 1o be traveled.
·.. you with your selections.
Ask for free gift box .
· 5. The sulphur and sludlle from this facility would further don't like anyone to belittle the mentally retarded. To me, ·
pollute Shoal Creek and the Ohio River.
some one like this is really "sick in the head" themselves.
. 6. It would cause a devaluation of property.
I think if you really ·knew what mental retardation meant,
7.1t would curtail the'furlher development of our residential you would think twieehefore·calllng residents names. Stop and
\\
. \" \
.;ommunity as well as expansion of business,
think ,;_ for a few minutes - you could be in tbese residents'
• 8.11 would create an additional burden on the Gallipolis Lock place yourself.
·
and Dam system that is unable to handle present traffic
If I were you, I would pray to God that I had my good
adequately with no hope of correction until the mid 1980s.
healthand·thatJ'mnot in the shape that these residents are in.
FANNY FARMER
The principals speaking for this facility have asked us to I have many times.
THIS YEAR
trust them, and have made many promises. Again we must
If you only knew what it was all about then you could thank
look .at the past, when dead and diseased cattle were dumped God for your good health.
I think it takes a pretty low person to make IWI of or call a
011 the banks of the Ohio River to ROT and attrwct vermin until
the flood waters washed them down stream. And the manure mentally retarded person names. Many people all over Gallia
from their dairy herd was flushed into the Ohio River for the and Meigs Counties and some from Pt. Pleasant apply at the
., GSIIor jobs every day and every year. Well, if this is the way
~
you feel about the resident;; of tbe GSI, you don't deserve a job.
'
I know from experience that many people from the
surrounding areas are really afraid of these residents and
there is no need to be.
See our fine selection
The residents only need love, understanding, a king word,
of men's wallets and a helping hand. They aren't going to hurt any one.
Tri ·.Folds · Bifolds ·
•
Thanks to many of you ~le you have taken away one of
Attache Cases - Key
Stop in on the 1st floor- See the fine
their privileges of being in the parade, a beautiful privilege at
Tainers. All the new
selection
of boxed candy - Christmas
• that. lf only you could work with these residents lor a week or a
colors.
By .
• day or two then you probably would feel like !feel because
wrapped- ready to give.
·willis T. Leadingham e when !'work with these resident;; I really feel good inside and I
•
ReaHO&lt;
• sincerely hope I have opened up a 'few eyes on the mentally
e
• retarded.
Just think, that if you had child in the GSI would you
• ·
• want someone to call your child names? Of course not.
,,t
A homeowner has a big . oet the best prospects sl ip .:
I sure wouldn't want someone calling my child names.
. • investment. When the time through their fingers. . • Just because he or she was mentally retarded ..
-. comes to sell !hal home,
Believe me. List your
1 am really prpud to work lor tbe GSI. and for Mental
• It's
mighty,
mighty home with a Realtor from • Retardation and I don't think lor one minute that these
• Important that you sell the start and you'll realize • resident;; are freaks and I can't st•nd anyone else to refer to
• right ... to make sure the
as much if not more profit •
.....~
A big selection of all sizes in
• investment has been a good
and fewer probfems .from • them as freaks.
coats
and jackets, 1 to 3, 4 to
• one.
the sale than i! you try ,to do ·•
We, at the GSI, love our residents and we always will until
If pocketing a broker's
it on your own. Stahsf1cs
there is no more GSI.
6x and 7 to 14.
• commission tempts you,
have proven this· over and •
Boys and Girls Styles
e ask yourself if you can over aga in.
•
I sincrely hope I have opened your eyes on this subject of
e , afford to let an amateur
e mental retardation. It'sa beautiful thing to work with. Thanks
e manage a transaction that
e very much for reading ·my article. -Willard E. Thomas, Sr.
·• involves 1housands of
h'
....
A fine selection - our
• dollars : Your dollars!
If there is anyt mg we ,8
entire
· stock of junior,
Also specia I sale prices
When you want a joQ done
can do to help you in the •
field of real estate please
:• well , you call a specialist .
misses and women's
now on our entire stock. of
~ This is standard practice
phone or drop in at·•
HOlDS POLICE
Authorities
were
called
to
sizes
at
sale
prices
now.
children's
snow suits.
e for successful businessmen LEADINGHAM REAL• DAYTON, Ohio( UP!)- A the scene in the early
Perfect for Christmas
•
. why buck success?
ESTATE, 512 Second Ave.,e Dayton man, armed with
afternoon when Anthony
•
Some people try to sell
Gallipolis. Phon.e 446-7699.•
giving.
• their own property, fail and
We're here to help.
• explosives and automatic Lewis, 20; said he had taken
• then list it with .a Realtor.
.·
• weapons, held police at bay
two hostages and was
.• In the meantime, they' ve
• for more than live hours
barricaded in a tw&lt;&gt;-&amp;ory ·
Friday night before taking residence in north Dayton.
his own life.
ol oplnloo •re welcomed. They should be less
lllaa • wordl loag (orsubject to reduction by the edltor)
mUll be aiped with the signee's address. Names may

Make Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your

...

-.~~~~1~-~~~•

CHRISTMAS

} • • • ''Vf.•

~-

•

HEADQUARTERS.

Pomeroy business district flooded

entine

OPEN MONDAY NIGHT TIL 8

1

Galli citizens beware!

GOWN &amp; COAT
ENSEMBLE

Employee cares for patients

VOL XXIX. NO. 167

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1978

WEMBLEY
TIES

BY BOB HOEFLICH
'·

.,

\\

GIVE HIM A
· WALLET

..:· ea •:
. state :.

• • • • •• • • • •·"" • ""I" ' ·•

CHRISTMAS
BOXED
CANDY

Today •

•

BE SMART FROM THE START

• .

a

SPECIAL

SALE PRICES

WOMEN'S
COATS

·················~·········

Your Quality Used Car
Dealership....
.

'

PONTIAC

Smith Buick • Pontiac
'78 BUICK SKYHAWK

th,,

sports model rs super sharp msrde rtnd oul 1 Cla ssy

Carmme e-ter~or wr th matchlllK custom cloth
bucket seats Optrons mclude arr condrhonmg, ltlt
wheel. radro. ;port styled whee l covers. econom rcal
V·6 eniHll!. and radratl rres.

'78 BONN EVI U.E 4 O.Seda&gt;. "
tra clean lamrly srled ~uhJ . Arch c whrte liorsh wrt h
only 9.350 mrles Ask our sales per sonnel about
Sm1th's Spec1al 100 pe1cer.t t.ananly

.. $5995

Now

Custom.
ne~~t LeSab1e trade w1lh balance olfactory warranty.
CrUJse control. tilt wheel. a1r condltiOrllng. custom
~elo ur mtenor and rea1defroster.
Only ) ,02 ) low m1les.
Only .

.$5295

'78 TRANS AM f&lt;&gt;&lt;Shed mM"'"'d
w\lh wh1le bucket seats. Tht5 l ran s Amhas 11all. Att
condi\IOnlnl. cru1se control. till wheel. AM-FM 8
track. R~ll ye 11 wheels and ra1 sed wh1te letter tnes.
Th1s neN Bonnewllte trade IS a locally owned
automob1le. Only 4.191
low. low m1 les. Now..

'76 GRAND PRIX lJ

$4595

'78 BUICK C~ntury Custom. Mid·

night blue exterior with contrasting
cloth interior. Th1s locally owned new
Buick ·trade is equipped with V-8
engine, air conditioning, tilt steering
wheel, AM radio and
radial tires.
Now ..

'77 CHEVY

'78 CAMARO Thos spo&lt;ts model"'""
tc catch

'

'''

~our

attent1on, Carmme e-tenor ar1d black
buc~et seats w1th aH condltiOnlni. automaltC
tnmsm 1sSJOn. AM.FM rad1o ar.d
.sport sl}led wheel s.
Now .

Frg

... $5995

'78 CAMARO

It'll pay you to

finishetl in Chest&gt;ut

stop

Brown exterior with cloth bucket seat!. Automatic
transmiSSIOn. Rallye wheels. and onlv 6.2341ow, loW
mtles.
Now .

dresses . suits ·
Shirts · slacks ·

'78 CHEVETTE

Popular Hatchbock
rmdel in m1dnight black with accen\ stripes. ~M­
FM. tape plawer.

j

I

many,

how to please everyone...
give
If

you just

can't decide "

on whot to

give- Stop
in at

2nd
floor oHice

for a gift
certifieate.

many

M•~-

Ma&gt;te Carlo Stunn&lt;&gt;l
Aii!ht bl ue ltntsh w1th blue clolll mtt riOr. cru1se corilfOI. lilt wheel. rally wheels and much more. If you
are hlO~InliiiOr a sharp one. see th is one now.
?r1ced Accordmgly
Now

'75 CHEV, PICKUP
ped the way ou like them. Automatic,
mg, power brakes.
Camper topper . Was $3495.
Now .

CIO.

Equi~

FOR CHRISTMAS

CHAIR SALE

power steer-

$3\95

SCAR.FS .
&amp; SHAWLS

ON lHE 3RD FLOOR

$3995

You'll tlke the many styles
fAbr ics and colors in our

Sunday ShoppeiS
Welcome.
Come In &amp; BIOWSe

large selection ot g ill
chairs. Stop ln. select the

60 MORE TO

one you want Use our lay-

away plan, If you wish we' II deliver in time for

Christmas.

CHOOSE .FROM

SALE
PRICES ·

Phone 446-2282

Big Group
Choose from
sporty
and
fringed plaids
to delicately
knitted
evening
styles!

BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE SANTA CLAUS ·
MONDAY, TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY 1 TO 2 P.M.

_ ~lberfelds

Gallipolis

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

'

In Pomeroy

•

••

Gift

more.

$3395

I

I ..

J...__l_he_W...,._or_ld_To_d_a_y-:-

·lield in Warren County jail
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) - Joseph L. Mullins, 35,
Cincinnati, was held in the Warren County jall over the
weekend for felony charges from Dayton and· charges flled
after a 53-mile high"'Jleed car chase along Interstl!te 71
Saturday. At the ~d of chase, Mullins was charged with
reckless,dperatjon of a IJ¥)(or v~lcle, ~ding, fleeing and
alluding pollee olftcers, and ·driving a stolen car.
. Highway Patrol Trooper Jerry Sewell said he stopped the
auto driven bY Mullins on 1-71 near Kings Island Saturday for a
mlssing license tag. A pollee cbeck showed Mullins was
wanted by Da:ytm pollee oo four counts of Jddnapplng and two
coWJts of armed robberv.

London driving lulzardous
WNOON (UPI) - DriVing in London these· dsys has an
extra hazard. Traffic lights at 16 major intersections were o,!'l

of action because maintenance men are on strike.
On the other band, parking is a dream. Traffic wardens! in
a slowdown to back wage demands, have issued no parking
tickets at expired parking meters since Oct. 2. Cit~ officials
said the action has cost them $3 million so far in lost lmes.

Await autopsy results

.,

Restroom fire
investigated
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Three were caused by icy
office reports that the men's highways.
The first accident occurred
restroom lit the northbound
roadside park on U.S. 33 was on Saturday morning on U.S.
damaged by fire early 33 near the ColWilbus and
Sunday morning.
Southern Ohio Electric
According to information . Company Sub-Station.
Marie Pickens, 17, Racine,
received, a hitchhiker all'
parently cold, set a fire inside waa traveling north when she
the men's restroom using _ lost control on the slick highwastepaper and some sticks way. Her ve'bicle ran off the
be gathered from outside.
road into the yard at Paul
A paaslng motorist going King's home. There was
north found the hitchhiker in moderate damage.
the roadside rest and took the
Saturday at 2:30p.m. on SR
subject to an Athens hospital 7 at Hobson, Mary K.
lor treatment for frostbite. Moomaw, RD, Rutland, was
After rece)ving treatment, traveling north on SR 1 when
the subject was taken to the she lost control of a pickup
Athens County Sheriff's of· truck she was driving. The
flee. Atheni County deputies vehicle slid on ice that lor·
· advilled the individual was med on a bridge and struck a
transported to a state guardrail.
There
was
holl)lltal in Columbus. Name moderate damage. .
of the Individual was · wlthSunday at 8:40 a.m. icy
condllioos cauaed an accident
held.
The sheriff's department . involving two l!ickup trucks.
advised a 12 foot aluminum
(Continued on page 121
· gate reported stolen Oct. 20
•
by Betty Stol¢, Rt. 2, Albany, , ,• w ,c: &lt;!&gt;' ~('ft ot- ,,. &lt;'&gt;•~
hu been recovered. An adult ~
• , •
:"',
and two Juveniles fr~m :;'
;II •; ·
-~
Albany area will be charged. ~ •
. They have given officials a ;
.
·: ,
•
ltatement concerning the ·~
•
1;;;
.gate which wu recovered by ~ ·
:Athena pollee officers whlle 11,
0
'investigating other thefts. Ill
~
Sheriff Proffitt advises '•
r;
. _charges will be rued later this -~
'
week.
';&gt;,
_,. &lt;:' ·:&gt; &lt;" ~ - (' A'l.
Tbe .department
In- '· &lt;"&lt;!&gt;',("..,., .,. • ' ! "'' '
veatlaated four accidents
DAYS TO
resultlntl- In no personal in·
lurles and no citations being
CHRISTMAS

,('

1Q •

Jl':8: , ,

~-

The Ohio River crested in Pomeroy abo!lt 5
p.m . Sunday at 49 feet , two and one-half feet over
flood stage and four feet under the predicted
crest.
Some Main St. businesses had as much as a foot
and one-half of water while others had only a
couple of inches. Some, sitting just a little higher
than others, escaped without any water,
especially those in the lower business block .
The flood came suddenly Saturday forcing
merchants and their employes to work most of the
night moving stock to higher levels while
. preparing for the predicted 53 feet crest figure .
Missing water completely was the New York
Clothing House. Stock was not moved so the firm
will be able to reopen for business just as soon as
the water recedes .

Swisher=Lohse Drug Store
which got only a couple of
inches inside the store was
open for business Monday
with patrons using the back
door .
The Hood hit at a most
inopportune
time
Christmas shopping season which is normally a shot in
the ann for the economy of
the town.
As a result of the flood,
businesses will be closed for
several days since stock will
have to be returned to sales
during the day, at least the rate of rise. had decreased
POMEROY' CHRISTMAS decorations 8eemed out of
counters.
sharply by Sunday. The quickness with which the river
place surrounded by flood waters Sundsy - an incident
Hardest hit by water were
rose · wwi real element of surprise to residents and
which generally does not occur in December. Pomeroy
the business houses in the
especially business people who put in long hOurs Saturday
Main St. business operators were hit bard by the flood
upper block and those at the
night moving stock to higher locations.
waters in having 1o close their stores and move stocks
corner of E . Main and
from the rising flood at the peak of the Christmas
Sycamore St.
shopping season .
The river is apparently
going to make a slow retreat.
The crest of 49 feet held until
alter midnight. By 4 a.m.
Monday the water had
dropped only to 48.8 and only
to 48.6 feet at 6:45 a.m.
Southern Local Schoo l
District .was closed today, but
Eastern and Meigs Districts
were operating.
.
The Meigs office of the Ohio
Department of Highways
United i'reas!nternatlonal
in LebinCii.Juncilon, 35miles
The flooding prompted the Hooding was reported in the reported several roads closed
The Kentucky River, southwest of Louisville, weekend evaC!Iation of an ci!y and authorities said the including Route 7 at Forest
swollen to record levels by forcing evacuation of more · estimated 12,000 to 15,000 water level behind the dam Run; Route 124 at Antiquity;
Route 124 at Minersville;
flooding that forced the than SO families. A shortage resident;; - most of them in was dropping slowly.
248 in the Reedaville
Route
evacuation of up to 15,000 of drinking water was Paintsville, Ky., where
By 5 pm, Sund-ay, the level
area;
Route
338 at nwnerous
persons, slowly subsided reported in the area.
authorities were fearful a of the Kentucky River, which
places,
and
Route
33 near the
today and the frigid weather
At least two people died in leaking earthen dam across cuts through downtown
Service
Station.
Beacon
that e~veloped the northern the Hoods. The bodies of Tina the Paint Creek would burst. Frankfort, had risen to an
Middleport Village, which
states during the weekend Wright, 22, and her 3-year-&lt;lld Those
residents · were unofficial 49.8 feet
is
higher than Pomeroy, was
gave way to moderating tem- son, Terry Lee, both of permitted 1o return home breaking the record 47.5
virtually
unaffected by the
peratures.
recorded in the great flood of
Bowling Green, Ky., were Sunday night.
water
.
Police and National found in their auto, which
Despite the evacuation of !937. Some downtown buildIn Syracuse three mobile
Guardsmen
Initiated apparentlv had been driven virtually all but emergency ings still bear water marks
homes
were evacuated
salvaging operations Sunday
crews in Paintsville little from that earlier Hood.
:Heel of water.
Saturday night. The homes
in Frankfort, Ky., where
were along the river near the
more than 1,000 families were
Racine Planing Mill.
forced from their homes.
Furnishings and belongings
Heavy security measures to
of the families were stored at
protect against looters were
the mill. The water did get
ordered by Gov. Julian M.
into the three homes plus two
Carroll, who declared a state
others
and a camper which
of emergency.
set
along
the river on Sunday.
The flooding in Kentucky's
capital city was the worst
Meanwhile, according to
among dozens of towns in
The Gallia-Meigs Post, Jenkins, ran off the right side collision at 11:55 a.m. on United Press International :
Kentucky and West Virginia Highway Patrol, investigated of the roadway and over- Bidwell-Rodney Rd., two and
hit by heavy rains in recent sixteen weekend accidents. turned.
Gov . James A. Knodes
one-tenth of a mile north of
days. Flooding -also was · Danny Jenkins, 30, Mid·
Jenkins was uninjured. U.S. 35.
today ordered an additional
reported along the Levisa dleport, was cited on charges There was moderate damage
According to the patrol, a 25 Ohio Na tional Guard
Fork of the Big Sandy and of DWI following a one- to the vehicle.
into
two
north bound auto driven by members
along the Ohio, Salt, Licking, vehicle accident Mondav at
There were no. injuries Preston Jarrell, 17, Bidwell, southeastern Ohio comGreen, Red and Upper 2:15a.m. on Story's Run Rd., sustained during five Sunday went out of control in a curve, mWJities that have been hit
Cumberland Rivers.
one and two-tenths of a mile accidents investigated by the slid left of center into the path by .floodwaters, leaving 6,000
As floodwaters · moved east of SR 554.
patrol.
of a north bound vehicle people in one area stranded
downstream, some new
Officers were called to the operated by Raymond Pope, and foccing the removal of 20
Ollicers' report a west
floodinR was reported toda.v bound auto operated by scene of a two-vehicle 34, Vinton.
Officers report severe
damage to the Jarrell auto,
moderate damage to the
Pope vehicle.
Jarrell was cited on
charges of left of center.
Officers investigated a twovehicle accident at 11:35 a.m.
on Nebo Rd., two-tenths of a
mile north of SR 325.
By JOHN T. KADY
The patrol reports a north United Press !nteroatlooal
bound auto operated by
A United Parcel Service
Charles Richards, 58, Patriot, truck, running beside a steelslid down a hill, went left of hauling rig on the Ohio
center and struck a south Turnpike , was struck by
bound vehicle driven by gunfire early today, as a
Dorsi! Smith, 51, Patriot, strike by the Fraternal
head-&lt;ln.
· Association of Steel Haulers
Officers report moderate entered iU! fifth week .
damage to both vehicles.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
The patrol was called to the saldthesniperwasprobably
scene of a two-auto mishap at aiming at the steel-hauling
, 5 p.m. on SR 218, three-tenths rig, which belonged to a
of a mile south of CR I.
Y9ungstownfinn, but missed
Officers report a south and hit the UPS !ruck . There
bound auto operated by were no injuries.
Kenneth Boster, 55, · Crown
Meanwhile, attorneys for
City, was unable to.stop and major steel companies
· struck a stalled vehicle returned to court In
driven by Roy Hill, 35, Bid· Pittsburgh to seek an
well, in the rear.
injunctloo to end the strike.
Boster was cited on
More than 380 separate
charges of assured clear incidents , including
distance.
vandalism against trucks,
There wa s moderate bricks an&lt;j rocks being tossed
damage to the !laster auto, off overpasses and gunfire by
slight dsmage to the Hill snipers in cars and .behind
vehicle.
hills, were recorded by Ohio
Officers investigated a two- and Pennsylvania authorities
LOT UNDER WATER- This Is the vi1lqe owned ])fll'tlng lot between Mechanic St., and
Butternut Ave., and the surroundin_g area which wu flooded on Sunday, Three .vehicles auto collision on Mitchell Rd., since FASH launched the
,were trapPecl in the water which alao rose higti, at the rear .of the new Pomeroy lire
one-tenth of a mile north of · strike m Nov. 10.
department headquarters m Butternut.
(Continuejl on page 12)
it
l

Kentucky River begins
subsiding early today

autoplly would determine whether a mentally-handicapped
boy was murdered by the man who was both his teacher and
(Continued on page 12)

sleepwear and

BUICK
PONTIAC
1911 Eastern Ave.

e a n s

BUSINESS DISTRICT FLOODED - This was the
Pomeroy East Main St. business section about ,1 p.m.
Sunday as water lapped at the doors of most of the
es\abllshments. While the Ohio River continued to rise

TOMS RIVER, N. J . (UPI) - Pollee today hoped an

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River crests
at 49 feet
Sunday night

mlo

OSP investigated 16
·area traffic mishaps

mobile homes in another .
The Guard members joined
25 others already on duty in
the communities of Point
Pleasant, Moscow and New
Richomond .
About 6,000 people, in
Gallia County, are isolated
because the Ohio River and
Raccoon Creek, have jumped
their banks and blocked five
main roada. Civil defense
officials biggest coocern is
that the resident;; could not
get to a hospital in an
emergency.
A
National
Guard
helicopter was St)nt Sunday
night from Columbus to
Gallia-Meigs Regional
Airport, in Gallipolis, where
it · is standing by to take
persons to nearby hospitals,
if necessary.
The Ohio River was at 52feet Sunday in Gallipolis, tbe
county seat of Gallia , and is
expected 1o crest at 53.5 feet
Tuesday morning, about I 'h
feet above floodstage in
Gallipolis , according to
county civil defense workers.
Bob Donnally, the ci~il
defense director lor Gallia
County, said the 6,000 people
are in the villages of Vinton,
Cheshire, and Addison. in the
northern sections of the
county, and in Centenary and
Crown City ,
in
the
southeastern section of the
county.
"We have 25 to 30 four·
wheel drive vehicles , 10 boat;;
and one amphibious craft to
gel to the resident;;. We
requested the helicopter in
case, we needed it/' he ·said.
Donnally said residents in
the areas still have utilities
and can communicate with
citizen band radios if
necessary. He said there are
no injuries.
In New Richmood, in aermont County, 25 National
Guardsmen from Batavia,
and six vehicles are standing
by if evcacution is necessary.
Kenneth Conover, civil defense director for Clermont
County, said in New
Richmond 20 mobile homes,
near the Ohio River , have
been moved because of tbe
threat of high waters. He .
reported no roads closed
Sunday night. New Richmond
(Continued on page 12)

Parcel vehicle
hit by gunfire
Teamsters and other
truckers not on strike have
taken safety measures,
including traveling
in
convoys, staying off roads at
night, and sleeping in their
rigs.
The U.S. Steel Corp., Jones
&amp; Laughlin , WheelingPittsbur gh
Steel
Co .,
National
Steel
Co .,
Bethlehem
Steel,
Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube Co.
and Republic Steel Co., are
fighting FASH in the U.S.
District courtroom
In
PitU!burgh of Judge Louis
Rosenberg .
They sued for f3 mWion in '
damages from FASH, a
$100,000 a day fine as long as
the strike continues and
individual fines against
FASHolficersandmembers.
The companies 'also
demand a restraining order
w end the stri~e on grounda
the current F ASH is the same
organization served with an
injunction in a 1970 shutdown .
barring
FASH
from
· interfering
with steel
shipments, )
;I

�Ohio State responds
after coach explodes

2-~ Daily SentiN,I, Middleport-Pomeroy: 0 ., Mund•y, Dt~·. II. 1978
~--=--:-:-:=--:=--..

II
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

\f ~\N'T Kl' fNJLT..
t\t: ~T MN&lt;.E

THE U.S.

ME QU\1. ..

YOU

William Steif

.

Homesteading, city-style ·

Brock's gamb.le pays off
By Martha Aqle aDd Robert Walters

r

WASHINGTON (NEA) -Republica" moderates, on the
upswing again after )!ears of frustration and second-elass
citizenship within the party, can thank GOP National
I
Chairman BiU Brock for making their comeback possible.
To the fury of hard-eore COIIServatives and the astonish.,,'
ment of GOP liberals, .b oth of whom expected something
quite different, Brock has used the chairmanship to halt
the steady narrowing of the party's base which had
proceeded virtually unchecked since the Goldwater era.
Deliberately refusing to involve the 1\epublican National
Committee in divisive ideological battles like the Panama
Canal fight - ev,en when pressed to do so by the likes of .
Ronald Reagan ·- Brock has concentrated on broadening
the party''s appeal and building its base at the state and
local level.
He has done so at considerable personal risk, gambling
that purge threats from the right wing would subside if his
open~()Or policies and well-financed organizational efforts
produced signiflcant gains in this year's elections.
The gamble appears to have paid off. GOP gajns in state
legislatures, governorships and· the U.S. Senate surpassed
all expectations and were especially impressive in the
Midwet;t, the traditional Republican heartland which ·had
fallen to the Democrats after Watergate.
Equally important, some of the most significant GOP
victories this year were achieved by moderate-to-liberal
RepublicaJIS in states with a Democratic registration edge
- Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Wisconsin and the like.
Candidates like Richard Thornburg, the new governor of
Pennsylvania, or William Milliken, re'elected governor of
Michigan, didn't win by toeing some narrow ideological
line. They won by appealing to voters who normally would
go Democratic. Thornburg pulled 50 percent of the black
vote, for instance, while M!lliken carried Wayne County
(Detroit).
·
Candida.t es like Thornburg and Milliken were practicing , CLEVELAND ( UPI) what Brock has been r.reachlng in his two years as party Attorneys are cmlinulng the
chairman .. Under his eadership, there is no more talk at jury selection amid reports
Republican National Committee meetings of "writing off" that defendants In the Kent
: - any segment of the electorate, no more "Southern State shootings retrial,
' strategy" or "Sun belt strategy."
.
.
Including Gov. James A.
On the contrary, Brock brought chariSmatic . bla~k Rhodes and 27 National
leader Jesse Jackson to address one RNC meeting m G _._
·
yin
Washington and then hauled the Republicans off to Detroit
uar......en,. ~e . tr g to
for an education on urban problems on another occasion . settle the Civil suit out of
He has poured money and manpower irito programs court.
A source familiar with the
designed to attract blacks and other minorities to the GOP,
and has met privately with union leaders to explore areas case has told United Press
of common Interest with labor.
International the defendants
And most of aU, he has set RNC professionals to work offered $600 000 to settle the
recruiting attractive candidates at the state and local level suit out-of-c~urt
- candidates wbo are pragmatists rather than purists.
The trial ste~ from the
Most Republicans had no clear idea what kind "of
·
• · chairman arock would be when he was elected two years May 1970 shootings of 13
ago in the aftermath of the bitter Ford-Reagan fight. The students ~t ~e university.
former Tennessee senator, who had just lost his seat, was a The plaintiffs m the case are
compromise choice when neither the Reagan nor the Ford " the parents of the four dead
forces could elect their own candidates.
students and nine students
. Althoullh Brock had supported Ford during the primary wounded by National Guard
battles,~ Senate voting record wa~ conservative en?ug~ fire during an anti-war
to make him acceptable to Reagan1tes. Moderates d1dn t demonstration
on . the
expect much of him, but lacked the clout to elect one of
their own.
campus.
Attorneys far the plaintiffs
Despite differences over the Panama Canal, Reagan who has been moving toward the center himself~ remains and the defendants refused
on fairly good tenrul with Brock. And moderates like .during . the weekend to
Milliken, who opposed his selection two years ago, now call confirm or deny the report.
him "tile best chairman in recent history."
"I woo 't comment m the
The o r Republicans stul angry with Brock are the report," said Sanford J .
"New R t" types - and they are finding it difficult to
argue wi . the GOP successes at the polls this year. '!The Rosen,
the
plaintiffs'
proof of the puddi!lg ... ,"Brock murmurs with a grin.
attorney. "I plan to 1M! in
court Monday to select a

,.'

Kent State case could
conclude out of court

jury."

HEALTH

Burt Fulton, one of three
attorneys representing the
defendants, would mly say,
"I have no comment on it."
Arthu~ Krase, Mrs. Martin
Scheur and Mrs. Louis Schroeder, three of the parents, all
refused to comment on the
latest offer.
According to the source,
' the defendants' offer was a
counter offer to one made
earlier by the plaintiffs,
which was rejected.
The plaintiffs had been
after considerably more
money. If the . offer is
accepted, the 'a greed upon
money would have · to be
appropriated by the Ohio
General
Assembly
or
approved by the State
Controlling Board.
An out-&lt;&gt;f-court setUement
would not be considered an
admission of guilt by the
state, but would be to
compensate the plaintiffs for
prior legal costs, according to
the source.
Sow-ces said a substantial
part of the settlement would
go to Dean Kahler, 28, wl\o
remains paral~ed from a
bullet fired into his spine as

•
"I have no comment," he
he was walldng 295 feet from
the Guardsmen. Kahler added. "I have never made a
works in Athens, Ohio, for the cmunent on the Kent State
Ohio Industrial Commission, case in eight years. It's a
setting up a safety program volltatle case. It'·s an
for handicapped workers . emotional case, and I feel it's
The p\alntlffs charge that the best that we don't say
National
Guard
used anything."
The first trial's ruling In
unnecessary
force ' in
1974
was against the
dispersing the May 4th rally.
plaintiffs.
But the 6th Circuit
In their suit, the plaintiffs
of
Appeals in
Court
do not ask for a specific
Cincinnati
ordered
a new
amo\Dlt, However, in the first
Kent State trial they trial because of threats
requested $46 million in against one of the jurors.
Judge William Thomas, who
damages.
The source said an earlier is nearing the case, has taken
offer was not made by the unusual precautions in
state because of election questioning the jury to
prevent anything again whlch
politics.
cause the verdict to be
might
At the time, Rhodes was
in an appeal.
reversed
involved in r~lectlon, as
In the case
Defendants
were members of the General
Include Ohio
besides
Rhodes
Assembly , so a state
Natimal
Guard
Adj. Gen .
appropriation to the plaintiffs
might have affected the Sylvester T. Del Corso, Bljg.
Gen. Robert Canterbury and
outcome of the election.
State Attorney General officers and soldiers at the
William Brown said, "This site of the shootipgs.
The four students killed at
office will maintain the same
position on Kent State that it Kent State were Sandy
has !lad fr the past eight Scheur, William Schroeder,
years and that is that it w!ll Jeff Miller and Allison
make no comment on pending Krause.
litigation."

Angry governor orders probe

By WOllam SleU
The 19th century cry was "40 acres and .a m~e." Any
American could go west, stake out land and,1fhe lnlproved
it - that is, farmed - it would be his. That was
homesteading.
th ·t ·
Today homesteading has been transplanted to e Cl 1es.
It's " an idea whose time bas come," says Nancy ~teetle,
who runs the program for the Department of Housmg and
Urban Development.
.
.
HUD owns nearly 30,000 foreclosed smgle-fa?HlY ho!ll.es.
It gives groups of these homes m !l city s . declinmg
neighborhood to the city, and the c1ty m tum g1ves those
homes, free, to selected persons if they'll fix up " the
property and occupy it.
·
·
In short, for an investment of your labor or your money,
or both, you can have a home at a knocked'&lt;!own price.
. Considering real estate prices these Clays, thiS can be a
good deal.
There are some catches.
.
First; not all cities qualify. Most cities have decilnmg
neighborhoods, but for urban homesteading to work there
has to be a cluster of foreclosed or abandoned homes in an
area, so that the renovation helps revitalize the entire
neighborhood .
·
·.
Another catch: the neighborhood can't be to:o b1~. For
example Detroit tried to qualify nearly the entire c1ty for
the HUD program. That's too big a bite.
.
Then there's the question of selectmg prospective home
owners. This can be tricky. Some cities prefer re'!t~rs who
don't have enough moriey to buy a home. Some c11les, like
Minneapolis, run lotteries. Others, li~e At!~nta, scr~en
homesteader applicants through a f1ve-e1t1Zen rev1~w
board . However it's done, the city has to be staffed to pick
the new owners fairly and then follow up to ml!ke sure the
property is brought up to local standards.
.
Usually, after three yea-rs of occupancy, title to the
homestead is turned over to the buyer who fixed it up.
Thirty-nine cities took part in HUD's demonstration
program. A total of 2,842 HUD-i!wned homes were given ~o
those cities and the improvements have had "a catalytic
effect" on the neighborhoods, says Ms. SteeUe. Other
abandoned houses in the neighborhoods acqwred value
and were renovated and reoccupied. The cities improved
streets, lightirJg, security and schools, sometimes partly
with federal funds . Small businesses reappeared and
prospered. The cities' tax bases increased·.
Philadelphia and Dallas, where 349 and 340 ho11_1es
respectively were turned over by HUD, are outstanding
examples of success. But the program wasn't and isn't
confined to big cities. For example, Decatur, Ga.,
Freeport, N.Y., Rockford, Ill., and Compton, Calif., have
participated.
Ms . Steetle says the cities have to be alert for
'~displacement" - wealthier folks pushing P?"r people out
of a neighborhood through· urban homesteadmg. The HUD
program has had none of that so far, she says.
But urban homesteading can be quite costly. In
Baltimore's Inner Har.bor the new owners spent up to
$60,000 per home. That's unusual. Generally, th~ renovation bill, per home, runs $6,000 to $30,000. The variables are
enormous.
·
If you want to know more about urban homesteading 1
Ms. Steetle's office has just published a pamphlet entitlea
" Urban Homesteading: A Guide for Local Officials," but
don't let the title scare you, Ask for it at any of the 40 HUD
offices; they're listed in the r.hone ~k under U.S.
Government. If you have troub e getting the pamphlet.
write Nancy Steetle,· Director, Urban Homestea~
Program, HUD, Washington, DC, 20410.
Then walk into y.our local councilman's office, slap th1
pamphlet on his desk and say, "How about doing thts•"

Peopletalk

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Impatience leads
to enemas

i"

FALCON GRID STANOOUTS -A benquet honoring the football teams
at Wahama Junior and Senior High was held Friday evening at the
school. Shown are some of the seniors recognized for their outstanding
play on the varsity team. In -the front row, are tbe players, while behind
each player are the people who presented the awards. First. row, left to
right: John Barton, Best Defensive Lineman; Tim Richard, Best
Defensive Back; Kevin Roush, Leadership Award; Jack Smith. Most

:.All five berths determined
BY JOE CI\RNICEW ·
UPI Executive Sports Editer
All five playoff berths In the
AFC have been determined
and there are two NFC
championshill'! decided but
it'll go do1m to the wire for
the division nobody wants.
That's the NFC Central,
where the MiJ¥1esota Vikings
and the G~een Bay Packers
seem to be determined to give
the title away.
New England won the AFC
East Utle Sunday by beating
Buffalo 26-24 and Denver took
the AFC West title by
crushing Kansas City 24-'1.

Miami and Houston earned
the wild card or best
runnerup slots when the
Dolphins beat Oakland 23-ji
and Houston stopped New
Orleans 17-12 after Cleveland
ousted the New York Jets
from contention with a 37-34
overtime victory and San
Diego bumped Seattle 37-10.
Dallas already has clinched
the NFC East title and Los
Angeles is the NFC West
champion but the Central
Division remains muddled
after both Minnesota and
Green
Bay
suffered

i

1~.

Hla other managerial pall
included
teama
a
Milwaukee, Albuquerqu•
N.M., Macon, Ga., an
Fargo, N.D.

f&gt;.l.

Detroit mauled Minnesota
4S-14 Saturday, one of the
Vikings' worst beatings in
years,. but Green Bay blew a
chance to take a one-game
lead with a week to go in the
season by losing I~ to
Chicago on Sunday.
Minnesota is at Oakland
next week and Green Bay is
at Los Angeles. II both win or
both lose, Minnesota is the'
~hampion
because the
Vikings won one . game
ag~inst Green Bay and tied

,.

By CATHY WOLF
'' UPI Spor\1 Writer
It will probably be a long
time before Kansas guard
Darrell Valentine tries
calling another tbneout.
Valentine's attempt with
three .seconds left in overtime
Saturday night cost the fifthranked Jayhawks a technical
foul and the game - a 67.00
loss to 14th-ranked Kentucky.
"Oh, lord, whatever in the
world was I thinking?"
moaned Valentine, who was
apparently hoping to give his
coach and team a chance to
talk over strategy after
Kentucky guard Kyle Macy
sank a jwnper to tie the
game. But the Jay'hawks had
. used up their allotment of
tlmeouts.
Macy went to the line and
Flinched the victory for the
defending champions, who
. scored six points In the last
·half minute of overtime.
Kentucky, supposedly
rebuilding after losing four of
its top six men from last
year's championship squad,
was doWn 35-28 at the half but
managed to knot the score 5656 by the end of regulation
play. The victory gives
Wildcats a ~ record.

"

S.D., in 11131. Hill Reds caree
ended in 1831, and the neJ
yer joined the Red Blrdl. H
D18118ged the Red Blrda 194:
44 and the Columbus Jet

damaging defeats to fall to 8-

·Technical foul costs
•
·Kansas, Wildcats wzn
Michigan beat Dayton GlHil
and No. 9 North Carolina
State toppled Campbell
College 108-83.
Top..-snked Duke and No .
10 Southern California were
idle.
Led' by Gregory Keiser,
who scored 27 points and Jay
Vincent , who added 23,
Michigan State held off a
furious rally to defeat
Fullerton 92-89. After trailing
by as much as 18 points,
Fullerton, now 3-1, cut the
lead to three' on a free throw
by Mike Niles with 24 seconds
remaining . But Spartan
Terry Donnelly made four
straight free throws to
protect the win.
Darrell Griffith scored 29
points and Derek Smith
addeil 19 to lead Louisville
over Idaho. The Cardinals, S1, outscored Idaho ~ in the
first six minutes of the second
half to open a 71-22 lead.
Texas ran its season record
to 4-2 as Tyrone Branyan
scored 28 points In an easy
win over Oklahoma State, 2-2.
Texas scored the first 11
points of the game and went
on to boost! its record to 4-2.
Sophomore forward Mike
McGee scored '%/ poiilts and
Phil Hubbard chipped in 17 as
Michigan held on in the
second half for its win over
Dayton, 2-2. The Wolverines,
now 3-1, led 39-30 at halftime
after outscoring Dayton 1&amp;.2
during an eightminute burst
late in the period. ·
Charles
"Hawkeye"
Whitney and Clyde Austin
combined for 49 points as
North Carolina State broke
opeo a close game down the
regular season Defore 10smg
stretch to defeat Campbell.
their second NCAA playoff
Whitney, scored 22 of his
game to Eastern Illinois, a
game high Tl points in the
team they defeated during
fU"st half, while Austin saved
the regular season.
16 of his 22 for the second half.
Narduzzi, whose Penguins
In games involving the
won the new Mid-Continent
"Second 10," no. 11 Indiana
Conference championship but
stopped Bradley ~. No. 12
lost In the aemiflnals of the
North Carolina drubbed
NCAA Division n playoffs,
Jacksonville 85-56, no. 13
received 10 of tbe first place
Syracuse edged RhOde Island
votes cast by 30 of the 32 Ohio
7M, No. 16 San Francisco
college coa.c hes polled .
downed Sacramento State 78, Based m three points for a
59, no. 17 louisiana State
first place vote, two for · dumped
Tulane
96-88,
eecond 8nd one for third,
Rutgers, no.l6, lost to
Narduzzl totaled 39 points,
VUlanova 86o6'l and no . 20
three more than Tressel,
Marquette
topped Missouri
whose Yellow Jackets
7f-57. No . l5 Alabama and no.
ftnl!hed 11-&amp;-1 and won the
NCAA Division Ill title with a 19 Minnesota had the night
win over Wittenberg In the off.
On Sunday, Ernie Cobb's 28
ftnala.
points
carried undefeated
Strahm, whose Findlay
Boston
College to a 78-65
team lost to Concordia
victory
over
New Hampshire.
(Minn.) Saturday in the
BC
raised
its
record to IHl NAIA Dlvlalon D flnaiB, the
its
best
start
since
the 1~7 "
Oilers' only louin 12 games,
season.
ftnlahed with 30 points.

Kentucky Coach Joe Hall
adll)lts the Wildcats don 't
have anywhere near the
ltlUSCie they displayed in the
Rick RobeyMike PhillipsJames Lee era, but he likes
their new look.
Macy finished with a teamhigh 15 points and LaVon
Williams added 10. Kansas
was led by Valentine with '%/
points. Tony Guy contributed
13 and John Craqford 11 for
the Jay'hawks, who lost their
first game after four wins all at home.
On the West Coast Saturday
night, third-ranked Notre
Dame defeated UCLA by
three points, just like In their
other two victories in Pauley
Pavillion.
·"
Led by Rich Branning and
Kelly Tripucka, who chipped
in 21 points each , the Irish, 40, handed the second-ranked
Bruins their first loss of the
season , an 81-76 squeaker.
In other games Involving
ranked teams, No . 4
Michigan State trinuned Cal
State-Fullerton 92 - 89,
Co-No.
5
Louisville
slaughtered Idaho 10154, N'o. 7 Texas defeated
Oklahoma State 48$:70, No. 8

.·Narduzzi Ohio
.~ Co'a ch of, Year

GAHANNA, Ohio (UPI) Services will be held today
for " Henry "Nick" Cullop,
former manager of the
ColumbUs Red Birds and
Cincinnati Reds player. He
died Friday at ll W~rvllle
cmvaleecent . center at the
age .of 711.
Cullop started playing
mlqor league ball at Madlaon,

Valuable Player and Best Defensive back: DeWayne Williamson, Most
Improved Player; and Mike King, Best Offensive Lineman. Back row :
Jim Layne, Mason County Bank; Corena Roth, representing Miller's
Insurance; Richard Ohlinger, Mason V.F.W .; Bob Barnitz,
Bob's Market; Paul Maynard, American Legion of New Haven: Rev.
John Campbell, representing Waddell and Reed .

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
·• 19780hloCollegeCoachofthe
Year Award goes to BW
Narduzzl, who directed the
, Younglllown State University
football team to Its most
IIUCceuful record In history
' by raclting up a 11}.2 mark. ·
Narduzzi, in his fotrth year .
. st YSU, edged out 1977 coach
. of the year Lee Tressel of
, Baldwin-Wallace 1!1 the
, 8llllual· poll Clllducted by The ·
. Columbus Dispatch , while
Findlay's Dick Strahm
·
finllhed third.
"Thlllldnd of puts me In the
category, at least on paper, of
lllllle of my llllgtime Idols,"
laid Narduul, a native · of
,.. Elllt c.nton 8Dd a graduate ·
·, ol Miami Univtll'lity.
.,
Narduul referred to John
Pont and lira Parseih!an
· fouuer Miami coaches wheri
• he played with the Redlkins
. 111d · Woody Hayes anothe~
;, former Miami rneni«.
" The Per~gulna posted a 11-1

·'

the other. The Packers' lone touchdown .
Falcons 20, Redsklns 17
shot at the title is to beat Los
Tim Mazzetti, given a
" Angeles while Oakland downs
second chance on a n offsides
Minnesota .
The NFC wild card picture penally, kicked a 32-yard
has Atlanta a virtual field goal with no time left to
certainty after the Falcons lift Atlanta past Washington .
raised their record to 9-6 with Mazzetti 's 37-yard try was
a 20-17 vict ory ove r deflected but he made good
Washington . The Falcons when the bali was moved five
need only to beat St. Louis ya rds closer after the
next week to ma ke th e penalty .
Bears I!, Pa ckers 0
playoffs. Others in contention
Walter Payton went a yard
at 8-7 are Washington and
Philadelphia. The Redskins for one TD and Mike Phipps
.face the Bea rs on Saturday threw 35 yards to J ames Scott
and Philadelphia plays host for an other to help Chicago
to the New York Giants upset Green Bay.
Browns 37, J ets 34 (ot)
Sunday.
Don Cockroft 's 22-yard
In other games Sunday, it
was Dallas 31, Philadelphia field goal 3:07 into sudden
13; the Giants 17, St. Louis 0; death overt ime bo osted
and San Francisco 6, Tampa C1eveland over New York and
Bay 3. Pittsburgh routed knocked the Jets out of
Baltimore 35-13 Saturday and contention. The Browns blew
Cincinnati is at Los Angeles a 17-point lead when the Jets
scored 24 consecutive points
tonight.
in the final per iod but tied the
Patriots 26, !!ills 24
score with 18 seconds left in
Rookie David Posey hit on
r egulation when Brian Sipe
a 21-yard field goal with eight
hit Calvin Hill on an 18-yard
seconds left to lift New
TD pass .
England over stubborn
Cowboys 31, Eagles 13
Buffalo and· provide the
Tony Dorsett and Scott
Patriots with their firs t Laidlaw each scored twice to
division title in 15 years .
lead Dallas over Philadelphia
Broncos 24, Chiefs 3
and give the Cowboys the
Craig Morton, . in the best
home fi eld advanU! ge in the
day of his 14-year career,
fir st round of the NFC
completed 19-of-22 passes for
playoffs. The Cowboys, who
288 yards and three TDs to won the NFC East title last
lead Denver over Kansas City
converted
two
week,
and give the Broncos their turnovers into touchdowns on
second straight AFC West
Laidlaw' s 1-yard run a nd a
lille. Morton, who completed 16-yard pass from Roger
86.3 per cent of his passes, the
Staubach to Dorsett.
second best performance in Chargers 37, Seahawks 10
NFL history , hit Riley Odoms
Dan Fouts threw three TO
for TDs on passes of 23 and 29 passes, two to rookie John
yards. He also completed 16
J efferson, as San Diego
straight passes to tie for the ended Seattl e's playoff hopes.
second best perfo rmance
Fouts had scoring passes of
ever in that category .
31 and six yanls to Jefferson
. Dolphins 23, Raiders 6
and a 5:&gt;-yar d TD bom b to
· Linebacker Larry Gordon
Larry Burton . He was 22-&lt;&gt;f.JJ
intercepted three passes,
for 279 yards .
recovered a fumble and
Giants 17, Cardinals 0
blocked an extra point try to
Randy Dean threw his first
lead Miami over Oakland and NFL touchd own pass, a 6int9 a wild card berth. The yarder to tight end Gary
victory brought the Dolphins Shirk, and Doug Kolar rushed
their first playoff berth since for 117 yards and a TD to help
1974 and knocked the Raiders th e Giants snap a six-game
out of postseason play for the losing streak with a victory
first time in seven years.
over St. Louis"
Oilers 17, Saints 12
49ers 6, Buccaneers 3
Robert Woods ran 80 yards ' Ray Wersching 's 3().yard
for a TO on a short pass from field goal on the fina l play
Dan Pastorini to carry lifted San Francisco over
Houston over New Orleans Tampa Bay. It was only the
and into the playoffs as an second victory for the 49ers.
AFC wild card entry.
Saturday
Pastorini, who played with
Steelers 35, Colts 13
broken ribs , completed 12-ofTerry Bradshaw threw
18 passes for 137 yards and a through steady snow for three
TDs to lead Pittsburgh over
Ba ltimor e and insure the
Steelers the home field
advanta ge thou ghout the
AFC playoffs .
REPORTS NEEDED
Lions 45, Vikings 14
Area seventh, eighth, and
Gary Danielson threw for
ninth grade coaches are
urged to stop by the Sentinel fiveTDs, the most productive
office and pick lip game output in the NFL this year,
Detroit
jolted
report forms. It is bnperative and
that you do this to ensure Minneso ta's playoff plans by
publica lion of the con tests. routing the Vikings.

. By
United
Pres s
International
An " upset" Ohio State
Basketball Coach Eldon
Miller " leaned " on his
players at halftime, and they
responded with what he
believes to be the best play of
the year .
The intermission talk produced results, for the
Buckeyes outscored
Tennessee, 49-36, in getting
an 86-78 victory at Knoxv!lle
Saturday night. Ohio State
was headed by sophomore
Todd Penn with 16 of his 18
points in the last half surge.
''lleaned on them a little at
halftime and it really paid
off ," Miller said. "We really
did ourselves proud in the
secondhalf . lthinkweplayed
our best basketball of the
year."
Miller said he told his team
to just run ·the offense
properly and the 15-foot
jumpers would start opening
up.
Coach Don DeVoe credited
the second half breakdown by
Tennessee, now 2-2, to a lack
of "ability to handle the
basketball and to generate on
· ,
offense ."
" Ohio Stale stuck In there
and made us look like a bunch
6f kids," he said. " They
turned the game around with
their poise. "
Penn and center Herb WilIiams brought Ohio State,
now 3-2, .b ack from a 35-25
deficit late in the first half. At
intermission, the Buckeyes
trailed, 42-37. Penn and junior
guard Kelvin Ransey led the
Buckeyes attack with 18
points each . Williams had 14.
Nick Daniels tallied 27
points and Keith Walker 25 in
sparking Xavier University
to an easy 107-77 win over
State
at
Morehead
Cincinnati , after overcoming
th e Eagles' early lS-11 lead .
The Muskies, now 3-1, lead by
a t least seven points the rest
of the way.
Also in Cincinnati, center
Pat Cummings racked up 23
points as the Bearcats pulled
away fr om a 38-36 halftime
lead and held on for a 7S-73
victory over Duquesne.
Cincinnati weathered the
Dukes' six-point which
trinuned the defi cit to 73-71
with 15 seconds to go , when
Bearcats 's
Mick
the
Shoemaker was fouled. He
sank both free throws to
assure the win .
Mike McGee pow-ed in '%/
points to lead Michigan held
on in the second half for a 86-

Person to person
health insurance

61 victnry over the University
of Dayton on the .Ohio floor.
The Wolverines, now 3-1, led
39-30 at halltlme after a 1&amp;.2
burst during an eight-minute
stretch late in the half.
The last surge of the
Flyers, now 2-2, came with
just over four minutes left in
the gsme when they cut the
margin to 6().57 on two free
throws by Rich Montague .
Jim Paxson, who led Dayton
in scoring with 21 points,
missed the first of a one-andone free throw opportunity ,
and Michigan then scored six
straight points to the put the
. game away.
. Ball State got a 7tJ..69 MidAmerican Conference win at
Athens when Dwayne Irvin
hit two free throws with 11
seconds left in the game with
Ohio University, 2-2 overall
and ().2 In the loop. Irvin 's
free throws gave the
Cardinals, now 4-1 overall
and 1.() in the conference, a

Michigan in MAC opener for
both teams. Western led by
three points, 63-60, with 5:52
left to play · but Miami took
over and scored the next 16
points to take the win .
St. Francis had little
trouble disposing of Kent
State 7()..55 in Pennsylvania,
Youngstown State defeat MI.
Union 91-78, Capital downed
Adrian of Michigan 87-76,
Centre of Kentucky needed
overtime to beat Wilmington
74-72, Eastern Illinois topped
Wright State 79-72, Kenyon
took an easy 95-76 decision
over Wilberforce, Marietta
surged to a 105-79 victory
over Walsh, Muskingum beat
John Carroll 70-57, Ohio
Wesleyan beat Penn State.
Capital 11()..56 in tournament
competition for third place,
Wooster beat Carnegie-Melon
of Pennsylvania 77-&amp;1, and
Otterbein defea ted Urbana
66-!i5 in nonleague play.

~7l ead.

OU's Steve Skaggs hit a
layup with four seconds left
for the fmal score. Tim J oyce
paced the Bobcats in scoring
with 20 points.
Bowling Green got a 9Q.ll9
MAC win at home over
Northern Illinois when J ohn
Miller hit the second of t wo
free throws with seven
seconds
remammg
in
overtime. The Huskies had
rallied from a 53-32 halftime
deficit, and had the game lied
up a t 85,'15 when it went into
overtime.
Game high was Nl's Paul
Dawkins with 32 po ints .
Miller and Duane Gray led
BG in scoring with 23 points
each.
In Kalamazoo, Terry
Brady scored 17 points and
had a game-high 11 rebo unds
to help Miami to an I!M
victory
over
Western

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5-The Dally SenUnei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mun!Wy, Ut!c. li. 19/h

Browns take overtime win
By R()BER'f SANGDlOROII:
CLEVELAND (VJ'l) -

'

New York Jeta CGIICb Wall
Michaels feH ww:lentandllbly
mrange Sunday 11 he
watched a man In hll old
C1eveland Bro"ll'llll nlmber :14 - knock hll Jell out of
playoff cmtention.
The man with the number
Michaels once wctre for the
BroWllll was m111e &lt;iller than
running back Greg Pruitt,
w~o boosted Clevellmd lo a
37 34 sudden death viclctry
ocer New York in frigid
Mwticipal StadiiDD.
" You've got lo give credit
to Greg Pruitt, be's wearing a
great number," said the
dej ected Michaels. "They
l the Jets defenae) ahould
buve torn it off him."
Browns' Coach Sam Rut!gliano surpriaed the Jets
vhen he told Pruitt to receive
the kickoff at the llart ol
sudden death overtime.
Pruitt responded with a burat
of speed and IoQk the ball to
the New York Jets 48 yard
litte. setting up winning drlw.
"This is the first time I've
askoo Pruitt to· run back
anything this year," said
Rutigliano, a former Jell'
assistant coach and native ol
flrooklyn. "You 1111e your
'designated hitter' in a
crucial spot and lhis was it."
Following the runback ,
Pruitt ran · the ball from
scr immage
on
three
,succei!Sive playa in overtime
for a tlltal of 44 yards. After a
ooe-yard dive by fullback
Cleo Miller, Don Cockroft
ki~kedaa 22-yardfleldsoalat
11 :53 In the overtime period
to w.tn the coniest.
·'I've seen tbele lhinga
happen befcre, but I don 'I

know wben," Mlcbaelll said.
"We took advanta&amp;e m .the
lraka, but we couldn't llnllh
lbem ol!."
After blowing a big lead,
the ·BroWIII I!IOVed to tie the
IICOI'e In apectacular faahlon
with 18 aeconda left in the
same, when quarterback
Brian Slpe hit f1mling back
Calvin Hill on an !&amp;-yard
loudtdown ..... Cockroft's
ema point kick sent the
game into overtime.
"We had six defensive
backsinontbelrlastdrlve (in
regulation ~ )," Michaels
said. "But they juat made the
big playa. You've got to come
up wllh the big playa when
the chlpe are down."
Besides Pruitt, who ran for
138 yards on 21 Cllrries and
caught six .-saes far 89
yards, the man coming
through .far ClevelaDd was
quarlet'back Brian Sipe.
Sipehltonflw of six passes
in the delperatim drive that
tied the game and CCIIIlpleted
20 of 32 aerials for 283 yards
overall.
·
The Jeta, fllhting to keep
their playoff hopes alive,
staged a never-eay-dle fourth
quarter rally that brought
them back from a 27-10
deficit.
'lbe late surge Included
four drives for three
touchdowns and a field goal.
During that time, Roblnsoil
· hit tight end Mickey Schuler
&lt;11 a four-yard scoring toss
an&lt;l connected wlth l'lllllling
back Bruce Harper an a 20yard touchdown pass.
'lbe Jets surprised the
Browns with an onslde kick
late in the game, recovering
and driving for a 4G-yard Pat
Leahy field goal that knotted

Toumamenta
Boyou Claulc
Lafayette, L.a.
Final Round
Pepperdlne 81, McNesse St.

Pa. 60
R.R. Coli 100, E. Conn St. 61
St. Francis Pa. 70, LIU 74
St. Francis 82, RIT 60
St. Lawrence 93, RIT60
Seton Hall 84, Columbia 12
Stevens Tech 68, RutgersNew. 57
Suffolk 14, Curry 73
Syracuse 70, U.R.I. 68
Upsala 86, Ramapo 73
Ullea 81, Plattsburgh
Vlllanoca 86, Rutgers 67
Waynesburg 94, Steubenville
74
Wagner 87, Adelphi 77
W. VIrginia 56, Penn. St. 47
Westfield St. 56, Worcester
St. 52
Westmlnsler 87, Slippery
Rock 76
W. Conn 85, So. Conn. 74
W.P.I. 81, R.P.I. 66

Fi rst Union Invitational
Charlotte, N. C.
Fi nal Round
Ulj(. Charlotte 66, Geo.

South
Augusta
Col.
105,
Presbyterian 55
Averett 101, N.C. Wesleyan 92
Bellarmlrie 76, Transylvania

Saturday's

college
scores
Saturday's College
Basketball Results
United Press lnterlllltlonal

60

1Nash. 61

Texas.E I Paso 79, Hofstra 67
Cougar Classic ·
Provo, Utah
Final Round
Bringham Young 76, Purdue

60

Sn'1ta Clara 87, St. Joseph's
Po. 73

Citrus Invitational
Lakeland, Fla.
Fina l Round
Florida So. 72, Mercer 70
S•. Peter's 69, W: Carolina 68
Hatter Classic
Deland, Fla.
Fina l Round
t,d ia na St. 102, Clevland St.
.'I

s •• T:.&gt;Jr'l

carolina

107I E.

82

Big Red Classic
Ithaca, N.Y.
Final Round
Cornell 61 , Colgate 57 ·
C•tholic U. 75, U. Rochester
(I

East
· !:·il ncc 78. Wash. &amp; Jeff. 75
·"•"" 66, York N. V. -46

·~ · ! J~"'\ 1

Sh 8111 Geneieo St. 56
t ,-. r:r ican 63, Lafayette 62
L. ., . Bible 97, Wash. Bible 51
U:• '•m

.

Bethune Cookman 68, Florida
A&amp;M 88
Bluefield 82, Davis &amp; Elkins

79

Carson
Newman
82,
Maryville 67
C. Florida 112, Florida
Mamorlal 84
Clemson 71, The Citadel 58
Concord 71, W. Va, Tech. 68
Esn. Kentucky 10., Butler 81
Bucknell 90, Bloomsburg 71
E. Tennessee 94, UNC .
Asheville 68
Fairmont 80, Wheeling 62
Florida St. 68, Florida 61 Florida S. 72, Mercer 70
Georgetown 95, Camp.
bellsvllle 82
Georgua St. 69, Austin Peay
64

I

Southern
Jr. high
schedule
Thursday,

Dec.

Eastern, Home, 5 p.m .

14,

Thursday. Dec. 21, Federal
Hocking, Away, 5 p.m.
Thursday. Jan. 4, Wahama,
Home, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, Jan . 10. Meigs
(8th ), Away, 5 p.m.
Thursday, Jan . 11, Cot.
tagevllle, Away, 6 p.m.

9 is your Instant
for highway
aid.

Thursday, Jan. 18, Federal
Hocking, Home, s p.m .
Monday, Jan. 22, Kyger
Creek, Away, 5 p.m .
!Cheshire Elem .)
Thursday. Jan. 25, Cottage.
ville. Home, 6 p.m.
Monday, Jan. 29, Eastern,
Away , 5 p.m.
Thursday,
Feb .
1,
Wahama, Away, 5 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 5, Hannan
Trace, Away , 5:30p.m.
Wednesday,
Feb.
7,

Waterloo, Home, 5 P.m.

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NBA Standings

By United Press International
Eastern conference

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Oneonta St. 75, Potsdam St.
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PlfJ.Johnstown 69, Indiana

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14 13 .519
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Houston 116,· Portland

no

WHA Standings

RIO GRANDE College inducted six fonner athletes into the school's
"Athletic Hall of Fame" during halftime ceremonies of Saturday's Rio
Grande-Heidelberg basketball contest at Lyne Center. Five of the six
honorees are pictured above- Louis Boyd, who now resides. in Gulfport,

.

Birmlnghm

u 12 3
8 5
11 11 4

31
31

26

12 12 1
25
Edmonton
12 13 o
24
Indianapolis
S 17 1
12
Saturday' s Results
. Quebec 4, Cincinnati 3
Birmingham 6, Edmonton 2
Sunday's Results
Birmingham 1, Cincinnati o
i ndianapolis 6, Edmonton 4

Quebec 4, Winnipeg 4 (otl
Today's Games
{No games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

Edmonton at Cincinnati

New England at Indianapolis

. RIO'S ~an lilse (~) slips inside for a layup against
ytSihng Heidelberg dunng Saturday's homecoming game
111 Lyne Center. The Redmen lost, BW3. On left is Student
Prince ace Steve Sable (53). On lower right is Kevin
Brooks ( 23).

n
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Fla., was unable to make the trip. Left to right are Mike Mileusnich,
Elbert Oder, Dr. Harry Fritz, Chester Hannahs and William Hollis
Ewing. Ray McKinniss, director of alwnni affairs; served as master of

ceremonies.

Broncos clinch crown

By United Press International
W. L. T. Pts.
Quebec
15 IJ 3
33
13

41&gt;

Marysville 63 Dublin 46
Mifflin 81 Benjamon Logan 41
Miller 56 Millersport 36
Northr idge 96 Li cking Valley
82
Portsmouth 59 Wa verly 42
Py matuning
Val
62
Southington 54

r------------,
1 Pro I
!Standings !

San Diego 107, Milwaukee 106

Winnipeg

Newark

Wooster 68 Lou isville 67

Los Angeles 88, Atlanta 86
Seattle 112, San Anton io 99
Today's Games
(NO games scheduled)
T'unday's Games
San o feoo at New York
Detroit at Cleveland •
Boston at Houston
Indiana at New Orleans
Golden State at Chicago
San Antonio at Denver
Phoenix at Milwaukee
Los· Angeles at Portland

Cincinnati
New·England

63 '

60

3
:;

by R. .lllllc

B ILDING

nerdale 34
Be• ley 80 North Union 49
Big Walnut 61 Buckeye
Volley 59
Can Cen Cath 73 Akr S 60

Tol Scott 69 Akr E 64
Tuslaw 66 Massilion 63
Wa lsh Jesu it 72 Padua 70 (2
of)
Willard 75 Norwa lk 44
Willoughby S 66 Wi ckl iffe 38

Kansas City 132, Detroit 108

·~

Touch bar
control. 9V
batt . incl .
12·1 81

Purcell . 12·0·24; Dorsey. 0-1·
1; Phelps. 2·2·6; Royse, 8·1·
17 : West, 2·0·4; Wash ington,
0·3·3. TOTALS 37·9·83.
Hal ftime score - Rio
Grande 49 Heidelberg 45.

64

\':

25 - m i le
range de·
pending on
terrain . With
9V batt .
12·156

Bellevue 66 Bucyrus 65
Berl in W Reserve 79 Brun.

Seneca E 56 Danbu ry 55
Shelby 52 Galion 50
Tllfin Col 76 Upper Sandusky

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Rocky River 54 Normandie 52

~

Reg .... ~~g9s

Ho!y Cross 85, Yale 79 ot
Hunter 115, Brooklyn ~
Husson '1'1, U. Maine FK 74
Ithaca 71, Cortland St. 70
.Jersey City St. 14, N.Y. Ttch.

94. Lycoming_~
N.Y. Maritime 91. ij)ncordla

2
5'h
9

Chicago 101, New York 96
Washington 101, Phoenh&lt; 98
Cleveland 115; Philadelph ia

by Reollsllc

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ORIGINAL WEATHERADIO!

H•mii ton 83, Drew N.J. ·56
lia verford 59, Philo. Phar·

United Press lnfern•tional

Akr Firestone 57 Akr St V-St
M 51
Barberton 95 Youngstown E

Sandusky Sl Marys 66 Hu,on

"'
E

Juniata 57

i'I\'Jienberg 62, Lebafal" Va. ao

2 112

Portland
13 14 . .481 7
san Diego
12 18 .400 91f:z
• Saturday's Results
New Jersey 125, San Diego

.
77, St. John's 71

L•,Moyne 118, Oswego St. 53
Lowell 78. Springfield Coli. 75
Lyndon St. 81, Plymouth St.
78
Massachusetts 69, Vermont
68
1\ldris t 69, Southhlmpton 67
ll'&lt;:oraviM 74, Swartmore 65

9 17 .346

New Orlns
10 18 .357
Cleveland
8 18 .308
western conferenc.t

Chicago

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269..

·13 1-4 .481

GB

1h

Denver

TRC-448 by Realistic
With 9V
b a t t
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•l'la"
12·606

Pet.

12 12 .500
12 13 .480

Houston .
Sl!n Antoni

Indiana

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~.

19 9 .679
14 9 .609
17 11 .61J7

GB

Kanss Cty

9S

Gonnon '1'1, St. John Fisher
&lt; &gt;ncr~et own
GrpiJf~ City 71,

''

Detroit

w.

central Division
W. ~ - Pel.

Golden Stt
Touch -bar transmi t/ lock switch .
Req . 2 "AA" bans. 21 .1113

Con McKinley 78 Akr Cen
Hower 15
Can Timken 73 Akron Gar.
field 71
Cardinal 68 Farmington 6&lt;1.
Claymont 57 Ridgewood 48
Cle Cent Coth 68 Cle Luth W
51
Cle Latin 77 E Liverpool 56
Clyde 51 Mohawk 41&gt;
Columbus W 70 Graham 50 ·
Coshocton 77 Carrollton 61
Delphos StJohn 71 Newark 66
E Canton 60 Fairless 45
Elyria 71 Tol Waite 59
Fairport 4'1 Grand Vall ey 35
Garaway 55 Guernsey
Catholic 31
Jefferson 82 Perry 57

'

Denver 113, Milwaukee 103
Golden Stete 94, Atlanta ~4
Sunday's Results

Midwest Division

Reg. 1&amp;••

Farmi ngdwle 88, Dowling S.

f·l 'i 71

Atlanta

porary Wrinkle Smoother.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wshngtn ·
Philadlph
New Jersy
New York
Boston

"

"

14~~.
19

Swain , 6-2·14;

• Saturd•y's
Ohio High School
Basketboll Scores

Catholic 61
Mapleton 61 Monroeville 56
Marllngton 49 Sandy Valley

STANDINGS

35915

..

HEIOELBERG {84) Reichert, 9·0·18 Sahie, 10-1·
21 ; Brooks, 3·0·6; Anderson,
2·2·6;
Kandel ,
9·2·20 ;
Nedolast, 2.1-5 ; Harris. 1·0·2:
Swickard 1·4·6; TOTALS 3710·14
RIO GRANDE (83 1 -

Johnstown

NEW- YORK (UPI) - Jim Rice looks great and feels even
better. Why not?
Ho)Vwouldyoufeel if they were about to layf:;mUIIon on you
and there was a chance the same thing could happen to you all
over again before you were through?
Primarily because he has both age and ability m his side,
Jim Rice could w.tnd up being a free agent twice. If be playa out
hll p,_,t option with the Red Sox, be'll become available to
the highest bidder at the end &lt;&gt;f the 1911l se-n and even if he
signs for five more years then, he'd be only 32 when that
cmlract ran out.
· Lookat Rod Carew. He's 33 and lhe Giants are willing to pay
him mctre than $3 mUIIon. And dm't forget last week's signee,
Pete Ruse, who's 37, a.young 37, and got more than $3 mUllan
· from the PhiWes.
·
·
Rice is only 25 and generates mare power than Rose and
Carew put together. He bad the kind of year that was almost
too good to be true, winning the American· League's MVP
award going away, and what the Red Sox want to milke sure he
doesn't do now is go away.
He has two more years on his present conlract and Haywood
Sullivan, the Red SGx executive vice-president and general
manager, and Al CUrren, the club's attorney, are talking · to
Rioe about a new contract.
.
When the Yankees signed I.nis Tiant not long ago after he
had chosen hll free agency wlth the Red S&lt;llt, Carl Yastrzemski
called Tiant "the heart of our pitching staff" and· said the
Yankees had "tom away our heart."
Rice has 139 RBI, 46 homers, 213 hits, 408 total bases, 15
triples and .600 slugging percentage making him the league
leader in each of those deparbnents. Rice's .315 batting
average was third best in lhe league.
I dm't know the exact figures, but I'd say Rice is asking for
somewhere around $5.2 mUllan over the next seven years and
that would Include a bonua up front.
Broken down, that comes out to hetler than $700,000 a year
and ifitsoundsllkea lot to you, it does to me, too. But you have
to bear In mind the Phlls gave Ruse more than that, the Red
Sox gave Fred Lynn a bonus of $875,000 alme two years ago
along with a comparable four-year contract extension and
Dave Parker very likely will get at least $1100,000 a year wlth
the Pirates.
Rice was in Orlando, Fla., during the baseball meetings last
weelt far a promotional venture he was involved in with Ron
Guidry and Davey Lopes.
On his flight from Andersm, S.C., to Orlando last Tuesday,
Rice met Rose on the plane wben Pete got on in Atlanta. Rice
congratulated him m his.new contract and they talked awhile.
When Rice arrtved in OrlaDdo, he was cmstantly asked
about his cmtract and was he going to ask for more than Ruse
did?
"Pete Rose is Pete Rose," he said. "wbat he did is strictly
his business. I'm Jim Rice. I have two mare years on my
canlract. Who lmows? I might he worth even more by then."

'29.9~!.

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as
seen on
national

MOBILE WITH CH. 9
PRIORITY SWITCH !

Grande was nine of 16 at the
foul line for 56.2 percent. The
Redmen had 43 rebounds 11
by Dan Bise. Rio Grande had
20 assists and 15 turnovers.
Sahle led the winners
rebounders with 13. Reichert
had 10 and Nedolast nine.
Rio Grande's next game is
Thursday, at Otterbein
hegliming at 7:30p.m.
'
Saturday's box score:

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

TRC-425 by Realistic ®

SAVE

21 markers. Dave Kandel
added 20 and Chris Reichert
18.
.
Rio GraiKie placed four
men In double fil(ures. led bv
Dan Purcell's 23 markers.
Dale RoYse added 17, Mark
Swain and Dan Bise each had ·
14.
From the field, Rio con·
nected on 37 of 74 field goal
attempts for 50 percent. Rio

Sport Parade

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wrinkles tor up to 8 hours. It 's called

'····cr k 92. Norwich 66

,,

Today

IV\onelay, Jan . 15, Hannan

·]· .u;lleis 85, Amherst 75

h~~l ~r n 86, East.

trhimpb over the Redmen.
The Student Prince upped
Rio held a ~ halftime their season · record to ii-I.
lead and maintained the Rio Grande dropped to ·3-4
upper hand throughout most overall.
of the second half before the
Rio Grande had a.chance to
Ohio Conference team pulled win the game in the final
it out of the fire in the final seconds of play, but missed
minute of play.
four or five shouts just before
the final hom.
::r:=====:====================================:======:=====================:=== =======:===:===:============:==============::======:==== ========:==========.=.::
Heigelberg placed three
men in double figures in
scoring, led by .Steve Sable's

Trace , Home, 5: 30 p.m .

8:own 57, Fordham S.
'&gt;:..:: Wes ter n 77, Johns
/,11 pldns. 76

6:

.·
Coach
Jobn
Hill's
Heidelberg Student Princes
apoiled Rio Grande CoDege'a
homecoming activities
Saturday night with a COilll!from·behlnd 84-83 non·
conference
basketball

Be prepared
this winter!

Instant switching between Emergency Channel 9 and your
se lected channel. Large S / RF meter and antenna warning
indicator. Switchable automatic noise limiter 21-1534

Secrel Miracle and its scientifi c blend
ol unique beauty ing redients works
wit~in minutes to smoo th over wrinkle s, crow's-feet, and under eye~
puffiness. New Secret Miracle will
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.

Heidelberg nips Redmen, 84-83

Reg. 14995

Hampden-Sydney 72, Emory
&amp; Henry 68
Hampton lnsf. 100, Shaw N.
c. 14
James Madison 77 , George
Mason 64
Kentucky 67, Kansas 66 of
Loyola Mel. 65, Lehigh 56
Louisville 101, Idaho 54
Louisiana Coli. 80, Nicholl '
St. 75
tv.J. Ball. County 90. St.
Mary's n
Maryland 86, Biscayne 60
Miss. St. 85, Middle Tenn. St.

'-l9ewa ter St. 106, Nicholl

r'

i

Ft. 111, Salem St. 101

5'1

the !!COre at 'n-'n, wlth 2:36
remaining.
New York took the lead
with 1:18left in regulation M
a oneyard touchdown hurst
with by ruimlng back Kevin
Long that made it 34-'n.
Long'siC(ll'e was set \Ill when
Wright fumbled the kickoff.
"I thought we had it won,"
said RobiMon.
Down 17-10 at the half, the
Jets moved deep into
Cleveland territory midway
through the third quarter, but
Browns' linebacker Dick
Ambrose, In a key play,
Intercepted a Robinson pass
at the Cleveland three.
Sipe then took hll club on
seven-play, 58-yard drive that
culminated in a touchdown by
Sipe on a tw()oyard boQtleg.
Cockroft's made the score 'n·
10, Cleveland.
The game hegan under
overcast skies with a Iiidegree temerperature and a
w.tnd chill factor of onedegree.
Sipe assumed cmlrol early ·
and mixed plays effectively
as he directed his club on a 31yard scoring drive. The
series ended with Hill's twoyard plunge for a to~chdown .
In the second quarter, Sipe
hit Pruitt on a 23-yard
louchdown pass. Cockroft's
kick put Cleveland up 1W.
The Jets got their first
score !Jiidway through the
second quarter, when Leahy
hooted a 45-yard field goal.
Follow.tng a Cockroft field
goal, Robinson finally moved
his club for a touchdown late
in the first half, on a threeyard pass to Harper. The
halftime score was 17-10,
Cleveland.

Saturday's high
school results

Store Hours : 8:30 to 5:30 - Mill Clos15
aiS:OO P.M. - Serving Meigs, Galli• &amp;
Mason Counties.

By JAMES LAWRENCE
second best performance that he would call the game
DENVER (UPI) - The ever in that category.
the way he did and he did a
Denver Broncos and their
"The game was definitely nice job."
The Chiefs, who were held
field general, 14-year veteran in the Lord's hand," said
Craig Morton, have fought Morton , a
bo'rn-a gain Ill 199 total offensive yards
National Conference
East
throughout the season to Christian. "Since September compared to Denver's 461,
W. L. T . Pet.
pro. ve their berth in my church had dedicated this scored their lone touchdown &gt;&lt; ·Dallas
11 4 0 .733
8 7 0 .533
Superbowl xn was no fluke . . day as 'vicoory Sunday' Ill midway through the first Washington
iladelphia
8 7 0 .533
period on a 23-yard Jan Ph
Collectively, the Broncos ease it financial burden.
NY Giant s
~90.400
st . Louis ,
5 10 0 .333
Stenurud field goal.
" So all day was victory
and Morton, individually,
Central
Stenurud's successful boot
now can relax momentarily Sunday for me, even before
W. L. T . Pet.
after having clinched the the start of the game, and it is followed an interception of a Green Bay
8 6 1 .SJ'J
8 6 1 .533
AFC West championship for totheLord'sglorythat things ·Morton pass, breaking the Minnesota
Detroit
6 9 0 .400
the second straight year with happened th e way they . quarterback's streak of 144 Chicago
6 9 0 ..400
5 10 0 .333
slraight completions which Tampa Bay
an impressive 24:3 win did."
West
Sunday over the young and
The Broncos - despite a was tops in the NFL.
w. ~ . r . Pet.
11 3 0 .786
Kansas City's only other X-LOS Angels
brash Kansas City Chiefs.
fll'st-balf offensive thrust in
Atlanta
9 6 0 .600
In
offensive
threat
came
late
"We wanted everybody to which they racked up 230
New Orlel!lns
6 9 0 .1100
know last year W811 no fiuke ," yards as Morton connected on the fourth period when Ted San Franclsc
2 13 0 . 133
X·clinched division title
said tight end Riley Odoms, 13 of 14 passes -held a slim Burgmeier returned a punt 55 v·cllnched
playoff berth
who caught two TD passes in 7.J lead at the half on a 4-ya rd yards Ill Denver's 8-yard line .
Saturday's Results
Pittsburgh 35, Balti more 13
the lriumph. "We are for Morton touchdo wn pass Ill The Chief's hope for a score,
Detroit .45, M inneso ta 14
however, was short-lived due
real!"
Lonnie Perrin .
• Sunday's Results
New Eng lllnd 26, Buffalo 24
Morton also removed any
During halftime , Denver Ill a Tony Reed fumble two
Dallas 31, Ph iladelph ia 13
lingering doubt of skeptics coach Red Miller reiterated plays la ter that was
Atlanta 20. Wl!lshington 17
recovered
by
Denver.
that his performance of last the importance of a victory
Cl eveland 37, New York Jets
"We just played a bad 34 (Otl
season, which earned him the by scribbling in chalk the
New York Giants 17, St . Loui.s
NFL player of the year words "champio ns" and game, " said Kansas City 0
Chicago u , Green Bay o
award, wasn't just a lucky "playoffs" in huge letters oo coach Marv Levy , whose
Houston 17, New Or leans 12
break for the 35-year-old a locker room blackboard. Chiefs were riding a two·
Mlam i 23, Oakland 6
Denver 24, Kansas City 3
quarterback..
The Broncos responded !0 game win streak - their first
Sa n Diego 37, Seattl e 10
The Bronco signal caller Miller's message, Wtcorking in two years. "It's not a step
san Franc isco 6, Tampa Ba y
Sunday turned in the best for 17 second half points, 10 in backward hecause I don't 3
Today•s Game
view things that way.
performance of his career the third quarter.
Ci ncinnati at Los Ang eles, 9
"We had a few chances Ill p.m .
which only two years ago · Veteran kicker Jim Turner
Saturdav, December 16
seemed to be at its nadir - by connected on a 3fl.yard field change the momentum but
Chic ago at wash ington , 1
turned
the
ba
ll
over
deep
in
striking on 19 of 22 attempts goa l boot and Morton
p .m .
Pittsburgh at Denver , 4 p.m .
for 283. The perfonnance WI loaded scoring aerials of 23 their territory ," he sa id.
Sunday, Dece mber 17
MiJler,
meanwhile
;·
earned Morton an 86.36 and 29 yards to Odoms, who
San Fra nc isco at Detroit , 1
rating, the second best for the season has a team- credited his team with p .m .
Cte._-ei and at Cinc innat i, 1
completion percentage in high 50 catches for 746 yards. playing possibly their "best p .m
.
NFL history for a single
"I am very happy for the game ever."
New Orlea ns at Tam pa Bay,
"We had a iot of emotion 1 p .m .
game:
guys, and especially for
New York Giants at Ph itadel ·
Moroon also completed 16 Craig." said Turner. "He out there and we played ph la, 1 p.m .
Da llas at New York Jets, 1
straight passes Ill tie Cincin- called his own game like the hard/' Miller said. "We're
.
nati's Ken Anderson for the field general he is. I think he champions once again and we p .m
Atlan ta at St . Louis, 2 p .m .
made a decision this week are proud of that."
Buffalo at Bll lfimore , 2 p.m .

Rams favored tonight
By JIM COUR
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
The Los Angeles Rams are
6'h point favorites over the
Cincinnati Bengals tonight in
their nationallv televised
game at Memoria(.Coliseum.
Coach Ray ·Malavasi wants
the ll.J Rams to generate
momentum that he hopes will
carry them to the Super Bowl
for the first time in their
hist ory . Th e Rams have
played uninspired ball except
&lt;11 defense since they beat the
Pittsburgh steeiers l!l-7 four"
. weeks ago.
They had Ill get last-minute
field goals from Frank Corral
to heat San Francisco, 31-28,
and the New York Giants, 2017. In between those games,
they lost lo Cleveland, 3()..19.
As a result, Malavasi fears
the Bengals who have wm
only two games and
moreover he wants to see the
Ram offense develop. .
"You people are alwavs
underestimating our op·
ponents," Malavasi told
sports writers. "Cincinnati is
much tougher than you think
they are.
I

'·

NFL Standings
Bv United Press International
American Conference
EISt
W. ~ . T. Pet.
X · NW Englnd
11 4 0 .733
Y·Miami
10 5 0 .667
. NY Jets
8 7 0 .533
Ba ltimore
5 10 0 .333
Buffalo
4 ll 0 .267
Central
W. L. T . Pet.
x .Pif1sbrgh
13 2 0 .867
Y·Houston
tO 5 0 .667
Cleveland
8 7 0 .533
Cincinnati
2 12 0 . 143
West
W. L T. Pet.
x .oenver
10 5 0 .667
Oakland
B 7 0 .533
Seattle
8 7 0 .533
San Di ego
8 7 0 .533
Kansas Citv
4 11 0 .286

" Th eir record s hows
they're 2-11 but I guarantee
you they don't play that way .
Their defense will be as oough
as any defense we've played
against."
In their w.tn at New York
last Sunday, the Rams
clinched their sixth straight
NFC West title - and first
lUlder Malavasi - but they
didn'tlook like a Super Bowl
contender in doing it.
There is something at stake
for, the Rams in the
Cincin nati game . The Rams
have
the
homefield
advantag~ for the first NFC
playoff game, Dec. 30 or Dec .
31 but they must beat either
Cincinnati or their last
regular season foe , · Green
Bay, to host the NFC
championship game Jan. 7.
Malavasi has had a
cmstant problem wlth the
Ram ground game this
season. Lawrence
McCutcheon, the bread-andbu l t 'r runnc1· h ~ .. ;!~"

·11

'''"'

muvh uf t.lw 1:n.· :.r· , , !•··
oo the injured resen ~ Jtst,
unable to reach the 1,(10().yard
mark he achieved in three
previous seasons .
The Rams signed Houston

castoff Anthony Davis, 26,
who was a great ball-carrier
at University of Southern
California but a flop so far in
the .pros. He may see some
service as a kick returner
against Cincinnati.
Fullback John Cappelletti
missed the Giant game and is
listed as probable for
Cincinnati because of a groin

pull.
Cullen Bryant was the
Rams' top rusher against the
Giants with 66 yards on 20
carries but he suffered a
bruised knee in that game .
Malavasi took over the
Rams after owner Carroll
Rosenbloom fired George
Allen before the season hegan
and he has his eye, of course,
on the Super Bowl.
"I think we can beat any
~ in the league," he said.
Cincinnati also made a
·coaching change this season.
After an 0-G start, Bill
Johnson was dumped for
Jr ,.
'""', 1 '1 ·,
:·• 1.&lt;; lo.st
I

~ ,

g,,1 {{1l•g ,-,

., ·

r;; 1 i• "'

.

{Q[i:

\&lt;1fl.

The Bengals hll Ute high
point of their season last
Sunday when they upset
Atlanta, 37-7.

Green Bay at Los Angel es, -4
p .m .
Kansas City at sea ttl e, 4 p.m .
M innesota at Oakland, 4 p .m .
San Diego at Houston , 4 p.m .
Monday, December 18
New Eng land at M iam i, 9
o .m .
NHL Stlndings
By United Press International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T. Pts .
NY Islander s
17 4 S
39
Atlanta
\ 6 11 2
34
NY Rangers
15 8 41
3.11
Ph il ade lph i
15 10 4
34
Smythe Division

W. L. T. Pts.

!Vancouver
12 14 2
Chicago
10 10 6
St . Louis
6 19 4
Colorado
4 20 5
Wales Conference
Norris Division

W.

~.

Montrea l
18 6
Los Ange les
13 10
Pitt sburgh
9 13
Detroit
7 13
Wa shington
7 17
Adams Divi sion

W.

~.

26
26

16
13

T. Pis.
4

40

3

29
24
2A
18

6
8

4

T. Pts .

17 5 6
40
13 13 4
30
9 10 a
26
9 u 3
21
S1turday•s Results
Detroit .5, N.Y. Rangers 4
N .Y . Islanders 3, Toronto 2
Philadelphia IJ, Boston 2
Washington 7, Vancouver 5
Buffalo 4, Pittsburgh 4, tie
Chicago 4, St. Louis 2
Minnesota 3, Colorado o
Los Angeles 5, Atlanta 1
Sunday's Results
Phl ladelphl&lt;!!l 4, N.Y . Rl!lnger s

Boston
Toronto
Buffalo
M innesota

0

Mon trea l 4, N.Y . Islander s 3
Detroi t 3, Chicago 3, l' le
Minneso te &lt;!, Bo ston d, lie
Bu ff alo S, Toronto 3
Today's Games
( No games scheduled J
Tuesd11~'1 Games
Los Angeles at N.Y . ISlanders
Montreal at St. Louis
Col orado at washing ton
Vancouver at Boston

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dt!c. 11, 1978

7-The_DallySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Munday, Dec.ll,l978

U. S. Seroicemen News

nations increase
Canter 's Cave

Eagle provides an op·
RANDY BECKER
SAN ANTONIO - Randy portunlty to plan, test and
B. Becker, son of· Don C. evaluate Army,' Navy, Air
Becker of 462 S. Flfth Ave., Force and Marine people and
Middleport, bas been com- resources working together
missioned
a
second in a simulated combat
POMEROY - Donations to Paul Sayre, Mr. and Mrs.
lieutenant In the U. S. Air situation.
the Canter's Cave 4-H Camp Thereon Johnson, Mrs. Nora
The airman Is .a 1971
·Force upon graduation froiD
Fund Raising Project have Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Officer Training School at graduate of Southern lfigh
greatly increased this past Kautz,
Alpha
Epsilon
Lackland AFB, Tex.
Scjaool.
week. The December 31 Chapter Alpha Delta Kappa
Lieutenant Becker,
deadline is growing closer Sorority, Mr. and Mrs.
selected through competitive
very rapidly. We . still need Manning Webster, Mrs.
examination for attendance
everyone's help in order to Barbara Sargent, Dan
at the school, now · goes to
reach the goal of $42,000.
: Thompson Ford (Pat Hill),
Attendance at church and
WrighH&gt;atterson AFB, Ohio,
~finite pledges and money Downing-Childs
Agency,
for training and duty as a Sunday school at the Free
received thw far for the 4-H Court ·House Cut-Ups 4-H
computer systems analyst Methodist ·Church was 94.
Camp Fund Raising in Meigs Clubs, Mrs. Helen Coast
Choir members present was
officer.
County total $14,992.01.
Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Asron
The lieutenant, a 1971 high 8. .
The Meigs County · Ex- Sayre and Stephanie, Mr. and
Mr. Roy Howell bas been
school graduate, received a
tension staff would like to Mrs. Wa.llace Bradford. ·
home · from
B.A. degree in 1975 at St. returned
thank
'the
following
If you would like to help us
University
Hospital.
Marys University, San An·
organizations and individuals reach our goal, contributions
Ms. Ema Fox and Mrs. Roy
tonio. He earned an M.B.A.
who have,donated or pledged may be ilent to the Meigs
.
Howell
went · to Cleveland
degree In 1977 at Park
money to the Canter's Cave 4- County Extension Office Box
Tuesdsy
on busineu .
.College, Kansas City, Mo. He
H Camp Fund Raising in 32, Pomeroy. Checks should
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dick Karr
ill the grandson of Mr. and
Meigs County during the past · be made payable to Canter's
Mrs. D. C. Becker of 434 S. spent the past week with their
daughters and sons-in-law, ,
· week: .
Cave 4-H Camp. Donation
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
Rawlings-Coats Funeral pledges within the next three
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mathew,
DONATION NOTED - John Rice, right, Meigs
Home, Mr. and Mrs. Robert years can also be accepted by
Huron, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed
County extension agent, agriculture, presents a Canter's
Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. indicating the amount you .
OLIVER SAYRE
!lauer, New Philadelphia.
WORLD MISSIONS DIRECOOR - The Rev. Wllllam
Cave Camp cap to Pat Hill of the Dan Thompson Ford. A
Garland Caldwell, Pullins will be giving and when it will
BELLEVILLE, .Ill.
Ms. Bertha Parker spent
Knittle, pastor of the Middleport United Pentecostal
contribution of at least $100 is acknowledged in the camp ·
Excavating, Mr. and Mrs. be paid.
Oliver E. Sayre, Jr., son of several days in Columllus,
Church, has recently appointed William Van Meter,
fund drive with the caps.
Mrs. Charles P. Bailey of Rt. ·and her daughter Ms.
Clifton, W. Va. as the new World Missions Director for the
I, Portland, has been Jeraldine Ferguson and l!(ln
local church.
promoted
to senior airman in James spent Thanksgiving
of
a
World
Missions
Director
conslst
of
directing
Duties
SHER IFF'S SA~E
Midd l e port ,
Ohio
it
the U.S. Air Force.
with Mr. and Mrs. Herman
missionary services held on the last Wednesday of each
F or th e 20t h of Ja nuary a t
l i vi ng : I t deceased · fhe
10 :00 A .M . 011 1he Courthouse
unknOwn heirs, dtvlsee$~
Kayper
and Mr. and Mrs.
Airman
Sayre,
a
month
as
well
as
various
other
duties
pertaining
to
s1eps ,
legatees, administrators and
pavements specialist, is Ronald Kasper, Dayton.
missionary
meetings.
or
assigns
of
Cllude
Ashley,
NOTICE Otthe unknown spoust.lt any~ ot
assigned at Scott AFB, Ill.,
Mrs. Tina Jacolls, local,
FOIII!CLOSURE
Claude Ashley , name end
with a unit of the Military Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobs,
In The Coul'f of
address unknown . WILBUR
common Pitas,
ASHLEY, WhOM ta•t known
Airlift Command.
Mr. and Mrs. Brure Jacolls,
Meif'
County, Ohio
~ddress Is Middleport, Ohio,
Polly Cramer
The airman is a 1971 Columbus, spent ThanksNO ICE
OF
1f living; If dKelled, the.
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS uf!known htlrs, devisees.
graduate of Southern High giving with Mr. and Mrs.
FOR De~INQUeNT LAND l.;atets, administrators and '
---~--School,
Racine, Ohio. His Paul Jacolls, SouUI, Shore, .
TAXES , BY· ACTION IN or assigns of Wilbur Ash lev ,
sweep it up the next morning.
wife, Comaie, is the ds~ghter Ky.
REM
BY
COilNTY th~ unknown spouse, lfanv. of
Doggy odor
TR
OF MIEIGS Wilbur Ashley, · name and
There should be no more cat
ofMr.andMrs.ChesterWells
Lisa and Deanna Darst
on the rug
address unknown. MAY
odors.
-ALBERTA
of
Rt.
1,
Long
Bottom,
Ohio.
Milan
visited recently with
QUIVEY, Whoae last known
DEAR POLLY - I have
addr·OIS Is 151 Mill St"
their
grandparents,
Mr. and
Athens, Oh lq, II living; If
DEAR POLLY -My dog discovered a simple way to
KEVIN
WILLFORD
Mrs.
James
Gilmore.
dece~std the unknown. heirs
has wet the living room take decals out of a bathtub. I
VALPARAISO, Fla.
~evine"a,
t•R..•teer..;'. . ad:
Mr. Vern Story, who ill
carpet three times. I have us- turn my blow dryer on high
Airman Kevin B. Willford, employed in Columbus spent ; ..
mlnfstrators, and or asSigns
Sunday School attendance son of Mr. and ·Mrs. Harry L.
of May Qu ivey, the unknown
ed carpet shampoo to remove and hold it on the object or to
spouse, ft · any , or May
on
Nov. 26 was 54. Offering Willford of Racine Is par- a week's vacation with hill
the stain but I cannot get rid the side of it just long enough
Quivey , name lnd adcti-eu
$25.90. Worship services were ticipating in Gallant Eagle wife Fern · Dara, and son
MONDAY
of the odor. Any suggestions for it to loosen the glue.lt will
unknown .
RICHARD
BETHEL 62, International held with .an attendance of 38, '79, a large scale joint John.
.0 E N.~ IU e._ !!tJl.l1SO J.ao.t
you or the readers have will then peel right off. I use a
Mr _ Harry Clark is a ":;
known address Is Gallaway ,
be greatly appreciated. - paper towel to wipe the glue Order of Job's Daughters, Geo rge Lowe of Belpre readiness exercise being
Ohio, if living ; if .deceased .
patient
in Veterans Memorial :
brought
the
message.
Chas.
MRS.C.W.
and it rolls right up. This has Monday, 7:30p.m. at the Midthe unknown heirs . devistes,
conducted by the United Hospital.
.
~.
Woode
led
devotions
and
to l~atees, edmlnlstrators ·and
DEAR MRS. C.W. - You worked most successfully for dleport Masonic Temple.
states Readiness Command
Ms.
Jenny
Ward,
Columbus
e or assigns of Richard Den - might try sprinkling dry salt
Howard
Flanders
the
singing.
TUESDAY
me. Also removes plastic picat Eglin AFB , Fla.
tax smOre ; the unknown spouse,
visited over the weekend with · '
A full house attended the
WINDING TRAIL Garden
estate if any , of Richard Densmore,
on the rug. Leave it overnight ture hangers that stick to the
Airman Willford Is an in· Mr. and Mrs. Jack Robson.
sale of such name and address u'nknown .
50th
wedding
anniversary
Cl
ub,
annual
Christmas
party
and then vacuum up the next wall. -GEilAIDINE
tegrated avionics systems
real estate
the satisfac. FLOSSIE PHILLIPS , whose
celebration for Ernest and specialist at Mountain Home All attended Sunday morning .:
ti on of the tax liens thereon . last known addrtSS· Is Logan,
morning. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Mine is 6 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Such action is brought Ohio, if 'Wing, If deceased the
Isola Taylor on Sunday, 2to 4 AFB, Idaho with a unit of the services at the local church.
DEAR POLLY - My son pie pastry making Pointer. Dollie Hayes. Members are to
aga inst the real propertv ontv unknown heirs, devisees ,
me a short shag rug that Mter mixing the flour, lard, take a covered dish and p. m. The . couple rece1ved Tactical Air Command.
=~~~~ ~~ fnet~~~~a ~h~~:i~~ent :;v:~:~~~sa:tf11FI~:!r:W~~;, ~;,~ gave
many greetmgs at the church · Involving approximately
was in. a . house he bought etc., for the pastry I put it in a either a homemade gift or a
The permanent parcel the unknown spouse, If any of
.,
$2
gift
for
exchange
and
are
and g1fts from relatives 25 000 personnel Gallant
here
from people who had cats and heavy plastic bag and with
number of Itch parcel In - FloSSie Phillips, name and
&lt;
'
'
eluded in such action, the full address unknown . REVA
dogs. The rug had a terrible my fingertips work through to wear homemad e and fnends. Cake, coffee,
st r ee t addrnsof the parcel, If SMITH, WhOII last known
punch
and
nuts
were
served.
Christmas
corsages
for
judgsmell.
I
tried
using
ammonia
the hag until the pastry has
''
av atlable , a CIJ!SCr 1ption of the address is Loian . Ohio, If
Juanita
Swartz
was
parce l , a stAtement of the living ; If Clecea.seet, the
on it but that did not help so I the right consistency. No i~g .
Kevip 'Knapp spent last ,
amo unt .
ot
taxes . unknown heirs, Cltvisees,
honored with a card shower
tried putting dark vinegar on more messy hands. The
WEDNESDAY
weekend with his grandassessments, penalties· and . legatees , aamintStretors ana
for her birthday on Saturday, Tuesda~ evening, Nov. 21 mother Lena Knapp of
it with a brush. Mter the pastry can then be stored in
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
charges d ue l!lnd unpa id on or ass;gns ot .Rev a Smilh ; the
Nov.
25. She received 45 cards with an attendnace of 16. LangSVille.
such parcel , and the name unknown spou&amp;e, It any, of
vinegar evaporated the smell the refrigerator in the same Society's annual Christmas
and addren of the last known Reva Smith , name Bnd ad and
greetings
and thanks all Hymn sung was "Come Ye
was gone. (Polly's Note- Do bag. Thill also works well for party will be held Wednesday
owner thereof , as such ~P- drus unknown . HAROLD
Charles Knap(f spent ·Ibis •
who
remembered
her.
peer on the general tax hst, PHILLIPS , whose tast known
Thankful People". Prayer · weekend with" ;his grand• •
test the effect of dark vinegar cookie dough. - BETH
evening at the home of Mr.
au as mor~ tuHy set forth In address Is Marion, OhiO, If
Chas. and Helen Woode and was by Osle Mae Folirod. ·•mother Mrs. Lena Knapp of ~
on thecolor of your rug before
Polly will send you one of and Mrs. Franklin Lewis.
thecomplamt, areasfollows : living; If deceased, the
several
other friends visited Work was done on reports.
CBT -0.4, Columbia Town· unknown heirs devisees
proceeding.) -MRS. A. H.
her signed thank-you
:
POMEROY - Middleport the White funeral home when Janet and Nellie attended Langsville. ,, ·
ship, Meios County, Ohio, Lot legatees, adminlitrarors enci '
DEAR
POLLYI
have
a
·newspaper coupon'clippers if ·Lions Club, noon W!!dnesday
'Mr. Earr Russell of Ken- •
No . 6, 20' W side of N'..-'2. T . G. or assigns of Harold Phil-lips ·
Chester Frederick's . mother workshop at Nelsonville and .tucky was a recent visitor of •
remedy for cat odor in she uses your favorite
Clay, address unknown ; theunknownspouse,iflny,of
at
the
Meigs
Inn.
All
Lions
Bertha
Clay ,
address Harold Philips, name and
passed away. Funeral and reported on it. The Christmas hls mother, Bel'tha Russell. .,
carpets.
Add
baking
soda
to
Pointer, Peeve or Problem iri
unk':lown; the unknown heirs, address ·~ unknown .
DALE
urged
to
attend.
burial
was at GratsviUe, W. party to be held at the church
white
cat
litter,
wet
a
little
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
d ~ v !se es,
legatees,
ad-. PHELPS , wnose last known
Mrs. Daniel Worley and ~
JUNIOR
American
Legion
Va.
m ,n .strators , executors. anQ address is Rt . 1, Waynesburg ,
Dec. 19 was announced. The Stacy of Beckley, W. Va. are •
and sprinkle it over the POINTERS in care of this
or assi gns or Bertha Clay, If Pa .• if living ; If deceased, the
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
The UMW held its January meeting will be held
carpet. Leave overnight and newspaper.
dec~ ased ; the unknown heirs , unknown heirs , devisees ,
Post
128, Middleport, 7:30 November meeting at the at Nina's and Clara's if · visiting with Mr. and Mrs. :
d e_ v ~ se es ,
legatees ,
ad · legatees, administrators, ·a nd
Charley Smith and Mr. and ~
m ' "'st~a tors , executors, an _
d or assigns of Dale Phelps ; the
p.m..
af
the
hall . home of Janice Pullins on weather permits.
Mrs,
·Doyle Knapp and sons. ~
or ass•ons of T . G . Cll!ly , If unknown spouse. if any, of
Organizational meeting with
dec euect ; 1113 .07 . Ser . No . 78 Dale Phelps , neme and ad .
all members or those inDLT l !i
·
dress unknown . BESSIE
RT -u:t ,
Kutland
Twp .,. SIDERS , whose last known
terested in joining Urged to
M eigs County , Oh io, 2 acre~ . addreu is Rutland . Ohio, it
attend. Mrs. Becky Tyree will
10 ro ds. 5 , ~, T. 6 R . 1-4, Oht~ living ; If deceased , the
Corn pany s
P_urchase , unknown heirs , devisees.
Mrs. Jerry Northway and Wednesday evening. .
be the new advisor of the
Ru t l and Townsh1p, Meigs legatees adm i nistrators and
Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLuz, junior group.
family,
Grand Rapids, Mich.,
County,' Ohio, lacre, S. 23, T. or anions of Bessie Siders
6, R . u. OhiO Comp•ny's the unl(nown spouse If any of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van local, and Mr. and Mrs.
AMERI CAN LEGION,
~ u_rchue; Fred Pinkston, If Benlt Sicters , n8me a'nd
Richard
Abels,
Long
Bottom,
Meter,
Columbus,
and
Mr.
Feeney
- Bennett Post 128,
hv mg , .address unknown; . If adrtss .unknown : ELVIRA
decees ed , the ,unknown h•ln, BARR , whosa · last known
and Mrs. Mac Van Meter and spent Thanksgiving Day with Middleport , 7:30 p.m. at the
de_v !seu,
legatees.
ICI · addrtlliS Laftl~llle, Ohio . if
Missy, Coolville,- called on Mrs. Ruth Blackwell and hall.
· m •n ,straton, executors, and living; if dfttt..d the
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, family, at Charleston, W.
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
or ass 1;ns Of Fred Pinkston. unknown H•fn, -~~es,
d ec . ; Hellday Hysell . If 1eoetees, adm{nlst;atofa~ d
Va. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lodge 363, F. and A.M., will
recently.
il't' ing, address unknown ; l' or ass igns ot.._elv'lra aan,• li•
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Pauley, Mt. Alto, W. Va., meet Wednesday, 7 p.m. for
de-ceased tl'le "nknown helra, unknown spo·U¥,' If _.,.y, or
de. v!sees, _legatees,
ad · Ei''l'-ira · Barr , ~ "Pimt and
Roush
and
family, visited Mrs. W. S. Long and the purpose of conferring the
m 1 n1str ator s ~ t)Cec:utors and a dress unknown HRLE N
Charleston, W. Va., Mr. and Robert Sneed,. a recent ma ster mason degree on one
or assigns of Halfday Hvsell, BARL.ES, whoSe last ·kf'IOWn
aec., S39 :.c1 ! Ser. No . 78 OL:r address Is H.,mden , OhiO , If
Mrs. Robert Euler and Wednesday.
candidate. All master
17 .
.
.· living ; i f deceased·, the
Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mrs. masons are invited.
family, Elkview, W.Va., and
SUT -02. OVT-02. Sutton unknown he i rs devisees
Twp ,, Me igs County, Ohio, l egatees, adm1n1Strators anci
Leota Birch, local , were Mike Evans and Matthew and
THURSDAY
Oi l, gas and other m inersals. or assigns or Heten sarles.
Leota
Birch
shopped
in
Thanksl!lving
Dinner
guests
EPISCOPAL
Church
E X CE PT coal , underlying the unknown spouse, If any , of
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gallipolis, on Wednesday.
Women of Grace Church 'will
100 acres more or less, In 160 Helen Bar l es , name and
acre Lot 1219, T . 2, R:. _12, Ohio address unknown .• $71 .83 ;
Mrs. Linda Haines, and meet at 12:30 p.m. Thursday
Harold Roush, Racine.
com_pany•s Purchase; Ottve ser . No. 78 DL T 19.
family,
Buckeye Lake, Mrs. at the parish house. Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gene
Hauger,
Tw p ., Meigs County, Ohio; · Any yerson owning or
Oil , ga' and other minerals clalmlno any right, t itle or
Martinahurg, visited Mr. and Gladys Bryant and Kenneth, Jean Moore will be the
underlylno 95 A . In 5.29, T. ;J, Interest In, or ,lien upon, any
Mrs. Gene Carpenter and Dunbar, W. Va., Ronald hostess.
R . 11, Ohio Compan,v 'r parctlof'reat property above
Purchase ; The mining In
listed may file an answer In
Mrs. Sylvala Carpenter, Bryant, Addison, Mr. and
ELEANOR CI RCLE,
terests In 60 A . inS . 29. T . J, ~ such action setting forth the
Mrs. Buddy Cornell, Inrec\!lltlY.
.
11, OhiO , Company's · Pur natureanelamountoflnterest
Heath
United Methodist
Mrs. Rully Bryant, Debra dustry, Pa. , were recent Church, Thursday night at
chase; 30 A .• S. 29, T . 3, R . 11, owned or claimed end anv
Ohio Cotnp.~ny's Purchase; defense or .. obJection to the
and · Dave,
spent callers atthe home of Mr. and the home of Mrs. Sandy
10 A . s. 29, T . 3, R. 11, Ohio foreclosur·e. Such answer
Thanksgiving Day at Buffalo, Mrs. Bill Bryant and .family. Luckeydoo. $2 gift exchange.
Company's Purchase ; 70 A., must be filed In the office of
s . 29, T . 3, R·. 11, Ohio Com · the undersigned Clerk of
Don Ward, New Jersey, Hostesses, Pauline Horton ,
W. Va. visiting her mother,
pany 's Purch,st, COAL· CoUrt, aAd a copy thereof
spent
last week with hls
Mrs. Myrtle Lewis, and
underlying 16 A., S. 29, T . 3. served on the County
R . ll. Ohio Company's Prosecutor on or before the
mother,
Mrs. Kathleen Ward, Audrey Davenport, Jeanne
family.
rrok, and Mrs. Luckevrloo.
Purchase ;
EDNA.
D . 21st day of Na,..ember. 1978.
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel, Portland, visited firends and
CORYE LL., If living, 2.-30
If nG •ns,..tr If tlltcl on or
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
Channing Way, Berkley, before tht dete sptclf1td es
Long Bottom, visited Mr. and relatives in the area.
Ca lif . ; If deceased , the the lest dey for flllnt 1n
172; OES, installation, 7:30
Mrs.
Dan
Talbott
and
family,
unknown heirs , devisees, answer , a ludgm·ent of
p.m. Thursday night at the
II!!'Qatees. administrators end foreclosure will be taken by
by Roger Bollen Middleport Masonic Temple.
FUNNY BUSINESS
or assigns of Edna Coryell, detaurt es to any parcel listed

Honor Rolls

I Social
I Calendar

an

Ambqei,"f!,ANDY ARMES,
J - Bulb, Kevla Curfman,
Lila llew, Tony Deem, LEE

DILL, J~NE MANUEL,
Corey M~Phall, Debbie
Michael, Linda ' Proffitt
Rhonda Smith, Milly Stover:
Daniel Weddle, LAREN
WOLFE, Too)' WoUe.
Eighth Grade - · Kathy
Baker, Tyrone Brlnager,
Todd . Cundiff, CINDY
EVANS, Angle Glenn, Becky
Lee, Klm Maynard, Tanuny
Meadows, Clair Morris,
Terry Patters·on, John
Porter, David Salmons,
Tonja Salser, Lori Warden,
Danette Weddle, MELANIE
WEESE.

Salisbury honor roll
Principal John Usle has
announced· the second six
weeks grading period honor
roll for the Salisbury
Elementary School. ·
Making a grade of "B" or
above in all their subjects to
be llllted.on the roll were:
First - Tracl Bartels,
Melanie Beegle, Heidi
Caruthers, Kelly Douglas,
Jay . Humphreys, Kristin
King, Manila King, Deanna
Norris, Juon stennett, Aaron
Whaley, Chris Wyman.
Second - Wesley Young,
Michelle Taylor, Jody
Taylor, Joan Simpson, Nick
King, Mary Butcher, Melodl
Carl.
Third - David Beegle,
Billy Brothers, Michele
Folmer, Sue Fry, Lisa
Frymyer, Charlotte Hart,
Audra Houdashelt, Kevin
Donald King, Kevin VIctor
King, Shannon Slavin, Angle
Sloan, Tamra Vance.
Fourth - April Clark,
Mark Corbitt, Heather

t Alfred

Social Notes

.. Wolfpen

Stiversville News Notes

Quickie
Breakfast Specialists
EVERYDAY 7AM TO llAM

3 Golden Brown Pnakes,
with hot syrup &amp;butter ...
2 ScrCillbled Eggs...

dec .; the unknown spouse if
any of Edna Coryell ; B . F .
Putnam, if living, whose last
known address Is Marietta,
Oh lo ; If cttceased, the
unknown heirs. devisees,
legatees , ad mIn 1srr ators,
e•ec:utoraand or asstons of B.
r: . Putnam , dec . ; RUDOLPH
W . GlASNER, If living ,
addr~ss
Unknown;
U
deceased, the unknown heirs,
dev isees,
legatees ,
acf.
.m inlstrators, e:.cecutors and
or 1ss1gns
ot R_u dolph W.
G la'"er , dec .; JOHN D.
AMES , If living , address
unknown; if deCI'IStCI, the
unknown heirs, devisees ,
legatees, administrators,
executors ,. and or assigns of ·
John D. Ames. dec .• $.477 .Of.
Ser . No . 71 OLT
Ua ;

11,192.25, Ser ..No.JI OL T l•t&gt;

In ",' compt11nt as to which
no answer has bftn riled . Any
r,•rctl •• to . which
1
ortclotvre 11 taken by
Clef1ult shell 'be Mkl for the .
sltlstactlon of " ' ' ra•et , ·
asstsl man ts , penal t les ,
chlrgts,_·end. cnts Incurred ;
In t~ torec1osure tha t
due and unr,eld.
A• any t me· prior to the
filing of an entr.v ' of con.
fir-metlon of sille, any own•r
or iltnhoJdtrofa. perctlllsted
In ttleComplalnt·may redHm
such parcel by tendering to
the county Trt11urer the
amount
of
te:.es ,
auetlmtfttl, penaltiH, and
chlrgn dUe find unpaid ort
such parcel ; together with •II
co1t1 which .h•v• · b"n In ·
c.urred In •ny proctldlng

$1.'19

Apple Grove
News Notes

ir;;·

lnSIIIUttG IQIIniiiUCh parcel
RV -02, . Rutland VIllage , undlr Section 5721 .11 of tho
Melgo County, Ohio. Lof 2 Rov- Code. Upon tho filing ·

ACE- INSec'ttCtCI!
Re68~H ..

F allon'• .Addlti&lt;Jfl Rutland, of 1ny entry ·of conflrmlflon
ex . 20 f.H t or E side, I. of sele, thtre ·11'1•11 .,. no
triangle of W sldo.; Claro furlloor equity of rtGomptlon .
Charteton,
address Any
person
thartafter
un-nown.; If deceased, .ttte clelmlng any right, title and·
unknown h~lrs , devisees . lnterett In, or llen ··u po", •rtv
legatee!l, administrators . such parcel shall be fort~ter
execu tors and or a~slgn ~ ol barred and foreclosed of any
C l~ua Charleton, dec .; _ ,th.t such rloht , title. Interest tn,
unknown IPOUie, If any J. tf Hen upon, and any equity of
Clara Chetteta• .:Nrf .12; S.,, redemption In, such parctl.

No. 11 ·0.T.

Lloll\" I.IPINC•I•
ctor• ol Co•rt of

ll .

RU -03 , Rutland Village,
Meigs
County,
Ohio .
CLA UDE ASHLEY, whose
last k nown
address
Is

ay:

CIMmonPIOII

Mal'ltn•

DOPVIY Citric

Herrlson,

Meltif Cauntv. Ottlo
( 12 ) 12, 19, 26, 3tc

'.

Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst
o&lt;&gt;f Niles, Ohio spent several
days here with Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsey Parsons and visited
other relatives.
Thanksgiving days dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Parsons were Mr. and Mrs.
Durst of Niles, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Johnson of Racine, Mr.
and 'Mrs. Russell Roush,
Cindy; Dave and Ed Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert RouSh ,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Mrs. Ron Russell, Amanda
and Michael, other visitors
were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morrill
Rachel, Jason, and Erin of
Bowling Green.
Mrs.
Frankie Foster Mlirnle and
Leah of Delaware. Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush and
daughter Kimberly of Letart
Falls.

2 ScrCitlbled Eggs, Sausage,
Hash Brown Potatoes, Toast
or Biscuits...

$1.75

Cullwna, Todd Culluma,

Phil

King, Brenda Sinclair.
Fifth - Jodi Harrison,
Rodne)'. Harrison; Darren
Hayes, Scott Pullins, Tim
Sloan, Anita Smith.
lllxth - Ruth Fey, Cindy
Hazelton, Sandy Hoyt, Teresa
Pratt, Jackie Welker.

Meigs jr, honor roll
rrtocipal John Mora has
announced the honor roll for
j \ the Meigs Junior High School
: 1 for the second six weeks
i! gradlng 'per!Dd.
~I Making a grade of "B" or
; 1 above In all their subjects to
be llllted on the roll were:
• f Seventh Grade - Sherry
; ~ Ar!lold, David Barr, Chris
;,; Burdett, Robin Campbell,
~:: Barbara Chappelear, Carl
f• Davies, Patricia Duffy, Tim
~ ~ Frazier, Brent George, Jeff
'" Gilkey, Scott Hysell, Mary
l Jacoba, Rhonda Jeffers, Mike
:' KennedY, Keith Kinzel, Vicki
'j Lamp, Michael Molirning,
; Anglea
Myers,
·Mae
; NUamolo, Patricia Newtz·
~ ling, Tammy Panona•. Jon
' Perrin, Christie Quivey,
t Cheryl Rlffte, Christine
' Rlg~s. Nick Riggs, Paul
Rlua, Vau1han Spencer,
Paula Swindell, Terri Thoma,
Kenny Sue Thomu, Clinton
Turner, Melvin VanMeter,
Sam Wamsley, Mary Beth
• Weeks, Tina Yost, Bryan
Zirkle.
·
Eigtb Grade - Rowena
Averlon, Robin Barrett, Jeff
Ban1gtunan, Karla Brown,
Robin BIIHington, .Cindy
Crooks, Karla DeMoaa, Faith
Dlckena, Angela Farley.
' lil'lllt Flnlaw, Kim Fraley,
• Barbara Grueaer, Beclly
: Handley, Scott, Harrison,
: Paula Horton, Stephanie
Houcblnl, Jim Hoyt, Tom
Kenuedy, BrW King, l'Jatalle

:i

POSTER Clll!D - Newly-appointed Ohio State
Chairman f~r the National Foundation - March of Dimes
Tim Hagan, meets Melanie Brockington, B, March of
Dimes 1979 National Poster Child. Hagan was appointed
for a one year term to lead the Ohio March of Dimes fight
against Birth Defects.
·

March of Dimes appoints
Timothy Hagan chairman
Timothy F.
Hagan,
Chalnnari of the Cuyahoga
County Democratic Party,
has been appointed Ohio
State Chairman for the
National Foundation - March
of Dimes, it was announced
today by Edward Fike,
Director of Development for
the organization.
As Ohio State Chalnnan,
Hagan will lead the voluntary
heahborganizat.ion's effort to
prevent birth defects. He will
act as spokesman on the
statewide basis. for the
organization and will assist in
the recruitment of other key
volunteers and increase the
public's awareness of March
of Dimes programs.
An important part of his
responsibilities will be the
development of Public Mfairs Committees throughout
the state which will attempt
to influence the outcome of
legislation of interest to the
organization.
"The March of Dimes has a
proven record of success and
I am pleased to represent
them in this capacity. In
fillcal1977-78, the March of
Dimes invested over a million
and a half dollars in scientific
research and medical service
programs at Ohio's leading
medical institutions and
community hospitals and in
support of public and
professional
education
programs."
"The March of Dimes has
done more than any other
organization of it~ kind to
protect the health of the
children in Ohio and

t

Lambert, 5111811 Ughlfoot,
:. Wayne Pearson, Scott
~ Plckllll, John Smith, Krls
l Snowden, Joan Tanner, Greg
,· Taylor, Wendy TUIII, Renee
l Wlllla, Suaanna Wise.
I

WE'RE BREAKFAST SPECIALISTS
at 328 Viand Street
irt Point Pleasant

WHO CAN A GIRL BEUEVE?
DEAR !lAP:
At'Cording to Mom; Dad walked out on her when I was 2. She
told '!'e nothing hut bad about him ever since, and I grew up
thinkmg he was some kind of rotten monster. She wouldn't let
me near hill parents. Moved out of the slate so "they wouldn 't
get their dirty hands on me."
.
Mom and I always clashed. I guess it was my fault as much
as hers, but anyway, I left home when I reached 18 - with
relief, ooth ways. She never seemed to like me very well.
By a reali.Y crazy coincidence- I helped save several people
~rom dymg an an apartment house fire, and my name appeared
man AP story- my father found where I lived and came to see
me.
Helen and Sue, he seems like a wonderful man . He won't say
anything bad about Mom except that it was Mom who locked
him out and left town. He 's taken me to see his·parents- my
grandparents - and I could love them. They all say they tried
to fmd us, but Mom kept moving. (True, we lived in a lot of different places.)
It's so hard to blot out all the terrible things I've heard . 1
want to accept my new-found family, but then I wonder, could
Mom have baled them so much without reason ?
Who should I believe?- WENDY DEAR
WENDY :
.
Believe the people who m~ke you feel loved and wanted.
(Evidently your mother never did. ) Don't let her warped viewpoint mu~dy up a relationship you already sense is genuine.-HELEN

Jenritnp Jleesle, principal,
bu 81110waced the Southern
Junior Hllb Sc:hool hanor roll ·
for tbe ~ llix weep
gradlac period.
Maklnc a grade of "B" or
ahave In au ~ subjects to
beliltedoo the roll with those ·
In
capltalletten making
llll'lllbt A's """ :
·
Seventh Grade· - Janie

POLLY·s POINTERS

1

; ~ye~=~~~=!:r !

Southern jr, honor
' roU announced

Laurel Oiff

--''-------------- .

;:':·.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::;:::~::::;:;:;:::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::; :;:;:;:;::::::::::::':::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;~

Rutlandiionor roll
••'

The aecond lix weeks

~r&amp;dlng period of the RutlAnd

: Elementary

been
1 completed, Following are the
• puplll receiving a lr&amp;de ol
: • ''B" or better In au their
: l 1Ubjectl. 'lbolle In capital
• ' IItten naceiwd aU "A"'a.
Flnt grade: An8ie Blada:,
1! j)eniiO'emlllll, Lilli 0or1t,
I ; ~ Doell, KIM EBLIN,
j ; Ntcale Hartwell, Julie
Hatfield, Robb7 RldunCIIId,
i TERRA
SCHOONOVER,
: !REBB'CCA STILTNER,

;I ,

:t

has

·NATALIE TROMM, Albert ,
Van Cooney.
Second grade: Shelly
Adama, Laurie Black, Sherri
Blair, Pete Brlckles, CHAD
CARSON, SHAWN FETI'Y,
ABBY FRY, RHONDA
GOMEZ, Jim Grueser, JOE
HALL,
SHEILA
HENDRICKS, Janella
Hysell, STACY HYSELL,
TRACY HYSELL, TllACY
MICHAEL, Sally McKnight,
Martha Nelson, Matthew
Peterson, PAM SMI'm, J . R.
WALKER, SABRINA
WIUDN.

Third grade: Michael
Bartrum, Jodi Brown, Mandl
Fry, Scott Geyer, Tracy
Holman, PATRICIA
McGHEE, Usa Miller, Mike
Roush, {&gt;atricia Smallwood,
Joey Snyder,
Pamela
Stlllner, Joe Tillis.
Fourth grade: Paul DaUey,
1\flcheUe Peterson, . Lisa
Searles, Marla Musser ,
Denny
Wesh,
Diana
.WU!Iamson.
Fifth Grade: Becky Birchfield, Todd Doczl, Greta ·
Kennedy, Chrlatlna McGhee,
lllerry Wilson.
Sixth grade: Ryan HaU,
Bollby Geyer, Jack Peterson,
Dollglas Priddy, Alison

throughout the nation. I am
certain we will continue to
make even greater progress
in the fugure," said Hagan.
Hagan comes to the March
of Dimes with a strong
political background,
working for numerou s
senators, governors, and
presidential candidates. A
resident of Cleveland, Hagan
has been involved in every
city mayoral election since
1971.

•

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I know how the girl feels who has a friend in state prison and
won't stop writing him.
·
I met Mike last year and fell in love. But he broke parole and
Went back to jail. When he got out, he had trouble getting on
his feet, so he did something that put him in prison again.
Everyone has turned against him except me. I wrote
himevery day the first time and am still doing it, though my
parents think I should forget he 's alive .
When someone needs a friend, you just can't turn away. I'm
doing everything I can to stop him from messing up next time.
Just sign me - ANOTHER LOYAL FRIEND WHO KEEPS ON
TRYING
DEAR FRIEND:
Loyalty is great, but mix it with caution - and common
sense. You've got a three-time loser here. Does he want to go
straight as much as you want this for him ? - HELEN AND
SUE
'

BIRTIIDAY PARTY
The birthday of Vinson
Martin was celebrated
Sunday with a party at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
-Martin, Chester.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Osby Martin and son, ·
Adam, Pomeroy, the hosts,
and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Kibble, Danielle and Brian.
Ice cream and cake were
served.

Holly ue~r;,,

RAP:

LUNCHEON
NAPKINS

My 50-ish m?ther quotes another colWTUiist who says, "Kids
danced close In my day because the ooys knew that was all
they were going to get. " Is that really true, Helen? - 17-ISH
DEAR 17-ISH :
If that were true, a lot of 1940-ish "premature" babies happened along via the dance floor. - HELEN

Christmas
tim
. e 0ifJ011J • 't'Tha~ks.glving

that the people I work with in
l'"l therapy the week · after
I'
b~gin
expenencmg dep r e s s 1 o n,
.
anxiety and depression," he
DENVER
( UPI)
said.
Thanksgiving can be the
"Thill ill apt to be greatest
starting point of a depression among those in post-adolesthat may last through cence who are still working
Christmas, a psychiatrist with issues of family, trying
reports.
Donald Weatherley said alcohol mixed with a depressed
mental state that stems from
a disappointing holiday
season can cause potentially
lethal behavior.
Thanksgiving, he said, is
when people may recall their
relationships with their
families and that can remind
them of domestic frustrations
or sbre points that have gone
unresolved during the rest of
the year.
"I'm aware, for example,
•

Rlf. 191 tlf.

For the holiday festivities
ahead! Single-ply luncheon
size napkins wit h green
holly design.

to break away, where there ill
still some anger."
The depression, he said,
usually extends through
Christmas and since ooth
holidays are suJlpOsed to be
happy family celebrations,
people who find them to be
less may resort to heavy
alcohol consumption .

*1
.
Pkft.
2

t

fiJBENFRANKLIM
llJ ~bring variety to life!

BUY NOW AT:

SAYRE

POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN

HARDWARE

Pomeroy , o.

200 East Main

~iSA1lESA1lESA1lESA1lESAVE~

~

PAT PRESENTS
SPECIAL PROGRAM
A program of special in·
terest to high school seniors
and their parents will be
presented Tuesday,
December 12 at Meigs lfigh
School by PAT (Parents and
Teachers ). Financial aid
which Is available to students
who wish to further their
education beyond high school
will be explained, beginning
at 7:30 p.m. Scholarships,
loans, and work programs
will be discussed by a film·
strip presentation and Meigs
Guidance
Department
personnel. Sample application blanks will lle
available, and parent
. questions will be· answered.
All MHS parents are urged to
attend this program, and a
special invitation ill being
given to senior parents.

BlltMINGHAM,
Ala.
(UP!) - The Birmingham
Bulls scored a 1-0 WHA win
over the Cincinnati Stingers
Sunday night when left wing
Paul Henderson scored at
14:31 of the third period, for
the host team's fourth
straight victory.
The Bulls now have a l:z..IZ.
I record and the Stingers are

sent to the box in the entire

game.

Bu~er

Oief

05

.
0

ti•tte ofda at
urgerChe •
~--------------------------~--------------------------~

Hamburger and ~d Bar

Big Shefand Regular French
Fries

0~$1 .. ,

Each coupon requires separate purchase.
Preeent coLipons when ordering.

I Coupon exp-Ires Oec. 21, 1971

.

Only$l.Of!
·
·

Each coupon require5 separate purchase.
·
Present coupons when order ing.

Coupon expires Dec. 23, 1978

I~--------------------------·--------~-----------------~
:Super ~h~~-arld Regular French
, Regular French.
•
Fries
and 16 oz. Drink

i
1

1

$1.00

Only$1.00

coupon requires Hparate purchase.
PreMmt coupons when ordering.

coupon
&amp;eparate
Present coupon5 when ordering.

~-

I Coupon oxplru Dec. 23, 1911

GAME' OFF
The Southern - Hannan
Trace girls game slated this
evening at Hannan Trace bas
been postponed. It will be
rescheduled later.

~

'"

.

•

Stingers beaten

14-1~.
Tromm ..
In a surpriBingly penaltyPrimary Special Ed. : Kim .
.
free
game, Cincinnati's Kelly
Barrett, Jack King; Marty
Davis
was the ooly_ player
Hutton, Kauin Hutton, Joy

Anderson, Tina Romine.
Intermediate Spec181 Ed.:
Devld Dunkle, Tim MuDins,
&lt;llarlotte Patterson, Miasy
Riggs, Larry Van Cooney.
L.D. Claaa:
Jimmy
Cleland, Robert Spears,
Donald Nickels, Charles
Harmon.
·

WENDY :
But do ask your father and grandpa rents more about his
marriage. You've a riqht to the truth. -SUE

NIELSON llATINGS AREN'T EVERYTHING- at least nqt for "The Paper Chase."
Though the law«hool drama has never placed above the bottom 10 in the ratings if.'l
critical acclaim has been sufficient to cause CBS to order another half'&lt;'Ieason of progr~ms .
James Stephens (right) stars at the law student with theatrical elder-statesman John
Houseman as hill professor.

require~

Coupon expires Dec . 23,

1978

sz·

purch~

�•
9-The Dailv ~ntinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec. 11. 1978

Holiday
remembrances
planned

WATCHMANTEAM -December13-17wlll bethedatesofthefallrevival at the Pomeroy
OnD'ch of Onist located at 212 W. Main St. This will be a little different than in the past with
the revival meeting running on Wednesday through Sunday. The services will begin each
evening at 7:30 and everyone is invited to attend. The evangelists for this meeting will' be
Dave Lucas and the Watchmen from Operation Evangelize located in Chesapeake. The
Watchmen began traveling in 1970 and have held bWidreds of evangelistic mee\iJ1gs across
lhe country. The actual singing group is made up of steve RJ!nson, who sings baritone, Rick
Ranlon, who is Steve's older brother and singa high tenor, Sam Natten, who sings lead, and
lhelr balls singer, George Draper . Vickie Warren provides piano back-up for the group. All
the members are Bible College graduates. David Lucas Is their evangelist and has been
preaching since the a~te of 15. He graduated from Kentucky Christian College with an AB
and BTb degree. David also received his Master's degree from Marshall University in
Huntlngtan, W.V. The public is invited. Members of the Watchman Team are,left to right,
Rick Ranson, Steven Ranson , Dave Lucas, George Draper, Sam Batten, and, front, Vickie
Warren.

...

Relative feels family murdered
MT. VERNON, Ohio {UP!)
- Om Cocdell, who lost 13
members of his family in last
month's People's Temple
mass suicide in Guyana,
believes it was ''murder plain
andsim~le. "

Holiday remembrances f9r
a family with two children ·
having respirawry dlaeases
were planned during a recent
meeting of the Meigs CoWity
Salon 710, Eight and Forty,
held at the home of Mrs. Veda
Davis.
The family was also invited
to tbe annual Christmas
party of the Salon and earlier
sent · a food basket and
provided with furniture.
Mrs. Iva Powell, cbapeau,
presided at the meeting
which opened in ritualistic
form . It was noted that $10
bad been sent to Mrs. Jane
Brown, Meigs County
tuberculosis nurse, to be used
for a local tuberculosis child.
Mrs. Mary Martin, national
LYDIA SIMON - Is shown in beauUful, hand
child and youth chairman,
embroidered dress from the PhUlippines to be shown at
reported on area conferences'
the hmcheon.
which she has attended. She
noted that this year the
emphasis is on disrupted
youth, immunization of all
SCULPTOR AT WO~ - Elizabeth Haley, sculptor, at
children, cbild neglect and
work in her studio.
cblld abuse. At all of the three
conferences held so far.• there ·
.
were speakers on various
topics including drugs and
J1
CUT YOUR OWN AT
alcohol.
Mrs. Martin also reported
on the National American
Legion's pledge to sponsor
2,200 retarded children in the
Vi PRE-CUT TREES AVAILABLE
Special Olympics staged
Located .on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Oarwin onto Rt.
through the Joseph P .
"Christmas Magic· 'Round Church nursery and reser·
681, go 4 mileS to Milepost 13, turn south on gravel r~ad
Kennedy, Sr., Foundation. the World" will be the thef(le vations may be made by tf 1•12 miles to grove.
·
w·
WATCH FOR SIGNS
M
, Emphasis of this, Mrs. for Christian Women's Club calling Keeler's, 446-4629, or II
Hours: 10 Til Dark
.
Martin,' reported will be · on luncheon at the Holiday Inn, Nuce's, 446-7374.
starting with sponsorship at Tuesday, December 19, at
the local level. Also included 12 :15. An international style
'
in the program were reports show will be featured with
on special run·a·way projects Gabriel Sattler, Lydia Simon,
being held in Denver.
Vilma Pilioja, Joanne
TUESDAY ONLY
It was annoWiced that the Shepler, Lucille Sarrett,
partnership goal is 24,500 and Patsy Fitch and Lakshm
that the national chapeau is Priyanath as models showing
interested in awarding 23 costumes from China, In- '
nursing scholarships at $1,500 donesia, Estonia,
the
each . S.alons were en· Phillippines, India, Germany.
. ·---- - ·couraged to endow beds at and America, describing
the National Jewi,sh Hospital holiday customs in these
in Denver and it was noted coWitries as well. Marta
1
that already Ohio has en· 1 Dean will furnish background
25% Off
dowed one. There was also music; Mary Margaret Willis
Just Present --Your
·
reported a $1,500 grant to the will play before luncheon.
. ....-Child Welfare Foundation by Jim Clark will be soloist and
Golden
Buckeye Card ·
Ohio.
guitarist.
·
0At the conferences, Mrs.
Elizabeth Haley, Sculptor
When Ordering.
Martin talked on the program and President of the Knox
of children and youth which ' . County Art Guild, will ' be
she encouraged be started on coming from Mount Vernon
the local level.
.
to speak.
The annual Chr~stmas · Babysitting is provided
party of the Eight and Forty free at the Grace Methodist
was held at the Point
Pleasant Inn last week.
An optimist is a fellow with
Members exchanged gifts.
loose dentures who bobs for
apples ala Halloween party.

'Christmas Magic' theme
of holiday program

I
I
1

~------------------------, .

I N. W. COMPTON, O.D. 1
I
OPTOMETRIST
1
I OFFICE HOURS:
'1:~0 to 12, 2 to s I CL.OS'£ 1
til:1;.;~2r:~~~-=--~~:~~::J

SMOKED

PICNIC HAMS

. . . . . . . . . . .~~:-~}79

Swift

49
$}
••••···•·· ···••· •····•·•· ··

WALNUTS .... l

lb. S[19
2 lb. $2.38

LARGE TENDER
CALIFORNIA CELERY· •• bunch

DIAMOND

WALNUTS

RED RIPE
salad pack
FLORIDA TOMATOES ...... lb. 39c

lb. $109

GRAPEFRUIT

INDIAN RIVER

oz.

12

S-SOMeiHI IJ0
WRO\.l0, Si g.'?

RED OR GOLDEN
haH bushel
ROME BEAUTY APPLES···$2.50

5 89t
lb. bag

~........:...._

Quantity Rights Reserved

U.S. NO. 1
10 lb. bag
IDAHO POTATOES• ... $1.39

I·

.

·--------~--~-----'

J

ETTY CROCKER
SUPER MOIST

SALE DATES DECEMBER 11 • 16, 1978

'

CAKE

12

\,LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE

tor

18-oz.
Boxes

Piuchase,

A coupon containing subs"cription information necessary . .
.for your gift giving is contained in this . ad for your
t'Qnvenience. Fill it o.u t and send It in together with your
check. .
·

OHIO &amp; W.VA ....................'22.00 YR.
ELSEWHERE... ~ ........................ '26.00 YR.

if!! ~~!JJ-Ny~:.,.....,..,:.~.~~·~~·~
·~· o~~~·c~~·.J'J-'·o~~~·~~·~
·~

:)i .Tbe Daily c;entinel

~

·

.

$169
·TEA BAGS.J~t ..

~~
~

Ntame .................................. ·~······~."············.·: .~
.·
5
reef ························Jo~····-························· ~
t i- n1 y .. ... .......... ..·.
·
~
-~
State ..........
Zip .......... ~

ARCH

•

·

From .................. ; .........._...... :..........

.

DAY

·aLES
VEGETA 3:::.'\oo
GREiM

WHITE

·'

"'z

limit ana with coupon

$429~

"

0

DOMINO
1·Lb.
Pkgs.

~

t;:;

ftor•l lllu• Slor••

oo-eO-()&amp; ~

CARIJINAI f~

Pkg.

LIGHT BROWN or DARK BROWN or POWDERED

Limit one with

,. .... .

$\

· ~~ __

;.J ••

.

AUGRATIN. HASH BROWNS or SCALLOPED
. BETT'i CROCKER

CARDINAL MARGARINE .................... .c'~.':'.~ 39 1

3

SWEETMILK.or BUTTERMILK

.

HUNGRY JACK BISCUITS .............. 2 ~~·~~ 89&lt;

MINUTE MAID . FRESH CHILLED

ORANGE JUICE ............ ,.......... ~:;~:.; 5 119

BEEF, CHICKEN
or TURKEY
BANQUET

BORDEN$

'

ALL NATUiAL YOGURT ................. 2 c·~~~" 891
BORDENS

POT PIES..........................

SOUR CREAM ..................................... 2c:::, 189&lt;
VALLEY BELL

COnAGE CHEESE ..........2.'.~: .. ~1 09

6Pak 69~
SHE RIO PUSHUPS ............................................... .
VALLEY BELL

KRAFT AMERICAN, PIMENTO or SWISS

MT. TOP APPLE PIE ..................... ·.. ········....................... 3:.;;~· $1 5'

0 It 0 I I

2 lb

NOLES CHEESE

1••

MT. TOP PEACH PIE···· ..... ................................. ............··~]~:~· ~
S}29
DINNERS ....~~~~-~................... ~.................
.-=~==-._

DAIRY VALUES

POTAfftES
....................... 2 Bo•••
Umlt two w1lr coupon

APPLESAUCE

•

'2&gt;a

etz1noo
0 STO RES

19

'

ICE CRIEAM

SAIDWI~HES •.................................·.......•.•........... •1;;~.· · s1~~
I

,••.

u ....
BORDENS or
VALLEY liEU
·, '

DIET RITE OR

MAXWEU HOUSE

· Christmas gift
Looklngfor a dal ring to It?
Idea with

'

e fOr
.se '" .

a....

someone yoo.i love

~

and penonohty) Y~
.
person (
. rJ colon, tOO·
dnzled by the ~ce . f a Christmas &amp;ift that says
So if you're seat:thlng or r exciting phone coUec·

.

· 1 IT\e see au
·
something spec•a • c.o GTE Phone Mart ~n.
tion for· younelf at d~ t It 's. a whole new way to see
The GTE Ph- ,.,,.. · '
.

computer."

39~

3 ,~~~: 5\ oo

•NS
GR££N· BE,..

· Qlristm&gt;S· whY not rpri
own
:~:special pl'lone or hit or hers":~ from . EaCh.
Wt We have so ~y differe;~~racter to expr~ the
with tu own urllque s.~yle
have in mind. You II be

"Remember, Santa Claus is
videotaping everything you do
and checking it twice with his

Lb.
Bag

Ct.

SPIMAC ....................
•··· 5\ oo
8a snMS
2
,.ec•• RROOMS ................. Cent~
MUS
'l"'~&gt;

@Wall Or5ney Producl.nns

~-~;~~~~~~~~~ir;t;!t.S:iPJ.
WE WILL SEND A CHRISTMAS CA RD

5
fOUR............
GOLD MEDAL

691
KRAFT Mill MARSHMALLOWS ...... '~•:~ 391

MO " ra

10tAA10£5

Hindi, the official language
of India, and Urdu, the offipial language of Pakistan,
are essentially the same
language, Hindustani, writ·
ten in different scripts.

LAFF- A-

TENDERLEAF

KRAFT MARSHMALLOW CREME ..... '~~~·

POMEROY-The 50th wed·
ding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Carol R. Pierce,
Langsville, will be observed
with an open house celebra·
lion on Sunday, Dec. 17 from 2
to S p.m. at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Rusty Pierce, Jr .,
Salem Center.
The celebration is being
hosted by their five children,
Carol F . Pierce, Jr., Salem ,
Center; Robert E. Pierce,
Colum~us ; Delores Johnson ,
Carroll; Sandra Sue Newton,
Waverly ; and David W.
Pierce, Mansfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Pierce were
married on Dec . 29, 1928 in
Michigan. Mrs. Pierce is the
daughter of Frank Abdon of
Chelsea, Mich. and the late
Mrs. Abdon. Besides their
rive children, Mr. and Mrs.
Pierce have 14 grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren.
Friends and relatives are
cordially invited to call during the open house hours.

~

·

lBJ9C

IPRODUCE VALUES/

SALE

Looking for just the right gift for that certain someone?
· How about a present that will be good at all seasons· of the
year? A subscription to the Daily Sentinel and Sunday
Times Sentinel.
.

WRH EACH Gin SUBSCRIPTION

:~t~~~.~~

1.vor.n -

with identity problems.

I
1.
I

to be celebrated

(ICWIIC

ENGLISH

DRUMSTICKS....................~~-..49~

DRUMSTICK... ~~;. 99~

Golden anniversary

,,

on people

LB.

~~~~~
................. ~~.~:. SJ69
THIGHS..........~~·. 79~

DAIRY VAllEY,

.~ ,

1

. . $}89
CUBE STEAK ..........•....~·.... .

WHOLE

LEGS. ••••••••••••L~;.69~

ADOLPH'S.

Pomeroy, Ohio

He said his aunt, Edith
Cordell, and two bothers
continued to attend the
People's Temple. The aunt,
who died in the Guyana mass
suicide, was talked into
selling three houses she

preyed

$}19 f
TURKEY BREASTS............ ;.......
I~

CHICKEN

1

~

$}69

RUMP ROAST. ...•...... ~ •••.. ~..'!·.... ·

1

BRADFORD'S GROVE

left when Jones sljlrted
preaching against the Bible.
' 1He was telling you that the
Bible was no good anymore ,"
Cordell said, "He was putting
himself up as a diety-as
father of everyone."

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

r··-·····•·····-···•
I CHRISTMAS TREES I
I

The Mt. Vernon auto mechanic,
a
35-year1)1d
Indianapolis native, was a
member of the Rev. Jim
Jones' congregation at the
Indiana state capital city in
the early 1960s, but he said he ·

Lite eight nephews and nieces
who died at Jonesville ,
because their deaths bother
him the most .
" There weren t any
suicides in the whole damn
thing," Cocdell said. "It was
murder plain and simple. If
Jones hadn't died, I'd liked to
have killed him."
Cordell contended Jones

SENIOR CITIZENS
--

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

. ~ ' 111 Court Street

owned in California and the
mmey turned over to the ·
temple, Cordell said.
The biggest philosphy out
in Callfornia was to make
'people totally dependent oo
him," he said. "What he 'WBS
doing was building himself
up. Nobody was worth
anything bot Jim Jones."
He cried when he thought of

yoor pllonO

16 West Washington, Athens .

,ompai:-r.::\ pHone

atthe~maRT

-I

..•
••

.._,
d

''

'

o&gt;

·•

."'

COFFEE
2-LB. CAN

~

8-16

'

29

POJJ
rA~QES
Limillwowilt'- ~. · ~

Plus Deposit

&amp;Other

on. wugon~ /.

-~
.-. '. ·

_~@t~

...,.,...•'

-....

·

!OCT.

•FRUIT BASKETS

SIZE

•BULK CANDY

•STORE SLICED LUNCHEN MEAT PlAnERS

•BULK CITRUS FRUITS
ANY SIZE

.

,.

,.

• _l

(f)

= ,., .

t;

~;

\

oo ..u .or; .{:) .1
CAR[JIIN Al f\\" :

$109

TRASH BAGS
r--,~CUUL~F~OiOODDSiiF~O~R~H~O~LI;D~A~YrHH~A~P;PiEN~IN~G~ss---~~~~~~--P-KG· ------- .

"
".
••

,,.j:
; ':

· ' ' ;. ,,.Cirdlnal llloyM 81ut Sto•••

DOWNY

Umlt one with coupon

)

, ... nt. Sizes
.. Bo•n

--. ,

l ~f:
.~~a
.:.·.~, ·_:wns
or Scalloped o~
.,':.Hfru:
1Z11ena

FABRIC SOFTNER
REO . .DRIP ELECT. PEAK or ADC

f!teii) ;;:::eJ:I .

BETTY CROCKE!\ ',, - - • • -

BOffiES

·~

'
•
':i

-~--"'&gt;it ORES • CAROINA LfOOOSTORES

oz.

�10-The Daily Sentmt•l. Mtddlt'ptll't- Pomeroy. 0 . Monday. f1c&lt; ·. I I. I!17R

WANT AD
CHARGES

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

1~

wh o wtU g rve som eth mg b enefrciat eQual to your con Hrbutr on .

SAG ITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Be cooperat rve today. b ut
don ' t be condescendr ng Others co uld mr sin terpr et you r
actio n and fee l you re try rng to
take advantage at them Fmd
out mo re about yo urse lf by

se nd1 ng lor yo ur 1979 co py o f
As tr o-Graph Le tt e r Ma 11 50
cen ts for t:!ach and a lon g , se lfaddre ssed . stamped en velope
to Ast ro-G ra p h , P.O Box 489 ,
Aad1o C 1ty S tati on . N Y 10019
Be sure to spectf y brrth si gn
CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan. 191
Major pro bl em s you can handl e
in str1d e toda y. b u t pe tt y fru s·
tra tro n s co uld caus e yo u

to

overreac t ThiS Is not a ttme to
m ake m o u nt a ins fr o m
mo lehi ll s .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 191
Tho ugh yo u 'll be m a g regc:m ·
ous mood tod ay . b ei ng a ro u nd
lrt end s who mdulg e m exc e sSIVe small talk wtll q u iC kly bore
you . Seek o ut pals w1th dept h .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 Be
o ri gin a l toda y. Don 't a tt empt to
Jailo r the tdeas of s omeo ne
e lse to f11 your needs . What
·wor ked fo r him may fall flat fo r
yo u
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll19) Take
li me to think things out c lea rly
tf yo u ' re tnvolved m any me nta l
pu rS Ui ts You have a tendency
to Jump to conc lus io ns to day
You c ould mak e m1s tak es .
TAURUS (April 20-May 201
Av o id Ch riStm as shop pi ng
today Cha nces are yo u 'll either c o me ho me e mp ty ~h anded
or else bu y care les s ly jus t fo r
lhe s ak e of g e1t1ng 11 d one .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) It ma y
be d iffi CUlt to s ee eye-to-eye
to day w lth o n e w 11 h wh o m yo u
are c losely as s oc1ate d . If yo u
see s to rm war nin g s , back o ff

CANCER

(June

21 ~July

22)

rli:tl'~l'

. .,

'"

1 25

NO HUNTING o r tres possmg on
my property w 11ho ut p e rm is .

-

-

-- -

-

r-------- ----,

jt•t Lit'na l

T It
l'l'Sf)II II.S IIJ it• fill
1 t•t't 11 1!;1!11 1o!ll ,

Public Invited
HotPOint
Microwave Cooking
Demonstration Tuesday,
December 12th
7:30 P.M.

P tiblt:;hct wtll nut be
III Uil' lhl:ltl Ollt' lilt Ill •

Pl'lllllt' 99'l-2l56

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Bring Your Appelile
And Questions

9 • ..!ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

liiiJ;I

Phone 992·2t81

·~

Mu t iU&lt;~ y

NtH.!II Ull Sat u nl,l~

Tul'sduy
thru F'1 1 tJu~·

Sumlay
4 P.M.

F'11t.l;;y aftt'rmxm

In Memory
IN LOV ING mem roy of Moro.ret
l ynch. who passed awa y 13
yea rs ago today
Sad ly mtssed by Be tty Stewa rt
a nd Fomt!y.
Card of Thanks
THE FAMILY of John Rashp wishes
to thank th ose wh o sent
fl owe rs, food , the stngers . the
m tnister and those who ca lled
or he lpe d in any way Mrs
John Ras P and Fom1ly

---,---;:-:c-::-:;-;::-::-:-:=-:;; - Lost and Found
lOST MALE cot. Whtte long ho1r
with ora nge ma rkings on ea rs .
nose a nd ta d Blue e yes wtth
fl ea colla r. Mulber ry Ave
Ar ea 992-6040.

More than us ual patie nc e is
cal led fo r In worktn g wr th others toda y Yo u co uld fmd yourself fru s trat e d ove r the1r se nsele ss ways of d o in g things
LOST· BROWN and wht le .4 mo
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 A c o mbi·
old Bea gle puppy Roc ksp" ngs
na tio n o f smal l ltme~ wa s ters
area . 992-58?5
could c ut yo ur prod 1JC I1v1ty
down co ns td e rab ly today DeHelp Wanted
vot e you r t1m e to your seriou s
proJects . Ig nore fn vo lo us on e s . WE AR E taking a pplications for
e mploym e nt . No phone cal ls
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Tople ase Oh1o Valley Manufo c·
da y you co uld b e o ve rly 1nflu·
tunng Co rp., Tup pers Plmns
enced by th e o p tnions of peoOh to
ple wh o do n' t have your best
interest at hea r1. Stnve to BABYSITT ER WANTED Mi ddle po rt
ar ea Phone 247-3292 . l ea ve
please th e m and yo u 'll do
messa ge
you rself a d tsservice .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Try
not to critici ze others · 1deas
Meigs County
today unle s s you can offer tru ly
Agriculture
cons lru ct ive s ugge s ti o ns
Society
Looking fo r fa ults won ' t enF ln~ncia I Statement
RECEIPTS
ha nc e your pop ula ri ty
$16,620 CO
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 In Gate Adm issi ons
Membersh ips
7,804.00
bu s tn ess matte rs today be &lt;Jery Season Ti c kets
208.00
care fu l of what you Sign . Read Conc essions
13 ,686 87 ~
all s mall print thoroughly b e· Class Entry Fees
383 .50
2,1!60 00
lo re locki ng your s elf tnto a Speed Re ceipts
StateAid( Jr . &amp; Sr . ) 22,180.00
lone -te rm aQ re emen t.
County Aid
5.000.00
( ~WS P~P E R ENTE RPRISE ASSN)
Sa les
1,65966
Ad vertiS tnQ
1,400.00
Short Term R.ent li iS 2,955.88
Int erest
289 .01
Sa vi ngs + Redepos it
The Almanac
C-0
15,046 ..4 4
Loan
7, 500.00
Uulted Press International
Refund s
1,951 .29
M isc . Income
Today is Mmday, Dee. 11,
509 .00
Bal. beg inn ing of
the 345th day of 1978 with 20 to
2.383 .76
year
follow.
$102 ,449.41
Total
EXPENSES
The moon is approaching
Salar ies
$ 1,500.00
its full phase .
Temporary Payrol l 8,237 .52
Bustness &amp; Prohts s ional
The morning stars are
E x p.
3,792.81
Mercury , Venus, Jupiter and
Ju dges
947 .50
Saturn.
Directors Exp .
510 .96
Administrative
The evening star is Mars.
155 .6
E xp
Those born m this date are Soc ia l Security
95 1.92
75 00
tmder the sign of Sagittarius. O ues
P r e m iums (Sr . Fair) 4,87&lt;t .34
F ormer New York Mayor
Pr e rn iu m s (Jr Flllrl 5,519 17
Ra c ing Purses &amp;
Fiorello Laguardia was born
24,522.39
E x penses
Dec. 11, 1882.
1,999 01
Publi c Util it ie s
On this day in history :
G rand Stand
7.850 DO
Attra ct ton s
In 1816, Indiana was
275 DO
s ani tat ion
admitted to the Union as the Advert ising
896.70
Sound System, Ten t
19th st ate.
Ren ta ls Etc .
2, 199 89
In 1936 , Britain's King Pre m lum Books &amp;
e90 14
Pr inting
Edward VIII abdicated the
c e . Re pa trs
' throne to marry American Ma&amp; intenan
Suppli e s
2,239 17
div o r c ee Wallis Warfield Capital
Improvements
4.376 7e
Simpson - •'the woman I
123 DO
Refunds
love." His brother, the duke Property Purchased 11 ,044 DO
15, 000 00
of York, succeeded to the Bank C-D Bought
Bank
Bat.
end
of
throne as King George VI.
year
4.&lt;6e 65
$102 ,449 .41
In 1941, four days after Total
Japan
attacked
Pearl 1121 11. 11c
Harbor, Germany and Italy
PROBATE COURT OF
declared 'War on the United
MEIGS CQUNTY , OHIO
Slates , pitting the Axis ESTATE OF MELVINA
BARNHART, DECEASED .
Powers against the Allies.
case No . :Z24"
In
1972,
Apollo
I7
On Novemb er 22. 1978, In
astronauts Gene Cernan and the Meigs County P r oba te
Court . Case No. 27.496 P"tl"i r-k
Harrison Sclunitt Iamed oo H . O' Br ren , 100 1h C o~rt
the moon for a three-day Stre et. Pomeroy, Oh 10 45769
was appointed ad mi nistrator
exploration .
of the estate of Me lv ina Barn hart, deceased , late of Rt 1,
A thought for the day : Middleport , Oh io .
American President FrankUn
Manning D. Webster
Probate J udge .Cierk
D. Roosevelt said, "The truth
is found when men are free to 1111 27, 1121 4, 11 . 3tc
pursue it."
----------

The Metgs County Rehabilitation
program i s now taking applications at 107 1h
Sycamore St. or phone 992-6341 from . Dec . 11
thru Dec. 22 . Jan. 8 thru 19 from 9 A . M . to 3
· P.M. Monday thru Friday to serve the home
ownership needs of stable, credit worthy
lower income families.
Eligible applicant must own property
and live in Meigs County and meet income
guidelines. This grand program will be
administered without regard to race, color,
creed or national origin.

19b7 TQTAL ELECT RI C mobt le
home. fur ms hed, 3 bedr ,
washer and dryer Air cond tlloned. I lot, 110 fi. frontage
$12,000 Phone 742·2826

.POMEROY LA~DMARK
I

4 PM .
lht&gt; tlay l.wful t' pulllk atlull

1 '1 ACRE 12 x 60 mob de home
near Dexte r. 992-5658
1

wanted to Buy
WOO D .
Poles ma x.
d10meter 10' on larges t end,
$ 12 pe r ton Bundled slob. $ 10
per ton . Oeltvered to Ohi o
Polle t Co , Rt 2 Pomeroy.
9'12 2b!l9
TIM BER - POMEROY Forest Products Top pn ce lo r sto ndtng
sow ttmber. Call 992·5965 or
Ken t Han by, 1-446· 8570

CHI P

For Sale
COAl. liMESTONE , s o n~ . gr ovel ,
ca lct um chlortde . fe rti lizer dog
food , ond all types of sa lt. l::x celstor Soh Work s, Inc E Mci tn
~ t_. ~o~e roy 992- 3~~ ---- _
APPLE S ,FITZPATRICK Orchard .
State Rt bfl9 Phone Wil l..esv tll e
669-3785.

.

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

CHRISTMAS
Rutl a nd .

TR &lt;ES

Mo;n

St. .

..

For Sal e

Mobile Homes fo r Sa le-

---· ~

197tJ WASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1', both und erp1nnmg, $1SOO
l.ltl
!25
and a ss ume loon 9.49· 2b83 or
!tl.ti"
s1on Judy McGraw _
.1 on
J 75
litta; ~
8• 3·33 11.
GUN SHOOT N:ocm e G un Club
F:..t'h Wllltl tiVt'l Ltk• llllllllll UIIl I ~
t::very Sunda y 1 pm . Factory 1970 Amherst 50xl 2 2 BR
IWI'I l&lt;; I~ ~ t'l'll( S pt•r \Nilr(l pl'l' d~~::
1970 Chomp•on bOx 12 2 BH
choke gu_ns_o':'ly
1\d:. tUI\11111.: ttl!W!' ll ~ ll l'lltl&lt;;i't'U li \'l'
19b5 General bOx 12 2 8R
GU N SHOOT, Roct ne Volun reer
( \:1\ ~ wtll Ut• d~.tl j.! l 'l l &lt;!1 tht I l l.1~·
19bfl P"''C 52•12 2 BR
hre Dept . Every Soturdoy b:30 1955 Protne Schoone r 2e x~ I BR
mi1·
pm at their bui lding in Bas ha n 1973-Royol Embass y 68x 14 3 BR
111 mt•mtw~· . fmd uf Tha 11b nml
~ac tor! chok !_ g~ ~s ~n ~y
1959 Star SOx I 0 2 BR
Ollltmt l )'' 6 t·~· l t l s p~: r wt,t'tl, $:1 oo
rnmtmum ·cash 11 1 &lt;~11\a nn·
BAILEY ' S
S TORE
331 1973 Sta r bOx 14 2 BR
19bB Star b0&gt;~1 2 2 8H
N 2nd A ve ., Mtddl eport , Oh to
Mt1btlt Ht•llll' st~ lc s ami Vall i ~d ~&gt;:
1970 Sylva 60xl 2 2 BR
W t11 be closed Dec 25 to Jon 2
;m • an'l'Jlll'd unl.) with l.i!Sh '1\tth
- . - .
19ba Vil lages 60x 12 2 BR
un ll-1 ~ l't'llt l'l!&lt;1 rgt• fur atl'i e:Jrry-·
196-4 Wmdsor 5 1x10 2 BR
mJ.! 1\l•x NumO..·t In Cu n• uf Titt &amp;!11- 1
1970
Ktrkwood 12xb0 3 BR
lll tl'l
MS MO BI L&lt; HOME SALES
PT . PLEASANT W VA .
rltt• PuiJhsht•r ct•:wrws tht• n ~ht
Lu t•d tt m· l l'/t't t any ads tll'l'ltll'd tllr
11111

ltht\

:! thl\ "

December 12. 1978
You may fo rm several Important new all rances th rs comrng
vear. They wr ll be wr th persons

-- -·--·
Noti ces

--:-:-:--;:-

Wor!l.,. ul' Ulllll•l·
ra ~h

11--Thtt na il~· St·nll nt ·I. Mtdrllt ' J lll l '1· 1 1 r llllt' I'CI~ . () !\ 1nl\da\ I )I 'I . 1i . \••;H

·
For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
--

For Tues doy , Dec . 12

.

LANDMARK

-- --

Heaclquorters
Chr istmas
for all your G. E . T.V.'s &amp;
Holpoint Appliances.

\.

SALE PRICES

it
.. '

JACKW.
CARSEY
t
Mgr.
l!hone991·2t81
•

't

RUT LAN D HAR DWAR E, 822 Ma in
St . 742·2255 Cal l for pn ces
Stoves wood a nd cool Ktng s .
Iorge size $195 to $329.95
Co oki n g o ppltonce
by
Sunbe a m R1vol and Mtrro 1Ov
off . Groom tn g a •d b y Sunbeam
a nd Northern 101-"' off
lovoro tory
cabine t wcth
s•muloted morble top $38
Tools proless•onol drop forged
plated ond polishe d 10 me ta l
bo1&lt; , 21 pc . th r~e - ei g t h s socket
se t, $13 95 lA pc •;, tn. socket
set , S2.t ,q5 . 10 in . proto pliers
with your chotce &lt;; utt e r or nee·
die nose both $6 99 9 pc co m·
bmat ton wr ench by S K
. ~~ f ~~~ ~e ~~ ~e'2_t y_.. $_1.:_ 9~ _ -~ _
19b2 INTERNATIO NAl 180 wtth 16
fla t be d with metal rmks $700
Ev~ nin~s_74_2 ~0~3~ ____ _
WOOD EN PICTU RE wtndow 5' x 5
$50 . 992-2969 or see Rt cho rd
Stewart , 3 miles S. ol Mt d·
~ l ':p_? r~ __ ----- ___ _
l ARG E FANCY ap p les fo r
Chri s tmas . Boskets or your ow n
use Ft tz pa tnc k Orc hard , Stat e
Haute 689. Phon r 669.3785

J. R. Construction
Co.
Carpentry, Electr ical,
Painling

-- ·---- - - - - - - -

TIRE

&amp; HOME MAINTtNANCE
New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation S..•rvi''"'

) 1-t7-1 mo.

r'-

'

· C1\ P TAI N EASY

'

. ALL HA~D S. HEAR TH\5!
FOR MUTIIIIY AIIID ?TRI KIN6
A&gt;J OFFICER-- I S I?NTSN CE.THIS ?TOWAWAY TO A
·GOOD WORK ING OVER
&amp;Y THe &amp;O ? 'N!

WHAT MA KE;? YO U THIN K

~ER

f;V E' R 60~ 1\JA R EACH

PORT ALI VE , MATEY~

ROGER_HYSEll.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
ReSidential and commer·
cial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service . Any day ,

'~'•

GARt.GE
by-poss

mlie off

Rt. 7
on
st. Rl. 124 toword Ruttoncl,

o.

985-3806
Jack Ginther 985-3806

&amp;

~ ~ ~J.!!I(!l ®

CHRISTMAS TREES
OWN

1

S-SOMB1HIIJ0

AR5 '1Ctl AtJ itJSPWOR. FROM
S/l.t-JITATIOIJ Df;P~,RTM!;t-JT ~

WR0\.)0, Sig?

AT

BRADFORD'S GROVE
PRE-CUT TREES. AVAILABLE
·-

I KX J

Located on Cherry Ridge, turn easla1 Darwin onto Rt.
681, go4 miles to Milepos113, turn south on gravel rood
1112 miles to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
Hours : tO Til Dark

\LEHTAHj

(J I K

LITTLE ORPHAN

Pomeroy .l.aAdmark
w.

Armstrong Carpeting

EWOTT

----

APPUANCE II

~----

- -----

-~ ---

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

t-tl

I

EAPEY

PHONE 992;:m

.

byHe nnA rnotdand Boblee

Unscramble these lour J umbles,
one letter to each square, to form
: - - : ; . - - - - - , lour ordin ary word s

i
i

, BORN LOSER

CUT YOUR

_

Radlat,Dr:r~~

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

-·

ISH' 1 THA1 BI G
Of- ' EM ! Wl10

FOUND

I IIAT
II'IONE Y ll.NYWf-IY

?'

A FI..ICSHT
EXPECTED

DURING

Now arrange the CirCled letters to
form the s urpr1 se answe r, as sug ge sted by the above cartoon.

KJ K

LET Mf OFF !

MEAS\.Y THOUS AND
0' 1 H' HUNDRED
MILL ION ··· WHAT NOW?

WHAi 5i0RIES HE.A~D

\TREEMPj

WEEPERS

YEAH? SNOOPERS 1
50 I'VE SPENT A FEW

tiNNIE, THEY SAY

A(IIIHIIIIJ

YOU MUST OPEN
111E O W E f OR
THEM ·

.
S atu rd ay s

I

,
(Answe rs tomorrow)
J umbles AW ASH TULLE PENCIL BEAUTY
,.
Answer. Where ht s wtl e sent htm -··up THE WALL

Jumble Book No. t2. c:ontalnlng 110puzzlea, ls avallebte for$1 .75postplld
Ifom Jumble, cJathl • newsp•:r•r. Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, addrtU, t ip code an makt chtcka payable to News pa p e~boaka .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~.. wd'

I'll. !t%·2174

by THOMAS JOSEPH

''.&lt;\.IJ .EY OOP
HONAKER'S CB a nd elec tron ic
eq utpment . Rt.33 506 2nd St.,
Mason , WV 25260.

Business Services
BRADFORD , Aucti on8er. Complete Service. Phone q4 9-2487
or 949 2000. Raci ne . Ohto, ( ri ft
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWERS RE PAIR Sweepe rs, toas ters , irons, a ll
sma ll ap plio hces . lawn mowe r
ne&gt;1t to State Hc ghwoy Garag e
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985·
3825
SEWING MAC HIN E Re pot rs. se r·
v1ce al l makes, 992-2284. The
Fabri c Sh o p , Pome roy
Authori zed Singer Sole s a nd
Serv1ce We sharpe n Sc tss ors
EXCA VA TING doze r, loader ond
backh oe work . dump trucks
an d lo·boys for h ~r e; wtll haul
f1ll dtrt , to s01 l limes tone a nd
gro vel. Call Bob or Roge r Je ffers, doy phone 992-7089. night
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232 .
EXCAVATIN G . do ze r ba ckhoe
and dttche r. Char les R. Hotfield
Ba ck Hoe Service,
Rut la nd , Ohio Phone 742-2008 .
Wi ll do roofmg constr uc tion ,
plumb ing a nd he ati ng . No job
too la rge or too small Phone
742·234B.
HOWERY ANO MARTIN E• ·
coveti ng , se ptic s yste ms ,
dozer boc khoe, d ump truck,
lime!to ne . grove l. black top
pavrng , Rt. 143. Pho ne 1 (614)
698-733 1.
BATH ROO MS AND Kitchens
remode le d, ce ra mic tile , plum·
bing, ca rpentry . a nd ge neral
marnte non ce. l J yeors e xpe uence 9tn-3685
PULLIN S EXCAVATING. Comple te
Service . Phone 992-2478
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
ca ncelled? lost your ope ra to rs
liCense ? Phone 992·21.43
FURN I'ICE
CLEANING . Call
9'12,55B7
FROSTY'S CB rod 1o equrpme nt .
Ev9ryt hing In IWO· Way radio ,
a nten nas and a cces . Phone
Portla nd 843-2181. Open eventogs ttll 8 00; Sunday 2:00 till
6:00

ACROSS
I Bad pitc h

DOWN
I Bloop er
2 E xtant
5 Attire
' 10 P otpou r ri
3 Like som e
II Take to
c oats
the road
4 Card g ame
12 Ba se ball's
5 Humrmng
Espinosa
sound
13 Chees e
6 L.A. pro
14 Edenic fe mme 7 G la d t1dm gs
15 BtU's m ovte
8 Almost
pa rtne r
gradua tes
16 Tuc k 's partner 9 Untidy
"\';-~·,'- ·
17 Sign of e mbar· 11 In a _
lQ ' 1 '· ~~~~"( ~ ~ ~·~ u~ '!'-!!!...._:_=::::_c
ra ssme nt
15 Injure
19 Elepha nt
18 Fle ece
party : a b br
21 Wea therc oc k
20 Mtsleading
22 Com e before
words
21 P art of
V.H.F .
22 Baby bu ggy
1
sir
24 Holbrook
40U
a nd othe r s
25 Th ree-s pot
26 Hand:
down
slang
27 Skirt fint s h
28 Flight
de pa rtu re
teen~

ftAND ASIDE, INTERLOPER! OR 'YI)U
WILL DfR WrTH MV BROTHER!

Yard Sale
IF YOU ho ve a service to offer ,
wa nt to buy or sell something ,
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever . . you'll get results
fost er wi th a Se ntine l Wont Ad.
Coll 992-21 56.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

1

: G ASOI.INE ALLEY

man w'tth moneu
has departed? The
IRS at 4our
service.

... ' we qits 4er
d'parted papa's
mone4 safe in th'
bank!

DRIVE ALITTLE

&amp;:
SAVE A LOT
All carpet instollod with
paddlnf! at no chorgo.
Expert 1nslollatlon.

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

•4.aa

~v:.;

9' and 12' Vinyl

" ·' -"'--

-

veil
30 F a tthless

--

Clill 74H21l

TAt.K-TO
Wendell or Herb Grote
or Gono Smith

RUnAND
FURNITURE

&lt;:.. . •

..

35
;; 37
38
I 39
: 40
41

•

i

IT A

., DrNeR'.S GLull"

36 He bre w
lette r
37 Ta ble
dec or

NORTH

j

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA TH~T
MAKES A

WON'T MIND ?

12-11-A

• A 63
t K75

+ K 10 9 5 4
WEST
+ A J 9 73

EAST

• 10 6 5
.. Q 7 4
• 10 4 3
• QJ 6
• 3
• J 662
SOUTH

• J 962

• K64
• K 10 5
t A962

Vuln e r a ble : Both
Deale r : S outh

explo rer
- of fact
Prome nade
Restmg
Li ke wtse
Audac1ty
Adolesce nt

West

North E a st

Sou t h
I NT

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

O p e ning lead :

Is

.-

11.· 11

Here's how t o work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

On e lette r simpl y stands Cor anot her. In thi s s am ple A is
used for th e t hree L's, X for th e t wo O's, e tc. Si n gle lett e r s,
apos troph es, t he le ngth a nd form ation of th e wo rd s a re all
hint s Each d ay the code letters a r e difFere nt
CRYPTOQUOTES

YOUR \3ROTHER15 A SCFTIE 1
WINNIE . UNDER l'HAT HARD1
MALE CH AUVINISTI C
EXTERIOR BEATS A
HEART OF PURE:
MUSH I

Rubber or duplicate play

+A Q 7

, WINNIE

YOU'RE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

:n Cr tmm a l

+7

DAILY CRYI'TOQ UOTE -

!J
S(JRE PERRY

BRIDGE

---~~~~~~~~--­

• Q2

I CAN HARDLY WA IT FOR

MOM ID GET HOME: SO I

L BMJ

KQ

G VMVCS

CAN TEL L HER ABOUT

MY PLANS FOR l'HE
'--'-- - - , r iJ t uRE

!

,..'l!!ll,,.A

YKVS G A
JFX

GVFXR

FR

RBQQVGVX

F L V G 0 M F C
SJKBHJ
WFXNA

0 S

0

c

SGf' C RNFSOKC . EFLVR
QV O WNVL FC
Saturday's Cryptoquote : AS THE BABY POLAR BEAR SAID,
" !DON'T CARE WHAT ANYONE SAYS, I'M COlD ."- ANON
BAR NE Y

You h old :
By Oswald Ja c oJiy
and Alan Sontag
Osw a ld : " Here is a ha nd
that r ea lly s how s the diffe r ence between g ood r ubber
bridge a nd g ood dupli cat e
play ."
Ata n : " It s u re does . I
guess that 1f this hand we r e
played a hundre d times in
matc h pomt dupc h c a te, 98
de clare r s would g o d own on e
1 a t three notr ump. "
Oswa ld : " They would a ll
rise with dummy 's queen of
sp a des . They would count
one s pade win n e r plus t wo in
each red s ui t a nd five clubs
for a s tarting total of t e n

ARE I{E BAD
HURT, MAW?

15 IM STOCK

MAKING ILLU5TRATION5
Ml{ BOOK A60llt
LIFE OF BEETHOVEN

Largest Selection In The Vaii•Y

.HERE HE 15 JUST A
FEW MINVTES AFTER
HE WA5 BORN ...

AND HERE HE 15
JUST BEFORE HE DIED

~ 12·11

·-

)

1 '

•

lnc k s . T he n th ey w o u ld p lay
out the ir a ce a n d quee n of
clubs. West would s how out
and all of a s udd e n th ey
would fi nd th emselves held
to e ig h t t rick s ."
Al a n · " A good rubber
b rid ge pla ye r w o uld note
that h e w oul d onl y n eed four
cl ub tric ks to w m the rubbe r .
He would dec ide to gua rd
aga ins t that bad clu b break
by le ading dununy 's t e n o f
clubs and le tting 1t rtd e . H e
would fee l s lig htly s ill y 11
West sco red a trtc k with th e
)ack but he would b e s ure o f
four cl ub trtc k s a n d the
rubbe r bonus ."
Os wa ld : " That firs t-round
fmesse would b e poor percentage in matc h points
whe r e o ve rtric k s a r e so importa nt but it w o uld s ure be
good p lay with a rubber at
sta k e . "

+

12-ll·B

KJ 7 G5

• K2
t AJ 9

+ A 10 4
A Uta h r eader w a nts to
know wha t we o p e n th e biddin g with.
. We op en one n otrwnp
s1~ce w e ha ve 16 high-card
pomts , notrwnp distributio n
a nd a ll s wts s t oppe d .
! NE WSPII P E R

ENT ERPRISE ASSN 1

(For a copy of J ACOB Y MODERN, send St to: " Wrn a t

Brtdge, ·' care of th1s newspape r. P 0 Box 489, Radio City
Sta tron , New York, N . Y. 10019.)

© 1978 Kang f eatures Sy ndu:ate, Inc:.

--- - -

- -

2H Pronoun
29 Papal

-

% GFIL.L.

and see whot you're genlnv
- Good Rtot:tlonl + Fully
stocked.

Rlitiend

cessible
24 Pric e boost
25 Most of Stan
Mus ial 's
nic kname
26 F r ench
pres 1de nl
( 1895-991

--' 32 Ta r o root
33 Tint
~·~~~-~~~-~----------------------....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 34 Scottis h

Buy where you c1n c:eme in

742-2211

23 Less ac-

'FI\AN K &amp; f:I{N IF:

Fklor CcM!ring In Stock

' .

Monda)·, Dec. 11

Saturday's ADBwer

follt, s
clo se
on
April
fjf .

~

-- -

e oo-Capt Ka ngar oo B. tO , Sesame St. 33 .
9 00- Mer v Griffin 3 , P hi l Do n ah ue 4 , 13 , tS .
Eme rger'l CY One6 , Hogan 's Heroes 8; Ma t ch Game
10
9 . 3o-Brady Bunc h 8. F am ily Affa ir 10.
10 · oo-Car d Sha r ks 3,4. 15 : Edge of N lght 6; A ll In T he
Family e. 10; Dati ng G am e 13.
10 :3().-Jeopardy 3,4, 15; And y Griff ith 6; Pr ice Is Ri ghi
e.10: $20.000 P yram ld 13 .
11 :ClO-High Roll e rs 34, t S; Happy Da ys 6, 13; Consumer
Sur v ival Kit 20.
11: 3().-Whee l ot F ort un e 3, 15; F a mil y Fe ud 6,t3; Love
of l1 fe B. 10; News 4; 11 :55-C BS News B: House
Call 10.
t2 :0o-Ne wscenter J ; ' Bob Bra u n &lt;: News 6 , t0,13 ;
Young &amp; the Restl ess B: Ame ri c a Alive t S: Music
33.
12 :3o-Rya n ' s Hope 6, t 3: Searc h fo r Tomorrow 8, to:
E lec Co. 20,33 .
t oo-Holl ywood Squa res 3. All M y Childre n 6,1 3;
News e. Young &amp; t he Re stless 10: Not For Women
On ly 15 ·
1 JC&gt;- Days of Our Lives 34, 15; As The World T urns
8, 10; 21l0-0ne Life jo Live 6, t3 .
2:3o-Doc1ors 3, 4,15: Gu iding Llghf 8.10.
3 :0o-Anofher World ~ .4 . 1&lt;· General Hopspltal 6.1 3:
Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3o-Mash B: Joker'S Wild tO; Dick Cavett 20.
4:00-Miste r Cartoon 3: Battle of the Planets 4;
Hol lywood Square s t5 ; Mer v Gr iffin 6; Por ky Pig &amp;
Friends B: Se sam e St . 20.33; Bat man tO: Dinah 13.
4:3o-Bew ltched 3; Gill igan' s Is. 4,8 ; Petticoat Junc 11on 15.
5 Oo-S tar T re k 3,4; Bever ly Hil lbillies 8; Mis ter
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC
10. Brady Bunch 15; Emergenc y One 13 .
5 3o-N ews 6 ; Sanlord 8. Son 8; Elec. Co 20,33: Mary
Tyler Moore tO. Odd Couple tS .
6 .00-News 3.4.8. 10,13, t5; Feeling Free 33; ABC News
6; Feeling Free 20 .
6 JC&gt;-NBC News J.4 ,t5; Carol Burne11 &amp; Friends 6;
ABC News 13; CBS News8,10; Over Easy20,3J .
? ·oo-Cross-WIIs 3; PM Magazi ne 4; New lywed Game
6,t3; Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10; Love.
Amer ican Style 15 ; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
Econom ically Speaking 33.
7. 3o-Hollywood Squares 3: Dating Game 4: Let' s Go
To the Rac es 8; Candid Camera 6: Price Is Right tO:
Donna Fargo 13 ; T V Honor Society 15 ; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 2().33 .
e ClO-Grandpa Goes To Washington 3; Happy Days
6, 13; Jac ques Coustea u 4: Billy Graham Family
Chrlslmas t5 . Pape r Chase 8; College Basketball
10; Soundstage 20 : City Notebook 33.
e · 3o- Lave rne &amp; Shirley 6 , 13. When The Boaf Comes In
33.
9 :00-Movle " A Woman Called Moses" 3,4,15. Three' s
Company 6,13; Movie " The Jordan Chance" B;
Cousteau Odyssey 20.
9 3o-Taxi 6,13: Hanukkah 33.
10 :00-Starsky &amp; Hutch t3: Billy Graham Family
Christmas 6; Cleo Lai ne tO ; News 20; My Kind of
Christ mas 33 .
11 :ClO-News 3,4.6,8,10, 13, 15i Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33.
l1 :3D-J ohnny Carson 3,4,15; MOY ie "Smas h -Up on
Inter stateS" 6. 13 ; BC News 33; Movie " Day of the
Wolves" 10.
12:3o-News e : I :ClO-Tomorrow 3.4: 1:3o-News 13 .

'iJjJ~'i'M} m~ ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Aut•, Truck
Repair
Also Transmission

Jack's Septic

992-2848

CEllULOSE
INSULATION
$fi.50 per

'

Sove30 pet. to 50
on holing cos
Experience ond
lully lnsurod
Free Ell.
talft92-2172
11-3-1 mQ.. ,

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 742-1029
11 ·16·C

MOORE'S

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Therma I insut,t_lon
'

" GIV E US A TR Y"

J&amp;L I
JIM

Ow

S:ClO-Star Trek 3,4; Beverly Hillbill ies e . M is t.,
Rogers 20,33: Gomer Pyle. USM C 10. Em e rgenc y
One 13; Brady B1 ·~c h 15 .
5:3D- News 6 ; Santor &amp; Son 8; Elec Co 20.33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; I ~ 1 Couple 15
6 ·oo- News 3,4,8 , tO,L, t5 , AB C News 6: Zoom 20:
Stud io See 33.
.
o :Jti-NB C News 3. 4. 15, BC Ne ws 13 , Carol Burnett &amp;
F r iend s 6, CB S Ne ws 8,1 0, Over Easy 20.33 .
7:0o-C ross.Wit s 3. ' New lywed Game 6,13 ; M arly
Robb ins' Spo11ight e. News 10; Love, Am erican
Sty le 15, Almanac 20. Know Your Schoo ls 33.
7 3o-T h at Nashvill e Music 3; Da t ing Ga m e 4; Moppe t
Sho w 6: Matc h Ga m e PM 8; Wild K1ngdom 10, Sl.9e
Bea uty Sho w 13 ; Nas h vi lle On T he Road 15:
Ma c Ne il-Le hrer Re port 20: Coll e ge Basketball 33
e ClO- FIIn tst ones 3, 4, 15; Yea r Witho ut A Santa Cla us
6, 13 : Bill y Gr a ha m F am 1ly Ch r istm as 8. While
ShadQw 10; E ven in\1 a t Sym phon y 20
9·Cl0-M ov ie " A Wom"" Ca lled Moses" 3o4, 15 , NF L
Foot ba ll 6, t3 ; Mash B. 10. T he Long Searc h 20.
9 · 3D-One Da y At A T ime e. 10, Th ieves of Time 33 .
10 :Cl0- Lo u Gran t 8, 10 ; News 20. E vening AI Symphony
33 .
10 :3o-Croc ke lt' s VI ctory Garde n 20 .
n · ClO- Ne ws 3. 4.8, 10, 15, Di c k Cavett 20. VIs ions 33.
11· 30-J ohnny Ca r so n 3, 4, 1s. Gun s m oke 8; Movie

•

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

IQ)FING

Construction
Maintenance

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

J&amp;L

H. L WRITESB. ·

T U ES DA Y, DECE MB E R 12,1971
5 :&lt;5-Farm Report 13: 5:50-PTL Club t3 ; 5 :55Sunrlse Semeste r 10.
6 :ClO-PT LCiub 15; 700 Club 6,8 ; 6 :25--&lt;:on cerns &amp;
Comment s 10.
6 :3o-F ocus on Colu m b us&lt; : 6 :45-Mornl ng Report 3:
6 :50-Good Morni ng. Wesl VIrg inia 13; 6 :55Chu c k White Repo rts t O; News 13.
7:Cl0-Today 3.4, t5; Good Morning Amer ica 6, 13; CBS
News 8; J etsons 10.
7 · 15-Weather 33 ; 7 · JC&gt;-Sc hoolles 10.'

MONDA Y, DECEM B E R 11 , 1978

;'

'

.

RUTLAND HARDWAR E. 872 Mo m
St., 7.42·2255. Modernrs tcc wood
stove
demons tra to r mode l,
SOS. Used auto wood stove
wt th blower. $289 New e lec trt c
hot wote r tonk , sligh tly ben t,
$122 95 Tool box, S K tools 31
pc. with tool bo~&lt; . 549.95.
life tim e warrenty b7 pc . ,drop
OLD FURNITURE, tee boxes , brass forge
d set wtth tool bo&gt;~ ,
beds. tron beds desks etc
SNOW
$49.95 One 93 pc. se t drop
complete households . Wnt e
forged tools wtth tool bo &gt;~ . ,
M .D. Mille r Rt . 4 , Pome roy 9r
SALE
$99 .95
coil 99.2· 7760
TRUCK FOR sa le. 19b4 Chevy ·
COINS, poc ket wa tc hes
&amp;NDWTI~I!S
p1 ckup
std
s h1ft
$375 .
class ri ng s. wedding bonds .
DNSALEAT
992·6067
dtam onds Gold or s t l ve~ . Coli . - - -----C.......Roge r Wa msley . 742-233 1.
OINING ROO M s01te , drop leaf . POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION·
table . .4 cho1rs, corne r hutch 2
wA NT TO buy old 45 a nd 78
ex:
tras
le
a
ves
,
table
pa
d
includphonogr ap h records
Co lt
ed . 992-3488 afte r 5
992-6370 or Contact Mar tin Fur·
nitur e
CHOI CE EAR corn , $2 bu .
ock
caney, M;r.
742-235:90 '-:-:-:---:--:CASH FOR 1unk ca rs. Wre cke r
service Frye's , Ru tl an d, Ohio FIREWOOD . $30 load 12 go
Plldne 992 -2lll
742 2081.
Ithaca 37 ve nt ri b barrel .' like
new . $200. 742-2359 .
WE PIC K up 1unk au to bodi es buymg 1u nk ca rs. scra p tron, bot- LOWREY GEN IE 44 . Perfe ct co ndt·
te n es a nd me tal s. R1der's
tr on . All ex tras 992·321S.
Real Estate for Sale
Sa lvage SR 12.4 , Po me roy. .
UNIQUE
ASSORTMENT
of
spectal
992 54~b!l
:::.__ _ _ _ __
g 1fl s" · clothing, p otte r~ . woks, Nt:W THR H bed room home .
hre ploce, sun dec k, 1~/. acre
le ath e r wall e ts bogs be lts
wooded lot b14-667.3890 Tuphots . Wes te rtl fe lt ha ts,
210 E. Main S1ree1,
pers Pl oms
Pets for Sale
1ewelry . Aloddrn , lamps, Blue
Pomeroy, D. ·
Flame hear e rs ond mu ch mo re NEW HO USE lo r sol e no l com·
RISING STAR Kenr"els. Boardtn g
Call
992-Tt l3
Stop tn · we'll be glad to he lp
ple te lv fm1 shed Ftmsh yourse lf
and groo mtng , a ll breeds
~or Free Estimates
Mountain
l
eathe
r
and
General
a nd se ve Near Me tgs Mtn e 1
Cheslme . 3:..:6.,.
7...:
-0.::.
29...:2c.
. _ _ __
Store , 104-106 W. Un1 on St ,
992· 71 9 1 olte r 5pm
11 -9· 1 mo.
AKC REGISTERED Boxe r puppies.
Athe ns , Oh to , 61.4-592·5.478
LAND
FOR
sole
nea
r
Me
rgs
Mm
e
t) wee ks old . A niCe Chn stmas
RUTLAND HARDWARE . 822 Ma tn
I Ru ral wafer available Priced
gtfl , $125 ea . Collm-2726.
St , 742-2255 Mode rni stic wood
to se ll. Phone 7.42·2746.
Real Estate for Sale
CHRISTMA S POODLE S, one
stove. free standi ng, open -·
chm:olote mole puppy left
It re pla ce .
de m a ns tr at 10 n r:::::::-:===-:::-=::-;=-::--., HOMESITES for sole . 1 a cre ond
up Middleport near Rut la nd.
older dog s ho usebroken , one
mo d e l, $65
Kong -0 -He ot
Coll 992-r.e1
cream mo le Pome ro nron , I
stoves. wood or coaL 6 room
mole Pe ki nese 695-1 297 after
, ;,e, new, $1 9'1 95 . Ad 1ustobl e
THR EE BEDROOM frame home in
&lt;·30 pm
steel ba sement pos t, 5' to 8',
WANT TO SELL? Call us
M1d dleport. Ca1 1997·3457.
$ 10 66
Wes ting house ho t for an appraisal and why
AKC
RE G IS TE RED
Ge rma n
FARM FOR sole . House . 2 ba rns ,
wate r tonk , new 5 yeor warre n- you should list with us.
8
She phe rd puppy. Mol e
trad e r. large pond 10 a cre s or
ty, slight de n! m outer 1acke t,
WANT TO BUY? Call us. If
weeks old. 949 1273.
82 a cres . 742-2566.
$1 22 .95. AU elec tnc small op· we don '1 have i1 then we ' ll
pltances wit h the best priCes 1n
find rt fo r you .
REAL ESTATE LOANS VA · No
m o n ey
Auto Sales
d own
(e ligib le
town wdl be redu ced an oddt- WHEN OPPORTUNITY
Vete re ns) . FHA · As low os 3...ttonol 10....- . Tool bol&lt; S-K too ls.
KNOCKS, you shll nave to
QUALITY CO NDITI ONED mu&lt;ed
down (all non-Ve te re ns and
31 pc . wtth tool bo&gt;~ , $49 95,
ge t up and open 1he door.
ho y Wtll de li ve r 992-72,..:0.:.;
1.: __
lcfe lime worrenly 67 pc drop
De j t now .
ge ne ral publi c) To purchase
real es ta te or re finance 30
fo rged set wtth tool bo&gt;~.
ott 1ce 992-2342
1975 DATSUN PICKUP Good con·
$49 .95 . One 93 pc. set drop
Eve. 992 ·2449
YEARS TER MS. IR ELAND MOR·
dt tton l ow mcleoge Good
forged tools wtt h tool box .
Rodney Downing, Broke r
TGAGE CO., 77 E. State St. ,
Itres Ste p bu mpe r. Truck mtrAthens.
4-592-305 1.
ro rs 985·3979
Bill Chtlds, Manager
_ $9_9_9_5._ _ _ _ · - - - - TWO
NEW
230
bu
McCurdy
gravt·
'
'
'
'
1967 PONTIAC Runs good $175
ty boxes on 10 ton runn ing
hrm. 7.42-28.46.
gears wtt h ex te ndable tongues
1cn9 FORD .4-wheel dnve A1r
and 11l flo tat iOn impl e men t
ca ndil to ne r. P S AM· FM , C.B ,
ti res I new 195 bu McCurdy
P.B 15.000 mil e s. 61.4-667-3305
gra vity bo &gt;~es . One 9 ft . John
Deere dt sc. Gehl 90 gr inde r
1975 CADILLAC ELDORADO Full
mixe r TWo 1974 a nd 1972 Ford
powe r. A tr AM-FM radio
F-250 picku ps 1 1974 Ford F-250
Cle an. Phone 992·7462
ptckup . 1 1975 Inte rnationa l ~;.
1977 CADILLAC ELDORADO Fu ll
ton piCkup. On e 1964 Inte rne· . ._ ....
powe r, a ir AM-FM rodto. Fuel
!tona l 2 ton wit h catt le rocks ,
tnt ec ti on Phone 992 7462
48112 ACRES- 1978 Holly
Cas e .4-16 bottom plows . Minn .·
Moli ne corn she lle r. Porta ble
Park mobile home. This
1978 FORD 2-doo r Futu ro coupe.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice 4
rolle r m1ll. 985-3341 .
has an 8 foot expando, 14' x
1969 Che vy l ', ton 992-708.4
bedroom brick home !hal
---·.
.
.
36'
add
-a-room
,
large
deck
you
can move right Into.
TWO 35ft . truck vans S475 eocn .
with built-in seats, meta ls
Has equipped k itchen,
1000 ga l. tnok . 3000 gal. tonk 2
48 000
natural gas, and 2 car
For Rent
unope ne d barrels hyd rou ltc
~u 'sr · COMPLETED
garage
wilh
large
fluid . $75 ea One pole tro ller,
Three bedrooms, l lf:a baths,
COUNTR Y MOBil E Home Pork
workshop .· Near stores .
$375.
Trash
ba
rrels,
$6
eo
.
One
lovely
kitchen,
recrea
t
ion
Rou te 33 , nort h of Pome roy
Just $23.000.
se t rig1d pipe threade rs . $ 125
room with fireplace, deck ,
Lo rge lots . Coll 992 7479
STORAGE Above all
Cal l la te e venm gs 742-3093.
full basement, garage, 1
floods .
All
ulilllles,
3 AN D 4 RM. furnished a nd un· TWIN TOO LS for Gravely ro ta ry
acre. $51 ,500 .
parking, and loading ramp.
f u r n1 s h ed
opt s . P ho n e
plow a nd rotary culti vator. One
ABOUT 7 YEARS OLD Around 3,000 sq. II.
992- 5:::
&lt;3:::'::_,--,..--,--.,--,18" sow blade lor Gra ve ly . One
Three bedrooms, 2 baths,
RT. 124 EAST Large
ne w set of tire cha ins for
TWO BED ROOM , kttche n furnt sh·
equipped k itchen, dining ,
older home of 4 or 5
e d, opt Call belore 8 am
Grav e ly and o fe w small ite ms
carpeted, full basement,
bedrooms, balh, central air
garage, about one acre.
tor Gravely. Save you rse lf $200
992-~288 .
and heat, carpeting down,
on these Grave ly tools. Price
$21 ,000.
large eat-In kitchen, 2 room
REN TE RS ASSISTANCE fo r Sente r
for all $350 One mini washe r
SYRACUSE lovely
basement,
and large lot.
Ctttze ns. Yo u may be abl e to
good co ndition , $25 . Two G78 x
home ( l ike new) three
Want 525.000.
lt ve tn our a pa rtm e nt lor less
15 studded wtnle r tires. been
bedrooms, bath, natura l
OPPORTUNITY - Large
th an $50 Vdla ge Man or Apartuse d $1 5. Clean oat st ra w $1 .25
gas forced air heating,
business
room
with
men ts. 992-n 87.
a bole . Note Vana man Pho ne
storm windows and doors,
-·- ~.:c..:_-,--..,.efficiency apartment. Can
THR EE BEDROOM urlf urni she d
7.42-2761.
large garage, porch and
you beat this for only
house for re nt 1n New Have n
patio. Ask ing $25.500.
St2,000? A real c heap
d
SIX YEARS OLD- Three
New bui lt · tn kitchen . livin g MACK ARMY 6x6 S lo n hoc lop
home. Better have a look.
with winch. A go od one .
bedrooms, nice kitchen,
•oom. din mg room , 2 cor
JUST PAINTED - Inside
742
3093
$4,700.50. Evemngs
·
·
dining, all electric, storage
ga rage Ca ll 682 ·2688 between
and out. All new carpeting,
a nd 11 and I pm or afte r 5 pm ROUGH COUNTRY Po rt-time kit.
bu ild i ng , rilce lot. Just
new natural gas F . A.
lor further deta ils 5 min from
Ftts 75-up Chevrolet or GMC •;,
$28,.500.
furnace, 3 bedrooms , full
Mou nta ineer Power Pro ject
or ¥. ton .4-whe el dri ve . Con·
basement for your kids,
verts fu ll time tran sfer case to
Several business places for
and out of high water zone.
APTS IN M id dl ~po r t Rtve rside
convent tonol 2 or .4 w he e l
sale. Work for yourself.
Want Sl6.500.
Ap ts . 1 bed room Sil l me plus
dri ve . Ne w in May . l ess tha n
TRAILER LOT - All set
e lec tn ctty . Monthl y leasi ng.
2000 mi. $300 or wit h lock ou t
The reason we sell houses
up ready to put your trailer
Eq ua l O pportun ity Houst ng .
hub s. $3.40 . Je rr y We ll ,
... is because we know who
or double-wide on before
Ca ll992-7721 fo r appointme nt .
_ 992-3501! afte r 5pm.
wants what.
Christmas. Have lust two.
RQOM AND boar d fo r $.40 a
Very reasonable.
BLOWER FOR wood burning
week . Portland ar e a . 843-2514 .
ReaHors
ACREAGE On water
s tove $3500 Child's chord
Henry
E.
Cleland
Jr.
line
In
Chester
Township.
$40.
B
o
th
organ
a
nd
bench.
HOUSE . FOUR roo ms a nd both
Henry E. Cleland
You can buy 5 acres for
Both some as new Phone
992 30'10
Assoc1ate ReaHors
$5·l100·
7.42-30.45
ONE BEDROOM house ond a 2
Kathy Cleland
bedroom tro1l e r. 992-2598
ONE INTERIOR door 1 bog ceLeona Clelond
G. Bruce Tutord
ment 1 bag wh ite pla ste r. 2 pr.
992-2159, 992-6 l9t, 992-2568
Helen L. Tutord
me n's -shoes 10 1/, 0 . 992-3401.
Suo P. Murphy
Services Offered
Associates
WAll
HANGING e lec t ric
WILL CA RE for the e lde rl y tn our
f~reploce
wllh the rmostat.
Housing
home . Phone 992 731 4.
992 2514 .
WATER WELL drt ll lng. Wdl1a m T. 1972 FORD F·l OO pickup. Good
Headquarters
condition v.a, 4·sp $1500
Grant . 742-2879.
\ Be orcot Ill scanne r like new.
ROOM lN privat e home for a la dy
.
\ $75. 949-2656.
Phone 992-5422
OWNER MUST SELL - The owne r of tht~
QUillS
FOR
Christmos
.
Co
lored
Wtll TAKE care of elde rly woma n
• and wh1te polyes t9r, cotton
charming 2 story stone lfome in Middleport
in our home . 61-4-667-3305.
printed materiol $30 eo Ne ar ' ,, mus1 sell now so stte is offering this fine
POMEROY LA DY will sit with pa·
Reed sville. J78·6276.
' home for a low, low price of 520,000 . There
tren ts a t home or hospital. BA SEMENT JACKS. Heav y duty
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
9'12-619B. - - - - - - ·- -992-1&gt;057.
living room w · fireplace , formal dining, eat·
-~-- -~· --- ------FOUR CRAGARS to fit Chevrolet .
in kitchen. bath w -shower, garage &amp; a king
Give Away
Bes t offe r 7~2· 2092 after 5pm .
s
tzed ¥a rd. Good loq.tion on Mill St . Call the
. ·- ··-· .....
·-·.-,.
THR EE MONTH old he o\lhy REDUCE SAFE and lost with
Wi SP. man Real Esta.t e Agency, Gallipol'is,
housebroken kttte ns . Ttge r
Gobese Table ts a nd E· Vop
446 · l64J .
'wa ter pil ls". Nelson Drug .
st nped and block. 949·2421
~ -- --·- --· . .
'
- -·- .

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TELEVISION
VIEWING

..

.

Business Services.

I

POMEROY

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DICK TRACY

" Chubasco" · 10.
12 ·Cl0-News 6, 13; 12:3().-FB I 6; News 8; Ironside 13 .
1· 00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:3o-News 13 .

NOPE -· I JEST
HAD TH' BREATH
TOOK OUT OF ME

�•

12- The Daily Sentin&lt;•l , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Monday . Dt&gt;e. II , 1978

Restroom

12 die on Ohio highways
UDited l'ress lutemattonal

The Highway Patrol listed
a dozen weekend . traffic
deaths in as many accidents
scattered around Ohio,
including two pedestrians
and one motorcylist.
Three persons were killed
Friday night, six Saturday
and three Sunday.
The traffic fatalities by
days:
Friday nlKhl
Port Clinwn: Jesse Riddle,
4, Port Clinton, killed in a
three-car pileup on an ottawa
County road in Portage
TownShip.
Celina: James Jutte, 18,

fort Recovery, kiUed in a
two-car accident on a
wwnship road in Mercer
County .
Warren : Anita Dundore, 44,
Orwell ' killed in a one-ear
.
crash on Ohio 45 m
Bloomfield Township in
Trumbull County.
Saturday
Lima : Lisa King , 18,
Delphos, killed in a car-train
crash at a Kemp Road
crossing in Allen County.
Cleveland : Murton Montgomery , 5, Cleveland,
pedestrian killed when struck
by an· automobile on a city
street.

J:. .

)L.
·, _r_he_w_o_rl_d_T_o_d_a_y_
1Continued from page 1)

legal guardian.
Jeffrey R. Clark, 32, of Dover Township, was held over the
weekend on a murder charge in the death of William Russell
Graham, 15, of Columbus, Ohio, last July. Clark has been a
teacher since 1971 at a school for handicapped children
attended by Graham, an autistic child.

:;:~:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;::

Cleveland : Edward
cOOaway, 36, (~o hcmetown
listed 1, killed In a one-ear
accident on a city street.
Bellefontaine: Thomas E
BeD, 44, West Manstield,
killed when struck by a train
at a railroad crossing In
wgan County.
Batavia: Thomas T. Lacey,
67, Cincinnati, killed in a onecar accident on a Clermont
County Road.
Cincinnati: Brian G.
Rosenberger, 21, Cincinnati,
killed when his car crashed
on a Hamilton County road .
Sunday
Sandusky: Mary Borden,
46, Apollo, Fla., killed in a
onevehicle accident on U.S. 6
in Erie CoUilty.
Medina: WeDs W. Miller,
(no age listed ), Litchfield,
killed in an auto collision
along Ohio 18 west of Medina
in Medina County.
Lebanon: John K. Hogan,
25, Franklin, killed when his
motorcycle was hit by a car
at Franklin in Warren
County.

(Continued from page I)
Clifford D. Ashley, 29, Rt. 3,
Racine, was traveling west
on Royal Oak Road and was
unable to tum his vehicle in a
curve due to icy conditions.
The vehicle skidded Into the
path of an eastbound pickup
truck driven by David
Huddleston, Racine. There
was heavy damage to both
vehicles.
Sunday at 12:45 a.m. Vern
Ord, 22, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was
traveling south on 143 when a
deer ran into the path of hls
vehicle. The animal wsa
killed.
Sheriff Proffitt reports
deputies are investigating
vandalism at Southern High
School.
Sometime during the night
· or early Sunday morning an
unknown person tore up the
front lawn at the high school
with a motor vehicle. The
incident is under· Investigation.
Anyone having any information regarding the
armed robbery of the Jones
· Boys Store Friday afternoon,
especially information
regarding the getaway car, is
asked to caD the Pomeroy
police at 992-2427 or the Meigs
County Sheriff's office at 992-

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Dorothy Wright, Rutland;
Virginia Nease, Racine.
Saturday Discharges - 3889.
The car is believed to have
Gertrude Scarbro, Ella Daft,
been
a late model silver
Terrence Smith, Virgil
Camaro
or Firebird with
Lewis, James Smith, Brenda
.
West
Virginia
tags beginning
Templeton, Goldie Hobnan,
with
I
G.
A
white
male subject
William Murphy, Mildred
that
entered
the
store
office is
Tubbs, John Scragg.
described
as
over
6
feet
with
Sunday Admissions dark
long
stringy,
curly
hair
Linda Stewart, Proctorville;
Donnie Evans, Racine; Nellie (shoulder length) wearing a
Hendrox, Reedsville; Virgie dark leather jacket, several
Blake, Middleport; David days growth of beard and
beady eyes.
Huddleston, Racine.
A female companion seen
Sunday Discharges
Amber Warner.

A chance of 'rain Wednesday w11b highs la the
tOs. A chance of snow
Thursday and Friday, with
high temperatures both
days In the %0s through the
period.
'

Firefighters
answer calls
The Middleport fire
department was called to the
Burdell McKinney residence
on Sycamore St. at 10:33 p.m.
Saturday when a- fire
developed in the chimney.
At 9'52 a.m. Sunday, the
squad went to the residence
of Augustine Clonch who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center from the. North Second
Ave., apartment. At 5:32
p.m. Sunday, the squad went
to 434 S. Fourth Ave., for
Delbert Becker who was ill.
He was also taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
The Pomeroy fire department went to. Liberty Lane at
4:04 p.m. Sunday to the
Dennis Butcher home where
a fire threatened around the
fire place.
The town's
emergency unit went to Vale
St. at 6:50 p.m. where Tom
Ables, a medical patient, was
treated on the scene.

in the car had white blonde
hair, grey eyes, approximately five feet six
inches taU and was WjlBring
shortsleeve light blue or
green sweatshirt. Any in·
fonnatlon received wiU be
held in strict confidence.

to some

mighty nice people
oreal}yca
Dressing a doll and assembling and
decorating a truck - that's caring- and a lot
of people in our area did just that this year.
They were all entrants in our Dress-A-Doli'M
and Design-A-Toy ™ Contest, and their efforts
will make a great many children happy this
Christmas. All dolls and toys will be distributed
to needy children in our area . Until then ,
however , the dolls and the trucks are on display
in our lobby . Won 't you please come in and
see them ry

~Farmers

..

·~~..

Bank

POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 MAXIMUM INSURANCE FOR EACH DEPOSITOR
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION .

•

Meet the prize winners
in .our Dress-A-Doll~"
Design-A~oy™ Contest.
Grand Champion _ _ _ _ Janet Koblentz
Freda LievinR

Knit and Crochet

Maliyn Spencer

Sensible

Lucille Clay

Special

Susan Danner

Grand CHAMPION--- - Unda Gillilan

Don Ad leta

Soecial

Toni Chapman

r---L_ Log

OSP •••

OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TIL 8

TRUCK PRIZE WINNERS

Bloody battles follow street riots

! Area Deaths I

(Continued from page 11
RAY E. ADAMS
CrUlL DUNHAM
is 12 miles west of Batavia. I
REEDSVILLE
Ray
E.
.
ALBANY
- Carl Dunham,
He said the .river Sunday
Adams,
71,
county
road
50
88,
.
Rt
.
3,
· Albany died
night was at 53 feet , one foot
near
Reedsville
died
Saturday
.
morning
at lbe
a hove floods tage ; 1I is
evening
at
his
residence
of
his
son,
Jolin
B.
Saturday
expected to crest Tuesday a_t
Dwlham, New Bolton, IU.
58.5 feet in New Richmond.
ho~r::o at Reedsville, Mr. Mr. Dunham wu born In
Adams was a son of the late · Mason County son of the late ·
BI k
Jesse and Sarah Frances
Perry and Viola
a e Barr Dwlham. He was also
MEETING TUESDAY
Adams. He was a member of
A title I parent meeting will the Eden United Brethren preceded In death by his wife,
be held at I :30 p.m. Tuesday Church and had retired from Opal Sines Dunham, four
at the Bradbury School with the U.S. Army Corps of brothers and three sisters.
an overall discussion of the Engineers alter 21 years of
Mr. Dunham was a retired
service. Mr. Adams was a New York Central Railroad
program to be held.
A Title I parent, or more, lifelong resident ~f the Painter, Army World War I
Veterans,
member
of
will be selected to serve on a Reedsvllle area.
Surviving are his wife, Pomeroy DAV and was a
District Advisory Council.
Sabra Morrison, teacher, will Forrest Kidder Adams; two member of Rock Castle
preside at the meeting.
sons, Melvin of Reedsville, United Brethren Church.
and Wayne of Belpre; two
He is survived by one son
daughters, Mrs. Charlotte and daught•·in-Iaw, John B.
OPEN DOOR SESSION
Vecchio, La s Vagas, Nev., and Janet Jeffers
dr Dwlham,
Co 1
nn e,
On December 13 a and Mrs. Marilyn Swain of four grandchil en,
representative from ReedsviUe. Also surviving Yvonne, John and Richard aU
Congressman Clarence E. are 18 grandchildren, two of New Boston, one sister
Miller's office will conduct an step grandchlldren and 13 Melinda Lewis, Columbus.
Funeral services will be
Open Door session from 10.12 great-grandchildren. He was
noon In the Court House in preceded 1n death by two held Tuesday at 1:30 at the
Bigony-Jordan .Funeral
Pomeroy. J~.nyone having brothers and a sister.
Funeral services will be Home Albany with the Rev.
questions concerning the
federal government, . should held at 2 p.m. Tuesday ·at the Ray Price officiating. Burial
stop by to discuss then with Eden United Brethren will be in the School Lot
Church with the Rev. Eldon cemetery. Friends may caD
the representative.
Rlake nfficlatinll. Burial will at the funeral home anytime.
~ l!! ~-~e church cemetery.
Friend&amp; may caD at the White
Edna E. Wiggins
Funeral Home In Coolville
Mrs.
Edna E. Wiggins, 87,
anytime. The body will lie in
(Continued from page I)
state one hour preceding the Minersville, died Saturday
afternoon at Veterans
SR 588, at 3:04 p.m.
service.
Memorial Hospital.
According to the patrol,. a
R. L. GENHEIMER
Mrs. Wiggins was born Jan .
north bound auto operated by
Carol Foster, 51, Gallipolis,
BELPRE
R. L. 6, 1891. A daughter of t)Je late
went out of control on the icy Gemhelmer, 15, former George and Mary Rollsh. She
pavement, ran off the right mayor of Belpre, 124 Maple was preceded In death by her
side of the road, striking a Street, Belpre, died Sunday parents, her husband, Mert,
ditch, then spun around afternoon at Camden-Clark three brothers and two
striking a south bound vehicle Hospital following an . ex- sisters.
Surviving are a daughter,
42 ·tended illness.
driven by Robert Brown, '
Mr. Genheimer was born in Mrs. Walter (Mary) Bentz,
GaUipOilS.
There was moderate Minersville son of the late Pomeroy; a son, Kenneth E.
,damage to the Brown auto, Douglas and Nettie S. Wiggins, Mlnersvllle; a
granddaughter, Dreams Sue
Jeroleman Genheimer.
M Genh ·
ved to Bentz, Pomeroy; a stepsllght dsmage to the Foster
h' 1
r.
eliDer mo
veThtc epa.trol was called to the . Belpre In 1931. He also lived daughter, Mrs. Gladys
e
.
in New Martinsville. He was Robson , Mlnersvllle; two
scene of a two-vehtcle ac- a member of Belpre step-granddaughters, Miss ·
cldent on Te~s Rd., three- Congregational Church, was Eleanor Robson and Mrs.
tenths of a mile north of SR associated with William Paul (Jean) Kloes, Miners588, at 10:15 a.m.
H 11 R 1 "'st
' t served ville; a step great-grandson • .
owe
ea "' a e,
Officers report the brakes
of a south bound auto as Mayor of Belpre from 1960 Michael Kloes, Minersville,
. Da iels 11 to 61 and also served as clerk and several nieces and
bYChr1s
n • • treasurer
·
1 th cityof nephews.
opera. ted
or
e
.
Ga U1P'?lis.' I0 eked · Daniels'
Belpre
·
·
Funeral services will be
auto shd mt? a parked vehicle
He .l~ survived ·by his wife, held at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the
own~d by Richard Wangh, 22, Mrs Georgia F. Genheimer Ewing Funeral Home with
M
Bett ' the Rev. Harvey Koch ofGalllpolts.
' da ght
Y
Both vehicles incurred one . u er, . rs.
slight damage.
Aroztan: Kensmgton, Md., ficiating. Burial will be in
The Gallia-Meigs Post three _&amp;sters, Mrs. Geneva Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
investigated 10 accidents Joachim, Belpre, Mrs. may caU at the funeral home
Hortense Frankel, Parkers- anytime.
Sat rda
u
yto
.
t
d
by
Lydia
burg and Mrs. Carrie
An au opera e
c·mc!nna
. t 1,. one .
H rtl
J. Hapney,· 20, Bidwell, in·
a ey,
curred severe damage in a nephew and a 11:1ece. .
, 1tubliard'Slireenli0useone-vehicle accident on SR
Funeral serVIces will be
992-5776
svra&lt;u••· 0. ·
160 at mllepost 11 at 10:40 held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
Potted Poinsettas
·
the Spencer Funeral Home
am
$1.00 to $6.50
.Of.fl'cers report Hapney's with the Rev. Lawrence H.
Hanging
Poinsettias
R
L
A
auto went out of control in a Craig and the ev. · ·
Tl!bS, 30 pll!s blooms
curv'e while. traveling north Phillips officiating. Burial
·
510 .00
will be In Rockland
on 160. .
1no
Foliage Plants
The vehicle slid off the left Cemetery. ·I n 11eu 0
wers,
3" to 10" soc to $5.00
side of the roadway and the family requests donations
be made to the memoiial
HANGING BASKETS 4"1o
struck two driveway markers fund of the Congregational
at the residence of Sidney Church. Friends may caD at ,10 " 11.25
'5.00
White, Ri. 2, Vinton.
f
h
It 1 m ...,_ _ _ _ _..;.;.;.;;._ _.
1
Severe damage was in' the unera orne a er Jl· . .. -~ .
curred to a vehicle driven by
Steven J. . Calvert, 18,
Gallipolis, during a one-auto
accident on Georges Creek
Rd., one-tenth of a mile east,
of Johnson Ridge Rd., at 9:35
pm.
.
According to the patrol, the
Calvert vehicle went out of
control while traveling east.
The auto went off the left
side of the · roadway and
overturned in a ditch.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle mishap
in Meigs County, on U.S. 33,
four-tenths of a mile east of
milepost 12, at 3:10 p.m.
The patrol reports an auto
. . where craftsmen still care®
operated by Donna L. Swartz,
·17, Gallipolis, traveling west,
slld off the right side of the
roadway striking a mailbox
when Swartz applied the
brakes to avoid collision with
an unidentified auto traveling
ahead.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Swartz
vehicle.
At 5:35 p.m., the patrol
investigated a one-auto accident on SR 160, one-tenth of
a mile north of Old 160.
Officers report a north
bound vehicle operated by
Jewell G. Coleman, 17,
Bidwell, went · out of control
on the ley pti.vement, ran off
the right side of the roadway
and struck a guardrail.
The Coleman vehicle in·
163461
curred moderale damage.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-auto mishap on
· SR 7, nine-tenths of a mile
· north of SR 218, at 4:20 p.m.
According to the patrol, a
vehicle operate&lt;! by Ronald
• Automatic stirring rod tumbles corn while it pops.
L. Janey, 30, · Bidwell,
trave)lng north, went out of •• Up to 25% more popcorn than ordinary p!)llpe11.11:1inp same .
amount of corn end LESS oil.
control on the ley pavement,
SPECIAL PRICE
passed off the left side of the
• Self-buttering; cover flips
for
serving.
roadwaY:itriick a ditch and
95
continued Into ti maUbox.
There was moderate
•
' Bring the children to see Santa Claus Tuesdamage to the vehicle.
·
day, Wednesday, and Thursday, 1 to 2 P.M.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
Investigated five other minor
accidents Saturday during
•
•
which the vehicles involved
•
incurred slight damage.

ELBERFELD$

Charactet------ Pat Wolf

Fire Truck

------------------~------i

to

OOLL PRIZE WINNERS

Fancy

River •••

By SAJID RIZVI
TEHRAN,Iran (UPI)- Bloody battles broke out between
imperial troops and anti-Mah demonstrators today In the
ancient Persian capital of Isfahan.
Reports from Isfahan, south of Tehran, said troops opened
fire Cll demonstrators, wounding dozens.
Wilnessea said anti-Mah mobs were rampaging through
the city, setting fires .
Today's outbreak followed day-long rioting in tbe city
Mooday after Savak secret police reportedly shot five persons
tD death In a mass attack on the local headquarters of the
dreaded secret pollee.
Four cinemas, a restaurant and a bank were set on fire
and several other publlc and private buildings were attacked
by angry mobs Monday.
Firat reports said demonsirators attacked numerous buildIngs.
.
Political sources said most of Iran's sprawling countryside
and far Dung provincial cities were in the grip of unrest,
althoU~th Tehran was cabn after two days of massive anti.,hah

marches.
Industrial strikes continued in many government
ministries and factories. The worst hit was Iran's $22 billion a
year oil industry, where production SBS!led tD 1.2 million
barrels a day, one of the lowest output levels since a strike
began in early October.
Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi remained secluded in his
vast Niavaran Palace today, canceling a scheduled public
appearance.
.
No official reason was given for the cancellation of ' the
shah'sappearance at religious rites at Tehran's Grand Sepahsalar Mosque, where tens of thousands of ahti-&lt;lhah demonstra!Drs packed the streets.
'Jliey were kept out of range of the palace by army troops,
silhouetted against a line of Chieftain tanks.
The mosque rites were tD be the part of the annual mourning
ceremonies for the martyred grandson of Mohammed. Normally the 10-day period is climaxed by frenzied self-

shah than physically punished themselves.
The U.S. Slate Department estimated Monday that over
6,000 Americans have left Iran in tbe past six months.
Millions of men and women, some carrying infants in their
arms, screamed "Death to the shah," denounced President
carter for his support of the shah and cried "Yankee Go
Home" as tbey swarmed through Iran's major cities Sunday
and Monday.
In Tehran, the army took positions that blocked access to the
northern quarter where the shah and most Westerners live.
There were no incidents in Tehran during tbe eight-hour
march. But troops fired on antishah demonstrators in Isfahan,
ancient Iran's pictureque capital, and patrolled other cities
under strict orders not to intervene.
The troops did not intervene even as anti-&lt;lhah demonstrators pulled down statues of the monarch in Mashad and Islahan and burned them .
Relieved officials Monday night praised the anny's attitude
fla~ellation, but this year more Iranians v~rbally a++Arked 1 he that, they said, prevented a bloodbath on the holiest Shiite

•

at y

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December 12, 1978

Some degree of normalcy returned to Po.meroy
this morning as the Ohio River slowly ,receded
after cresting two and a half feet over flood stage
Sunday evening.
·
Most stores reopened this morning after
having had· a wild weekend working feverishly
until early morning hours Sunday moving
merchandise to higher levels after the Old Ohio
went on the rampage Saturday.
A number of those where stock was moved did
not actually get water since the flood did not reach
its predicted 53 foot crest.
The river receded slowly Monday, only about
one-tenth of a foot .an hour. Street department
workers and firemen were cleaning the Main St.
flooded area as the ri\&lt;er receded. They were
hampered by traffi~ trying to get through the
area, However, Main St. was cleaned and ready
for use Tuesday.
On Monday schools in the Southern District
were closed due to high water. Classes at all
Meigs County schools were being held today .
Water was still prevalent along the edges of the
parking lots running along the Ohio River on
Tuesday morning .a nd the lots were blocked off
from traffic thereby making parking spaces quite
limited.
Street department workers were clearing the
lots of mud and debris being left by the water.

,_,.•

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...., _

_

•.•

,...

'

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-

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......."~
RIVER GOING DOWN .- The mighty Ohio River
swollen by heavy rains and melting snow this past
weekend is beinning to recede following the worst Dooding
in more than a decade. Monday, the flood gauge at
Pomeroy read 46 feet at 2 p.m. Flood stage there is 46.5

feet. Yesterday, Pomeroy merchants and fire department
members were busy cl~aning the streets and restocking
merchandise. Photo above was taken in the Syracuse
!:!r"P.R

Worst flood in decade
doubles
river's
depth
I~WJL\_r_he_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_
;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::_
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Instructor still loves Army
FORT JACKSON, S. C. (UP!) - Drill Sgt. Willie
Alexander of Timmonsville says he still loves the Army
despite being reduced tD private and receiving a six-month
prison terin and a $2,672 fine for the heat-stroke death of an
Ohio recruit.
"I have no regrets about ever joining the Army or
volunteering tD become a drill sergeant," he said Monday after
a court-martial board of four officers and three enlisted
members found him guilty of involuntary manslaughter and .
dereliction of duty.

By RICK VAN SANT
United Press International
The Ohio River, which
usually measures about 29
feet deep at Cincinnati, has
doubled in depth at the high
point of the river's worst
flooding in more than a
decade . .
The river, forecast to crest
about noon today at 58.5 feet,
6.5 feet above Cincinnati's 52foot Dood level, forced dozens
of people in low-lying areas tD
temporarily evacuate their

homes and caused authorities
to de!Dur iraffic from several
water-covered highways.
The flooding in the
Cincinnati area climaxed
several days of overflow
water along Ohio shores. The
Ohio River forms aU 450
miles of Ohio's southern and
southeastern border.·
The river, which began
climbing in the wake of last
week's heavy rain throughout
the Ohio Valley , reached
higher and higher Dood levels

as it rolled downstream
because of ·the increasing
number of rainswollen,
major tributaries feeding it.
However, the flooding in
Ohio was not as bad as had
been feared over the weekend
and not nearly as bad. as in
neighboring Kentucky.
The river crested at 49 feet
Sunday in Pomeroy, Ohio,
where flood stage is 46.6 feet,
· increased 00 54 !eel early
Monday near Ironton,
climbed to 56.5 feet . late
Monday at Portsmouth,
where flood stage is 50 f~t .
and figured to hit its highest
levels in the state in
Cincinnati today.
Beyond Ohio, the flood level
is expected to worsen later in
the week along the KentuckyIndiana border, with, for
example, a crest nine feet
above flood stage predicted
Thursday in Louisville.

Cincinnati's expected crest
of 58.5 feet marks the highest
the river has been since
March, 1961, when it hit 59.6
feet.
Late last week, as ·rain
continued to fall, river
forecasters had feared the
flood level would top 60 feet in
Cincinnati this week. But
when the rain abrutply
stopped at week's end and
extreme cold weather began
freezing
some
minor
tributarie s, the flooding
turned out to be not quite as
bad as originally forecast.
Still, the flooding did force
the evacuation of nwnerous
homes along the river just
east of Cincinnati.
In New Richmond, a state
of emergency was declared in
order to permit National
Guardsmen to help move
people and their belongings
(Ccotinued on page 10 )

Teenagers rescued

for bigger,
fluffier,
great-tasting popcorn!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Fift ee n Cents
Vol. 29. No. 165

Rate hike
loses again

\\tSl'=f\\

$24

enttne

Normalcy
•
returnmg

Popper

Mf S INC

•

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2 to 6 Ot Corn

John McCarthy

Moslem holiday , revered by devotees because it glorifies
bloodletting lor a just cause.
The marchers were more militant than on Sunday, when 1.5
million demonstrators trekked across the capital under strict
control o! moderate politicians and clergy men who appeared
intent on proving they had the mass following .
"Shah, beware, yo ur son is also young - stop killing our
youth, " screamed thousands of women, their ankle-length
·
black veils covering their blue 'jeans and sneakers.
"Death to the shah, the bloodsucking shah " and "down with
Carter" rang out as the human mass heaved across, east to
west, along a road dotted with monuments to the shah.
The marchers pun ctuated their chants with rhythmic
striking of cymbals and drums, part of the mourning rites.
The protesters also burned four movie theaters , the Thousand and One Nights Restaurant and a bank.
In the southern town of Dezful, a policeman shot and killed
his commanding officer Monday after he was ordered to open
fire on demon strators.

RETIRE-SELL BUSINESS - Ruby and Ed Baer, left,
Pomeroy, are retiring from their business, the Ohio
Valley Plumbing and Heating, Inc. as of Jan. 2, 1979. The
Ba•• have sold thetr busineu to Sue and Don Beegle,
Racine, on th right. Mr. and Mis. Baer purchased the
Wendel Frecker and renamed the establiBhment from
Frecter Plumbing Co. tD Its present name. They operated
~

~

the business tor almost 20 year•. Uon Beegle is presenUy
the building supervisor of Veterans Memorial Hospital
but will devote full time to the business when he and his
wife, who will serve as bookkeeper, take over in January.
Mr. and Mrs: Baer are retiring· due to some health
problems Mr. Bae.r has ahd. They extend thanks tO their
many customer•. over the past 20 years .

The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to Bradbury at 3:56 p.m.
Monday
where
four
unidentified teen-agers were
stranded in a car stalled in
flood waters. The four had
climbed to the top of the
, vehicle. The emergency
unit 's boat was used to
remove the juveniles from
the car.
At 1:18 p.m. Monday the
unit went to Route 124 for
Charles Burt, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center, and
at 1: 50 p.m. transported
Candace Lambert, Route 1,
Langsville, from the fire
station to Holzer Medical
Center.
Pomeroy's Emergency unit
went to Lincoln St. in Mid·
die port at II: 34 a.m. Monday
for
Mrs. Juanita Ferrell who
1
was 111. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

where she was admitted.
At 3:38p.m. the unit went to
the Hiland Church Road for
Mrs. Pina Covert. She, too,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.
At 3:14a.m. the squad was
called to Cherry Ridge for
Clifford Cox who was ill. He
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center and at 3:40 a.m.
Tuesday the fire department
went to Route 1 and 124 where
a trash dumpster was on fire .

light . Co uncilman Mullen
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport VIllage council also indicated that he does
by a vote of 3-2 Monday night not favor the installation .
Mayor Hoffma n and
again turned down a rate
in crease asked by the Counciiman Horton outlined
PoinTView Cable Television aspects of their meetin g with
Herb Talabare, director of
Co.
Several times, the proposed HUD on making applications
com munity
imrate increase had been for
provements
grants.
discussed, but the increase
Several Pomeroy officials
has been turned down .
attended
the meeting with the
The company asked an
increase of $1, (from $6 to $7), Middleport representatives.
for regular customers and It was recommended by
from $4.75 to $5.50 for senior Councilm an HurloQ that
citizens and disabled persons. Middleport proceed with its
The com pany reviewed own application for a grant
plans for improving th e rather than combining with
service which it said includes Pomeroy. Both towns were
removal of one Columbus turned down in an application
channel, combining two local alst year.
Horton said the group was
type chann els and adding two
new channels. It was pointed given information on how to
out, that unless Middlepo rt co mplete an application
co uncil accepted th e in · stressing certain points so
crease, two channels will be that it would stand a better
blocked out for Middleport chance of being approved.
Deadline for fili ng ap·
subscribers.
_
At last night's council plications is Feb. 4.
Mayor Hoffman said
meeting, there was very little
discussion on the matter. commun ities with fair
Councilmen Charles Mullen housing ordinances get 25
and William Walters voted in points additional credit on
favor of the first reading of their applications. Council
the ordinance providing for will discuss such an or·
t he increase while co un - dinance in January. Hoffman
cilmen Allen Lee King, Carl will present a sample for the
Horky and Dewey Horton group ~s consideration.
Th e mayor also discussed
voted against the measure.
King ha s stated he feels the snow removal and the need
rate increase is too high for for authority to 'regulate
senior citizens, although he parkin g so that better
would like to have the im· removal can be carried out.
proved service being offered. Council will consider such an
Council voted to dispense ordinance in January.
A requ est was receivwith the second regula r
ed
from
the
fire
meeting in December sin ce it
asking
that
dep
artm
ent
would have fallen on Christmas. No other regular spaces in front of Ingels
meetings are scheduled until Store and the Citizens
January.
National Bank be cleared of
The report of Mayor Fred parking by removal of meters
Hoffman showing receipts of in order to allow more space
$5,132 in fines and $101 in for the fire trucks to tum
merchant police collections those comers.
The matter was referred to
for a total of $5,833 was ap·
the st reet committee.
proved.
Mayor Hoffman reported
council president Marvin
Kelly is confined to the Holzer
Medical Center. He com·
mended Kelly for his faithful
attendance over the past
years.
A missing person's report
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene has been filed with the Meigs
Grate read a notice from
Co unty Sheriff's Department
Ashland Oll noting an In· !or
a Rt. I, Reedsville youth.
crease of .5 of a cent on
According
to the report
regular gasollne and .7 of a
Tony
Barringer,
15, left home
cent on premium and
Sunday.
He
was
reportedly
leaded gasoline as of Nov.
seen
in
Reedsville
at 3:30
Z3.
Council
under
p.m.
Monday.
emergency measures gave
Tony is white, 5~, 124
three readings to an orpounds
with light brown,
dinance which increases
medium
lengt h hair, blue
water tap charges as of
eyes,
and
wears dark rim
Jan. 1.
glasses.
He
was
wearing blue
A request lor a street light
jeans,
co
wb
oy
boots and
near the Harris Apartments
cowboy
hat
when
last seen.
on Beech St. was tabled until
Any
one
having
any
Councibnan Kelly returns.
knowled
ge
o!
his
However, a report was sent
whereabouts
is
asked
to
that Kelly is agab1st the new
contact the Meigs County
Sheriff's office or the
Barringer family at 31~215.

Youth missing

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EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Saturday, occasional snow
Rnrrles, mainly in northern
coun!les, on Thursday,
with fair weather Friday
DEADLINE EXTENDED
Registration for Christmas and a chance of rain
food baskets at the Salvation Saturday. Highs wlll be
Army, 115 Butternut Ave., near 30 Thursday, warming to the upper 30s or to
Pomeroy, has been extended
lhe 40s by Saturday. Lows
through Thursday between
will
be In the upper teens or
the hours of 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.
the
lower ZOs Thursday,
Registrations are also
warnilng
to the upper ZOs
being held today and Wed- ·
or
the
lower 30s by
nesday at the above hours.
Saturday.
This is for needy families in
the county.
~

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t.) ~ ...·'

,.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

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