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' ~:41-TheSunday Timc,,-;.•nti&lt;.d, St.nday,

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Latest OPEC oil hike will hit immediately

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FURNITURE DEPARTMENT . I
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CHAIR SALE

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Wall ·a ·ways · swivel rocke rs · Rock ·o

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TAKE ADVANTAGE ·Of THESE SPECIAL SALE PRICES
SALE BEGINS MONDAY, DEC. 18 AT 9:30AM' ..

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loungers . oc casi onal chairs . Free Delivery

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Small , Medium, Large and Extra Large.

SALE PRICES
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DRESS COATS
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CONSOLE
COLOR TELEVISION

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Just received shipment G.E . 19 inch color

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MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

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Popular styles - Sizes 38 to 46.

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MPn 's Sport Shirts
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Size coats .

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Fine selection of styles, colors, and fabrics .

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You could_n't gtve a nicer gift than a new
Jacket. Stzes 3b to 50. Waist length and
fing e r tip length s tyl es

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Sizes 2 to
Selection.

4

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Women' s Wellel s Clulch Purses CigarelleCases
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CHILDREN'S SNOW SUITS

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SUITS

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Size - Birth to 6 Month .

1 to 3 and 4 to 7.

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SALE PRICES

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styles - Sizes 30 to 44 - Choose his favorite
width and color.

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Regular Prices 55.00 to 510.00

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GIRLS CO-ORDINATE

SALE PRICES

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SPORTSWEAR

Pants · Skirts · Ja ckets

Blouses . sweaters

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Every 18 HOUR style now ON SALE! •

Big se lection - ready for you to select.
Sizes 36 to 46 in regulars and longs polyesters and corduroys .

MEN'S '79.95 SUITS. ..............SS3.99
MEN'S $89.95 SUITS. .............. '71.99
MEN'S sgg,gs SUITS...............i79.99

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$149

WINTUK YARN
Solid colors- sparkle colors - variegated
colors. 3112 ounce skeins- Red Heart · 4 ply
hand knitting yarn.

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$119 SKE~N

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PERCALE SHEETS

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Famous Cannon Gold Label Sheets of SO%
cotton. Fitted and flat sheets in -king, queen,
twin and full bed size. Pillow Cases to

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SALE PRICES
SALE PRICES
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en tine
VOL. XXIX

NO. 172

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Rockies brace
for more snow

ABU DHABI (UP!) ~ The
Organization of Petrolewn
Expor.ting Countries will
Increase oil prices by a
surprisingly hefty nuirgln of
14.5 percent In 1979 and oil
ministers concede the
decision C&lt;&gt;uld throw Western
economies into a "small

Saudi Arabia, with ·its vast
12 million-barrel·a-day
capacity, was the chief
moderating influence at the
OPEC conference. The Saudi
government worries that
excessive Increases will spur
recession. in the West and
rebound on OPEC, both by
reducing energy demands
recession."
and
by jeopardizing the vast
The 13-member cartel,
meeting in the Persian Gulf dollar Investments of the oil
emirate of Abu Dhabi, producers.
·Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh
decided Sunday to raise
prices in four stages by Oct. Ahmed Zakl Yamani said he
I, 1979, with the first 5 percent was "not very happy" with
hike Ill take effect In less than the Increase, which he said
two weeks ..oo Jan. L ·
was too high.
AJ; it Is, he said, "! think
The decision was a major
the
Carter there will be a slow-down In
blow to
administration, which had the U.S. growth rate next
fought to persuade the oil year, and this might lead to a
producers to limit their small recession."
But Yamani said the
Increase to about 5 percent.
"This large price hike will situation In Iran ~ where
impede
programs
to strikes have cut oil ·
maintain world economic production by 80 percent in
recovery and to reduce the past ·couple of months inflation," the White House had made it inipossible for
said in a statement hours him Ill resist the demands of
after the OPEC decision was the more militant C&lt;&gt;untries
seeking a 15 percent Increase. ,
anftOWICed.
The State Department said
Most coWllries cited the fall
ENTERTAIN - The Brass Choir of the Meigs High
School band, directed by Randy
It "deeply regretted" the of the dollar -In which oil is
downtown Pomeroy Saturday.
'
decision and urged OPEC Ill priced - and the Inflation of
the cost of goods they buy
reconsider.
American conswners will from the West as their
not feel ~ full impact of the reasOns fer seekfug a bigger
Increase until next winter, increase. A communique said
n·
but that was little consolation the oil ministers noted with
·
for Carter administration "great anxiety" iJle erosion
offlclalll who have batUed for of their revenues because of
moniJls Ill keep the U.S. these causes.
inflation rate below 10
The basic price of crude oil,
pegged aI $12.70 two years
percent.
Energy Secretary James ago, will gradually rise to
Schlesinger said that as a $14.54 foc a 42-U.S. gallon
result of the OPEC decision barrel - a hike of 4.4 cents a
and a shortage of unleaded gallon.
One letter signed by Annie given as evidence by
GEORGETOWN, Guyana
OVer the year, the increase (UP!)~ The Peoples Temple G. Moore, 70, a nurse and the Guyanese crime official Cecil
gasoline, American molllrists
will have to pay 5 Ill 6 cents will be C&lt;&gt;llectively worth of the Rev. Jim Jones cult's financial secretary , Roberts. It said the Peoples
more a gallon for gasoline $14 .2 billion to the oil planned to will more than $7 was addressed to Soviet Temple funds were in two
producers, which now million to the Soviet Embassy official Fedor Panama-based banks, the
some time next year.
Union Bank of Switzerland
Utility companies also are produce an annual $142 Communist Party to help Timoseyev.
and
the Swiss Banking Corp.
expected to raise home · billion-worth of crude.
It said, "I am doing this on
"the oppressed peoples all
Of that Increase, $4.5 billion over the world."
Another
letter, signed by
heating bills. Consolidated
behaH of the Peoples Temple
Edison, the major utility in will be paid by iJle United
Maria
Katsaris,
Jones' se~
The infocmation was con· because we as communists
told of
an
the New York City area, said States - which is nmning a talned In letters presented want our money to be of cretary,
Sunday . it would boost its $45 billion annual trade Sunday at a coroner's Inquest benefit for and Ill help the Wldisclosed swn in the BanC&lt;&gt;
electricity rates by 4 percent deficit - and $5 billion by the into the slaying of Rep. Leo oppressed peoples all over Union De Venezuela which
and steam heat rates by 10 nine European Common Ryan, D-Calif., and the iJle world or in any way your was also to go Ill the Soviet
Market nations.
percent.
subsequent mass suicide- decision-making body sees Communist Party.
The staggered-price murder at Jones' Guyana fit. II
Police found the letters In a
The dollar also was
expected to take a beating on system was a compromise commune Nov. 18.
The letter was one of five suitcase which three .cult
survivors ~ Michael Prokes,
world . money markets between ooWllries wanting 15
because of the OPEC percent - they almost get it
decision . In Tokyo, the within nine months - and
greenback today sank to Saudi Arabia that wanted, as
194.10 yen from Friday's Yamani said, "no more than
5 percent and smaller doses ."
close of 195.95.
United Press International
40, Cleveland, killed In a two· Delaware County.
The Highway . Patrol said car accident in Cleveland.
Cleveland: Alice Davis, 67,
today that 14 persons,
Hamilton: Vanessa Wogen- address unknown, killed
including one pedestrian, stahl, 23, Fairfield, killed in a when hit while she crossed
were killed in a dozen one-car crash on Ohio 4 near the street.
weekend traffic accidents Hamilton.
Stow: Debra K. Parlette,
scattered aroWld Ohio.
Springfield: Jarnes no age, Hudson, killed when
Thirteen persons died in Campbell, 23, Springfield, the car she was driving
TOKYO (UP!) - The dollar, reacting to a 14.5 percent oil traffic mishaps the prior killed in a twocar crash on crashed in Stow.
price hike by the Organization of Petrolewn Expo,tlng weekend and 10 two weeks city slreet.
Sunday
Countries, lllday slipped to a one-month low against the yen In earlier.
Geneva: Mary Phipps, 21,
Akron: Robert E. Parry, no
. One death occurred Friday Ashtabula, killed in a one-car age, Bath, killed when the car
To!lyo and closed at 193.30 yen. :
Dealers predicted the full impact of the oil price Increase night, 11 Saturday and two crash in Geneva.
he was driving plWlged into a
would be fell in key European money markets.
Sunday.
Napoleon: Lillis Palomin, culver! In Peninsula.
Ther~ were two multiple
33, and Delores Martie, 58,
Medina : Nancy J . Boler,
death accidents,
both both of Defiance, killed In a 15, Olmsted, killed In an auto
occurring Saturday . Two two-car crash on Ohio Route crash on Ohio 83 In Medina
OLIVE GREEN, Ohio (UP!) -Timothy G: Ellis, 20, men were killed in an au Ill· 281 and a Henry County road County ,
Buffalo was killed Sunday while working on an oil derrick train collision In Middletown, near Napoleon .
' Green m
' Noble County.
and two women were killed in
Delaware: Swanie M. Ro·
near Olive
SQUAD CALLED
Officials said a guide rope snapped while Ellis was an auto collision near berts, 21, MoWlt Liberty,
The Middleport emergency
descending, dropping him 4ll feet Ill steel decking. The man Napoleon.
killed in a one-vehicle unit was called to 15 Dew st.
The fatalities by days :
accident on CoWlty Road 3lln at 1:01 p.m. Sunday for
was pronounced dead at iJ1e scene.
Friday night
Howard Dailey who was
Bowling Green: Wilda
taken to Holzer Medical
Fausey, 64, Pemberville, ~flW!!ft!l!!lil:t,ll!1ii&gt;."'i!i;.'iiiPii&gt;'h'\.'\.&lt;;: Center.
TOKYO ( UPI) .::: A !mile-wielding man posing as a killed In a two-car accident on
EXTENDED FORECAST
repcrter today made an unsuccessful attempt on the life of Ohio 105 In Wood CoWlty.
Wednesday through
Japanese Prime Minister Masay~i Ohlra as he was about Ill
MEETS TONIGHT
Saturday
Friday,
a chance of rain
The Meigs Hi gh Band
leave his official residence, police reported.
·Middletown : Kenneth
Wednesday and ?hen
Ohlra was not harmed In the assassination attempt but two Blankenship, 26, Middletown,
Boosters will meet at 7:30 this
turning cooler. Fair
p-lvate guards who wrestled the suspect to the ground suffered and Joseph Hurley, 20,
evening
in the band room of
Thursday and Friday
the
high
school.
Fruit baskets
minor cuts.
Middletown, killed In a car·
except flurries In the
will be prepared during the
train crash in Middletown.
north, mainly on Thurs·
evening.
Cleveland: Eddie Moore,
day. Hlgbs wUI range
from the tO. to the middle
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Suburban Miami Township
50s Wednesday, but
FLAG STOLEN
offlclala and Cincinnati Gas and Electric Co. safety
lowering to the 30s by
Meigs
County sheriff's
.Investigators will trY Ill. determine today why a beer !leg
Friday. Low temperatures deputies Sunday Investigated
Mild with rain developing
exploded, kUling a compaily wocker. ·
wUI be In the 30s Wed· the theft of a new American
Officials said CG&amp;E lineman Bernard Warman, 37, late tonight and .CQntinulng
nesday, dropping to the fl ag taken from the Rock
Milford wail ldlled In the accident. Friday night during a Tuesday, with low tern·
20s tbe next two days.
Springs Ce metery . Lloyd
party. Another lineman·was injured .and several peratures in .the middle 30s
and the highs in the upper 40s. :~~,~~,~~'1&amp;~;.;.;..'1!&lt;::;. Foirner reported the theft.
(Continued on page 10)

M0

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1978

oil prices

SALE PRICES

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SALE PRICE

You can r eally save on the shirts

three-quarters of the year will be reviewed in view of the . enormously complicate our job of holding inflation In check."
Herb Hugo, senior edilllr of Platts Oilgram, said the 14.5
circumstances al iJlat time."
percent
figure came as a surprise.
The price increases also eventually will be felt in the cos! of
"Things
had been looking rosy," he said. "Saudi Arabia had
kerosene, the fuel for airplanes. Jim Kennedy, a spokesman
been
trying
Ill hold the price at 5 percent and everyone thought
for United Airlines, explained it this way :
that
the
price
would not go higher than !Opercent."
"U the C&lt;&gt;st of kerosene is increased by I cent a gallon, it
For
some
companies,
the effect was not expected to he
boosts our fuel bill, now at $437 million, by several million a
dramatic.
year. Certainly the increase in any magnitude of this type is
Stanley Ragone, president of Virginia Electric and Power
eventually borne by the conswner."
However, he said he could not predict the specific effect of Co., said his utility's conswnption of oil, which has been
declining steadily, will drop once again next year with the
OPEC's 14.5 percent increase.
·
The overall reaction by iJle administration, and many bu~­ opening of a fourth nuclear power plant.
And Charles Boyd, a spokesman for Arizona Public Service
nesses, was one of dismay at the size of the hike.
" You don't necessarily prosper by impoverishing your Co., the electric utility serving Phoenix, said, "We don't use
customers," said Alfred Kahn, the administration's top infla. much oil for generation -only a small amoWlt ~ and most of ·
tion fighter. "We're terribly disappointed. It can only the oil we do buy is domestic."

OPEC will
mcrease

Carhartt brown duck - blue denims - cor ·
duroys, quilted, nylons. Sizes s. M, L, XL,
and XXL.

• TIVE TO BAlE • PLAYTEX· • T1VE TO 6lliJE e

~-------------lai!S::&lt;BoiiMiaBI!s.::&lt;i

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Big se lection of Dress Uniforms and Pant
Styles, too -- Junior and Missy Sizes
Regular Prices $9.00 to $30.00. Ready to
Wear 2nd Floor .

about 3.million customers in New York City and Westchester
CoWlty , predicted the full price incretiSe for oil Ill run its power
generating plants would boost Its own rates by 4 pereent.
Con Ed also has 2,400 steam cuslllmers in Manhattan, all
owners of large buildings, and their rates were expected to
shoot up 10 percent.
In Washington, Energy Secretary James Schlesinger
predicted an overall increase of S to 6 cents a gallon at the
gasoline pwnp next year because of the OPEC hike and
because of an expected shoctage in unleaded gasoline.
Although the administra lion seemed resigned to the firs!
increase, it urged OPEC to reconsider imposing the other
three hikes.
Noting the full hike would add another half a percent to the
rate of inflation In the United States, Schlesinger said: "We
would hope ... that these price increases slated for the other

•

'5099 I SALE PRICES ~
~-------------------+-----------"""···----1
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LimE BOYS
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portable T .V . sets . Solid state chassis -

Simulated walnut finish cabinets.

WINTER VESTS

lhi'

' By PATRICIA KOZA
United Press IDiei'Dilliooal
Americans will start feeling the first effects of the latest
OPEC price Increase almost Immediately.
·
That was the Initial reaction of .the utilities , the transporta.
lion Industry and cmmUess other oil-dependent businesses who
were attempting today Ill assess the impact of OPEC's
decision Ill Increase the price of crude oil by a total of 14.5
percent next year.
The price Increases, annoWICed Sunday by the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting CoWltries will take effect in four
stages, with the first one, of 5percent, slated for Jan: !. ·
The respoose was almost immediate: a spokesman for
Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, for example, said 2 cents will be
a~ded Ill the price of gasoline within the next two weeks.
Coosolldated Edison Co., which provides electricity for

United Press International
The center of a major
storm rolled over the
mountains of northern
Nevada today, and the Roeky
MoWltain states braced for
another heavy coating of
snow.
The slllrm shed rain along
the entire West Coast, and
snow blanketed most of the
intermoW&gt;tain region . The
heaviest snowfall was
reported in the higher
elevations of the Rockies.
Roads were slippery, and
hazardous traveling
conditions developed over
much of the western Rockies.
Mountain passes in Utah,
Nevada, northern Arizona
and Colorado were being
closed by 1-2 feet of new
snow.
Further south the slllrm
was scattering rainshowers

Candidates
Hunt, entertained in

must file

ey would have been statements

willed to Communists

14 died on Ohio highways

J:...,]L'·_rh_e_~_v_o_rld_To_d_a_y_
Dollar slips to month low

Oil worker killed Sunday

Unsuccessful attempt made

Beer.explosion probe begun

Weather

Ou'latnias

'

Tim Carter and his brother
Mike - had been ordered Ill
take to the Soviet official In
Georgetown along with
several hundred thousand
doilars.
" I, Maria Katsaris, leave
all the money in the Banco
Union De Venezuela in
Caracas Ill the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union,"
Miss Katsaris wrote. "This is
my final wish before I die."
Previous reports have in·
dicated that Jones' foilowers
had been in touch with Soviet
officials to discuss moving of
the commWle to the Soviet
Union.
Cult survivor Stanley
Clayton told the hearing iJlat
Jones exhorted the dying
followers to stop crying out
because they were scaring
iJle children "rather than
making them fee l proud of
dying In dignity ...
The Chicago Tribune
Sunday reported Jones did
not die by his own hand and
said more than 700 of the 911
cult
members
were
murdered.
The paper quoted Dr. C.
Leslie Mootoo, chief medical
examiner
and
senior
bacteriologist for the Guyana
government, as saying he is
certain most cult members
did not voluntarily drink a
fatal mixture of a flavored
soft drink and cyanide.
SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to Mid·
dleport at 10:31 p.m.
Saturday for John Taylor who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. The Pomeroy squad
filling in for Middleport
Saturday also )Vent to Ash St.
for Keily Lee who was treated
on the scene.

through Southern Galifocnia
and southern Arizona. The
National Weather Service
said flooding was possible iii
southern Arizona.
A much weaker storm
system lingered over New
England,
with
snow
spreading from western New
York and the Virginias inlll
Maine. Travel conditions
were poor throughout the
area, and winds gusted up Ill
40 mph .
The storm system In the
Rockies put an end ·to the
clear skies over the Plains
and Mississippi Valley.
Freezing drizzle iced down
western Colorado while
cloudy skies covered the
nation
west
of
the
Mississippi.
Several
ralnshowers developed in the
central Plains.
The southeastern C&lt;&gt;rner of
the nation' had fair skies with
mild temperatures. Freezing
temperatures covered New
England and the Great
Lakes, dipping into Iowa,
Nebraska and most of the
Rockies.

COLUMBUS (UPI) Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown today reminded all
candidates they must file post
election campaign expense
accounts by 4 p.m. Dec. 22
regardless of whether they
received or spent any money.
" In addition, any political
committees or groups of two
or more persons which have
made contributions or
expenditures to influence the
result of any issue election
must .file post election
campaign expense reports,"
said Brown. "But, if no
financial activity occurred,
these non-candidate
committees need no file."
Brown advised that many
organizations such as Wlions,
women's clubs or service or
fraternal orders could also
fall under the filing
reqUirements.
"Any group which makes a
single contribution to a cam·
paign is considered Ill be a
political committee and
theref oce is required Ill file
the post election report," said
Brown.
"Filings should be made at
the coWlty boards of elections
for county issues or
candidates , in the most
populous cmmty if a district
flting, and with the office of
secretary of state if the
expenses or contributions
were made foc state-wide
issues or cardidates," Brown
said.

Minor mishap
investigated
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
an accident In Meigs County
Sunday at 8:50 p.m., on
Roush Lane, seven-tenths of a
mile west of SR 7.
Officers report a west
bound auto operated by
Raymond
Canter,
19,
Syracuse, swerved right to
avoid collision with an
unidentified east bound
vehicle.
The Ganter auto ran into a
ditch and struck a rock.
The
patrol
reports
moderate damage to the
Canter vehicle.
·

METERS FREED
Pomeroy parking meters
have been fr eed by Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews and
Pomeroy Council . The
MEET TUESDAY
meters will be free of charge
The Meigs CoWlty Board of·
through ·Saturday this week
for the convenience of Christ· Health will meet at 4 p.m.
at
Veterans
mas shoppers in the business Tuesday
Memorial Hospital.
section.
')

Deputies
• •
ass1stmg
marshal
Meigs County Sheriff
deputies are assisting the
Racine Marshal in the in·
vestigation of a hitsklp that
occurred at approximately 11
p.m. Saturday in that village.
According to the sheriff's
report, a vehicle skidded
across the intersection by the
Pennzoil station, ran off the
road and struck a historical
marker in the yard of Mrs.
Anna Obitz. The impact
caused the cast metal marker
to snap off its holder. The
marker is valued at· approximately $600.
After striking the marker
the vehicle backed out and
headed up Third Street
through Racine.
The Sheriff's department
received a report Saturday ·
morning of an accident that
occurred Friday at midnight,
but was not reported until'
Saturday morning.
Roger G, Winebrenner, 23,
Mason, was going west on
Bailey RWI Road. His vehicle
ran off the highway Into a
ditch. There was heavy
damage to the vehicle. No
injuries and no citation.'
The sheriff's department
also received a report that a
deer was killed when It ran
into the path of vehicle driven
by Vincent Earl Mossman,
17 , Pomeroy. The incident
occurred on Gold Ridge at
11 :30 p.m. Saturday. After
striking the deer, the car ran
off the road, striking a fence.
There was moderate damage
to the vehicle.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PQmeroy, 0., Monday, Oec. 18,1978

..

lt

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

WASHINGTON (UPIJ Teddy Kennedy was the
socko act tn Memphis. The
Massachusetts senator's
speech m national health
insurance provided just about
the only excitement during
the entire three .days of the
Democratic
midterm
conference.
As a result, there were
some people who interpreted
the Kennedy appearance and
the response it received as
the first small sign that tbe
senaror might be toying with
the idea of a 1980 challenge to
Ptesident Carter.
That Is an Interesting idea,
except for two points.
· The first Is that Kennedy
did not rematn tn Memphis ro
lead the battle for the health
insurance proposal he is
pushing in competition with
the administration's plan.
Had be done so, it surely
would have been taken as a
sign that Kennedy was
staking out a possible place in
the 1980 picture.

na tion .

NEEDS NO LAWYER: In what is beUeved to be a courtroom
first, ewnintng attorneys will ask proapectlve trial jurors in
Loa Angeles, "did you ever live with anybody without benefit
of clergy?" The occasion -a landmark conununlty Jli'Operty
battle filed by Mieheile Triola Marvin against Lee Marvin and
expected to come to trial any day now. Michelle ilved with
Marvin for six years before the relationship cooled. Now she
wants the same SUpport ro which she would be entitled had
they been wed. Meanwhile, her lawyer- top divorce counsellor Marvin Mitchelson - will celebrate his 18th wedding
anniversary Wednesday tn New York tn Nirvana restaurant.
Says he, "I dm't practice what I preach."
QUOTE OF THE DAY: University of Tennessee psyehologl.!t Dr. Howard Pollio, In the January edition of Omnl
magazine oo his study of humor: "The stimulUB of a laugh Ia an
inteilectual event, yet It quickly goes on to block out all else.
There are only two other phenomena that 110 ccmpletely take
over your awareness- the orgasm and the sneeze."
GUMPSES: Jimmy Stewart received the Louella Parsons
Award from the Hollywood Women's Presa Club Sunday at the
38th aMual Golden Appie Awards ... Bob Hope hu laWlehed a
three-year series of television commerclala for California
Federal Savings at a fee de!cribed by a banking official as
"substantial" ... Suzanne Somera willlti"Ve as hosteu for the
New York portion of the 1978 Holiday star Teletbon for
Cerebral Palay :.. Candice Bergen is mlocatimln New York,
filming Paramount's "Starting Over" with Burt Reynolds ...

•

,

Marauders win
first cage game

:~

.

~ ~

·'

Washington
Window•••

WASHINGTON 1NEA) - In the interest of common sense
and political prudence, the Internal Reven ue Service had
best head back to the drawing board with its proposed new
procedures for revoking the tax-...empt s tatus of racially
discrim inatory private schools .
If it doesn 't , the IRS faces the very real threat of
congresstonal intervention that could effectively nullify a
much-needed and long-overdue crackdown on so-called
··seg regation academies" which have sprung up as havens
of white Oight in communities undergoing public school
desegregation .
The r e is absolutely nothing wrong with the intent of the
new guidelines, notwithstanding the noisy · howls from
some quarters that racial politics of private and churchrelated schools are none of the IRS' busi ness .
On the contrary, a series of Supreme Court rulings make
it clear that the IRS has a positive responsibility to insure
tha t a valuable public benefit - tax-..xempt status- is not
accorded to private schools that practice racial discrimi-

MADMAN MARTIN: It makes good sense to stay with a
good thtng but Steve Martin seems to have trouble being
anything other than a "wild and crazy guy." Most performers
would take the American Guild of Variety Artists' Entertainer
of the Year Award with a grain of hwnillty but not Martin - he
showed up m stage tn a bathrobe and shower cap. "For me? It
was so unupected," the comedian mugged as he accepted his
"Georgie." Martin also was tapped as AGVA's Male Comedy
Star of the Year in the awards, taped Sunday night at Las
Vegas• Caesars Palace to be aired .Jan. 10. Other winners Carol Burnett, Barry Manilow, Debbie Boone, AnnMargr~t.
the Bee Gees, Doug Henning, Dolly Par!Dn and Lassie.
LlZA V~. LUFT: Sid Luft says he only wants to put the
memory.,! 13 years of marriage to .Judy Garland behind him.
That 'a why he'sauctlontng off her personal possi.lllions, but be
redluned without the late great rainbow girl's daughter when
be started 'rellding the gavel. Uza Mlru!eW is suing - says she
wants !ll'oceeda from the auction placed in her mother's estate
- not in Luft'a bank accoWlt. Luft sold 11 collection of Judy
metllOCabilla two weeks ago, but Santa Munica, Calif., Judge
Laurence Rittenband says it has to stop WlW Miss MinneW's
lawsuit Is settled.

.

~

By M·a rtha Angle and Robert Walters

By KENNETH R. CLARK
UDited Prela Jaleraall0118l
TRIBUTE : It was to have been a special tribute to Motown
Records founder Berry "Pops" Gordy on his 90th birthday.
Diana Ross, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder and Smokey
Robinson weren't reaching for the top of the charts when they
got together tn the Hollywood studio to record "Pops, We Love
You." ButGordydledNov. 21, before he could receive his tune,
so it was played at his funeral. Now, says Motown response to
the impr9I11ptu recording is so strong, they're brlngtng It out
this week as a sin~e.
·

.

t*************************•*******************i
.
·~

Try again, IRS

Peopletalk

*.

! Editorial opinions . i* :~

Ill WASHIIIGTON

The problem, as is so often the case, lies in the drafting of
the new procedures . In an attempt to achieve guidelines
that are uniform and comprehensive , the IRS has
inadvertently threatened the tax-..xempt status- which is
to say, the financial lifeblood - of hundreds of private
schools which are totally innocent of any discriminatory
intent or policy .
Since the proposals were first published in August, the
IRS has been inundated with hostile mail - more than
100,000 letters in all, the heaviest flood in agency history.
More than 200 witnesses, all but a handful opposing the
plan, testified at public hearings before the IRS in
Washington last week .
There is little controversy over new guidelines for
dealing with schools which have already been formally
adjudicated, by courts or administrative agencies, to be
racially discriminatory .
The uproar concerns the second part of the IRS proposal,
which wou ld single out for special scrutiny all private
schools established or significantly e&gt;&lt;panded during a
period of public school desegregation in the community.
Any such school which lacks a minority enrollment equal
to at least 20 percent of the minority school age population
of the community as a whole would be preswned
discriminatory unless it could prove otherwise through a
series of tests involving minority recruitment efforts,
employment of minority teachers, scholarship aid to
minority students and so forth .
Once a school was put in this "reviewable" categC)ry, the
IRS would suspend advance assurance that donations to
the school would be treated as tax deductible - thereby
drying up contributions even before a determination has
been made that the school actually discriminates.
There ts no doubt that this plan would catch nearly all the
so-called segregation academies. But unfortunately, It
would also ensnare countless Innocent schools as well schools whose only sin, perhaps, was to add a new grade or
put up a new building at a time of public school
desegregation, even if the reasons for expansion were
completely unrelated.
Many religious schools - Hebrew day schools, for
instance - couldn't possibly meet the minority enrollment
quota or other tests for the simple reason that their pupils
are exclusively Jewish and there are almost no black
Jews.
Other schools, including many independent private
schools, would fail the 20 percent test despite active
minority recruitment efforts - and once their tax-..xempt
status was jeopardized, would lose the contributions they
now use for the very programs the IRS demands as proof of
good faith - such as scholarship aid.
The impatience of civil rights groups with past IRS
inertia in this field is both understandable and justified.
But regulations that throw out the baby with the bath water
won ' t belp matters, and probably woit.'t be tolerated by
Congress. A second try is obviously required, and there are
indications that the IRS realizes it.

.

'*********************************************~
~

Economic
growth

The second is that there
was no visible political
followup to the Kennedy
appe8rance or any organized ;
apparalus working m his
behalf tn Memphis. The
By DICK WEST
Lawrente E. Lamb, M.D.
WASHINGTON (UPI) :- Kennedys are not new ro
Although fairly new at the campaign organization and
at
job, Alfred Kahn, President nothing . happened
LECITHINISAFAT
machine.
Memphis
that
looked
liked
a
Carter's numero uno inflation
By Lawrence Lltmb, M.D.
I presume that the thrust of fighter, already has several . Kennedy operation.
.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I your question is your concern battle scars .:... mostly
So what conclusion can be
would really appreciate your about calorie content in tnructed by President Carter. taken from Kennedy's impasanswering a couple of vitamins and lecithin.
One scar evinces the lime sioned appeal to the midterm
questions for me. Cl\ll you tell Although there are a few Kahn ventured to suggest conference?
·
me what foods naturally calories in lecithin, neither that a certai!t combinatim of
There Is the possibility that
· contain lecithin and are there lecithin nor the vitamins are economic conditions coold the speech was exactly what
any calories in a 1200 an · important source of bring about a depression.
an
is was labeled milligrBip vitamin capsule? calories.
His mention of a possible expression of Kennedy's deep
Also, are there any calories tn
Other foods that are rich in depression so depressed the belief that he Is right and the .
vitamin B complex with choline, which your body can White House that Kahn, who administration is wrong on
vitamin C that has 15 use to make its own lecithin, is occasionally given to the Issue of implementing a
milligrams of lecithin in It? include wheat germ, liver, drollery, • began usfug the national health insurance
DEAR READER - In the egg yolks and kidneys . Your . word ' 'banana" as · a program.
first place, lecithin is not a · body needs between 150 to 160 .euphemism for that term.
It is also poSSible that
vitamin. It's a triglyceride milligrams of choline a day.
Kahn was scarred agatn Kennedy, without having
Seven ounces of lean meat recently when he ventured ro
(fat) attached to choline.
Your body can manufac- will contain 200 milligrams. suggest that consumers made any fateful ~eclsion
about a presidential nm tn
ture choline from amino
Lecithin is important tn should boycott companies
acids if you have an ad~uate your body, but you need to that violate the president's 1980, used the occasion ro
keep himself iii. the eye of the
amount of good qualitY know that the way lecithin is wage-price guidelines.
psrty rank-and-file in case he
protein In your diet. The increased , in your blood is
That scar was inflicted at a
does
decide to make a move
calories in lecithin comes from the ·action of your own news conference at which
toward the White House.
from its fat eontent. There liver. The liver is a Carter commented that he
Carter, who left the confer~renine calories in every 1000 remarkable
organ that personally
opposed ence just before Kermedy
miUigrams of fat. It follows controls the level of sugar tn boycotts.
arrived, obviously got some
that a 1200 miUigram lecithin your blood, regulates the
Apparently, it was tlje word
complete reports on the iienavitamin capsule probably formation of different sized more than the tactic that
tor's appearance, and he was
contains less than 10 calories. fatty ·- cholesterol particles, bothered Carter. For Carter
e&gt;&lt;ceedingly careful in
You should know that your changes "one amino acid Into also said that cmswners
discussing It at his news
own body manufactures another amino acid, breaks " should be conversant with
conference a couple of days
lecithin. The amount that is in down amino acids from the relative compliance"
later.
your blood stream is proteins and even forms new with his guidelines.
The president made it very
baskally regulated by your ones.
What Kahn needs now is a clear that he, realizes
own liver. Choline can be
To give you more in- word ro substitute for "boyKennedy Is not just another
manufactured from essential formation
on •
your cott." I would venture to
United States senator; that
1
amino acids tn the protein remarkable liver, I am suggest "kwnquat.'
he " represents a family
!roll) a well-balanced diet and sending you The Health
The two words sound a bit within the Democratic Party
your liver can produce the Letter number 7-8, Your alike and tn Kahn's leJdcm
that Is revered because of his
fatty acid necessary to form Liver And How To Live With kumquat could be to boycott
two brothers." That "makes
the triglyceride part of the It. Others who want this issue what banana Is to depression.
him a spokesman not only tn
lecithin . So if you are eating a can send 50 cents with a long,
"When consumers discover his own right but also of a
self-addressed a company has violated the
good normal diet, your stamped,
much
broader
lecithin level is more apt to be envelope for lt to me tn care anti-Inflation program, I
constituency. I recognize this
dependent upon the basic of this newspaper, P. 0 . Box suggest they kumquat its
and I have no objection to it."
characteristics of your own 1551, Radio City Station, New products," he might say.
Carter also said Kennedy
body chemistry.
York, NY 10019.
For that matter, this
Lecithin is found in a
cowitry probably would be was especially Interested tn
variety offoods; soybean and
better off with an entire new the health insurance subject
"having devoted several
soybean products are good
economic glossary.
examples. Choline is foWtd tn
In a speech last week, the years of his legislative life"
meats. If your diet contains
president expressed fear that ro it, while as pro.sident, "I
an adequate amoWtt of meat,
we might talk ourselves tnto a have ro look at a much
you should be getting sufrecession if we continue broader range of issues than
ficient choiine for your body
harping m the possibilities of does Sen. Kennedy."
There Is no doubt that
to manufacture its own
a downturn.
Is the lO,OOO.pound
Kennedy
•
lecithin.
Surely that prospect would
THF. DAILY SENTINEl.
gorilla in the Democratic
Note that lecithin is not a
be
lessened
if
we
talked
In
UEVOTF.D TO THE
vitamin and its calorie
11\"TF.Rf'K(jT OF
iruitbowl code rather than In Party who, tn the words of the
MEifoS·MASON AREA
joke, sleeps "wherever be
content is solely dependent on
blunt economic terms.
ROHF.RT HOEFLICU
wants
to." Carter knows that
the point that is really a fat.
"Inflation"
itself
is
an
obviCity F..rlilor
Publ islwd thlily exeept &amp;tturd&lt;ty
ous buzz word. In place of Kennedy probably could have
Real vitamins don't have
!Jy Tht· Ohiu Vull l'Y Pulllishinlt
inflation, let us use "water- beaten him and anyone else
calories. For that re~son,
Ct•mpany-Multinwdi:t , trw .,
Ill
the
presidential
Cumt St., Ponwruy . Oliiu 45769.
melon.'' As in, "If this wage- for
vitamin B comple&gt;&lt; and
'Business Offit·t• Phutu• 002- 215fi.
nomination
tn
1976
and could
price spiral doesn't stop,
vitamin C do not add to your
F'.tlilunal Pl11IILI' !19'2 ·2lfJ7.
make
a
real
challenge
tn 1980.
there soon will be another
Sct•Uilll da !'S (MtSI&lt;It-ll' piiltl &lt;tt
calorie intake. They are noe
Pl•tm•roy.
Ohi••·
The
president
obvi01¢y
is
double digit watermelon."
used for energy.
Na tiurl&lt;ll atiVt't1isirlJ! repn•Sl•tr:
not
'looking
for
a
"
fight
with
Another scare word is
Vitamins are commonly
tiltiw . l.aTrtlorr As.'itl('l&lt;th·s. 3101
Kennedy, but he also cannot
F.udrd A\'t' ,, Cll·\'t'lmltl. Ohitl 44 115.
"deficit." Try this Instead:
used tn the metabolic cycle to
Subst.'riptiull ratt •,; : Ot•livt.•n't.J by
ro look like he Is afraid
afford
''The
ooly
way
we're
ever
help your cells break down
c;uTit•r wltcrt• &lt;t~• ailt~ hll' 7:) nmL.; IJl'f
of
him.
So he Is careful to go
Wt'l'k
A,·
Molur
Ruult•
whcrt
•
c.&lt;~r
rit•r
going
to
lick
our
watermelm
the food you eat and rele1!5e
~t'l'\'i~·t• ' nut a\'ailal!lc , Otw muntlt ,
all the motions of
through
Is
ro
drastically
problem
the calories that are in the
$.l25 Ay tmtil 111 Ohio ;md w. Va .,
reduce
the
federal deference and cooperation
Om• 'r't•at·. $17.05 Six muntlt ~ ,
food . These vitamins, many
$14 .50, Tlu·ct• mntllhs. $11 .50:
with the senator while
pomegranate,"
of which are tn the vitamin B
F:lst·wlwrt.• ti2 .0U vt·ar : S1x montl ts
Or, "In order ro stabilize maktng it clear that It is
complex group, can be used
$17 .00 : Thr't•t• ' nwn tl ts, :f.!l.OO .
S uh ~t Tipti,,r t prit1• i n t ·l ut!t· ~ Surttlay
the
American
dollar Jlnuny Carter, not Teddy
over and over agatn. Your
Ttt llt ' .'"'~ 'llti rw l
overseas, we must cut down Kennedy, who is the
body is an excellent recycling
the size of our International president right now.
trade pomegranate."

HEALTH

WHY CHRIST

.••.'.
.

COMMENTARY
1 ,

}"'·-·'

•

Donald F.Graff
:

Spanish cliff-hanger

..:

By Don Graff
There is an impulse to hold one's breath in observing
developments these days in Spain.
Like some cliff-hanger from the age of melodrama ·
updated with a political twist for the contemporary world
audience, the story of that country in the historically very • _

short period since Francisco Franco's departure has been :
a progression from one crisis point to another. So far the
Spanish each time have been rescued, or have rescued
themselves, but not alway with much to spare.
The latest happy c
r conclusion is the electorate's
approval of a new c
itution ending the state of political
limbo which has preva1
since Franco's authority passed
to his chosen heir, Juan Carlos de Borbon, who took over as
king but wielded, in the legal sense at least, pretty much
the same dictatorial powers as ha!( the generalissimo.
Spain has now become a parlia mentary monarchy with
sovereignty vested in the Spanish people. The 169-article

1
.•

•
.
,·
.
:
•'

constitution, Spain's seventh in close to two centuries, .
declares the desire of the Spanish to create "an advanced ,;
democ ratic state ," guarantees a wide range of individual ·
rights and explicitly renounces the principles and political

machinery of Franco's corporate state.

1

It's significance is not limited to Spain. It is also in effect ..
a formal declaration that the country is joining itself
politically to the Western Europe of which it is a
geographical part. Formalized association with the Common Market and even NATO may not be too much farther
down the road .
There is , however, still a cloud or two on the Spanish

UP DASHER UP DMIWt!
UP CE-Cil. At.lD IRVI~&lt;loi

..

•

•

. fi

•

Meigs won its first game of ·the season. Other players
shown in this Greg Biley action shot are the Tomcats' Bill
Jones {45) and the Marauders' Greg Becker (12) and Tom
H~wley {32).

horizon.
The vote on the constitution· registered an overwhelming
15.7 million in favor against 1.4 million opposed. But ·
almost a third of the electorate abstained, P.rompting some
dis«juieting speculation about the durability of the new
national charter and the survival pr.o spects of the minority
government of Prime Minister Adolfo Suarez which
brought it into being.
The bulk of the opposition is based in the northern .
Basq~e provinces, where abstentions averaged 50.6 percent. Basque nationalists of various degrees of extremism,
harshly suppressed under Franco and pursuing something
close to guerrilla warfare against his successors, demand
more autonomy for their region than the constitution's
recognition of special regional interests permits.
The most immediate danger would appear to lie not in
the possibility of Basque violence in itself frustrating
implementation of the constitution but that It may provoke
counteraction from another opposition camp the far-right
ideological heirs of Franco with st.rong army ties who are
not at all happy with developments since his death. The
Basques. have far more to lose than there is any prospect of
the1r gaming in such a situation, which it is to be hoped a
realistic majority among them will reco~ize .
Spam, thus, has passed the initial constitutional test only
to move on to a new cliff. The melodrama is not over. Even
at this. still inconclusive point, however, something
conclusive may be said about the current reign in Spain.
Franco was undoubtedly aware that he had something .
less than a complete meeting of minds with his annointed
heir. But it is doubtful he could have foreseen that the new
king would move so deliberately and skillfully in dismantling Fran~o's political works and to a very considerable
degree revising the outcome of the Spanish Civil War.
In so doing, he has also revised an evaluation of his
family made by Talleyrand, the Machiavellian French
statesman who observed almost two centuries ago that the
Bourbons (the French spelling of the family that ruled both
countries) "have Jearnednothing, and forgotten nothing." .
This Borbon has certamly learned something from the
recent history of his country and the world of which it
cannot escape being a part.

Health Review
By Dr. Lamar Mills

OU College o..i: Osteopathic Medidne
SUICIDE -THE RESULT OF DEPRESSION .
Question: Every year during the holidays, we always hear
about suicides. Why Is this Common during Christmas and New

Year's?
Answer : Suicide Is always possible when a person Is
And, depression is common during the holiday
season. The same suicide4epression link is prevalent durtng
gloomy weatner seasons when the sun Is not seen for days. We
also . know that depression usually Is the result of some
tempo~ary stress tn our environment and requires no special
care, SIIICe it disappears sp&lt;iltaneously. Even tbe most severe
cases of deJll'esslon will often disappear tn about six montha.
The median duration for all types of depression Is about three
months and 75 to 85 percent of all victims recover completely.
During the Christmas holidays, depression Is common for
some people, partly because they are not working as hard and
have more time to !)link about their problems. Also, memories
of past times or departed relatives and friends are renewed
and many times can cause remorse. Another llnportant facto~
Is the Increased drinking of alcoholic beverages which usually
accompsnies the holiday season. Alcohol is known to heighten
depressim in many people.
·
depre~.

Question: Are there different types of depression?
~wer: There are several ways in which psychiatrists
claSSify depressim. One way is to identify depressed pstlents
as psychotic and nm-psycbotlc. Psychotic depression requires
extensive treatment and sometimes lnstltutimal or hoepital
care because of its d""!H'ooted causes and Its tendency to
recur more often. A syndrome physicians cail the "manicdepressive state" Ia a typical type of psychotic depression. In
this type, the patient alternates in mood from great euphoria to
deep depression. Another llY!IIem of classification identifies
"rC!lctive" and "endogenous" types · of depresslm.
Reactive deJll'ession is tbe result of a definite environmental
stress or worry. Endogenous or "biological" depression seellll
to begin spontaneously without any known stress causing event
such as a death, ftnandalloss, or fariilly separation,

Question: Are there ways to detennine If a de~ssed
person Is suicide-prone?
·
Answer: There are definite signs, but at tlme8 they are so
subile that only a psychistrlst would be likely to diBcover
them. ExJll'essim of "hopel~ess" is a character!Btlc
feature. Also, the person who dlscusaea definite aulcide plana;
has previously attempted suicide, or has a family blstory of
suicide should be strongly suspected. Certain groupe of the
populaUon are more prone than others to conimlt suicide.
Older people, particularly thoae who are unmarried, widOwed,
. or separated, tend to have a higher than average suicide rate.
Men commit thla act more often than women. The typical
suicide victim is an older male Uving alone with a chronic or
._,.~
painful dlaeaae. The old adage that a penon whO
,
.e
'"'"
""·
,~.
·
-li-1\W
cunmunlcatea
theuJU"eUable
threat of Indicator
suicide 18ofnot
likely to follow ·
' - - - - . . ; ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;.:..;;L._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,;:,;.;;....:...J through _Is a very
behavior.
1

HOT POTATO - Meigs' Ray Andrews ( 24) and an
unidentified Trimble Tomcat go after the ball in
Saturday'S non-league encounter at Larry Morrison Gym.

By Greg Bailey
Tom Hawley poured tn 'll
points and sophomore Steve
Ohlinger contributed 20 as tbe
host Meigs Marauders picked
up their fitst wtn of the
season Saturday night, a
thrilling 77-72 victory over the
Trimble Tomcats.
Meigs was forced to hold off
. a valiant comeback by the
Tomcats tn the final three
minutes before pulling away
in the closing seconds.
It was a fasti'aced contest
from the very start as neither
team was able to build up a
lead. In the final seconds of
the first period, Meigs began
cmtrolling the tempo to take
a four potnt lead, IS-12 .
In the second period, the
Marauders of Coach Roo
Logan padded their lead, but
could never quite get out of
reach . Meigs forged ahead
eight and nine points, only to
see the visitors narrow the
margin to five on several
oc casions . By halftime,
Meigs was up 37.JO.
The fireworks really began
in the third quarter . Meigs
scored the opening bucket on
a jumper by Ray Andrews.

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK {UPI) -The wind was so bad and the game so
duil that one human relationship between two of the players
went practically unnoticed, and It really shouldn't have
because it offers a perfect example why the Dallas Cowboys
are most likely to wind up Supe~ Bowl champs agatn.
The pair Involved were Danny White, the Cowboys' backup
quarterback who played in Sunday's game with the New York
Jets, arid Roger Staubach, their regular quarterback, who
. didn't.
.
And if you'd like ro know how strong the wind was at Shea
Stadium, where tbe Cowboys cloiled out the Jets by
demolishing them 30-7, it was more like a full blown gale,
gusting up to 50 miles an hour and causing the light towers
above the stadiwn to teeter so precariously that some of the
52,532 looked up at them wondering if they wouldn't come
down.
That was the kind of wind an anxious, nervous Danny White
had ro contend with maktng his first start in the NFL and his
first start at quarterback since he was with the Mempnis
Southmen tn the old World Football League back in September
of 1975.
White , 26,1s finishing his thiid year with the Cowboys. He's
good enough to be the regular quarterback for any number of
teams in the league and understandably, he doesn't enjoy
sitting around when he'd love to be out there calltng signals,
but all he generally gets to do for the Cowboys is punt. The
reason he got his chance ro start Sunday in a game that didn't
really mean anything tangible to the playoff-bound Cowboys is
because Staubach was out with an injured right index ftnger .
The wind made it rough for everybody, especially a nervous
young quarterback trying a little extra bard because he was
getting his big chance. White did a splendid job under adverse
conditions, connecting on 15-of-24 passes for 156 yards. In
addition to his normal quarterback duties, he also did the
punting for the Cowboys and handled every aspect of his job so
well that Dailas controlled the ball over 70 percent of the time.
That's what made the game generally boring for those
watching it.
Not for White, though.
He was on an emotional high after it was all over, talking
about how big a game it had been for him, how he had never
played in such a strong wind like that before and how much he
enjoyed the chance to play even though "he made some
mistake~.

With it all, though, he didn 't forget the man he had replaced,
Roger Staubach, who was missing only his second game with
the Cowboys in 10 years.
"I know I could never expectto replace Roger on this team,"
White confessed. " Maybe 10 years from now I might."
Tom Landry, the Cowboys' coach, said be felt White handled
the team weil and tbat it had confidence tn him, and Staubach
said he thought his llnderstudy "did a tremendous job under
.
pretty rough circumstances...
Charlie Waters, Daltas' veteran strong safety, said White
fired him up the way he came out throwing the ball in a hurry.
"He was smart tn the wtnd," said Waters.
Being around the Cowboys for ~ny length of time, you can't
help but being struck by the way theyfeel·abouteach other.
After Super Bowl I, Vince Lombardi talked about that feeling
among his Green Bay Packers and cailed it "love." It Is there
among the Cowboys, also, and they apparently have enough to
carry them through Super Bowl Xlll.
·
.
Saturday's

Ohio College
Basketball Scores
. United Press International
Adrian (Mi ch) 73 He idelberg
71
Akron 85 Walsh 64
Ash land 98 Mt Vern on
Na1arene 97
Bethany
(W
Val
75
Dominican 55
Dayton 74 Baldwin ·Wallace

73

Defiance 105 Ma nc hester
(In d) 72

Findlay 63 Hanover ( lnd I 62
Gannon 85 Steubenville 75
Holy Cross 110 Cincinnati 88
Illinois 82, Kent 51 44
Ky Wesleyan 86 Ohio
Wesleran 84

Mlam 60 Cleveland St 58
·CJtto Northern 55 Mercy (NY)
48

CJtlo U 86 Youngstown St 71
Rose -Hyu lm an (In d) 79
Kenyon 70
Salem (W Val 78 Mar ietta 73
Toledo 76 East ern Michigan
47
Wllr!]lngton 71 Eor lhOI"n ;B
WJttenberg 89 Hiram 41
Wright Sf 112 Otterbein 94
.
Xavier 51 Tennessee 50

Sprln' Arbor (Michl
Classic
.
~~lng Arbor 121 Central St
· .

Fairp ort

62

Paine sville

Harvey 56
Franklin Furnace

·

49 Symmes

Val 41 .
Granvi lle 65 Licking Valley 63
Greenon 74 Shawnee 42
Ham ilton Twp 62 Franklin

His 44
Heath 73 La kewood 50
Kent

Roosevelt 57 Newton

Fa lls 46
Lucas 60 Plymouth 51
Mansfield Sr 71 Marion 61

Mansfield Malabar 51 Dover
48
Mansfield Chr ist 73 Norlhmor
57
Maplet on 71 Norwalk Sf Pout
43
Meigs 77 Trimble 72
N Canton H 69 Akron Spr ing ·
field 62
New Phil 73 Mansfield
Madison 70
North Canton 79 Canton South

67
Northeastern 47 Lo ndon 44
Northr idge 71 JGhn sl own 60
Ol d Fort 74 Carey 70
Peebles 93 Port smou th N D 7l
Portsmouth 51 Chilli cb the so

Port!mouth E 120 Ports-

mouth W 62
Ridgewood 56 Garaway 48
River l/alley 93 Olentangy 73
Twinsburg 59 Cte Benedictine
44

However, the Trimble squad
made some adjustments ,
namely a .full-court press that
the hosts found hard to break.
Within four minutes, Meigs
committed 12 turnovers and
with 2:05 left in the third
period, Trimble went ahead
46-14 on a layup by Ken
Kovach.
Ohlinger knotted it, and
then the winners reeled off
nine more unanswered points
to take a lead at the buzzer,

away . Trimble hit with one
second left, but the game was

over.

Besides Ohlinger and
Hawley, Meigs' Greg Becker
hit double figures with 12.
Meigs has been getting
double figure outputs from
cllfferent players in each
game, but so far the team
hasn't been able ro all score
at the same time.
Meigs hit a fine SO percent
from the floor , but agatn lost
~the battle of the boards ro the
Meigs seemingly ''wrapped taller Tomcats, 5~. Neither
the bail game up" from there. team did well at the foul line,
The Marauders raced out ro a Meigs hitting 11 of 21 and
71~5lead with just 2:50 ro go.
Trimble netting 12 of 25.
Alter the Tomcats called a
Jeff McClelland led the
TOLEDO REUULTS
lime out re-instituted their losers with a ftne night,
TOLEDO (UPI ) A
· press, Trimble got back inro rossing in 21 points while L.
the game on a 13-2 scoring R. Faires netted 15, Kovach stretch battle tn the featured
surge thatleftMeiga with just 13, and Sam Jones 12. The eighth race at Toledo
a 73-68 lead with 24 seconds team hit just 30 of 78 from the Raceway Sunday night
resulted in Tuxedo WW, the
remaining.
floor, 38 percent .
winning a four-horse
favorite,
The starting five Meigs
Meigs Is now 1-4 on the
photo
finish
by a nose over
players came back in and in season. Their next game is
·
Sam
The
Timer.
the last 12 seconds as Friday night at Waverly. A
The
Whole
Thing
was
third,
Ohlinger and Hawley each hit Meigs cage team has never
and
Friendly
Fellow
was
last
a bWlny to put the game beaten a Waverly squad.
in the close windup of the
$1,700 pace, timed at 2:06 3-6.
Tuxedo Will returned $4.00,
$3 .00 and $2.40.
The ~ lOth race trifecta
MEIGS MARAUDERS
worth $1,94HO. It was
was
Player
FG-A . FT-A RB· PF TP
1-7
Ashley
2
1 2 headed by the win by P.J .
0-0
9·15 2-6 10
CJtllnger
3 20 Storm, paying $77.80, in the
JJ.JO J.]
Hawley
5
0 27 track's final program of 1978
4-7
Becker
4·6
5
5 12
4-9
0-0 12
4 8 season stretching over 169
Andrews
o.o
1-4
I
Dodson
2
2 nights. It was attended by
4-5
O'Brien
1-5
0
2 6 2,625 harness racing fans who
o.o
Blaetlnar
0-0
0
1 0
33-66
I 1-21
Totals
35 19 77 bet $249,176. Toledo Raceway
starts the 1979 race schedule
TRIMBLE
4-ll
of 192 nights on April I.
S.Jones
4-8 13
3 12
o.o
Trace
1·8
2
2
2
B. Jones
J.4
1-2
4
0 7
6-20 J.6 14
1 IS
Faires
DeCore
0-0
1
1 0
0·1
5-12 J-4
Kovach
3
3 13
Echstenkamper
J
J
2
1·2 o.o
McClelland
10-2 1 1-4 17
s 21
Totals
30-78 t2-25 52 t8 72
By Qua rlers:
Trimble
12 18 16 26-72
16 21 17 23- 77
Meigs

Meigs-Trimble box

PREVENTION
IS THE .

BEST POLICY

Marauder
reserves

Sunday 's

College Basketball
R.esulh
By United Press International

East

CC NY 75, Brooklyn 69

Midwest

win, 49-36

ASHLEY JUMPER- Freslunan Bob Ashley (34) goes high in the air for a jump shot
against Trimble's Bill Jones ( 45) tn Saturday's non league game at Meigs High School. The
Marauders of Coach Ron Logan captured their first win of the sea.!lon.

Wildcats avenge
earlier·defeat

Saturday 1 s

Ohio High School .
Basketball Scores
United Press lnternationa I
Akron East 69 Perry 49
Akron North 74 Canton
Timken 54
Ath ens -711 Lancaster 66
Barberton 87 Cuyahoga Fall s

63
Joe Bowers added 12 while
Spencer led all 'reboWtders
with 19 of the Eagles' 40.
Eastern had 22 turnovers
compared to 25 for the hosts.
In the Harman Trace win,
Spencer had 27 points and
Goebel 22 .
The Eagles had a cold night
from the floor, hitting just 28
of 73 shots for 38 percent
while the winners hit 33 of 64
attempts for a hot 51 percent.
The Wildcats had 35
rebounds, Guinther leading
with 12.
The reserve contest was a
tight one with Waterford
flnaily winning 34-'l/. Greg
Wigal again led the Eagles
with 11 points while Joe
Rauch had 13 for the winners .
Eastern is now 2-2 on the
year and will · host Southwestern Tuesday night in an
SV AC matchup.
·

By Greg Bailey
Waterford
The
host
Wildcats placed five men in
double figures Saturday night
avenging an earlier season
loss to Eastern 84-65.
Eastern
downed
the
Wildcats three weeks ago by
three potnts, but high-scoring
Kelly Lang was absent then .
Saturday night Lang tossed
in 19 points while Ted Lang
netted 22, Steve Cunningham
12, Dan Guinther 11. and
Sam· McCutcheon 10 to pace
·
the attack.
Eastern, victors over
Harman · Trace f!riday night
in a big way, just couldn't
seem to find the range over
the tailer hosts .
At the end of the first
quarter, Waterford · had a
comfortable 22-11 lead.
The Eagles of Coach John
Boston had the hosts in foul
trouble early. Eastern was in
Eastern (65) - Spen cer 10the bonus situation midway J .2.t; Bower s . 6·0· 12; Goebel
through the first quarter.
However, the Meigs CoWtty
crew just couldn't seem to
make the first one. The team
fini shed the night with just 7
of 25 free throws. Waterford
meanwhile-ca1uted 16 of 21. If
Eastern could just have made ·
good on the first of its one and
ones, it might have been a
different ball game . The
hosts were called for 26

Bea chwood 57 Hawkins 48
Bellef on taine 50 Ken ton

Ridge 42
Bell ev Clear Fork 93 Castalia
Marg 64
Berkshire

64

The Meigs Reserves played
fine defense the first half
Saturday night limiting
visiting Trimble Tomldttens
to just six first period points
enroute ro a 49-36 win, their
first of the season, The
offense did well too making 17
of 36 shots for a fine 47
percent.
Todd Snowden had another
good night for the victors as
be poured tn 17 potnts.
Brian Swann and Chris
Judge each added eight while
the team made good on 15 of
23 free throws. Meigs is now
T-4 on the year .
Trimble was led by Davisnine points, and the team hit
on just 15 of 45 shots for 33
percent. They canned just 6 of
16 foul shots.
Meigs travels ro Waverly
Friday.

Reserves
Meigs (49) - Snowden 4-9·
17 : Swann 3·2-8; Sm ith 2·2·6:
Kennedy J.0-6 ; Judge 3 2-8;
Miller 2-0·4. Totals 17-15·49.
Trimble ( 36) - Jenkins t-O·
2; J . Faires 1-0·2; Bycofsk i J.

Mo unt Scenario 90, Coe 73
Wayne St . 86, St . Mary 's 67

As

an

independent
agency , our
primary f unct ion is to
pro vi de pol icies which
attend financial proteCtion
in case of loss .
insurance

But, we also ha"Ve a vital
in1erest in loss protec1ton ,

as should our clients. We
2-8 ; Sikorski 3-0-6; Davis J -J 9; Bickley 1-0-2; E . F• l r~s J.
0-6; Campbell 0-1-1. Totals IS·
6-36.

Quarters:

Trimble
Meigs

6 16 24 36
17 25 36 49

encourage care, caution
and safety .. : preyentive
measures which can keep
that car accident from

happening, !hal building
fire from starting, that
home burglary from being
committed.

Prevention saves l ife, limb
and property ... and helps
control insuran ce costs and

Person to person
health insurance

premiums.
When losses do occur , our

policy holders can count on

protection and service in

time of need . Bul we still

It can help pay

say -

soaring hospital
and surgical bills.

best policy .

preven11on is the

Call me.

Mike

SwiJ~I!t

DALE C. WARNER
. . . ,. f U l l

·&amp;

sr,l.tf FARM WUTUAl

.t...IOIII•IIIrll~t~nc • COI'IPIII'f

\tlolrle Ol!·o

... ... ...&lt;(.

•

Slrilmii'I91Dn.

~.

INS.
992-2 t43
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

Ric h mo nd

Heights 49
Bethel 80 Riverside 39
Buckeye Valley 47 Delawa re
40
Canton

Aquinas

71 Akron

Bu chtel 60
Canton C Cath 70 Massillon 53
Chagrin Fa ll s 63 Wickliffe 61
Cle Marshall 55 Lakewood 51
Cle St Joseph 85 Coll inwood 74
Columbus Briggs 72 Big
Walnut 71
Danville 61 Centerburg 47

Delphos 51 John 70 Ayersvl lle
48
Elyria W 78 Brunswick 58
11 -3-25; Bissel ll -0-2 ; Eynon 0·

0·0; Boyles 1-0·2. Totals 29-7·
65 .

Waterford (84)

-

Cun .

ningham 5-2-1.2; Guinther S-1·
11 ; Lang 7-5· 19 ; McCutcheon

3-4-10 ; Lang 10·2·22;

Eich ·

mill er 1-0-2; Rauch 2·0-4;
Camitts 1-2-·t Totals 34 -16-84 .

Share a
ride with
a friend.

By Quarters :

Eastern

Wa terfo r d

B 2.4 43 65

22 42 59 84

pcr t:o nal fCl ul s whil e the
f ,'1!',1' ~ )1Wl tll,' 'l&gt;lu:--tlc Ulown
on them just 13 t.i mcs . .
Eagle guard Jeff Goebel
netted· 25 points to take
scoring
honors
while
teammate Dan Spencer was
right behind with 24 . ·

011

A PubliC 5erYICe ol This NeW$paper, the U.S. Department ol Transporta.tron &amp; The AdvertHMQ Council

•

�4- The Daily :)entinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Det·. 18, 1~7ij

J,

I ~', •' , ,

"

-·

CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
Cleveland Browns have also
· defaulted.
Two days after the city of
Cleveland defaulted, the
Browns went broke Sunday
and suffered the most
lopsided defeat in their 18game rivalry against the
Cincinnati Bengals in the
NFL " Battle of Ohio."
The Bengals bankf.;upted ~:
tlle Browns, 411-16.
.!!;.. ; .. -.
Cincinnati's heavyweight
' : fullback Pete Johnson
~:. crashed for a clulH'ecord 160
•

,;H d
'•

l
'

e

y~rds rushing and Ken
Anderson passed for 256
yards
and
personally
accounted for half the six
Bengal TDs to lead the
foreclosure.
Despite the embarrassing
defeat, Browns' coach Sam
Rutigliano came away with a
new five-year contract.
Browns' owner Art Modell
said he had given his coach
tlle new pact just bef&lt;re the
game. Modell inaisted after
tlle lopsided loss that he
hadn't made a mistake.

e

"The scor\lbOard doesn't
deter me," he said, "We shall
win with Sam Rutigliano ."
Bengals' coach Homer
Rice, who took over five
games Into the season, also
figures to be returning next
season. The aMouncement
from Bengals' general
manager Paul Brown Is
expected sobn.
"Homer," Brown told Rice
as he entered the victorious
clubhouse late Sunday, "you
know what I'm thinking."
"Paul," responded Rice,

d

e ric 1mpresse

By GENE -CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
• Ohio's so-called major
! powers are finding out that
: Cleveland State's basketball
• program has arrived.
: Miami got a first hand look
; Saturday night and, although
• the Redskins escaped with
: their lives, 60·58, Coach
:Darrell
Hedric
was
• impressed.
: "We've played some good
: clubstllisyearandlost,"sald
• Hedr1c , whose team now has
: a 34 record, "and Cleveland
: State could play with any of
• those teams that have beaten
: us. This is the best Cleveland
' State team we've ever played
: agalnst."
: In fact. Hedric altered his
' tllinking because he felt he
: couldn't match up with the
' Vikings.
"We tried to slow the tempo
of the game beeause we ~w
we couldn't outlast their big
· kids," he said, "and, for once,
1t worked."
Rick Goins led Miami's
bala nced attack with 17
points as the Redskins held on
in the closing minute, despite
problems at the 'free throw
line.
Miami, which led 31·28 at
halftime, never trailed in the
final 20 minutes, although
Cleveland State, now 5-3,
managed to tie it at 42-42 with
13:09left.
Frank Edwards scored 15
points to pace Cleveland
State, which shot 38 per cent
from the floor.
" We couldn't play any
better and lose," said Viking
Coach Ray Dieringer. "We
had the opportunities to win
the game, but Miami made
the big plays at the right
time."
Elsewhere Saturday ,
unbeaten Illinois rumbled
past Kent State 82-14, Ohio
U n i v e r sit y tripped
Young stow n State 86-71,
Da)·ton nipped BaldwinWallace 74-73, Holy Cross

.

downed Cincinnati 110·88,
Toledo buried Eastern
Michigan 76-42, and Xavier
captured the Volunteer
Classic with a last...econd 5150 decision over host
Tennessee.
SQphomore Forward Gary
Massa hit a 15-footer from the
right corner at the buzzer to
give Xavier its win.
Nick Daniels, the tournament's most valuable
player, led Xavier with 22
points, while Massa, with 12,
was the only other Musketeer
in double figures.
Reggie Johnson paced
Tennessee with 16 points.
Bert Bertlekamp had 12 and
Johnny Darden 10.
The Vols took a 50-49 lead
with 3::1» to go in )he game
and began a stall. But, an
offensive foul on Bertlekamp
gave Xavier a chance with 44
seconds remaining.
Daniels shot with 10
seconds left was short. Massa
took an inbounds feed and
calmly hit the winning baaket
as the buzzer sounded.
In the ~tent State game,
Illinois Guard Mark Smith
tallied 18 points to lead the
team to its lopsided win over
crippled Kent State.
The Illini broke o~t to a I().{I
lead ilfter four and a half
minutes and never looked
back as they led 31&gt;-19 at
halftime.
Kent State, playing without
leading · scorer Burrell
McGhee and with No.2 scorer
Kevin Smith injured during
the first three minutes of the
game, was Jed in scoring by
Trent Grooms with 14 points.
At Dayton , the Flyers
needed a steal and layup with
five seconds left by Jim
Paxson to down BaldwinWallace. Paxson led all
scorers with 27 points, while
Ron Myers had :1» for BW.
Gary Witts and Warren
Perry scored 24 points apiece
to lead Holy Cross to victory
over
Cincinnati.
The

"this (victory) 'was for you."
Brown was fired bY Modell
a8 coach of the l!rowns in
1982. So, any Cincinnati win
over Clevelanc!, is sweet.
Sunday's biggest ever was
the sweetest.
Although Cleveland's
brilliant dart of a runner
Greg Pruitt was the. day's
leading rusher with 182
yards, including a 7().yardTD
dash, he was overshadowed
by Johnson because the
fanner Ohio State star broke
the Cincinnati single-t:arne
rushing mark of 159 yards
that had held up since Paul
Robinson set it in the club's

chuckled Johnson after a
performance he 'termed the
most satisfying in his twoyear pro career.
"I run better at a heavier
weight. . My knees are
stronger arid I can bounce off
tacklers lie\ter.. It's drive and
detennination that count, not
playing with less weight."
!Jespite ·setting the club
rushing record with 160
yards, Johnson had to
apologize for not getting 200.
"I told (running back
coach) George Sefcik I was
going to get 200 today," said
Johnson. "I never lie. I
always keep my word. Now I
have to apologize to him."
Although the Bengals
finished the season with a 4-12

:!~:~:~~beT!:

it was like seeing Johnson
churning downfield all
afternoon.
"I blink and 240 pounds of
Pete Johnson is right on top of
me," he said. "It's not fun to
bring down a runaway freight
train."
WhatDardendidn'tknowis
that Joonaon actually is a 257pound freight train.
"The coaches want me at
240, but I weigh 257 today and
that's the way I like it,"

Crusaders led by as much as
24 points in the opening half
with their biggest margin
being 104-721ate in the game.
"".'" "'- Bea•cats
were led by
•
senior center Pat Cummings
with 25 points.
Tim Joyce poured in 29
points and Steve Skaggs
added 18 in Ohio University's
victory over Youngstown
State.
The Bobcats, now 3-2, raced
toa33-17lead after the first
10 minutes and were on top
47-34 at halftime. They held
their largest margin at 55,34
with 15 :25 left In the game.
Freshman Dave Zeigler
continued his hot shooting for
NFL St1ndln11
By United Press· lntern•Uonll
YSU, leading the Penguins ii1
American Conference
scoring for the third straight
E111
W. L T. Pet.
game with 30 points. Bruce
11 • 0 .733
New
Englnd
AI ex and e r , another y -Miami
10 5 0 .1&gt;67
freshman, added 18 Jl(lints , NY Jets
&amp;80 .500
5 11 0 .313
Toledo got off oo the right Buffalo
5 11 0 .313
foot in its quest for the Mid· Baltimore Centnl
W. L. T. Pet.
American Conference title. A
u 2 0 .875
P ittsburgh
17-point scoring spurt y-Houston
10 6 0 .625
midway through the second Cleveland
8 8 0 .500
half put the game away for Cincmnari West• 12 0 .250
the Rockets.
W. l T. Pet .
10 6 0 .625
Jim Swaney led Toledo Denver
970 .563
Oakland
with 13 points while seattle ·
970 .563
9 7 0 .563
teammates Stan Joplin and San Otego
" 12 0 .250
Dick Miller added 12 apiece. Kansas City
Toledoled32-28athalftime,
National conference
East
then outscored Eastern 44-16
W- L. T. Pet.
in the final :1» minutes.
12 4 0 .750
Dallas
970 .563
In other games it was y-Philadelph
880 .500
Adrian (Mich.) 73 Heidelberg Washington
6 10 0 .375
St. Louis
6 10 0 .375
71; Akron 85 Walsh 84; NY Giants
central
Ashland 98 Mt. Vernon
W- L T. Pc:t .
Nazarene 97; Bethany (W. x-Minnesota
B 7 1 531
B 7 1 .531
Bay
Va.) 75 Dominican :i5; Green
7 9 0 .438
Defiance 105 Manchester Detroit
1 9 0 .438
Chicago
5 11 0 313
(Ind.) 72; Findlay 63 Haoover Tampa Bay
West
(Ind.) 62; Gannon (Pa.) 85
W. L. T. Pet.
Steubenvllle 75; Kentucky Los Angeles
12 4 o
7.50
9 1 0 .563
Wesleyan 86 Ohlo Wesleyan y-Atlanta
New Orleans
7 9 o .438
84; Ohio Northern 55 Mercy san Francisc
2 14 o .125
(N.Y. ) 48; Rose-Hulman x-cllnched division title
playoff berth
(Ind.) 79 Kenyon 70; Salem v· clinched
Saturday's Resul1s
Chicago 14, washlnoton 10
(W. ,Va.) 78 Marietta 73;
Pittsburgh 21, Denver \7
Wilmington 71 Earlham
Sunday's Results
(Ind.) 58; Wittenberg 89
Detroit 33, San Francisco 14
Cincinnati 48, Cleveland 16
Hiram 41; Wright State 112
New Orleans 17, Tampa Bay
Otterbein 94; and, in the 10
Philadelphia 20, New York
Spring Arbor (Mich.) Classic, Giants
3
Spring Arbor 121 Central
Dallas 30, New York Jets 7
- st:- Louis 42, A11anta 21
State 100.

.-----------,
1 Pro I
!Standings I

This week's
cage games
Basketball Schedule
United Press International
Monday

record, they won their last
three in a row and Johnson
led the parade of optimism
for next year.
"I think we're going all the
way," he declared. "The
Super Bowl. We're going to
win every game. "
When repo~ters began
chuckling, Johnson .snapped,
"SerloOBly, I think we can do
it."
Said Rice about,a team that
went ~ the first half of the
year, "We did just what we
set out to do and that's come
back the second of the season
and finish strong and give us
momentum to go into next
year.
. "Oii defense has been
great and our offense baa
arrived. All in all, this is a ·
great victory foc us."
As for the Browns, who
finished at 8-8, well, their
lmmedia te concern Is
quarterback Brian· Sipe, who
was hit hard in the first series

Alabama
Cedarville at Wilminglon
West Liberty (W Va) .at Dyke
Mt . Vernon

Salem (W Val

Nazarene at

Baldw in-Wallace at Point

Park (Pal
Urbana al Wittenberg
Steubenville at Pill -Johns town (Pal
Tuesday
Washington State at

State

Ohio

Cincinnati vs Michigan Slate

ALL GAMES
W LP OP
TEAM
Portsmouth 4 0 269 , 29? ·
4 1 342 ~
Waverly
4 ,. 351
Athens
Logan
3 1 292 239
Washington
s 2 373 3j4
Ironton
3 2 312 251
Jackson
2 3 315 384
1 3 260 313
Wellston
1 3 190 189
Gallloolls
. 1 4 311 395
Mel~s
- Pt. leasant
0 0 0 0
Ravenswood

(Pontiac)
Defiance at Bowling Green

Malone

at

the

couldn't play the rest cif
da!.He had a real bad concussion," reported Rutigliano.
"His belmelfell oil and he bit
the turf with hts head. He was
totally incoherent. He didn't
know where he was oc what
happened."
··-·
Asked · how much . ..,..... a
absence hurt the BniwnS,
Rutigliano said, "We don't
use Brian oo defense."
"I felt we didn't do a g&lt;10t1 '
job on defense "
he
esplalned. "Either V:e had a
good pass rush and no
coverage lri the secondary or
we had coverage and no pass
rush."
Cleveland led S.O ·after the
first quarter thanks to a fiveyard quarterback draw
touchdown
by
Slpe's
replacement rqokle Mart
Miller.
'
·
But then, as Rudgllano
said "everything changed in
'

Cage standings

Akron at Kent State
Ohio University at Cleveland
State

Catholic Un iversity at Toledo
Oiterbein
at
Northern

of plays by Ross Browner and

0 0

0

0

Saturday'• R..ulto:
Athens 26 Lancaster 66
Portsmoulh 51 Chillicothe SO
Meigs...ll. Trimble 72
Dec. w 1ames:
Ashland a Ironton
Wellston at Vinton County
Southern at Pt. Pleasant

Dec. 22

~ames :

Athens at ronton

Logan al Jackson
al Waverlr
Ga lhpolls at Wei ston
Barboursville~~ Pt. Pleasant
Dec. 23:
Porlsmoulh at Gallipolis
Mel~s

the aecmd quatllr ·"
Wblle the Be~ala· . , . _
shut out CleYeland. Alida..,
arched a perfect
bomb to Don IIMI and IIIIa&amp; a
Uyarder to Ardlle Grlftl!l
fer toucbdownl and &lt;llrll
Babr added a IS-yard lleld
goal lor a 17,. ,..~ baiiiiiM
_
lead.
Early .1!1 the .ll*d period,
Grllfln'a'-"ani"'Jfbec:!r
pall

.._,.lll'd

••,.

vM_,

~~

to Rick .Walllsr upped tbe
lead to 2U before Onellnd
staged a mUd raUy on
Pruitt's '10-yard TD bunt and
Don Cockroft's lt-Jard field
goal to maks It »-11 I~ tbe

end of the ~-~~ b
But In ~.!:!:: '==.,-. ._lr

.. .,._ ... ...
.quarter
this . . . . ,:H, to win ~

Jle~als

1111111t points in BIIY

away.ToucbiiOimlcameaaa
threeyanl rWI by Alldlnon, a.
12-yard burlt by Jolulloa and
a 16-yard pass In~.•
return by Scott Perry. J!abr
added a 49-yard field cOil. '·
"Obviously," IUIIIIIIed up
Cleveland's Jerry Sbert,
"lbey dominated the · - · " .
'

1fubbard's GraliOille
SVrAICUSI, .0 .
992-5776
Potted Poinsettas . ·.
$1.00 to $6.50
Hanging PolnseiiiiS
Tubs, 30 plus blooms
$10.00
Foliage Plants
3" to 10" SOc to $5.00

HANGING BASKETS 4" to
10"

1

1.25 to '5.00

Clearwl!lter

Chrlsltan (Fia)
Rio Grande at Pikeville ( Ky)

Mu~kingum at Rose-Hulman

(In d) Tourney
Wednesday
Davis &amp; Elkins (W Val at

Marietta
Otterbein at Birmingham

(Ala)
Wright Slate at Youngslown
State

Muskingum at Rose-Hutm·an
Tourney

Give A Gift
That Keeps On Giving

Thursday

MiamI at Purdue
Malone at Edward Water.s

( Fia)

Frldav
North Carolina at Cincinnati

Capital at Wright State
Akron at Purdue-lndla'na
Tiffin at Ashland
Rio Grande at Marshall
Held~lberg Holiday Tourney
University of Daylon In ·
vltational

. '

Saturday

~--

Bowling Green at Butler

Cleveland State al Siena
(Mioh)
Dyke at Indiana State (Pal
Heidelberg Tourney
University of Dayton In -

eee

vitational

.,,

'Buffalo 21, Baltimore 14
Los Angeles 31, Green Bay 14

McAdoo paces Knicks
to second win in row .

Oakland 27, Minnesota 20
Seattle 23, Kansas Ci ty 19
San Diego 45, Houslon 2-4
TCKiay's Game
New England at Mia mi, 9

p.m.

(End of Regular Season)
Sunday's Playoff Games

NFC.

p.m.
Houston

United Press International
Marvin Webster blocked
Near the end- of Willis six shots- including three in
Reed's tenure as New York the pivotal third quarter
Knicks coach, he wished when New York ran off nine
aloud for the return of the :1\raight points and grabbed
mjured Bob McAdoo. Current the lead foc the first lime, 73C&lt;lach Red Holzman had also 71, on a McAdoo basket.
been missing his Big· Mac.
The Knicks took the lead
Can one man really make for good early in the fourth
all that difference?.
quarter and led by as many
"What we saw was an as eight points with 2:10
outstanding performance by remaining.
a truly great player," Atlanta
The llawks, 15-14, were led
C&lt;lach Hubie Brown said by Joon Drew, who scored
Sunday of McAdoo's return, ooly seven of his 24 points in
which included 41 points and the second half, and Dan
a 111-105 Knicks victory over Roundfteld, who added 19.
the Hawks.
In other games, Cleveland
McAdoo, out of the lineup topped Seattle 101-81; Golden
with a bruised toe since Slate beat New Orleans lotNovember 18, played 42 ml· 98; Milwaukee clipped
nutes to lead the Knlcn to Chicago 117·101; Pbiladelpbla
their second straight victocy. beat Los Angeles 103-96;
The 6-foot-10 star made his Portland ripped Denver 123appearance _with 8:37 110; and Saq Diego topped
remaining in the first quarter Phoenix 111&gt;-110.
and the Knicks trailing 12-2. Cavaliers 101, SuperSonics 91
He scored nine straight New
Campy Russell scored a
York points.
ganie-high 23 points and
He wound up shooting 15- Austin Carr added 19 in
for-23 from the Door and Cleveland's 12th victory in its
grabbed a game-high 11 last 13 games against Seattle.
rebounds.
It moved the Cavaliers within
McAdoo surprised himself 41&gt; games of the Central
with the amount of playing Division lead. Jack Slkma,
time he contributed.
who also' grabbed 21
"I just had more energy rebounds, and Dennis
than I thought I would," he JohnaoiJ topped the Sonics
said. " It's the first time In with 17 points each.
four weeks I really ran and Warrlon 104, Jaa II
jumped on the toe. But I was
Sonny Parker led five
ready to play. I decided I had Golden State players in
to be aggr essive right away. double figures with 19 points.
"The last time I was Clifford Ray added 16, Phil
injoJred, I laid back a little Smith l:i and Robert Parrish
and tried to get the feel of and ·Joon Lucasl3 each as the
things when I got bact. It Warriors snapped a three·
didn't wock 10 Ileaf'N!d:(r.om.' ·pme iollllg streak. Trudl:
the last time and started to Robinson scored a garne.IJ!gh
play right away."
28 points and Pete Maravich
I

added 24 for New Orleans.
Bucks 117, Bulls 101
The Milwaukee bench,
paced by Junloc Bridgeman's
23
points,
outscored
Chicago's reserves 89-24 to
spoil the first visit for Bulls'
C&lt;lach Larry Costello since he
left as coach of the Bucks two
years ago. Marques Johnson
added 191&lt;1.' Milwaukee. Artis
Gllmoce scoced 23 and Joon
Mengelt :1» foc Chicago.
Sbters 103, Laten 98
Reserve guard Henry
Bibby scored six points In the
final two minutes to rally
Philadelphia, which lost a 19polnt, f!rst-balf lead. Los
Angeles twice tied the score
in the fourth period. Kareem
Abdu!Jabbar led the Lakers
with 25 points, but missed five
of seven shots in the final
period.
Trail Blazersl%3, Nuggets no
Tom Owens scoced a career
high 35 points to lead
Portland, which defeated
Denver foc the second time in
three days. David Thclnpson,
who was attacked by ·a man
as he got off the team bus oo
arrival
at
Memorial
Coliseum, was high foc the
Nuggets with 22 pointa.
Clippers 111, SuDa 110
Lloyd Free, a doubtful
starter because of a sore
back, IICOCed eight of his 30
points In the final six
mlootes. Free has scored 30
or more points in eight games
this year. Randy Smith,
playing , In his 548th
cooaecutlve game, scored 28
points for the Clippers. Phoenix's Alvin Adami IIlii all
scorers with 32 and WBlter
Davis added 'l/.

.

.

Philadelphia at At lanta, 12 : 30

AFC.

vs.

Miami

undetermined ), 4 p.m.

·

West Union 82 Manchesler 50
Westfall64 Chillicothe Flagel

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Willoughby South 48 Euclid 40
Wooster 67 Coshocton 58
Worthington Ch 69 Massillon
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~

.Pomeroy, Ohio

~

Name •••••••••••••• ~ ..................._••••• "·~····!'······~·· ·~ ~

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HOME IMPROVEME

POMEROY CEMENT ·
BLOCK CO. ·
Tne Department Store ·
Of Building
Since 1915

~.

lo.·

City. . . . . .. - .... , . _.. Ste·~· .. ,,..:,. ·.: . Zip ,,,;, •• ,~. '

THE DAILY SENTINEL

~ · Frolfl... ~........::,.,••• ~~.·.~······i}tt"""'""'"";;.· ·: · .
~~~.~~~~~~- -·
WE WILL

SIND A CHRtstMAi ·t AID
.
'
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,...

.

,

,

:,

..

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'

;t

•

.~l

....

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•

!•

•

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'&gt;

~'

,. '

·..: ~
'

••

'

'

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..

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- - .

~

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6- The Daily Senti~l. Middleport-Pomrroy. 0 .. Monday, [)e(•. 18, 1978

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Monday . Dec. 18, 1978

Installation of officers highlights Mason meeting
The annual installation ur
officers uf EvanKcline
Chapter 172. Order ur the
Eastern Star, wa s held
Thursday night at the Mid·
dlcport MaSilnic Te1ilple.

ln sta llt•d

Wt'rt'

Ann

Mn!Tin Wikux, ."'t't'l't'l.fll'\' ;

K111g.

uwr:-&gt;h;tll: Maxim•
· Kl':-&gt; ( t'l'~(lll. (li'J.:C
Hlist : [ .AH't'IICI

l .lih:Hl

Kathr·yn F.vttns, Ll'ea~un·i·:
Betty Vtm Matr·e, eon- Sull . Adah : ·Audr&lt;·l· Kinz&lt;•l.
clurtrt•ss: · nnnna Slt~w•-u1. ·nuth: Kav I ""'"1 .' · P.sllwr:
HS!Wl'iatc conduc.-tre.s~r: f;h•nrm ·Cris p. Martha :

Thomas. w\,rtlly mat run :
Paul Darnell. wurlhy
matron; · Rt!alrin• Kuhn,
as.r.;odate mat run : Rubt•rt
Kuhn, assul'iatc pe:tlrun:

Bessie Kin!{, dtaplain ; Dub

favors fur the Holzer Medical
Center. They al"'1 decided tu
buy a Christmas girt for Jean
Kiser who is eunfined lo a
convalesce nt hom e at
Piketon. Her address is Plea·
sant Hill Convalescent Home ,
Box 334, PikcllKI.

Barbara Gheen opened the
mee:tiltg with a reading entilled "Chri&gt;1mas Journey " and

ahtHil

\·itin~ m&lt;wslmli: Mrs . Mitdwll. l1 11• tlw inslallin~ mar:·: h~tll : Mrll'ic HcnvKin:-; , t'Oildudrcss; Euvclla B&lt;•ehlle.
Cal h&lt;• ri lll'
r llarlain :
Shcnl'ficld. organist: F:nn:t
Ynlro.' warder: aud Glt•rm
P.ntns. i'i cntinel. Soloist, Lin-

Christmas" by Garnet P.l'·

da Mayer. sang :·Hl' Tnucht•cl

fll•lure s

Sayn• .

F.ll·&lt;·la :

is ChristrnHs" by Mar·y Kay
Yt1st ;

··Evcrythin~

Matthew , vine; "Let Christmas Last "
Chapter 2, verse nine . Roll by Doris Hensl er ; " A
call was answered by 15 Christmas Firesi&lt;le Prayer"
members. Officers' reports by Ollie Mae Cozart: "I
were given and prayer was Behold the Christ in You" by,
byGarnetErwi ne.
Mary Cleek: '"A Santa Lel·
._.-----~--For the program eac h ler" by Teresa Van Meter;
member Kave a Christmas " J ust a Little Bit or
1
reading. These included "A Christmas" by Phyll is
Legend or the Christmas Railey.
Rose" by Marth£~ Lou
Christmas carol~ were
Beegle: "Christmas" by Non· sung by the ~roup followe&lt;l
~
dus Hendricks: "The Mean· by a Bible quiz concerning
.
MONDAY
inK of Christmas" by Bar· remarks in the gospels of
SPECIAL MEETING, bara Gheen: "Davie's Gift" Matthew, Mark. Luke and
Twin CityShrine Club, 7 p.m. by Marjorie Grirrun ; "The .Jnhn about the birth of Christ.
Monday with election of of· Ballad ur Befana" by F:mma
Members exchanged gifts.
ricers and refreshments.
Adams ; " Home f or Ref&lt;·cslunents were served
Christmas" by Noami bv the hostess. A small bell
CAROUNG, Kanauga Youth Slobarl; "A Christ mas _.;,, given to each guest by
· Fellowship, in community, Carol" by Helen Slack; "This the hostess.
meet at the church 6 p.m. Hot
chocolate,
cookiesFinley's.
a(ter i}::::&gt;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::{
caroling at Marcia

'

•, Socia}·

seriptun

wnn lt•r :

.J~ma- s TIIDIll&lt;'IS, !&gt;it·nt irwl ; ;: nul
Snt · Fluyd , Buht•Jt Kin~:. mnl
K&lt;•thr.n l Mildwl l. tr ustct·s.
F'arit.• Kcnneclv was Lht• in-

Ruth . Circle plans Christmas·projects
RACINE-Christmas pro·
jects were planned when the
Ruth Circle of lhe Racine
Baptist Church mel recently
al the home of Mrs. Martha
l"u Beegle.
Members will meet luday
at the church to prepare

l\. t 'I\IIC 41~.

from

!it cwart,

grand

rqu·csc•rrlativ••

lu

l ,(I UiSI'

Washingl(lll : wnrthy rnatn1ns
ami wmthy patrons or other
d1 r•ptcrs, l.inda ViHIJ.: han of
Di, trid 24, Wilkesville,'Stella
J\tkins uf Hllrrisonville ;

M" ys el

McCutdwnn

of

M&lt;• ."

t

· 't Cal.eil
ar
. d

I l••tH Jrt'c l gu(.'st .o,; (ll'l'st'lltt•ll
Wl'n · lfnwru·ct Shull , pa.,;t
gr ;111d patr1111: I ,ciis Pauley,
ckput y
grtiiHI
mrtlrun:
P ;:d rit'ia Wil son, g rand
n'pn·st'lllalivc tc1 Kanse~s :

POLLY·s POINTERS

•

Polly Cramer

~~~~~=-~

il&lt;t~11l-tt , F.lnisc Mautz of

r'rench and Ruby Diehl, :;o
Valley
Chapter, Me· vear members, and Evelyn
Comwlsvillc F:mme~ Pnlcn nf i.A.:wis, a {)5 year member ;
Macksburg, Ann Hemsley of and (AJui se Davis, a district
Pomerny ;

Oomthy Terrell ,

Others

presented . were

those with fonner grand ap-

Mahaffey nf Albany . .
Alsn presented were Ralph
Webb, Racine, wnrshipful
master or Racine IAKige, and
Thnmas EdWards, Pinncroy,
a knight nf the Ynrk Cross nf
H&lt;»uor: past matrons and
past patmns of Evangeline
Chapter, Maryln Wilcnx,
Farie Kennedy , Bill King,
Kathryn Mitchell, Glenna
Crisp, Euvella Bechtle, Ann
Thomas Grace French,
Evelyn Lewis, Linda Mayer,
Marie Hawkins, Ella Mae
Norton, and Noami King, and
past patrons , Bob King, Bill
King, and Paul Darnell, along
with honored Mason, Dale
Smith, knight ot the York

poinlmenls Nancy Riley,
Marietta ; Mary Shu ll ,
Athens: Sylvia Midkiff,
Pomeroy ; Mary Hughes,
Cheshire: Naomi King, Mid·
dler~&lt;~rt; DorothY Terrell,
New Marshfield, Catherine
Sheneiield, Wilkesville; past
matrons and past patrons of
other chapters, Florence ·
Weli, Ella Smith, Pomeroy;
Bill Stewart, Racine; Charles
King, Harrisonville: Ruth
Erlewine, Harrisonv ille;
Willa McCutcheon, Beverly,'
and Estelle Ankrwn, Belpre.
. The junior past matron and
patron, Bessie and Bub King,
were presented gifts from the
chapter. Refreshments of
:-;andwiches, S::llads, relishes,
cake, pie and beverages were
served in the dinilll( room .

bitter, too.- MRS. D. F.
DEAR POLLY - Years C ru~s uf Honor , and a past
ago we had the same problem patron or Pomeroy Cha pter.
that Sue has with while melal Also introduced were Grace
kitchen cabinets turning
yellow. We discovered that by
spraying window cleaner on
them and immediately
wiping them the yellow stains
•
seemed to roll off. Clean from
III'I'J
r
the bottom up and work only
1 C'.'
J
small sections at a time. All
our white appliances get the
:.• :.,_.:;_
same treatment.
'
The
book, ·" Wh e n responsibilillly, qiving and
When making sandwiches
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS
POLLY
Christmas Means the Most'' companionship. She said that
for lunch boxes try spreading was · reviewed by Miss Mary traditions and customs of the
::
the mayonnaise, mustard, Virginia Reibel ala meeting present make memories in
p.m. Monday.
::::
:;:: the mail be sure lo fold a catsup or whatever between
·
or th e Middleport Uterary the future.
LAFAYETTE Legion Post
small sheet of aluminum foil two slices of cold meat in· Club Wednesday night al the
For roll call each or the
Ryan Russell
No. '!I and awtillary unit's
TEENS SAY VIRGINITY COUNTS
or heavy while paper around stead of on the bread. There home of Mrs. Arthur Slralllis. members am:;wered with a
annual Christmas party, 7 to DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
.
it so the money will arrive at will be no soggy sandwiches
The book wrillen by family tradition or some
at IWICh lime.
9 p.m. Members and families
I was glad to see that'your T~en Survey showed more kids its destination unnoticed. Catherine Marshall included l'emcmbranee of Christmas.
Quite by accident when I
Mrs.' Ben Philson opened
invited. Entertainment will are beginning to thin~ virginity is okay.
RUTH
stories or family life espec ial·
follow dinner.
Talking to friends, and sometimes even in classes, we've
DEAR POLLY - Before was frying bacon for break· ly at Christmas lime, the the meeting and led the
TIJESDAY
found this is true . Many kids have decided freedom isn't exact· buying head lettuce be sure to fast .one morning I put the pan eustoms and tradilions or the members in the club collect.
ly free. And il isn'texactly all fun and frolic either.
semll the core. If il smells lid on the hack burner of the closely knit Marshall family . The Strauss home was exten~
LADIES AUXIIJARY of
Why risk gelling VD or pregnant or maybe complications bitter the lettuce will taste stove. Since it was just \he Mi ss Reibel described the sively decorated for the holiMr. and Mrs. David V. Pomeroy Eagles Club. will fr.om contraceptives when sex is not all that great , unless
right size (o cover all or the
Marshall family as one with. day season. The .table from
Russell, New Haven, W. Va. meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. · you're madly in love, and even then it can be disappointing?
burner , the grease spattered spiritual conviction and which rerreslunenls were
Annual
dinner
held
are announcing the birth or rather than ff p.m. as plan·
on the lid instead of on the
My boyfriend and I have decided to wail. He cares about me
related several or the stories served was covt!red with red .
their second child, a son, ned.
very much and !think I love him, but we aren't ready. It isn't
Annu&lt;il Christmas dinner of burner. It is certainly eaiser told in the book. She said that Mrs. Philson presided al the
Ryan Car).
HARRISONVILLE Senior so difficult, when you really understand each other. -JOCLYN the Twin Ci ty Shrinelles was to clean a lid \han to take a Mrs. Marshall listed several rMfee service.
held atlhe Metgs Inn Wednes· burner apart to clean it. I now ways or keeping the family
Next meeting will be at the
Citizens Christmas dinner RAP :
.
place a lid on the back burner
Let me tell you a·bout otir boys locker room. A lot of frnaybe day night.
horne
of Mrs. Everett Taylor
Tuesday 6 p.m. at town
together, these inciMding
The baby was born on Sept. hOuse. Gift exchange and most i guys don 'l brag about how they scored last Saturday
Atte ndi ng were Miss any lime I am frying. love, gratitude, compassion with Mrs. Richard Owen lo
30 at the Camden Clark birthdays observed.
· night. I understand from my older brother that this isn '( the Shirley Beegle, Mrs. Edna MARILYN
une for ·another. sharinK give the book review .
Polly will send you one of
Memorial Hospital in
. way il used to be, when you made up a good story even if you Slushe r, Mrs. Cora Bc&gt;egle,
Parkersburg. Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Gertnule Mi tchell , Mrs. ~~~i~~~~~rr~;.or~ ~e:
didn't get to first base.
Russell have another son,
Yes, !think y9ur survey qil it on the nose, Helen and Sue: Beulah Ewing. Mrs. Mary
11. 1
'
1
1
I
Eric. Maternal grandparents
Stewa11 , Mrs. Clar·a Adams, uses your favorite Pointer, I
kids are thinking or other thing~ than sex these days. ·RICK
are Mr. and Mrs. Lawrenc-e
Peeve
or
Problem
n
her
I
OPTOMETRIST
I
Mrs.
Barbar·a
Dugan
and
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I
( Mary Kautz ) Stewart, Route
I'm from Marin County- you know, that " wild Califoriua daughter, Dixi e. Mr . an d column. Write POLLY 'S I
POINTERS, in care. of this · I OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to S (CL.OSE I
DEADIJNEJAN.lt
3, Pomeroy, and the late Carl
cuunllj" that has been wrillen ahout and reported on TV as Mrs. D. A. Byers, Mr. ami
newspaper.
1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
Kautz. Maternal great·
Mt·s. James Clatworthy, and
being kooky, kinky arid very sexy.
The
White
House
has
until
grandmother is Mrs. Elmer
Mr. i:intl Mrs. Thomos Bowen.
We aren't, you know. The majority or us, anyway.
llna) Kautz, also of Route 3, 'Jan. H \o convince \he.
Maybe it's a pendulum change, as you say, but I've noticed
Pomery. Pomeroy. Paternal Norfolk'and Western Railway that teens in our area who have the most liberal parents
grandparents are Mr. and and its railway clerks unioo (divorced, live-togelhers, drug-users, etc.) are the ones who
Mrs. Robert E. (Jane) Lee, to accept a recommended are getting more conServative. Maybe they don't like what
Charleston, W. Va., and Mr. settlement drawn up by
they find at home, or maybe it's ju&gt;11hat kids can't stand being
and Mrs. William Rlllisell, special presidential boaid. like adults, so they're setting a trend in a different direction.
If no agreement is reached
Marietta. Mrs. J . V. (Irene 1
by
then, the union wiU be free -E.W.S.
Mt-Grew, New Haven, W. Va.
DEAR E.:
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Russell is the fanner to resume a strike that
If young people are trend-setters, and they are, then perhaps
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Miller of
J oy Kautz of Route 3, brought tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of the elders will follow their lead. Can we soon look forward to fewer
national rail netw&lt;rk to a halt divorces, less bed-hopping, a decline in drug abuse among Middleport visited Mr. and
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Russell Roush and
In September.
adults? Somehow llhink so.- HELEN
•
family Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Eddie Hupp, Mrs.
-~] E.:
Kenneth Bass, Kenda and
Our country is growing more conservative- that's for sure. Corrine of Portland ·visited
The 1980s will possibly be a calmer time than we've seen' for
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
quite a while. -SUE
Friday evening.
Mandy and Mike Russell
NOTE FROM HELEN : Bullet's hope the pendulwn doesn't
spent
Friday nighL'!!th their
swing too far the other wily. Arepressive society is not for me.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush.
RAP :
Mr. and Mrs . Herber t
Who says teens are swinging back to virginity? Most of my
By Charlene H&amp;flich
Roush
visited Ott Boston at
j
friends aren't virgins. It doesn't bother them, une way or the
Racine
Monday.
other, unless they gel· pregnant. Maybe only goodie-goodies
Mrs. Dolly · Wolfe, Mrs.
Chris.n. IS came a little early this year for Steve and Mila answered your survey. - AWARE
Nora Pearson of Dorcas
.Jane Powell Raymond and their young son, Jeremy.
DEAR AWARE :
Mr. and Mrs. Roy
visited
On Nov. 28 Sp. 4 Steven Raymond of the U. S. Anny was . Judging from their outspoken comments, we doubt it! - H
Donohew
recently.
slated to leave for Germany, so the family decided to celebrate andS.
Chrisbnas on Thanksgiving. The families gathered, there
were decorations and gifts galore.
Mila and Jeremy will be here another month or so before
leaving for Gennany where the family expects to be for the
next three years. And Mary and Gerald, Mila's parents,
- they're already making arrangements !or paSsports, just in
case ...... .
l.ETART FALLS-Annual
Had such a nice note from Coleen Wilson Ohlinger ahout the Christmas dinner of the
youth choir of the family 's church, the North Terrace Church United Methodist Women of
of Christ in Zanesville.
the Letart Falls Church was
. The cboir appeared at the Middleport Church on Christ held Wednesday night at the
earlier this month. It is composed of ~ teenagers,.called the , community hall. Families or
Master's Few, and as Coleen noted in her letter to us "It 's lhemembers wereguests.
The dinner was served
great to see a group of young people who aren't afraid to
demonstrate their Christian faith ." As you may remember, from tables centered with
Coleen and her husband, Terry, were very active in the Mid· Christmas arrangements .
dleport Church before moving to the Zanesville area .
Mrs. Don Bell had the prOgram with the Rev. David
Harris giving a Christmas
And just this reminder ... ..
talk
and scripture. Mrs. An·
Judging in the Middleport home decoration contest will he
Tuesday evening at 6 p.m. Be sure thai your decorations are drew Cross had a Christmas
liwhted. No advance registration is required since the judges reading, Mrs. Bell related a
will be driven on a tour of the town by members of the sponsor· Christmas story, and there
ing groups, the Middleport Amateur Gardeners and the Mid· was special music by llie
Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Harris
&lt;Deport Garden Club. '
There are several categories - religious, secular, windows who also accompanied the
and or doors, and overall - with prizes given by Hubhards group for carol singing.
Prayer clost'!lthe meeting.
Greenhouse in Syracuse.
Attending were Mr. and
The contest has been held for many years and has done
Mrs.John
Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Your ... CHANCE OF A LIFETIME" TO GET AN AMANA.
much tq make the village more festive for the'holidays.
, . lt.t9, .
Don Bell , Mr. and Mrs.
,.,. ~f .
The Quality-Feature Line-at FANTASTIC SAVINGS.
For Ken and Carol McLaughlin there was good news this Elmer Pickens, Mr. and Mrs.
week. Their son, Duane McLaughlin, stationed with the U.S. Harold Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Better keep plenty of these
Navy at the nuclear site at Idaho Falls, has passed the ex- Paul Beegle, Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Cross, Mr. and Mrs.
aminations which QlJ!Ilify him to he a nuclear operator.
on hand for those Christ·
That means that he will remain in the States rather than Bert Grinun, Mr. and Mrs.
mas toys! Pkg. of 4 "C" or
'' D'' size cells.
have sea duty and for his wife and four-month old son, Jason Cliff Hill and Max, Mr. and
Mrs.
Willian
Wickline
and
tee, that's just great.
Incidentally, if you would like to send them a Chrisbnas card chlltlren , Mr. and Mrs. Don
the address is 1260 North Utley Circle, Idaho Falls, Idaho, Hill and children, the Rev.
Mr. arul Nlrs. David Harr·is
83401.
and
son, Mrs. Chris Beegle
Jitor
Meanwhile, Duane 's brother, Kevin, is In boot camp at South
and
children,
Rita
Jo
Hill
ami
Carolina scheduled to complete that in January. His address Is
Pvt. K. D. McLaughlin 276580998, Platoon 3093, H Co. Third children, Mrs. P.ulil Wolfe, In·
ez Hill , Alic&lt;· Ri!lscr, Aarnl1
RTBN, MCRD, Parris Island, S. C. 29905.
Wulfl!, Marjorie Hunt. r.Jatlys
Pomeroy,
,oo East Main
Slri&lt;·l
dt;.
HAVEANICEWEEK!

J

~i~: ia~~y~~r~~ ~~:
t 't;~b ~r~~~:a•pa~;~:~~~

FREEZE
LEFTOVER COFFEE
.BY POLLY CRAMER
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - What can
be done with leftoyer coffee?
-C. E. M.
DEAR C. E. M. - I suggest
that you freeze leftover coffee
in ice cube trays and then use
it in icedthat
coffee.
eliminates
dangerThis
or

Lb.

-

MEAT

...

,

WHIT. .

Comrnunityt
Comer I

'

I

• FlOOR SAMPLES
• DEMONSTRATORS

UMW held
annual dinner

AT
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED PRICES!

77!

u
n

uRR·· V ~H~L~ TH. EY
·1,

. LAST!

~=Fig variety to

POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN

'

,

(
,

I

'

o.

i

~~~G~~::E~M ~LJ8ff ...................... Po"$"" 1$15"9

1-Lb.
Pkg.

$149

2

09

BEEF CUBE STEAK ............................""""' 5 1"

-

Farm fresh Produce
DIAMOND SHELLED

WALNUTS •••••••••••LB. $299 TANGELos •••••12
REG. 13.59

NICE CRISP

99~

FOR

NICE JUICY FLORIDA

CELERY•••••••••••••••• '49¢ ORANGES •••••••••••s.L!!·. 99¢
5LB. $100
YAMS•••••••••••••••••••
GRAPEFRUIT····&amp; FOR . 99¢
POTATOES •••••••••2~ :~·. 99¢ BANANAS ·······4
88¢
BUNCH

SALE DATES DECEMBER 18 • 23, 1978

NICE PINK

UNCLASSIFIED

VAUGHAN'

LBS.

ina I

··--·'

Beaut
ru t
ts.
Order Today and We'll Deliver

UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I DAIRY VALUES I

2% MILK..................................................~~~:.•1s'
EGGS ... ~~-~~~-~....................
.. ..................~~~: ...7 5 e

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
DELMONTE

COCKTAIL
.

16....

Can

YTHING
FOR YOUR
CHRISTMAS
COOKING.

Umit two with coupon itnd 110.00 purchase
excluding coupon item. beer. wine and cigarett'es

1-!~~2~!!2~--~-~------~-j

·-

'1"

DARK MUT •••

:-: se~:;gRpa~~/:!:~n.;th!:~

Fairview
News Notes

Pound

IOIELESS HALF HAMS ............................

89(

CARDINAL

CENTER CUT

ARMOUR

$J59

32 ·••·

Literary Club
Vte W' Yule book

i---r.-w---CO-...M--P-'fi_O_N___O_D____,

S

$ 79

HAMS ....~~:~~ -~~·............ ~~: ...
TURKEY BREAST .........iifiSii..srAN;ARD
TAVERN
"We Got
BALLA~R~os~-----. .
FROM ALL oF us TO au oF Yoo 1
~ \ .~~~T$E ~s, .._H_A;.;.;;M.s;...___
'e_m_"- . J ~~H~~~E HoG sAusAGE ............. ........,••• ,
4
32-o•SJtt ·

WHITE

Announc.e birth

a

P--~

Cao

TURKEY ROASTS

Generation Rap :_,: ~~:, . ic~~· c~-:~ ~~~:.t:.ring
By Helen and Sue Bottel

BONELESS WHOLE

9.tJt

BASTED TURKEYS

3 $75' 5 ,\!~ $122f

!!~MS

Pound

18 LSS . AND UP
ARMOUR STAR or HONEYSUCKLE

DUCKS ..............................,.••••• Slit
"cwA'"IIED

more of Guysville, and Ju.ann

.

BUnERBALL TURKEYS ...

IW1"'"'MlUM , 4 · 8li. AVERAOE

officer .

New Marshfield ; Rada Skid·

. . . . . . ~~·. 79e

SWIFT, 10 to 20 LBS.

DELMONTE

SWEET PEAS ..............................]

...

16 ·01.

,s100

MA·X~~~~~~~~o~: roR£S

KRAFT PHILADELPHIA

(REAM CHEESE .................... ~;: 59•
CARDINAL WHOLE
COLBY CHEESE .............................."••5229

COFFEE
All Grin ds

CARDINAL SLICED

l.lmil """ w&gt;lh· J:~ ..
Ontl ~oupon ptr"ttm!l¥

SWISS CHEESE ............................."". s2n

Con

XfteliJ ill•l:l
~~

$199 ~
-'
0
~

E"""" 12/ZJ/18

S1&lt;""'

0(1(14 _, c.rdln•l Roy•l BluB

. ·-.• - .,. ... A,J.E ·~~~ 99

t;]

O!lJ!oO!i

{;::)

'

excluding coupon item, beer. wine •nd cigarettes

FRESHLIKE

BEAlS
VEGETABLE

FRESHLIKE

SALEI

r::,.~OS f O Rf S . CA ROINALFOODSTORE S
"-

14-oz. Sliced -Carrots
14'h· oz. Cream Style Corn
12-oz. Whole Kernel Corn

HUlTS TOMATO SAUCE .................... .'~;~·

Limit oM w iTh eo11po11 ..-.1
u~ coupon

it•m . b••r. wi!ltl 1M llillilar.ttn
un• coupo"
t1mlly

KEEBLER ALL TOAST

,\~..'"""CRACKERS .... ~::

69•

CARDINAL. ASSORTED FLAVORS

SPRITE OR

SJ7'

MAXWELL HOUSE

1-Lb

Can

,._$11

~

Plu1 ::::::,

ICE CREAM ............................. ~~~~~ $1"
LADY BORDEN

· ICE CREAM ........... .......... ..........

I '

·-

~

'.'
'

99( ~
~

...... 11123111
0110111 "' C.~ ""'"' l!llu• Sto&gt;n

.. ..

VALUABLE COUPON
Ill

I '

'

'

.'

0

'

-

COUPON

.."
~9 ~
~

a"'" 99

1
36-oz.
Bottle
Goact

VAUEY BELL

ICE CREAM CAKE ...........$2

bttr••

•t C1rdin11

.$1

X

0

12/ 2:3/7 8

~

Roy1r 81u • Sro•BJ
00 1505

~

f§

C ARDINAL\~

39

.
~

z

0

=

I HOUSEHOLD VALUE I

Limit on11 with coupon

12 -oz.
Cono

89( ~
~

OAVIll! PIEOENBACHER

0

POPCORI .................................................':;;· 89•

~

~

REYN.OLDI HEAVY DUTY

ALUMIIUM FOIL .... .':~,' 69e~

TAYLOR

~

'bo STORES

JOB SQUAD

1 8-oz. Vac Pack

23-oz. Svrup

TOWELS

ea..

3 -0IAMOND

MAIDARII ORAIGES ........................ .'~;~·

49•
Mill MARSHMALLOWS .................... .':;;~ 49•
KAAFT

a110STORES

KRAFT

69•
BIOWIIE Mil ....................................... .':;:~ sI"
MARSHMALLOW CREME ....................'~:·

Limit 2 with coupon
~-"110:::

DUNCAN HINES

Umlt one with coupon

-

~

REG. DRIP ELECT. PERK or ADC

PILLSBURY
ALL PURPOSE

•

Jar

BORDEIS DRUMSTICKS .........~~: 891

COCA COLA

IISTAIT COFFEE ................................... '~;~·
BORDENS CRIMORA ........................... .'~;~· s149
MAXWELL HOUSE

..

~·

I TORES

S2
· OZ .

p••

IBEVERAGE BUY I

SWEET
POTATOES

X3:·lll;;;t•l:l

,

11 0.00 purct.•••

LIBBYS

EE

HELLMANS

MAYONNAISE

14-oz. Peas · &amp; Carrots
16-oz. Vag-All Mixed Vegetables. _.
12 V.-oz. Cut Soinach

:~-

J

C ARDIN A l~()~

1

I

•

'

�.

.

~

..
9- The Daily Sent inel, M iddleport-Pom e r oy, 0 ., f&lt;!oml ay , Dt.'l' . 18, !078

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom e r oy; 0 .. Monday . 0...: . 18, 1978

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling L.nes
Morning Glories
Dec. 12, 1971
G . &amp; J .. Auto Parts
15
Sears
64
Karr &amp; VanZandt
60
Newell Sunoco ·
56
Cleland Realily
44
Gibbs Grocerv
37
1st High Individual Game :
Kell y W i lson 177 ; Vicky
Gillilan 176
ls i Hlhg Individual 3Game : Kelly Wilson 484 ;
Vicky Gilli lan 474
lsi High Team Game :
Sears 835
lsi High Team 3-Game :
Sears 2276
Pomeroy Bowlin9 Lanes
Early Wed. MIXed
Smith -Nelson Motors
77
Longshots
~
Headquarters
61
Young' s Market
S8
Zide's Sport Shop
53
No3
45
High Series : Charles Smith
· 585 ; Betty Smith -508 ; A. L.
Phelps, Jr . - 553; Pat Carson 467
High Game: Charles Smith
- 210 ; Betty Smith -177 ;
Charles ·Smith - 198; Betty
Smith - 176

Team Series: Zlde's Sport
shop . 1988
Team Game: Zlde' s Sport
Shop -680

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Earlv Sundav Mixed
Jack 's Dairy Bar
Tom ' s Carry Out
Gibb' s Grocery
3 in One

86
80

Royal Crown

58.

62
58

Meig ' s Inn
40
High Series : Ed . Voss . 593 ;
Betty Whitlatch - 540 ; Bill
Willford - 573 ; Maxine Dugan

. 487

High Game: Ed . Voss - 214;
Betty Whitlatch - 188; John
Tyree - 211 ; Belly Whitlatch 185
Team Series: Royal Crown
. 2008
Team Game : Royal Crown
. 734

PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
SETTLEMENT OF
AC ·
COUNTS ,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

Accounts and vouchers of
the
follow i ng
named
fiduc i aries have be en fil ed In

the - Probate

Co ur t ,

Meigs

Cou nty . Oh io, for epproval
ft nd settl ement
CA S E N O 21815
F irSt

Curren t Ac count or Bernard

v . Fu ltz , Trus t e ~ of the Trust
under Item 10 of W i ll of
And e rson
8
Ki bb le ,
Decea sed
CA SE NO : 20199 Ninth and

F1nal Acco unt ot Paul
Sturgeon ,
Guardian

o.
of

Ka thleen K . Stu rg eon
CASE NO . 22 154
Fi nal
acc ou!'lt of Hugh P Custer .
E:.c ecutor of t he Estate of

Shirl ey o . Custer. Deceased
CA S E . NO : 12465
Final
Accoun t of Jo H Caruzz i,

Adm in istnttr i)ll of the Estate
of We bs ter Boggen Hodge,
Deceased .
Unless e•ceptions are filed
thereto, sa id a ccounts will be
tor hear ing before sa id Court
on the 16th day Of Jan uary ,
1979 , at wh ich ti me said
accounts w ill be considered
and contin ued trom Clay to
day unt il finally d isposed of .
Any person interested may
f lle wr itten excep tions to said
accoun ts or to matte r s
per taining to the exec.u110n of
the trust , not less than five
days prior to the date set for
hear~ng
·
Ma nn ing 0 . Webster
JUDGE
Co m mon P leas Court .
P r obate Divis ion ,
Meigs Co unty , Ohio

I 12 1 18 , ltc
Tuesday , Dec 19

ASTRO·GRAPH

WANT AD
CHARGES

_

CH IP

Want__ec!_ tC!_ Buy _

For Sale

WOOD

Pole s rn oJl
CO Al lJME ST ON ~ !&gt;Ond gravel .
on lorgef&gt;l rrr d , · rnl&lt;l utn chl orrOc . fc rt tl rrC'r. dog
Sli' per 1011 8ur1 dl ed sloh, $10
lnorl nnd nit types of soli tx
pN ton IJ P. Itvered to Oh1 0
(f'l!&gt; 1nr Salt Worlt .-. Inc , I: Mo 111
'
l&amp; Wurcl-. l•r lJmk•1·
Pol le t Cn . Rt 'J Pom rroy
Sl., Pome roy ~en 3691 .
Cii~ h
r'hm~1 ·
W1.:f6H9.
1.110
Jd.n
1 !5
AfJPLf S. ~IT l PA HU CK Orc hard
:! tht\s
15&lt;1
I ·~
TIMBI:fol , POMI:: ROV Fores t Pro ·
Slota HI. 08~ Phone Wilkesvd lo
:\i l il:....
1.00
~. ~
duc ts . Top pr1ce lor stondi r g
bCY·J7tl5 .
.1,11(1
.1,7:;
h da\t'
saw t1m bcr Col t q92.:.SY05 or
CHRISTMAS TRH S Ma in St ..
Kent Honb-, . 1 440 85'10
F'.;~ ('h ~~o urd 11\ ' t ' l lht• llll llll lllll ll 15
.,
Rullanrl
'-111n l ~ 1s -4 t' l'llh t••r " 'lid llo.'l day .
OLO FURNITURf 1re bo ~t e !&gt; bra ss.
,\ d~ nLI IIll lll.! ••ll11·r than • Pll.'«'t'lll ll't'
!:: A~
co rn
bu
hech 1ron hed· dr· ~ ~ c it .. CHOICI:
dil~ ~ 111 1! ht · i 'l \01 1'1-! l'il Hl Ilk' 1 iiH)
/ 41,2359.
ro mplc t,:. ho useholds Wr1te
r:llt•.
'
M.D. Mille r Rf. 4 , Pome roy or
! nn w m u r ~. L',ud t•f ·n t;mb arul
colll./91 '17b0
lARGf f AN CY oppl es lor
Obi tum~ .6 l1' 11l.s pt·r ~~ · ~d . $.100
Chnstmo s. Boskets or your ow n
OLD COI NS, pocke t wa tches .
mllllmm n Casl11 11 ii iiV&lt;l lll't'
u ~e f 1ITpol rick Orchar d Stnte
class rrng s . weddt ng ba nds.
H0ule 684 . Phonr b69·37HS
Mulli lt• Hunw .s:1lc:-; and Yaril SJilt•s
d1o monds Go ld or s1i11 er Co il
an• ltt't't•ptt-.1 on!~ wlt h t·a.~ h '-~' 1\h
Hoge r Wamsle y '1 42·233 1
CRAIG RH L to pe recorde r 40
111tlt•r . ~ t•t•rrt t'hHr'J(I' ft• r iu ls l'ilrry-·
channel Re oltslic Mobile CB
11 1~ Rux Num bt·r Ill C,m • of 'rhl· St!n·
, WANT TO buy · old 45 ond 7H
1
One Realist ic power rn1ke . One
hilt•I
phonog ra ph record s
Call
block and v.lhtle por tab le
Yq:t.oJ70 or Co nt oct Mortm ~ ur ·
Tht• Pub!l sht• J' l'l'St'l'\'t'S tht• r i ~hl
lele vi sion IJ m Othe r ne""
mtu re.
Itt t•dn ur rt•Jt'l't cmy cttls d l'&lt;.:lllt•tl ubele rlronic de ms . Col i tiY'l 'J.'l'l b
}t.'t'\iumd. TIM.• Pu tJ ii ~l"l•r Will nut be
CASH FOR 1unk ca rs. Wr ecker
II'"!Jt'IISii.J it• f111 llllll't' lhHll lllll' llll'llr•
serv tce . f rye's . ~ut la nd . Oh10. GI HSON MASTEIHO N/: bon1o wtfh
ll'd IH.~c•11 &lt; 111
Sc rugg s tu ners and pl ush li ned
741-20lJ1
Phum· OO'~-&lt;! l t'lfi
case . $'150 Fe nde r bon1 o . $050
Wf PICK up junk outo bodu~ s buy·
OI4 ·J67 ·'172'il.
tng junk cars , sc rop tron. bol·
te ri es a nd me tals . R1de r's
Sal vage . SR 124 . Po meroy
RUTLAND HARDWARE, 822
tllf.'-·5408
Main st. 742·2255. we ha\'e
to make roam for spri ng
30 to' 50 ACRES 0~ land in the
merchandise so all s1ock in
Sole m or Rutl and Townships
store 10 percent off. This
Call aft e r bpm , 742 ·2026
means
se ll ing
some
merchandise a! cost . So oet
your Christ mas gifts now .
Yard Sale
Open 8-9 thru Chr istmas.
Muml&lt;l\'
No park ing problems.
IF YOU ho ve a serv1ce · to otf er,
Ni)(•n nn S..ti.n d&lt;t~
wont to buy or sell o;ome th1 ng,
oe looking lor worlo.
or
TUt'Slllly
whateve r
. you II gel res ults
thru FruiH Y
SNOW
taste r wtlh a Se nti nel Won t Ad
4P.M.
tilt' ilay bt&gt;fort'IJUblrt•allon
Coll992·715b.
d iot n~ l er

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

TIRE SALE

~P . M .
!

·For Rent

Frrday uftc n wo11

COUNTRY MOBIL!:: Home Por k.
Rout e 33 norfh of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Call IJ92·'147q

l
Notices

Business Services.

10'

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

--

°

See

BloWn Insulation

Denver Kapple
At

MOORE'S

PH . 992 -2848

,

..

---

LICENSE BOILER
OPERATOR

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER

it

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

Chester

W

l

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

Cellulosic (wood' fiber I
Thermal insulation ·

.,... .....

--

..... ..,. to tM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Plo. 99Z-ZI74

CEU.ULOSE
INSULATION
~.50 per bag

J&amp;L INSULATION
JIM KEESEE

Construction
Maintenance

CAPTAIN EASY
IF 'fOU TWO Tfitt.JK

save 30 pet. to so pet.
on helting cost
Experience and
fully Insured
Free t;;st• .
· call9n-2m
--- · 11 -3·11!!lll

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-tfc

Service
,.....

ME, IS-

JIM KEESEE

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

.

SALE PRICES
c"\

CONTACTED

PAIC

J&amp;L

·J. R. Construction
Co.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

.I

For The Best
Price In Town

PHONE 992-2772

~

HOTEL.?
FOR OPENERS,
TfiEGUY WHO

Me, AND

3 AND 4 R.M lurntshed an d un·
'
NO HUNTING or trespassing on
fur n is hed opt s
Ph one
my property w1thout perm•s-.
9q'J. t&gt;434
'&gt;ton . J~dy ~t~ ~o":" . . . .
TWO BI:::DROOM , kitchen furn1sh
GUN SHOOT. Rocme Gun Club
December t9, t978
ed . opt . Call betore B om . . .~ck w. car'sey, Mgr.
!::very SUndo11 I pm. Factory
Thursday Late Women, a There will be a delinite market
9Y:.r .noo
·~ Phone 992-2181
chok_e ~uns. o~ly_. _ .
new bowling league for thts coming year for spec1a1
RfNTtRS ASSISTANC E fo r Sen1or
women, has recently
been kn owledge or expe rttse that GUN SHOOT , Racine Volunteer
Citizens You may be a ble to
~ire Dept Every Saturday b:30
l1ve 10 ou r apartment fo r less UNIQUI::: ASSORTMENT of ' spe( 1ol
organized at the Mason yo u possess . Don 't sell you r11 -3-1 mo .
pm ot their bu il dmg 1n Boshon .
self short on what you have to
than SSO V1lloge Menor .Aport
g1fl s" do t ~ t ng , po ttery , woks , ..
Bowling Center.
Fadory
choke
guns
only
offer , and don ' t pe rmtt others
ments ~ Y 2 · 77H'I .
leath er walle ts bogs be lts
-. - . . - - - -. - .
The league, as denoted by to do so .
BAillY ' S
STORE .
331 l:lEAUTl FUl 4 bedroom home m
Wes tern fe lt hots
hot s
its name, bowls on Thursday SAGITTARIUS (Nov. ZJ-Dec. N 2nd Ave Middleport , Ohio
1e welry , Ala ddi n lamps Bl ue
Pomeroy
Do uble ga rag e
~ lo me heoten and mu ch more
nights at 8:30.
Zt) Lislen caretully to the wis - Will be clo5ed Dec . 75to Jon 2.
, Wr ite !:lox 729·1:: , c·o The Doily
Stop 1n we'll be glad to he lp
. dom passed on to yo u toda y by BAKER 'S BUSY Bee§ Ceromics will
Sen line/. Pomeroy. OH 45709
Pres1'd en t f the 1eague lS
- .
'
Mounlor n leat her and Gene ra l
profound thr nkers . Someone
close Det. 22 end reopen Jon. Et:~ AP T. in Middle port. Suitab le
'
104 100 w Unio n St ,
Store
Celeste Bush and secretary is co uld say some thong that moght
'2'2 . Thonk s for your patronage
Carpentry, Electrical,
for one Kay Cec 1/ 992-52b2
Athe
ns
,
Ohi
o,
614
-542.!)478.
Mary Lou Swisher. Other have a benel1 c ial ellecl upon
'
thoughout the year Pou l1ne
- . . - e ventngs
Painting
.
. . .
Boker
league members Include you r lile Li ke to lind ou t more
Peggy Reese Shari Cochran ot what lies ahead lor you in TO MY LITTLE Cl:l sissy Und e r
1
•
•
1979? Send for your copy of
Help Wanted
Cover Love r Happy Bi rthday
Loutse
McCarty,
Helen Aslro-Graph Le11er by mailing Fluffy.
WANTED· FUH truck drive r w1th
Burnett ,
Renetta
May , 50 c ents lo r each and a long ,
"GIVE US A TRY "
expe nence dn vtn g truc ks
Thelma
Reese,
Janey ,se ll·addres sed , stamped enveWr1te
PO
Box
729-W
c·o
The
Reasonable Prices.
Headquarters
Christmas
Cochran Carla Cochran Pam lope to As tro-Graph . PD . Box
Pets for Sale
Doily Sent inel, Pomeroy , OH
References Available
for ·an your G.E. T.V.'s &amp;
'
'
489 , Radi o City Station, N.Y.
45709.
Phone 742-2029 ;
Burnett and Carol Buck.
10019. Be s ur e to specify birth RISING STAR Kennels Boarding
Hotpoint Appliances.
and groommg , all breeds . BAR MAID wo nted. Must be
--11 ·16·1
Last Thlll'8day's standings Sign .
Chesh1re , 367·0'192 .
·- '
a
vailab
le
evenmg
s
and
are as follows :
CAPRICORN (Dec. ZZ-Jan. t9)
-··-------- - week e nds fi.ve flomt s G rd l Rt
Jo1 nt ¥entures could be a very AKC RI:::GISTERtD Boxer pupp1es ,
7
·o wee ks old . A nice Chnstmas
Woa Lo1t profitable area tor you today.
Real Estate for Sale
~
IP ;KW.
91ft . $12S eo . Call992-272b
Peggy Reeae Team
14
2 espec1ally one where someone
------ - ·
HOMI:S IHS lor sole . I a cre a nd
ft CARSEY
Celeste llulh
12
4 has don e Ihe spad e work and MALt DOBERMAN Hmo . old, e ors
up. Middleport , nea r Rutland.
Mgr.
1
Thelma Reese
you ' re play ~n g a su pport~ng
S 1"15
a nd toil cl tpped
Co11992-74tll
.
7
9 , role .
~
Phone
992-2181
.
..
. .
9'12 ·32 16
THRtE BtDROOM frame home 1n
Ulnise McCarty Team 6 10 AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO-Feb .. 19)
_M~d~ lep&lt;:~l.: &lt;:_o ~ 9~ 2_3~5~. ___
Carol Buck
~
11 Alihough you ' re a p i lo feel a
Services Offered
Carla Codtran
4 12 irllle Jndependentloday , you 'll
fARM ~OR sale. House. 2 barns ,
Real Estate for Sale
State of Ohio license,
lind the Situations offenng the Will CARE for the elderly in our
trader. Lorge pond . 10 otres or
rototing shift, excellent
greatest reward Will be those
hon1e. Phpnecrn. 7314.
H'l acres 742·2566
fringe
benefits.
High individual game
where you 're working with a
- --- -- ~ - - - - - Apply Personnel Office
REAL ESTATE LOANS VA · No
,·
WAT t: R WEll dril li ng. Wil li am T
Carla Cochran
Partner
mo ne y d ow n
(elig 1ble
Grant . 742-2879.PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
.. - . - - -... _ High Individual
Ve tere ns). ~HA As low as·3,....
There ' s no l1 m1t to wha t you ROOM , BOARD and lou ndrey in
down (oil no n-Ve te rens ond
Carla Coclnn
WANT TO SELL? Call us
can achieve today withtn your
private home for e lderly lady
general public) To purchase
for
an
appraisal
and
why
992 ? 4~2 ~ . __ ~ _ _ __
capabilities, if you use your
real eslote or refina nce 30
vou should 1ist with us.
!nlltati'Je Be a self-starter .
Y~ARS TERMS. IRELAND MOR·
WANT
TO
BUY?
Call
us.
If
Go IIi polls, Ohio
Have clear-cut objectives .
TGAGE
CO .. 77 1:: Stole St ,
Give Away
we don't ha'Je it then we 'll
446-5105
Athe ns Phone 614-592·3051
t.RIES (March Z1-Aprll 19) AI ·
find It for you,
though you may not be seekmg ~OUR PUPPIES to good homes .
WHEN OPPORTUNITY
NI::W THRI::E bf!.droom home
Short haired collie, port breed .
attentto n, you ' ll draw tl wher·
KNOCKS, you sttll have to
Hreploce , sun deck, 1)/• a cre
992 -3b35
e¥er you go to day . You make
get up and open the door.
Auto Sales
wooded lot . 614-067·3890, TupDue to snow and high s uc h a fav o rab le impressto n , THRH MALE puppies . Mother is
Oci•now .
·
p e_ r s_PI_? I ~ S : ________ .
Beagle Hove been wormed 19 7~ Chevelle Malibu wagon
Office 992-2342
water, only 45 persons at- people can't help but noti ce .
Eve. 9V2 -2&gt;149
ond oil 'hoi' 300 Broodwoy ,
P.S , fll:l ., outo , a 1r . Pnced to
tended morning services at TAURUS (April 20-May 201 That
Rodney Down1ng, Broker
M1ddleport . 99J.2717.
sell . 949·2753.
the Free Methodist Church slow , steady progress you en·
Bill Childs, Manag~r
joy so much will be with you all Hil:::t:- -To ·- ~od - h~ ;;,; -;i x ~d 1905 FORO MUSTANG . 289
Dec. 10.
day today . By even1n g you
bosself pupp1cs . 9S5 427 1.
outomoh c. Pmto 23 8 CB bose
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell,
should be able to look back
- - - - - - - -- - - - - .
unit with mtc stand O ld buller
PART COCKER Spon1al puppies ,
Mrs. Enna Fox attended a
w1th a sense of ach,ie..,ement.
churn . 'Dial a nd sew cabin e t
742-2545
birthday party for Leslie GEMINI (May Zt·June ZOI Harsewing moch1ne. Also fre e
pu ps to good ho me- . Coii .Lyons . of Rock Springs mony prellatls 1n most areas or
your lile today . If a meeling of Mobile Homes for Sale
_CJH~-~ 2?Y _o ~ yt.i m_e . _
Sunday, Dec. 10. Leslie is a
mtnds is called tor to brtng
Re bu ill
granddaughter of Mr. and about so mething you des ire, 197b NASHUA 14 x bS 3 bedroom 19b7 THUNO~RBIRD
1
motor
New
poi
nt
No
ru st.
1 'l both . underpinning 51500
Mrs. Howell and a . great- get together now .
Snow fire s &lt;,l~jc,t :J042 .
5 ACRES wilh very nice 3
(June
21-July
22)
Your
ond
ass
um
e
loon
.
9-49·2b83
or
CANCER
granddaughter of Mrs. Fox.
bedroom home . Large
843·3311
' . - - _____ .
efforts
will
pay
o
ff
today
You
'll
.
___
992-3325
The birthdays of Mr.
kitchen
and
dining.
Fireplace. Storms. 2 car
Nonnan Schaefer's daughter be rewarded for personal 1970 Amhe rst 50xl2 2 BR
216
E.
Second
Street
For Sale
ach le\'ement. Tht s holds espe- 1970 Champion bQ)I( 12 2 BR
garage . Owners have
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
cially true m areas where 19b5Gene ralb0 x i27BR
BUSINESS BLDG - Main
moved . $32,000. Make offer.
COBRA
2Y
CB
with
'coax
and
William Perry, Athens, were you ' re performing serv1c es .
19b8 PMC 52x12 2 BR
Street location with 4
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
a
nte
nna,
$100
992
·'1708
or
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22~ You ha'Je 1955 Praine Schooner 28JtH 1 BR
celebrated Sunday at the
rooms and half bath up.
frame, excellent neigh'192.5671 '
1
$25,000.
borhood, 3 bedrooms , P/:z
home of Mr . and Mrs. a commanding way about you 97J Royal Emj:)ossv 68xl4 3 BR
CONDITIONBO hoy $I o bole
PRIVATE YARD-7 room
baths, N.G . forced air heal.
Schaefer. Their daughter and today, but o thers won 't ftnd it 1959Stor50x107BR
949 2108 .
frame, 1112 baths, all city
offensive . In fac t, you ' ll en- 1973 Star OOxl 4 2 BR
Ullllly R. Asking S20,000.
19M! Star b0x12 2 BR
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
utilities. 3 large bedrooms.
IN THE COUNTRY PEA HAULERS CB Soles . Equip
hance the esteem In whi ch 1970 Sy/.,..o b0x12 2 BR
Vern Story and son, John,
$15,000.
Several tots, 1 floor plan, 3
me nt now on sole. All in stock
you 're held .
1968 Vi iloges b0xl2 2 BR
3 APTS. - Income $265 a
bedrooms, forced air heat,
were guests.
Radio~
and
accessories
through
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 2Z) Being 1964 Wind, or 51 xlO 2 8R
month $25,000.
garden, barn , fruit trees.
Ch nstmos. Open everv day ex ·
the power behin d the throne is 1970 Kirkwood 12xbOJ BR
All
CITY LOCATION $17,700.
cepl Sunday and Monday . Even·
a role you ' re capable of e xs&amp;s MOBILE HOME SAltS
utilities. Newly overhauled
70 ACRES- Newer home,
1ng
s
by
o·ppot
n
tment
pertly playing today . Ta~ing PI PLEASANT W.VA
Inside and out. Bath and
bam, corn crib, storage
Portlond ,Ohio Phone !:l"J ·20b4
bows won 't be as impOrtant as
....
gas furnace. $17,000.
-·~
bldg. Overlooks the rivor .
Friends here received word
getting the job done right.
1'.1 -ACRE --12 ;
-m~bil e- ho~e
19n INTERNATIONAL backhoe
COUNTRY HOME 4
$33,500.
from Mrs. Fred Rice, a
949·20A2
liBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 23) Your
near Dexter . ~ 2 . 5858 .
bedrooms, bath, 10 rooms
NEW A FRAME - Close
Influence over your intimate
fonner resident, of the death
and level · lot for the
in, l'h baths, 3 bedrooms,
ONE
PAIR
Creati
ve
77
3·woy
sphere of friends Is more pow- 19b'l TOTAL ELECTRIC
bile
children. $27,500.
rec. room , wood burner,
of her brother , Ryland
speakers $120 l pair Gt 3·
erful than usual today . Use it in
home
lurnished , 3 bedr ..
7 ROOMS - In town . All
heat pump, storage bldg .
way
speakers
,
$140.
985
3301
Plielps, at Concord, Va. Mr.
ways to benefit everyone .
washe r and dryer . A1 r cond 1'.
conveniences, bath, fur Ullllly R. 2'17 acres. $37,500.
.
_d~y~
o~d_9!5~
1_
4~
o.!_t_
e!
~P~
·_
Phelps was quite well known
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
t1 oned 1 lot. 2!0 ft . trontoge
nace and large lot . $9,500.
WHEN'S THE BEST TIME
51
8
6
QUALITY
CONDITIONED
m1
xed
OVER 4 ACRES- 8 room
This is a good day to call to
here as he had been a
? ~ · !h.?n..!_?A! -~ 3 .. _ ·- _
TO SELL? Any time Is the
_ha_y._~!!~eli ~.. 992 - 7~1 :___
country home wHh 3
ri!!ht time If you can get the
frequent visitor in the home your superior's attention the IY"/4 HOLLYPARK'lbedroom . l'l ,Ji
bedrooms, carpeting and
fine job you've been doi ng . He .65 toto/ electric , furnished ,
· pnce your house deserves.
PORTABLE ROYAL typewriter w1th
of Mr. and Mrs. Rice.
nat. gas furnate . $280 a
carpeted throughout. like new
carrying case, $30
Days
CALL TODAY .AND LET
may even agree you 're entitled
Mrs. Roscoe Hollon spent to more remuneration .
year heal bill. $27,500.
US
SELL
YOUR
condition . $9800. Con be seen
~2 -3~- ~e-ni~g ~ ~.2_- 2~b~ .__
several days in Sandusky
MAKE YOUR DEDUC {NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
ot Kingsbury Home Soles, 1100
PROPERTY.
DtANNA
DURBIN
movte
star
do
lt.
TIONS NOW BEFORE
f Mo in, Pomeroy, Ohio or coli
Realtors
with her daughter, Betty, who
30 in toll , $15 . Block fu r cope .
THE NEW YEAR BY
99~ · 7 034 .
Henry E. Cleland Jr. '
has been Ill for several years .
11ew, 27 in . •long , size 14 $1 0.
BUYING PROPERTY.
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
lad1es long block toot, like
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller
Associ•tes
ne w. sin 14 . ss: Nurse s new
spent several days with Mr. '
G. Bruce Teaford
Kathy Cleland
uniforms, size 12 -14 , $3. AntiHolen lstOilford
Leona Cleland
and Mrs. Don Williams,
que dishes a nd other limes
Sue P. Murphy
992-2259,
992-6191, 992-2561
David and DeaMe, Colum30&lt;-773-51lb.
Sue P. Murphy
Mrs. Laura Circle of
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas
bus.
Realtor Associates
BOOK COLLECTORS: 1857 to 1'177
Circle attended the funeral of
Dorcas and Mrs, Llzzle
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert
Histo ries and School booh
,John Rasp of Fostoria, Ohio
Bostic of Racine R.D. spent a
Also glo ss o nd p_o,tery ,
Allen, Westerville, were
at the Ewing funeral home in
recent evening with Mary
742 ·2255.
Sunday dinper guests of Mr.
Headquarters
Circle. Those at the · Circle STAMP COLLfCTORS and Dealers.
Pomeroy on Wednesday.
and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Mr. and · Mrs. Douglas
home on Sunday wetie Mr.
1903 IYOb. 2 Stomps 2' Stamp
Tbe name of Miss Tammy
mmt . 1903 ~ tomr ra re .
Circle had the following
and· Mrs. George Circle and
Starcher was unintentionally
OWNER MUST SELL - The. owner of this
'141-2255
guests recently, Mr. and Mrs,
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of
missed from the guest list of
charming
2 story slone home in Middleport
CHRISTMAS
GIFTS
·
S1lk
screen
New Haven, W. Va,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul Lawrence Scarbrough of
must
sell
now so she is offering this fine
prints of old time Pomeroy ·
Napoleon ; ' Ohio, Charles
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
and sons on Thanksgiving.
Middleport. 8 1'' x 1.4 . Suitable
home for a low, low price of S20,000. There
Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl
Griswald of Belpre, Ohio,
for fram•ng , SIS Call992·230.4 .
Mrs. Helen Nelson and
are 7 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
Earl Harden and son of
LeAnn
called at the ~ of
.
M
~·~ ~S ~~ S':U ~ -- _
Mrs. Enna Cleland called on
living room w -fireplace, formal dining, eat'
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas CAROUSEl CON~ECTIONERY . We
Mrs. Donna Ihle, Racine, Canton, Ohio, Mrs. Sharon
tn kitchen, bath w-si!Dwer, garage &amp; a , king
Johnson of Racine on Sunday.
hove Chnstmas ccndy molds,
Mrs. Sharon Michael and Card and sons, local, Jill
sizeb
yard. Good loc~ion on Mill St. Call the,
ckocalote . di e h~tic chorolote.
There were thirty·seven
Mrs. Martha Rose, local, Earicb of Columbus, Ohio,
WISPman Real Est~le Agency, Gallipolis,
Chr~:&lt;~hnos sole , many item s ~~
Mrs. Betty Ward and Shirley
present for Sunday school
oft. Open ('vc ning ~ tlll
.Monday.
446 -3643.
last Sunday.
Long of Portland, Ohio.
'Chr1slrnos.

Pomwoy landmark

I'M GOI&lt;JI&lt;JA WeAR TH I$
APROI&lt;J AND BS AI&gt;JYBODY'5 MAID- -YOU'RE
OUTA YOUR*EAFARIN'
5KIJL.L.5!

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

HAMMOND&amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES&amp;SERVICE
(NEW&amp; USED)

I.

'flJt\iNl ~'if

ReSidential · and com mer·
cial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any dav,
·anytime.
Phone 985·310'
Jack Ginther 985 -3806

PETE SIMPSON
SALES REP.
FOR
SUN DINS HAMMOND
ORGANS
Racine, Ohio
Phone 949-2111
AllerS P.M.
11 -26-1 mo.

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

I I I I X) ( I

lL. . . . .

'~'•

mole off Rt. 7 by-pus on
St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,

'

Chimney

Sweeps Guild
Insured

Don't let a chimney fire put
a dam p er on y our life Call ..

THE SWEEP
19th
Service with

Century
10th eentury

'

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

Roofing, guHers, new and
repair.
Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling I
tile
Free Estimate - all work
guaranteed
'
20 Yrs. Experience
Coli : Tom Hoskins
949-2160
11 -28-c

~ ..'Hd'

0.
Auta&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

'

4,,._1fc.. I

.'

BRADmRD, Aucti onee r, Com plete Service . Phone 949-2487
or q49·2000 Racine Ohi o. Cr1tl
Bradford .
---~-- ·ElWOOD BOWER S R~PA I R
Sweepe rs , toasters , trons, oil
small appliance s lawn mower ,
next to Stol e H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (b 14) 985·

---

-----

-

3B2S

KnOW · How .

Specilllzing in
Wood stove, on Furnace
&amp; Flrepl1ce Flues
Phone: 742:-3110
. Kim White, Proprietor
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, se r:
vice. ol! ,mokes. 992·221:14 . The
fobr1 c Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Singe r Soles and
_S~v ic_=_. ~~ s hor~n- S:_is!ors ~ _
fXCAVATING , dozer loade r and
backhoe work du mp frutk s
and lo boys tor hir e : will haul
Iii/ d1rt. to so tl. ltmes tone ond
grovel Coli Bob o r Roger Je ffe rs, doy phone 992-70t:! 9. n•ght
phone 992-3525 or 992· 5237
- ---- ---.
EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and d1k her Charles R Hotfield , 8oclo. Hoe Serv1ce ,
Rutla nd,._Ohio.
- - Phone
- - - -74-2-2008.
WILL do roofing , construct ion,
plumbing and heat ing. No 1ob
too large o r too sm all Phone
742-2348 .
HOWt~Y
AND MARTIN Excavating, sept ic systems ,
dozer, backhoe, dump , tru ck,
lime stone. grave l. blacktop
pa ving , Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)
b98-7331 '
BA THROOMS AND Kitchen s
remodel ed, ceramic til e plum
bing . carpe ntry ond ge neral
maintenance. 13 years e x·
_ _P':.::~n_:.e . 992:3~8~·------ ·PUlliNS EXCAVATING Com plete
Se rvice. Phone 992-2478.
Al,JTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
cancelled? Lost your operators
license? Phone 992 -2143.

-- --

____

HONAKER'S CB ond electron ic
equipment. Rt 33 506 2nd Sf ,
Mason , WV 25260 .

"'I

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE A LimE
&amp;,
SAVE ALOT
All carpet Installed with
paddhl' at no charge. ·
E"Woert 1nstall1tion.

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4 •88

sq.,yd.
I up

~

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Covering In Stock
Buy where yov c1n come tn
and SH whot you're genlng
- Good seledt•n•· .;.... Fully
stocked.

'!

,::=rr)~~~-.!i!fuL!~.~n~;;=~

BRIDGE

Christmas
cards

Swing hand in team play

to the
post

..

Mr.

+ . ---

J. POTTS
M.D.

•

l:"M .

TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smitt

'1b

HAve-

T'O t.I:ARN TO L.tvE

INl'r'HOU'r SMOf&lt;.tNc..
$pa(!y FOODS, RND

~lli42-)l11

RUTLAND .
FURNITURE

diamond?''

Westerns

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

'SI)(T'Y.· F1vf r&gt;OLLA~s.

fa

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

It:

Pass
Pass

6+
Pass

::

Oswald : "I have always
refused to answer that question because I was not going
to make up my mind until I
had to do so and I never had

Pass
Pass

Opening lead : •J

One letter simP.IY stands for another. In thia sample A ta
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Singl e letters,
il) 19 /8 ~y N ~A.. In&lt; T M A~~ IIS PdiiMI ·l,, .. ,Jf\ j'·IB
L - - - - - -:;;;:::;;;I;::;;;.._:..::...:...:...:.:..~----~"~:~~·;:!!!_ apostrophes, the length and formati on ol the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dll!erent.
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Sontag

to ."

----'

CRYPTOQUOTES

:t ~INK ~ESE
DREAMS MEAN
SOMETHING !

Alan: "Knockout and
C E V - Swiss team matches represent the most skillful form of
B
N
F
bridge, yet even there the
EGF
BNF
CXQSIUX
11
0MEN 11/
luck factor still plays an
N • K
J J X R important part. How about
CEV
R N I . - SIUVEG
some j!xamples of swmg
,r-o~l-..11
,
hands from team games."
Yesterday's Cryploquote: THE ONLY ARGUMENT
Oswald : "Here's one from
AVAILABLE WITH AN EAST WIND IS TO PUT ON YOUR the finals of the Spingold
OVERCOAT.-JAMES R. LOWELL
some forty years back. My
team carried a two-thousand

OH WIN NIE;
DARLING-; NOT
AN OTHER

OXLXGFX

. Eu

s

NMVXG

J E A X

vzx

s

MAKES A

MY MAN SNUFFY'S

Housing ..._

\

----

GETTOII/Ml

LAID UP WIF A

·alii

---

r

ANP.I CWLPN'T

15

X)

I

11 -17-1 mo.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOtiNG &amp; HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

D

I

[J

'

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

11 -9-1 mo.

LEEBI

•~ENLOOD~

'

'

12:30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;
E lee: . Co. 20,33 .
:!»-Bewitched
3; All My Ch ildren 6, 13; Young &amp; the
1
~rA~I~M'T' FAT~t!
Restless 10; News 8.
I : 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
s
B, 10.
(,R,f&gt;X'{"?
l
2:00-0ne Life to Live 6, 13; 2:30-Doctors 3,A,15;
~
Guiding Light a, 10.
·
J :QO-Another World 3,4,15 ; Generol Hospital 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3: 30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Dick Cavett 20.
4:1»-Spec lal Treat 3,4, 15; Merv Griff in 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13
4:30-Gilllgan ' s Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10.
·
5 :1»-Star Trek 3,4 ; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC
Now arrange the circled letters to
10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15.
form the surpnse answer, as sug5 : 30-~ews 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
gested by the above cartoon
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6 :1»-News 3,4,a, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Feeling Free
33,20.
Prlntanswerhere: [
..ITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-JUST A LOUD STRIKE
6 : 30-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett&amp;
(Answers tomorrow)
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
S
aturday's
Jumbles
MEALY
CUBIT
NEARBY
MODEST
JUST WATC HIN '
7:00-0ral Roberts 3; ; Pm Magazine 4; Newlywed
'THIS 'TIME l'liEY 'RE
s EE? HUMDREDS
MAKES "E FEEL
A N' HUNDREDS 0'
Answer· Out of jai l- and ill in bed -" B·AI L·ED"
&lt;0011'1' TO USE LOTS
Game 6, 13; Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10;
SOilT 0' SICI\
5nCKS D' DYNA" JTE
A~D LOTS O F
Love, American Style 15; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
10 I-IV STU~M IC K ... '" ll'LL ~AKE AN '
D'(l'(IIMITE ...
Jumble Book No. 1:2,conlalnlng 110 punles, Is available for$1.75potlpald
Economically
Speaking 33.
AWfUL BAI'IG I
from Jumble, c/o thla rtewspapar, Box 34, Norwood, N.J.07648.1nclude wour
7:
30-Let's
Go
To
The
Races 8; Dating Game4; Candid
name, address , zip coda and make chet;:ks payable 10 Nawspaperbooka.
Camera 6; Pr ice Is Right 10; Donna Fargo 13; TV
Honor Soclely 15; MacNeil- Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:1»-Bear Who Slept Through Christmas 3,4, 15;
Happy Days 6, 13; Paper Chose 8; College
Basketball 10; Clly Notebook 33 .
8:3()-{)nce
Upon A Starry Night 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Shirley 6, 13 ; Have Yourself A Merry Little
ACROSS
2 Frankte,
Christmas 4; When the Boat Comes 1n 33.
I Drop, as
9:1»-Carpenters 6, 13; Rod McKuen' s Christmas In
to Johnny
New England 4; Movie " The Millionaire" 8;
of paint
3 Not quite
Hanukkah 20.
round
Br!!!N S)(· 5 Pit
9 :30-EIIzabethan Christmas CelebraTion 20;; Film
ilC:TJ'&gt;' "T!;;N AND
II Wander
4 BarbaraMakers 33.
Geddes
10 :08-Mac Davls3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Jackie
12 Secluded
Gleason 10; News 20; Percussion Noel 33 .
.!
LAB, OOOLA! 13 Grandparents! 5 "Light
10
:
30-Like
It Is 20; Area Showcase 33.
~--~
It Pressed
Brigade"
11 :!»-News 3,4,8, 10,13,1S; Dick Cavett 20; OVer Easy
15 lAve set's
33.
site
barrter
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " 11 Harrowhouse"
6Showed
6,13; Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33;- Movie " The
16 T.M. follower's again
22 MaMered
29 Clergyman's
Delphi Bureau" 10.
incantation
one
house
7 Egyptian
12:30--News B. 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
17 Gennan city
23 Spring
I : 30-News 13.
·deity
30 Venerate
20 Hostelry
8 Insurance
up
31 Gander's
21 Nino's aunt
group
24 Branda
mate
Monday, o.,.,. 18
22 Insect
film
9 Always
32 Fix m the
23 Garden
25 Merriment
there
memory
spot
26"
- Mater" 34 Indian
10 Insect
27 Alias the
18 Fret
r.-:---:---:-:-:-- -:----. 25 Be of the
title
You'd better r:m&lt;r"' opinion
Scarecrow
19 Clangor
37 Vereen
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
I take t~our
tt out with m4
26 Duck
~~--~
union~ r-r="""'ll(" 27 Cotffure
.,..-+-+-+--1-+-i
style
28 Chinese
point lead into the last set of
pagodas
boards. Nothing much hapNORTil
12- 18
29 P1cture of
pened until I picked up the
office
+ KJ8!5~
South hand and found myself
many
;, K
for4ou,
in a normal seven"8pade
images
• 1191 7 ~ 2
contract that would surely
33 Brute
be bid at the other table. My
let?
35 One of the
WEST
EAST
top clubs were useless and
• 3
my whole problem would be
Di Maggios
•JIOI75
!
•
Q864
3
tn
the diamond suit. "
36 Revealing
• 63
• Q5
Alan : "You didn't care
I 37 Nmny
• J 9 62
+111750
about making the contract.
All you wanted to do was to
lF~R~A~N~K~&amp;~~~=~=iil...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 38 Relaxing
SOUTII
make the same play arthe
39 Hibernian
+AQI0912
other South would make . I
tongue
• A
see that it was all academic.
+A K J
40 HighThe queen of diamonds was
+AKQ
schooler
c:.PIN~
doubleton and right in front
Vulnerable : Both
41 Require
of your top diamonds. Whitt
Dealer : South
would you have done if East
DOWN
followed
low on the second
1 Max of the
West North East

KJ

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

Pomeroy, 0.
' call992·7113
t-or Free Estimates'

byHe nrtArnoldandBob lee

33.

Afl.e '{oo

Chester, Ohio
10 30-C

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

220 E. Main Street,

I 0.
9: 30-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10.
10 :1»-Card Sharks 3.4. 15; Erin• nl llllnht 6; All In The
Famoly 8, 10; Dating Game 13.
10 : 30-Jeopardy 3.4, 15; Andy Griffith 6; Price 1$ Right
B, 10; 520,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :QO-High Ro llers 3,A,15; Happy Days 6, 13.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; News
4; Love of Life 8, 10 .
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12:08-Bob Braun 4; News 6, 10; Young &amp; the Restless
a; Midday Magazine 13; America Alive 15 · Music

BORN LOSER

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING ·

ElliOTI
APPUANCE II

9 : 00-Merv Gr iffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15;
Emergenc y One 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Match Game

Unscramble these fo ur J umbles,
one letter to each square , to lorm
fou r ord1nary words.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoXJ

TUESDAY, DECEMBER If, 1971
5 :45-Farm Report 13 ; 5 :50-PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 :Q0-7CO Club 6,8; 6 :25-Concerns S. Comments 10.
6 :30-Focus on Columbus&lt; .
6 : ~ 5-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50-Good Morning, West
Virg inia 13; 6 :55-Chuck White Reports 10; News
13
7 :QO-Today 3,4, 15; ; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10 .
7 : 15-Weather 33 ; 7:30-Schoolles 10; Big Blue Marble
33 .
B. I»-Capf. Kangaroo a,IO; Sesame St . 33.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~~ ®

Carmel News, By the Day

'

MONDAY, DECEMBt;!!.l8, 1911._
.
4:!»-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets ~ ;
Hollywood qua res 15; Merv G riffin 6; Porky P ig &amp;
Friends 8; Sesame St. Z0,3J; Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewllched 3; Gilligan ' s Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;
Pett icoat Junction 15.
.
5 : 1»-Sta~ Trek M ; Beverly Hil lb il lies 8; Mister
Rogers Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
10; Emergency One 13; Brody Bunch 15.
5 : 30-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lee. Co. 20,33 ; Mary
Tvler Moore 10: Odd Couole 15 .
6 :1»-News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6 · Zoom 20 ·
Studio See 33.
'
'
6 :30-NBC News J, 4,15, ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Frlends6; CBS News a, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:1»-Cross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Marty Robbins ' Spotlight 8; News 10; Love,
American Style 15; Almanac 20; Know Your
Schools 33 .
7:30-That Nashvil le Mus ic 3: Dati no Game 4 : Muooet
Show 6 ; Match Game PM 8; Wild Kingdom 10; Sl 98
~eaury &gt;now t~ ; Nashv ille On The Road 15;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:08-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,4,15; 20-20 6, 13;
Peanuts 8, 10 ; Even ing at Symphony 20; Mov ie
" The Two of Us" 33 .
.

~IT, ATT~c

I

8 :30-'Twas The Night Before Christmas 1. 10.
9 :QO-NFL F Football 6,1 3; Mash 1,10.
9 :30-Movle " The Oeerslayer" 3,.,15; One Day Af A
Time 8, 10; The Long Search 20; Once Upon A
Clahlc 33 .
IO:QO-Lou Grant 8, 10 ; Evening At Sy(nphony 33.
10 :30-News 20.
11 :OQ-News M ,a, 10, 15 ; Crockett' s Victory Garden 20.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,~, 15; Gunsmoke I ; Movie " The
Swimmer " 10; Dic k Cavell 20; VIsions 33 .
i 2 :QO-News 6, 13; 12 :30-FBI 6 ; News 8; Ironside 13.
l :QO-Tomorrow 3,• ; 1:30-News 13 .

TELEVISION
VIEWING

HIM.
c

Sunda)

Bernice Bede Osol

f)) CKTRACV

For Best Results Use ·S entinel ·Classifieds

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT ,

I'M WRITING ASTOR'&lt;'
FOR SCHOOL

STOCK

.

LArgest Selection In The V1lley
'

BAD COLD,
ELVINEV -·

(SNIF- SNIF)
I RECKON HE TOOK
IT FROM ME

An Illinois reader wants to
know what a temporizing bid
is. It is a bid made in a
forcing situation to get more
information from your partner. In other worda, a bid
just to gain time.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . t
(For a copy of JACOBY MOD-

ERN, send II to : " Win at
Blldae," csre of thts news~­
per, P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station , New York , N. Y. 10019.)

THAT VARMINT WILL
TAKE ENNI.fTHING THAT
AIN'T NAILED DOWN

�'

..
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . tl., Monday, Dec. 18, 1973

·TruCker shot three times today
United Press International
A truck driver was sh~t
three times early today at a
struck sto~ in Wood C&lt;lunty,
Ohio, as incidents of violence
picked up in the 39-&lt;1'!~ strike
by the Fraternal Association
of Steel Haulers.
Authorities said several
Shots were fired at two steel·
hauling trucks parked at the
truck stop. One driver, who
was not identified, was hit
three times in the leg.
A shooting of a truck was
also reported on the Ohio
Turnpike in Sandusky
County.
In Pennsylvania, State
Police reported 21 incidents
including two trucks hit by
gunfire.

One of the shootings was stopped in his car along the said it was believed the
weapons "might have been
reported in Westmoreland Indiana Toll Road .
A state police spokesman intended for use in thes tee!
C&lt;lunty and the other in Erie
Co unty, both in Western
Pennsylvania.
Authorities in Mahoning
County. Ohio, reported nine
tires on two tractor · trailer
trucks were punctured in a
motel parking lot overnight.
In Indiana , state police
arrested a Portage man early
Ken Kellett, 25, of Boulder
Klll DEVIL HILLS, N.C.
today, saying he may have
rode
his repoduction Wright
(UP!)Dutifully
decked
out
planned vandalism in con·
"Flyer•;
into the air at 10:51
·
in
a
tum
of
the
century
suit,
nection with the steel haulers
a.m.
Sunday,
75 years after
the
youthful
aviator
settled
strike.
Orvjlle
and
Wilbur
Wright
Carl L. Sleby, 46, was into his airplane and waited
flew
over
the
sandy
Outer
charged with carrying a for the wind to come up.
Banks
of
North
Carolina.
But Sunday, it was a young
weapon without a permit.
It .was ooly a qualified
Police said Sleby had a pistol, Colorado man who tried to fly
success
for Kellett. While hts
bricks and board with large and, by his standards, he
reproduction
Flyer ilf.ted skysucceeded.
nails in it when he was
ward with a gust of wind, the
tail appeared never to leave
the ground.
"We've made our point. We
came here to fly that airplane
and we succeeded in doing
that," said Kellett, whose
plane was virtually identical
to the Wrights',
,
With Orville at the controls,
the original Wright Flyer
made a 12,second flight
covering 120 feet on nee: 17,
1903. They followed tbat with
three more attempts that
day, the longest flight
covering 852 feet and lasting
59 seconds.
While Kellett said he
thought his flight might have
covered as much as 60 feet,
his craft appeared to become
airborne with its tail
dragging near the end of Its
120-foot takeoff rail. His
effort ende&lt;t just past the end
of the rail and the main body
of the plane was in the air
about 2'k seconds.
.
Kellett said he had been
looking for stronger winds.
"The winds could have
been better," he said. "That
last flight we had a gust at the
right time and it really
helped. The winds just were
not there again. They kept
dying down and coming up."
When the Wright brothers
flew, the winds were about 'El
mph. Kellett estimated the
winds during his takeoff roll
at 18 mph, with a 25 mph gust
that lifted him into the air.
While the town of Kitty
Hawk, 'where the Wrights
hiked to send a telegram
telling their family of the
event, generally is associated
with the first flight, the sandy
area now Is actually in the
town of Kill Devil Hills.
North Carolina may seek to
acquire the reproduction
Flyer from Kellett.
His demonstration
highlighted two days of
activities surrounding the
75th anniversary of manned,
powered flight. Moments
after his effort, a flight of F·
105 Thunderchiefs screamed
over the crowd of 6,000 who
had gathered at the liase of
the
Wright
Brothers
Memorial - aircraft far
removed fl'om the Wright
aviation era.

Wright brothers
flight reacted

REACHinG.
nEW HEIGHT/. ••

You don 't have to be an outdoorsman to appreciate the mountains of
money you can accumulate by placing your earnings in one of our
long-term savings accounts . Currently, we offer the highest interest
rates allowed by law. Depending on how long you wish to invest your
money, you can earn up to 8.75 Pet. Come in today and choose the
plan t hat suits you best, then sit back and watch your money keep on
clim bing!

(§]Farmers
~·~
Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 IIAXIIIUM INSURANCE FOR EACH DEPOSITOR
II EMBER FEllERAL DEPOSIT INSURANcE CORPORATION .

Area
Death

hauling strike."
The independent steel:
haulers went on strike to back

Veterans Memorlai Hospllal
Saturday Admissions Venedia Knight, .Portland;
Ben Davidson, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - ·
Rhonda H,annahs, liary
'Ginther, Linley Hart.
Sunday admissions Brooxie Layne, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges Mary F . Smith, Leopold
Hysell Brooxie Layne Linda
Stewart.
'

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Dec.15)
Aim'! Bailes, Rebecca
Barnett, Cad Bishop, Shawna
B~o~, Wtlham C&amp;pehart,
V1ck1e Coon, Oscar Dempsey,
Kathryn Dobbins, Jud1th
Drummond, Joh~ Hale,
William Henry, u,u1se Jones,
Ruby Mace, Lew1s Mltche~,
Avaneile Radcliff, Tw1la ·
Robmson, Tery Roush ,
Katherine · See, Charles
Smith, Leslie Taylor, Clair
~'%..~"C!J::88FHW~~~: Turner, Dolores VanMeter,
Betty White, Carlos White,
AWARD SOUGHT
Leora Wright.
COLUMBUS (UPI) Blrlhs, Dec. 15
The state COJilrolling
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Board was asked today to
Stewart, son, Londonderry.
award
$675,000
in
(Discharges, Dec.l&amp;)
damages and legal fees to
Lori Adams, Virgil Caudill,
plaintiffs In the 1970 Kent
GUEST SPEAKER - Tom Gramley, abllve, new
Roy Chamberlain, Essie
State University
director
of the Gallia.Jackaon-Meigs Community Mental
Conley, David -Crabtree,
shootings case to settle II
Center,·
and Bill Kiser, Crisislipe Coordirultor, will
Health
Robert Freeman, Michael
"once and for all."
speak
at
the
luncheon
meeting of the Meigs ijuman
Hawley, Mrs. Milford
The board began Its
Council
at
noon
Tuesday, Dec. 19, at the Meiga
Resource
Howard and . daughter,
deliberations on the
·Inn.
Gramley
will
report
on the center's new day
Charles Joseph, Edward ·
money for au out·of-court
treatment
program,
Adult
Community
Training, offered
Kapp, Kimberly Knight,
settlement of the 81&gt;·
from 10 a.m ..J p.m., four days a week. He will alao report
Walter Lambert, Jr., John
year-old case as a retrial
on the new inpatient unit of from 8-10 beds scheduled to
Long, Mrs. Ronnie McNeese
of the $46 mllllon civil suit
bpen soon. Bill Kiser will describe the daily 24-hour
and daughter , William
was about to slarl In
telephone
crisis counseling service (992-5554) and the
Morriss, Mrs. Robert Ne'al
Cleveland.
I
volunteer
training program. Next. year's Human
and daughter, Daniel Shane,
Resource Council officers will be elected during this
:·:·:::,:::::::::.:::::::-:,:::::,:::::::::::::::-:-:::::::::::-::::::::::::::· John White, Ryan Williams,
monthly forum meeting, which continues to be open to the
Scott Williams, Wanda
public.
Williams, Brant Wright.
Blrlhs, Dec. 16 .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Keller,
son, Oak Hill.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jeffers,
holidays will be !ellS spirited · son, Pudman, W. Va.
than two Columbus men bad
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
(Continued from page I)
expected it would be.
·
Pyl~. daughter, Bidwell.
other
workers
thrown
against a wall, but not injured. The keg
Nine state, federal and
Mr. and Mrs. John Lisle, w;as in a barrel of ice and sitting on a workbench when the
local agents Saturday son, Syracuse.
bottom blew out, striking Warman in the head.
arrested the men and
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Riley,
confiscated a still and 100 son, Beaver.
gallons of moonshine whiskey
(Discharges, Dec.l7)
packaged in ope-gallon
David Baker, Mrs. William
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Fighting desperately to save
·plastic · bottles wrapped in Bird and daughter, Louis
Cleveland
from bankruptcy and a state takeover of the city's
grocery bags stamped Blevins, Christal Cornell,
Mayor
Dennis Kucinich prepared plans today to lay
fmances,
"Happy Holidays."
Curtis Fulks, Ross Harding, off 3,500 municipal employees -including half the city's pollee
Clarence E. Walker, 46, Drema Harmon, Mrs.
Columbus, said by police to Thomas Hutchins and son, and firefighting forces.
City union leaders vowed, however, to seek court action to
be centr~l Ohio's largest Nancy McCorkle, Guy Me·
stop
the mayor's .emergency ;msterity program, arguing It
distributor of moonshine, was Williams, Leah Patterson,
would
endanger the public's health and safety.
· arrested on seven charges Deborah Powell, Marvel
involving firearms and Quillen, Kennie See, Cheryl
liquor . John Borden, 37, Spangler, Charles Stewart,
Columbus, was arrested on Clarence Turner.
NEW YORK (UP!) -Fill agents early IDday arrested two
one count of carrying a
men for allegedly trying to plant a bmnb at the Egyptian
Births, Dec. 7
concealed weapon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester National Tourist office in Manhattan, authorities said.
The moonshine was foun&lt;! McGowan, son, Oak Hill.
the FBI said Victor Varicier and Bruce Barry Berger were
in the trunk of a car
Mr . and Mrs. Samuel ch&amp;rged with conspiracy' in connection with the alleged
being driven by Wal" Larch, son, Letart, W. Va.
attempt to bomb the office, 630 Fifth Ave., at Rockefeller
ker when be was arMr. and Mrs. David Center. Vancier and Berger were arrested by an FBI stakeout
rested. The still, which Hammond, son, Gallipolis. team about 4 a.m., liD FBI spokesman said.
had not been used recently,
was found in the basement of
the house the two men
shared. Columbus Police Lt.
CHICAGO (UP!) -The American Civil Liberties Union
NOW YOU KNOW
Harry Dolby refused to say
has
filed suit to ban nativity scenes from govermnent
·According to Con Edison,
where Walker had obtained the first Christmas tree ever property, charging the use of public money violates
the homemade liquor, as to be adorned with electric . constitutional separation of church of slate. "We think It Is
other arrests were expected lights belonged to Edward H. _dangerous to all religioos when the government becomes
to be made before the three- Johnson of New York who set involved," said Jay A. Miller, executive directorofthe ACLU's
month investigation is closed. it up in his Manhattan illinois Division.
In another controversial case, the ACLU earlier this year
apartment in 1882.
defended the right of a neo-Nazi group to march in the heavily
Jewish suburb of Skokie.

Agents catch
moonshiners

•Lane Love Chests
•Tables • Chairs
•WaN Plaques

'

BY BOB HOt:FUCH
The Meigs Local School
District Board of Education
may be headed lor legal
action if a settlement is not
reached in a dispute resulting
from a recent car-school bus
accident in Rutland.
The possible legal action
was one of three alternatives
offered at Monday's regular
session at the Junior High
school in Middleport . The
board met with represen·
tatives of the Erie Insurance
Co.
The Erie Insurance Co.
represents the driver of the
car, Dottie Turner, which
struck the school bus in the
Rutland area several weeks
ago.
Dwight
Goins,
ad·
ministrative assi~tant, told
the board repairs on the bus
involved $15,000 while the
bus, purchased Aug. 6, 1975
bad cost $15,152. The bus had
approximately 10,000 miles
on it when the accident oc·
curred.
Goins said the Erie In·
stirance Co. had offered a
settlement of $7,277 lor the
wrecked bus. Using a black·
board, Goins showed several
different ways of figuring
depreciation on buses. None

RAISING' PAY
CINCINNATI (UP!) Teachers in two Cincinnati
area school districts are
8S8UI'ed of a starting salary of
at least $10,000 next fall.
North College Hill Board of
Education approved a
proposal Saturday .for a
$10,000 starting base pay
effecting the first of the year.
The Mt. Healthy Board of
'Education agreed Friday
night to raise the teachers'
base salary to $10,200.

' .

Must give up his throne
MASHAD, Iran (UPir- The ayatollah said quieUy that
the monarch must give up his throne, while on the street
outside his followers shook fists in the faces of armed soldiers
and screamed, "Death to the shah."
AYatollah Sayed Abdallah Sliirazi, 60, the most lnOuential
religious leader in Mashad, a holy city of the Shiite Moslems,
said in an interview with UP! Sunday that Sbah Mohammed
Reza Pahlavi had violated the principles• of Islam.

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

of his procedures placed the
bus's value at $1,277. The
amounts ranged from $9,819
to $10,652.
Goins said he bad refused
the $l,Zl7 figure in set·
tlemenl, thereby leaving
the matter to the board.
Two representatives ol the
company and the board
discussed a settlement.
The representatives made
offers which finally went to
$8,150 with the district to
keep the wrecked bus for
salvage or $10,000 with the
Insurance company to lake
the damaged bus.
The board went into
executive session with the
two insurance represen·
tatives and Edwin Davis,
Langsville, who is in the
school bus business. Davis
earlier stated he would be
happy to buy many buses at
the $7,200 figure offered by
th e insurance represen·
tatives as the value of the bus
in question. He said he could
resell them for about $11,000.
Apparently, during the
executive
session ,
no
agreement was reached .
After reopening the meeting,
the board voted four-to-one,
(with Jennifer Sheets casting
the dissenting vote), to ac·

Knife-wielding Ohioan dies
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - A policeman shot and
killed a knife-wielding attacker in a French Quarter
confrontation early loday. Police said JamesBardley,
23, of Columbus, Ohio, died soon after arrival at
Charity Hospital.
Officer George Hesni was treated at the hospital
for a cut hand and released. A police spokesman said
Bardley pulled the knife from his pocket when Hesni
and another officer sought to question him and a
companion.
.

Increase sends dollar down

OPEN TIL 8

The oil cartel's price increase sent the dollar
slightly lower in Europe today but gold shot up more
than $3.50. A West German newspaper said Arab oil
interests ·were getting into gold.
In Japan, the greenback held steady. fn London,
gold rose $4.75 ·an ounce to open at $217.625. The
precious metal opened $3.70 higher in Zurich at
$216.875.

EVERY NIGHT
BIG SELECTIONS:
You'll find very good selections at Elberfelds-:in every department- o·n every floor and· at the
Mechanic Street Warehouse. Sizes • colors ·
styles. Plenty to select from- and we're anxious
to help you with your shopping .

nr

slips or tokens fur change of
99 cents or less. the recipient

will receive cash.

For each $1 of change the
recipient will receive a $1
food stamp. Ail of the credit
slips or tokens left over after
Jan. 1 may still be used for
food.

Accordin g
to
new will be added to the kinds of
regulations , hot foods or hot food sta mp books now being
food products in retail food used - the value of these
stores which can be eaten being $2, $7, $40, $00 and $6!i .
immediately will not be The new $10 book cover will
allowable fur purchase with be blue-green and will have
food stamps. Ali other rules one $5 stamp and five $1
on how to spend food stamps stamps.
receipients are reminded
will remain the same.
that
$5 and $10 food stamps
Another new regulation will
should
be kept in their books
be a $10 food stamp book. It
until spent.

enttne
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1978

cept an offer of $10,652.95 in
settlement with the insurance
company to keep the bus or
would accept $9,500 and keep
the dama ged bus.
The motion went further to
state that unless the board
receives one of these two
offers, Goins is to contact the
Prosecuting Att orney on
legal action against the in·
sura nee company.
It also authorized Goins to

lease a bus to replace the
wrecked vehicle with the
insurance company to pay
the costs involved.
Combine Services
An innova lion this spring
came about as a result of last
night 's meeting when the
boa rd upon the recom·
mendation of high school
prin cipal James Diehl, Jr.,
voted to combine the Bacca laureate
and
com·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

mencement for this year's
senior class. The combined
service lastin g about 15
minutes lon ger than two
separate ceremonies will be
held on May 22, at 7: 30p.m.
Diehl said he was making
the recommendation after
conducting a survey among
the teachers and seniors. The
combined event is probably a
first for any high school in
Meigs Co unty.

Firm Employed
The board moved into
executive session for a
second time during the
meeting about 10 :30 p.m. to
discuss teacher negotiations
which will begin next month.
Following thRt session, It
was announced the board had
agreed to employ the services
of McDowall and Whalen of
Cuyahoga Falls to assist the
[Continued on page 10)

I
J

NATIVITY SCENE- This beautiful nativity scene is
decorating the main office at Meigs High School. The
ceramic nativity scene is th e handwork of Mrs. Mildred

Bailey, and Mrs. Harry Moore. Pictured with the scene
are from left to right, Mrs. Janet Williamson, Mrs. Rita
Hamm and Mrs. Bailey .

Special class relocation
main Eastern board topic
The
possibility
of
relocating
a
le arning
disabilities class took up most
of the discussion during a
recent meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
Several parents from the
Tuppers Plains Elementary
Sch oo l
expressed
dissatisfaction with
a
proposal to move the class·
J'oom from Chester to Tuppers Plains.
A recent inspection of
special education facilities
resulted in the school district
receiving a letter from the
state
department
of
education directing that the
board move the learning
disabilities class from its
present location to a more
suitable classroom.
The state letter indicated

the best available location
would be the Tuppers Plains
building. The board received
a report from Mrs. Dorothy
Calaway, board member,
conce rning a proposed
alternative plan for housing
the class.
The
board
directed
Superintendent Clark Lees to
write a letter to the state
depa rtment of education
requesting the state to review
the new plan. The proposal
calls for the class to remain
at Chester, but in a new
location . It was pointed out
that the program is funded by
the s)ate and the provision for
special EMR and learning
disabilities classes
is
required by state and federal
law.
Added to the substitute

teachers list were Madha
Malhotra, William Robinette
and Lynne Bajec.
Paul Voss was named a
hom e

inst ru ctor

and

Margaret Ella Lewis was
employed to teach a high
school special education class
for the remajnder of the year.
Upon the recommendation
of Jam es Huff , federal
pro grams coordinator, it was
agreed to make application
for a $6,000 grant lor ad·
ditional instruction in reading
at the Riverview, Tuppers
Plains and Chester schools.
The grant would provide
additional reading materials
and special instruction for
elementary teachers in the
area of reading.
Supt. Lees reported that
another levy will be needed in
the district in 1979. The
organizational meeting was
set for 6 p.m. on Jan. 2.
A report was given on
custodial work to be done
during
the
Chri st mas
vacation at the buildings and
grounds.

Deputies probe

FREE DELIVERY:
•

SANTA CLAUS
Santa Claus- Bring the children to see Santa in the Main
Store Tues.- Wed.· Thurs. 2 to 3 p.m.

EASTERN cilom - This choir will perform at the
Christmas concerl of the vocal music department at
Eaalern lfigh School. The concel" will be held Friday at

BEGINS DUTIES - Bernard Gilkey, 1284 Powell St.,
Middleport, began his duties Monday as superintendent of
the Meigs County Garage of the Ohio Department of
Highways. Gilkey for the past two years has been
employed as a bridge inspector for the Meigs County
Highway Department and was a county commissioner for
two years prior to that. He was a Salisbury Township
Trustee for 13 years and a central committeeman in
Middleport for 10 years. Gilkey replaced Bob Clark who
retired recently from the top post at the highway
department garage.

65 units
·-~ collected

Check Sunday's newspaper for our big Christmas Sale Big savings on wallets· men's belts· women's coats· girls
coats · boys jackets · men's suits , men's shirts ·women's
sweaters· men··s sweaters- and many more excellent gift
items you'll want.

Select furniture or appliances or T.V. sets- Whatever.
and we'll deliver it for you befilr.e Christmas.

c::lir~

InstP&lt;id of receiving credit

•

SALE PRICES:

.

fo od stamp elig ibility is
determined will take effect
between March and July,
1979. These regulations are
expected to eliminate nearly
67,000 participants. The
Welfare Department also
announced ot her changes
effective Jan. 1. Regulations
provide that r rN! it

NEWARK, Ohio (UP!) - Two Newark women
died Monday in a fire that destroyed a downtown
warehouse where they worked. The victims were
identified as Doris Cunningham, 44, and Marie Fulton,
62.
Mrs. Fulton was an office manager of the Arcade
Warebouse and Mrs. Cunningham was a bookkeeper at
the firm, which stored toys and wrapping paper for a
nearby drug finn . Bodies ofthe two victims were found
at the base of a front stairway, burned beyond
recognition , fire officials said.

ELBERF·ELDS

t:

tokens will no longer be used.

Other regulations un how

Fire claims two women

Coal group

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UP!) - The President's
Commission on Coal has been
granted three more montha to
make Its report.
Scott Wldmeyer, press
secretary to Gov. Jay
LUNDY L. DEITZ
Rockefeller, confirmed
SYRAf.llliF -:- ..Lundy L" Sunday the extension to Dec.
Deitz, 73, ;syracuse, died 14, 1979 the deadline for the
Sunday at Pleasant Valley nationalcoalpanelheadedby
Hospit.al. Mr. Dietz was Rockefeller.
preceded in death by his wife,
The executive order by
two sisters and one brother. President Carter gives the
He is survived by one son, panel more time to take
Edward Deitz, Fairmont, W. testimony at public hearings
Va. and two grandsons.
and review the material gaFuneral services will be thered.
held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
The commission was due to
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. report on Sept. 29, the first
Dale Bass officiating. Burial anniversary of Its round of
will be in Gilmore Cemetery. factfinding meetings. That
Friends may call at the also Is the scheduled end of
funeral home after 10 a.m . . the slx-&lt;lay United Mine
Tuesday.
Workers convention in

stated.

...----Nation wise___...,

Wants nativity scenes banned

GET LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Johnny Alan
Johnson, 19, Camp .Lejeune,
N. C., and Colleen Christene
Persons, 19, Rt. 1, Long
Bottom.

NO. 173

Approximately 37,000
Ohioans who curr en tly
cannot afford to buy food
stamps will be able to receive
benefits throuth the Food
Stamp Program when this
change takes effect, it was
reported. Most of those en·
tering the program now will
be the elderly poor and
working poor, Mrs. Shuler

Accident may force court battle

Two men arrested today

MEET WEDNESDAY
The Meigs Girls Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at· the high
school. All parents are in·
vlted to attend.

•

VOL XXIX

Massive layoff plans begin

gets extra
three months

end. A tam11y now paying $60 ministration of the program
for $100 in food stamps, for a and redirect benefits to
$40 benefit, will simply needier persons," she added.
Although food stamp users
receive the $40 in stamps.
"Eliminating the purchase will not have to pay, they will
requirement of food stamps is be getting fewer stamps.
the first phase of the new They will probably have to
regulations designed to get use part of their income to
food stamps to persons truly purchase food during the
in need," Mrs. Shuler said. month, Mrs. Shuler pointed
"The chan ges ti ght en •d- out.

e

The World Today

The panel was established
by President carter in May to
probe labor-management
problems in the coalfields
and recommend ways to ease
the tensions.-

•Admiral
•Other Famous Brands
•MiriOIS
· •Dishwashers

Starting Jan. I, food· stamp
participants in Meigs County ·
will not have to pay cash for
their food stamps, Barbara
Shuler, director of the Meigs
County Welfare Department,
said today .
As part of the Food Stamp
Act of 1977, a requirement
. that food stamp participants
come up with lump sums of
cash to purchase stamps will

HOSPITAL NEWS

Miami.

GIFTS FOR THE HOME

New food stamp regulations effective Jan. 1

up a series of 10 demands
including the right to bargain
collectively.

7:30 in the gymnasium, after which there will be a·
reception, open to the public. At the reception the Junior
class is sponsoring an arts and crafts sale to help finance
the Junior-Senior Prom .

NEW VOCAL DIREC·
TOR- Gale Douthitt is the
oew vocal music director
at Eastern High School.
Douthitt · attended Rio
Grande College and was a
member of the Rio Grande
Chorale for four years,

being the president lor
three. He formerly taught
the floe arls class at Rio
Grande.

Firm honors
two employees

Lawrence Diddle and Bob
Roy are being honored for 25
years of service, General
hit-skip Monday
Telephone Co. of Ohio an·
Deputies of Meigs County nounced today.
Sheriff James J . Proffitt are
The psir launched their
investigating a hit-skip ac· telephone careers with the
cident that occurred Monday company on the same day
night at approximately 7 p.m . the company's Pomeroy
at Salisbury Elementary district in 1953.
School.
Diddle started as an in·
According to the sheriff's staller - repairer and is now a
report an unidentified auto switchworker in the Pomeroy
was traveling south on old U. ' offi ce. A native of Racine, he
S. 33 and turned into the lives at Syracuse with his
Salisbury elementary school wife, Helen.
parking lot. The driver lost
Roy, also a native of
control and his vehicle Racine, works in hi s
skidded in gravel and struck hometown. He sta rted as a
and broke off a gas pwnp.
lineman and is now an inThe vehicle hacked out and staller · repairer.
left the sce ne without
Roy and his wife, Hazel,
reporting the accident. The live in Racine. He is· a
ihc ident is und er in· member of the Racine Lodge
vcst igation.
461, F&amp;AM.

Sixty-five persons par·
ticipating in the American
Red Cross Bloodmobile at the
Pomeroy elementary school
Monday contributed 62 pints
of blood lor the Meigs County
Blood Program.
Of the total blood given. 24
.pints were for repla cement
and five persons were first
time donors. During the visit
Martha J . Hackett became a
three gallon donor.
Making up the medical
staff were Dr. L. D. Telle and
Dr. E. S. Villanueva with the
Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital providing
the canteen . Nurses were
Lenora Leifheit, Betty Jewell
and Ferndora Story.
Making up the clerical staff
were Mary Neas e, Jean
Nease , Juanita Sayre, Jean
Sayre, Etta Mae Hill, Joyce
Hoba ck, Lula Hampton,
Erma Roush , Emma K.
Clatworthy, Grace Rusche!,

Mary Rusche\, Robert Roush,
Vernon Nease and Mace\
Barton along with R.S.V.P.
pro gram workers, Paul
SmarC Imogene Simms,
Clarence E. St ruble and
Bernadette Meier.
Donors by communities
were :

Pomeroy
Walla ce
Hatfield, Harlan H. Wehrung.
Tina Duffy, David M. King,
Lewi s Harper , Billy J .
Spencer, Robert W. Vaughan,
William W. Radford, Patricia
imboden , Mary L. Starcher,
Patricia Vaughan, Pamela J.
Vaughan, Leo L. Vaughan,
Larry G. Fisher, Crystal
Glaze, Homer Baxter, Clyde
E. Ke nned y. Dorot hy J.
Oliver, Homer B. Smith,
Waiter R. Couch, George L.
Harris, Gerald Rought, Ola
St.
Clair, Michael Ben·
dineIlL
Minersville - Carolyn A.
(Continued on page 10 )

Council okays
garbage hike
Pomeroy residents will be
paying an additional $1 a
month for garbage collection
beginning the first of the
year.
Meeting with Pomeroy
Council Monday night was
Basil Haynes, owner of H &amp; P
Sanitation . Haynes asked
council to renew his permit
which expires Dec . 31.
Haynes also requested a rate
increase from $4 a month to
$5.
Co un cil approved both
requests. Haynes explained
that senior citizens and
people on fixed incomes will
not be affected. He also said
he will negotiate with local
business establishments.
Also meeting with council
'was Lois J . Zalupski ,
operator of the Pennzoi l
Service Station on West Main
Street in Pomeroy. She asked
council to reconsider and
approve her application for
ca rryout beer license.
The request was granted on
a 4to 1 vote with Lou Osborne
voting no. ·
The motion stated that if
there are any problems, the
license will not be renewed.
Jeannie Grueser asked
councillor permission to sell
handmade wall plaques
downtown. She was given

'

perm1ss10n as long as she
displayed and sold them !rom
her vehicle.
Osborne reported Larry
Brogan had requested per·
mission to pla ce a sign at Nye
Ave. and East Main Street.
The request was tabled.
Harold Brown reported
Pom eroy will make ap·
plication lor a HUD grant not
a joint grant with Middleport
as was previously planned.
Council approved ad·
ditional appropriations until
the annual appropriation is
made for 1979.
Appropriations included
(Continued on pa ~e 10 )

-..

•.r...~ .:' &lt;S&gt;- .J ' ~&gt; ..J '

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

'

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