<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15667" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15667?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T16:47:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48789">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/4a694fc1779aefc4e0150697e13462b4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>041f215e3f261577d77b985f419ccd09</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50209">
                  <text>. ,'

.I,

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Dec. 20, 1978

· Former Pomeroy banker, resident .recuperating
. ApproJdmately two and one-half years ago, Dennis Keney,
a v1ce president of the Pomeroy National Bank and a resident
of near P(llleroy, was seriously injured in a motorcycle
accident. Keney, who was talented and personable, had a
bright future before him. Then carne the accident. He hovered
between lile and death f&lt;r weeks.
Keney is now in California and is making tremendous
strides through a rehabilitation program of the Kentfield
Hospital at Kentfield, Calif. Following is an article which has
been published by the hospital :
"There is often a tendency to view rehabilitation as a short

term process. In some cases the patient requires Intensive
rehabilita lion over a long period of time. Outpatient therapy at
Kentfield Medical Hospital fulfills the needs of the person with
loog range rehabilitation goals. An individual who had
benefited from this program is Dennis Keney .
"On June 23, 1976, Dennis was critically injured in a
motorcycle accident. The resulting head injury left him
comatose and there was little optimism among doctors that
Dennis would live. Even when he regained consciousness two
months later, it was felt he would remain completely
dependent .
,
"But almost remarkably his condition improved and there
was hope of continued gains. A decision was made for him to
live with his sister in Marin County (California). It was
apparent that Dennis had rehabilitation potential which

reqliired,developmentin an appropriate ~Jetting . His sister and
his physician arranged for Dennis to receive outpatient
therapy at Kentfield Medical Hospital and this treatment
began on March 2, 1!117.
"Dennis was scheduled into a heavy therapy regime which
included physical and occupational therapy and speech
pathology. Eventually, his progress dictated that only physical
therapy was necessary and the other therapies were
discmtinued. But during this Ume Dennis had developed the
confidence and ability to control his own We .
"The one person cited as llelping him the most was Tova
Bauer, PhYsical therapist at Kentfield Hospital. Sbe was
objective about his progress yet offered encouragement.
Dennis felt this approach was invaluable in allowing him to
realistically assess his progress and his problems.

"At present, Dennis is able to walk with the assistance of
Canadian crutches, speaks with confidence and clar!tv and
even drives his own car. His great prosress in rn!nlmizlnJ his
handicap is reflective of the KMH staff, but a greater tribute to
Dennis' singular devotim to his rebabllltatioo.
"Dennis understands how other patienta become
diScouraged with long range rehabilitation. He reallzes his
case is special and with the support of devoted family
members, KMH staff and other friends he has been fortunate.
Dennis is justifiably proud of his accomplishmenta and in the
future would like to use liis experience to encourage and
motivate other handicapped individuals.
"Dennis' more immediate goal Is to walk without
mechanical assistance. Those who have witnelllled his past .
determination feel itis ooly a matter of time."

Secretary ofState Brown concedes defeat
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
, COLUMBUS (UPI)
: veteran Rep·ublican .
; ~cretary of State Ted W.
lll'own, who held the office for
28 years in a row, today
conceded defeat in a recount
. of last November's election
, contest with Democratic
· state Sen. . Anthony J .
Celelrezze Jr. of Cleveland.
Brown announced final fig-

$38,400 action filed

The
Perfect Christmas. Gift

u~sttwvu
~CANDIES

superimposed on a preexisting injury.
The · plaintiff's choice of
vocation is severely limited
and she experiences pain
which limits her ability to
work. It is necessary for her
to incur further expenses for
medical · care
and
hospitalization according to
the entry.
An injunction was filed by
the Board of Health, Meigs
County, Pomeroy, against
Leon Putman and Bonnie
Putman, Rt. 1, Reedsville.

A $38,400 damage suit has
been filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court as a
result of a traffic accident
Dec. 19, 1976 on East Main St.
in Pomeroy. Betty J. Young,
Rt, 1, Minersville, filed the
action against Beverly Pooler
of Mason.
According to the court
entry, the plaintiff suffered
acute injuries to her back
resulting in a severe
disabling and painful type of
injury,
which
was

Mayor's Court

®

Six defendants were fined
and six others forfeited bonds
in the court of Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were George J.
Beaver, 19, Middleport,
speeding, 40 miles in a 2$ mile
zone, $15 and costs; Kathy S.
/ Darst, 2$, Cheshire, speeding
,/
40 in a 25 mile zone, $15 and
costs; Donald Lovett, 55,
Middleport, $25 and costs,
disorderly
manner; Hubert
l'
J
•
H. Stewart, 32, Middleport,
QUEEN OF CHRIST· $25 and costs, disorderly
ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
MAS BALL - Jeannie manner; George A . McAlways a Christmas Favorite ... creams, nuts,
Jbbnson, a senior at Daniel, 51, Middleport, $25
Southern High School aud and costs, disorderly manfruits, caramels, nougats, toffeescotch,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ner, and Buddy McKinney,
crunches and chewy centers, dipped in the
Clyde Johnson, Portland, 61, Middleport, $25 and costs,
finest dark and milk chocolate
was crowned queen of the disorderly manner.
1 lb. $3.50 2 lb. ~6. 95 3 lb. $10.40
Christmas Bali held at
Forfeiting bonds were
Hospital News
51b. $17.25 8 oz. $1.85
.
Southern High Saturday G09rge H. Welch, 54, Mt.
night. The event was Airy, N. C., $50, posted on a Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
sponsored by the Tri-M disorderly manner charge;
ADMITTED
John
Club. J eaonie was chosen Jay P. Warner, 22, Mid- Fisher, Racine; Gertrude
THE GIFT BOX
by vote of the student body. dleport, $25, spinning tires; Woods, Middleport.
... an exquisite gift
DISCHARGED - Leola
Major W. Walker, 61, Langspackage filled with
ville, $25, assured clear Keck, Lela &amp;binson, Birdie
a variety of chocodistance; John A. Belche, 31, Conger, Charles Neece, Ben
lates and butter
no address listed, $300, Davidson.
bons ... creams,
disorderly manner and
resisting arrest; Wayne L.
crisp and chewy
Holzer Medical Center
Adams, 'P, Middleport, $150,
centers.
Discharges, Dec. 18
reckless operation and
Eva
Allison , Kristina
1'h lbs. $5.25
passing in a no-passing zone,
Berkich,
Darlene Callicohe,
and Melvin B. Freeman, 40,
Mary
Channell,.
High Yield Certificate Grove City, $32, speeding 45 Dulaney, Gladys · Bonita
Ellsis,
miles in a 25 mile zone.
Elmer Finch, Jeffrey Fowler,
1
with 1,000
Fourteen defendants Lawana Hanunond, Marion
'
forfeited bonds and two Hoover, Mrs. Bill Jeffers and
Minimum Deposit
others were fined in the court son, Inex Kilburn, Shawn
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Leach, Brian McClinton,
8 Year Maturity
Neda Mink, Roberta Myers,
Andrews Tuesday night.
~
Substantial
Interest
Forfeiting were Ronnie Nina Russell, Jinuny Salyer,
Penalty
Required
for
Early
ruDI"
Richards, Pomeroy, $200 Ollie Saunders, Bradley
Withdrawal on Time
posted on a negligent assault Sheppard, Edward Spears,
Deposits.
charge; Robert Arnott, Jenvieve Starcher, Evelyn
Racine, $30, speeding; Williams.
Discharges, Dec. 19
Elmont Bosworth, Dexter,
Robert
Adkins, Ossier Aux$30, failure to yield the right
ier,
Mary
Baldwin, William
of way; Timothy Reese,
Bowman,
Christopher
Cline,
Cheshire, $31, speeding;
Randall Lutz, Columbus, $31, Vernon Duhl, John Evans,
The Athens County
speeding; Brian Knopp, Tracey Grueser , Brandi .
Savings &amp; loan Co.
!kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Pn.
Syracuse, $30, running a red Hollvack , Thelma Holtz,
W. Main St.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
light; Tony Hutton, Langs- Charles Howard William
Pomeroy, Ohio
Mon . thru Sat. 8:00a.m. tot P.m.
ville, $30, speeding; Ronald Jenkins, Mrs. Larry Keller
Sundav 10:30 to 12 : 3D.and S to q p.m.
Deem, Hartford, W. Va., $350, and son , Dora Larson,
PRESCR I ~T ION'
PH. 992·29SS
driving while intoxicated; Geraldine Lee, Mrs. John LiFriendly. Service
Pomeroy,O.
Andy Doczi, Middleport, $39, sle and son, Gail McClaskey,
E. Main
speeding; Douglas Medlin, Clara McMAster, Clara Pyle,
Open Nights till9
Lewisburg, N. C., $100, in- MRs. Charles Pyles and
toxication; Anita Ball, daughter, Ressie Roach,
$30, running a Beatrice Robson, Scott
I !1\jlll ll• ll"'""' """ ~"' ~"" ~"" ~= ~'"'~"'&lt;~~ !'.&lt;::&lt; B:~ """'""" ~&lt;~~&lt; ~&lt;~~&lt;!!~~:!~""&lt;""'!'&lt;II! ~&lt;~~&lt; ~to:~~ ~ ~ to:~ f. Middleport,
red light; Earl Phelps, Saunders, Glenn Simpkins,
Narie Slone, Mrs. Edwin
~ Pomeroy, $50, disorderly Stewart
and son, Benjamin
Tom Quillen,
I conduct;
Upton,
Henry
Walters, Judy
Middleport, $50, disorderly
Williams
,
Margaret ·
conduct; Marlene Padgett,
Winebrenner,
Todd
Syracuse, $200, petty theft.
Wiseman,
Douglass
Wright,
I Fined were Terry McCune, Tanuny Wright.
Rutland, $50 and costs,
Births, Dec. 19
disorderly conduct, and Carl
Mr.
and
Mrs. Brice Gilpin,
Hendricks, Jr., Pomeroy, $50
son,
Point
Pleasant,
W.Va.
and costs, squealing tires.
Mr. and Mrs . James
Wooldridge Ill, son, Bidwell.
I
SQUAD CALLED
~ The emergency unit of the
~ Middleport Fire Department Wi nd.nam 72 Lords town 71
was called to the Middleport
ss J. Marshall
Hill area at 11:27 p.m. · Wlnlersville
WVa. 44
Tuesday for Geraldine Woodridge BS Rootstown 70
Yards &amp; Yards ol New Garland
Sexson who was ill. She was Wynford 80 Ontario 57
Christmas Arrangements (Live.
Young North 131 Vincentian
taken to Holzer Medical 47
Permanent &amp; Silk)
Center.
Youngs Rayen 76 Mercer Pa
Door Wreaths
52
Swags
Zanesville Rosecrans 71
Candles &amp; Candle Rings
Miller 56
PUBLIC INVITED
Poinsettias
~ A Christmas program will
Potted Pia nts
be held at 7:30p.m. Saturday
'TI&gt;rrariums
at the Freedom Gospel
PROGRAM SET
CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR THAT '
Mission Church, Bald Knob.
A
Christmas
Program will
HARD T'O BUY FOR PERSON
Th~ public Is invited.
be held Sunday at 10 a.m. at
the Racine United Methodist
.
.
Church.
HOSPITALIZED
~ Bill Vaughan, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Vaughan, S.
SEEK LICENSE
Third Ave., Middleport, is
Mn. Millard VanMeter
A marriage ilcense was
11
again
hospitalized.
Cards
. .Phone 992-2039
1116 Butternut Ave.
II may be sent to him at the issued to James E. Holman,
Wo accept all major credit canlaana
wlrt flowll'l
Racine and Denise Lynn
I ·Jewish Hospital, Kings High- 21,
•••ywllor•;
Roberts,
19, Rt. 1, Portland
i'm&amp;f&lt;:lll!t way, St. Louis, Mo.
'
.

J
&lt;

*

INTEREST

10% DISCOUNT ON ALL
RUSSELL STOVER AND WHITMAN
c . CANDY ORDERS OVER 'JOOI
UNTIL

i

--·
FSIJC

---------

I

a

•~

••!
a
!
!
!

.POMEROY

.FLOWER SHOP
we

,.

•

•I
!

a

I
1

secretary of state 's race
outpolled the governor's
race. But the recount showed
wrhis amoWlts to a net Celelrezze gaining as much
change in votes from the in those counties , where
official count of .0069 computer punchcard · ballots
percent,' ' said the secretary. are used, as Brown .
In Cuyahoga County, where
Celebrezze ended up with
50.15 percent of the vote and\ Celebrezze piled up a margin
big enough to win the
Brown with 49.85 percent.
Brown had been suspicious election, Brown fared worse
of returns from a dozen in the recount, which was
counties in which the made at taxpayer expense
recount over which he
presided , to Celebrezze' s
objection.

•

at

be cause the margin of victory
was less than one-half
percent.
To the end , lll'own maintained the results verified
the
integrity of hi s
administration of the Ohio
election system, since the
final figures varied little
from the offi cia l written
results received from county
boards of election last month.
"During my tenure I have

tned ver y hard to give the
people of Ohio their value
received and with the help of
our fine election family and
an exceptionally good staff, I
beli eve th is has been
accomplished," said Brown.
Brown claimed Ohio's election system is the finest in the
country, an d "it is the people
who work in Ohio's election
system that have made it
great/' he said .

Brown , a native of
Springfield , learned politics
at the side of his fath er , who
sold legal forms and office
supplies
in .
county
courthouses and city halls
across Ohio.
He attended Wittenberg
University and was later a
professional football player
for the Springfield Bulldogs.
Brown began his political
(Continued on page 101

•

ent1ne

FiftPen Ce nts
Vol. 29, No . 175

Nation wise---., Meigs to get $200,000
for title programs

United Press International
TEHRAN, Iran - Troops fired to disperse several
hundred student demonstrators at the Tehran
University campus today and intervened in a funeral in
the western city of Tabriz where mourners shouted
anti-shah slogans. On the political front, the shah's
opponents stymied the monarch's attempts to form a
"National reconciliation" government claiming they
had been told to do so by the Ayatollim Khomeini in
Paris.

••

(Continued from page I)
utilities must think about
helping the consumers and
the Ohio miners, instead of
just thinking about
themselves.
" If the utilities will
cooperate, we can keep con·
swner bills down, save the
mining jobs, and clean up the
air all at the same time.
"The ball is in the utilities
court .''
Ohio's ut.ilities have claimed that if they are forced to
install expensive scrubbers
the rust would have to be
passed on to their customers
which would raise electric
bills all over the Buckeye
State.
"I urge the utilities to act in
.goud faith by sitting down
with the EPA as soon as
possible to prevent serious
economic disruption in the
state of Ohio," Metzenbawn
said.

now · a federal judge in
Cincinnati, will take office
Jan. 8 for a four-year term. A
state senator for four years,
he administered Brown's
first election defeat in 30
years.
"Final tabulations show
Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr.
with 1,365,207 votes and Ted
W. Brown with 1,356,946
votes," said Brown in
announcing the end of the

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, Dec. 21, 1978

The defendants since
Jan. 3, 1978 have failed to
comply with solid waste
disposal regulations and is a
nuisance and is ·detrimental
to the public health and
welfare of the citizens of
Meigs County according to
the entry.

Ohio.

ures from the recount showed
he gained only 189 votes
giving Celebrezze a victory
margin of 8,261 votes - less
than one vote per precinct.
''The people of Ohio have
been very gracious and kind
in keeping me here for these
past 28 years," said the 72year old Brown.
- Celebrezze, 37, son of
Anthony J . ceJebrezze Sr.,
former Cleveland mayor and

WASIDNGTON - About 5,200 ounces of gold
valued at $1.1 million ·has mysteriously disappeared
from the Treasury Department's assay ·office in New
York City, ljlld the government says it may never be
found.
It was the second time in history that United States
has lost track of some of its gold stockpile.
The gold probably vanished between 1973 and 1977,
a spokesman said Wednesday, although faulty
management and accounting procedures made it
impossible to determine exactly when the losses
began.

NEW OWNERS - Mr. and Mrs. Paul Simon are the new owners of
the Pomeroy Wine Store having purchased the business from Mr. and Mrs. Shirley
Guinther. The Simons now own three business establishments all located in the same block
and just doors apart. The wine store is located on Pomeroy's West Main Street. The wine
store has been at its present location for ovf.'r 40 years. Simon, pictured, will offer imported
and domestic wine and beer.
·

r---A;;ean;;athsl
.

.

PITTSBURGH - The United Mine Workers are
gearing up for a year-long organization drive aimed at
surface coal mines in seven western Pennsylvania
counties.
Union spokesmen said ~e organizing drive was
approved by 120 delegates to the UMW's District 5
convention. The delegates represent 14,000 miners . .
District 5 Jresident Lou Antal said $200,000 was
being set aside for the campaign, and a Uknan
organizing staff was being put together to plug for
unionism at non-union mines. Presently, bewteen 10
and 20 percent of the coal coming out of the District 5
area is non-union.

ALBERT E. HAWK
Albert E. Hawk, 79, Rt. 1,
Guysville (Shade area) died
this morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Hughes-Van
Fossen Funeral Home in .
Athens.

and Juanita Reynolds, .ByesALMA L. DAVIS
RICHMOND, Ind. - AIIila ville. Two sisters, Mary
L.. Davis, 92, died Monday Tippie and Clara Wilson and
evening at Heritage House a brother, Charles Leslie,
Nursing Home, Richmond preceded her in death in
to her parents.
following an extended illness. addition
Private funeral services
Mrs. Davis, a native of will be held at 10:30 a.m.
CARL WICKS
Meigs County, formerly Thursday at the Hughes-Van
LANCASTER- Carl Wicks,
resided in Newcastle, Ind. Fossan Funeral Home in
54, Lancaster, died unexShe was a member of the Athens with Monsignor
pectedly Tuesday morning.
United Church of Christ, Donald Horak officiating. His wife, who survives, is the
HagerstoWn, Ind., Order of Burial will be in Stewart former Betty Martin of
Eastern Star, 116, Newcastle, Cemetery. There will be no Syracuse. Funeral services
Ruth. Shrine No. 17, Order of calling hours.
will be anncunced later.
White Shrine of Jerusalem,
Past Matrons Club, Garden
Club of Newcastle and Royal if'ilom:H,lll'l'~~:"""'l~ljO::&lt;ij:~~~f&gt;'O&lt;I:Ol!g;t·g;tl~l•!fll:llj•-.
Neighbors of Newcastle,
three clubs . in Athens, The
Rebeccas, the Grange and
the Progressive Club.
She is survived by one
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Worl,
Hagerstown, one granddaughter, one grandson, six
great grandchildren, one
brother, Harry E. Davis, .
Arlington Hts., Ill., and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will he
held this evening at 8 p.m. at
the Main and Frame Funeral
Home in Newcastle. Friends
are being received today
from 3-4 and 6-8. Eastern
Star services will he held this
evening at 7:30p.m. Burial
will be in Salem Center,•
Meigs County, Thursday at 1
p.m.

COLUMBUS - The Ohio chapter of the U. s.
Harness Writer 's Association will establish an Ohio
Harness Racing Hall of Fame to honor Ohioans who
have made major contributions to the sport.
The first persons to be inducted into the hall will be
the four Ohioans already a part of tbe U. S. Harness
Writer's National Living Hall of Fame in Goshen, N. Y.
They are Stephen G. Phillips, Xenia, inventor of
the mobile starting gate; Walter Michael, Bucyrus,
harness breeder and former president of the U. S.
Trotting Association; Wayne "Curly" Smart,
Delaware, famed harness driver; and Howard
Beissinger, Hamilton, trainer-driver of Speedy Somoli,
1978 trotter of the year. ·

ELBERFELDS
OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TIL 8

GOLD STAR
AWARDEES
Tuesday's awardees in the
Gold Star promotion sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chambers of Commerce were
Clarice Callicoat, Gallipolis,
$10 gift certificate from G &amp; J
Auto; Delores Will, Pomeroy,
$10 gift certificate from
Hartley Shoes; DoUie Hayes,
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate
from Elliott Appliance;
Donna Koehler, Syracuse, $10
·gift
certificate
from
Marguerite Shoe Store.
Wednesday's awardees
were Willie Edwards, Hartford, $10 gift certlficater from
Grow's Family Restaurant;
Mildred Morris, Pomeroy,
$10 gift certificate from
Kroger Store; Margaret
Ellis, Pomeroy, $10 gift
cert'lflcate from · Simon'
Pick-A-Pair; Connie Warner,
Pomeroy, $10 gift certificate
from Francis Florist.

I

Eleven vocational
education teachers of Meigs
High School attended an inservice meeting held Wednesday at the Meigs High
School Library.
The in-service meeting was
a "trlal run" with just a
portion of the faculty present
to discuss the topic, "Pupil
Personnel Services at Meigs
High School."
The major thrust of the
meeting dealt with the county
and Meigs Local School
District testing program in
conjunction with a request by
high school principal, James
Diehl, that the guidance

After the verdict was announced, Stover's wife,
Kathryn, 36, a registered nurse, shook hands with him
and embraced him briefly. Her lover, Ann Adams, 34,
also a nurse, joined her in the front of the courtroom
and they walked out together with their attorney.

Contracts

CLEVELAND - Cleveland City Council members
prepared for a special meeting later today or Friday to
act on Mayor Dennis Kucinich's compromise plan to
resolve the fiscal crisis that has swamped the city
since its default last week on $15.5 million in bank
loans.
Council President George Forbes, the mayor's
chief political antagonist, said late Wednesday that the
Council would vote to call a special election to let city·
residents decide whether to sell the city-owned
Municipal Light Plant and whether to approve ·the
mayor's 0.5 percent city income tax hike proposal.

Sapel'fkal'
SOund I
Model
6857

discussed
Me~ting with the Meigs
County Commissioners
Wednesday night, Judge
Manning Webster discussed
the contract of the architect
for the school for the mentally retarded and to request
transfers in the juvenile court
budget.
Wesley Buehl presented the
board with the engineer's
year end report. A lengthy
discussion was held pertaining to the 1979 appropriations for the highway
department.
Henry
Wells,
commissioner, reported on the
construction of the multipurpose health center. All
contractors are progressing
as scheduled but there may
be a delay in obtaining steel it
was reported.
Attending were Wells,
Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners, and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

CLEVELAND - Tcm Grace, one of the nine
students wounded in the 1970 shootings at Kent State
University, faced questioning today as the federal
retrial of a civil damage lawsuit based on the shootings
entered day three.
Grace, Buffalo, N. Y., was a 20-year-old
sophomore at the time of the shootings. He was shot in
the foot.
Meanwhile, Howard Ruffner, whose eyewitness
photographs of the shootings appeared in a national
magazine, faced additional questioning before Grace
was to take the stand.

• Fca iUrtS highly s~n ~ itiv e AM!FM
n::cc i\·er. Reaches out to pull in dist.:mt
stations wlrh minimum noise.
• Pbyer/ Recorder le ts you make professional·
qu ali ty tapc' from phon o or radio.
• BSR ll.u tomatic record changer with cer :1mlc
cartndgc, and diamond stylu s.
• Bass rcfl e){ ported spcakn system.
SOLID QUALITV, SOUND PF.AFORMANCEl

___

___

-- -...
Be sure to see all !he other itom5, Music Department,

NEW DELHI, India - Two students today
released the 129 passengers and crew of an Indian
Airlinea jet they hijacked - apparently with toy guns
- to J:I'Otest the imprisonment of former Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi.
Across India, 20,000 JI'O.Qindbl demonstrators .
were arrested in violent protests against her expulsion
from Parliament and arrest· this week.
Police said they had arrested the two men, who
Wednesday conunandeered a Boeing 737 jet on Its way
from Calcutta to New Delhi, diverted it to Benares, and
held It for 14 hours, demanding that Mrs. Gandhi be
freed from jall.
.
They were Identified as Devendra Nath ·Pandey
and Bholanath Pandey, both students. It was not
known If l)ley were related.

2nd Floor. Table rldlos, portable. radios, I track and
cassette recorder, car radios, Clr spuktrs. Bate and
mobUe CB's, CB antennas, tape c•us, children's
record players.
Special sale prices now on many last mlnutogltt !toms

- Men's shirts, ties, belts, slacks-, jackets, sweaters,

women's coats, sportswear, swuters, wallets, girls'
cuts, aportswear, dresses. You'll really IIYI on tlwH
and many other items.

Santa Claus will be in the store on the 1st floor Thursday 2 to 3 p.m. Friday and Saturday 6to Bp.m.

'

~lberfelds

In Pomeroy ·

.

'

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy E!llergency
Squad was called to Wipple
Road near Five Points at 7:46
a.m. Thursday to the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Russell for
Mrs. Clara McMaster. Mrs.
McMaster who has been in
failing health for sometime
was dead upon the unit's
arrival.

-·

.

;

•

teachers to all of the
elementary schools. The staff
of the unit has access to
thousands of dollars worth of
materials through an Athens
source. Two aides on the unit
work closely with the
teachers, Morri s stat ed.
Under
the
program
elementary libraries are
being started and improved
and half-time library aides
are provided. Others are
being secured through other
agencies at no cost to the
district.
The district has another
grant under Title 4-C which
provides for 10 teachers to
receive training and two
trainers in a program to
provide improved readin g
teaching. Good reports are
coming from the program,
Morris reports.
The district has an $8,285
grant under Title 4-B which is
designed
to
provid e
elementary library materials
and equipment and $8245 in
flow through money in a
prpgram for handicapped
students.

WOr:JTI~~ ffil~®Or:J~)

THE SALVATION ARMY is hard at work again this Christmas season but always with a
smile, as Shll'ley Landers demonstrates in front of the Kroger Store in Pomeroy. The money
m the kettle g1ven by area res idents is used in the Army 's Christmas program to help the
underpriviligcd .

VMHto
•

revrew
claims

Effective January 1,
Veteran Memorial Hospital
will assume " dele ga ted"
review of its claims to
Medicare and to the Medicaid
programs. "This is a
department look into an involuntary effort of the
service meeting centered
hospital and is to be definitely
around testing. The meeting
commended
,' ' announ ced
was funded by a $400
_____ J
Jack T. Kindig, Executive
vocational education planning district grant. Tlie Tr
'
· II ' 'I Director of Peer Review
money was used to buy ulh,tr ·· · ~·;~J.. lEA~ ~&amp;ra Ul ·":.,tl r~,'u Systems (PR.S ) with offices
in Portsmouth.
materials such as the Oc·
NEW YORK (UP!) PRS is a not ·fo r·profit
cupational Guidance Library. Winter makes its official
organization
representing
During the meeting teachers debut tonight at 21 minutes
physicians
of
eight
southern
were instructed on how to use past midnight to begin an 89the library and how to better day reign of long nights and Ohio counties. It contracts
with the Federal government
und erstand their students short days .
to
assess the qu ality and
through effective test inThe
event,
known
appropriateness
of services
terpretation and usage.
astronomically as the winter
During the meeting several solstice, means the sun at rendered to Medicare and
speakers were featured and that point is exactly over the Medi c aid r ec ipi ent s .
included :
Tropic of Capricorn, south of "Because of rigidly accepted
Russell Moore, Meigs the equator, and ready to standards, it has bee n
County secondary school begin its slow return possible for PR.S to delegate
to Veterans Memori a l
supervisor, who used the northward in the sky.
Iowa tests of basic skills as
The sun will terminate that Hospital many review funchis topic pointing out the journey with the spring equi· tions for which PRS is
purpose, aspects of in- nox, at 12:22 a.m . on March ultimat ely respon Sible,"
terpretation and use of 21, when it stands directly Kindig continued.
Local physicians elected to
results ; James Rodgers, above the Tropic of Cancer on
the board of PRS are Lewis
county school psychologist, the first day of spring.
D. Telle. M.D. and Esberdado
who spoke on the purpose,
referral procedures, in·
S. Villaneuva, M.D. Trustees
terpretation and use of Unit answers
and officers serve without
results in psychological three alarms
compensation .
testing, and Tim . Flesher,
The emergency unit of the
Meigs
High
guidance Middleport Fire Department
counselor, who spoke on the answered three calls We~­
Organizational
Interpretation of the general nesday.
aptitude test battery and the
At 12 :08 p.m., the squad meeting Jan. 2
Ohio vocational interest went to the Middleport
The annual organizational
survey and the use of results. Elementary ·School for Mrs.
He outlined how to use the Judy Crow, a faculty mem her meeting was set for 7: 30p.m.
occupational guidance who was ill. She was taken to on Jan . 2 in the high school
cafeteria when the Southern
library.
Holzer Medical Center. At Local School Boa rd met
At the conclusion of the 1:54 p.m. , the unit went to
meeting, teachers were North Second Ave. for Mrs. Tuesday night.
The board a pprove d
requested to evaluate the Gertrude Kloes, also a
financial
and acti vity
effectiveness of the tin- medical patient, who was
statements
and
em ployed
service meeting. The session taken to Holzer Medical
Ruth
Smith
as
a
full time
received a very positive Center. A short time later,
custodian
at
th
e
Racin e
evaluations
from
the the squad went to 695 Oliver
Elementary School and the
vocational teachers at- St. for Jason
Amos, 15
tending . An in-service. months, who had gotten hold leave of absence of Debora
meeting with the same topics of an insect killer can. He was Harris as an elementary
teacher was termined.
will be presented to the non- treated on the scene.
William Robinette was
vocational faculty in the
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
.
added
to the substitute
spring or at the beginning of
teacher
list.
Necessary fund
the 1979~ school year.
EXTENDED FORCAST
transfers
and
a girls' athletic
Saturday through Monday
fund
were
approved.
County
Snow flurries possible
Auditor
Howard
Frank
Saturday and Sunday, with
discussed
House
Bill
1285
fair weather on Monday.
with
the
board.
Highs will range from lbe
mid
30s lo the mid 108
TO PRESENT PROGRAM
Saturday and Sunday and
Youth of the United Pen- in the 30. Monday. Lows
tecostal Church will present a will be In the 21&amp; early
Party cloudy tonight, with
Christmas program at 7:30 Saturday and In tbe mid·
a
low in the mid 20s. Partly
p.m. Friday at the church teens or ' the low 208 by
cloudy
again Friday, with
located on S. Third Ave. The early Monday.
high
temperatures
in the mid
public is invited.
:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:·:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::

attend session

best we can."

Stereo
·System

Pointing to the success of
the program, Morris reports
that at the beginning of the
school year last year, 28
pupils needed to take part in
the program. After the
testing at the end of the year
only two tested to remain in
the program. Morris credited
the situation to the class
teacher, a special program in
reading and the Title I
Program . . Morris said that
there are indications that
next year the district will
rece jve an ev en higher
amount of funds for the
program.
Another program is Title
IV-B for which the district
receives $48,984 in strate
funds. This is the Disadvantaged Pupils Program
and provides such services as
a school nurse and improved
library and instructional
services. The Apple Crate is
operated through this
program.
Morris points out that the
Apple Crate - a large van sat unused for two years but
now has been put into use to
transport instructional
materials and aids for the

Eleven teachers

DENVER- Harold Stover, a 41-year-old realtor
whose wife left him for a lesbian lover nine months
ago, cried briefly, then broke into a big smile when a
judge's ruling gave him custory of his two young
children.
"It was the best Christmas present I ever got ,"
Stover said Wednesday at the end of the week-long
court hearing, much of which was testimony about his
wife's lesbian relationship with another woman.
"I'm going to try to raise the children as best I
can," Stover said. "That's the important thing now.
We've got to just put all of this behind us and do the

C!Jannel
Master

DOROTHY WILSON
Miss Dorothy Wilson, 59,
Columbus, died unexpectedly
Tuesday at the home of her
twin sister, Mrs. Dorothea
Koehler near Guysville.
Miss Wilson was born at
Stewart, a daughter of the
late Charles and Raldie
Longstreth Wilson.
Besides her twin sister, she
is survived by four sisters,
Pearl Lee, Athens; Elsie
Keaton, Columbus; Jessie
Dodderer, Tuppers Plains,

The Meigs Local School
District is receiving over
$200,000 this year for "Title
Programs" according to a
report giveri by Dan Morris,
director of curriculum of the
district.
The district has the
greatest involvement in the
Title I program receiving
$153,170 for this program
which primarily involves
remedial reading. Under the
program, 10 full time
teachers are employed to aid
some 429 students. The
students are given remedial
reading instruction away
from their routine reading
classes in grades one through
six. The funds provide onefourth of the salary paid
Morris and provides for a
half-time secretary. Thirty
percent of the students must
be in a low income bracket to
qualify . Progress in the
reading of students involved
is checked through testing
and particular guidelines
must be followed in carrying
out the program. The
program is evaluated by the
Ohio
Department
of
Education.

\

\

Weath• r

Plenty of gas
ih pipelines
By BRUCE NICHOLS.
every one of the nation 's
HOUSTON (UP!) - This inter&amp;iate pipelmes, where
winter, for the first time in posted curtailments ·- the
nearly a decade, there is bureaucratic term for supply
plenty of natural gas.
shortages - still reach as
In fa ct there 's a glut of it high as 40 percent. But some
that may last for several experts say the federally
years .
But
indu•try reg ulated number s have
•'JlOkesmen say the glut has become almost academic.
nothing to do with the recent
" While
curt ai l ments
deregulation bill that raised re main in eff ect at the
prices.
pipelin e level, I don 't think
The natural gas spokesmen you'll find many at the retail
say pipelines are.full because level," said one ' industry
they are producing more and so urce . "The customers are
storing more, and people and getting all tl1e gas they
companies are using less need .''
because of previous winter
But one of the few industry
service cutoffs, conservation supporte rs
of
the
compromise law , Geor ge
and higher prices.
One industry spokesman, Mit chell , president of
who asked that his name not Mitchell Energy Corp., is
be used, said, "The supplies blunt about it.
that yo u're seeing right now
" I would say this year all
are the result of long-term curtailments could end if they
in vestment. Our company let intrastate people furnish
alone has spent $1 billion all the gas they could to
interstate people;• Mitchell
since 1970."
The natural gas law, said.
Intrastate to int erstate ·
providing an imm edia te
increase from $1.50 to $2 per transfers - uncommon under
thousand cubic feet, phases old energy rules because of
out price controls on newly price
different ials
produced gas by 1985 and supposedly will grow under
extends controls for the first the new Natural Gas Policy
time to gas sales within the Act , although th ere is
state of production .
confusion as to just how or
The effect of the new Jaw when tlley will begin .
ca nnot
be
estim ated :-:;.;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::&gt;:::::::::·:·:·:::·:·::::::::::
accurately, but experts say
ATHENS, Obio I UPI ) that at most, th e price of an
Brjan
Burke, 43, offensh. e
average home gas bill would
coordinator
at
tbe
increase by a few dollars per
University
of
VIrginia,
month .
today wa s named head
The glut doesn 't affect
foolball coach at Ohio
University.
Burke, a native of
Cleveland and a 1958
graduate of Kent State
NO PAPER MONDAY
In order to permit em· . University, succeeds inploye es to •observe the ; teri m couch Bob Kappes,
Chri stma s holiday, the who held the job last season
Sentinel will not be published following the death of long
time coach Bill Hess lasl
on Monday, Dec. 25.
spring.
:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::

LIMITED SERVICES
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Cent er will have limited
services on Monday , Dec. 25
in observance · of th e
Christmas Holiday. Services
are alw ays avai labl e for
anyone In need of services by
call in g · ' he
Crisislin c.
Crisisline telephone numbers
in the three counties are
Galli a County 446 -5554 ;
Jackson County 286-5554 and
Meigs County 992.,)554.

40s.

.

tf! ~

¢

. .. . ~. .·' &lt;. . .

.... ''li ' t•\\i

~

¢
t)
'

s~
t)

'c.

-.-J~
'

s(&lt;i&gt; .,,"".,,...

~~

....
. '"""-' '$

"'~~~

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS
'

'

�. .......... .c.. .. . . . _,. ......

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middieport-Pomeruy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 21, 1978

ALMOST

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

}
:;:;

RIO GRANDE - Two
teams with winning basket·
ball traditions in their

':[

~~~~~ti;~ m~~l~g~~~

:·:·
.·.• tington Friday.
A 7:30 tip-off between the
NEW YORK (UP! ) - SUddenly, it's open season on Chuck Rio Grande College Redmen
Fairbanks, and to me it looks as if he'd like to say a few words · and the Marshall University
in his own defense, but can't.
·
Thundering Herd will mark
Neither can I.
the first meeting of the two
I think he's getting eve~g he deserves.
teams since 1922.
To me, his action in jumping a contract with the New
Th~ Redmeri, ~ in the
England Pat.-iots for one with the University of Colorado was a current campaign, are
precipitate, self-serving show of conduct, completely symbolic defending Mid·Ohio Con·
not only of all that is wrong with sports today but of all that is . ference champions and were
wrong with our entire society. ·
runner-up in the 1977·78 NAIA
If a man's worddoesn'tcountformuch, if it doesn't have any District 22 tourney last
substance, how much substance can the man have bimself?
winter.
Colorado's Athletic Director Eddie Crowder, in his anThe Thundering Herd was
nouncement that Fairbanks was coming to coach at the school, runner-up in the Southern
t.-ied to make his listeners believe that Fairbanks' decision bad Conference tournament after
"little to do with compensation." And it certainly had nothing a third place 1977-78 season
to do with published reports of Fairbanks getting $1 mlllion by finish of 14-15 overall.
becoming part of a golf course and real estate development
headed by Wichita oil man Jack Vickers.
' Fairbanks, he said, "has chosen to come because he loves
Colorado, loves college coaching and because of his interest in
bringing his family to a west em area."
Oh, sure.
I don 't doubt for a minute that Fairbanks loves Color11do
because many people do, myself included, but if he loves BY MIKE TULLY
college coaching so much, how c0111e he left the University of UP.! Sports Writer
Maryland is grateful Ernie
Oklahoma where he bad such a successful career with the
Sooners and where he told so many people, myself included, he Graham does not give up
was supremely happy?
easily.
"I missed my first couple of
Fairbanks left Oklah00111 because Billy Sullivan, the
Pat.-iots' owner and president, practically laid the world at his shots," he said Wednesday
feet in January of 1973. To begin with, Sullivan named him night, after scoring a schoolgeneral manager and head coach of the Patriots so that he record 44 points to lead the
could have complete authority without any interference. Along Terrapins to a 124-110 rout of
with those titles, Fairbanks, 39 at the time, was given a five· fifth.l'anketl North Carolina
year cont.-act for $120,000 a year in salary, a virt11ally State in an Atlantic Coast
unlimited expe•ise account and a special pel\!ion fund for Conference game.
"I decided to keep
retirement at age 55.
To say Fairbanks was happy would be gross shooting," added Graham,
understatement.
in fairness to him, he did lead the Patriots to the best record
in their history in 1976 when the team won 11 g~~mes and lost
only three, but in fairness to his employers, that's what they
were paying him f«r, wasn't it?
In any case, word somehow reached Sullivan that Fairbanks
wasn't that happy with his contract anymore two years ago. So
the contract was renegotiated and Fairbanks' salary was
raised to $150,000 a year. Now he was even happier than before. By moMAS BROOKS Jr.
Naturally.
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala.
Fairbanks has always taken the sllle of what he felt was ( UPl) - Texas A&amp;M Coach
moraUy right. When John Hannah and Leon Gray, both allopro, Tom Wilson said he hadn't
refused to play at the start of the 1977 season because of a planned on using Curtis
salary diapute, Fairbanks, in his capacity as general manager, Dickey any more than usual
sided with ownership, reminding the players of the legality of
their cont.-acts.
And when Oklahoma was found guilty of a recruiting
violation by the NCM and had to forfeit eight games it bad
So hot, in fact, he ran
won shortly after he took over the Pat.-iots in 1973, Fairbanks through Iowa State tacklers
said he had no knowledge of the particular transgression in for one touchdown and 276
which a prospective player's high school ree«rd was altered, yards, more than any back
but said he felt he had to "eventually accept the respon. has gained against the
siblllty ."
Cyclones, leading the Aggies
So you have it from him- he's on the side of what's morally to a 211-12 win in the second
right. But with four more years remaining on his pre9ent annual Hall of Fame Bowl.
cont.-act witli the Patriots, he somehow has lost sight of which
Dickey carried the ball 34
side he was on.
times, which tied his personal
The Patriots said Fairbanks had "reconsidered" Wednesday high for carries in a single
and had turned down the Colorado offer, which Crowder kept game.
saying was only $45,000 a year plus whatever Fairbanks could
"I got tired," the junior
earn from television and radio.'
running back said. !'It's all
When Crowder beard the Patriots' announcement saying right, though. I just wanted to
Fairbanks had gone hack with them, he denied it, saying that help the team."
was only for the duration of the NFL playoffs, after which
Dickey runs of 21 and 24
Fairbanks would come to Colorado as he had agreed.
yards midway through the
SUllivan insists he won't release Fairbanks even after the second period set up a oneplayoffs are over. ·But how are you going to keep a man who yard touchdown plunge by
hasmadeuphis mind to go elsewhere?
David Brothers to give A&amp;M
And that's where the whole thing stands now.
a 7-6 lead. His 34-yard run
late in the second quarter set
up a four-yard touchdown
pass from Mike Mosley to
Gerald Carter to give the
Aggies a I~ halftime lead.
Dexter Green of Iowa State
scored the Cyclones' first
N BA stanamgs
NHL Stlndings
By United Press International
Bv United Press lnterna1ional
touchdown on a five-yard
Eastern conference
campbell Conference
pass from Walter Grant early
Atlantic Division
Patrick Division
W. L T. Pts. in the second period and
W. .L. Pet. GB
Wash
23 9 .719
NY Islanders
19 4 7
45
scored on a 28-yard run with
Phila
18 10 .643 J
Atlanta
18 12 3
39
Philadetphi
17 11 s
39 1:49left in the third period to
New Jrsey
17 13 .567 5
New York
16 17 .485 Jlh
NY Rangers
17 10 4
38 bring the Cyclones to within
Boston
l1 20 .355 lPh
Smythe Division
w. L. T. Pts. two at 14-12.
Central Division
10 14 7
27
W. L. Pet. GB Chicago
Dickey scored once on a 19Vancouver
12 20 2
26 yard dash midway through
San Anton
17 14 .548
Hovslon
15 13 .536
lf? St . Lou is
7 22 5
19
Colorado
6 21 6
18 the final period to break open
Atl anta
16 15 .516
1
Cle velnd
11 10 .355 6
wates conference
what had been a close game.
Norris Division
Det ro it
10 20 .333 6112
Adger Annstrong, Dickey's
W. L. .T. Pts.
New Orlns
11 22 .333 7
Western Conference
Montreel
22 6 4
48
backup, scored the Aggies'
Midwest Division
Los Angeles
13 12 5
31
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
11 14 7
29 final touchdown on a five·
Detroit
8 16 9
25 yard run with 5:03 left after
Ken City
18 10 .643
Washington
8 20 5
21
Denver
16 15 .516 Jlh
Iowa State lost a fumbled
Chi cago
13 19 .406 7
Adams Division
W. L. T. Pis. punt at their own five-yard
Milwauke
14 21 .400 7112
Indian a
10 20 .333 9
Boston
21 5 6
48 line.
Pacific Division
Toronto
16 14 4
36
Dickey was voted the
W. L. Pet. GB
Buff&amp;lo
l3 11 8
34
Se a ttl e
20 10 .667
Minnesota
11 17 3
25
game's outstanding offensive
PhOenix
20 13 .606 1112
Wedne1day's Result$
player and the most valuable
Los Ang
20 13 .606 PI~
N.Y . Rangers6, BfloJ
player by writers and
Portland
16 14 .533 4
Montreal 5, Ch icago 3
Detroit 7, vancouver 2
Golden St .
17 15 .531 4
broadcasters
covering the
14 20 .412 8
Toronto 4, Minnesota 2
San D iego.
game.
The
outstanding
Wednesday's Results
Thursday's Games

Rio Grande's current
season bas bad its ups and
downs. After an overtime loss
in their road opener to Find·
lay College, 92-3S, the Red·
men rebounded with two
victories a~d a championship
in their own Lions Club
Thanksgiving Tournament.
The season's first venture
into NCM Division I basket·
ball saw Rio Grande on the
short end of a 107-32 contest
with the University of Pitts·
burgh.
The third victory over
Lincoln Memorial College, 6662, preceded a current four
game losing . streak which
includes Cumberland,
Heidelberg, defending Ohio
Athletic Conference
Champion Otterbein College,
and Pikeville Tuesday night.

The Thundering Herd, now
4-4, is a highly talented young
squad. They took on Detroit
Monday losing 91-62. Vic·
tories haye come over Morris
Harvey, Morehead State,
East Tennessee and Ohio
Wesleyan. Losses have come

MU's

at the hands of West Virginia, ·
Appalachian State, Funnan
and Detroit.
Hot shooting Dan Bise,
Mark Swain and Dan Purcell
will play an important role in
the Redmen game plan. All

Vince Phelps of Rio Grande
and Greg White of Marshall,
each trying to control the
tempo of the game.
As in most games thus far,
it will be the speed and quick·
ness of the Redmen against a
much taller opponent.
Assistant
Coach
Tom
Meadows noted, "Ohio
Wesleyan, a small team, bad
a lot of success running and
using a penetrating guard
offense. They passed well and
got good $hots. That could be
Memorial Fleldbpuse, but the key ."
Rio Grande still bas some
won't be allowed to play, the
of
its allocated tickets
Marshall coach said.
Price is MarShall's third remaining on a first come
leading scorer with an 11· . basis. They are $3 each and
point average. He also has can be picked up at Lyne
been
averaging
nine Center ori the Rio Grande
campus, Wednesday through
rebounds per game.
Friday, 8:30-4 p.m.
three sport 17 point plus per
game averages through the
first seven games. Bise Is
hitting at a sizzling 66.3
percentage from the field.
A key matchup will feature
two excellent ball handlers,

Price ~benched

Aberdeen indicated
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(UP!) - Freshman starter Wednesday
that
the
Robert Price has been Brooklyn, N.Y., native had
benched for Ftiday night's been handed a one,game
home contest with Rio suspension f«r violating team
Grande by Marshall head rules.
basketball
coach
Price, who starts at low
Stu
Aberdeen for breaking post, will attend the game at
unspecified team rules.

1
•
:i

·j
,

!
'

"Grahamnad a great
offensive night," he said. "He
got a lot of points when our
kids had a hand in his face but
he got several when we
weren't defensing him."
Graham scored 11 straight
points early in the second half
ils the Terrapins, S-2, pushed
a 47-42 halftime margin ID 7356 with 12:43 ID play.
Greg Manning scored 25
points, 20 in the second half.
Charles "Hay;keye" Whitney
had 35 points, 28 in the second

unbeaten Temple edged
Manhattan,
73-69 .;
Providence topped North
Carolina A&amp;T, 75-63; and
Baylor downed Tell8s Wesleyan, 87-31.
Also, Mlnnesota tagged
South Florida, 69-M; New
Mexico handled Cal-Davis,
86·74; New Orleans beat
Princeton, 53-45; Wichita
Stste blasted North Dakota
State, 118-77, and Houston
potmded Pan American, II)().
70.

half, wid Clyde Austin 20 for
the Wolfpack, 7·2.
· In other games involving
top teams, Marquette topped
Western Michigan, 76-60, and
Georgetown stopped Frelmo
State, 49-42, in the first round
of the Wolf Pack Classic.
Elsewbe{'e, Delaware
ripped South Carolina, 84-72,
and Virginia Tech swamped
St. Louis in the opening round
of the Roanoke Tournament;
undefeated Pennsylvania
routed ·wake Forest, 68-66i

'
ll

defensive player award went
"I don't know if he's the the best I've ever played
to Iowa State end Rick White, best I've played against, against," White said. Sims, a
who showed respect for because I played against · junior at Oklahoma, won the
Dickey.
(Billy) Sims, but he's one of Heisman Trophy for his

STANDINGS

Boston 121 , Indi ana 105
Houston 108, New Jersey 105
Atl anta 121 , New York 112
Sa n Antonio 131, Ch icago 102
Kansas City 114, Seattl e 95
Denver 121 , New Orleans 112
washing t on 137, Phoen ix 129
Golden State 85, Phila 81
Thursday's Games
Houston at Cleveland
1ndiana at Detroit

St . Louis at NY lslndrs
Washington at Philae
Atlanta at Buffalo
Chicago at Montreal
Colorado at Boston
Pittsburgh at Los Ang
Friday's Games
Det roit at NY Rangers
Toronto at Atlanta

Friday's Games

AUenta at BOston
Cleveland at New Jersey
Sa n Antonio at Chicago
Kansas City at Phoenix
Denver at Golden State .
Washington et Los Ang
Philadelphia at Seattle

wHA Standings

'By United Press lntern•tlanal

w. L. T. Pis.

Quebec
16 11 4
New England
15 9 6
Clnc:innatl
14 15 4
Edmonton
15 13 0
Winnipeg
12 l2 4
Birmingham
12 l4 J
x-lndpls
.
5 18 2
x-team disbanded
· · Wednesday's Result
Sov iet All -Stars 5, Cincl 3
Thursday's G•mes
(NO games schltduled)
Frld1y's G1me
Quebec at BlqnlnQham
Winn ipeg at Edmonton

36
36
32
30
28
27
12

College Bastcettllll Results
By United Press International
WeclnlldiY
Roanoke Holiday Classic
Ro•noke, Va.
First Round
Del. 84, South Car . 72
Va. Tech 92, St. LQuls 71
Nevada Wolf Pack Classic
RenD, Nev•d•
First Round
Geotown -49, Fresno St -42
East
Can lsius 87, Pitt 83
c .w . Post ea. Marlst 79
F . Ocknsn 66, Tenn . Tech 61
Hartwick 64, NY Tech 57
Marietta 86, Ovs&amp;Eikns 84
"New Orlns 53, Prlncetn 45
Nrtheastrn 64, Oartmth 57
Penn 88, Wake Forest 66
Prov 75, N.C. A&amp;T 63
soutnampton 70, Pratt 61
Temple 13. Mnhttn COli 69

South
Maryland 124, N.C. St. 110
Nrthwstrn St. 81, Nicholls 75
xavl~r 93, Albanv St. 82 · .
Mldweat
Frgus Fells 88, Ellndale 70
Loras 103, St. Fran ltl. 91
Marqu~tte 76. W. Mich . 60

Sports Tr•nsactlons
By United Press International
Wednesday
Football
New England - L iffed the
suspension of Coach Chuck
Fairbanks.
Baltimore - Signed running
back Ben Garry.

Colleige
M innesota Named Joe
Salem head football coach .
Hockey
St . Louis (NHL) - Placed
center Doug Palazzarl on loan
to Salt Lake City of the Central
Hockey League.

Mlnn . 69, So . ·Fla . 54
Minn -Wsca 92, Lakewood 65
N . D .. Bttneau 97, Nrthlnd 85
Nar1h Dakota 65, Huron 50
71
5
11

~t~ (i~uuJ~:,nG~ .A~~~~~';'o

Wesh&amp;Lee 73, Concordia 68

Wichlla St. 118, N. Oak. 77
Southwest

Baylor 17, Tex Wslvn 81
Houston 100, Pan Am 70
New Mew. 86, Cat -Davis 74

We•t

.

Redands 86, USI U 76

Weber St. 90, Seattle 60
Wyo. 101 , Adems St . 63

,.

By STEVE KRAUSE
BOSTON (UPI) - Chuck
Fairbanks is becoming the
center of an east-west tug-of.
war, and while the New
England Patriots feel they
·have the edge now' it's
prohably only temporary in all likelihood Fairbanks
will join the University of
Colorado at the end of the
NFL playoffs.

suspension lifted

Fairbanks' two-day
suspensidn
was lilted
Wednesday by the Pat.-iots
after he sent a carefuUy
worded telegram to the
University of Colorado
apparently rejecting the head
coaching job he accepted tinly ·
days earlier.
Wl!ile he told the university
he was returning to the
Patriots, he didn't teU them

he had turned down the job.

Colorado Athletic Director
Eddie
Crowder
said
Fairbanks hasn't refused the
offer, and will be the new
coach next year.
"Coach Chuck Fairbanks
has not rejected out offer,"
Crowder said. "At this time,
we do not need to negotiate or
sign a contract 'With him."

Nets slip by R.o ckets
By MIKE TUlLY
UPI Sports Writer
Kevin Loughery knows
Bernard Kinli has created a
delicate situation for himself
and the team, but the New
Jersey Nets' coach makes It
clear he sympathl2es with his ·
young star.
"I have ID feel that the
individual now is more
important tlian the team,"
Loughery said Wednesday
night, after King scored 29
points and grabbed 15
rebounds in a IOS-105 loss to
the Houston Rockets.
"However," continued
Loughery, referring to the
Monday m«rning incident in
which King allegedly was
found in his car, intoxicated
and in possession of cocaine,
"that does not mean I
condone .what Bernard did."
But Loughery knows these
facts are extraneous to the
case. King's career could be
in trouble and he knows how
serious the matter is.
"I am down ... I know this
could effect my career .. . I
don't want to let my
teammates down," said
King. ''The fans made me
feel real good and the support
I have gotten from Kevin is
real important to me."
When King took the court,
the fans stood as one and
tendered hiip a standing
ovation. Obviously touched,
King started slowly, scoring
only six points in the first
half, but finished with a 17·
point fourth quarter.
King's effort was to no
avail as Houston cashed in
Mike Newlin's 12 straight foul
shots in the final quarter ID
.decide the issue. Rick Barry
scored 18 points and bad elght
assillts, five of them in the
fourth . period.
Rudy
Tomjanovich led the Rockets
with 23, Cal Murphy had 22
and Moses Malone 20 with 18
rebounds.
In ott~r games, BOston
whipped Indiana, 121-105,
Atluta beat New York, 121·
112, Kansas City drubbed
SeatUe, ·UI-95, San Antonio
blasted Chicago, 131·102,
Denver downed New Orleans,

,.

eff«rts this season.
Dickey's
performance
overshadowed an outstanding
g~~me by Green, who ran for

121·112, Washington Nuggets 1%1, Jazz 11%:
George McGinnis scored 39
outgunned Phoerdx, 137·129,
and Golden State shaded points and , David 'Thompson
32 for Denver. New Orleans
Philadelphia, lll;.81.
now has lost 15 of 16 road
Celtles 1%1, Pacers 105:
Chris Ford scored a games.
season·high 32 points and BuUets 137, Suns 129:
· Bob Dandridge sco,red 36
Marvin Barnes hit for a
points
when Washington
season-high 22 to help Boston
squandered
a l~int lead
hand Indiana its fifth straight
but
held
on.
loss.
Warriors 85, Slxers 81:
Hawks 1%1, Knlcks 11%:
Sonny Parker made, four
John Drew scored 44 points
as Atlanta broke a twGogame free throws in the final 32
losing streak and snapped seconds to lift Golden State
New York's three-game and snap Philadelphia's four·
game winning streak.
winning streak.
Kings m, SuperSonics 95:
Billy McKinney paced six
Kansas City players in double
ST.WU1S(UPI) -The St.
figures with 23 points to help
Louis
Blues have loaned
harid Seattle its fourth
Doug
Palazzari ID the
center
straight loss. .. . ...
.
S
alt
Lake
City Golden
Spurs 131, Bulls 192:
Eagles,
the
Rlues'
Central
George Gervin scored 29
Hockey
I.Alllgue
affiliate.
points and teamed with
In 21 games for St. Louis
James Silas during a third·
this
seaslln, Palazzari bad
quarter charge to key San
two
goals,
.three assists and
Antonio's fifth straight
penalty
minutes.
·four
victory.

Curtis Dingess, 62, Bidwell,
was·cited on charges of DWI
following a one-vehicle accident Wednesday on SR 160,
one mile north of U.S. 35, at 10
p.m.
The Gallla-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports that
a north hound auto operated
by I?!!J~ess went off the left

side of the . roadway, and
passed through a guardrail
into a field.
Dingess displayed visible
signs ·of injury, but was not
immediately treated.
Officers reported moderate
damage ID the vehicle.
The Gallia·Meigs Post
investigated slx other

JEWELRY
&amp;
GIFT ITEMS

.'

disagrees.

TilE DAILY SENTINEL
OEVOTEDroTHE

INTF"'EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

!/1 ,I

.

ROBERTHOEF1.1CH

Cily Edl.,..

Published &amp;illy exL't!pt Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publl•hinl

C&lt;llnpany.Mullllmodla, Inc..

)
/

.
'

·,

'
"

.

ONLY 2 D.AYS LEFT

JEWELRY

'

*WATCHES
*RINGS
*PENDANTS
*BRACELETS
* STICK._PINS
,. EARRINGS
·• 14 K CHAINS

coach , today

A
YOO

I

..

OU expects ·;
'
to select
..

The only certainty now is
that Fairbanks, who coached
the Pat.-iots to the AFC East
title, will be on the sidelines
for the playoffs. He was
suspended Monday after .
informing team owner Billy
· SUllivan he had · accepted
Colorado's oF· ·r.
Fairbanks' telegram read: .
"I have returned today
(Wednes&lt;illi) to assume my
fuU.time duties as head coach ·
and general manager· of the
New England Patriots'
football club.
"I am not in a position at
this time to engage in any
further negotiation with you,
or to execute a cont.-act with
you. Very truly yours,
.
Charles L. Fairbanks."
The Patriots say that
means Fairbanks turned
cJown the job. Crowder

Ill

Court Sl., P0111&lt;"Y• Ohio 45769i
Swdne~ Offlt.., Alone 992· 2156.

F.diturial Plwnrmm7.

Sa'Ond· class puslal{e paid at
Ptllnt!ruy, Oh!u.
[
~&lt;~tiona! advertlsln~ . _repr~n
IAillvr, l•ndon Assoclal&lt;s, SIOi

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio University officials ai'e
expected to name inteim ·
coach Bob Kappes as head
football coach at a news
c&lt;inference here today, the
Columbus Citizen-Journal
rep..-ted.
Kappes was named interim
coach when longtime OU
coach Bill Hess died last
spring.
Kappes led OU to a fifth
place finish in the Mid·
American Conlerence with a
3-4 record and had a ~7
overall mark.
The newspaper said neither
Kappes, no OU Athletic
Director
Harold · N.
McElhaney would confirm
.the hiring but two other
candidates denied they were
in the final running.
George Bell, an OU
graduate and an assistant at
Colorado, told the newspaper
that OU did not interview him
for the position.
Meanwhile, former Iowa
Coach Bob Commings, who
was fired last month, told the
newspaper that OU olllclals
"never really contacted" him
abo,u t the Bobcats head
coaching job.
Kappes is a 1950 graduate
of Miami Univeeslty and
served as head coach at
Cincinnati Western· Hills
before going to OU as end
coach in 1958.

Timc•s..~·l1tittt·l .

* SILVERWEAR
* BRASS
*PEWTER
*COPPER
*GLASSWARE
*CHINA
* PLAQUES

"

,•

DO-IT·

YOURSELF

GIFTS
APPLIANCES
FOR HER
FOR THE HANDYMAN

SOUTH POINT, Ohio
(UP!) -limbo Davis, a high
school teammate of West
VIrginia University rushing
letoder Dane Conwell at South ,
Point High SchOO), has signed .
! prellrninary letter Of intent
-'th the M lain
"'
OUR
eel'S,
The 6-foot-2, 17~und
Davia
a quart b k
•
er IC •
running bock and defensive
back at South Point, Wll
sought by WVU as a

defensive back.

EBER.SBACH
HARDWARE
. POMEROY, OHIO

the Baltimore Coltl.
A

Colts

armounced

G

22,

the

· spokesman
slgning of

we&lt;~n-·-

":"""Y·

cidents Wednesday.
An auto operated by Eric L.
McKinney, 26, Pt. Pleasant,
was demolished during a onevehicle accident on U.S. 35, ,
sil&lt;-tenths of a mile east of SR
160, at •:20 p.m.
According to the patrol, a
west bound auto operated by
McKinney went out of control
on the wet pavement, went off
the right side of the roadway,
struck
the
guardrail,
recrossed the highway, and
struck the guardrail on the
left side of the road.
McKinney was cited on
charges of operating a motor
vehicle without a license.
Officers were called to the
scene of a · two-vehicle
coUision at 1:38 p.m. on SR 7,
at the junction of U.S. 35.
The patrol reports that an
auto operated by Wilbur
Bailey, 75, Pomeroy, pulled
from 35 into the path of a
vehicle driven by Ray Clark,
68, Cheshire, traveling south
on 7.
Bailey was cited on charges
of failure to yield.
There was moderate
dsmage to the Bailey auto,
slight, damage to the Clark
vehicle.
The patrol investigated a
on
one-auto
accident
Bulaville-Addlson Rd., one
and one-tenth of a mile west
of SR 7, at 12:50 p.m.
Officers report that an east
bound auto operated by
Robyn A. Cornelius, 17,
Gallipolis, went out of control
in a sharp left curve, passed
off the left side of the road·
way, and struck a ditch and
an embankment.
Cornelius claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated.
The patrol reports sUght
dsmage to the vehllce.
·Officers were called to the
scene of a one-auto mishap on
Lew Southers Rd., eight·
tenths of a mile west of SR
553, at .7:44 a.m.
According to the patrol, a
west bound auto operated by
Thomas Fife, 18, Eureka Star
Route, swerved right to avoid
an unidentified vehicle.
· The right wheels of the Fife
auto dropped off the right

THE

]a,is will
attend WVV
next year

.1 . - - - - - - - . . . J .I arry,
,I

GIFT
ITEMS

PICK UP YOUR LAYAWAYS

B LTIMORE (UPI)
A
F.urlldAvc., acv.lomi,Ohlo4111S. . Running back Ben Garry,·
Sul.ll!crlptlon rHlL"!l: O.:liven!tl by
ho
ed 31 touchd
l'Hrtie r&gt; Wht!re &lt;IVI:Ii1Hb1e 75 cenls pU ' W
8COI"
OWDI ·,
Wt't'k . R)' Mutur Ruu~ wher~ can-ier
and gained 3,595 yards While
,.,,,.• nol •voll•ble, On• monlh, at the University of Southern
13.21.
By m•ll In Ohio and W. v•. , , ·"IIDDIOOI
"'·-'•-'ppl, baa -a•_........, ,with
Ollt' Yt!ar, S27.00; Six months,
Sl-1 .50 ; Three months, 18.5() ;
F:l~wherc S32.00 yen: Six mun\hs
117.00 : Thrt!t' munths, 19.00:
SulJSc•rlplhm pricl" indud~s SwldHy

.. ..

j~010H
111M ~\ttl.

'

.

1J

UU ~~ tl U.. loc. .

·r-------------------------1

Driver ·charged with
DWI after accident

"

"At the conclusion of the
Patriots' post-season
endeavors, he will be the
University of ColOrado'• next
football coach," Crowder
said.
Even the Patriots admit the
problem hasn't been solved only temporarily shoved
aside until the season closes.
"They can reopen negotia·
lions," he said. "But we have
' not released Fairbanks now,
and we will not consent to his
release after the season."
At an impromptu news
conferenC'e at Schaefer
Stadium
in
Foxboro,
'Massachusetts, a tight·
lipped, grim-faced Fairbanks
, was evasive about what,
exactly, the telegram meant.
"It means what it says,"
Fairbanks said. "It enables
by Ploger Bollen
FUNNY BUSINESS
us to continue in the
playoffs."
Fairbanks reportedly has
I'LL KEEP 1HI'6
four )le&amp;rs left of a $150,000
per-year cont.-act, and the
SECI&lt;ET; IF
Pstriots say they'll hold him
WIL.L.I ...
to it.
"No WilY we're going to
release him," Sullivan said
.Tuesday. "We expect him to
perform - for four years."

I

148 yards in 21 carries.
"I'd like to be happy with
my performance, but I'm
never happy when we lose,"
Green said.

•• •

.'

..

Texas Aggies top Cyclones, 28-12
;;~~~~r.~·~~~i: Fairbanks'

•

'

Graham nets 44, Maryland romps
Graham won him over with
"because I thought I owed
·final
slats, which showed IS.
myself a few baskets."
for-26
from the field. Graham
Maryland Coach Lefty
topped
the previous school
Driesel allowed Graham to
record
of
43 set by AI Bunge
play only 25 minutes because
.
of some mistakes the in 1960.
Albert King, who added 19
sophomore made early.
"Everybody on my team points, was awed by
has the option to shoot if they Graham's perf«rmance.
"He just couldn't miss,"
have an open shot," he
King
said. "But he could do it
explained. Tonight I had to
all
the
time, if we let him
take Ernest out because he
shoot.''
took some bad shots. He has
North Carolina State Coach
the green light until he puts
Norm Sloan was impressed
up bad shots."
also.

WHY CHRISTMAS ALMOST W

Auditor In July, 1977 and
was elected last mouth to a
full term. As one of the
youngest County J!.udltors
ln Ohio, Couladls also
serves on the Executive
Committee of the County
Auditors Association · of
Oblo and Is a member of
the American Society lor ·
Public Admintst.-atlon and
the International
Assoclatloo of Assessing
Offlcen.

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor)
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication. However, on · request, ·
names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

Questions council's action

J. A. KELLEY
PROMOTED - Nationwide
Insurance has
promoted Jack A. KeUey,
formerly of Meigs County,
to manager of marketing
luformatlou. KeUey joined
the Colombus • based In·
surauce orgaulzatloo In
1967
as
a
junior
programmer. He was
named
manager
of
marketing Information
services In 1973 and served
the past three years as
lnceme analysis manager.
A graduate (1961) of
Eastern High School In
Meigs County, Kelley holds
a degree Ia mathematics
from Oblo University. He
resides at %038 Heathcliff
Dr. In Columbus.
side of iiie roadway. The
vehicle slid off the right side
of the road, down an em·
bankment, and overturned.
Officers report moderate
damate to the Fife auto.
The patrol· investigated a
one-auto -accident on Fair·
field-Centenary Rd., one mile
south of SR 588, at 10:58 p.m.
Officers report that a south
bound auto operated by
David Kuhn, 32, Bidwell,
s.werved to avoid an
unidentified vehicle which
was stopped on the roadway.
The Kuhn auto went off the
right side of the road, and
struck a mailbox.
There was minor damage
to the Kuhn vehicle.
Officers were caUed to the
scene of~ one-auto mishap on
U.S. 35, at the junction of SR
588, at 8: 45 p.m.
The patrol reports that an
east hound vehicle operated
by Mark Moreland, 19,
Detroit; struck a hole in the
pavement.
There was minor damage
to the right rear tire and rim
of the vehicle.

lOth district
action club
has meeting
The
Tenth
District
Democratic Action Club held
its regular bi-monthly
meeting recently at the Ohio
University Inn in Athens.
Vice president Alexander
Prisley, Athens, presided
since the president, Mary
Benson, Carroll, had not yet
returned from her duties as a
delegate to the Democratic
Conference held in Memphis.
Represehtatives from six of
the counties in the district
were informed that more
than $2,000 was distributed by
the club to Democratic
candidates lor Congress and
the General Assembly. Much
of that amount came from
proceeds of the fundraising
dinner held by the club in
October, where Senator John
Glenn was the featured
speaker. The club also made
plans for an annual fund·
raising dinner so that con·
trlbutions could be increased
for future campaigns.
In other business, the club
amended Its constitution
t wlce in order to change the
regular meeting date of the
organization and also to
make its press secretary an
appointed, rather than an
elected, position. Plans were
also made for total revision of
the club's constitution at
some future date.
Commemor.atlng
the
Christmas season, Mrs.
Maxlne Wingett, Racine,
presented
a
reading
reminding members that
expressions of love and appreciation and deVoting time

I would like to know why the council members in the
Village of Middleport rejected the two stations offered them by
the Pl. Pleasant cable television. It doesn't seem fair that we
have lost two stations, instead of gaining two new stations. I
am sure the maj«rity of Senior Citizens would have gladly paid
an extra $1 per month rather than he denied the privilege of
having the ext.-a movies, sports and religious programs. Name withheld by request.

Meigs

Local Bowling
Friday

~a)e

Mixed

December 15, 1978

Youngs Carpeling
Colemans
Capeharts
Team 4

w

~

91 29
77 43
57 63
53 67

Youngs Gulf Station

47

73

Team 6

35 85

Carpeling, 892; Team

4, 872 ;

High Team Series : Young s

Col emans, 851

High

Calemans ,

Team

309;

Carpeting, 304

Game :
Youngs

&amp; 294
.
Men's "High Series : Butch

Roush , 417 ; Vic Wippel, 406 ;
Terry Seldenabel, 404
Men's High Game: Bulch
Roush ,
161;
Terry
Seidenabel, 154; Vic Wippte,
140
Women's High Series:

Marlene Wilson, 488; Kelly

Wilson , 458 ; Margaret Wyatt,

383

Women's H i gh Game :
Kelly Wilson, 195 ; Marlene
Wilson , 181 &amp; 163

Wednesday Ear\ybirds

December IJ, 1978

w

~.

Royal Crown

78 42

New York Clothing

74

46

Riebel's Used Car
63 57
Swisher and Lohse
49 71
King Builders
46 74
Jack's Club
44 76
High Individual Game:
Candy Brothers, 205; Belly
Whlllatch,
196 ;
Belly
Whlllatch, 193
High Individual Series :

Belly Whillalch, 529; Bess
Hendricks-Marlene

Wilson ,

495; Mary Voss, 483
High Team Game : Swisher

and Lohse, 822 ; Riebel's Used
Cars , 808 ; Riebel's Used

Cars, 794
High Team Series: Riebel 's
Used Cars, 2296; Royal
Crown. 2176 ; Swisher and
~ohse, 2150

Monday Night
December 18, 1978

8th grade
beats KC
By Greg Halley
Last week the Meigs eighth
grade used a stiff defense
enabling them to register
their first victory of the
season, 26·10 over neigh·
boring Kyger Creek.
The victory game after
three straight road trip
losses. Meigs had lost to
Southern 40-30, to Shade 30·28,
and to Athens in a big way, 59·
11.
A tight first half saw Meigs
go into the locker room
leading 9~. In the third
quarter, the offense came
alive, the buzzer sounded
with Meigs comfortably
ahead 18-3. The defense held
Kyger Creek in check with
only· two points in the last
period for the win. Todd Rife
. led the winners with 17 points,
while Rick Edwards added 4.
R!Stroud and P. Hurley each ·
bad 4 for the losers.
Monday night , Meigs
faltered in the second period
and before falling to visiting
Jackson 52·32. Jackson was
up only 6-1 after the first
period, but · went into the
locker room at halftime
leadine 28-14 . By the third
period they bad increased
their margin to 41·21.
Jackson outsized Meigs and
had a well balanced attack.
The full court press wore
Meigs down as the game
progressed.

BALTIMORE (UPI ) -The
Baltimore Colts Wednesday
signed running back Ben
Garry from University of
Southern Mississippi.
Garry , 22, was drafted by
the Colts in 1978 but did not
come to terms and did not
play football this season .

PETE COULADIS
NAMED PRESIDENTAthens County Audllor
Pete Couladls was recently
elected President of the
Southeastern Oblo County
Auditors Association.
Couladls, a graduate of
Ohio University and a
former City Councilman In
Athens, was appointed

WHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
CARPET

RECAPPED
OR
REG.
SNOW
TIRES

LEANING
Get professional
results at a
fraction of the cost.

'K
BUY

NOW!
-·-------.--

-

:'$1St~

aT

,

.-...

WINTER
HAS
ARRIVED!

«HOUR

·----- ---------

STAR SUPPLY CO.
N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0.

949-2525

R.lcine, 0.

Rick Chancey, recovering

w

~

Roach's Gun Shop
98 30
Salem St. Mkl.
80 48
Powell's Mkl.
eo 48
Frye's Pennzoll
68 60
Heiner's Bakery
36 92
Meigs Co . Ad. Taker 22 106
Team
High
Series:
Powell's Mkl ., 2178 ; Salem
St. Mkl .. 2162; Frye's Penn·
zoll, 2103
Men's High Series: David
McCunn, 556; Bill Smith, 481;

from a sprained ankle, had a
good night' for Meigs as he
scored 16 points. The team
made 7 of 17 foul shots.
The winners made 6 of 15
free throws and B. Walke led
all scorers with 18 points.

SI(IL

Roger Carpenter. 477
Women ' s High Series :

Belly Whlllalch, 585 ; Drema
Roach, 487; Bess Hendricks,
479
Team High Game: Salem
St . Mkl., 808; Powell's Mkl.,
751; Meigs Co. Ad. Taker, 743
Men's High Game: David
McCunn, 224: Roger Car·
penler, 185; Ron Smith, 181
Women's High Game:
Belly Whitlatch, 219; Belly
Whitlatch, · 198 ; Drema
Roach, 189

to others are the best gifts
anyone can give.
The Democratic Action
Club's next meeting will be
held in Jackson, Ohio on
Februarr 21. .

Cordless DRILL
And Screwdriver. Dr ives screws.
verses to remove them. High · tn1rnu'~
- muscle enough for steel .

Casey Kam .

REG. 139.99

WMPO

SATURDAYS
c___

9_ tl.l Noon

NOW

r---·---~-~;;.~'3&gt; -----·-

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923 S. 3rd Av e.
Middleport, 0 .
992-2 709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to s.:OO Mon. thru Fri.
7:1. 'lo3:00 Saturdav

�~

-

•

••

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

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 21, 1978

I,

: 5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeror, 0 .• Thursday. Dec. 21, 1978

, Annual holiday party of the

readings were given in' llliddleport Business and Pro- eluding ' a mediation on
;fessional Women 's Club was hands -by Mrs. Janet Korn,
! held Monday evening at the " Twas the Night After
; Meigs 1m.
Christmas" by F.rna Jesse,
! Mrs'. Frances Louise D-dvts "One Solitary Life" by Mrs.
•presided at a brief business Grace Pratt, " The Wise Men
: meeting during which time a Seek Jesus" by Mrs. Alwilda
:letter was read from Loretta . Werner. There was also a
!Jones, district chainnan, verse from Dr. Norman Vin, regard!ng the district young cent Peale by Mrs. Korn, and
•careerist program to be held a "Christmas Diagnosis" by
Feb. 18 at the Hocking Mrs. Werner .
: valley Motor Lodge at
Games were played with
; Nelsonville. Reservations are prizes being awarded to Mrs.
1to be in by Jan. 31 with the Beulah Strauss, Miss Jesse,
• cost to be $8 per person. The and Mrs. Eva Robson . Door
: Jileal young careerist is Mrs. prizes were won by Mrs. Mar~ IUionda Dailey, R. N. who is jorie Goett and Mrs. Kathryn
~employed
at Veterans Werner. A gilt exchange was
-Memorial Hospital.
held.
Mrs. Alwilda Werner,
Others attending the dinner
Chairman of the hostess com- were Donna Davison, Wanda
mittee, conducted the even- Eblin, Edith Forrest, Linda
.ing's program which was ar- Stobart, Catherine Welsh ,
r_anged by Mrs . Mary Eloise Wilson, and guests,
~ilnzelman. Several holid;iy
"""· K•thryn Werner and
••

'•

LAST MINUTE

:on

SYSTEM SEVEN- BIG SOUND, MINI SIZE
by Realistic ®
Reg . Separate
Items Price

CHIU8l'MAS GIFTING -It appears tllat Meigs.County Infirmary residents will have a
good Cluistmaa, thanks to the generosity of individuals and organizations of the coun9'.
Employees placing the contributed gtfta under the infirmary tr~ are, from the left, Opal
. CUmmins, Sibyl Dorst and Barbara Sargent.

32980

A dlmer was held recenUy
in the fellowship hail of the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church honoring the
winning · team of a Sunday
school attendance coolest.
For the contest the congregation .was divided into
two teamS, the cowboys and
the Indians, with the objective heing to see which team
could bring In the most new
people over a specified period
ol. time.
David and Unda Acree
were captains for the
cowboys; Carl and Mary Nottingham for the Indians
which was the winning team,
The dimer was prepared and
hosted by members of the losing team. Games were played
and fellowship enjoyed.
Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. William Knittel, Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Nottingham,
Cllrla, Jeff, Jason and Ed,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Friley,
Mr. and Mrs. William Van
Meter, Tony, Ricky, Misty,
Taunda, and Shaunda, Mrs.
Linda Acree, Aat'lln and
Stephanie, Mrs. Joyce
Sauters, Joy, Sherri, Charles
and Pat, Mrs . Virginia
.Vita toe, Mrs. Mary Lyvere,
Mrs. Jean Kelly, Mrs. Edie
Zirkle, Mrs .. Teresa Shaffer
and Tracy, Robert Hartley,
Rita Arnold, Viki, Chris, Cindy and Shelly, Barbara
Pooler, Angela, Christine and
Michelle, Doris Spurlock,
Amanda Eastman, ·Valerie,
Violet, Kathy, June , Lisa and
Clarence Hayman, Angela,
Diane, · Renee and Davi&lt;)
Rhodes, Sandy Davis, Mark
Landers, Harold Cunningham, and Billy and Ann
Bobo.

Seniors hold party at new
Senior Citizens ' club
HARRISONVILLE--The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club hi.td a Christmas party
recently at their. new
quarters in thE. old town hail.
Decorations carried out the
holiday theme and a ham supper was followed by a glft exchange. A trio composed of
Otis Chapman, Cheshire;
Dorothy Boggs, Shade, and

TOPS Club met
Mrs.

Freda Henderson,
Pomeroy,
entertained
members of the Tops Club
138,'1 with a Christmas party
Monday evening. The
members exchanged gifts
and enjoyed low . calorie
refreshments with Charlene
McKenzie giving the blessing.
Odela Mack had charge of
entertairunent_ The group
sang Christmas carols and
presented Mrs. Henderson,
the leader, with a gift.
Several songs pertaining to
TOPS were read by Mrs.
McKinzie, Edith Gardner and
Betty Clark. Others attending
were Catherine Little, Barhara Roush, Barhara Colmer, Mamie Stephenson, and
the hostess .

Party held
A surprise birthday party
was held .Saturday night
honoiing Becky Ambrose, 14.
Hostesses for the party held a
, the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Max Eichinger were Becky
Eichinger, Melissa Thomas,
Pam Murphy, and Kelly
Hedley.
Others attending the party
were Greg Cole, Mike )!issell,
Robbie Smith, Brian Wells,
Mike Whitlatch, Richard
Mora, Denise and Jennifer
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ambrose, Mr . and Mrs.
Eichinger and sons, Max, Jr.
and Scott.

·

DODGE CITY, Kan. (UPI)
- Dodge Clty CGmmunlty
College
Wednesday
amounced the appointment
of Jerry Cullen as the new
head foolball coaciL
Odlen wtJJ replace Terry
Wllllams - who resigned
·about a mcntb ago. The
appointment ls effective
immedlately.

Only 3YJ."' High! I 0 Watts per

352 E. Main , Pomeroy

ohms· -,,om 20-20,000 Hz . wirh

with -Base . Magnetic Cartridge
and Dust Cover

Navaho~

••
•··

Turns one

sso

recently at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Whittekind,
Osborn St., honoring their
son, Shawn Lee, one.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Van Cooney, Lonnie and Tom, Mamie Stephen!:ion, Tanuny Johnson, Barbara Colmer, Timmy and
Shari and daughter, Amber,
Rohert Ralph and Joyc"e Hall
and children, Sherri, Lara
and robin . Sending gifts were
Randy Snider, Rocky Kearns
and Debby, Mr. and Mrs.
James Farley and sons.
Cake, ice cream, and soft
drinks were served.

~

,.

". ,,,

Reg_ 179

.

If Emerg . Ch . 9 os used only once this winter a
Rea lis tic CB pays fo r i1 selfl Help ·s JUSt a c·all away!
Find out about road hazards up ahead . Up-front
speaker. AC / DC cables.

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)

STEREO·PHONO SYSTEM WITH PEDESTAL

·',

2 MORE

Chronomatlc®-209 by Realistic

SHOPPING DA VS

,.
.
',.
'

Pedesta l holds speak ers or doubles as rec ord rack . 2-speed
manual record playe r
has 45 RPM adapter
Speakers sep. to 18'
With dust cover.

42!~.

ss

4795

FOR

•SHOE and
•SLIPPER

~

••

,.
,..

snooze, fas t/s low time set. 3 V2' s peaker. s lide -rule
dia l. earphone jack .

•

heritagf1) house

SAVE

Reg.

Rise to music or buzzer alarm ! Digitron display,

SAVE 5 10

Shop At

,,.

Reg. 59"

.,

GIFTS
(A GOOD SELECTION)

MORE HOLIDAY Gin BARGAINS-UNDER '100-0NLY AT THE SHACK"!
CASSETTE
RECORDER

40-IIIINUT.E 8-TRACK

59

1

Reg
44 ·840 P 9

heritage house

" '

60 -MINUTE CASSETTE

OF SHOES

, J26
Reg .
44·602 1"

CUT20%

'

CUT 25%

Reg. 39'~

MINUTE 8-TRACK 90-llllNUTE CASSETTE

07

2

2U

Reg.
.1,44-603 2 "

CUT 20%

CUT 25%

t4 ·842
.

nis.
• R6q . 6 "AA " b•ns.

Moduiette®-8 by Realistic

95

89
SAVE

AC ADAPTER 4" 60·3053

Reg.

t 2-·1402 9995
5 10

Only 8x6 'f,x3'h''! Auto Level , Auto -Stop 120V
AC.

I

Social
.

I!ARRISONVII .LF:-- I .ois
Pauley and Paul Pauley were
in•talled as worthy matron
and worthy patron of Harrisonville Chapter 255 , Order
of the Eastern Star, in
ceremonies held Friday night
at the Masonic Temple.
Other officers installed
were Janice DeBord,
, associate matron ; Dallas
DeBord, associate patron ;
Gracie Wilson, secretary;
Betty Bishop, treasurer;
Joan Kaldor, conductress;
Jill Lawrence, associate c'Ondudress; li!is Thompson,
chaplain; Chester King, marshall, Jane Wise, organist;
Jea~ Wood , Adah;. Lois
Wyant, Ruth: Mae Gtiham,
Esther; Pat Arnold , Martha;
Brenda Kennedy, EJecta;
Gloria Riggs, w~rder ; and
Ellen Arnott, Senlmei.
Gracie Wilson and Howard
I. Shull were the installing offleers and were assisted by
Mary Shull, inviting mar~hall, ~nd Florence Manring,
tnslalhng marshall. Others
assisting were Mr)1le Pier~ e,
c'Onductress; Sylvia M1dktlf,
chap!~ in ; Wilma Styer,
orgamst ; Fauna Combs,
warder ; Howard Kehl, sentmei.
_ Honoring installing officers
were Bernice Hoffman,
associate matron; Dana Hoffman, associate patron; Ruth
Erlewine, Adah ; Stella
Atkins, Ruth; Pearle Canaday, Esther; Sharon Jewell,
Martha; and Avanell George,
Electa . Soloist was James
Soulsby who sang "The End
of a Perfect Day" accompanied by Jane Wise.
Distinguished guests
presented and escorted lo the
F:ast were Roberta K. Mindling, past grand matron ;
Howard I. Shull , past grand
patron ; pat Wilson, grand
represetnallve to Kcmsas;
Loui se ' Stewart, grand
represent a tive
to
Washington ; Betty G. Martin, deputy grand matron,
New Carlisle. District 28.

1

1 Calendar 1
THURSDAY
CHRISTMAS Prnl!l'am at
Chester Church of the
Nazarene 7:30 p.m. Thurs:day; ·public invited.
FIRST CHURCH of God,
Syracuse,
Chrlst!ll&amp;S
program, 7:30 p.m. Thursday; public Invited.
MAGNOUA CLUB annual
Christmas dlmer and party
Thursday 6:30p.m. at Meigs
IM.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
P'ck 245 Thursday 6:30 p.J'I!.
at
Middleport
United
Presbyterian Church.
FRIDAY
THE CHESTER PTO will
present
a
Christmas
assembly
at
Chester
Elementary School Friday at
12:15 p.m. Parents and
friends are welcome.
RUTLAND
F 1R E
Department Ladies Auxiliary
party, 6, 30 p.m. Friday;
poilu k dinner a d •• gift
c
n ..
exchange.
SATURDAY
M
CHRISTMAS PROGRA ·'
7:30 p.m. Saturd~y. at
Freedom Gospel Mtulon,
Bald Knob; public IDV!ted.
SUNDAY
CANDI..EUGHT SERVICE,
5 P·~· Sunday at Pine Grove
Bapttst Church.

Mr.andMrs.JamesFar!ey
and .children, Ricky, Jamie,
Davey and Joey, Marietta,
hosted a holidaY dinner
recently for relatives of
Pomeroy.
Attending were Mrs.
Farley's mother, Mrs.
William Stephenson and son,
Jimmie, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Whittekind and son,
Shawn, Mr. and Mrs. JetTy
Colmer and children, Timmy,
Billy and Shari and her
daughter, Amher, Mrs. David
Johnson, and Randy Snider.
Unable to attend were
David Johnson who was at his
employment, and William
Stephenson, recuperating
from an illness.

Stella Atkins, junior past
matron , and Larry Wel l.
junior past pi::ltron , wen•
. presented in the West and
welcomed by the worthy
matron , Mrs. Pauley .
Mrs. F:rlewine presented a
gift to Mrs. Atkin s, and
Stanley Kaldor presented one
to Larry Well, both in appreciation of their service

during the past year.
Attending were

43

members of the Harrisonville
chapter, with Ill visitors in-

Christmas Gift Guide
KODAK

n ·gistralion. Prugro111 Wt' l't'

lnslant Camera

made by Mrs. Huffm"n . r.irt,
wer e

prc~en ted

Just

tu all of the

in s t~lli ng

officers by the worinCjlron ami worthy
patron. Mothe1· of Jlearl
ncc kiCt ce~ on llilver ehains
made by Paul Pauley were
presented to each of the
visi ting- worthy matmns. JarS
of candy were given to the
visiting worthy patrons. Gifts
were also presented tn the
newly in st" ll ed worthy
Jn&lt;ttron and worthy patron.
Guests were invited to the
dining mom fol' H pntluck Uinner. Dceorations carried out
the holiday theme.
thy

cluding 15 visiting worthy
matron, 11 visiting worthy
patrons, and 14 pa st matrons.
these !&gt;eing, Betty Bishop,
Mrs. Pauley, Mrs. Erlewinc, ·
Marjorie Rice, Mrs . Wilson, ~t
Elsie Roush, Mrs. Canad~y.
Mrs. Hoffman, Avanell
George, Pauline Atkins, Loi s
·Thompson, Alegra Will, Joan
Kaldor, and Mrs. Jewell.
Past patrons atending allending were Doug Bishop,
Pauley, Don Wilson, Dana
Hoffman. Jr., LmTy Well .
Stanley Kaldor, Norma n Will, ";iiiii
and Charles King .
•
Chapters represented were
Albany , New Marshfield,
Maneor, Racin e, Aurelius,
Marietta. Euphemia,
Bartlett,
At hen s ,
Reinersville, Valley , Belpre,
Evangeline, Lowe ll , Mt.
Moriah, Thea , Stockpo rt,
Amazon of Ca ldw ell in
District 18, and Wilkesv ill e
Chapter ofDistrcL 25 .
Pinons were a shell and"i(
P.,arl, symbol lor the grand
matron, Susanne Pee:~r l. Vi sit~
ng worthy matron pinons

Crank out a whole holiday season of memories as they
happen with Kodak 's THE HANDL E. lowest priced instant ca mera . Get brig ht beaut iful co lo r by Kodak with
these easy-to-use features : Electronic shutter . Automa tic exposure c on trol Drop-in 1oad1ng . The great aim and-shoot instant camera .

KODAK Instant Print Film PAlO

Produces beautiful color with elegant
SATI NLUXE '" Finish from Kodak .
Develops m minutes.

the

()I§()()
PICK-OURPOCKETSALE

RM:Iwin.

were

strings

of

KODAK 1 1Q size

12 E)(posures

KOOAK EKTRA I
Camera Oulfit

A smooth op era tOr Easy-touse Just a•m and shoot. No
se t!Jngs to make Sltd•ng
co ver p•o tects lens and lock s
shutter to prevent acc tden tal
e&gt;&lt;posure _ Inc ludes !Jim and
ll• pllash.
~

TelaEktra 1

pearl s .

Presented besides those named were honored Masons, and
50 year members. Ruby Diehl
and Roberta K. Mindiing,
those with former grand appointments and past matrons
of other chapters. Helen
Johnson and Ruby Diehl were
the sunshine pages with the
collection to go to the OF.S
Endowment Fund.
Mrs. Erlewine and Mrs.
Kennedy ha nd le d the

You 've got
the moves.
Pedwin's gol the loo~ .
Tall heels. Platform soles.
Slick leather.
in
Brown

by Science Fair ®

4·KEY MEMORY
CALCULATOR
EC-243 by Radio Shack

b)' Mlcronla ~

SHOE BOX.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Middleport.
Ohio
~ ea Jh e r

relers lo uppers

Smelly gorbuge

disposal

World's first and only kitchen
range · the speed of a
cquntertop
m1crowave oven
and versatility
of a full size,
self cleaning
electric range.
Cook with Microwave speed and still enjoy
all the delicious results of traditional
cooking_ Only from Caloric ... the
sensational Microwave &amp; Electnc Range.
ME combines a full700 watts of Microwave
cooking power with.Electric baking and
broiling in a full size, full meal oven.
Select Variable Microwave Power from
20 to 100%. Relax, too ... ME is self
cleaning. See ME to believe ME.

by Radio Shack

AM BIKE RADIO
WITH HORN

...

CUT 13%

~

Everything you
need for 75-in-1
proJects! Req . 9V. 2
"AA ' batt s.

'

FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-$TATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN :
.
Mon., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til5:00
Thursday Til12. Noon
Friday Until&amp; P. M,
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason . W.·Va.

1095

65·6t8A

SAVE'30
40 CB channels.' AM /
FM. emerg./weather
service on UHF, VHF
Hi / Lo. Req . 4 "C" batts.
M ol.,.ht VHF ! UH F use rn some locahlrllS

mar be unlawlul m r111qune
Atk loca l authontre s

il

Reg.
1495

permn

SAVE 26%
Error / memory keys.
Easy to read digit ron
(lisplay. With 2 " AA "
batis.

95~:~..

26

22-203

95 ~;~.

15

-,

t2-t 93

SAVE 10%

SAVE 11%

30,000 ohms / volt,
27 ranges . 4 '!,'' me ·
ter . With leads/ bans.

Fits any handlebar.
Push -button horn. 3"
safety reflector. Req.
2 "C" batts.

~ ~

140;·

,,.:It

Caloric pu.ts more in America's kitchens.
Beauty .00 ecooomy with
~roven Caloric automatic
pilotless ignition.

'

MASON FURNITU/RE

.........

...-.... ...
......

:C...n
·
•,
_ ,
~ ... .,

Reg.22 95

Pomeroy, Ohio

RLP359-30"Gas RanKf'
• Automatic Pilotless
Ignition • Keep-Wann Olll!n
System • Black Glass Olll!n
Door • Tri-Se~ &amp;mer
Cootrols • Radial Clock
• and mu'h more.

·

Con~~ f~tures
II"~ ., Ca~
quahty •i«tnc rilnst".
EJPJ64-JO"Eiectric bnst"

• Cootiriuous Cleaning
Broiler/O.en • Tih-'f!JP
Cooktop • AutomatiC
Timed O.en • High-~.
Snap·Out Su1ace Units
• Infinite HeatControls
• Electric Clock

Caloric p00 triM' in Amftic.l's A:irdrm.

CALOR ICe
Calonc Cor poral ron • fODton Pa. 1ffl2

SMART SANTAS SHOP THE SHACK ® . .. MOST SWRES OPEN LATE NIGHTS ' T!L CHRISTMAS!

Most items

also available at

Rodio Shock

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

D•alera.
look 1or thil
sign in your

neighborhood. . ._ _ _ _ __

ljA DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIViDUAL STORES

•

·

12 Explsure

THE

by Archer Road Patrol ~

--

KODAK 126 size

film box

;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;

2195

ELECTRONIC
MULTITESTER

-

lKoda~

'123

SAVE 26% ON VIDEO FUN!
TV Scoreboard

~imsm~
film box

Buill - Ill autO manual
Squash, hockey ,
t a p e player. 1 0" ta ll
practice. tenni s.
J.60·3060
spea kers se p. up to 1o· . . Req . batts.
Reg. 29.,
Compa ct for do rms .

• Req. 4 " C " batts.

1101&gt;-E. Main

.

Pistol , remote control. Target, pr~c­
tice , hockey,
squash. skeet. ten-

8-TRACK/AM/FM STEREO SYSTEM

CUT
~~?; 20%

Open EvetiingsN. 2nd Ave.
till
Christmas
. .
Middleport, 0.

SAVE 25%

1164

Reg .

44 -841

95
31

GIFT WRAPPING FREE
Undecided! Give A Gilt Certificate.

Blank Tape by Realistic

.

.

l

RECORD THE SOUNDS OF CHRISTMAS!

CTR· 42 by Realistic

'

,------~

.

',-

WAKE TO AM/FM DIGITAL ALARM ClOCK

Clarinette®-12 by Realistui~c~;;;;;~---;;;:--------

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

SHOP

~

2t .t544

95

LAB KIT WITH SPACE AGE PROJECTS!

.____9..92--7·~-4..._

•',

' I

• 12V DC adapter, S6_ 95
t 4·844

II

~

95

SAVE

A birthday party was held

"
•

TRC-431 by Realistic

Shawn Whittekind

~

_._::~.:~:~::.__ .J

'

c'

• LAB-53 Three -Speed Changer

no more than 0.5 '% total

. Rubin Campbell. Nt•xt
meetinJ: wlll be IK,ld on .Jan.
15 with l~ highway safely
mnunittee to have the program.

Observance
Point View
Cable TV
·oHfces Will
"
~; Close At 12:00
.."
Noon
Friday
'
December
22nd.
'Parleys
'"
•
re
tzves
Ia
host
..

.!

harmonic dislOrtion

/Due To The

Holid.a y

•

BASE CB GOES MOBILE TOO!

l

~

• TwO Minimus• -7 Two· Way
Speahr Systems in .7'lt6"

CaSt Aluminum Enclosvres

chtmnel. minimum RMS at 8

! 9t~ t

.
•

• STA -7 AMI FM Stereo Receiver.

----~·--~·-y

PH. 992-2644

••
.'
T

•FHA &amp;VA

FLORIST

-

•.

l

MODULAR
HOMES

You r ·· Ex1.ra Touch "
Florist Sinc e 1957

~

•

Anita Lee, Pageville, sang
with guitar accompaniment.
A group of carolers was inGENE RIGGS
vited inside to sing.
'
"OHIO CAPTAIN"
Ardis Waggoner was in
Kenneth E. (Gene) Riggs,
charge of games won by Sher- with offices at 104 Mulberry
rie Boggs and Bessie Ave., Pomeroy, has qualified
Graham. Minnie ML'Grath, as "Ohio Captain" lor the
vice president, presided over month of November wlth the
the activities and an- John Hancock Mutual Life
nouncements. Linda Calhoun, Insurance Co. He qualified
Route I, Rutland, was the for this distinction In the
winner in a drawing on a month of November ln
quilt.
competing with 106 John
Quarterly birthdays were Hancock associates
observed with Eliza Powell throughout the state of Ohio.
receiving a gift for being the
oldest.
.Favors were donated by . - - . - - - - • - -..
two local banks and an insurance agent. Next meeting
will be held Jan. 23 at 7 p.m.
"t thee hall with quilling to be
held on Tuesday and Thurs- .
day from 9a .m. to 3p.m.
By_
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Turner, Mr ' and
All American
Mrs. Earl McGrath, the Rev.
and Mrs. Otis Chapman, Mr.
MEETS
and Mrs. Claire Waggoner,
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley,
•OHIO BUILDING
Eliza Powell, Franees Sampson, Louise Eshelman, Nellie
CODES
Horgan, Margaret Douglas.
Bessie Graham, Dorothy
Boggs, Sherrie Boggs, Ora
SEE OUR LOT
Carsey and granddaughter,
Anita Lee.
MODEL TODAY

r

"

_,

•'
••

Sunday attendance
honored by holiday dinner .

Eastern Star installs
worthy matron, patron

jB&amp;PW meet, hold party

\
·-

HURRY! ONLY A FEW DAYS ·
LEn! MOST STORES OPEN
CHRISTMAS EVE, 18-6 PM

'

f

!
,.J
I
.\

'

See what cooking is cominll to at:

�__ , ·- -..-

6-The Daily S.,ntinel. Middleport-Pt1meroy, 0. , Thursday. O.•c. 21. 1978

MILWAUKEE (UPI) The first aMual Henry Aaroo
Award as baseball's Man of
the Year goes to slugger Jim
Rice of the Boston Red Sox,
flle Milwaukee chapter of the
Baseball Writers of America
said Wednesday.
Aaron, the all-time home
run champion , will present

Bradbury Club visits
veterans last week
A

vis it

to

Veteran s

Memorial Hospital with gi ft~
for the children ami tray
favors for other patients wa's
made by members of the
Bradbury Variety Club
Thursday .
The members ·mel at the
horne of Mrs . Bernice Winn
and then went to the Mei gs
Inn for a holiday dinner
before going to the hospital.
They look Chrishnas stockings filled with coloring books
and crayons as well as sluffed
animals for the children, and
tray favors which they had
made for the other patients.
Returning to the Winn
hoine, the group enjoyed a
dessert couree and a gift exchange., Attending were Mrs .
Win!) , Mrs. Evelyn Murray ,
Mrs . Oleva Cntterill , Mrs .

Arline Davis, Mrs. Rose CArsun, Mrs. Dixie Sayre, Mrs.
Carolyn Searlt•s.
Amy
S.arles. Hnd Mrs. Virginia
Whitlatch.

a

Delight everyone o n yoll
Christmas list wi th an un·
forg ettable gift! Send
FTD Season's Greeter'"
llouqu&lt;t, fffitivey ~~il

hospital

statement
sai d.
The
statement said Morga n, 59,
had a double coronary bypass
for coronary heart disease
and the replacement of the
mitral valve in flle heart.

· in a n excl usive

marbleized pedestal bowl.
Call or stop in today. We
can send your gift
selection s almost
. anywhere, the
FI'Dway.

...

.

-- ·

"'

SEND ONE...TAKE ONE HOME .

OURITD

BOUQUET

MEIGS INN

.

"
"

, .,
..
'
.,

With Cash
'n Cany

The traditional gift exchange party of the Xi Gamm a Mu Chapter of Bela
Sigina Phi Sorority was held
at the home of Mrs . Annie
Chapman , High Street, Tuesday evening.
The hostesses, Mrs. Chap-.
man, Mrs. Carol Adams,
Mrs. Martha McPhail and
Mrs. Maurisha Nelson served
a buffet turkey dinner. The
homemade mints were made

NEW YORK (UP!)- Jack
Nicklaus, who won his record
18th major championship this
year by capturing flle British
Open, was named Wednesday
Sportsman of flle Year by
Sports Illustrated.
Ironically, the award to the
world's greatest golfer, his
first such designation by the

THE INN PLACE

ma gazine,

came

by Mrs. Carolyn Grueser.
A thank you note was read
from Mrs. Roberta Maiden,
along with one from the
Meigs County Extension Of.
fi ce for a donation to the
Canters CAve 4-H Camp projeel. It was reported that
Mrs. Marilyn Anderson and
Mrs. Martha McPhail won
the door prizes at the couple's
party.

Mrs.

CHRISTMAS ARRANGEMENTS
EXCLUSIVELY DUDLEfS
Carnations , Holly, Pine and
Christmas Ornanments, some
with candles.

.'

20% OFF

'

with cash 'n carry, similar
illustration . No wire orders.

Anderson, · service

chairman , thanked the
members for their donations
for needy families at
Christmas . ll was noted that
Sandy Sargent had . a new
baby, and for the cultural
program, Sue Zirkle and Libby Sayre pr ese nted
Chri;tmas games.

to

.

...
.,

..

59 N, Second St.
992-5560

.•

when

Nicklaus is curtailing his
tournament appearances .

•
•

......,

0

..'

.

MAKE HIS CHRISTMAS SPECIAL WITH LONDON FOG

Available At These Area

.,

.LOnDOn 'FOG'

.,'
~

I

a·

Dealers

. Gallipolis, Ohio

•

New York Clothing
House

Pomeroy, Ohio
Carters Menswear

Pl Pleasant, W. Va.

TONKA TRUCKS
.ttORSTMAN

p~rfect g lfl tor the man who seems not to
need an ything! {And ll's t he sm11rlnl wtJy to

beat the chill of 111 norther!) London

Fog's

luxurious. zip-out plush-tined outerwear wil t
wrAp him up!

• · Dougl,u clinic tnnchc:oat : British Tan only.
Poly-cotlon shell and ~ ton acrylic pile liner .

London Fot Umbrella S9 .00

SIU

b. O)(boW with fur coli• : Natural or bla ck..
Dacron polyester twill pl ush lined and collared.
S!OUO.
c. ADs: Natural Oaeth Ckl th poly-cott on shell
lind acrylic p ile liner 141! .00.

eCOOKWEAR

SETS

,....
"

'

..

eCROCK POTS

.

••

I MERRY
~

w

I FROM:
•
W

CHRISTMASIw

RIVERSIDE

w

i

V.W.-AMC-JEEP

W

"The Dealer That C.rn Aboul Quality"

11

111977 PLYMOUTH 1973 CHEVROLET 11
IMPAlA ~
GRAN FURY
"Loaded". Extra dean,

- ~ ~~~~ 1 one owner. Used

•3995

11

2 Door coupe, low mii.S,
A-c, PS, PB, Don't min
this one ,

'1295

11

1 1975 DODGE
1 CRESTWOOD

1978 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

11
~

Low miles, auto .. A-C.

WAGON

CruiSe Control; till
11 wheel, PS, 318, V-8, A·C

AM ·FM radio, cloth
interior .

~

w
11
11

I

in·

sidiaries include: The Third

transaction will be revealed
in a letter to shareholders of
The Commercial and Savings
Bank and complete details
will be included in a proxy .
statement.
President Cornell of The
Commercial and Savi ngs
Bank, issued a statement on
the proposed affiliation. He
said, "In the face of growing
complexities
and
technological changes in the
banking
industry,
the
leadership and assistance of
First National Cincinnati
Corporation will give added
strength and capability to our
bank ." Cornett emphasized
that the entire present Board
of Directors, officers and
staff of the bank will continue
to serve the Gallia County
community as they have in
the past .
First National Cincinnati
Corporation , with assets of
$1.5 billion is anchored by The
Fir st National Bank of
Cin cinnat i. Other sub-

SEEKS DIVORCE
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Patricia Cleland;
Rutland, filed suit for divorce
against Wayne C.leland,
Rutland.
The ma!Tiage of Carlos
Ermel Stepp and Loretta Joy
Stepp was dissolved.

Circleville, Ohio; The First ·
National Bank of lronton,
Ir onton , Ohio ; The F irst
National Bank &amp; Turst
Company, Troy, Ohio and
The Miami Depo sit Bank,
Yellow Springs, Ohio.

LIFE SEN1:ENCE
SANTA ANA, Calif. (UP!)
- John B. Tidwell, 30, an ex·
Marine from Warren, Ohio,
has been sentenced to prison
for life for killing an 18-yearold youth in 1973.
Superior Co urt Judge
Walter Charamza sentenced
Tidwell Tuesday after
rejecting defense motions for
a new trial.
Tidwell was convicted in
Octob er of fir st degr ee
murder in the Dec. 13, 1973,
slaying of Harold Rinehart.
Prosecutor Paul Meyer said
Rinehart was killed for his
one-third share of a $100,000
burglary in Port Orford, Ore. ,
one week before his death.

NEWHI-LOW
YORK TEMPS
(UPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Wednesday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 89
degrees at Aliee, Texas.
Today 's low was 10 degrees
below zero at Idaho Falls,
Idaho.

.

I :AT THIS TIME, ALL OF US AT RIVERSIDE I

'

'6495

Cornmillsion, while Pettit, a
lawyer with the firm of
Musgrave, Vinson, Meek, Rife
and Peoples, represents
Power Distribution Products,
Inc.
Building architect is Larry
E . Ellis.
The
Mason
County
Development Aufllority is a
n011-profit organization which
is composed of a board of
directors of 21 members.
Robert Wingett serves as
president , William Knight ,
vice president; G. A. Gibbs,
secretary
and
Charles
Lanham, treasurer.
.--------

'Hubbard's- Greenllou:;..
Syracuse. 0 .

992· 1776

Potted Poinsettas
$1.00 to $6.50
Hanging Poinsettias
Tubs, 30 plus blooms
$10.00
Foliage Plants
3" to 10" 50c to $5 .00
HANG! NG BASKETS 4" to
10 "
1

1.25 to 15.00

~·~~J~l"
~

/' Christmas ·-.;::
,.,..
/
-.., :
Suggestions

Cl \
..,....

I

\
IJ') \

\:)~
CJ

JI:I

\
'

I

Most Sizes

i

. ,.

25 and

/.

Opton 9-5 Mon ., TUe!t., ::tili. /.,....;
Fridaynighttil&amp;p m. h

--===::.:.:=:==.;.=..::~
-'-

IB~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~g

FREE

Gin

CERTIF.ICATE
Drawing
Friday, 12 : 00 Noon
Dec . 22, 1978

LET US HELP COOK DURING THE BUSY HOLIDAY SEASON,
AND SAVE YOU MONEY AT THE SAME TIME. SAVE 25' ON
OUR HOLIDAY ·sHOPPERS SPECIAL •• THE 2·PIECE DINNER
BOX INCLUDES MASHED POTATOES AND GRAVY, COLE

I V.W.-AMC-JEEP WOULD LIKE TO WISH I
...
11 ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS I
I
A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A JOYOUS I
...."..
I
......,• I11 UpperNmY~R.
Route 7
-.
I .
·
I
1
·c;alllpolls, 0.
1
•••

I

l~..Jl~~IJtO••••I

SLAW AND A DINNER ROLL

Tookies Fashions
rookie's Fashions in New Haven has
that special gift for that special
someone for Xmas. rookie's
Fashions arE! open on Friday nights
til 7:30 for you working gals .

~
..

-

--

Jo11kie~

'Jo.JhionJ

\

1

GIFTS

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Mary
McCalllm, Minersville;
Catherine Stefanshi, Shade;
Sra WIIIIB, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED
Charlotte Conley, John
Fisher.

I

HANDBAGS

Our Two-Piece Dinner-Box!

The Holzer Clinic Ltd. · in
Gallipolis and Its Jackson
County Branch in Wellston
will be closed Monday, Dec.
25, in observance of the
Christmas Holiday .
In case of an emergency
during the holiday period,
physicians of the Holzer
Cllnlc Ud. staff will be on
duty in the Emergency Room
(Phone 446-5201) of the Holzer
Medical Center Hospital to
handle emergency cases
only .
Holzer Clinic Ltd. will
resume normal operations on
Tuesday morning , Dec. 26.

',

•JUSTIN
LEATHER

Holiday Shoppers Special

J

,.

Hollclay Shop Enry Night Til Chrl1tma (Except Sunday)

F urt her

our plant in the Industrial
Park at Huntington, but after
a routine contact by our attorney, Tom Pettit, with officials of the Mason County
Development Aufllority, we
were very impressed by the
attitude and interest of the
local officials."
Roberts added that the
principal owners of Power
Distribution Products, Inc.
have 104 combined years of
experience in the marketing,
sa les,
engineering and
manufacturing of mining
power distribution products.
The firm anticipates having
30 persons employed by the
end of the first year and over
50 workers on the job within
three years. Types of crafts to
b.e
employed
by
the
manufacturer are welders,
draftsmen ,
e l ectric a!
assemblers and sheet metal
fabricaators.
·
Attorney Ron Stein of the
Point Pleasant firm of Shaw
and Stein handled the legal
work on the loans and
Property sale for the
Development Authority, an
arm of the Mason County

11

"

.
•MIXERS

authorities.

formation concerning th e National Bank of Circleville,

Mason County has received
an early Christmas present in
the form of an announcement
of a million dollar industry
locating in the nearly complete Industrial Park in the
TNT area .
The new industry, Power
Distribution Products, Inc.,
will be situated on a six-acre
lracl of the 60.7 acres Mason
County Industrial Park,
located near the .Fairgrounds.
The firm is paying $45,000 for
the land.
•
Newton Roberts, Jr .,
president of the business,
announced Wednesday the
company has already contracted Childers Construction
Company, Huntington, to
build a 14 ,000 sq uare ft.
building to house the plant.
Constru ction is begin ning
Immediately .
Power Distribution Prodducts, Inc. will manufaclure
equ ipment that supplies
electric to coal mining
machinery .
Among
th
machinery to be built will be
portable ouUioor substations,
high voltate switch gears,
power centers, rectifiers and
motor starting equipment.
Other officials of the
compa ny, in addition 'to
a re
Donald
Roberts,
Neuhousr, vice , president.
engineeri ng; J ohn Talentinow,
vice
presidentoperations and Tracy Kitchen ,
vice president-sales.
Construction of the new
facility is bein g financed
through loans from the
Frmers
Home
Administration, in co n ~
ju nction
with
Ci tizen s
Na tional Ba nk of Point
Plea sant, and the West
Virg i nia
Econom i c
Development Authority.
Roberts, in formally announcing construction of the
new plant, praised the Mason
County Development
Authority, President Charles
Lanham and oth er members
of the board of the Citizens
National Bank , Farmers
Home Ad min istration offi cials,
West
Virginia
Econ omi c Development
Authority and Point Pleasant
Mayor John Musgrave for
their efforts to make the plant
a r eality.
"Originally," said Roberts,
·: we had intended to construct

I
l1

..•

~

The announcement was
made jointly today by
William N. Liggett, Chairman and Chief Executive
Offi cer of First National
CinclMati Corporation and
U. A. Cornett, President of
The GaUipolis Commercial
and Savings Bank.
Commenting on the announcement, Liggett noted
the similarity of banking
philosophy between the two
institutions. He said , "We are
especially pleased to have
this opportunity to enter into
this relationship with The
Commercial and Savings
Bank. It will strengthen a
long-standing association and
benefit
both
will
organizations." Th e Com·
mercia! and Savings Bank of
Gallipolis m aintains a
correspondent bank i ng
relationship with The First
National Bank of Cincinnati,
an affiliate of First National
Cincinnati Corporation.
The agreement in principle
is subject to executing . a
definite purchase agreement
and the approval of the
director s of First National
CinciMati Corporation and
the shareholders of The.
Commercial and Savings
Bank as well as regulatory

i

,

•
,,

The Commercial &amp; Savings
Bank of Gallipolis has
reached an agreement in
principle to become an affiliate of First National
Cin c innati Corporation,
CinciMati, Ohio.

Clinic to close

•I •2a95

.

.."

Gallipolis bank affiliated
with Cincinnati organization

~~-~--------------,
W
Last Chance For A
Won December 25

I1

,_ ,,

I

GOING OVER PAPERWORK - Newton Roberts, Jr ., president of Power Distribution
Producls. Inc ., the first firm to locate in Mason County's new Industrial Park , left, goes
over paperwork with Allorney Tom Pettit and Charles Lanham, .treasurer of the Ma son
County Development Authority, far ri ght.

''quarr_el, m~ke up , have sex;

•••

'

I

By TIMOTHY KENNY
quarrel, make up, have sex."
SALEM, Ore. (UP!) - The In addition, said Burt, Mrs.
attorney for a man accused of Rideout once told her
raping his wife has told jurors husband she was raped by
he intends to prove the another man, later denying
woman "has a severe sexual the story.
She alllo told Rideout that
problem" and that the
publicity from the case is a "she had a lesbian sexual
usource of gratification, to relationship," Burt said.
her.
"She told John that and then
John J. Rideout of abandoned it."
The defense attorney said
Silverton, Ore. is the first
man in the country to stand he " intends to prove this
trial for raping his wife while young lady has a severe
they were living togefller as a sexual [X'Oblem. She's had It
married couple. Greta for a loog time ." Among
Rideout, 23, has filed for those problems, he said, are
divorce since the alleged rape sexual fantasies .
''The position we are taking
Oct. 10.
Defense attorney Cl!arles is that this entire incident has
Burt told jurors in opening been a source of gratification
remarks Wednesday the to Greta . She's In . the
couple's marTiage was an limelight, she enjoys the
unstable one with a history of position," Burt said.

..

' .

.FOR THE
FAMILY

MIS:
Family counseling might be a· better solution here . Call a
Teen Hot Line or your Mental Health Association . Perhaps someone there can help you persuade your parents that you all
need outside help.- SUE

I

•
".,
.,

•

•TOY *Guitars
*Guns
*Holster Sets
•PRORA RACE CARE SETS
•TYCO TRAIN SETS

d . The Holll"11wOrth: Natural poly-coHon shell
with hood. warm and cozy acrylic pill! liner.
190.00.

..•

.,

TOYS

The

,

.

•

•FISHER PRICE
Will kttphlm warm end dry

...,,

..•
...'

DOLLS

1.01\DOR FOC'

RAP:
I read in the paper about a mother and father who asked the
judge for a divorce from their daughter - and got if. (They
couldn 'I handle her .)
So why can 'I teen-agers gel a divorce from their parents if
the kids can 'I handle the situation at home• -MISERABLE
MISERABLE:
They ca n, they can 1
But the teen must prove ·dangerous parental neglect or
mi streatment - in court - before she is placed in a foster
home .
Are you prepared for this?- HELEN

Attorney says woman
has 'sexual problem'

·Traditional party held

ALL
LEGAL
BEVERAGES
SOLD

\-

.

.

A LIVING, WVING HOLIDAY GIIT

lNG
WEDS., THURS., FRI.
&amp; SAT. NIGHTS AT THE

Be adult enough to discuss the problem with your aunt and
unde. Tell them you understand about the added burden and
you want to lessen it by helping wherever possible in exch~nge
for the first caring family you've ever had.
With three small children to care for, your aunt will appreciate part-time baby-sitting and housework, and this won 'I
make you a slave but an older sister who does her share.
A down-deep talk may show you that you 're needed and loved after all. -HELEN AND SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN: Your relatives should visit the Welfare
Agency. If their funds are low, perhaps "aid for dependent
children" could be arranged.

14 Cash 'n Carry

SEASON'S G~ETEK

A LEITER FROM A 'THROWAWAY'
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I guess I'm one.of those "throwaways" people read about.
Mom and I never got along too well. Once when she was mad
she SHid I was the reason she couldn 'I get married again:
" Who wants to take on a brat like you?"
Well, I'm not the best, but I used to try. Some of my teachers
even liked me.
After another bi g fight, Mom sent me to my almt's and uncle 's. She lol•! me. they said it was okay, but when I got there , 1
found out she d Wired them I was corning after I got on the bus .
Then sh~ moved and didn't leave a forwarding address.
My aunt and uncle are nice, but they have three little
children and a small house and not all that much money. I
heard them talking last night. They don't know what to do with
me. My aunt said something about, " I could never throw her
out. .. ''
l
So I guess l 'lltake off and solve their problem. But where
can I go• -ANOTHER THROWAWAY (15)
DEAR THROWAWAY :

Don't run~

'
1

the overall category , Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Skinner' residenMrs. Bob Fisher, North tial, and the Royal Crown
Third, first, and Mr. and Mrs. BoHling Co. and King
Paul Davis , Russell St. , se- Builders, businesses.
cond; in the door or window
Prizes were poinsettias
category, Mr. and Mrs. donated by Hubbards
Michael Gerlach, Grant St. , Greenhouse, Syracuse. ·The
first, and Mr. and Mrs. contest was sponsored by the
William Morris, South s.,. Middleport
Am a t e ur
cond, second; and in the Gardeners and the Mid''tl''ft'ft'ft'D't:P secular category , Mr. and dleport Garden Club. Others
· Mrs. Bernard Fultz , first, and attending the social hour
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell, were Mrs. Juanita Bachtel,
second, both of Fair lane Miss Nellie Zirkle, Mrs.
Drive.
Gra ce Pratt, Mrs . Elizaheth
Honorable mentions were Burkett , Mrs. Dorothy
given by Mr . and Mrs . Ray- Roller. and Mrs. Ruth Armund Ba~er and Mr. and nold.

By Helen and Sue Hottel

•,•,

celebrate flleir aruma! Christmas party. Santa presented
cany canes to over 100 senior citizens.

and then returned to the
home of Mrs. Emogene
Crooks for a soda! hour and
refreshments.
Winners in the religious
category were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Smart, Lincoln St., fi rst,
and Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Boyles, Oliver St., second ; in

Generation Rap

•.'

17.50

Prizes were awarded in the
annual home decorating con·
test following the judging
'tuesday night by Mrs. James
O'Brien and Mrs. Nancy
Reed, Pomeroy.
The judges were driven
around town by Miss Judy Arnold to view the decorations

Industrial park lands
million dollar _firm

·:-.

.·•·
·.·.

1

VISIT FROM SANTA - Santa Claus paid an early visit to
tlle Meigs Senior Citizens Center Tuesday to help

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Dec. 21. 1978

•.•.

GIFT/OF

LOS ANGELES (UP! ) UCLA Afllletic Director J. D.
Mo·rgan
successf ully
underwent
open heart
surgery Wednesday at UCLA
Medical Center.
" He came through the
surgery fine and is in stable

condition ,"

..

·the award to Jtlce at the
chapter's annual Diamond
Diruler Jan. 14. "I played
baseball 23 Y\!BrS and I
haven't bad anything touch
me as this has, " said Aaron.
"This ranks up there with all
my honors ... and meaM I can
help preserve my ties with
Milwaukee."

.

ONLY $1.45 REGULAR P~ICE 1.70
Good T~rough Sunday, December 24
1

�J

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 .. Tlmrsda~·, Dt~·. 21. 197R

Livestock Report

ESTATE

OF

C E C IL

HIGGINBOTHAM ,

COLUMBUS ( UPi l
Tuesday's Ohio livestock
auctions report :
Compared
with
last
Tuesday , slaughter steers
steady to - . 50 higher ,
slaughter heifers .5()-1 higher
at Washingto"n C.H. but .75-1
lower
at
Damascus,
slaughter cows steady to .50
lower at Washington C.H. but
3 higher at Damascus ,
slaughter bulls steady to .50
high! and feeder cattle
steady.
Slaughter steers: choice 24, 900-1200 lb . 54-56.85, high
dressing 57-57 85; choice 3-4,
95()-1250lb. 54-.'i5.50 ; good and
low choice 2-4, 875-1250 lb . 5355; good 2-3 825-1225lb. 49.5()54 .25.
Slaughter heifers : choice 24, 85()-1100 lb. 53-56, several
56.50 57.00; good and low
choice 2-4 ; 875-950 lb .. 51-53 ;
good 2-3, 75()-1050 lb . 47.50-51
Slaughter bulls : l 's 1200-2100
lb. 52.50-57 ; 1's and 2's 95()2000 lb' 45' 75-50.50
Calves returned lD farm :
medium and large frame 17()280 lb . 61-72; individual250 lb .
78.
Vealers: prime 175-285 lb .
8&amp;-97 ; choice and prime 7:&gt;-135
lb. 72-95 ; choice 18()-220 lb. 7481; good and choice 74-110 lb .
59.5()-72; good 16()-275 lb. 4953.50.
F eeder catt le: choice and
prime steer 300;550 lb. 62-73
675-885 lb . 53-56.60 ; standard
600-aOO lb . 47 .5()-51.75; choice
and prime heifers 300-565 lb.
53-60; good 37(&gt;.€00 lb. 45.5()58.
Hogs: barrows and gilts
.5()-1.00 higher, sows .5()-4.50
higher , feeder pigs steady
bars 1 higher .
Barrows and gilts: US 1-2,
200-245 lb . 50.8()-51.30, few 5252.10.
Sows : US l.J 300-450 lb.
43.35-45; 45~0 lb. 42.1()46.50, few 47.25-48
Boars: 4,0()-650 lb 34-35
Feeder pigs: US 1-2., 2()-30
lb. 10.5()-24 per head; 4()-50 lb .
33.5()-40; 6().3() lb . 44.5()-55,
Sheep: slaughter lambes 2
higher.
Slaughter lambs : choice
and prime 85-108 lb. wooled

M.

Feeder lambs: chioce and
fancey 5()-60 lb. 62-70.

DECEASED

On Decem ber 18 , 1978, in

Notic es

WANT AD
CHARGES

the Meigs County Probate
Cour t , Cas e No _ 215 41 , Co nnie
Witt , 2540 W i ndag e Dr .•
F airfield , Ohio 45014 was
appointed Ad m inistra trix of
the estat e of Cec il H iggin botha m , deceased , lat e of R .
R 1, D ex t er . Oh io .
Manning D . W ebs ter
Probat e Judge~
Clerk.
( 12) 21. 28 (1) 4, 3fc

G UN Cl ub mf"'l:'t•ng ON
IH ., 30 p 1n . flcr tion ol 11 l
f.rl:' r s Du ('~ $20 mu st b~ paid
belnn· Jo11 1.

i:i W,or•b ur· l lrult·r·
t ':t:-lr

J.Z.}.

\.1-1
1.50
I. All
.1 .00

1 1la .1
~ d ; n .~

j, J, , ~'

,;, Ia; .,

J:;u-h

f'hm'j!t'

WIII"C / !1\"t' l"

1.!10
:t25

:1.75

\Ill' lllllllJlllllll /5

wun l~ 1 .~ ~

t"t•nts Ill'!" 1\'Hn l 1"-'1" tla .~·.
,\tJ, 1"!11(1((1(~ 11tllt'l" lhilll I"!IWii'!"U\iVl'
dn)·... wtl l LK· dwn!dl 111 tht' I day

PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF MYRTLE B .
Mc BRIDGE ,
DECEA SED

1"/l!t '.

Cas!:' N o . 225 67

f'anl ,,f Thnnks ami
{ n •nts JH.'t· wunl. $;1.00

lr 1 llll'llltln".

tll•lllliU)

NOTICE OF

I IUIIIII IIIIJ I. ("a:, h Ill fldY!illt "t' .

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY

,\1, htl1• Hurnt• s: tl&lt;•;o.; mnl Yard .!i&lt;tlt•:-:

On De ce mb er 18, 197B, in
the Me igs cou nty Pr oba t e

l"t" ~JIII I I ~ tiJit• fur 11\111"&lt;' \ hall Olll' lllt"UI"·

Manning D . W ebster
P r oba te Judge Clerk

n•r t

tn ~t'!" lt ~&gt;ll

Pl11•ut• !19"l-215fi

( 12 1 2 1. 28 ( l l 4, Jtc

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

k nown pl ace of r esidence was
Ro ute 2 , Box 69 , Jamesvi lle ,
North Caro lina 27846 ; i s
hereby noti fi ed that on the 1st
day of November. 1978 ,
Clifford G riffith , bei ng the
plaintiff, fil ed hi s co mplaint
against her as defen d ant in
th e Cou rt of Co mm on Pleas ,
Me i g s Cou nty , Ohio . Case No .
17,0 11. praying for a divorce
f rom said Cec il ia Grif f i th on
the groun ds of gross neglect
of duty a nd extreme c ruelty ,
plaintiff also p ra ys fo r other
p r oper re l ief ; sai d ca use wi ll
b e ser for h ea r ing
on
Febr uary lOt h , 1978.
Cl i fford Gr i ffith,
Pla intiff
! 12J 7, 14, 2 1. 281 114, 11. 6tc

___ V'!_a_nt~l!_ f(J ~uy__

~P . M .
Fmla~· afl t'I"IIIK I/t

Notic.~
e.._
s _

GUN SHOO( ~o c ine Voluntee r
F i•-~ Dept_ !:very Saturday 6:30
prn a t their build ing in Bo shon .
facto ry choke guns on ly.
B A ilt:Y ' S
STORE ,
33 1
N 1t1d Ave ·., Middleport . Ohio.
Will be l lose d Dec . 2S to Jon 2.

- - -Auction
- - - - -( H~I ~ lM A ~ Aurli an Sale .
t, i 7 rm - Drawing onrf rloor
p• irl:' o r Ohio Ri ve r Auction S:!Y
H i~ h ~' - Mirldleron , Ohio

I A~1

Friday, Dec. 22

ASTRO·GRAPH

~ \}-!Jl!Jll

·•

December 22, 1978
Expec t good things to happen
th is coming year in areas
where you h ave planted your
see ds . Dame Fortune will

reward your effort s with an
e~t:tra lauc h of happiness .

CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

P .S. , P. B., ni ce car, air.

Lack o f forethoug ht cou ld e re·
ate some problems for you, but
lu c k is o n your side today .
Another will intervene . You ' ll
come out better in the long run .
Fi nd out the secrets of getting
a long with o th ers in your 1979

As1ro-Graph Lel1er. Mail 50
Ce nt s for each arrd a long, se lf addre ss ed , stamped envelope

to Astro-Graph , P.O. Bo x 489 ,
Radio Ci1y Stalion , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth sign .

'1495

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19)

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES
Located on W. Va. side of
eroy -Mason Br
(304) 773-5777

TIMBE R_ POMEROY Fo re!ot Products. To p price for s.t ond ing
so w tim ber . Co li 992.5965 o r
Ke nt Hanby , 1-440 -8570 .

Take care of ob ligations early
in th e day, n o mat!er how
difficult it is fo r you . Whe n all

lhe fun begins later , you'll be
free to join in .

WANT TO buy : old 45 on d 78
pho nog ra ph
r ecor d s . Ca ll
9Q2 -b3YO or Con tact Morfin Fur ·
n it ur e.
CASH fO R junk c-ars _ Wrecker
!oer vir:e . Ft ye' s, Rutl and . Ohi o .
7-42 -1081
.
Wl: PIC K up jun k
ing junk cor s.
te ri es and
Sal vage. SH
992 -546El .

\.

WOULD LIKE to buy 4 cyl . Jeep
motor _304-773-5 b8CJ .
'

WANHO TO buy : old je w elr y .
Call 992·5262 or wr ite Kay
Cecil. 87 S. 2nd , Middle port ,

1975 DA fSUN PICKUP . Good co n dition . Good
tir es . irron .
9BS-39n .

3 AND 4 RM . furnished ond u nfu r nished
opt s .
Ph one
991-543-4 .

than
own

needs.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) All in a ll,
this i s a pretty nift y day coming
up. The one pr ob lem area on
the horizon is your tendency
toward ex travaga nce.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Seet. 22) Be
ca reful today that you aren't
too sel f- seNing . You ' ll be em barrassed la ter when peopl e
shaw they have gone ou t of

their way to be kind .
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) You
cou ld start the day ofl with
patience for tho se who don't
support your views . Later, that
old , charming, you emerges to

the delight of all.
SCORPIO {Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) A
frien d might abuse your gener-

DOWNING.C:HILDS
BRANCHMGR.

osity today . Happily , a little
later another makes up for it in
much larger measure.

. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2H You may have to hold in

check too much emphasis on
0. FFICE 992 • 2342
lhe " self" today . Go easy . The
VE,
992-2449
day
turns out in your favor
E
_ _ _ _ _...;;;.;.;;,;.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . anyway.
!NEWSPAPER EN TE RPRISE ~SSN . )

'

For Rent

TAURUS (April 20-Mo~ 20) It 's
best lhat yo u don 't depend on

you'll slill have more
enough time for your

._... ,CN" . to
c:...•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

SNOW
TIRE SALE

l wo bedroom. two lu ll bath s.
b:tro n ice on in!o ide
Col i
60i' -39 01 or see on IH Y Sout h
Tup per !. l--'loins .

Hotpoint Appli_ances.

Reasonable Prices
Available
Phone 742-2029
11 16.['

~

•·····

Call. ..

19th Century Service with
1:0th Century Know- How .
Specialiling in
woodstove. Oil Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone : 742-3110
Kim White, Proprietor

Phone 992-2181

-

-

Fireplace , su n deck , P~ acr e
wooded lot 614 -667 -3890 . Tup ·
per s Plain!. .

.

TWO 8t:DH OOM . kitchen fu rn i shed. opt _ Col i bet o re 8 om

992-2288.
RENTERS ASSISTANCE for Sen ior
Citizen!.. You may be able to
li ve in our aportment fo r less
tha n $50. Vi llage Monor .Aport ·
m e nts. 992 -"1787 .
EFr: . APT . in Middleport . Sui table
for one ." Kay Cec il. 992 -5267
_e ,_en:in_gs. . . _ . ~ _ _ . _
12 ,.. 00 mobile home neor Racine
991 -5858.

HOMESITI: S l or so l e, I acre ond
up. Middlepor t. near Rutl and
Coli 992-7 Mil .
THH I:E BEDROOM !rome home in
Middl epo r t. Call 992-3 457 .
.
- . .
fARM ~O R sol e . House . 2 bar ns
traile r. Large pond . 10 ocre!o or
H?ocres . 741 -2566.

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

- -

.

. .

For Sale
ST AM P CO LLI:CTORS and Oeol e rs .
1903 . 1906 . 2' Stomp5 . 2' Storn p
rntnt
190 3 stamp
rar e
742 -2255 .
HU TL A ND HARDWARE . 822 Mai n
Sl. 7.42 -2255. We hove to molo. e
room l or !.pr lng merchandis e so
o il stock tn sto rP 10 per -cen t
oH _ Thi !o meo11~ selli ng sor:ne
rn e rchandi!oe a t cos t. ~a get
your Chr is tmas gi fts now . Ope11
B-9 thru (hristm o!.. No parking
pt o bl em s.
USI:D qo ,OOO BTU g un type oi l fur ·
no("(~ . 90.000 BTU LP ga s fl oo r
furn ou' wi th c-ontrol!. . 'JO go l
cabine t electric wa ter heote r
Carl Horohi ll , Tup pers Pl ains
Phonebb7 -:J400 .
PtA HAULfRS ( 8 SoiPs . l:quiprn en t now on sole . oil in ~ t o r lo­
Rn d ios and oc-ccs ~o ric s thro ugh
Chd!o lmm Open e'v~ ry dny ex ·
c-P. pt $unrlny onrf M ondoy .
EVt'l niftQ!. by
appointment .
Ohif'l .
PhOf"l"'
P tH tlond ,

fl,d.:J064 .

-

I

l'

OPPORTUNITY

MAIN lo.l.:~;:.:._.
POMEROY,

0.

5 ACRES with very nice 3
bedroom horne.
Large

kllchen

and

dining.

Fireplace . Storms. 2 car
garage .
Owners
have

moved. $32,000. Make offer.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
frame, excellent neighborhood, 3 bedrooms 1 111:1
baths, N .G. forced air heat.

Ulillty R. Asking $20,000 .
IN THE COUNTRY Several lots, 1 floor plan, J
bedrooms, forced air hea1, .
garden, barn, fruit trees.

$17,700.
70 ACRES - Newer home,
barn, corn crib, storage
bldg . Overlooks the river.

$33,SOO.
NEW A FRAME -

Close

in, 1112 baths 1 3 bedrooms,
rec . room, wood burner,

heat pump, slorage bldg.
Ulillty R. 21/zacres. $37,SOO.
WHEN'S THE BEST TIME
TO SELL? Any time is1he
ri~ht time if you can get the
CALL TODAY AND LET
US
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY.
Realtors
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
AsSociates

Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
992-2259,992-6191,992-2568

VIRGIL B. SR.~~~
992-3325
216 E. Second Street

ELWOOD BOWoRS RoPAIR -Sweeper s. looster s. iron!. . all
!.moll app liances . Law n mow er ,
ne~~:t to Stat e High way Gor og e
on Route· 7. Pho ne (014 ) 985 3825 .

•

•

•

•

0

•

o

-

·-

EX CAVATING . dozer. backhoe
and ditche r. Charles R. Hat fie ld , Bock
Hoe Se rvic e .
Rut land , Ohio. Phone 742·2008.

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
coveting .
septi c
sy stems ,
d ozer , backhoe, du mp truck ,
limestone , gravel. black top
paving , Rt . 143. Ph one 1 (614)
698 -7331 .

Street location with 4
rooms and half . bath up.

525,000.
PRIVATE YARD -7 room

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
Service. Phone 992 -2478.

Main

frame , 1 V:~ baths, all city
ulililies. 3 large bec;trooms.

51S,OOO.
3 APTS. - Income 5265 a
monlh 52S,OOO.
CITY LOCI'. TION - All
utilllles. Newly overhauled
inside and out. Bath and
gas furna ce. $17,000.

COUNTRY

HOME -

4

bedrooms, bath, 10 rooms

and level · lot for the
chlldren . 527,500.
7 ROOMS - In lown ., AII
conveniences,

bath ,

BORN

"~t..P, ~'&gt;A

AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE bee n
cancelled ? los t you r operators
liceMe? Phone 992-2143 .

,.

Yesterday's

r'·

ANGINA COMPEL

1-!AROL()

GRA"i•

40 Literary
col)ection
DOWN
4 Set at
I Attired
intervals
2,School
10 Turkish
for eleves
weight
3 Footwear
12 Is it allowed • 4 In short
supply
13 Lout
5 Remote
times
6 Syn .'s
opp.
7 Valor
8 Undertake
9Make

use: ~,. ;o·

.. '

$E:NO US

BACK?'

1
I
·\

..

·~

700-IS-6 Ply Hwg.
$37.36
700-15-6 Ply Deep Lug
'
$42.45
Mounted &amp; Bolanced Free
Phone 742-2328

..·'
...;

'

.'

..

''

Mobile Homes for sa·le
1976 NASHUA 14 x 65 3 bedroom
1", bo th , underpinn ing, $1500
and assume loon. 9.e9 -2b83 or
843 -3311.
- - - - -_,
·- - ·- - - - ·1970 Amherst 50x12 2 BH
1970 Champion b0x12 2 BR
1965 General 60)( 12 2 BR
1968 PMC 52x12 2 BR
1955 Prairie Sc hooner 28x8 t" BR
1973 Royal Embas sy b8 x14 3 BR
1959 Stor 50xl02 BR
1973 Star 60xl4 2 BR
1961:1 Star b0x12 2 BR
1970 Sylva b0x1 2 2 BR
19e8 Vill ages b0x1 2 2 BR
1964 Windsor 51)( 10 2 BR
1970 Kirkwood 12xb0 3 BR
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMo SA LE S
PT. PLEASANT, W .V A .

Denial
Greek
festival
22 Drudgery
Z4 Secluded
valley
2li Star in
Cetus
\ 26 Egyptian
, .. '· god
' ;· Z7 Japanese

Sieq!

-

19 "Chances - "

have a card
Sieq found it.
herefor4ou ,_,.,,.,
Gramp5!
somewhere.
'\;;;;~A Clovia'

Good morn';nq,

/\NO T'HE:N .:t
SENT THE Rf:GtPf: . TO
•'JETTefl fiOMEMI\fCIN&amp;"
MI\GJ\.,_1 Nf: •••

1967
hom e. lurni5 hed , J "bedr .,
wo!ohe r ond dryer . Air condi ti oned . I lot, 210ft . frontage .
S12,000. Phone 7.e2-2826 .

,I

8
;
;

~
~

•

~

MINUS 'T"Hc A~$cN\C., l

or

Services Offered
Will CAR£ for the elderly in our
hom e . Phoneq92-731 4.

News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women

Only IS.
r: 3D-Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; As The World Turns

B. 10 .
2:0&lt;1--0ne Life to Live 6, 13; 2:Jo-Doctors 3,4, 1S;
Guiding Light 8. 10.
3:()0-.CAnother World 3,4, tS; General Hospi ta l 6,13:
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Wonder Anew 33 .
3;30-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10; You Bet Your Life 20.
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3: Battle of the Planets • : Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B; Sesame St . 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:3D-Bew ltched 3; Gill igan ' s is. 4,8; Brady Bunch 10;

more
intense

Blue Marble 33.
7:3D-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game • : $1.98 Beauty
Show 6; Family Feud 10: ; Pop Goes The Country
15; MacNeli -Lehrer Report 20; College Basketball
33.
B:DO- Bob Hope 3,4, 15; John Davidson 6. 13; Christmas
is Family B; Washington Week In Review 20;
Wonder Woman 10.

8:Jo-Wall Street Week 20; 9:QO-College Basketba ll 3;
EIQht is nouqh 6, 13 ; Rockford F i les 4, 15; I ncredi ble

Hulk 8, 10; Congressional Outlook 20.
9 : 3o-TurnaboUt 20; Christmas Eve on Sesame St. JJ.
IO :DO-Edd1e Capro Mysteries • .15; F lying High 8,10;
News 20.
10 : 3o--Monty Python ' s Flying Circus 20 ; To ucc h of the
Renaissance at Christmas 33 .

province
22 Fairy queen
23 Speaking
24 TV Grandpa

statue
30 Pretend
31 Dropsy
35 Periodical,
for short

A5500N ASI

TALK W11H 1lJiU
AND FIND OUT

i!XACTLY WHEJ&lt;E
HEMET THAT

AND JUST Wt'd5
GOlNGTO RUN
THIS PLACE

WHILE )'t)U1RE
GONE?

RECWSE!

21

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Tough hand played to win
NORTH
... 6

12-2 1-A

• 10 9 6
+AJ104

• J763 2
.,.....-+---1---!1 WFST
EAST
-+-+-!I + 7 4 2
+ AK J 109 5
"'
¥7 3
¥84 2
-+-1-,lt
9863
t K52
+AIOB4
•Q
SOUTH
• Q8 3
¥A K QJ 5
• Q7
• K95

structure
32 Coiffure
gadget
33 Dawdled
34 Brute
36 Old hair-do
37 Printed
matter
36 Particle
39 Wentlow

West
Pass
Pass

North Eas•
I+

2.

4¥

Pass

Pass
Pass

South

C~RISTMAS EVE

PA55EO, ANC' SANTA
HIS RAIN 6EAI&lt; 1-lAD
JVVI'~ THEIIUOB! THE END

the soup .
Here is the winning line of
play . South mus t eash two
high trumps. and hope his
opponents will have to follow
so that there will be no
trumps left out.
He lead s a e lub to
dummy 's jack and ruffs a
club to establish dwruny's
fifth club. Then he returns to
dummy with the ace of diamonds, disca rds his queen of

diamonds on that fifth club.
Leads the jack of diamonds

Db!.

a

ruffing

finesse and

eventually is able to ruff one
spade and disca rd the other
on a good diamond.

2¥
Pass
You hold :

Opening lead : • 7

12-21-B

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
.
. By Oswald Jacoby

Sontag

used for the three L's, X for the tw.o O's, etc. Single letters
apos1rophes, the length and formall ?n of the words are al Here is a really tough
hand . The defense starts off
hints. Each day the code lellers are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
with a spade to East's king.
The queen of clubs is led to
West 's ace and the four of
AW
I AD
KMXPZY
M
n A Z Q I clubs shot back. South plays
low from dwruny . East ruffs
U F A N P L Q and leads back a trwnp.
p J
FPYBD
MI I
South has lost the first
D A three tricks and needs the
UMO
DA
BMNQ
L AZ' D
OAR
rest. He also should know
KRGB
WAF
PD . - MIHQFD
IMJXQ,~ahr~e:~:~n~es~~!:h:~~~.
Yeaterday' o Cryploquote: CHRISTMAS WON'T BE CHRIS idea of their distribution.
MAS WITHOUT ANY PRESENTS.- LOUISA MAY ALC01 Also he should make his
.. _ .(C) 19'1'8 Klns Feature• Syndit.ate, Inc.
COntract although when we
BARNEY

'' 6VT THE MAN IN THE
· !fELLOW SLICKE~ AND
616 RUBBER BOOTS
NEVER FALTERED "

watched Lhis hand played m
a duplica t e gam e, most fourheart declarers wound up in

for

One letter simply stands for another. In th1s sample A 1 ~ and Alan

12 - lt

WINNJJ'.;

SHOPPING

s

.c:::ou~se.

WATER WELL drilling. William T.
Grant. 742·2879 .

HOLIDAY

News6,10; M1dday Magaz ine 13; America Alive 15.
12 :25--Eiec. Co. 33; 12 ·3o-Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
~
1;00-Hollywood Squares 3: All My Children 6,13;

Thursday, D ec.

Curtain
country
16 Epochal
21 canadian

~ :IS Lofty

'-.,

--··------ - - TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile"

12QO-Newscen1er 3; Bob Braun ' s Christmas Party -4;

5:®--Mov\e "Klondike Annie" 3.

river

l "1 ACRE . 12 1e 60 mobile home
ncar De xter . 992-SBSB

6,13 ; Love of Llle 8,10; Sesame St . 20.
11:55--C BS News B; House Call 10.

Movie " The Hound of the Baskel vllles" 10.
12 :00-Monty Python 33; 12:3o-Juke-Box B; 12 :4olronslde 13.
1:()()-CM1dn1ghl Special 3,4,15; News 8: Movie "l slanc
of Lost Women" 10.
1:4D-News 13; 2:3D-News 3.
3:00-Mov1e " Three On A Couch" 3;

ACROSS
lin medias

... COULDN'T 'YOU

'

11 : 30-Wheel of For tune 3,15; News 4; Family Feud

11: 30--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Baretta 13; Gunsmoke B;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEYOOP
i

9:Jo-Brady Bunch B; Family Af1alr 10 10.
10:oo-.-:Card Sharks 3,4,15: Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10 :30-Jeopardy 3,., 15; Andy Griffith 6; Price Is Right
,
8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11:00-High Rollers J.•. IS; Happy Days 6,13; E lec. Co.
20; 11 :2s--Sesame St. 33.

11:DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Di ck Cavett 20; Sounds1age 33.
·

~

~---- · ~~~

i

Thur. &amp;~rl.
OPEN: Mon., Tues.,
9 to 8 P.M.
Dec.ember 23, 9 to 6 r.nu ·· ·

, I

RABBI

Answer· A dog that sounds hk.e a boxer-A PUG

~:::u.~~~:·.~~;~~'::'f:~i::~h&amp;ck~';'avabre·t~ New~paperbooka.

Housing ...
Headquarters
OWNER MUST SELL - The own er ot thi c
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
home for a low, low price of $20,000 . There
are~ bedrooms ( 1 is extra large), spacious
living room w · fireplace, formal dining , eatin kitr.hen. bath w -shower, garage &amp; a king
sized yard. Good location on Mill St . Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
446 -3643.

I

Jumbles SKULL

11 •~•11ablelor$1.75postpald
J urn bl • BookN.• ,' ' conta lnln"• 110puules,
3• N
ood N J 07648 Include ,our

HOURS

Realtor Associates

"[ X1 XI 1 Xr"

Print answer here:

(Answe rs tomorrow)

-

33: 7:3o-Schoolles tO; Freestyle 33 .
8:DO-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame 51. 33.
9:00- Merv Griffin 3: Ph11 Donahue 4. 13,15 ;
Emergency One6 ; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game
10.

American Style 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Big
{)11

UTIT.E ORPHAN ANNIE

country
home with 3
bedrooms, carpeting and
nat. gas furnace . $280 a

Helen lsteaford
Sue P. Murphy
Sue P..Murphy

""

Now arrange the circled leHers to
.. form the surpr ise answer, as sug gested b~ the abo11e cartoon.

fur-

G. Bruce Teaford

u 5 ~.,

News 8; Jetsons 10.
1,: 15--Weather

Petticoat Junction 15.

I I I I [j
I SIBOPH I

--·

nace and large lot. $9,500.
OVER 4 ACRES - Broom

year heal bill. S27.SOO.
MAKE YOUR OEDUC·
liONS NOW BEFORE
THE NEW YEAR BY
BUYING PROPERTY.

' :.:.~.,';';,:.~""'"· ~.

6:D0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15; 6:25-Soclelles In
Transition 10.
6:3o-Columbus Today 4; 6:45--Mornlng Report 3;
6:50--Good Morning. West Virginia 13; 6 : ~5-­
Chuck Wh ite Reports 10; News 13. ,
7:DO-Today 3,4, 1S; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS

5:00-Star Trek 3; Star Trek 4; Beverly Hillbil lies 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Emergency One 13; Brady Bu nch 15.
5:3D-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son B; Elec . Co. 20 ,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple IS .
6:00-News 3,.,8. 10,13,15 : ABC News 6; Si mple Gifts :
Six Episodes lor Christmas 20 ; Zoom 33.
6.30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 33.
7:00-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Ga me
6; Rudolph 1he Red-Nosed Reindeer B: News 10;
Christmas with the Lennon Sisters 13; Love ,

NIXEV

equipment . Rt.33 50b 2nd St .,
Moson, WV 252b0.

·----- - ·--

II aJ
··-· ....

CHA'51~ ,...,._,

··---- - - - ·- ---HONAKER'S CB and. elec troni c
M 8 M Home lmpro¥emen t !oer¥·
ing Gollipo li!&gt; and area . We
spec ial ize
in
vinyl
ond
a lum inum siding . For free
esti mates, coli bl-4 -367·0128 .
Gall ~p~ l i~ . . _ _ _ _

YES-IT COULD
"DISPEL" PAIN, SIR I
· \

I YOFA~

1'1..1.- W'{
lHAT

I

-

~

byHenri ArnotdandBob L_
ee

unscramble these lour Jumbles ,
one letter to each square, to lorm
lour ordinary words .

M

EX CAVATING . doler . loa der on d
back hoe wo rk ; d ump trucks
and lo-boys l or hire: wil l haul
fill di rt , to soi l. lim_estone and
gro¥el. Co l i Bob o r Roger Je l l ers. day phone 992-7089 , night
pl~o~e _99_2-~ 5?5 _or_~2 ~ S_
?J?. _

HATHHOOM S AND Kitchens
remodeled . ceram ic til e. plum bi ng, carpen tr y , ond general
maintenan ce . 13 year s el&lt; per i ~n~e: 9~2~3~8~. _ . __ _

BUSINESS BLDG -

...

BRADr:ORD, Au ction eer , Com plete Service. Phone 949 -2487
or 949 -2000. Hocine , Ohio. Crill
Br adford .

•

LL"'---"'-'.!!.!1"-"'"-"'"""-""'""'='

on

fully Insured
Free Est
&lt;.:all992-2772
1U, I 11lP~·

-

rn'il W THAT SCRAMBLEu WORD GAME

~ ~ ~U;l'-!l ®

Experience and

Bus mess Serv1ces

0

KNOCKS, you still have to
get up and open the door.
Oc it now .
Office 992·2342
Eve. 992·1449
Rodney Downing, Broker
Bill Childs; Man~ge r

save 30 pel. to 50

on heating cos

St:WING MACHINE Rep air s, ser vi ce , oil mak es, 992-1284 . The
Fabr ic
Shop ,
Pom eroy .
Auth ori zed Singe r Soles and
Ser.,.ice. We shorpl?n Scissor s.

WANT TO .SELL? Call us
for an appraisal and why
you shoultllist with us .
WANT TO BUY? Call us. If
we don't have it th en we'll
find it for you .

~'if\lNf

Cellulosic (wood· fiber!
Thermal insulation

'

W ILL do roof ing, constru ct ion.
pl umbing and h eating . No job
too Iorge or too small _ Phone
742 -2348

pnce your house deserves.
.

I

-

t0 :3D-Sing We Noel33; You Bel Your Llfe20 .
li :DO-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8: ABC News 33; Movie " Robin &amp; the 7
Hoods" 10.
12 :JD-News 8; 12 :•o-SWAT 6,13; ! :DO-Tomorrow
3,4; I :50-News 13 .

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

'

Pomeroy, 0 .
3·15·t1c

Pit. 992-2848

Real Estate for Sale

WHEN

I

'

Muffler - Brakes
Shocks - Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

...',...

J&amp;L

I

News 20.

11-1 THI!

..........

'

MOORE'S

THE SWEEP

. JACKW.
• CARSEY
Mgr .
1

--:---;:-:-cc- ·- . ~- _-· Auction._ _ __

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

Don't let a ch'Imney f ire put
damper on your life -

GUI-IFWI-INII-J€1, At.JD A
FEW OTHER NAUTICAL.
S.IDELINJ:;5-- SUCH
AS. PIRA CY !

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
'll:lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

20 Yrs . Experien(e
Call : Tom Hoskins
949-2160
11 ·2B·c

Heritage 33; Oral Roberts 10; Duchess of Duke
S1reel 20.
9:3o-Soap 6.13; 10 :()0-.CDav ld Cassidy Man Un ~
dercover 3,4, 1S; Family 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10;

;:!,l

St. Rl. 124 toward Rutland,
0.

guaranteed

Chimnev
Sweeps Guild
Insured

a

SALE PRICES

it.

Inside Paneling &amp; Ceiling
tile
Free Estimate - all work

·

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

.

Malntanal1~rQ

9 :00---Barnev Miller 6, IJ ; Hawall .flve-0 8; Christmas

'

mo .

'I• mile off Rf. 7 by-pass

Roofing, gutters, new and
repair.

References

IN I'&gt;ETI'I"'EN 5MU66LIN6•

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

Construction
"GIVE US A TRY"

OF SERVING AS THE MATE'S "MAID"- -WASI-f
HAS BEEt-! ASSIGNED TO THE GAllEY

c.AAZX MAtJ

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

Carpentry, Electrical,
PaintinQ

OH,PEFINITEJ.Y, DfAR BOY-

.._,.....

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
11 · 11 · 1

WHIL.I!! I:A~Y ~Ui=FER7 THE HUMH,IATIOI\I

WOT l&lt;lt.JDA
WORK DOES
DO IN THIS
DIDt.J'T SEE

''
''

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

11·9·1 mo.

-

.. r'

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy,O.
Ca 11992-7113
t-or Free Estimates·

J. R. Construction
Co.

l '1 )( 70 1Q/5 Sch ultz m obile home

•

ROOFING

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

11 -3-1 mo.

-~· -

\

Armstrong Carpeting

PHONE 992-2772

~ Pltcfno 992-2181

·'

H. L WRITESR

J&amp;L INSUlATION
JIM KEESEE

Pomeroy landmaltl
9 ..~ck W. C•r'sey, Mgr. ·

~.

Your HeadquarteJS For

CAPTAIN EASY

,,

Chester, Ohio
10·30·c

BoJIJ

11 ·26-1 mo.

CELLULOSE
INSUlATION
'6.50 per bag

,.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Phone 949-2118
Afler5 P.M.

Style ts ; Horsepens-oiO 20; Wild, Wild World of
Animals 33.
7:3D-f1ollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4; onkers 6;
Waltons 8: 5100,000 Name That Tune 10; Nashvil le
On The Road 13; Dolly IS; Mac'Neii-Lehrer Report
20,33.
'
8: DO-Little Drummer Boy Book II 3,4,15; Mork -&amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Waltons 10; S1 mp le Gifts : Six Episodes
for Christmas 20; Christmas Theme 33.
8:3D-Gift otthe Magl3 ,•. 1S; What's Happening! ! 13;
Big Ear 6 ; Please Stand By 8: Christmas Snows,
Christmas Winds )3.

'

,..,

Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginther98S-3106

Racine, Ohio

Newlywed Game 6,13; News 10; Love, American

•fl l

any1ime.

SALES REP.
FOR
SUN DINS HAMMOND
ORGANS

'

POMEROY
lANDMARK

Rf!sidential and commer-

ciol. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,

PETE SIMPSON

the

1972 DA TSUN PI CKUP w ith in s uiOt e d
t o pper .
S 1100 .
992-!&gt;082 .

COU NTRY MOBILE Home Park
Route 33 , no rt h of Pomeroy.
Lorge lo ts. Co ll 992-7479 .
. - - . . . . . . . - . . -

an t task . Do it cheerfully -

Service

""""the .......

BOOK COllECTOR S 1857 to l 9?7
Histories ond School books
Al !oo gl oss and
po tt er y .
741-2255 .

Auto Sales

might just as well calf it an early
day w ith your wo rk , since your
heart a nd m ind won't be in· it.
Plan for a fun evening .

help someone with an unpleas·

Radlat,ftr ,---.,

borkh oe.

-- ~ -:---:--=--=---

1969 CHt:VV NOVA 2-dr .. P.S..
auto ., b cy l. Good sh ape.
304 -773-5707 .

up In a happy mood .
CANCER {June 2t-July 22) You
mig hl be called upon loday to

19"12 INTERNATIONAl

-

AKC
REGISTERED mi ni ature
doch!o hund
puppie s
Coli
992-5117 oft er Spm.

-

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

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

o bol e.

.AST CHRISTMAS Au ct ion Sol e.
Fri . 7 pm . LJrowing and d oo r
Yard Sale
priz e at O hio Hiver Aucti on . 537
High S~ -- _M~d d lepc: rt : Ohio ._
IF YOU ho~o~e o ser vice to off er.
wont to buy o r se ll something ,
or
oe looking for work
R ea-l estate-fo-r Sa-le
wha tever . . you"II get r es ults
- .
fo ster with o Se nt in e l Wo nt A d
Coli 991-2156.
~EA t ES TAT E LOAN S. VA
No
111oney
down
(e li gi ble
Ve!erens) . FHA · A s low os 3,....Pets for Sale
down (o il non -Veter ens ond
RISING SV~H Ken nel s. Boarding
gene ra l public) To purchase
a nd grooming . oil b ree d s
rea l es ta te or relinonce . 30
CheShire. 367 -07_92.
YEARS TE RMS . 1R HAND MOH·
TGA G E CO ., 77 . f . Stol e St ..
AKC RE G-ISTI:Ri::D Bol&lt;er puppie:;.
Athe ns. Pho ne 614 -592-:1051 .
6 weeks ald . A n ice Ch r i !o t m a ~
gilt , S1_25 eo ~ o_ll 'Jq'l -1726 .
NE W THRH bedroarn horne

Plans m ight be di ffi c ult to organi ze and threaten to throw
eve rything out of kilter toda~ .
Don 't fre t ; somehow , every-

day could start out with family
members being a mite touchy
or g rouchy, but things turn
about quickly and all will end

Beautiful 3 bedroom, l'h bath , family room
in basement. equipped kitchen and laundry,
.8 of an acre of ground on Fisher St . $35,000.
Will consider a mobile home in trade .

'

PISCES {Feb. 20-Morch 20)

GEMINI {May 21-June 20) The

MIDDLEPORT

a u to bod ies b uy ·
scr ap iro n . bat me tal s. Rider's
124
Po mero y .

1974 MU STANG II. 4 cyl . 4-!op eed
Bes t offer . 992 -7685

·Others to come through for you
on any issue thai's impo rtant .
Your luc k lies in things you do
for yourse fl today .

CONL&gt;ITIONBO hoy S1
'J4Y-1 10H

'
OL D FUHNITUHE , ice bo,..es , brass DINING
TABLI: . four cho irs. b ·
bed s. iron beds, desk s. etc .,
cell enl con dition. SlOO . Co li
com pl ete househo ld s. Writ e
lJ9'J -1540
M .D . M iller . HI. 4. Pom e roy or
Ht:
CTRIC FURNACE , n ew . Block
coli 991 -7700.
lb. Col i
wal nuts .
5 . 10
OLD COINS. p ocket wotche!o .
td4 591 'J15Cl
doss r i ng~ . weddi ng bo nd s,
d iamonds. Go ld or sil ver . Co li
Hoger Wam sley . 7~2 ~ 133~ .

lhing works ou t beaulilully .
ARIES {March 21·Aprll 19) You

FOR SALE

_

OH.

un@wll11.uv

St ..

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

(HIP
WOOD .
Pole s
mo,.. .
diameter 10" o n largest end ,
S11 per ton . Bundled slob , $10
pe r ton . De livered to Ohio
Pall et Co .. HI . 2 . Pom eroy .
991 -26&amp;9

Snnd&lt;t.l"

Moin

~11 t l cmd .

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER

lhnr vmi;w
\Itt• t\;~y

TltHS .

L·AflC f
FAN CY appiC&gt; !&gt; t or
Christmas. Bos.ke ts Of your Own
~~ ~ ·f' . Fi11potri ck O rc hard. Slate
flou ti! 6H9. l'hnnr 66Q-J785 .

rotating shift/ excellent
fringe benefits.
Apply Personnel Office

Goltipolis, Ohio
446-5105

4P.M..
bt•f11n' pub] it ·a titm

6(,\j

( HRI ~T MA S

Sunrlse Semester 10.

THURSDAY . DECEM.BER 21, ta•
7:DO-Cross-Wits 3; Famuy Feud B; PM Magazine • :

;..,..

•

f iT ZI--'ATRICI&lt; O r r: hur'd.
HI , 6H9 . Ph ont' Wd kcwillf'
J785 .
.

QUALITY CONDITIONED mi xed
hoy . W ill d l?li ve r . Q9:J-7201.

license,

~~

~ r trtn

PAIR Creati ve i'7 'J - wo~
speok e r !o. $120. 1 pair GE 3
woy sp eake rs. $140 . 985-3301
rloys a11d 985-4140_olt e f Spm .

LICENSE BOILER
OPERATOR

r-

Al--'1--' 11~

ON~·

Ttr t· .~tl;il"

."'

Business Services

Ct)/\1 ! IMl- ~ fO N ~ . S&lt;:llld . gro.,. e-1.
r olr ttHl1 r hlr&gt;r idf' f f'rli li rP.r rJ..,fl
lnm l onrl oil typ("&gt;s ol ,ott . h -"
rp f.,mt SoltWorlo:. s, lnr . f . M n11•
~ t . t-' ntn{'IOy . 9Q;j .JI:I&lt;,I)

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1978
S:4s--Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55--

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~c

fi4'J ·1U4 L .

Mor ttla \"
Nt~t•u nr!S;~ ti.t rd&lt;~y

GU N SHOOT . Rorinc G un Club .
!::ver y Sunday I p m . Fact ory
chok e gun!. on ly

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO

fOUND : COLLI!:
pup.
N&lt;&gt;or
Bow mon"s Hun Rd . 949-2741 .

Stale of Ohio

NOTICE
PU 8LIC NOTICE
Ceci lia Gr i ffith , whose l ast

'3995

lOST· ot Jone5 Boyo:.
b illf old .
Rew ord 0 1 ~ eep m o ne y Like to
ho.,.e- persor1o l item s boc k .
'1':12 -JO l B.

Tlw Pu!Jirslrt'r n ·.~t · rws llll' right
tu •·d ll ur l" t'jl•t·l 1111.\" Htis ,J,•,·mt•cl nil·
Jl'•·ttutl&lt;li . Tht· P uhl t .~ l• c r- Will nut lit:

Roa d , Sy ra c use . Ohio 45779 .

1llt,

5.

un l•·r :!.;) 1"1"111 rlnuw· fur mb 1·Hrry-·
lilt-! II••K Nu ntllt·r· ln ( "at·t• ufThl' Senimd

Beegle , 309 Ma nn Avenue,
Fa irborn , Ohio 45324 , was
appo in ted E)(e c utor of the
esta te of Myrtl e B . McBride,
dec eas ed , tat e of Ros e Valley

HOLIDAY
SPECIALS
1976 OLDS Cun.ASS

fOUND · MALf cross be tween
Beag !(' and Bo:;sett Hn und
Brown nnrl w h i le . l eading
( r i:'Pio mco Co li Q97 -3757 oliN

a n • f1('t"1'p lt•d ''Ill)' With t•;t.~l l "w1th

c ourr. Case No . 22562, Gilbert

"I'm afraid we're sliding from
upper to lower middle class."

LOSJ a_nd FQun_d __

DICK TRACY

--•

For S~le

f/A C IN~

Bernice Bede Osol

BROKER

...

'

case No . 12541

• Dr , AM-FM tape, P.S..• P .B.. electric split
sea t~, elec. window defr~ster , sport wheel covers,

.9-The DliilY Sentinel, Middleporl-Pu!Deroy, O...Thursday, Oee. 21, 1978

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

MAW'S OFF VISITIN' ·- AN' I
WIF HER SISTER
GOTTO
IN TH'
GITMVOWN

DADBURN

LE'S SEE .. DO I WANT
TO START OFF WIF
OATMEAL OR JUICE?

+Q J754
¥ A 10 7 G

• K43
+8
Your pa rtner opens one

spade

in

fourth seat.

A

Maine reader wants t o know
what we respond .

We simply jump to four
spades . W e have maximum

support for spades.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A&amp;SN.)

roo you have a Question for
the experts ? Write " Ask the
Experts , '· care of this newspaper. Individual ques tions will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes. The most interesting questiOns wl/f be used in
th is column ancJ will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

JUICE!!

�. .·

10- The Dailv Sentinel. MirtcllPoort-Pomeruy . 0 ., Thurst!Hy , Dec. 21 . 1n78~1!0&lt;'1!10t~IIIIII!!Oll•~tl!l*t-tlllltlllltlllltlatllllllllll!llll!llll!llll!llllll:l!lll!ltilllll'"''~::_-n•I!!IO'III!IIII!OI•I!IIIl!IOII I'I~~D:I!I:III•B:Il!J::&lt;l!JI:Itlll!•l•l•l·l·l·llj:ll!lll !~~ll!lll!l:lflllilllllilllllllllll!

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

r---Ai_:~-;-n;;;iiis-1
I

ALBERTHAWK
Funeral services for Albert
F . Hawk, 79, Guysville
(Shade area ) who died
Wednesday at Holzer Medical
Center l'lill be held Saturday
at I p.m. at the Hughes-Van
Fossan Funeral Home,
Athens with the Rev. Charles
McVey officiating. Burial-will
be in Alexander Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home Friday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.
Mr. Hawk was born in Lodi
Township the son of the late
Lewis and Sadie Williams
.Hawk. He was also preceded
in death by one grand·
daughter, Denise Green, two
brothers, Russell and Em·
m ett Hawk and one sister,
Mrs. Primrose Green.
He was a member of Shade
United Methodist Church and
was a former employe at
North American Aviation,
Columbus, as machinist and
was a retired farmer .
He is survived by his wife ,
Marie Dew Hawk, and two
sons, Glennis L. Hawk,
Moline, m., and Robert L.
Hawk, Athens, one daughter,
Mrs. Wayne (Joanne) Green,
Wellston, four grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren,

Meigs
Property
Transfers

~: -¥·+·

two brothers, M. E . Hawk
and Herbert Hawk, both of
Athens, one sister , Mrs .
Berdena Woods, Logan.

CLARA MCMASTER
Mrs. Clara McMaster, 59,
Minersville Toute I, died
Thursday morning at the
home of her sister, Mrs.
William Russell.
Mrs . McMaster was a
daughter of the late Adolph
and Clara Mcintosh Grueser. She was also preceded
in death by her husband,
Charles McMaster, and two
brothers,
Adolph
and
Richard.
Surviving are two brothers,
Charles, Minersville, and
Walter of Pomeroy , and two
sisters,
Anna
Tucker,
Chepachet , Rhode Island,
and Mrs. William (Mary)
Russell, Route 3, Pomeroy.
Several nieces and nephews
also survive .
Mrs. McMaster was former
owner and operator of the
LaMar Beauty Shop in
Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Harvey Koch of·
fi ciating. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime
after 7 this evening .
DALE WARNER
Dale E . Warner, 78, Rt. 2,
Albany, died Thursday
morning at the O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.
Born in Meigs County, he
was a son of the late John
Amos and Birdie French
Warner. He was a retired
machinist having been
employed with the North
American Corp. He attended
Ohio University and was a
former teacher in the Meigs
County Schools. He was a
veteran of world war II.
Surviving are his wife,
Bertina Van Dyke Warner;
four sons, Gale, Marysville;
John, Gene and Jerry, aU of
Albany ; a daughter, Mrs.
Peter (Barbara) Good,
Athens; a stepson; Mervin
Nelson, Tampa , Fla; Four
grandchildren and four
step - grandchildren; a
brother , Herman Warner ,
Pomeroy ; four sisters,
Cledith Johnson and Ina Curl,
both of Columbus; Delca
Moler, St. Petersburg, Fla.,
and Zelda Davis, Pomeroy.
Besides his parents he was
preceded in death by a
brother and two sisters.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Saturday at the
Bigony -Jordan Funeral
Home with the Rev. Donald
Shue officiating. Burial will
be in the Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
Friday.

Gordon
B.
Teaford,
Rebecca J. Teaford to Marc
French, Lot, Middleport.
William Lindsey Ward to
Lloyd Ward, I
acre,
Salisbury.
Delbert Milliron, Goldie
Milliron to Ernest M. Shuler,
Mary L. Shuler , parcel,
Letart.
Ernest M. Shuler, Mary L.
Shuler to Delbert Milliron,
Goldie Milliron, parcel,
Letart.
Ernest M. Shuler, Mary L.
Shuler to Delbert Milliron,
Goldie Milliron, ·parcel,
Letart.
Karen Russell Hood,
Richard Hood, Edward
Russell Jr., J enny Russell to
Donald E . Miller, .81 A.,
Olive.
Marjorie D. Murray ,
William F . Murray, William
Darst by Atty. in tact., Betty
I. Darst by Atty. in fact,
Charles Darst by Atty. in
fact, Edna Darst by Atty. in
fact , Marvin Darst by Atty. in
fact to William C. Quickie,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Norma Theiss to Columbus
&amp; Southern Ohio Elec. Co.,
Minerals, Lebanon.
Norma Theiss to Colome!
Inc., 83 A., Lebanon.
Ronald E. Barber, Berl
Barber to Lola Barber,
Delbert Bart-&gt;r 25 A., Olive.
p, • ._',.tl, Lillian
Roy
Proffitt to 'l'homas Uoyd
Deeter,
Mary Deeter ,
Corrective Deed, Lebanon.
Thomas Lloyd Deeter,
Mary Deeter to Raymond
(Continued from page I I
Barber, Helen L. Barber, 141
A. , 36 A., Lebanon.
career as Clark County
Bertha T. Pullins to Stanley recorder, and was once
E. Pullins, Parcel, Olive.
president of the Ohio
Association of
County
Recorders.
Brown lost three times
before becoming secretary of
state in the 1950 election, but
thereafter he was impossible
LICENSE ISSUED
Marriage licenses were to dislodge until this year. He
issued to Terry Ray Warner, won re-election eight times.
The secretary plans to
22, Rt . 1, Long Bottom and
to his home in Dublin,
retire
Sara Darlene Wells, 19, Rt. I,
wbere
he lives with his wife,
Long Bottom; Kevin Brent
floren
ce,
and pursue his
Willford, 19, Racin e and
ceramics . The
hobby
of
Brenda Ellen Rodberg, 21,
Browns
have
three children
West Palm Beach, Fla.
and nine grandchildren.

.

~~tr-s~~?
OPEN 'EVERY NIGHT
.

~Si zes

WOMEN'S
SWEATERS

OJr entire stock of Missy and
Women 's size sweaters on sale. Big

selection Sllpover and Cardigans .

14.00 SweateiS. ......111.44
-,o.•IIV Sweaters ...... 114.74
Sweaters ...... 116.44
124.00 Sweaters ...... 119.64

1

MEN'S

~ELTS

PARIS

Excellent quality men's
d ress and jean . bells - the
popular new widths Big
selection .

'6.00 PARIS BE~TS .•••• 5.29
17.00 PARIS BELTS .... '6.19
18.00 PARIS BELTS .... !6.99
'9.00
... 17.99
1

selection of patterns . 100 pet .
polyester double knits .

SALE
PRICES

iw

WEMBLEY TIES

SPECIAL
SALE PRICES NOW

Children 's

•

SPECIAL SALEI

GIRLS' DRESSES
Dresses and girls' jumpers

sizes 2 to 4, 4 to6X. and 7 to i4.
Girls..
Dresses .......... 56.39
$11.00 Girls
Dresses. ........... 8.79
~---_ .. $12.00 Girls
Dresses .. . ....... . S9 .59
$13.00 Girls
Dresses. ......... $10.39

In

ss.oo

Special Sale Prices!

llffiE BOYS

SHIRTS · SWEATERS
·KNIT TOPS
Sizes 2 to 4 and 4 to 7, cute styles.
You' ll want several when you see
them!

2nd

IS how the building site looked when Meigs
Industrial Arts students started to work on it.

Size·s -38 to 46, Reg . or long. Solid
color~ and patterns.

Meigs students study wall,
ceiling and roof framing

MEN'S '99.95 SUITS.....179.99

Special.

Men's Shirt Sale

floor

Portable G. E. Solid State Color TV, walnut
finish cabinet .

house 27'fz feet wide and 41'h
feet long.
The walls were built in the
interior wan sectiooB, shown
in the above pictures, for a high school's industrial arts
shop in smaU sections and
Were later transported to the
building site on wagons and
trucks.
The wall framing included
By United Press International
. the assembling of vertical
CLEVELAND - BOARD CHAIRMAN Karl H.
and horizontal members that
Rudolph of the Cleveland Electric llluminating Co.
formed the exterior and insaid Thursday night the utility currently is not offering
terior walls of the structure.
to purchase the Municipal Light Plant from Cleveland.
This fr amework supports the
" It's time to speak out," Rudolph said in a
ceiling and roof and serves as
prepared statement. "There is not, and for more than a
a nailing base for inside and
year there has not been, an offer to buy Muny light by
cover in g
out side
wall
CEI.
'
.
materials.
"The reason is Mayor Dennis J . Kucinich, through
In framing this house
delay and harassment, clearly killed the city's offer to
students had a n opportunity
sen when he repeatedly announced that he would never
to learn how to estimate
give up Muny Light . The political value of the facility
materials needed for walls,
has more importance to him than the money that might
partitions, ceiling joist,
have prevented the city from defaulting.
rafters and roofing .
To build the wall sections
TEHRAN, IRAN- ARMY TROOPS used jeeps and
students had to square the
clubs to scatter several hundred students and
rough lumber and learn the
professors demonstrating in front of Tehran University
following : the parts of the
today. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi worked to find
JX1litlclans wiUing to join a new civilian government.
University professors said several persons were
injured when club-&lt;&gt;winging troops drove· their jeeps
into a crowd of students and teachers outside the
university's administration building.
" The students and professors had gathered outside
to show their solidarity with those of us inside," said
one professor among more than 100 staging a sit-in at
COLUMBUS (UPI ) the administration building.
Sixteen Ohio House members
and one Senate member
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND-SECRETARY OF
informed legislative clerks
STATE Cyrus Vance and Soviet Foreign Minister
,. Andrei Gromyko reported further progress today
Thursday that they will take
less than the $22,500 a year
towards concluding a basic strategic arms limitation
The
other 116 members of the
· treaty.
General
Assembly
The two men, who met twice Thursday and again
a pparently are going to
for two and a half hours this morning, fixed a fourth
accept the full $22,500 pay
•. session for this afternoon.
hike, which has brought critiVance
Thursday
offered
the
Soviet
Union
a
•
cism from President Carter
controversial compromise for dealing with the
Prior to the pay increase,
sensitive issue of secret Russian missile codes; which
made $17,500· a
legislators
to
become
an
impasse
toward
achieving
a
threatens
"
year.
SALT treaty. Gromyko apparently . resisted the
112th
General
The
' compromise.
Assembly held its last session
,, L----------------~ Thursday and ·members were
file with the clerka
asked
by 5 p.m. if they intended to
take reduced pay. However,
the lawmakers legally have
•
'
untll the start of the next
'
&gt;
EXTENDED FORECAST General Assembly to file for
Sunday
fbrough reduced pay.
Tuesday, snow or rain
Those requesting less than
Sunday and a chance of the $22,500 maximum, and
snow Cbrllbllas Day, wltb the amount they want, are :
•''
fair weather Tuesday.
Repr esentative
John
'
H!g~ wlll be Ill the 40s
Begala, D-Kent , $18,725;
Sunday and In the upper 20s Larry
Christman,
D'
or lbe 30s Monday and Englewood, $20,500; Robert
'··' CLEVELAND (UPI)
Tuesday. Lows will be In Corbin, R-Dayton, $19,300:
Thll week's wloolog Ohio
tbe ZOs early Suaday and In Fred Deering , DMonroeville,
• LoUery aumbers : .
tbe upper teens to the mid Dennis Eckart, D-Euclld,
· ,, · Gold aumber - 1.
. 20s early Monday and
$22.000.
··
White number - U.
Taeaday.
John
Galbraith,
R""
Blue number - 296.
Maumee, $19,250 the first
• .
Wlll•A·Tbon
year, $22,500the second year;
'
06411:
Don Gilmore, R-Columbus.
Meigs High Industrial Arts
students have framed an
entire house.
The students started with

Save plenty on the shirts you need for
the men on your list .
.

rough oak arid poplar lumber
and built the exterior and

Nation wise

big

G.E. 19 INCH
DIAGONAL MEASURE
COLOR TELEVISION

THE HOUSE with rafters in place.

HERE'S A LOOK at the inside wall partitions.

MEN'S 179.95 SUiTS..... '63.99
MEN'S 189.95 SUITS .....171.99

Practical gifts for Someone

Men's $9.95 Shirts ..... $7.94
Men's $11.95 Shirts .... $9.64
Men's $15.95 Shirts .. $12.94
Men's $21.95 Shirts .... 17 .74

CHILDREN'S
~ · JACKETS AND COATS
SPecial sale prices now on all of Dur
ttC

r.r.

tt!
!1.

boys' jackets sizes 2 to 8 and girls'
Winter coats and jackets, size 3
and 7 to 14. Chi dren's dept .,

iw· floor.
S18.00 Co_!l!s and Jackets ·
If
~

I

'399
Music Dept. · 2nd Floor
See Our Fine Selection

'14.39
520.00 Coats and Jackets
. •15.99
.

S25 .0Q

r;oall and Jackets ---'

'30.39
WOMEN'S
ST. THOMAS

WALLETS
AND ACCESSORIES

A perfect gift - Panasonic - Channel Master and
Roberts brands A.M. and AM-FM Radios Stereo set
with AM-FM rad io, 8 track or Cassette players , 3 sp.,.J
record player plus speakers. Let us help you with your
selection .

Women's $16.50
Women's $17.50
Women's $20.00
Women's 525.00

Fine selecllon of styles, leathers, and colors In wallets,
cigarette cases, clutch purses, key-talners. Sale priced
oo the second floor .
Wallets ................. $14.59
Wallets .......... ; ...... $15.49
Wallets. ........... ..... $17.59
Wallets. ................ 522.09

.

Missy, junior and larger size
coats, entire stock on sale. ·
Women's $68.00 Coats

'57.95
Women's 584.00 Coats

'71.95
Women's $98.00 Coats

83.95

1

Women's S11U.uu '-oats

.'93.95 .

SANTA CLAUS
Wi II be in the store on the
lsi Floor.

FRIDAY
6 to 8 PM
SATURDAY
6to8PM
. BRING YOUR CHILDREN
IN TO SEE HIM

.

UNGERIE DEPT.

(;hoose long or short style robes
in a big selection of styles and
colors.* women's Po lamas by
Pltll Motld, lcrralne,
ond Katz - nylons,
flannels ..d brushed
, r•yons.
* Women's gowns In 1
wide variety of styles
and colors.

pontles, ·sllpo.

w

•.

*Women's Gown
robe HIS lhlt _mote~
porftctly' long
short length styles.
• · Plus big selections of

women's

wall frame , how to make
corners, how wan partition

intersections were made, how
to make rough openings for
windows and doors, how to
make a plate layout, how to
nail and what size and how

many nails should be used,
and lastly how to construct
these wall sect ions in the shop
so that they wo uld fit
properly when nailed in place
at the building site.
In roof framing st udent s
studied roof types, parts of
the roof frame, parts of a
rafte r , layout terms and
principles, slope and pitch ,
how to find the raft er length
- both mathematically and
with the framing square, how
lo layout a rafter and erect
the gable roof.
The carpentry course is
offered to any student at
Meigs High School who has a
real interest in the building
trades.

Sevent_e en legislator~
ask less than $22,500

'19.19

538 _00 Coal&gt; ond Jockels

TRANSISTOR AND TABLE
RADIOS AND
STEREO COMPONENTS

WASHINGTON (UPI) and vegetables helped keep
Slightly higher food costs down the inflationary rise ,
pushed consumer prices up the department said.
by a moderate 0.5 perc'ent in . November figures brought
Nwem ber,
t he
La bor -. the total Consumer Pr i~e
Department reported today ln -1ex up to 203.9, said the
- much better . news for department, which computes
shoppers than the s harp its index on the basis of the
increases of the previous two fig ure 100 for 1967. This
months.
means a market basket of
In almost every category goods that cost $100 II years
, 111easured, the department ago now costs $203.90.
said , price increases were
Increases in tile cost s of
down
sha rply
from food and bever age totaled
September and October just 0.3 percent in November
figures .
- less than one-third the
Sharp declines in the in · price hikes recorded the two
creases in pr ices of fresh fruit previous months .

Home ownership costs rose
5 percent, more than twice
tlle increa se in any two-

month period this year, the
department said. It noted the
increased cost of homes and
finan cing was partially offset
by the decline in electricity
charges.
Ne \\' car costs rose 4.9

per cent . and significant incr eases also were recorded
for tire s, auto financ e
charges and maintenance.
Costs of public transporation
declined slightly .
Moderate price increases
for milk , beef , bakery

Hijacker, 17, .h eld

VESTED SUITS

Good selection of styles -

MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

Departmi!DI- lnd

¥;

MEN'S 3 PIECE

Our entire stock of men's
and boys' winter Jackets - ·

~~~~~~·'~!~~~~-~~-~~~~-~-

floor

...

'5.50 TIES ....... ........ 14.20
'6.50 TIES ............... 14.90
1
7.50 TIES .............. 15.20

AND LONGS - SALE

Men's $8.50 Wallets ..... $7.49
Men's $10.00 Wallets .... $8.89
Men's$11.00 Wallets .... $9.69
Men's $13.00 Wallets ... $11.49

Men's $18.95 Slacks

t·..

,.

1'

,Popular new width, pre-tied ties
and four in hands.

Men's $16:95 Slacks

'14.40

~

"''" &gt;

STUDENTS nailin• wall sections into place. L to R
instructor Charles Frecker with students Todd Smith and
Steve

Tins

For Men

talners, credit card cases, attache _cases,
entire stock sale priced.

'12.70

'16.00

'

Christmas Sale!

selection of leathers and colors, plus key -

Men's $14.95 Slacks

WINTER COAT SALE

•

mas .

SIZES .38 to 48 - REGULARS

Trlfold and Bi -fold style wallets -

WOM

Everyone Welcome!

We'll deliver in
time for Christ-

MEN'S ST. THOMAS
WALLETS AND ACCESSORIES

Sizes 29 to 46, Solid colors, lind a fine

\

6th- Palmer Streets
Middleport, Ohio

Consumer prices up
0.5 pet. last month

from our large selection.

DRESS COATS .

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2\l, No: 176

•

on the lrd floor . Seled a Chair

MEN'S '79.95
FUR TRIMMED

SALE PRICES

en tine

at

@

Children's Department

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

•

Visit the furniture department

S, M, L, and XL. Slipovers,

Men's $14.95
Sweater......... $11.84
Men's $18.95 -. Sweater.. ... .... $14.94 ·
Men ' s $21.95
Sweater........ . $17.34
Men's $34.95
Sweater ......... $27.64

GOSPEL SING

Ansted, W. Va .
At

Pomerpy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, December 22, 1978

EASY CHAIRS

&lt;Cardigans, Sweater Vests, fine
sselection of styles .
sale prices now!

NEW YEAR'S EVE

Featuring The
'"King's Harmony Quartet"

e

'

You'll Please Him
With ASweater Gift

Secretary

7:30PM

..

.

'

br•s

..
~

CLOSED SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24TH

Elberfelds
l.
n
.
POmero
•

..

.,, -

•;' .

'I

$18,275 ;
Matt h ew
Hatchadorian,
R-Mayfield
He ights , $17 ,500 ; Edward
Hughes, D-Menwr, $19,561;
John Johnson, D-Orrville ,
$18,725; Alan Norris , RWesterville, $1B, 725 the first
year, $20,035the second year;
C. William Q'Neill, RColumbus. $17.500: Thomas
Pottenger,
R-Cincinnati,
$20,000; Myrl Shoemaker, DBo urneville , $17, 500 ; Dale
Van Vyven, R-Cincinnati,
$17 ,500; James Zehner, DYellow Springs, $20,000.
The lone Senator to file for
re duced pay was newlyerected John Kasich, RColumbus, who filed for
$17,500.
Five of those filing for
reduced pay voted for the pay
ra ise bill . They are
0\ristman, Deering, Eckart,
Hughes and Zehner .

OFFICES TO CLOSE
Offices in the Meigs County
Courthouse will be closed
Saturday. Offices will open
Tuesday morning.
. MEET DEC. 29
Orange Township Trustees
will hold their last meeting of
the year on Friday, Dec. 29 ,
at the clerk's home at 7 p.m.

Hy SAMUEL 0. HANCOCK
MARION, Ill . (UP!) - A
17-year-old girl who hijacked
a TWA jetliner with 87 people

aboard hoping to force a
federa l prison to release the
man her mother died trying
to help escape was in custody
of juvenile auttJOrities today .
· Robin Oswald of St. Louis
comma nd eered the fli gh t
from Louisville to Kansas
Mo .,
Thursday,
City ,
claiming she had three sticks
of dynamite strapped across
her chest. After her arrest ,
the FBI said the "dynamite "
wa• actually railroad flares.
Janice Story Locha ry, She ordered the plane to fly
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo

Lochary
appointed
coordinator

•

In

products, processed fruits
and vegetables were partially
offset by a sharp decline for
fresh fruits a nd moderate
declines for fresh vegetables,
non-alcoholic beverages, fish ·
and seafood.
The department said
restaurant meals cost 1.4
percent more in November
than in October.
There were hefty price
increases for medical care 2.5 percent - and entertainment - 2.7 percent. The
department said they .were
the largest increases for any
two months this year.

Illinois

bearded it and took her into
custody Thursday night.
The FBI said Miss Oswald
was trying to carry out the
dying wish of her mother,
Barbara Oswald , 43, who was
shot to death May 2t in a
helicopter
commandeered
while try,i;Jg to help Trapnell
ground in Marion , the escape from the U. S.
hostages managed til escape pentientiary near Marion.
-Robin
Oswald
was
one-by-one and in small
arraigned shortly after her
groups.
When she was left alone on arrest and placed in the
of
juvenile
the p lane , FBI ag ent s custody
authorities.

to Marion , the site of the
federal prison housing
Garrett B. Trapn ell , 40, a
convict ed hija cker . Miss
Oswa ld 's mother was shot til
death r)uring an attempt til
free Trapnell last May .
But during the nearly 10
hours the plane was on the

Story, Route 2, Pom e roy, has

been appointed coordinator of
vocational edu cation, applied
arts and career education in
School District U46 at Elgin,.
Ill.
.
Mrs. I .ochary, a frequent
visito r to Meigs County , will
assunw the 10-month-a-year
job as soon as a replacement
is fo und

fo r

her

Four hospitalized in
Meigs after incident

present

position as a home economics
teach er at Streamwood High

Four men were apparently

deliberately run down by a
ca r a llegedly driven by Bill
Rece iv in g h e r bache lor
Kauff, 29, Rt. 2. Pomeroy in a

School in Elgin .

·

degree in home economics

from Ohio University , Mrs .
l.ochary did graduate work in
developm e nt
h u man
education at the Institute for
Child Study at the University
of Maryland and earned a
master's degree in health
education at George Williams
College, Chicago. Her thesis
was on " Health Knowledge of
Select ed
High
School
Sophomores, Illinois District
U-46.''

She has a certificate of
advance study in educational
leadership from the National
College
of
Education,
Evanston, Ill., where she is
presently taking additional
course work.
In 1972, Mrs. Lochary went
to Elgin High School where
she initiated a ·sequence of
elective courses in " Th e
I n divi du al," '' Human
Relationships," " Life and the
SELF [Students of EHS
Lean in g
F r iend s hip )
program and developed

curricula in these areaS.
She is a member of the U-46
Instructional Co uncil , the
Instructi o na l Co un c il
Steering Committee and the
Senior
High
Health
Educat i o n Co n t inuin g
Committ ee. She was a
mem ber of the writing teams
for the Senior High Health
Education and the one-and
five-year plan for vocational
education in U-46. She also
assisted in the long-term
planning for and the opening
of the applied arts division of
Streamwood High School.
In 1976, she was recognized
as Kane County educator of
the Year by the Kane County
Educational Service Region.
Mrs. I..ochar y is married to
Charles Lochary, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. P. Lochary of
Pomeroy. The couple has two
children, Meg and Robert,
both at home. The family
resides in Schuenberg, Ill.

•

Father Gillen to

hit-skip in front of Shenang
Sp rin gs at a pproximat ely
11 :42 p.m. Thursday .
Injured and hospitalized
were William Lehew, Greg
Sheets, and Gary Van Meter,
all of Pomeroy and Bob
Nelson of Reedsville.
The men were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

help with services
Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy will have a visiting
priest, the Rev. Father Leo
Gillen , Steubenville, who will
help with the holiday services
at the church.
The Rev . Father Mr. Gillen
will celebrate the Sacrament
of Reconciliation on Friday
from 7 to 7:30p.m. apd from 8
to 8:30 p.m., and on Saturday
from 7 to 7:30 p.m. and 8 to
8:30p.m. and on Sunday, the
day before Christmas, at
7:3()-8 a.m.; 8:30-9 a.m. ; 9:3010 a.m. and 11-11 :30 a.m. and
from 7 to 7:30p.m. and 8to 9
p.m.
Father Gillen will celebrat e
the Sacrifice of the Mass at
7:30 p .m. th is evening,
Saturday and Sunday.
The Masses for Christmas
Eve are 7:30 p.m. and 12
midnight and at 9 a .m. on
Christmas Day.

Name pageant
participants
A Christmas pageant, "I
Wonder," will be presented at
6:30 p.m . Sunday at the
Bradford Church of Christ.
Taking part will be Donna
Kay Hysell, Diana Bing, Mike
Wayland, Belinda, Edie and
H. J . Grimm , Shellie and
Linda Stobart, Becky and
!,lade line Pa int er, Victor
Painter, Janice and Deanna
Haggy, Tammy Milli ron ,
Dreama, Steve and Scott
Pickens, Kathryn and Norma
Russell, '['ressie Hendricks,
Ruth, Virginia and Gene
Underwood, Wilbur Riley,
Danny Harrison and Evelyn
Wood.

Project in
final week
BY JEAN SPENCER
Asst. 4-H Agent
Th e Ca nt er's Cave 4-H
Camp Fund Raising Project
is reaching its final week.
Definite pl edges and money
received thus far for the 4-H
Camp Fund Raising in Meigs
Co unty total $24,529.01.
If you wish to donate, we
are reminding you that the
deadline is December 31.
Contributions may be sent to
the Meigs County Extension
Office, Box 32, Pomeroy.
Checks should be made
payable to Canter's Cave t-H
Camp. Donatio n pledges
within the next three years
can also be accepted by in·
dicating the amount you will
be giving and when it will be
paid.
The Meigs County Extension staff would like to
thank
the
following
organizations and individuals
who have donated or pledged
money to the Canter 's Cave 4H Camp Fund Raising
Project during the past week :
Mrs . Esther B. Greer,
Laurel Cliff Health Club,
Citizen's National Bank, Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Pickens,
Mrs. Rachael Downie, Mr.
Kenneth· R. Riggs, Meigs
County Farm Bureau, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Clay,
Farmers Bank, and Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society .

by the Pomeroy and Middleport emergency squads.
Hospital officials reported
the men are in satisfactory
condition .
Meigs Co unty Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reported
that hi s department was
notified by a member of the
Meigs County REACT team
that there had been a hit-skip.
Kauff had been ordered
from the establishment and
racing the
went out and
motor of his car. The four
men went out to investigate
and this is when the incident
occurred, according to
reports.
· ·
According to Gary Wolfe,
investigating officer for the
sheriff's department, Kauff
was apprehended later at his
home by Deputy Lou
Osborne. Kauff is presently
lodged in jail and a charge of
driving while intoxicated had
been filed against him with
other charges pending.
Preosecuting Rick Crow is
conti nuin g with the investigation.
Assisting t he sheriff's
department were Pomeroy
police department and state
highway patrol.

was

Weather
Mostly s unny Sat urda) ,
wit h highs In the nilddle u
upper 40s. ProbabUity of
precipitation is 10 percent
through Saturday.

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="810">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11453">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50211">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50210">
              <text>December 21, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="612">
      <name>grueser</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="137">
      <name>hawk</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2677">
      <name>mcmaster</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="182">
      <name>warner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
