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•

'
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 27, 1978

Iran's oil production dips to 27 -year low
By SAJID RJZVI
TEHRAN , Iran (UPI l Oil production throughout
Iran plunged to a 27-year low
today and exports were
halted completely f~r the
se.c ond consecutive day,
sources in the disrupted
petroleum industry said .
Just be!~re dawn, imperial
troops stonned a sit4n by
Tehran
University
professors, arrested 100 and
reportedly
beat
two
instructors who said they
received a letter of support
from several prominent
Americans, including former
Attorney General Ramsey
Clark.
Heavy
shooting
was
centered f&lt;r the fifth straighl
day around the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran.
Industry sources said
production of Iran's most
important resource - 'oil dropped below 500,000 barrels
tuday, far less than the
750,000 the nation itself

consumes daily .
The source said productioo
was · the -10west since 1951
when the government moved
to nationalize Iran's oil fields.
Continued violence and
anti-shah demonstrations by
oil workers have forced Iran,
ooce a leading exporter of oil,
to go to neighboring Kuwait
and Saudi Arabia looking for
oil.
The · halt in Iran's oil
production was not expected
to have "any illliilediate,
dramatic effect rn the United
States, which imports less
than 8 percent of its
petroleum from Iran~ But a
prolooged hiatus in Iran's
production could drive up
world oil prices.
As Iran's production
plunged ,
disgruntled
employees at the Tehran
refinery distributed oil and
kerosene free to residents
who lined up with plastic and
metal containers.
Troops
stormed
the

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

MEIGS INN
ALL
LEGAL
BEVERAGES
SOLD

\-

Ministry of Science building
at the university hef~re dawn
where Tuesday a 27-year-old
professor was shot and kWed. .
One hundred professors who

had staged a sit-in to demand
the reopening of the school
were
arrested,
their
colleagues said.
A spokesman for another

uwe're waiting foc our
turn," he said. "They 'll be
coming for us next."
The spokesman said these

CLARENCE ADKINS
Clarence Adkins, 70, Route
2 Letart, died this morning at
Holzer Medical Center.
He was a retired farmer
and served as a member of
the Mason County Com·
mission from January 196:i, to
March 1976. He served as
president of that group in
1975.
Mr. Adkins attended the
Oak Grove United Methodist
Church.
He was born Feb. 15, 1908,
in Mason County to the late
John T. and Ina May Fry ·
Adkins.
He ls survived by his wife
Ercell Greer Adkins; a sister,
Mrs. Virginia Holland, Route
2 Leon; four brothers, Virgil
Adkins, Route 2 Letart, and
George W. Adkins, Robert G.
Adkins and Carl T. Adkins,
all of Point Pleasant. He was
preceded in death by a
brother, William E. (Boone)
Adkins, who died Jan. 15,
1968.
The fWJeral will be held
Friday at 2 p.m. at the CrowHussell Funeral Home with
reverends Bobby Woods,
John Icenhower and Robert
Fulton officiating. Burial will
follow in the Suncrest

Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m.
Thursday.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Rebecca
Smith, Middleport; Gerald
Shuster, Pomeroy; June Van
Vranken, Pomeroy; Edith
Welch, Pomeroy; Barbara
Tillis, Rutland; Karen Lyons,
RaCine; Belva Mohler,
Middleport;
Dolores
Wickline, Racine; Howard
Lanham, Portland; Martha
Searls, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Sharon
· Stark.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Dec. 26
Glen Arrrowood II, John
Foster, Sadie Gillenwater,
John 3ohnson, Bobbi King,
Tammy Mathews, Myrtle

Meal, Bertha Saunders,
Junior Short, Harold Thompson, William Winebrenner ,
Brenda Winkler, William
Winter.
Births, Dec. 26
Mr. and Mrs . James
McLain, daughter, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs . Bruce
Richards, son, Point Pleasant , W.Va.

Weather
Clearing and cold tonight,
with lows in mid teens.
Mostly sunny Thursday,
highs In the middle or upper
30s.
Probability .
of
precipitation 20 percent
today, 10 percent tonight and
Thursday.

Rates of Taxation for 1978
~n pursuance of Law, I, George M. C'?llins, Treasure~ of Meig'S County, Ohio, in compliance with revISed Code No. 323.08 of State of Oh10, do hereby g1ve notice of the Rates of Taxation for the Tax
Year of 1978. Rates expressed in dollars and cents on each one thousand dollars tax valuation.

TOWNSHIPS

c

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

0

1

AND CORPORATIONS
BEDFORD
Meigs Local S. D. ---- 4.30
Eastern Local S. D. _. _ 4.30

170
·
1.70

24 00
·
32.00

10
·.10

40
·.40

10
·
.10

20
·.20

1 00
·
1.00

1.00
1.00

32.80
40.80

.01391230
.08805076

1.00
1.00

41.60
33.60

.09050098
.01871099

1.00

40.20

.21375707

1.00
1.00

41.80
40.70

.09342116
.10018896

CHESTER
~as tern Loca l S. D. __ . 4.30

e11:rs LocalS. D. - - -- 4.30
COLU MBIA
Alexander S. D. .. .. . . 4. :10
LEBA NON
Eas tern Local S. D. . . . 4.30
Southern Local S. D. . . 4 30
LETART
South ern Local S. D. .• 4.30
OLIVE
East ern Local S. D.
4.30

2.50 3 ~.00
2.50 24.00

.10
.1 0

.40
.40

.10
.10

.20
.20

1.00
1.00

1.70 29.00

.10

.40

.10

.20

1.00

2 70
·
2.70

10
·.10

40
·
.40

10
·.10

20
·.20

l.OO
1.00

2.70

32 00
·
30.90

2.40

30.90

. 10

.40

.1 0

.20

1.00

1.00

40.70 - .09752626

2.70 32.00

.10

.40

.10

.20

1.00

1.00

41.80

.09026456

1.00

41.60

.08997838

1.00
1.00

33.40
37.60

.01800563
.02700915
.01391242

ORAN GE
Eastern Local S. D . .. . 4. 30

2.50

32.00

.10

.40

.10

.20

1.00

RUTLAND
Meigs Local S. D... .. 4.30
Rutland Village ___ ___ 4.30

2.30
1.00

24.00
24.00

. 10
.10

.40
.40

.10
.10

.20
.20

1.00
1.00

SALEM
Meigs Loca l S. D. .... _ 4. 30

1.70

24 .00

.10

.40

.10

.20

. 1.00
.

1.00

32.80

24 .00
24.00
24.00

.10
. 10
.10

.40
.40
.40

.10
.10
.10

.20
.20
.20

1.00
1.00
1.00

1.00
1.00
1.00

32.80 .01391242
37.50 .02419414
37.10 .02376285

24.00

.10

.40

.10

.20

1.00

1.00

33.50

.0186887 4

30.90
30.90
30.90

.10
.10
.10

.40
.40
.40

.10
.10
.10

.20
.20
.20

1.00
1.00
1.00

1.00
1.00
1.00

40.10
48.70
43.90

.09556673
.09751088
.09807414

2.10 24.00

.10

.40

.10

.20

1.00

1.00

33.20

.01576502

SALISBURY
Meigs Loca l S. D. . .• . . -UO 1.70
Middleport Village . .. .4.30
.20
Pomeroy Village . .... _ 4.30
.20
SCIPIO
Meig s Local S. D. . . .. 4.30 2.40
SU'ITON
Southern Local S. D. .. 4.30 2.10
Racine Village __ _____ 4.30
.60
Syracuse Village ... . _ 4.30
.60
SU'ITON
Meigs Local S. D...... 4.30

5.50

6.20
5.80

10.10
5.30

Real Estate t axes which have not been paid at the close of each collection carry a penalty of ten
per cent. T":"es rna;,: be pa1d at t he office of the county trea.surer or by mail. Please bring your
laat tax rece1pt and 1f you pay by mail be s ure to locate your property by taxing district and encloee stamped self addressed envelope.
A~waya examine your tax receipt to see t hat it covers all your property. Office Hours 9:00 A .M.
to J4 .00 P .M. da~ly except Saturday wh en office closes at Noon. Tax Books will open December 20"
to anuary 20, 1979.
·
'
GEORGE M. COLLINS, Meigs

•

(

professors recently received
a letter of support from a
W'lllP of American writers
and professors including
Clark, Arthur Miller, Daniel
Ellsherg and Eric Bentley,
backing their 'demand that
the university be reopened
immediately. The letter was

dated Dec. 21.
The university has been
closed due to repeated rioting
by students demanding that
Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi abdicate from his
throne.
The 27-year-old civil
en~ineering professor shot to

at

death Tuesday died at
Pahlavi hospital and a crowd
of doctors and teachers
gathered today to lead a
funeral processioo. Troops
moved In to break up the
crowd, firing into the air and
using tear gas, professors
said.

Mayor's Court

room apartment early
Christmas
Eve.
Mrs .
Perkins, who is unemployed
and on welfare, said she .did
not have enough mooey to
pay for the burials.
" Everybody has been so
nice in sending in their
donations and calling," Mrs.
Perkins said Tuesday, wiping
away tears. "!thank God for
it and it has given me the

WELCH, W.Va. (UP! ) authoriti es
joined
the
Four people have been investigation and confiscated
arrested in southern West all fir ecrackers gathered by
Virginia
and
eastern state police at Welch, V',I .Va .
Kentucky for illegal sale of
The Cons umer Product
faulty , high-p owered Safety Commission said in
firecrackers that exploded Washington it is possible the
prematurely and seriously dangerous firecrackers ar e
injured more than 160 people · being sold in other states.
during Christmas weekend .
Jimmy Joe Bailey, 32 of
The wife and brother-in-law Isaban, .W. Va ., was arrested
of the man arrested in West Wednesday on a charge of
Virginia were among those illegal sale of firecrackers .
injured by the M-80 blockbus- Bailey posted $500 bond in an
ters, according to State appearance
before
a
Police.
magistrate and was released
Meanwhile,
federal until his arraignment Jan. 5.

before flames reached their
strength to get over this."
A report by the Orleans bodles.
Mrs. Lawless said some of
Parish coroner indicated all
but two of the eight bodles the youngsters' bodles were
were "partially cremated" so extensively burned. they
by the blaze that started had to be restored by a
because of faulty Chrlsimas special mortuary service.
Telephone callers and
tree lighting.
neighbors
Tuesday showered
Authorities said all eight
the
Perkins
family with
children died from carboo
monoxide poisoning. The ·donations of mooey, food and
repcrt said they were dead clothing .

Workers won't comply
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Tbe
United Rubber Workers will
not comply with President
Carter's wage guidelines In
contract negotiations with the
rubber industry next year,
URW International President
Peter Bommarito said today .
Bommarito, in a "New
Year's Message," termed tbe
president's voluntary wage

in a prepared statement. "If
wage increases are limited
by a 7 percent ceiling (as
Carter as suggested), then
business should likewise be
harnessed to keep prices
down.
"This hasn't happened and
we aren't surprised. This
won't
happen
until
mandatory controls are set
and enforced," the union ·
leader asserted .
Warning that a union
settlement with the rubber
into the middle Mississippi
industry "may not come
Valley.
easy," Bommarito said the
Early today temperatures
URW leadership would
dropped below zero from the
closely review the needs of Its
upper Mississippi Valley lniD
membership during fan
.Jhe western Great Lakes
International Polley Comregioo and across portions of
mittee meeting oo Feb. I.
the Northern and Central
" Two challenges which we
Rockies.
need to examine are
A travelers advisory was in
reserving jobs and boosting
effect for extreme western
retirement benefits."
New York state for snow
He also lashed out at the
squalls, and snow showers
news media, predlcting, "The
blanketed much of the Great
media will portray the URW
Lakes area.
as eager to grab all we can."
Sault Ste Marie, Mich.,
Bommarito said the rubber
received 3 inches of new snow
workers would abide by
late Tuesday and early today,
Carter's guidelies only if
leaving a !Dial of just over 2
controls were Instituted oo
feet oo the ground.
·"profits,
dividends, rents,
Rain and drizzle covered
interest
rates,
executive
much of southern Texas. and·'
compensation,
professional
showers dotted portioris of
fees."
southern Florida.

Six defendants were fined
in the court of Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday night, all on charges
of disorderly manner .
Fined $50 and costs each
were Donald Lovett, 55,
Middleport; George A.
McDaniel, 51, Middleport;
Sammy. Little, 42, Mid·
dleport; Buddy McKinney,
61, Middleport, two $50 fines
on the same charges and
Charles W, Boyles, 40,
Middleport, and William
McKinney, 22, Pomeroy, $25
and costs each.
Gary A. Last, trust
Forfeiting bonds were , representative of The Hun·
Leslie L. Whittington, 39, tington National Bank,
Middleport, $25 failure to Columbus, was guest speaker
yield the right of way; Virgil at the regular luncheon
Phillips, 27, Middleport, $100, meeting ofthe Meigs- Galliapossession of a controlled Mason Association of life
substance, and Gerald S. Underwriters held at the
Eblin, 30, Middleport, $37, Holiday Inn in Kanauga.
speeding 50 miles an hour in a
Last spoke on the use of
25 mile zone.
trusts to help preserve family
assets in the event of the
Four defendants were fined death of a husband or wife.
in the court of Pomeroy He recommended everyone,
Mayor Clarence Andrews young or old, prepare a wW.
Tuesday night.
He advised the use of trusts to
Fined for failure to pay old help relieve the "tax bite"
fines were Douglas Burns, allowing more funds to be
Pomeroy, $181.80; Mike saved, invested at a good rate
Smith, Middleport, $116; Jeff of return and distributed as
Hawley, Middleport, $172 . needed.
William
D.
Lavendar,
During the meeting,
Middleport, was fined $50 and presided over by Don
costs on a charge of squealing Stanley, Gallipolis, president,
tires and $50 and costs on a David Jenkins, secretary charge of passing on a double treasurer, discussed business
yellow line.
items as did David WelsForfeiting bonds were heimer, Springfield, state
Ronald Arms, Route 4, treasurer of the Ohio
Pomeroy, $50 posted on a Association of Life Uncharge of driving while under derwriters who reported
suspension; $30, running a ways the local association 1
red light, and $33, speeding; can improve its benefit to the :
Douglas C. Medlin, New community.
Haven, $30, failure to· yield
He also spoke on some of
the right of way, and Paula C. the new legislation which
Bocock, Mason, $30, assured affects the consumer of life
clear distance.
insurance.
Attending were Andy Toler, l
Ron Toler, Nick Johnson,
Walter Grueser; a guest,
Carson Crow, Pomeroy attorney, who pointed out some
legal points to consider; Gene
Riggs, Ray Davis and BW
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The Quickel.
financially tro11bled Cincinnati school board has
adopted a resolution to grant
FUNDS RELEASED
teachers and other school
Gov. James A. Rhodes has
employees 7 percent pay announced the state is
raises in each of the next releasing a seventh install·
three years - if the board ment of 1978 ~ehicle license
comes up with more money. revenues for distribution
However, a teachers' union among Ohio's 88 counties. Of
official labeled Tuesday's the total distribution of
resolution a "ploy" to head $4,695,877.87, · Meigs County
off a possible teachers' strike received $15,319.44.
next year.
The school board faces a
$10 million deficit In .Its 1979
SQUAD SUMMONED
budget and cannot legally
'!'l&gt;e
Pomeroy emergency
give pay raises until It bas
squad was called to 401
enough money to keep
schools open all school year. Spring Ave., at 10:01 a.m.
Tuesday for Mrs. June Van
Vranken who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
WATCH SLATED
with a hack problem.
There will be a New Year's
Eve Watch Party at freedom
Gospel Mission, Bald Knobs
Sunday from 8 p.m. to 12
MEET SATURDAY
midnight. The public is InOlive township trustees will
vited to attend and par- hold their last meeting of the
tlcipete in the singing and year on Saturday, Dec. 30 at
watch the old year out and the 6:30p.m. at the fire station in
new year in.
Reedsville.

'I_'rust .usage

major topic

Fift e e n Cents
Vol . 29, N o .. l 79

The sale of fir ewor ks in
West
Virg inia
is
a
misdemeanor, punishable by
a $100 fine and 90 days in jail.
In Kentucky, State Police
a rr est e d three people,
including Jack Chapman , 44,
of Kimper, Pike County, for
illegal firecracke r sales. The
oth er s uspects were not
identified.
State Police said Bailey 's
wife was released Wednesday
from Stevens Clinic in Welch,
and his brother-in-law was
treated at Beckley for loss of
finger s.

and price cootrol program
"ineffective," arguing that
Carter has failed to impose
the same restraint on prices.
"As Carter's voluntary
wage and price controls stand
now, we woo 't comply during
1979 contract negotiations
with the 'Big Five' rubber
companies," Bommarito said

Snow pelts Great Lakes
United Preos International
Much of the northern part
of the nation braced against
subzero temperatures today,
and snow fell in the Great
Lakes region.
A high-pressure system
centered over the middle
Mississippi Valley dominated
a large section of the middle
of the country, with skies
mostly clear from the
Southern Plateau across the
Southern and Central Rockies

en tine

•

Four persons charged,
evidence confiscated

Friends provide burial funds

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) A
welfare
mother wlll be able
CARL R. WICKS
to
bury
ber
five children and
Funeral services for Carl
three
grandchildren,
who
R. Wicks, husband of Betty
perished
in
a
Christmas
Eve
Martin Wicks, who survives,
fire
,
without
cost
under
a
former Syracuse resident,
collective
plan
offered
by
were held Dec. 21 at the First
Church of the Nazarene, area funeral homes.
"The-entire funeral will he
Lancaster, with the Rev. Jay
at
m expense to tbe famlly ,"
R. Smith officiating. B!U'ial
Dorothy
Lawless, director of
was
in
Forest
Rose .
Lawless
Funeral Home
Cemetery. Mr. Wicks who ·
\"here
the
eight
bodies were
died on Dec. 19 graduated
embahned
and
restored,
said
from
Olivet
Nazarene
Tuesday.
College, taught school 17
"We have asked all the
years, 15 of the 17 In Lanfuneral
homes in the area to
caster, and a member of
donate
somethinga casket,
the Church of the Nazarene,
mooey
a
hearse
and
any
Lancaster 15 years.
we
receive
wW
be
turned
In addition to his wife, he is
over
to
the
famlly
to
help
survived by one son, Rick
get
started·
over."
them
Wicks, Lancaster; three
A wake will be held f~r the
daughters, Brenda Cunchildren
Thursday at 8 p.m.
ningham, Beeman; Carla and
at
a
local'
Baptist church.
Jana at home, his parents,
will
follow
on Friday
Burial
Mr. and · Mrs. Pearly· Wicks,
at
Rest
Haven
Cemetery
at
The Plains, one brother and
12:30
p.m.
one sister.
, Ida Perkins, 39, lost five of
In lieu of flowers donations
her
own children and three
were given to the Nazarene
in the fire that
grandchildren
Residential
Home
for
gutted
their
crowded
fiveRetarded Children.

HOSPITAL NEWS

THE INN PLACE

group
of
professors
occupying the Administration
Building said two arrested
professors were
badly
beaten.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 28, 1978

•

ELBERFELD$
Festive Holiday Fashions

• Long Dresses
•Sweaters
• Velvet Skirts
• Velvet Jackets

• Dress Blouses

DREDGE STATIONARY - The Allegheny Towing
Company dredge boat now stationed in Mason, W. Va.
near the Mason Golf Course sets silently. An employe is

As the strike by Local 2359
of
the
International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers (!.B.E.W. ) against
the Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative enters its fifth
week, reports of violence and
vandalism in Gallia County
have dramatically increased .
The Gallia County Sheriff's
Department
Wednesday
investigated a shooting incident at the residence of an
~mployee of the electric
company, an act of vandalism at a dwelling where a
number ' of
contracted
workers for the company
reside, and numerous reports
of damage to the lines of
Buckeye Rural.
Two Shots Fired
Dean Evans, who works in
the Engineering Department

No 'action
taken by
0

You'll like our selection of miss and junior sizes
for parties, dance, speclol occasions during the
holiday seoson . Let us help you wlth your
selection.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

of Buckeye Rural, reported to
the sheriff's office that two
shots had been fired into his
home on Cora Rodney Rd.
Deputies report, upon investigation, they discovered
one .2i calibre shell lodged in
tbe storm door, and one .30
calibre shell lodged in the
ceiling after it had passed
through the storm door and
front door of the home.
According to Evans'
report, the Incident occurred
at approximately II p.m. the climax of an evening
during &gt;rhich numerous
suspicious vehicles had
patrolled in the area around
his home.
During the evening, the
Gallia County Sheriff' s
Department was informed
that a metal object, a
solenoid switch , was thrown
through the window of a
residence in Centenary where
contract personnel are living.
Those living at the Cen-

0

commission

&lt;::::::::;:::::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::

READY TO WEAR :
SECOND FLOOR

between the t wo e nds.
:·:·:::·:;:;:;:::;:;:;:·:&lt;-:·:·:·:·:;:-:· =·:·:·:·:.:·:···:·:·:.:-:-:-:·:-:·

Buckeye strike enters fifth week

Meigs
County
Commissioners Tuesday night
failed to take action upon the
1979 budget for the Meigs
County Highway Department. The matter was tabled
until Jan. 3.
Tuesday's meeting last
well over midnight after
commissioners go into the
budget issue.
In other business the board
discussed the need for cover
dirt at the sanitary landfill.
The board, in other action,
appointed Charles E. Blakeslee as a member of the Gallia·
Meigs Community Action
Agency Board of Trustees
and named Charles R. and
Barbara Knight as alter·
nates.
The next regular meeting is
scheduled for Jan. 2. An
organizational meeting will
be held Jan. 8.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter; clerk.

Board adopts
resolutior

bel!eved to _have fallen into the Ohio River Tuesday night
while working on the boat. Thus far , dragging operations
have been fruitless.

PAIR DROWNED
CANTON, Ohio (UP!)
A father and his
teeoaged sou drowoed late
Wednesday when they fell
throacb Ice on WWow Dale
Lake In Slark County.
The
victims
were
identified u
Mlcbael
Winner, 40, and bls sou
Mlcbael Winner, 13, both of
Towoshlp.
,Jackloo
Aotborltiea eaid the boy
weal lbrough the ice and
drowned and tbe father
:a110 fell througb the ice
·willie aearcblog lor hlm.
Tbe body of tbe lather was
'looad Wedoeoday nlchl
alld that of the boy was
·palled from the Jake early
:today.

Death caused
by poisoning

CHARLES CLINE

Promotion
announced
I

Charles Cline, son of
Russell Cline, East Third St.,
Syracuse, has been promoted
to production superintendent
of operations at the Mitchell
Power Plant of The Ohio
Power Co. at Moundsville, W.

v~ii~~ of g~~du~ted

tenary ·residence are em- Service was restored at 10:50
ployees of the Floyd Pike p.m.
Electrical Contractors Co. ,
-Disconnect
switches
and are doing contract line opened on the Solida Rd. in
work for Buckeye Rural Lawrence County at 11 p.m., ·
during the strike.
disrupting service to 176
Suspect Questioned
members . Service was
A member of Local 2359 of .restored at 1; 15 a.m. '!bur·
the I.B.E .W. was picked up sday.
and questioned by the
- Disconnect
switches
sheriff's
department opened on Little Buffalo Rd.
following an incident at the in Lawrence County at 1:08
Quail Creek Mobile Home lot p.m. disrupting service to 22
in Rodney.
members . Service was
Investigating a report of restored at I : 25 a .m.
power failure at the mobile
Local2359 of the I.B.E.W.,
home park, deputies spotted union employees of Buckeye
a
suspected
vehi cle Rural went on strike on Dec.
operating in the area.
L
Following a serial check of
The strike which affects
the vehicle and the em- service in nine Southeastern
ployment status of the owner, Ohio . counties, was called'
the driver of the vehicle was foll owing four months of
stopped in Gallipolis and unsuccessful negotiations
taken to the department for between the union and the
questioning. After taking a cooperative.
statement, the subject was
The contract between the
released.
union and Buckeye Rural
The sheriff's department expired Sept. I.
further received the following
Union members, who
reports of suspected acts of worked three months without
vandalism against the a contract , are askmg that
electric company on Wed- th e old agreement be
nesday :
renewed, with an additional
switche s 16 percent raise over the next
- Disconnect
opened on SR 588 at 9:30p.m., two years.
disrupting service to 105
The local I.B .E.W. is
members. Service was asking that the minimum
restored at 10 :50 p.m.
eight percent raise per year
switches be guaranteed, with a cost of
- Disconnect
opened on SR 141 near the living clause if inflation rises
junction of SR 775, disrupting over that eight per cent.
servi ce to 38 members.
'(Continued on page 12)

from

Southern Local High School,
Racine, in 1964, and from Rio
Grande College receiving a
bachelor of science degree in
chemistry in 1969. He started
with The Ohio Power Co. at
the Philip Sporn Plant im·
mediately after completing
college in 1969. Later that
same year, he was trans!erred from the Sporn Plant
to the Mitchell Plant at
Moundsville.
Prior- to his Dec . I
promotion, Cline has been the
Kammer
and Mitchell
Plants '
performance
supervising engineer since
Aug. 1, 1975.
Cline married the former
Lois Sisson and he and Mrs.
Cline, who reside at Route 2,
.,:,.,.,..• , .......· . ·.·.·.~·· ... .. .... ... .. .. .. .. .. J Moundsville, Mve two sons.
r '. . . ..... ,• ,•.• .•.•.• .•,•. ·.~· -~.·.:.: -:-:-:.: .:· :·:· :·:· :·:· : ·: · : · ·. :
Charles and Steve.
II

A presumptive ruling on
the death of Herbert J. McFann, 37, Rt . I , Oak Hill, has
been made by Jackson
County Assistant Coroner
John Cook.
According to Dr. Cook, a
provision death certificate
has been issued attributing
the cause of death to ,
" poisoning by the ingestion of
an unknown toxic substance."
The assistant coroner said
Wednesday full results of an
autopsy may take up to eight
weeks. At that time, a
corrective certificate of
death will be issued.
McFann was pronounced
dead on arrival at the Oak
Hill Hospital Saturday night.
In a report fUed With the
Gallla County Sheriff's
Department, and aP. 1rdlng
to a spokesman 1 r the
J acksolt'- Counly Sl. ~ rlff ' s
Office, McFaM became U1 at
a Gallia County Tavern, on
SR 233 in Gallia County,
earlier in the evening.
The Ohio Department of
Uquor Control was called in
by the Jackson County
Department to aid in the
investigation of the death.
Sunday evening, the ODLC
and Jackson County Deputies
conducted a raid in Jackson

Alarmed by the serious
injuries 1\ people using the
fir ecracker s, State Poli ce
have asked West Virginians
Lo get rid of any fireworks
they're planning ID use for
New Year :.S celebrations .
Police believe the deadly
fir ecracker s came from one
of the south ern states where
fireworks are legal, "and a
person or pe#sons from the
Kentucky-West Virginia area
may have gone down and
bought a van load, if you
please ."
About 140 of the injuries
reported were in Kentucky .
About two dozen people wer e
hurt in West Virginia ,
including McDowell , Wayne,
Cabell and Raleigh counties.
Reports by victims were
similar - ti1e instant they
touched a match or cigarette
to the fuse the firecracker
exploded.
The illegal M-OOs identified
so far are red cardboard
cylinders a bout one to two
inches long a nd up to threefour t hs or a n inch in
diam e ter . The fu ses are
green and are mounted in the
r enter of the cy linders ,

CONDUCTOPERATIONS -: Member~ of the Point Pleasant Volunteer fire department
Wednesday asststed mthe draggmg operations for the body of a man believed to have fallen
off a~ Alleghe~y-Towing Company boat Tuesday night. The boat was in this area attempting
to ratse Amencan Electric coal barges which sank between Mason and Hartford , w. Va.
The U.S. Coast Guard is expected to be called in to assist .
•

EXTENDED FORECAST
Rain and snow Sathrday
and •a chance of snow
flurries on Sunday, with
fair weather Monday. High
temperatures will be in the
40s Saturday, cooling into
the 30s Sunday and into the
20s Monday. Lows will be lo
the 20s early Saturday and
in the teens Sunday and
Monday.
::;.,:;:;:::::.::::::&gt;.::::::

Three persons are injured in
five-car smashup ·near bridge
Two persons were treated
for injuries susta ined during
a five-vehicle accident on SR

7, just south of U.S. 35, at the
ramp to the Silver Bndge, at
12 :30 p.m . Wednesda y.

L ow-mcome
•
h ouseholds
wiJl get }ivmg
•
h 1•ke ·
Low-in come hou se hoh~s
will be getting a cost-of·
living increase in their fuod
st amp a llotm ent s st arting
Jan. I , Barb ara Shuler ,
Di rec tor, Meig s Co unt y
Welfare Departm ent , announced.
'The increase reflects the
rise in the cost of food from
March to September of this
year. F'or a family of four,
thi s means a 5.2 percent
increase in their food stamps.
Between March and July
1979, Ohio will be phasing in
new a llotments and income

eligibility limits r equired by
the F'ood Stamp Act of 1977.
As a res ult, Ohio will be
issuing food stamps under
both old a nd new progr am
rules while thi s transition is
taking place. I
Under the progr a m r ules
being phased ou[ ', a fa mily of
four with no net income will
have their allotment increased from $182 to $1 92. The
maximum net monthly income a famil y of four may
have and still be eligible for
food stamps will incre~se .
(Continued on page 12)

Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol , reports that a
so uth bound pickup truck
operat ed by Morris Martin ,
68, Ewinglon, struck the rear
of an auto driven by Mike
Wills. 21, Gallipolis.
In a chain reaction. the
Wills a uto was pushed into a
vehicle oper ated by Bruce
Davidson, 25, Ga llipolis; the
Davidson auto was fo rced
into a vehicle driven by Cindy
Shoemaker, 18, Gallipolis;
and , the Shoemaker vehicle
was pushed into an auto
dr iven by Ra ymond Hoce, 62,
Pomeroy.
Wills and a passenger,
Cheryln Wills, 20, Gallipolis,
displayed visible sign s of
injury and were transported
by t he Gall ia Volunteer
Squa d to Holze r Medi cal
Center .
Mike Wills was treated for
a contusion of the left jaw,
a nd a l ~ceration of the leg,

and released.
Cheryln Wills was treated
for a contusion of the right
elbow and bruises to the
scalp , and r eleased.
Davidson claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated .
The Ga llia Meigs Post
report s that t he Ma rtin , Wills
and Shoemaker vehicles were
demolished.
Ther e was mode rat e
damage to the Davidson and

Hoce autos.
Martin was

cited on

cha r ges of fa ilure to mainta in
an assured clear distance.

Marl in
Pom eroy',

McAngus,

18,

was

on

cit ed

cha r ges of DWl followin g a
one-vehicle accident on SR

124 in Minersville today at
2:15 a .m.
OffiJ;ers report that an ..east
bound auto operat ed by
McAn gus went out of control,
(Continu ed on page 9)

County near Centerpoint, and
confiscated a quantity of
suspected liquid.
The ODLC is reportedly
analyzing the material.
According to a spokesman for
the Jackson CoWJty Sheriff's
Department, the results of
the examination should be
available this week.

Deputies probe
two complaints
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department is investigating
the breaking and entering of
the Sam Rairden residence,
Long Bottom, that occurred
Wednesday between 6 p.m.
and 10 p.m.
The breaking and entering
was discovered by Rairden.
The house had been ransacked . ltems reported stolen
were two throw rugs, two
towels, two pairs of new
pejamas and one new flannel
shirt.
Roger Milliron, Rt. 2,
Racine, reported Christmas
Day a 12 volt battery was
stolen from his vehicl•
parken •t his resid~ce .

BRAVE COLD DAY - Even though the day was very
cold and the ground frozen Bob Jeffers owner and
operaiDr of Jeffers Excavating, and emplov'es were hard

at it Wednesday digging a leach bed for a resident in the
village of Syracuse. Assisting Jeffers were John Lyons
and Ebner Pickens.

•

1

"

\

�2--:The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-P&lt;Wneray, 0 ., Thursday , flee. 21!. 1978

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Dec. 28. 1978

"*********************************************~

~ Editorial opinions

IN WASHINGTON

~

*t*********************************************.:

Carter's wage-price guidelines.
On Nov. 18, Rep. Leo Ryan,
D-Callf., and three others
were gunned down alter their
visit to the People's Temple
at Jonestown, Guyana .
Within hours, followers of
cult leader Jim Jones were
shot to death, were forced to
or voluntarily took poison at
the group's communal
plantation. The final death
toll was set at 913 .
Moat of the ballots had been
returned prior to the announcement of the resumption of .diplomatic relations
between the United States
and. China.
Headllue Value
1. Guyana massacre ,
suicides.
2. Middle East peace talks.
3. Two Popes die, election
of Pope John Paul II.
4. U. S. Economy: inflation,
dollar's decline, stock
market ,
wage-price

HEALTH
lawrence E.lamb, M.D.
Symptom!' of
pota~~iurn

los!'

DEAR DR . LAMB - What
symptoms would one have
because of great loss of
potassiwn caused by taking
diuretics?
DEAR READER - The
great loss of potassiwn is
usually associated with a
great Joss of other salts induding sodiwn as well as an
exl'ess Joss of water . That's
why a person bas a mixed set
of symptoms.
Faintness and weakness is
common. This may be as the
result of decreased blood
volwne from the Joss of excess water. It can also be
Irom the Joss of more than an
optimal amount of water
from various tissues, particularly from the legs. Faintness weaknes.' headache
are ' commonly ' associated
with such problems.
The Joss of potassiwn also
increases the irritability of
the heart muscle. Many patients who have a deficient
level of potassium may
deve lop ·irregular heart
beats. hi its severe fonn, this .

ct-tn cause dar1gerous heart irregulctrities.
Potassi urn and sodium are
the main types of salt in your
b&lt;xly. I am sending you The
Health Le tter nwnber 10-12,
Salt : Yonr Vital Sodium And
Potassium Balance. others
who want tl1is issue can send
50 cents with a long, stamped ,
self -addressed envel ope for il
to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
DF:AR DR. LAMB - Can
y&lt;iii·glve me an idea of what is
the ma tter with me ? I go to
bed about II :00 and by 12:30 I
am awake because I h•ve to
go to the bathroom. It's an all
night affair from then on. I'm
just a bundle of nerves. I have
to get up about every 15
minutes . I itch all over. Is
·that n erves? Or is something
wrong with my bladder?
I have taken Gantanol for
the bladder and I also have a
pill for nerves. This whole
procedure goes .,on so often
that it is usually about 4:30
a .m. before I can go to sleep.
I hale to see the night &lt;'orne as
I know what to expect.
DF:AR READER - It's
possible that your problem is
from nervousness but there
are other possibilities. ·
·If it were just simply a
bladder infection, one might
wonder why you didn't have
the same problem all day
long instead of just at night.
The other question is, are you
passing a large volume? If
you arc, one has to start looking for causes of what doc-tors
call nocturia, meaning
simplygetting up at night and
pas.,ing lol• of urine.
Might l suggest that you
collect the volume of urine
voided throughout the ni~ht
when you gel up, and also in a
separate cuntainer cnlledthe
vol urn¥ for the d~ylime , Then
measure the volume of each
so that you can find out
whether you are rt·ally pass-

•

ing a lot of urine or just getting up frequently .
F:ven if you're not passing
very much each time, it could
still be associated with a
medical problem such as an
infection of your bladder.
I note in the rest of your letter that you are 68 years of
age. As women get older, hormone deficiencies sometimes
affect the cells that line the
outlet of the bladder. This
causes the bladder to be more
susc"Cptible to infections.
So. you need lo know what
volume you are passing at
night and you'll probably
need more than one examination to find out whether you
have a urinary tract infection . Your doctor may want to
know whether you are retaining urine in your bladder
because of some mechanical
disorder that you may have,
as well as wanting to know
what your hormone status
would be.
As you can see from these
comments, unraveling why a
person has frequency of
urination or noc-turia is not
always a simple problem.

Carter takes care

SS questions
and answers
Q, WbeD I applied for SSI
paymeulll, lhe lady at the
101:1al ~ecurUy oHfce men·
lloued somelhluC about a
perledic redetermination:
How does Ibis work? Am I
au~ to get in touch wltb
soelll seeurlty at a certain
lime?
A. The SSI law requires
that each recipient's case be
periodically reviewed to
make sure that the per110n is
stU! eligible for SSI and that
his or her payment amoiUlt is
correct. In some instances,
this redetermination can be
conducted by telephone or
maU. But, in some cases, the
periiOn bas to visit the social
security office for an interview. The local social
security office will notify you
when It is time for your
redetermination.
Q. I Jut get married a few
weeki a1o. Does my
marrta1e bave any effect on
.my 881 paymealll?
A. A change·in your marital
status could affect the
amount of payments due ·you
and your husband or wife.
Yo11 lhould notify a so~ial
security office promptly. The
people tber~ will tell you bow
your marriage affects your
paymenta.
Q. I've lleard lbat people
wbe 1et 881 paymelllll are
eUilble for IOdll ltn'lcn.
My lfMdmolher, wb•'• ~
lllld Ia poor · beallh, ueedl
to do ber marketing
aad hlp with boasebold ehora. Wllere eu I fbld 0111
wbat ~ervlcea are avaDable
Ill - eoJIIIIIIIIIHy?
A. states provide social
eervlcu. You can .get in·
fortru1tlon about the services
In yoiD' area from your State
or loea1 IOcllll aervlceti or ·
welf1re office. Or, the people
in any IIOCial secuflty office
can put you in touch with the
office llllt can help you.

10-

guidelines.
5. San Diego air collision
kUls 144.
6. California's Proposition
13 triggers anti-tax sen·
tlment.
7. Panama Canal treaties.
8. Chlld conceived in
British laboratory.
9. Terrorism , including
kidnap-murder of Aldo Moro
in Italy.
10. Northeastern United
States hit by two worst
bUzzards in decade.
Long-range Significance
I. Middle East peace .talks.
2. U. S. Economy.
3. Proposition 13.
4. Guyana massacre,
suicides.
5. Papal deaths, election' of
Pope John Paul II.
6. Panama Canal Treaties.
7. Carter and Congress,
including tax and energy
measures.
B. Supreme Court's Alan
Bakke ruling on reverse
discrimination.
9.. Chlld conceived in .I_ j
British laboratory.
10. Washington scandals:
The Lebanon Cemetery is
Korean influence, GSA, believed to be the oldest one
several congressmen.
in Columbia Township. The

Backstairs at the
White House

Jordan conducts regular
weekly meetings on Monday
with senior staffers and top
aides of Cabinet and federal
agency officials.
"We let them know what we
think is wrong and they let us

know," he said.

"It'~

a free

exchange. We talk about our
priorities. It's a two-way

street."
Incidentally , Jordan said
he's been wearing ties and
suits and the proper attire for
a year, and folks are just
beginning to notice it. He
· dropped his more casual
wardrobe because "I got
tired of people writing about
the way I dress."
Jordan said Carter "has
never said a word about the
way I dress."
At the time he was interviewed, he wore a blackstriped suit.
"Tbis is my Cy Vance
. •uit," he said, referring to the
secretary of state.
Jordan prefers not to have
his name cropping up in the
social columns as it did so
often when he first took over
his top White House job. The
"gossip columnists," as he
calls them, had a field day,
But he has dropped the
·
party circuit.
" My 110clal life is nonexistent{ .he said. "I Just
don't feel like I can go many
places. I feel vulnerable."
"I jullt don't go anywhere,"
he said, quipping, "I'm
socially
underdeveloped."
He remembers the advice
of his predecessor Richard
Cheney, who was Gerald
Ford's chief of staff. Cheney
said, " What you want to do is
keep a low profile."
Mter . the unpleasant publicity, Jordan wrote Cheney,
newly elected congressman
from Wyoming : "I've been
an. absymal failure ."
Rosalynn Carter says the
widespread reports lhe and
her mother-in-law "Miss
Ulllan" do no! get along are
"absolutely false ."
The. first l~tly admits that
I
&lt;

when her husband quit the
Navy {llld decided to move
back to Plains, Ga., to take
over the family business, she
was not happy.
"You must remember I
was young," she said. " I had
three children. My mother
and my mother-in-law were

there. 11
She also points out "Miss
Ltllian" went off to be a
fraternity housemother in
Auburn, Ga ., for several
years soon after her son
Jimmy and his family moved
back to Plains.
The White House-commissioned portrait of Pat Nixon
has been completed and
according to curator Clement
Conger she's "pleased with
the results."
But the name of the New
York artist is still a top secret
and the painting is under lock
and key. It will not be
former
unveiled
until
President Nixon sits for his
portrait and it is completed,
Both portraits wm be hung in
the White House at the same
time.
Conger said Nixon also
approved the work of tbe
artist who painted his wife's
portrait and may have his
done by the same painter.
Conger said there is a
chance Nixon may sit for his
portrait early next year.
The curator, meantime,
said his next move is to get
President and Mrs. Carter to
sit for their portraits ''while
they're young and in the
White House."
"The White House really
ages you," he said.
"The Nixons Wish they had
taken my advice and had
their paintings done while
they lived in the White
House," he said. "Things
ended so quickly, they never
got them done."
Conger also has a surprise
annoWlCement to make in
January when he announces
th_e acquisition of a painting
sought by the 'White House
since the Kennedy era.
"It's very important ... one
of our greatest acquisitions,"
he said, deelining to be more
specific.
Conger also said he is
getting ready to lift the White
House Historical Association
"out' of its moribund state"
with a drive to raise $1
million a year to purchase
furnishings and works of art
for the White HouSe.
He said the goal is to
acquire $25 million "so that
future first ladies wm be able
to . finance such purchases."
Amy Carter, 11, is enjoying
the life that any little girl
would have who has nearly
everything at her disposal.
She is going skiing in
Colorado after Christmas,
·and the first week in January
she will t~avel with her
parents to Guadaloupe in the
Carribbean, wber'e she will
learn to snorkle.

::·}: :::: :: : :::::: : : :::::::: ~··· ·

.·.·

:;:
\~j~

Brown rebuff

rrhe Leban·on Cemetery

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) Backstairs at the White
House :
H President Carter'tlecides
to seek re-election, and few
doubt he will, it will be
necessary for him to set up
his
own
campaign
committee. Such a move
gives shudders to those woo
remember Richard Nixon's
Conunittee to Re-elect the
President, and the Watergate
aftermath.
The Democratic National
Committee would not step
into that picture until the
Democrats pick a nominee.
Asked if he would be
Carter's campaign manager
again, top aide Hamilton
Jordan said, " I hope not , but
I'd do what he asks me to do."

United Press lnterilatlonal
Four Ohio college teams
battle for the championships
of their own holiday
. basketball tournaments
tonight as no less than six
tourney titles are decided
around the Buckeye State.
Findlay takes on Capital in
the title match of the Findlay
Tournament ; Wooster meets
Alma ( Mich.) in the Wooster
Classic; Marietta goes
against Cedarville in the
Marle~ta Tourney;
and
Muskingum
faces
Wilmington
in
the
Muskingum Tournament.
In the other two holiday
events, Centre (Ky .) tangles
with Grove City ( Pa .) for the
Colonial Classic title at
Mount Vernon and Bethany
( W.Va .) meets Allegheny
(Pa. ) for the Mount Union
Tourney championship .
Findlay advanced to the
title round of Its tourney with
a 73-65 victory over Ohio

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - For all his confidence about
his standing within the Democratic Party, President
Carter is laking great ca re to minimize friction with his
two most formidable potential rivals - Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy a nd Califorma Gov. Jerry Brown.
The White House was caught off guard by Kennedy's
blunt assault at the Democratic Mid-term Conference in
Memphis, where the senator assailed c arter's plans to
combat inflation with deep budget CJJis in "bas1c social
programs. ''
.
.
.
But instead of retaliating, Carter carefully turned the
other cheek - setting up a meeting between Kennedy and
his budget director, James Mcintyre, and then telling the
world about it at his press conference last Tuesday .
Carter also used the rress conference as an excuse to
emphasize his areas o agreement with Kennedy ("we
espouse the same ultimate goals" ), while downplaying
their conflicts.
It was a far cry from his campaign performance in 1976,
when he responded to criticism from the late Sen. Hubert
H, Humphrey by deriding Humphrey in the most cutting
terms.
During the Memphis conference, the Carter forces also
made informal overtures to the Jerry Brown camp. White
House aide Anne Wexler. a seasoned political operative,
huddled at length with two of the governor's top aides,
Josiah Beeman and Tom Quinn; during a Saturday night
cocktail party sponsored by the AFL-CIO's largest union,
the American Fel!eration of State, County and Municipal
•.
Employees ( AFSCME ),
Although Wclxer insisted it was just a casual chat among
old friends , it was learned that she solicited the views of
the Brown staffers on Carter's performance, asking their
opinions of what the president is doing right and wrong.

_Mass Guyana murders,
suicides top story
NEW YORK (UP!) - By
an overwhelming margin,
American newspaper editors
chose the mass murders and
suicides among members of a
religious cult in Guyana as
.t he top headline story of 1978.
President Carter's Middle
Ea•l •ummitry at Camp
David In an effort to reach an
Israel-Egypt peace accord
was second in the anniml
balloting conducted by
United Press Cnternational.
More than 300 editors
participated in the poll,
results of which were
released today.
Editors were asked to rate
the big stories of the year,
both from the standpoint of
headline impact and longrange significance.
The quest for peace in the
Middle East was selected ,as
the story with the most farreaching
significance,
followed by U. S. economic
developments, including

Ohio teams baule for championships

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

oldest marker in Columbia
Township is (oWld in this
cemetery. It .bears the.name
of George Clme who d1ed on
April12, 1819 at the age of 27
years, 1 month and 2 days.
The most recent burial is that
of Anna Skelly who died 3-271891.
The Lebanon Cemetery is
located near the center of
Section No. 24 just west of
State Route No. 143 and
northwest of the Temple
Church. It cannot be seen
from the road. Dwaine and
Ruby Jordan own the land
nearby , There were at least
35 graves in this cemetery in
the bicentennial year of 1976.
The cemetery was in poor
condition in 1971. Names of
those interred in this
cemetery according to
markers ·round ar.e as
follows:
Beckley, Walter, age 62, 818-1883; Sarah, age 15, 1-211877, Hannah, age 16, 11·11·
1680, Mary E ., age 23, Hi1881, children of W. and L.
Beckley.
Cline, George, age 27 yr., 1
mo., 2 days, 4-12-1819;
Eliphalet, son of George and
Anna; George, 9-0-1851, 110n of
L. and S. Cline.
Ferrell, John, age 83, 1-121856; Daniel, age 13 year, 11
days, 9-24-1846, son of E. and
M. Terrell; Mary, wife of B.
Ferrell.
Andrew W., son of D. and
R. Ferrell.
Martin, Mary J ., daughter
of W.V . and N. Martin, 3-15·
1861.
McLaughlin, Joseph, age
35, 6-9-1876.
McNabb, Elizabeth, 12-12·
11156, wife of W. McNabb.
Roberts, Mahila, 2-18-1814,
4·6-1872, wife of David ;
David, 2-14-1812, 5-9-1891.
Rutherford, Mary 3-101847 ; Martha, Sarah.
Scott, James 4-3-1861,
Lucinda .
· Skelly, Anna, 7-27-1823 - 3·
27-1891.
Trainer, James 10-12-18()3-

Quinn, Beeman and several other aides who attended the
Memphis conference on Brown 's behalf found little
enthusiasm for their man among the Democratic delegates. They were rather firmly rebuffed by the key New

A thought for the day:
British novelist Aldous
Huxley said, " There's one
corner of the universe you
can be certain of Improving,
and that's your own seU."

~:~:~i~);.?;::~~~~~.J~; :~a.::~::h!.~!~~=~~ed, :t

the only sign of .B'rown interest came on a handful of
" Kennedy-Br own " buttons of mysterious origin:
·•
• •
•
SJgmhcant speculatiOn
Speculation about Kennedy 's future political plans was
intensified not only by his ringing Memphis speech but also
by news that he has hired 33-year-old Carl Wagner, a top
political operative for AFSCME, as a special assistant.
(-Another AFSCME political expert. Bill Welsh , is -joining
the Carter administration as an assistant secretary of the
Departme nt of Hous ing and Urban Development).
Wagner is widely regarded in D.e mocratic circles as a
crackerjack field organizer. Although he insists there is no
spec1al significance to his joining the Kennedy staff at this
time, the senator has not had a political aide in his Senate
office for almost two years.
to happen

Hundreds of "HAD" buttons on 'lapels in Memphis
heralded the creation of yet an other inter ~s t group within
'the Democr a tic Party - Hispanic American Democrats , a
coalition of citizens of Mexica n, Cuban and Puerto Rican
descent.
Initial planning for the coalition began a_ bout 9 months
ago, and the three groups got together for the fir st time in ·
Dallas a month a~o . Wh1te House aide Rick Hernandez was
at the first plannmg session, and Puerto Rico's most avid
Carter supporter, Franklin Delano Lopez, is part of the "
HAD leadership .
At Memphis, the group set up a 37' member planning
· committee a nd announced its intention of establishing
state chapters. A fullscale convention is planned for July.
HAD leaders also caucused in Memphis with top black
Democrats and agreed to work on common goals.

Peopletalk

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Press International
NEVER AGAIN: The ~ening shots were fired Wednesday
in Los Angeles in Michelle Triola Marvin's alimony-for-mistresses lawsuit against Lee Marvin, and the two promptly fell
ru" F.tlill•r
PuiJli.~hl'd d;tll.r t•xt•t•pt SatLJnl&lt;tY
to
bickering about a jury. Marvin- with whom Michelle lived
hy Tht• Oltiu Valh·y Pulll tshinlf
C'Htn (lilll j· Mll\t tllh't!ia . l ilt' .,
Ill
for several years without benefit of clergy - is being sued for
, Cuurt St., Pt•I IWwy, Ohit' 4 57 f~!J.
the same supporthe'dhave to pay her as a divorced wife. He'd
R u~ult'ss OHit ·t· Pl111rw !lfl2- 215fl.
like to settle the matter before a Judge, without a jury, but
F:dilill'i &lt;~l Plu•m•ffiM\57.
St•t•o rw! d:to.; s pt•st;tgt• (la id al · Michelle isn.'t having any. Says she, through her attorney,
Pt•IIII'I"IIY. Ohiu.
.
Marvin Mltehelson, "My days of putting my fatih in one man
Nut itm al atlvt•t'li sin~ n•pn•scnli11n·t•, l.;u11 h•n AS."'II'iith'S. :1101
are over." They're due back before Judge David Eagleson
F.,uditl A\'l'., Ckvt'land , Ohiu44 115.
.
today to iron it out.
Suhst'l'i)lltmt rah·s 11dil'l'rcd h\'
TilE PAII .Y SENTINEL
OF.VOTF.O TO THF.
INT+: R F,ST OF
MEIGS-MA."'ON AREA
R0Rfo:RT IIOF.FUCH

t'HtTi t·r wlwn• itVailahlt• 75 n ·uls JM;r
Wl't•k. R\' Mu1t11' Ruutt• wht'l't• t'Ot!Tit•r
!'l'l'\'ll'l' 'mil C
tvililitbh- , 0rlt' llJUIIIh.
:f,:l.:ti R~· m;u l i11 Olliu a111l \'/. V;L 1

Olit' Yt'ill', S27 .0a : ~1x mnu ths,
$14.50: Thr l'l' mu uth .... $fl.5n :
F.lst•v.·lwn• SJHl(l yt•&lt;tr: SIX 11\1&gt;11\hs

U i .OO :· Thn·t•
~ u h~w ript i un prit •t•

m n ntl1 ~.

t:fl.llll;

im•ll1tlt•s SU IUII-1)1

Tunt•s,..""-·nlml'l .

MISS Kl1TY SPURNED: James Arness, a fixture on U.S.
television for two decades as Marshal Matt Dillon in the series
"GWlsmoke," has gotten married for a second time - and not
to Miss Kitty, the saloonkeeper who was Dillon's TV lady
friend . An MGM spokesman· says Amess married Jaoet
Sartees Dec. 16 at the First Christian Church in Los Angeles.
Amess now stars in the television series "How the West Was

Won."

Berry's World

•.·

·.·.:·:
·.·.
·.·.
;::

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

1

It HAD

·::::::::::::::::.:.:.:;:;::::: ·::::::::·:·:::::·:;.;.;.::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;::::.:

Today's

~~:':;::~e

delegation. a nd given little encouragement
Most Memphis delegates who expressed unhappiness
\·
with Carter clearly preferred Kennedy as the alternative,
6-24-1875; Mary PatteriiOn 11- · not Brown. A couple hundred blue and white "Ken,nedy"

:l.'i-1809 • 7-31·1886; Mary' L.,
daughter of J . and M.
Trainer.
Wood, M. Workman, 19
years, 3-18-1879, liOn of J. and
E. Wood.
About 35 graves with 24
markers at least partially
legible.
First burial in Lebanon
cemetery and in Columbia
Township is George Cline
who died on April 12, 1819 at
· the age of27 years, I month, 2 .
days.
1
Last burial in bicentennial
year of 1976 was Anna Skelly
who died March Tl, 1891.
It should be remembered
by those doing genealogical
research that grave markers
can be reported in error due
to their legibility. Therefore
searchers should check
deeds, wiUs, tax records,
court records a nd other
records to confirm the accuracy of grave marker
records.
Nov. 30,1978
- H. E . Throckmorton

.

Wesleyan Wednesday night
Capita I downed
while
Wabash (Ind .) I~ in the
other semifinal contest.
Wooster cruised to an easy
104-63
victory
over
Kalamazoo and Alma downed
North Carolina-Greensboro
by a 7~ margin in the
semifinals of the Wooster
Classic.
Marietla also had little
trouble winning its opening
round game in the Marietta
Tourney, overwhehning John
Carroll
102-78,
while
Cedarville edged Oberlin 9190 in the other first roiUld
matchup. ,
Muskingum waltzed to a 7656 victory over Bluffton and
Wilmington blasted Denison
91-66 in the semifinals of the
Muskingum Tournament at
New Concord.
'It took an overtime period
to decide the first game of the
Colonial Classic as Centre
squeezed by Kenyon 79-76.

. CENTERFOLD CLASSIC: Not many women are lucky
enough to find Vincent Van Gogh and Pablo Picasso side by
side in their Christmas stockings, but that's what San~ Claus
left this year foc Kathy Keeton - associate publisher of ;
Penthouse magazine. Santa, in this case, is PenthouSe publisher and longtime boyfriend Bob Guccione. The Van Gogh
original is titled " Mother and Child," but the Picasso may
more adequately fit the magazine's format. It's called "Standing Nude, Lying Nude." For Ms. Keeton , it definitely was tbe
"Pet of the Year."

I

:;:
.·.·

vic tory

over

Hiram .

Alleg heny downed Moun t
Union 91-79 in the other
semifi na l game.
In non-tournament action

Wednes day night, Tol edo
edged Loyola of Chicago 6().
59.

AI Toledo, ce nter Jim
Swaney .Cored 18 points and
guard Tim Selgo added seven
cruci al points down the
stretch as lhe Rockets came
from behind ro whip Loyola .
Loyola led 31-29 at the half

and upped their adv"!'tage to
41,1:1 with just five minutes
left. But the Rocke_ts fought
bsck, led by Swaney and
Sei,;J, who scored seven of his
nine points in the last fe w
minutes.
Toledo . now

United Press Internalional
After the Detroit Pistons'
humiliating
Joss
to
Milwaukee Tuesday night,
O:&gt;ach Dick Vitale started
yelling at his players and he
didn.'t stop until they took the
court against Houston 24
hours later .
And when he stopped, the
Pistons started, making
amends for the most lopsided
loss in the team 's history by
crushing Houston, 131-119, at
lhe Silverdome.
M.L. Carr , who scored a
career-high 36 points against
the Rockets, said Vitale's talk
made an impression on the
team .
"After "he got done talking
to us there was no doubt in
my mind we'd play well
tonbtht. even if we were
playing an All-Star team,"
Carr said. " I rold my wife
when we got home from
Milwaukee I couldn 't wait
until eight o'clock so we could
get a chance to redeem
ourselves. That wa s lhe most
embarrassing performance
I've ever been part of ."
Bob Lanier , who added 29
points to the Detroit attack,
took the court with the idea of
playing a physical game.
"I played with greater

intensity on defense and the
only way I can do that is by
being more physical ," Lanier
said.
Detroit raced to a Ilk) lead
and ended the first quarter
with a 41-29 advantage . They
increased the margin to 58-35
midway through the second
quarter before Houston n ar~
rowed the gap to 68-53 at the
intermi ssion .
Detroit shot 62 percent
from th e fi eld in the first hail
and recorded sea son highs for
scoril)g in a quarter and a
hail. Houston made only 37
percent of its field goal tries
in the first two periods.
Elsewhere, New York
nipped New J ersey, 11!)-104,
Atlanta
de feated
San
An tonio, 115-107, Philadelphia
bested Indiana , 122-11 0,
Boston downed Kansas City,
112-103. Seattle tripped New
Orlean s, 122·103, and Los
Angeles shaved Golden State,
100-104 .
Hawks 115, Spurs 107:
Led by John Drew's 28
points, Atlanta held off a
furious Sa n Antonio rally to
hand the Spurs their fir st loss
in nine games .
Kni cks 115, Nels 104 :
Bob McAdoo sco red 31
points . including 24 in the

J4

off ense .

Quarterback Steve Fuller,
the man who throws the
passes that Butler catches,
agreed with · his partner's
assessment of Clemson's
performance at la~1 yea r's
Gator Bowl.
11
1t was all a m ess,'' said
the
Atlanti c
Coa st
had an awful game last year . Otfrlference's player of the
" But we're m ore excited year . ''ll seemed like nobody
about coming to the' Garor could do anything right. We
Bowl this year than we were all wRnted it ver y badly, but
last year," he added , " not we couldn 't put the things
just because we want to toge th er we needed for
redee m ourse lves, but victOr y.
" Besides. Pittsburgh was
beca use th is is the la st
play ing super football at the
chance for most of us ."
Butler is expected to go time . The game wasn't reaUy
high in the pro footb all draft . close."
Asked about Ohio Sta te,
He is considered one of the
Fuller
said , " they're not as
cou ntry 's pr emi er pass
good
as
Pittsburgh, but lhey
receivers.
ar
e
good
.
His accomplishments a t

second,ha lf,to lead New York
over New Jersey.
Sixers 122, Pacers 110 :
Doug Collins poured in 25
points and substitute Henry
Bibby added 21 more as
Philadelphia beat the Pacers.
Celties 112, KJngs 103 :
Marvin Barnes and JoJo
White combined for 48 points
to lead last-place Boston over
first-pla ce Kansas City.
SuperStmics 122, Jazz 103 :
Fred Brown came off the
bench to score 27 points as
Seat tle broke its six-game
losing streak .
Lakers lOG, Warriors 104:
Kareen · Abdui-Jabbar connected on a hook shot with 20
second s remai nin g, liftin g
Los Angeles to a come-frombehind victory over Golden
Stale.

CHICAGO (UP!) - Bobby
Orr has been named assistant
genera l manager of the
Chicago Black Hawks, the
a nn o un ce d
H a wk s
Wednesday.
·Orr , 30, who retired as an
active player Nov. 8 because
of chronic knee problem s,
will asswne ' 'many new and
important r esponsibilit ies
with the club."

34-3 setback
JACKSONV ILLE , Fla.
(UP!) One of the
mementoes in J erry Butler's
trophy case evoke s both
pleasa nt
and
painful
memories for the Clemson
split end .
ll is the silver and gold
trophy that Butler received·
as Clemson's Most Valuable
Player at last year 's Gator
Bowl game.
That 's the pleasant part .
But the trophy also reminds
Butler, of Ware Shoals, S.C.,
that Clemson took a drubbing
in that 1977 game, losing to
the n defending nationa l
champion Pittsburgh , 34-3.
And that is painful fo r
Butler.
A &amp;-foot-1, 18().pound senior,
Butler wants ·the 1978 Gator
ma tches
Bowl ,
which
Clemson against Ohio State
Frida y night , to be only
happy memor ies when it 's ·
over.
"The MVP trophy brings
back some good memories,
but it brings some bad ones,
too," said Butler, who caught
four passes fo r 64 yards in
last year's Gator Bowl. "We

A sale of quality men's apparel that you , cannot afford to miss. ·
Come in early while our selection is at its best. Listed here, are just
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HART-SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX • JOHNNY.CARSON
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there."
"Later on, we also were told there were no white infants
available for people like us over 40," McDougald says. "My
wife and I would always say to them, 'Who cares, we just want
kids.' That's how we got Jon and Matthew."
McDougald never encouraged his two older sons, Gil, Jr, and
, Tod, to play baseball because he wished ro spare them any
possible embarrassment caused by people comparing them to
him. Jon and Matthew seem more naturally inclined roward
baseball, though.
"I pitch to them all the time, somethi~g I never did with my
older boys ," says McDougald . "The two little guys also played
Little League soccer last spring. I think they're going ro be
pretty good athletes.''
The seven sisters and brothers in the McDougald family get
along exceptionally well together and the three youngest
children all are aware they were adopted .
During his days with the Yankees, McDougald was so boyish
looking, no one ever could picture him being the grandfather of
five children as he is now. He always looked like such a kid
himseU, The first time Casey Stengel saw that unorthodox
open, widespread stance of his and the way his bat drooped
before the pitcher delivered, he worried about him getting
killed.
But after McDougald showed him how well he could hit, and
oow capably he could play third and short as well as second ,
Casey never worried about him anymore and the skinny San
Franciscan spent 10 seasons with the Bronx Bombers.
McDougald never got any bonus to sign. The most he ever
made in salary for one year with the Yankees was $40,000, but
when he says he isn't envious of someone like Pete Rose,
there's something in the way he says it that suggests he
honestly means it.
·
" I was a ballplayer once myseU ," Gil McDougald laughs.
"I'm bappy to see some of them making more money
nowadays."

•105 SUITS ........................................·.............................. '84.00
•135 suns ................................................................... •101.00
1175 SUITS ................................................................... •131.00
lJ95 SUITS........................................... ..........._............. ~ 146.00
•210 SUITS .......................................................... ..........'157.00
1285 SUITS ........................... ......................... .. .... .......... •214.00
ENTIRE STOCK Of MEN 'S

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Dress Slacks Reduced ............. ...... .. ............................... 20,-o 25%
Outerwear (Leather Coats included) Reduced........................... 25% • 50%

Dress Shirts Reduced .... ... ....................................................... ...

25%
Ladies' Wear Reduced ....................... ...... ...... ............... . 25 % • 50%

Sweaters Reduced .... •..•... ....•........... ...........•.. ...... ......•... •....•.•.. .

Dress Hats &amp; Neckwear Reduced ..... ........... .... ... ...... .......................
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GROUP OF MEN'S

GUMPSES : New York Yankee superstar Reggie Jacbon ·
Is in Hollywood, filming a guest appe.ance for televlslon'a
" Love Boat" - starring Gavin McLeod - in which he'll play
himself ... Del SbannOD, Jim Clan lAm and Wolfman Jack will be
among stars.of the '50s who will pay a special charity tribute to
rock 'n' roll legend Buddy Holly with a concert in Clear Lake,
Iowa, on the 20th anniversary of his death in a plane crash ... l'
Industrialist Cy1111 .
Eaton celebrated his !16th bil'thday
Wednesday in Cleveland ... Swedish actress Blhl Auderuoo 1
ooe of lngmar BergmBD's inner circle - married fonner
Liberal Party leader and Deputy Premier Per Alllmark '•I
Tuesday in Stockhohn....
·

5~2 .

percent from the floor , while
th e Ram blers co uld only
manage 36 perc-ent.
Loyola, which dropped to 46, was led by forward Larry
Knight with 19 points and
l.eroy Stampley with 14.

'P istons crush Houston Butler recalls

25%
Samsonite Luggage Reduced ..................... ........ .... ... ..... .......... .... . 20%
Reduced .. .. ................................................ .. 20 ,-.

Leyi's Casual Slacks

QUOTE OF THE DAY i A clerk in B. Dalton's bookstore in
Los Angeles: "I just don't know what to tell this woman Oil tbe
phone - she wants me to recorrunend a book as a gift 'for
svmebody who ill very narrow-minded."'

s.

:;:
::::
:;::
::::
':':

NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Most of the former ballplayers I run
into keep telling me they aren't the least bit envious of all that
money the ones around today are making. Frankly, they're
hard to believe. Except'maybe a guy like Gil McDougald . Him
I believe completely.
He has something that means a whole lot more to him than
money, something priceless, in fact . What he and his wile,
Lucille, have are seven healthy fme-looking chilcjren,
including three who were adopted.
One of them is 13-yearo()ld Courtney, a girl, and the other two
are eight-yearo()ld boys, Jon and Matthew, both of whom are
biracial. Jon is black and Irish and Matthew. is black and
Slavic, none of which makes any difference whatsoever to
either McDougald, who is Irish, or his wife, who is Russian .
"You don't see color or religion when you adopt," says the
50-yearo()ld one-time Yankee infielder. "It should be the same
way in every other aspect of life, but unfortunately it's not. "
The McDougalds have four other children who were born to
them, two sons and two daughters : Gil, Jr., 29, and Tod, 21!, and
Christine, 30, and Denise, 26.
"!love children, and if it was up to mywlfe,l think she'd like
to run an orphanage," laughs McDougald, now executive vice
president of a thriving mechanical maintenance service
bearing his name.
"When I was stU! playing ball in the late fifties, we had four
kids. who were pretty much grown up and we felt we'd like to
adopt some more. We were turned down a lot because we had
four children of our own. It would burt us to go to orphanages
and foster homes and see these kids who were like tenants

HEPBURN STARS: JohD Curry and Jo Jo Starbuck are the
stars of " Ice Dancing," but backstage, at least, it was
Katharine Hepburn who stole the Broadway show Wednesday
night. She showed up at Curry's dressing room with praise for
his blade worlt - told him she once was a bronze medalist
skster herself. On the way out she bumped into Uv UllmaoD,
whom she'd never met befoce, and greeted her·with "Helloit's about time." When she left the theater, her llmoosine was
nowhere in sight, so New Yli'k's finest took over. A friendly
cop bowed her into his squad car, offering to take her
anywhere she wanted to go.

"/ DREAD having to watch all the football
games coming up this weekend!"

:..; :;

Grove City edged Otterbein
71-70 in the nightcap .
The first game of the Mount
Union tourney also was an
ext ra pe riod affair , with
Bethany pulling out a 77-71

Clemson include a streak of
34 consecutive games in
which he has caught a pass,
the school 's all-time record
for career receptions (134 )
and highest career yardage
(2,1 791 .
This yea r a lon e Butler
caught 54 passes for 864 yards
Can average. of 16 yards per
catch ). ranking him lOth
among the nation 's receivers,
even
though
Cle mson
basically ha s a running

·~t

Quality

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY

Polyester or Corduroy Reduced ....... .. ....... ... ... ... ..

All Men 's Jogging Suits Reduced .............................. ................... ..

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All Florsheim Shoes Red uced ........ ..... ....... .................... ...............

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Group of Men's Dress Shirts Reduced........... ....... ......... ... ..... ....... .. .

50%

,,
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'I

ALL MERCHANDISE FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK

,'

�•

..
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 28, 1978

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 28, 1978

Bengals' punter best

Earl Campbell, 1978 NFL Rookie of the Year
By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI.Sports Writer
NEW YORK. (UPI )- Pete
Ro2elle looked at the small
white card, smiled and
turned
towards
the

microphone. "The Houston
Oilers, picking first, select
running back El!rl Campbell,
University of Te:ras."
Those 13 words spoken by
the NFL commissioner last

May at the pro football draft
proved very fortuna te for the
Oilers - and very unlucky for
the league's other 27teams as Campbell rushed for a
league-leading, 1,450 yards

and led Houston tu its first
pla yoff berth Iince 1969.
Wednesday, Campbell was
named . United Press In·
ternati onal 's American
Football Conference Rookie

Bad-mouthing Vikings could
prove to ·be a bad Ram error
United Presslatematlonal
Los Angeles Coach Ray
Malavasi thinks his Rams
can break the hex Minnesota
has over his club - but bad·
mouthing tbe Vikings and
Fran Tarkenton could p-ove
to be di sastrous.
" There .i s no comparison

with this (MiMesota) team
and those Super Bowl
teams," Malavasi says.
"Tar kenton used to move out
of the pocket more than be
has lately. I don't think he's
as effective right now as be
was two or three years ago.
"He also isn't surrounded

by as many good people as be

should be the difference in the
other NFC playoff game this
weekend, Saturday's
before."
matchup in Dallas between
But, the first team standing the defending Super Bowl
In the Rams' way is their old champion Cowboys and the
nemesis, the Vikings, who wtld card Atlanta Falcons.
play at Los Angeles Sunday in
The heavily favored
an NFC divisional playoff. Cowboys are making their
The Vikings beat the Rams in 12th post-season appearance
the NFC title game in 1974 in 13 years, while Atlanta
and '76 and in the divisional reached the playoffs for the
playoffs last year in the rain first time ever this year. The
at Los Angeles. The Rams Falcons rallied from a 13-0
lost to Dallas in the ftrst deficit in the third period and
round in 1973 and in the NFC survived a last-second field
championship game in '75. goal try to edge Philadelphia,
Experience, plus talent, 14-13, in the NFC wild card
has been iii the past. They are
not as experienced as

playoff Sunday.
"Experience is Important
in the playoffs, " Dallas
C!Jach Tom Landry says.
"It's just the ability to get
into a game and keep the
pressure from carrying you
away . Pressure gets into a
game like this very strong."
The
AFC
divisional
playoffs begin Saturday with
Central Division chAmpion
Pittsburgh hosting Western
Division winner Denver. The
game is a rematch of last
year's firstround playoff
encounter won by the
Broncos, 34·21, and this
year's regular season finale
won by Pittsburgh, 21·17. The
Broncos are the defending
AFC champions.
The second AFC game
features wild-card entry
Houston at Eastern Division
champion New England
Sunday. The Oilers came
hack from a 23-0 first-hall
Monday's Cotton Bowl deficit to beat New England,
affair (CBS, 2 p.m. ) will be 26-23, Nov. 12.
Houston Coach Bum
the first meeting ever
between Houston ( 9-2 J and Phillips was asked if he was
No. 9NotreDame (8-3) and- rooting for a Texas Super
as they do every week - the Bowl matching the Oilers
Irish players expect nothing against the Cowboys.
"I care a lot whether the
short of a fanatical effort
Oilers· make it to the Super
from the opposition .
For the first time in years, Bowl," he said. " But I
there isn't any combination of couldn't give a damn about
events or circumstances that the Cowboys."
could result in a national
champion coming out of the
Orange Bowl (NBC, 8 p.m. ).
College Basketbiltl Results
The Missouri Tigers took
By United Press International
Wednesday
care of that when they upset
Gator Bowl
Nebraska in the last game of
At Jacksonville, Fla .
the season .
Final Round
Championship
Now, the game is just a
Ja~nville 601 Flor ida 59
grudge match between No. 6
Consolation
Pit t B? , Massachusett s 68
Nebraska (9-2) and fourthPoinsettia Classic
ranked Oklahoma (10..1).
At Greenville, S.c ..
First Round
Three All-Star games also
Furman 102, Yale 94
remain to he played with the
G~ Suthrn 87, Mrry St . 8A
Hula Bowl and East-West
All -College Tournament
At Oklahoma City, Okla.
Shrine game set for Jan. 6
First Round
and the Senior Bowl
Weber St. 72, E . Tenn . 58
Ok. City 86, Nr th wstrn 75
scheduled for Jan. 13.
Big Eight Holiday Tourney

of the Year bya near·
unanimous vote.
Campbell, who scored 13
regular-se•son touchdowns
and starred in Houston's
wild-card playoff victory
over Miami last Sunday, was
chosen on 55 ballots cast by
UPI's selection committee of

TORONTO . (U P! )
Toronto captain Darryl
Sittler, who currently is the
Maple Leafs' leading scorer
with 19 goals and 23 assists
for 43 points, is expected to be
out of the lineup for four
weeks after suffering torn
knee ligaments in a game
against Boston Wednesday
night.
Right wing Jerry Butler is
out for 10 days with a cracked
left fibla and Walt McKechnie
will probably be out the
few days with a bruised left
ankle. ,

next

56 writers, four from

.
each

AFC city. John Jefferson, San
Diego's flash y wide receiver,
rer•ived the only other vote.
The Oilers got even. 111ore
than they expected when they
drafted the 1977 Heismnn
Trophy winner.
Campbell, 23, a unanimous
selection to UPI's All·AFC
backfield, instantly became
the Oilers' key third-down
threat, as he kept key drives
go in g with his
rare
combination of speed and
power.
And he was primarily
responsible for bringing the
Oilers something· else they
had not had for a long time ...
a postseason game .
"You don't appreciate him
(Campbell) like us coaches
do,!' , Houston Coach Bum
Phillips toll\ reporters all
season. "He doesn 't just
ca rry the football . He blocks
like the devil when someone
else is carrying. "

Mor e often than not,
however, it was Campbell
who was carr~g .
The 5-foot-11, 224-pounder,
who became the first rookie
since Jim Brown in 1957 to
lead the NFL in rushing,
downplayed his individual
achievments. ~"1 think the most important
thing this year is that I come
ouLevery day and do my best
on the football ·field,"
Campbell said. "I just want
to go out and do my best. If
my team wins , I want to be ·
part of it. And when we lose, 1
want to be a part of it."
The losses have been
sparse for the Oilers, who
up5et the Dolphins, 17·9, to
advance into the AFC
' semifinals this Sunday
against New England. Campbell was ineffective in the
first half, gaining only 16
yards on 13 carries. But he
grew stronger as the game
progressed, rushing for 68

-.

second-half yards and the ;,
clinching touchdown.
In almost any other season, &lt;•
Jefferson would have been ·,,,
the odds-{) n favorite to '"
;.
capture rookie honors.
One of only four players in
the league to gain more than ,.,
1,000 yards iii receptions, the. ·•
Arizona State rookie caught :
56 passes for 1,001 yards and
snared a league-leading 13
-:.
TD passes.

r--------·----.--.. , ....

#

I

Your " E•tra Touch"
F lorist Si nce 1957

I ~
I
I
/t~~
I .
I .;·

II
1

surpnses
Bruins

champions."

The seemingly perpetual
flow of college bowl games,·
which this year gives viewers
o four-day respite after
Christmas, starts again
Friday night when eighth·
ranked Clemson faces Ohio
State in the Gator Bowl;
continues on New Year's Eve
with Stanford taking on seventh..-anked Georgia in the
Bluebonnet Bowl, and gets
into full swing with the
Cotton, Sugar, Orange and
Rose Bowls all set· for
Monday, New Year's Day.
Clemson's versatile Willie
Jordan will play defensive
back position and return
punts Friday night when the
Tigers (10..1) take on Ohio
State (7·3-1) in the Gator
Bowl (ABC, 9 p.m. EST )
while Cardinal quarterback
Steve Dils, the NCAA passing
leader, heads Stanford (7-4)
in the Bluebonnet Bowl
match
against
9·1·1
Georgia .
It is the " Big Four, "
however , that will attract the
biggest audience.
For
most
people ,

WALTHt\M, Mass. (UPI)
- . Bob Kelley, a 1975
Brandeis University
graduate, was named interim
head basketball coach at his.
alma mater Wednesday.
Kelley, an assistant coach
th e past three seasons,
suc ceeds
Coach . Bob
Brannum
who
was
hospitalized after suffering a
broken pelvis when-a horse he
was riding threw him and
then rolled over on him.
G)enn Wong, a 1974 Brandeis
graduate, was named to
succeed Kelley.

Ma rietta 102, J . Carroll 78
Musk1ngum 76, Blu ffton 56
Nqtre Dame 96, St. F~n 43
• l..oyola 59
.
Denison 66 ~

' 04, Klmazo
Southwest
Howard F"ilyne 78, Wiley 68
West

Colo. St . 87, lda.St.
F r ~sno

7~

St. 37, Montana 36

Humbldt 106, Cal. Bapt 62

F'pprdne ~J . St. Xavie r 72
St . Mrtn's 19, UC -Dvs 7'7
SMIJ 81 , Ca i. -S.O. 61
Sfantor d 75, UCLA 72

United Press lntemalioDBI
The only Stanford fans that
may be Wlhappy are Coach
Dick D!Blaso's parents.
"It feels super," said
DiBiaso, after unranked
Stanford shocked the third·
ranked UCLA Bruins with
their first victory - a 75-72
win - over their Pac-10
rivals since 1975.
"My mother and father
taught me to be humble in
victory. I just want them to
Wlderstand that I hope they
aren't disappointed when
they wake up tomorrow and
see the picture in the
newspaper showing me
looking happy."
It was an exciting victory
- DiBiaso deserved his joy.
With UCLA leading, 72-71,
with I :11 to play, Stanford
stalled Wltil 15 secQnds re·
mained to take one final shot . ·
Jeff Ryan hit .the field goal
and drew a foul with two
seconds to play.
He missed the free throw
but Orlando Ward tipped it in
to score the final two points.
" It was a team victory. It
was a special victory for our
two seniors, Wolfe Perry and
Paul Glovacchini. Perry had
a super game," commented
DiBiaso.
UCLA
Coach
Gary
Cunningham was suitably
lmp-essed. "I give Stanford
all the credit," he said.
In other games involving
top teams, second-ranked
Notre Dame crushed St.
Francis
(Pa . ),
96-43 ;
Georgetown breezed past
Southern-New Orleans, 97-58;
and Kansas ripped Iowa
state, 75-.&gt;5.
Orlando Woolridge led
-tlotre Dame, ~. with 18
points on lk&gt;f·IO shooting
from the floor and two
blocked shota in a tune-up for
Saturday's match against
defending national champion
Kentucky.
Freshman Eric Floyd
scored 16 points to lead
Georgetown to its -19th
consecutive home victory.
Reserve Center Ed Spriggs
and senior forward Steve
Martin added 13 points each
for the Hoyas, 11-1.
Darnell Valentine scored 20
pOints to give Kansu, 11-3, a
victOry over !own State in the
opening roWld · of the Big

Ei&amp;ht Holiday tournament.
Wi&amp;nore Fowler popped in 10
of his 18points in the first half
to give the Jayhawks a 32-27
intermission lead.
In tournament play ,
Jacksonville Shaved Florida ,
60..59, for the title and
Pittsburgh
drubbed
Massachusetts, 87-68, in the
Gator Bowl; Colorado edged
Oklahoma St., 66-04, in the
second game of the Big Eight
Hollday Tourney; Georgia
Southern beat Murray State ,
87-M, and Furman bested
Yale, 102-94, in the Poinsettia
CLassic at Greenville, S.C.
Weber State
topped
Eastern. Tennessee, 72·58,
and Oklahoma City downed
Northwestern, 8&amp;-75 at the
All-College Tourney in
Oklahoma City; Oregon
tripped Wyoming, 72-68, and
Indiana
eased
over
Washington, 71-57, in the
opening round of the Far
West Classic; and Utah
shaved Tennessee, 80..71, at
Honolulu in the Rainbow
dassic.

PH. 992·2644
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At Kansas City, Mo.
First Round
Colo . 66, Oklahoma St. 64
Kansas 75, Iowa St. 55
Far West Classic
At Portland, Ore .
First Round
Oregon ]2, Wyoming 68
Rainbow Classic
At Honolulu
First Round
Utah BO, Tennessee 11
East
Fairmnt 76, Owing NY 60
Geotwn 97 , So. -N.O. 58

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Hartw ick 91 , Scrntn 60
Hunt er 9.4, Livngstn 75
LIU BJ , ,CCNY 51

Potsdam St. 79, Pace 6.4
Ramapo 79, Brooklyn n.
St.Ptr 's 76, F .Ocknsn 65
South
USC -Aiken 100, Berry 83
Hmptnlnst . 62, Mrgn St. 60
Presbyterian 75. Allen 74
Pt. Park 91 , W.Va. St. 78
S. A la . 96, A . Peay 67
Va . St. 93, Lin coln 72
Midwest
Alma 78, N.C. -Grnsbro 66
Allghny 91. Mt , Union 79
Beth any 76, Mt. Un io n 71
Capital 100, Wabash 80
Centre Ky . 79, Kenyon 76
Cedarvl 91 , Oberl in 90
Findlay 73, Ohio Wslyn 65
GrveCtv Pa . 71. Ot1erbn 70

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next season and have high
hopes that I can do better and
help lhe Benglils more."
Other year-end Cincy
statistics showed Pete
Johnson was the club's
leading rusher for the second
straight year. The big
fullback from Ohio State ran
762 yards in 180 carries for a
4.2 yard average per carry.
Top receiver was Isaac
Curtis with 47 catches for 737
yards, a 15.7 yard average
per catch. Curtis' 47
receptions were the most
ever in his six-year pro
career . His previous high was
45 in 1973, his rookie season.
Ken Arlderson completed
173 of 319 passes fer 2,219
College, and the return of . ¥ards. His completion
Greg James will definitely percentage was 54.2.
help our board strength."
Dick Jauron topped CincinTen game Rio Grand nati pass interceptors with
statistics show Dan Purcell four. Tony Davis was the
as the team's leading scorer club's top punt returner with
at 19.2, with Mark Swain 16.1, 22 for 130 yards. Rookie Ray
Dan Blse 14.2, and Dale Griffin returned 37 kickoffs
Royse at 11.7 points Plir for 787 yards.
game.
Chris Bahr made 16 of 30
Dan Bise, fresh off a 6 of 7 field
goal attempts and led
shooting night at Marshall, the team In scoriilg with 74
continues to lead the team in points.
shooting percentage from the
As for the 1979 schedule, the
field at 65.7. ·
Bengals will play home
games against Pittsburgh,
• Houston, Cleveland, Kansas
City, New England, San
Diego, Philadelphia and St.
Louis.
Road games will be at
Dallas, Denver, Washington,
Buffalo, Baltimore,
Pittsburgh, Houston and
ALL GAMES
Team
W L POP Cleveland.
Porlsm outh
6 0 389 309
Cincy has two first round
. Pl. Pleasant
2 0 109 83
picks
in next year's college
Waverly
5 1 418 280
Logan
4 1 368 305 draft - picking in the No. 3
Wash inglon
5 2 373 334 and No. 12 position in the
Ironton
5 2 431 Jol4 · opening round .
Alhens
4 2 404 346
Gallipolis
2 4 311 309
Jackson
2 5 434 515
Wellslon
1 5 368 452

overall record is 6-4.
The Rio Grande record and
losing streak may prove
misleading to their op·
ponents. Last Friday the
Redmen gaye a strong NCAA
division one Marshall
University team all it could
handle through one half of
play, leading the ThWidering
Herd by as much as eight
points.
Marshall's inside strength
and Redmen foul trouble
finally pulled Marshall even
and then finally on their way
to a 117·90 victory.
Bright spots for the Red·
men included excellent guard
play and a strong return to
action by last year's leading
rebounder Greg James.
Vince Phelps and Dale Royse
denied the two Marshall
guards and held both to Wider
their season averages.
James, seeing limited action,
scored 14 points and grabbed
7 rebounds.
"We'll be a different team
from this point on," Lanham
continued. "6'7" Steve Lones,
a transfer from Cedarville

Cage

standings

~eigs

1 5 348 471
Ravenswood
0 0 0 0
Wednesday's results :
Vinton County ss Jackson 53

SP.orts Transactions
By Un1ted Press International
Thursday
Hockev
M innesota (NHLl - Called
up defenseman Do n Ja ckson

Portsmouth 57 Mifflin 55.
Friday_'s games:
Athens at Logan (t o start

at 7

p.m.)
tournament, Lanham said,
Ironton at Waverly
"We know Heidelberg from
Jackson at Ga ll ipolis
their one point victory at
Saturday's games :
Lyne Center. They are a big, from Okl aho ma City.
Wellst
on a t Meigs
College
strong physical team.
Brand eis - Bob Kelley was Wash ington al Waverly
Wheaton lllinois is a stranger named as interim head basket. Gallipolis at Pt. Pleasant
ball coach and Glenn wong was
to us but their stats show na
med to r epla ce him as
balanced scoring. Their assis tan t coach.

Can Knight
replace
Pete Rose?

CINCINN AT! (UPI ) - Can
R&lt;ly Knight replace . Pete
Rose?
While probably no ooe can
really "replace" Rose in the
Boys Ohio
Cincinnati Reds' lineup,
High School Ba•ketball
Knight is hoping to he the
United Press International
player who takes over the
Wednesday's Results
third base position vacated
Akron South 64 Ca n ton
Tlmken 62
by Rose when he left the Reds
Ashtabula Sl John 69 Kirlland for Philadelphia.
61
Knight, a Reds' reserve,
Cin Bacon 53 Cin Zavier 51
Claymont 67 East Canton 49 has gotten to play a little
Cle Collinwood 64 Ashlabula third base the past two
47
seasons after Rose was lifted
Coldwater 73 Elida 68
Continental 73 Upper Scioto in the late innings of some
games.
Val 65
Coshoclon 61 Ashland 47
"I realize no one can really
Day Fai rview 66 Miamisburg
replace
!lose," said Knight .
65
"And
I
know
I'll never be as
Day Northridge 69 Beavergood as he is. I'm convinced
creek 57
Day Oakwood 75 Day Kiser 52 though, that if 1play up to my
Day Rolh 86 Day Dunbar 84 capabilities, 1 can do the job
Fairborn Park Hills 57
at third for the Reds ."
Fairborn Baker 43
To get ready to try to win a
Gallaway West land 76
Weslervllle S 66
regular job at spring
Groveport 71 Worth ington 54
training, Knight has set up a
Hamilton Taft 79 Lemon ·
mechanical pitching machine
Monroe 72
and
a batting cage in the back
Hamilton Garfield 72 Col
linden 65
yard of his Albany, Ga .,
Hamilton Ross 67 Trenton
home.
Edgewood 61
He plans to work on his
Hilliard 52 ~t Vernon 54
Kent Roosevel t 66 Kenston 60 hitting aU winter long.
Lake Catholic 70 Painesville
"I'm putting in wiring for
Harvey -44
electricity
so I can hit at
Lakewood ' S! Adward 82 Cle
night,
too,"
he added.
South 62
Rose would llke that kind of
Massi llon 71 Zanesville 63
Medina 68 Cle East 59
enthusiasm.
Monlpeller 45 Ayerovi lle 43
Oberlin 77 Norlh Ridgeville 74

GREAT
SELECTION
Bring in your
Christmas
Money and
Gift Certificates
and see
the Great
Selection
of Fine
Wearing
Apparel
for Men
and Women.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

N BA Standings

By United Press International
Eas tern Conference
Atlintic Division
W. L.
2.4 11
21 10
17 14
t1 19

Pet.
.i186
.677

- -

:~·--:••

W. L. Pet.

Ka n Citv
19 lJ .59.4
Denver
17 16 .515
Milweuke
. 1.5 22 .405
Chicago
13 21 .382
Indiana
11 23 .324
Pacillc Division

-- -, : ... u

The Van Cliburn International Plano Competlllon

"CONTEST TO CARNEGIE HALL"
' December 28 at 8 PM , CST on PBS TV.
si mulcast on stereo FM . Check loca l
li stings lor time and channel. Funded
by grants from TANDY CORPORATION
AND THE CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC
BROADCASTING.
Directed Rnd, prod ,~ r.d by Mitc hell &amp; U,uJohnsGf1 . Fort W~r th
ProduC:hOII J, I nc ., 111 UIOCtiiiOn wu h t~; E AA - TV Ch•nnel13

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',

·

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for thts

Lo~

stgn tn yo ur

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PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

2112
61/ 2
7
9

W. L . Pet. GB

Wednosdoy's
Ohio ~ollego
Baskotblll Results

Wooster Classic
78 NC-Greensboro

Alma Mlch

NHL Standings
United Press lnternationel
By United Press International
Campbell Con ft r•nce
Toledo 60 Loyole 59
Piltrick Division
W. L T. Pts.
Mt Vernon Tourney
NY Islan ders.
22' 4 7
51
Centre I&lt; y 79 Kenyon 76
P hiladelphl
18 12 6
42
Grove City Pa 71 Otterbein 70
NY Rangers
19 11 4
.42
Atlante
19 14 3
41
Muskingum Tourney
Smytrle Div ision
Musk.ingum 76 Blufflon 56
W. L. T . Ph.
Chicago
12 IS 7
3 1 · wilminglon 91 Denison 66
Vancou...,er
13 20 2
28
St . LOUiS
1 26 5
19
Marietta Tourney
Colorac;la
6 2A 6
18
Marl ella .102 John Carroll 78
Wales conference
Cedarville 91 Oberlin 90
Norris Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Montreal
Mt Union Tourney
25 6 4
S-4
P ittsburgh
13 15 7
33 Bethany 17 Hiram 71
Los Ange les •
13 15 5
31
Allegheny Pa 91 ~I Union 79
Detroit
8 18 11
27
Washing ton
8 22 6
22
Adams Division
W. L. T . Ph .
Bos ton
23 5 7
S3
ST. LOUIS (UP!) Toronto
17 16 )
39
Buffalo
1S 12 8
38 National Football League
Minne-sota
14 17 3
31
coaches polled by the
Wednesday 's Results
Sporting News have chosen
Montreat 5, Detroit 2
Minnesota 6, Washington 1
Jack Patera of the Seattle
Pittsburgh 5, Los Ang 2
Seahawks the 1978 Coach of
Chicago A, St. Louis 3
Boston 1. Toronto 1, tie
the Year, the Sporting News
Buffalo s. Colorado 2
said
Wednesday.
Thursday 's Games
NY Ranger~ at Phila
The Seahawks under
NY lslndrs at Atlanta
Patera's directio n have
Los Angeles at Montreal
shown steady improvement,
Buffalo ar Vancou\ler
FrldiiV'S Games
· going from 2-12 in their first
(No gam~s sch eduled)

21 12 .636
Ph oen i ~
22 13 .629
LOS Ang
22 14 .61 1
'h
Portland
·1s 14 .563 2'h
Go! den Sf .
17 18 .486 s
San Di eg o
16 20 .444 6lf2
. Wedne.dily 's Results
New Yor k 115, New Jersey
104
Ph iladel phia 122, lnd il!na 110
Atl anta 115 , San Antonio 107
Detroit 131 , ~ouston 119
Boston 112, Ka nsas Ci ty 103
Los An g 106, Golden St . 1Q4
Sea m e 112. New Orleans 103
ThursdiiY 'S Q,ame s
Was hington at New York
San Oiego at Cleveland
Mi lwaukee at S.!ln An tonio
WHA Standings
Chicago at Denver
By United Preu lnternalional
W. L. T. Ph .
Portlan d at Phoeni x
New England
17 9 6 40
FrldaY'Ii Games
Quebec
17 12 4 38
Kan City at New Jersey ·
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Cincinn ati
\ 5 16 4 34
Winnipeg
U 13 4 32
San D iego at Detroit
Ectmonton
16 15 o 32
M ilwaukee at Houston
Den ve r at Chi cago
Birmingham
13 16 3 29
~· I n dianapo lis
5 18 2 12
Phoenik at Seattle
New Orl eans at Golden St .
K·team disbanded
Wednesday 's Results
Portland at Los Ang e les
Edmonton 5, Winnipeg 3
1\iew Eng 10 , Czchoslvkia 4
Thursday's Games
Birmingham at Cincinnati
CzechOslovakia at Quebec
INTERNATIONAL
Friday's Games
Birmingham at New England
HOCKEY LEAGUE

Jan•.5-7

set

66

Wooster

104

Kalamazoo

63

Findlay Tourney

Captial 100 Wabash lnd 80
Findlay 73 Omio Wesleyan 65

Middleport

•JUSTIN
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Friday night til8 p.m.

year in 1976 to 5-9 in 1977 and
9-7 this year.

United Press tnternational

North
W L T Pts. GF GA

Saginaw 16 12 6 38 148 139
Pt. Huron 15 13 4 34 140 113
Flint
13 !8 2 28 133 136
Kala.
11 13 6 28 122 135
Musk .
3 27 2 8 85 185
Soulh
W L T Pts. GF GA
Grand Rapids
23 5 3 49 145
Ft. Wayne22 9 I 45 159
Toledo 14 15 3 31 131
Milwau . 11 16 5 27 111
Wednesday's Results

97

112
127
140

Grand Rapids 5, Flint 2

Kalamazoo 9, For t Wayne 6
Toledo 7, Muskegon J
Saainaw 6. Mi lwauk ee 5
Thursday ' s Games
No games scheduled
Friday's Games
Muskegon at Flint
Port Huron at Kalamazoo
Fort Wayne at Toledo
Milwaukee at Grand Rapids
~AJOR INDOOR
SOCCER LEAGUE

United Press

NewYork
Houston

MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) George Thomas, 41, assistant
coach of the University of
Minnesota hasehall team, has
been endorsed to succeed late
head Coach Dick Siebert. He
was recommended for the job
Wednesday by Paul Giel,
university men 's athletic
director. His appointment is
subject to approval by the
university board of regents .
"! don 't like taking over

Wishing you and yours the best lor 1979.
Thank you for your patronage .

PLEASE MAKE ALL CHRISTMAS
EXCHANGES BY JAN. 6, 1978. THANKS!

Wlder these "Circumstances,''

said Thomas, who had
worked with Siebert, who
died earlier this month, since
1972. "But this is something
I've alway wanted to do."

lntern~tional

W L Pet. GF GA
101 .00072
1 0 1.000 10 J
I 1 .500 8 12
0 0 .000 0 0

~

Cine .
Pil ls.
Phlla.
0 1 .000 5 6
Cleve .
0 1 .000 3 10
Wednesday's Result

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:00P.M.

...

• -•

Cincinn a ti 6, Philadelphia 5

lot)

Thursday ' s Games

New York al Pl!lsburgh
Cleveland at Houston
Friday's Games

·"

No games scheduled

LAKE PLACID , N.Y.
(UP!) - A funeral was held
Wednesday for Ronald
MacKenzie, 76, late president
of the Lake Placid Olympic
Organizing Committee, who
died Saturday. An autopsy
reveal ed that Ma cKenzie
died of am emholism, not a
heart attack, as was thought,
an LPOOC spokesman saltl.
More than 500 people ,
including state and federal
officials and members of the
United
States
and
International Olympic
Committees, attended the
service at Adirondack Com·
munity Church.

Every day in every wuy

Reynoldsburg 55 Weslerville

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.
Open All Day Thurs.
Open Fri. Evening

N 48

we ltope your yeua•

Springf ield N 62 Bellefonlalne
45

St Henry

80

Sidney Lehman

will be tlte best ever%

59

Vlnlon County 55 Jackson
Walsh 78 Tallmadge 62
Wh ileha II 58 Delaware 43

VISA'

53

Dtanks to our loyal friends.

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Most tlems
also avatlable et
Radto Shack

GB

Seattle

Patr ick Henry 80 Leipsic 52
Porlsmouth 57 Col ~llflin 55

••

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Was-h
Phila
1
New Jrsey
.54ti 5
New York
.472 1v,
Boston
13 20 .39.4 10
Central · Divisio n
W. L . Pet. GB
San Anton
20 lS .571 Houston
17 15 .531 11:,
Atlanta
18 17 .51.4 2
Clevelnd
12 21 .36.4 7
Detroit
12 22 .35:.1 7'1t
New Orlns
12 24 ,.JJJ 8•12
We stern Conference
Midwest Divis ion

·~

Tape off-the -air. from discs or live . Digital
ttm er mak es reco rding easier . Auto-Stop
and dual VU me ters . Switchable lor slanda rd recording s. 14-928

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
'

•,•

TR- 802 by Realistic

A RA0/0 SHACit S,ORE NEAR VOU I

N A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

&gt;

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1 4·606

179
Capslans and DC servo motor reduc e w ow
and flutter! 3 -position tape bia s. equal iza ·
tion se lectors. Detachable cassette do or
for easy maintenanc e. 1 4·604

•••

Puo between ot he r compone nt s or belween
s he lves . Bias/ equalization switc hes, dual
lig hoed VU meoers. e nd -to -tape Auto-Slop.

95

REG.

•'

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TIRES
IN

'•''

Inc Dolhy rrnur:Ps no1s£' 11nd C'Xtends dynamic rr~nge

• ,;;,;;i•u••

SNOW

.
•

STA·85 SYSTEM

RIO GRANDE ~ The
Purple and Gold Touvnament
Dec. 28-29 in Defiance, is the
next stop for the Rio Grande
Redmen haskethall team.
Trying to end a current five
game losing streak, the 3•7
Redmen will face the host
Defiance College Yellow
Jackets in the second game of
Thursday's opening roWid.
other teams in the four team
tournament
are
the
Heidelberg Student PRinces
and the Wheaton Illinois
Crusaders.
Defiance Is 4·3 on the
season and is an offensively
explosive club. In their four
victories thus far they have
averaged 105 points per
game. Five players are
currently averaging in double
figures. Jim Arnzen leads
with a 13.9 average while
Larry Flym, Jim Kramer,
Larry Papenfuss and Mark
Myer all average over 12 per
game .
Coach Art
Lanham,
speaking of the Purple and
Gold Tournament, said,
"Defiance playiilg at home
has to . be .consi~ered the
favorite .
Pre -season
predictions list Defiance as
the team to heat in our NAIA

·· ~

STA-85 SYSTEM #2 CUT 13010

punting technique to top Guy
and become pro football's
best punter.
"I'm elated to have won the
championship, but 1 really
feel I can do better," said
Mclnally. "1 went into a
shnnp at mldseason and it
took me several games to get
things straightened out. ·
"I'm looking forward to

Rio Redmen face Defiance
_Friday in holiday event

district."
Of the other teams in the

AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-7034

,_~

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CASS. RECORDER, DUAL CAPSTANS

MODl..JLAR
HOMES

1'.':

FLORIST

will he determined soon

Stanfio•d

l

...

College's national title
United Pres•Iaternatlonal
regardless of what USC feels,
To Charles White and the · · the Sugar Bowl match
rest of the USC Trojans, the between top-ranked Penn
Rdse Bowl against 10.1 State (11.0 ) and second-rated
Michigan (NBC, 4:45 p.m. Alabama (9-1) will be the
Monday) will be just as deciding game for the
important as a national national championship.
championship game.
Joe Paterno, whose Lions
White, the leading rusher in lost to Alabama, 13-6, in the
Pacific-10 history with 4,096 Sugar Bowl after the 1975
yards, has a logical formula season , said his team was
for the No. J.ranked Trojans healthy and in good shape for
(10..1 ) to wind up No. 1.
the Sugar Bowl rematch in
If USC beats No. 5 New Orleans ..
Michigan and Penn State
"We're going to play our
loses to Alabama in the Sugar football game.! don't want to
Bowl, White reasons, there's get involved with glmrnicks,"
nobody clse but the Trojans Paterno said. "We'll play
entitled to the national title loose and have fun down
since USC was a convincing here."
24-14 winner at Alabama in its
third game of the season.
• ,
" If we hadn't lost a game
(a 2()..7 Joss to Arizona State),
•
there wouldn't be any ques·
tion," said White. ·"But we
did lose a game so it comes
down to our final game. If all
the right things happen, we
can be the national

I:

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Pat 20..yard line. He edged
Mclnally of the Cincinnati Oakland's Ray Guy, who
Bengals has won this year's averged 42.7 yards per punt,
NFL punting championship for
the
distance
by averaging 43.1 yarch a championship.
punt, according to Bengal · When Mclnally came to the
officials.
Bengal s off the Harvard
Mclnally, a Harvard campus a few years ago , he
University graduate, punted said his hero was Guy. But he
91 times for 3,919 yards and also predicted he would
had 25 kicks drop inside the eventually develop his

Cage tourney

STANDINGS

~ .

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d

ACE
HARDWARE

Frigidaire

of Pessimistic

Microwave
Oven

People. . .It's Time To
Buy Sleds and
Snow Shovels From

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA

••
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From The Land

"A r~&gt; i' 1h., pl ilrl'~.~oith
tlw t'f lphl l llot rdw.u•• M.•n"" TM

3••
••"'

Thanks For Your Patronage In '78.

992-3662

9/6 M/5

12/6 SUN. ,

We look fonvard to serving
*Mary Sauvage
*Helen Neutzling
*Elizabeth Davis
*Dorothy Sheets
*Marie Leifheit
-,r Martha Anderson

0
N
L
y
You can warm let loverS. cook
snack,s or prep1re many com·
plete me11s in up 10 75%" less
time lnd with so;,75'4 less
energy than conventional

cooking. And lhis model
even adds the time-saving

convenience of an automatic
Defrost cycle .
·

Mo"l RCM·4

MEASURES
23%" DEEP
1814'' WIDE
15" HIGH

yo~

in '79.

*Thelma Nease
*Catherine Miller
* Texanna Well
*Lila Mitch
*Ronald Hanning
*Kenneth McCullou~h
*Charles Riffle

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
fco,,n.o th Mctuuough, t&lt;. t', .
C:harles Riff I&lt;!, R. Ph .
Ronald Hanning , R. Ph
Mon . thru Sc1L e :OO a .m to9 p.m .

Sunday 10:30 lo 12: JO and llo 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS.
PH. 91l -2955
friendly.Service
Pomeroy, 0.
E. Main
Opon Nights 1.1119

�•

cr:_.._..Pomeroy
____l
!.l Persona I Notes I

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Dec. 28, 1978
Tim , Kingston . and tlw 'mtrl Mrs. ' I .&lt;HT~- Ht iiiJlfll ' ,
r
Rnbe rt Rurnilz fe~lnil y,
flt-•m loc· k ' r.ruvt• . 011
Mason, w, VH .
('ill'istln llS nny tlwir gm•sls"
Mr. and Mrs. Hnhm1 Young wt·n~ Mr. mHI Mr."i. Rollin
of Sidney spent Clll'istmHs in lladf&lt;•n l. SHIIv Hnd .Judv. Mr
Pomeroy with Mi" ElizHhcl)l alld Mr,. flotig J.it tit•, Co!um·
~ ·Christmas weekend Fickand othcrrelativcs.
lJu.-;, H11mcr Radford. Vir~i\
. houseguests of Mrs . W. 0 .
Mr. and Mr•. Ernest J"'" C:!azc and Mr·s. C:ra cc G!H?.i'.
"' Bamit.z were Mr. and Mrs. Kleski (Jennifel," Chapma n , wit h afttJrnonn callers being
~ Harry Young of Galion , ,and uf Tipp~canot• made a pre- Mr . cmd Mrs. Georgt.~ Glan·.
r Charles Young of Columbus.
Christmas visit here wi th her B!:&lt;'ll and Brian , Rock
' Other callers were Mr. and family , Mr. :md Mrs. PHul Bridge.
· · Mrs. John Young, Phil, Robin ChaplnHn Hnd children.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlt's Kin• and Lisa, Lancaster ; Mr. and
Christmas Eve guests of mid. Char!t•slnn . W. Va . and
• Mrs. James Ca rpenter and Mr. and Mrs. William Rad- Mr. and Mr·s. Randy Crouch,
; Jay, Chester; Gary Barnitz fori! were Mr. and Mrs. Mannet. W. Va . were
d lnd daughters, Ellen and Ann
Roger Gilmore, Athens: Mr·. Christmas guests of their
, Margaret, Belpre, Mr. and and Mrs: Bill Radford and molher, Mrs. Ruth Crouch.
.Joinlfl g t oge th er fo r
; Mrs. Keith Barnitz, Tom and Brooke, Marietta, and Mr.

Christmas--.
still specuil

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DO TilEY LOOK FAMILIAR•- U they haven't knockeq at.your door yet, they may be
doing so in the near future. Their names are Karen and Dick Ciranko and they're Jehovah's
Witnesses. They periodically visit the local congregation and endeavor to call at all other
homes in the community to encourage Bible study and answer questions. As a further
community service, Mr. Ciranko has now organized a special Bible workshop to be held
January 6and 7at Huntington's new Civic Center. " It wiD deal with family problentB we all
face in this twentieth century and how to solve them. All interested persons are invited to
attend . All sessions are free and no collections will be taken," according to local spokesman,
t\lbert Tromm, Rutland. Members of the Middleport congregation have made plans to
attend the Huntington seminar. Mr. Tromm, presiding overseer, also announced the visit of
Di&lt;·k Ciranko, traveling representative of the Watchtower Society, from January 9 through

,.•'

H.

·Riverview Garden Club held meeting
'
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Th e Riverview Garden

Club members enjoyed a
Christmas buffet dinner at
the home of Mrs. Donald
Myers Tuesday evening. Cohostesses were Mrs. Walter
Brown and Mrs. Gene Young.
' Members were seated around
card ta bl es covered with
green cloths and centered
with lighted candle~. Tree
decorations fo r favors were
pl&lt;jced at each .place setting.
Grace was given by Mrs.
Harliss Frank. The house was

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beautifully de co rat e d
throughout lor the holiday
season. Exchange gifts were
placed under a decorated
tree.
The president, Mrs. Donald
Putman, conduct ed the
business meeting. Roil caU
was respond ed to by a
Christmas ornament exchange. Mrs. Putman told of
delivering th e gifts for
Operat ion Santa Claus lor the
Athens Mental Health Center.
The program consisted of

verses, readings and prayers

with each member taking
part. Games were conducted
by Mrs. Tom Spencer. Prizes
went to Mrs. Denver Weber,
Mrs. Steve Cowdery, and
Mrs. R. H. Hannum. A
macrame wreath made by Mrs. Steve Cowdery and
Mrs. Gene Young was Jason, and Mrs. Charles
presented to Mrs. Putman for Weber, guests, and these
the door prize. Recipe members, Mrs. R. H. Han·
booklets were given to aU who num, Mrs. R. E. WUllams,
attended.
Mrs. Ray Young, Mrs. Gene
During the social hour, a Wilson,
Mrs.
Ernest
dessert course was served to Whitehead, Mrs. Denver
Weber, Mrs. Tom Spencer,
Mrs. Donald Putman, Mrs.
Ronald Osborne, Mrs. Roy
Hannum, Mrs. Claremont
Harris,
Mrs.
Herman
Grossnickle, Mrs. Harliss
Frank,
Mrs.
Ronald
Cowdery, Mrs. Okey Con·
nolly, Mrs. David Chadwell,
Mrs. Frank Bise, Mrs. Lyle
Balderson and the. hostess,
Mrs. Myers, Mrs. Gene
Young, and Mrs. Brown.
There wiU be no meeting
during the month of January.

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NEW YORK !UP!) - The
latest Harris poll indicates
the Christmas holidays, for
most Americans, are a time
for family togetherness and
renewal of the spirit of peace,
hut for the younger set, Santa
Claus and the wassail bowl
also get top biDing.
The survey, released
Chrstmas Day, showed a 97 to
3 percent majority of those
polled calling the yule season
· "a time when familles can
enjoy a joyous holiday
season." The vote for "a time
when people can take a few
days off an&lt;:l renew the spirit
of peace on earth and good
will to men ," was 90·9
percent.
.
Nearly nine out of 10. of
those polled saw Christmas
as a special time for children
who believe in Santa Claus with the majority supporting
that opinion aged between of
18 ami 30. A time for giving
and receiving gifts was cited
by a margin of 62-37 percent
- again with young people
feeling most strongly ..
The survey indicated 46
percent of those under 30 look
upon the season as a time to
"let it all out at parties," but
overall, a 67-31 percent
majority voted for restraint.
Christmas as a time for
renew~! of religious faith was
supported by a 711-22 percent
majority and the Scrooges,
who said it's just a time when
"people spend too much
money and celebrate more
than is good for them"
dominated that quest.ion by a
margin of 68-31 percent.

NOW

Kodak Ektra 1. ... ... . ..... ... . . . . . . . $29.99
$19.95
Kodak Colorburst .. .... . . . . : ... . ..... $44.95
$37.95
Spartus Harvest Clock .. .• . .. . . .. .. . . $22.95
$12.95
woodstock Toy ... .. . . . ... . . .. . .... . . $ 3.39
$ 1. 99
Pol le nex Dial Ma ssa ge Shower Head ... $39.95
$22.95
'
22 oz . Cookie Tin &amp; Danish Cookies ..... $ 3.89
$ 2.69
Sandra Lee Hard Candy ....... . . . . . .. $ 2.50
Betty G Portable Mixer . ·. . ..... ..... . $13.99
$ 7.98
Guardian Angel Christmas
Tree Fire Alert .. ..... ..... .. .... . . $12.95
$ 6.98
Fisher-Price Activity Center . . ... ... . . $12.95
$ 9.49
convertible Plastic Shewing Machine .. $15.95
$ 7.99
Banjo Benny . . . ..................... $19.99
$12.99
Sta r Command AM Radio Space Ship ... $17.95
$ •9. 95
16" Green Christmas Wreath ... .. ..... $ 7.06
$ 3.99
Indoor-Outdoor Light Set ............. $ 5.35
$ 3.49
Tinsel Garland-gold &amp; silver ... . ...... $ 1.39
.89
Glass Tree Ornaments .... .. .... ..... $ 2.89
$ 2.29
Angel Doll ........ ... ........... . ... $ 4.10
$ 2.49
· Lolly Doll ........ . .. . ... .. ......... . $ 5.95
$ 4.49
United China Kitchen Tool Set ..... .. . . $ 6.40
$ 3.59
Champagne Bubble Bath 28 oz .. . ...... $ 1.69 $ 1.19
Pizza Baker Grill . . ........... .... . . $31.95
$17.99
Norelco Mr. Coffee . . .. . .... ... . ... .. $33.50
$27.49
Mick e y Mouse Watch ..... ..... . ..... $18.95
$12.95
Sunbeam Coney lsla~d Steamer ... .... $12.95
$ 7.49
CheseTray ..... ... ~ .......... ...... $ 7.99
$ 3.59
Northern lce .Cream Maker ........... $26.95
$14.88
United China, 50 pc . flatware ......... . . $21.25
$13.88
All Christmas Hallmark ......... ... ....... • 112 Price
Heaven Sent Natural Spray, 2 oz . ...... $ 1.50
$ 2.95

Meigs County
React elects
1979 officers
Officers were elected at the
December meeting of the
Meigs County React held at
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
Elected were Charles '
Blake, secretary-treasurer;
Frank Casto, field com·
mander under emergency;
Earl Mossman, safety break ·
chairman; Charles E .
WilliantB, monitor reporter,
lind
Donna
Stewart,
newspaper reporter. The
president's of!lce held by Guy
Hysell was not up for elec·
tlon.
Hysell announced that high
reflector road signs will be
used at the coffee breaks
during 1979 to enable
motorists to locate easier the
React safety-break stations.
It was reported that 24
React team . members
• renewed their memberships
and six new members are
enrolled. President Hysell
also aMounced that new
memberships are stm being
accepted. Donna Stewart
served pizza at the close of
· the meeting.
At an earlier meeting held
at the center, Jobn Lela!,
president of the Ohio React
Council, was reatured guest
speaker. His presentation
included a film, "There
Seconds Count", which
showed how React teams
saved people's Uvea during a
crisis by use of citizens bank
radio .
Plans were made for the
1979 coffee breaks. Door
prizes were won by Dale
Priddy, $25, and Dorann
Kirby, SSS . Refreshments
were furnished and served by
. women of the team including
Nellie Watkins, Sharon
Folmer and Donna Stewart.
Twenty-five members and 10
visitors
attended
the
meeting.

In 1945, Congreaa officially

recognized the "Pledge of
Allegiance" to the flag of the
t: n: ~ cd States.

MOM ASKS, 'HOW COME?'
RAP :

Parents are always rescheduling &lt;heir lives because·of their
children. We cancel engagements when the kids get sick or
something comes up at school we must attend. We so often say,
"I'd love to go, .but that 's my day to take the children
horseback riding ... " or whatever. ·
When it's a choice between an adult invitation and
something we've promised our offspring, conscientious
parents "don'tlet the kids down ."
OK, teens , would you do the same for your folks ? If you'd
planned a day with them - and they were looking forward to it
-and your crowd decided to go skiing, would you say, "SoiTy,
this is my day .with the family"? If your father was due for
some kind of award, and you were asked out by a special person on his presentatidn day, would you think , "He'll unders·
tand," and ask to be excused?
I 'II wager 90 percent of you wouldn 'I give up your plans to accommodate your parents. Yet you expect them to jump every
time you need something, and you feel so terribly hurt if they
don 't.
Think about it, kids: -A PARENT
NOTE FROM RAP: We'll get lots elf answers to this letter,
from parents as well as teen-agers. It should make a lively column!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My mother went to work this fall , and I bate it. She doesn't
make cookies any more, and dinner isn't ready on time, and if
I forgot and left my claS~&gt; assignment at home, she isn't there
to bring it to me at school, and I have to do more housework ...
Why can't mothers stay home where they belong? I think
Dad agrees with me. He doesn't like· housework either. DESERTEDAT15
DESERTED:
Please read the first letter in this column. It seems written
especially for you. -HELEN

PORTLAND - The Emma
Smith Circle of the RacinePortland Branch of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day-Saints
met at the home of Nancy
Adams for the annual
Christmas party Dec. IS.
Those attending were:
Golda GiUilan (leader); Lucy
Taylor, worship chairperson,
who made the new "Year
Books"; Pearl and Eula
Proffitt, song leader; Ethe_l
Frannie and Beulah Roush,
secretary; Linda Evans,
Freda Furgeson, Maxine
Sellars, ,Uidene McKay, Pam
Diddle, Ruth Bradford,
several children and this
reporter.
·
The evening was spent
singing Christmas hymns,
visiting, exchanging gifts,
enjoying refreshments,
served by Nancy's daughter,
Lor! and friends. We ellch got
a ceramic napkin holder to
bring home and I won the
door prize. Some of the
sisters work at the Steamboat

Inn and this is a OO.y time
with much illness. The group
missed its pastor, sm RoWib,
and his wife, Dab, who bad
surgery recently and is Just
recovering.
,
Most of the circle attended
the ChristiJUII dinner at the
church on Wednesday, at the ·
Senior Citizens Nutrition
weekly lunch at the Satellite
Site there. Anyone wbo would
like to go may call on the day
before or by 9 a.m. the day he ,
plans to come, and a bus will •·
come for him. The phone Is I
M~M .

Mauut•l , and Mr. rmd Mr...; .

Mitd!i'll Alh·n . -Jlrian ami
Mtt.rk . .Tiw gat ht' ri ng t~•nk
plac&lt;· at th&lt;' I .ish• hom&lt;•.

1 Social

l

1 Calendar

l

FRIDAY
INSTA I.l.ATIO N, IM!w l
62. Jntcrna t iont-~1 Ordt•r of
Oaughtt~ rs, 7:;1.0 Fr i d&lt;-~.V
I'Vl'ning Hl the Middh·port

.Job's
POMONA

r.RANGF.

Tht• Me i~!'i r.ounty Pomona
r.ra nge 46 which me~·ts bi-

Ma!o\onic

T L•rnp lt•.

Dnl l it•

RnuSl'V tn ht• inslHIIctl as
hnntll't.•tl qu een.

PARTY at tlw St'llior
mnnlhlv on the firs l Fridav of
till' rnni1th will tnl'l'l on .la'n .:; Citizen!'i Ct:&gt;nh•r. Pntncruy,
lht· Roek Springs r. rangl' . 8::10 p . ut. to midnight.
Rl'frcstunt:&gt;nls wi ll hE.'

s~:: rv L•d,

ruu ml ;md squarv d:Ull 'lllg ,
and ~ing ing . Opl'll lu tht&gt;
publie, wit h athnission at $1
rnr rulults . rhih lrt'tl undt•r 12

Bapti;1 Ch~rch featuring the
King 's Harmon y Quartet,
Aristeo, W.Va ., 7:30 p.m.
p.m., at fire station in Sunday; publi c invited.
admitted fn~~··
Reedsville.
NEW YEARS EVE Watch
ROYAL OAK BALLROOM party Sund ay 8 p.m. to
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Trustees Friday 7 p.m. at DANCE CLUB combination midn ight at Freedom Gospel
Christmas potluck dinner and Mission , Bald Knobs. Public
C1~est er Township hall.
New
Year Eve party invited .
THE WELLS Family,
at Royal Oak Park.
Saturday
Vienna , W.Va., will sing at
NEW YEAR 'S EVE dance
Dinner
served
promptly at lor members and guest of
the Jubile Christian Center, 7
p.m. Friday; the public is 7:30. Event lor members and Drew Webste r Post 39 ,
guests . Decorati on com· Am erican Le gion Sunda y.
invited .
mittee to be at wrk at 1 p.m. Music by Armand Turley.
SATURDAY
DANCE Sat urday at Music by the Peppers of Each co uple to bring covered
Ra cine America n Legion Columbus.
dish .
Post 602. Music by Guy SUNDAY
BEDFORD
TOWNSHIP
NEW YEAR 'S Eve gospel TRUSTEES, Sunday, 2 p.m.,
Thoma and Country Ram·
biers.
sihg at Middleport First at the home of the clerk.

.

There were many friends i
and neighbors there, but the
highlight of the day was
meeting a teacher which this )
reporter hadn't seen since the j
early grades, Mrs. Ada J
(Gilliland) Morris of Chester. :
The group bopes she will ,
come back again. All who l
came seem to enjoy them· l
sieves and the group loves ,
having them.
·l
Goldie Clendenin '

LET THE
K ER DELl DO IT!
AVAILAIU AT STORES WITH OELI

OPE

ONLY
HOT FOODS AYAIUBU I IAM -7PM

· DECEMBER 31 , NEW YEAR'S EVE

lOOa fOI THI\ SIGN
fHIOUGHOUf fHI
fANJASTIC SA~INGS
ON W:IOGIIIIAND
II'IOOVCU.
liS TID AllOW All JUiT

·.AM TIL

"M.

SHAVED , COOKED

Smithfield
Ham

Open Monday, JClll. 1., New Year's Day, a19AM and
Remain Open Regular Hours The Remainde~ of the W
.reek

••

99

bch of thBH 1dvertised items i,: ·

tO be readily available for sale
in-1 each Kroger Store. euo:cept as
apeclfitally noted in th11 ad. II we do
run out ·of an advertised item , we will
t~ffer 'JOU .,.our choice of a comparable
requ ired

PINT I!TUINAi l E

DES:
Sil!Uller down!
Your mother deserves a life outside of "doing for her fami·
ly. ~ · Why don't you and your father pitch in and help her more?
-SUE

t h~

·sg·c

2-~.

.

Seven-Up Or
Sugar Free 7

}'Ou tc , · ~Jrchase thfl ad11ertised

Preserves

RAP:

IOTTliES

SCtvinga or a raincheck which w ill

ClOVER VAllEY
STRAWIURY

.

advertised

pric~;~

withm 30

COPVIIGHf 1971 - THE kltOGU (0 . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD TUESDAY DEC . 26 THIU SA TURDAY 0£ ~ . 30 . "711N

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT 10 llMIT QUANTiliES . NONE SOLD

TOOUI.US .

f.$1°

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES
DAD'S ROOT BEER,

PLUS DEPOSIT

'--

I'm not bad looking, am 16, and can't get a boyfriend. My ...~
girlfriends don't have any trouble, but guys don 't even look at
me. I'm sorta shy, but not terribly.
1-f"~ l fl'
I've been thinkihg about seeing a doctor about my trouble,
but I'd be embarrassed. If you can't lielp me, though, I I'. I
1
definitely will. -LONELY
I
LONELY:
:.;:..... .
The best doctor is: yourself. Work on a friendly smile, a
relaxed awareness of the boys you want to·impress. Somehow
-;P-"1
you 're turning them off, and we suspect it 's because you're
afraid to make the first move.
·~~f--L?r;;!.~~
Study how the other girls do it and then : act interested!
Remember, they're a little scared too. - HELEN AND,SUE

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHCllCE
BONE IN

-

Loin Strip
Steak

Hi Nu 2%
Low f at MI•lk ...... .

r::~

1'-

$

KROGER

$ 99

(' \

KROGER lOWFAT 0.5% MilK..

GaL

-Vegetable Oi.l

URGENT

I·

~$399

Inventory Reduction Sale

( '

li~~~
t.r__O#Jf[cJj5~V

""
r'

KROGER

2 DAYS ONLY

Tomato Sauce

.

8·01.16 c
Can

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Tail-Less
T·Bone Steak

$

HOLLY FARMS. U .S.D.A.INSPEC:TED

Mixed
Fryer Parts .... .. .

28-oz.
Btls.

c

FRESH

Picnic
Pork Roast

('

fl.~~
~~

DECEMBER 29th &amp; 30th
f

.WE MUST REDUCE OUR INVENTORY BY JAN. 1, 1978.

U-17-LB. AVG.

hole Fresh
Pork Loin

KROGER

'

CCitsup

i

I

t

Qt.7.7 c

EVERYTHING REDUCED 2 DAYS ONLY

$ 19

Jar

Our most popular tt1y includes
moitt pink ttam , tvrhy , ran
roast beef , ta•ty canted but ,
elong •ith Am~rican , S•iu and
Mueruter Cheese . This ntea t
and cheeu tray truly is the
connoiue ur 's choice. Serwu
20-30 people. 1

Country Oven
Potato Chi

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
·White Bread ....... ..
SHOWBOAT

Pork 'N'
Beans .... .... ... ...... .
' Grade A
Large Eggs ..

--~ ('It

• STEREOS
• MICROWAVES

cou•o"

Chicken Of The
Sea Tuna

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

• WASHERS

~.~
AVONDAlE

Shortening

s·01.

• DRYERS

4.2

19

25·(1.
Pkg .

I

'
I

co~,o• cooo

OF

Cottone lie
Bath Tissue

.. .
~

1

. SWANSOFT WHITE

facial Tissue

. lc
•

.•

•

II ...

.

.. -

Green or
· White Cabbage
···h

c

4

Texas 18$
Ruby Red
Grapefruit .. ;~!~

: ~....;::..-.__,
••

.. .

runcn DEt

SUI IItT 10

Pkg.

LIMIT I WITH COUPON UD S7.SO ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(EXCLUDING THIS ITEM I
12

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMll Y

Of tOll"'• COOD msDAJ DEC 2fi TNIU S&amp;UIDU DEC JD I UJ
SlllllCT TUI't"LIUIU STATE &amp;lOCAl UHS

$

t~~~
"'
••
•• ••
r '

f!):

12

Banquet
Fried Chicken

I
I
I
I

POMEROY

I
I

LIMIT 2 CANS WITH COUPON AND $7 .50 AOOITIONAL PURC! ;, •
(EXCLUDING THIS ITEM )

Do• .

Scott
owels

(

E. MAIN STREET

I
I

KROGER

• CARPET

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE.II

I
I
I

I
I

-Roll

Kroger
Tomato

·• REFRIGERATORS • RANGES
. • DISHWASHERS

Alka Seltzer
Tablets ...... ...

I
I
I

$

Spotlight '
· Bean Coffee. Ba~

(~~~·

I
I

CHUNK LIGHT

C0\1

(

•TELEVISIONS

29.95

PLASTIC CTN . $1 .59

Big ~
Soft Drinks

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

CONNOISSEUR'S CHOICE

A toNI t•te trHf , this superb
Mr lacl¥4•• r011st Htf , ham,
turkey, Ctf'Md hef and your
dloke of salod. n.e added
towdl Is 1 rtlah centerpiece
..,..,,..tl with frtlh panler .
(AHfttoflll aalod IMJ be
rtfltllod)S.rwea 15·20 People . 1

PLEASE ULOW ONE DAY PREPARATION TIME. CALL IN ORDERS WELCOME.

KROGER

...
•..
.

THE AMERICANA

28.95

Plastic or
Paper Ctn

~~~

.

SATURDAY
OL IV E TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES, Saturday, 6:30

APwttq7~

Item, when available, rellact.ng the

IJ

r------··-·1

.

ami c:hillln•n, T&lt;)(kl. St ·ott and
Tta\'is, Jay , Mrs. Hl'l'!·whd

~

by Roger Bouen

i I

,

.

'

Chri slmas Dny ('t·lchratwn
\\·.-n• Mr. Clml Mrs . .Tnhn Li ~h·

·

-~~

~

-

.. ... .

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I

lb.

2$ 99

I

I

-lb.

Box

c·

LIMIT 2 BOUS WITH COUPON AND S7.50 mmmL PURCHASE
(EXCLUDING THIS ITEM)
12
J)f

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMilY
CMPOII CI!ODIIIIIll I!C 21 !IIi IIIUIOII OIUO. 1111
SIII(Cl TO Al't"liCAilE SliT( llOCAllAlU

I

,&amp;, • ·

~--------·············-~-

I
•

�t--The Da!lySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Tnursitay, uec. /)j, Htld

Doctors must warn of abnormalities
or pay cost of lifetime care
The mother of the
mo ngoloid child, Dolores
Becker of Melville, argued
that her doctor , Eugene
Schwartz of Great Neck, had
failed to tell her that her
chances of having a
mongoloid baby were significant because she was over 35.
F urther , he failed to
administer a test to
determine if the fetus was a
mongoloid, Mrs . Becker
argued . The child is now 3
years old.
In the second case, Steven
and Hetty Park had asked
Hyde
Park
their
obstetricians , Herbert
Chessin and Allan Gibstein,
whether a kidney disease that
bad killed an earlier baby
was likely to recur.
The doctors a!legedly told
them the disease was not
hereditary and that chances
of a recurrence were

By JUDY WATSON
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)
Doctors who fail to warn
wunen of particular risks in
their pregnancy that might
produce an abnormal child
can be forced to pay for the
lifetime special costs of
caring foc such a child, the
state 's highest cour t has
ruled.
However, the Court of Appeals Wednesday refused to
let parents sue for emotional
stress resulting from the
defect or for their child 's
bavlng a "wrongful life."
Before docto r.s can be
forced to pay lor the special
costs, the court ruled that
negligence must be proved
such as in malpractice cases,
· The ruling involved two
· babies born with defects ooe a mongoloid and the other
with a hereditary kidney
disease that caused its death
alter 21&gt; years.

••practically nil .''

In both Instances, the
parents argued that had the
doctors properly warned
them about the chances of
their having defective
children, they never would
have decided to have them .
Mrs. Becker said she would
have had an abortion had llhe
known she was carrying a
mongoloid.
The Beckers sued to
recover money they will be
forced
to
spend
to
institutionalize their retarded
child lor as long as she lives.
Parks
wanted
The
reimbursement for special
expenses they bore before
their daughter died.
Both couples also sued on
behall of their babies lor
"wrongful life," and on their
own behall lor emotional
injuries suffered as a result of
the defective births.
In an earlier ruling, the
Appellate Division said

children had a "fundamental
right ... to be born as a whole,
functional, human being,"
and upheld the right of both
couples to sue the doctors on
a!l COWits except emotional
and psychological damages.
In a reversal, the high court
said the parents should be
permitted to sue O!lly for
special expenses required to
care for a handicapped child,
saying any calculation of
damages on the other coWJts
would be too speculative.
"Surely the law can assert
no competence to resolve the
issue," the court said.
The court said the claims
lor additional e:&amp;pel)ses of
raising the child were readily
calculable and should be
viewed
like
other
malpractice cases if a breach
of duty on the doctor's part
could be proven.
It sent the case back to
state Supreme Court for trial
oo whether the doctors were
negligent and, if so, what
amount of damages were
justified.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
ht•c·ansl' J rc•ttll y ('t~U i il n ol affcw.: tu h:tVl' it )uokl'd at,
much less towed to a ga l'e:t);.(t~ .

He lp lo r

po t' handles
11F:AR POLLY- TIK• Hlnve
IH•at lms ('HUSt&gt;tl tlll' h ~mll es
to i'OinC off nf lWU of my

J n•membPrecl that when a
llt'iJ.:hbur had a

s imi l&lt;-~r pru~
BS

blt&gt;m hl' had diagnosed it

Deadline Saturday
to enter·exhibit
Saturday, December 30, is
the deadline to have com·
pleted registration forms for
pa inting and sculpture .
collections, to be included in
the "Collectors Gallery" at
Riverby during the month of
January, delivered to Peggy
Evans or Jan Thaler at PJ's
.in downtown Gallipolis.·
These forms must be in the
hands of Mrs. Evans or Mrs.
Thaler by Saturday so that
necessary arrangements lor
this special exhibit by the
French Art Colony can be
made. Riverby will reopen
with the new exhibit on

Sagurday, January 6.
Both of the Galleries at
Riverby will be used to
dis play the painting and
sculpture that will be on loan
from individuals who would
like to !!hare up to three
collections. Participation is
open to both members and
non-members of the French
Art Colony.
AU items to be included in
the January " Colle ctors
Gallery" should be delivered
to River by on Tuesday ,
January 2, between 10 a.m.
and 3 p.m.

t'IIIT&lt;K led ports on the ba t"
t&lt;•ry. He look it apar1 and
''lt•aned
the parts with sand·
slil inlcss steel is perfect. I
papt•r. I had no. to()ls or sand-1
wnt~ l d li ke to get rww himdlt&gt;s
fnr them but do not know paper· ~ ll&lt;H&gt;ked in my purse
iin&lt;l found a small, un- ·
where to lctkr them . Can vou
breakable plastic comb and
tell me I The manufactur~r 's
used
it to comb all a rnund the
na rnt~ on th~ butt urn is " Lnw
posts
and battery. The car
Heal."- LILLIAN
started right up. Now I
DEAR LILLIAN -- I have
alw~:~ys carry 1:1 comb in the '
an idea that the " I AIW Heat" ra
r in case the same thing .-- - - -- - - -- - -- - -- - - - - -.,
mark is not the name of the
should
happen again, - DEBm'akcr but a We:t_rning to only
January 19'79 Exhibit At Riverby
RA
1\
usc the pans on low heat,
Registration Form
DEAR DEBRA '_ The
whir h would explain the ·
Loanor's
Name
Phone
unusual situation of having owneP of 1:1 large ~mlomobUe
Address
service depHrtment told me
the handles burn off. There is
Artist (1 )
(2)
(3 )
that anything abrasive could
a line of porcelain looking
TiUe
lx• used for such a job. - POl r
cookware that has clip-&lt;Jn
Media
LY
ha ndles for some of it.&lt;; pieces.
Value-x
Polly will send you one of
1~a kc your pans to a hcmlware
x-( lor French Art Colony insurance coverage purposes
he r signe d th a nk -yo u
Htnre and sec if they would fit.
only)
newsp&lt;1per coupon clippers if
- POLLY
sht! uses your fa vorit e
DEAR POLLY - The other
Pninter, Peeve or Problem in
day I was downtown and my
her column. Write POLLY'S
discouraged workers who
ear . refused to start. The
Rating Unemployment
'
eng"ine would not even turn POINTE RS in eare of this
The unemployment rate is have given up any hope of finand he expressed hope her . ewer. J w ;.~~ f111ifP unSP.l ncwsp1:1per.
misleading, according to a ding a job.
underdeveloped and
Conference Board analysis.
damaged lungs will heal.
Unemployment data indude
"She's a very active baby,"
DON
BELL
many
people wno may not be
r-------~
said Mrs. Falllkner.
Dtm Bell of l.elarl Falls suffering acute economic
"HI ask her is she's been a
r·et urn ed to the Hol ze r hardship, such as profesUo you ever have the
good girl, she'll close her eyes
Medical Center Tuesday mor- sionals movin ~ to a new city
hunch !hal the boss
sneaking
real tight ... she smiles, sucks
ni ng· , a lt e r spe ndin g to find a better job or
finds
out
what's
with the eomher finger and one day she
Christmas weekend at home teenagers living at home. At
pany
only
after
eavesdroppwas even playing with the
with his family. Mr. and Mrs. the same lime, the statistics
'Hi&gt;liday visitors of Mr. and Bell were joined for the holi- fail to incl ude ma ny ing on the secretarial pool?
ears of her doggy," a stuffed
Mrs. Bill King and son, Kevin day by their soh-in-law and
toy.
"At first I lived from hour were Mr. and Mrs. Ri ck daughter, Bruce and Lorna
to hour because we aU knew Meckstroth, Huntington, W. Bell Hart.
she could die at any time," Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Hank
Mr. Bell continues to
said Mrs. Faulkner, mother Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Steve receive therapy and other
of three other daughters, 15, Finlaw, Matt and Heather.
treatment for injuries whk h
Mr , and Mrs. Charles Rrad- he suffered in an auto acci·
14 and 10. "But now it's more
day by day. And I try not to bury had as Christma s guests dent on Od . 13. He entered
their family, Mr. and Mrs. the hospital for the third time
worry.
"H the doctors aren't wor- Asa llradbury, Jeffrey and un Dec. 7 ami returned home
ried, then I'm not worried. Nikki, Circleville : Mr. and only for Chrislm(JS. His r&lt;Jorn
When they are, then I am. But Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Megan, nmnber is 222.
a!l I want is to take a healthy Wendy and Tricia, Raci ne;
baby home, even ill have to Mr. and Mrs. Pat O'Brien and
wait two or three months, or Joy, Pomeroy. The Asa BradALL
The Raymond Cla pper
bury family left frnm here for
even more."
The baby's father is an Morristown to· visit Mr. and Awa rd is prese nted to
outstanding journalists by the
unemployed meat cutter . _ Mrs . Robert Reibel.
Mr. and Mrs. Ge u'r~e White House Correspondents
Mrs. Faulkner works in the
Glaze,
Trey and Clinton Assn,
billing department of Sky
Chefs Food Catering , a visited Friday and Saturday
division
of
American at Mt. Orab with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs . F:arl Muon.
Airlines.
st&lt;-t inl(•ss stt!el eooking puts.
Tlwy ;In; very old but the

•-..

LOWERED
ITWI .. COST OF
CJtRPET CLEANING

NOW RENT

do is live.

Doctors believe that will
make her the
most
prematurely born infant to
survive.
When she was born seven
weeks ago "my first reacti011
was, how could something
that small kick so hard," said
her mother, Myrna Faulkner.
Mignon was born four
months early, after only 23
weeks gestation, barely hall
the normal development lime
lor a fetus. She was only 12
inches long.
Now Mignon weighs just
over 2 pounds, nearly
doubling her birth weight, so
physicians at Children' s
Hospital and Health Center
gave a coming out party lor
her Wednesday, showing off
the tiny infant wired to
monitors, breathing

apparatus and many tubes.
Despite many health complications, her chances for
survival are now better tban
50·50, said Dr . Richard
Hender'son, staff
neonatologist.
In the days following her
birth, Mignon underwent
surgery to close an opening in
her heart ·arteries, suffered
kidney failure several times
and has a major problem
with her lungs, which are
sma!l and underdeveloped.
She breathes with the aid of a
respirator inserted in her
throat.
She m~ get frequent blood
tran!usions to replace the
blood lost to many blood tests
needed to monitor her
condition .
But Henderson says her
condition has now stabilized

Family gathers for Christmas
Do·lt·rour! eU
and get prolessional
re•ult~

STAR SUPPLY CO.
949-2525
R1cine, 0.

Christmas was observed at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
F:lza Gilmore, Jr. Saturday
evening with a family gathering.
.
Joining the family for dinner were Mr . and Mrs. Rick
Gilmore of Reedsville, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Gilmore,
Athens, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Michael Gilmore, Rutland.
Later in the evening Mrs.
Nora Gilmore, Mrs. Denver
Kapple and Miss Louise
Gilmore came for a party and
gi ft exchange. The family

lisle&lt;\ to a recorded program
presented by Roger and Mary
Gilmore and Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets at a Rotary meeting
~eve ra l

weeks ago .

On Sunday evening Mr. and
Mrs. Gilmore talked with
their son, Joe, and his wile,
Linda in Walworth, · Wise.
They plan a visit to Meigs
County in the next few weeks
and at that lime they will .
nbst&gt; rve Christmas here. The
Gilmores plan to keep their
ar1ilieial tree in place until
their visit.

Youth go caroling

SHOP

Youth of the Bradbury
Church of Christ went
Christmas caroling Saturday
evening and then returned to
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Johnson for a party.
The group caroled older
members of the church in
Middleport and the Cheshire
eommunili es, and then
returned to the Bradburv
community.
·
In the group were Kevin
King , Kath.y JOhnson ,
Johnson, Cathy Hess, Sherrie
Barnhart, Rodney Bailey,
Desi Jeffers, David Cole,
Chri s t y Sla nl ey, Ruth
Ca rsey, and Mr. and Mrs.
William King.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat . 8: 30 til 5:00
Thursday Till2 Noon
Friday UntiiB P.M..

Herman Grate
773-5592

Mason · W. Va.

1 Middleport \
Personal Notes

I

APPEARING

\VEDS., THURS., FRI.
&amp; SAT. NIGHTS AT TilE

'

..

., '

·-'
.,,. /

.,.,
."

WOMEN'S &amp; GIRLS'

EVENING
SLIPPERS

FASHION
BOOTS

AND
BAGS TO MATCH

30~FF
OPEN
FRIDAY NIGHT
TIL8

heritage house
N. 2nd Ave.

OF SHOES

Middleport

.

''

'·

,·:•

·~

-·

•

!)inner guests
Christma s dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stiles,.Soulh
Third Ave. , Middleport, were
their son, Roger Stiles of Lexington, Ky. ; James and Barba r·a Stil es F r y , and
daughters, Ruth and Sue,
Pomeroy: and Matthew
Craddock who makes his
home with his grandparents.
During his time here Roger
visited with his sister, Nina
Craddock, a patient at St.
J os eph
Ho s pital,
Parkersburg, W. Va. Her
parentH and son, Matthew,
visited with her lln Christmas
afternoon at the hospital.
Injured in a single car accident on Nov. 28 at Hartford,
W, VA., Mrs. Craddock is
paralyzed from her waist
down . The family reports that
she is cheerful and enjoys
cards which may be sent to
her at St. Joseph Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Va., Room
401.

Children 's program

The children's program at
the Middleport Church of
Christ was held Sunday morning during the worship service.
Songs ami rt&gt;cilations were
given by the children under
the direction of Mrs. Debbie
Gerlach . Jared Stewart gave
the welcome, after the
children sang ".(way in a
Manger" and "Come Sing
Wlle Child ren", with Usa
Honak er , Ann Riffl e,
stephanie Sec, Bridget Davis
of the nursery class giving
recitations.
Others giving recitations
were Linda Chapman, Charla
Cooper. Tara Gerlach, Pete
Bricklcs, Shannon f'AJates,
Wesley Howard , Clinton
'Glaze, Cjlris Stewart, Jennifer McKinley, Matthew Erwin, Kelly Neff, Sherrie
Cuoper, Trey Glaze, Jared- ·
Sheets, and Kathy Thomas.
The l'nngregatlon joined the
group in singing ",Joy to the
World" and "Silent Night"
Jan•d Sh!!ets and his mother.
MrH. Jennifer Sheets, had a

-\

Tiemeyer children
home for holidays
Seven of Mrs. Loretta
Tiemeyer 's eight children
were home fur the holidays.
These included Mrs. Carol
Rindsburg, Newport , Ky.
with her three children,
Sharon, Darla and Owen
Ray ; PFC David Tiemeyer,
slaliond in Albany, GA. with
the U.S. Marine Corps ; ; Mrs.
Ju Ann McC linto c k,
Pomeroy, and her two
children, Erica and Brian,
Mr. and Mrs. John Hankla of
Rutland and their four
children, Laney, Amber , Eric
and Dean ; John Tiemeyer of
Athens, and Mary and Bill
Tiemeyer, both of Pomeroy.
!.ester Bowers joined the
Christmas gel-together.
Kcnriy Tiemeyer who is in
Ca li1&lt;1rnia telephoned on
Christmas Day, This was the
fi rst Christmas in five years
that the Tiemeyers had most
of the famil y horne for the
holiday.

LEGAL
BEVERAGES
SOLI&gt;

'·

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RECEIVES AWARD
Walter M. Grueser, an
affiliate of the Tice Agency of
the Midland Mutual Life
Insurance Company of
Columbus, has been awarded
the National Quality Award
for outstanding service
rendered to the insurancebuying apubllc.
The National Quality
Award is a unique citation
sponsored by the National
piano duet, and Mrs. Nnr11 Association of Life UnH j ('( ~·!-1 dHss ~CIO K'
'' T ile derwriters Washington, D.
~~ ri • : n d l y
Hccrst ." Th (' C., and the Life Insurance
clllhlren ld t th• · sa rwt m.1 n · Mark etin g and Research '
singin~ ''Wt&gt; Wish You ;, Ass ociati on, Hartford,
Connecticut.
Mt•rr r !ll'istmas "

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The American middle class is
about to get socked · once
again in one of its most
the
.vulnerable areas,
paycheck.
A. hefty itlcrease in Social
Security taxes, which for
some will go as high as 31
percent, takes effect with the
first payday of the new year.
It means more will be
deducted for Social Security
from everyone's takH1ome .
pay, and many employees

into the year.
It's the first of what will be
annual, automatic increases
every Jan. 1, approved by
Congress a year ago in an
effort to keep the Social
Security system solvent.
Under that schedule, most
employees' payments to the
social Security lund will have
doubled by 1982.
Most of the first year's
pain, however, will be felt by
people earning between
$20,000 and $30,000 a year, the

Index dropped
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
government index intended to
forecast the future course of
the economy dropped 0.6
percent last month , the
government reported today. .
The drop, which followed
three coosecutive mooths of
increases, was the first
decline since mid11wruner
and a signal the economy
may be slowing.
Although · the Index of
Leading Indicators is volatile
and is subject to revision, it
often offers advance signs of
economic performance.
The administration Is purposely trying to slow
economic growth in the
United States in order to
tame lnllatlon.
Officials have projected a
growth rate of about 2.5
percent for 1979, a level that
will probably mean some
increase in unemploYment. ·
But officials say the loss of
some jobs may be a
necessary price in order to
control inflation, which is the
nation's No. I economic priority.
Some private economists
have
offered
more

pessimistic assessments,
saying the country may fall
into a mild recession in the
latter stages of next year.
The 0.6 percent drop registered last month compared
with a 0.4 percent increase in
October, an 0.9 percent rise in
September and a 0.5 percent
gain during August.
II was the first drop since
July's 0.9 percent decline.
The leading indictors
index, published by the
Commerce Department, is
comprised of 12 components
that are used to measure
changes in general economic
activity.
Of the 10 components
available lor October, five
declined and live rose.
The decliners were: vendor
performance, contracts and
orders for new plant and
equipment, stock prices, the
money supply and new orders
in 1972 dollars.
The five that advanced
were: average workweek, the
layoff rate, change in total
liquid assets, change in
sensitive prices and building
permits.

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W e're sure this -

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Hours:

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•SHOCKS
•ALTERNATORS

•WATER PUMPS
•FUEL PUMPS

•TUNE-UPS
EXPERTLY .INSTALLED BY

th eir apartment Oct. 10 .
Rideout said his wife also
slapped him once .
One juror, Jean Kay Lent ,
44, the wile of an Oregon
Supreme Court justice, said
the jury took lour ballots
before Rideout was found
innocent.
"We just weren 't convinced
(of hi s guilt ) beyond a
reasonable doubt ,'· Mrs. Lent
said .

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2nd St.
POMEAOY, O.

sidered middle-&lt;:lass.
drop about $160. A person
Aone-shot cutin income tax earning $50,000 a year with a
rates, also effective Jan. 1, family of four will pay the
was designed to ease the same additional $333 to Social
initial burden, and lor the · Security, but his income
average employee earning taxes will be approximately
less than $20,000 or more than $625 lower.
$30,000, the tax cut offsets the
At the other end of the
new · Social
Security scale, a family of lour earpayments. But lor those in ning $15,00!) will pay only $12
the $20,000-$30,000 range, it more to Social Securtty, while
falls short .
its income taxes will drop
An individual earning about $85.
$25,000 will pay $333 more to
However, no tax cuts are on
the Social Security lund next the books to offset the Social
Security hikes to come on
New Year's days of the
EVENT SATURDAY
future.
Th e
Pomeroy
Fire
And one of life's .little
Department will hold its
luxuries
will disappear in
amual ball Saturday, Dec. 30
1979
lor
anyone
earning beat Pomeroy Elementary
tween
$17,700
and
$22,900. It's
School from 10 p.m. until 2
that magic moment, usually
a.m.
Music will be provided by occurring between July and
when
the
"J. J . Dob and Company". December,
maximum
Social
Security
Those wishing to make
reservations may call Don payment has been made and
tako;.home pay increases by
Mayer at 992-5954.
the amount that had been
withheld.
In 1979, Social Security
GET LICENSES
Marriage licenses were taxes will be withheld on the
issued to Noah Preston first $22,900 of earned inHaskins, 76, Middleport, and come, up from $17,700 this
Cora Elizabeth Moore, 74, year. Anyone earning the
RD, Albany; Michael Allen maximum will pay $1,403
Capehart, 30, Middleport and next year, up from $1,070.
Patricia Ann Wondyard, 28, That's an Increase of $333, or
31 percent.
Rt. 1, Long Bottom.
By 1981, this wage base will
have increased to $29,700, and
REGULAR MEETING
the maxlmum
annual
A regular meeting of payment will be $1,975.
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
For anyone earning less
Eastern Star, will be held at than $17,700, the pain will
7;30 p.m. Monday at the hardly be noticeable.
;emple.

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

! Area Deaths !
JAMES A. FRENCH
James Albert French, 58, a
resident of Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
died in Hol2er Medical Center
at 1:15 a.m. Thursday. He
had been in failing health the
past three months.
Mr. French was born Jan.
5, 1920, in Gallia County, son
of the late Oscar Eugene and
Nelli~ Belle Smith French.
He marriC!I Marjorie Ellen
Swisher on Dec. 14, 1939, in
Gallipolis. She survives,
along with one daughter and
two sons : Mrs. Karen
Tucker, Rt. 1, Gallipolis;
James A. French, Jr .,
Reynoldsburg, and Marshall
D. French, Fort Worth,
Texas .
Four grandchildren survive. Three brothers survive :
Vernon V. French, Addison :
Vaughn J. French, Addison
and Robert E. French, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis. One brother,
Kenneth Paul, preceded him
In death.
Mr. French . operated a
farm in the Bulavllle area for
several years. He drove a
GaUia County School bus
(Kyger Creek District ) lor 20
years and served as an Ad-

DUE TO THE HOLIDAYS
OUR OFFICE WILL CLOSE
NOON FRIDAY.
·
Richard Newell. Manager

DENVER KAPPLE AT

Happ{NewYearl
PolnTVIew Cable TV
(304) 675·3398
(614) 992·2505
:'

Mrs. Rideout had accused
her husband of beating and
raping her the afternoon of
Oct. 10 in th e couple's
northeast Salem apartment.
The couple's child , 2'1;,-yearold Je nny , wa s in the
apartment at the tiine ,
according to trial testimony.
Rideout denied he for ced
his wife to have sex with him
but admitted he slapped her
once during the argument in

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•MUFFLERS

Norma Joyce of the Salem
Women's Crisis Center that
helped Mrs. Rideout before
and during the triAl. said,
"Most of us are just in

women , all women," the
crisis center counselor said.
''I was hoping that it would
hot be this verdict. ! feel that
women are going to be more
and more afraid to lind legal
justice since they have been
stymied so much in the past. "
But District Attorney Gary
Gortmaker sa id he still
believes women can bring
rape charli(€'!'l ;:rgain!\t t hPir

husbands regardless of the
marriage contract.
" No one should be
compelled by force to do
anything against their will,"
he said, adding he did not
think the verdict would deter
women from filing such
charges.
" I think that if a person is
strong enough and if there
are these fa cts they (women)
will come for w&lt;~ rd . "

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•BRAKES

women."

shock .''
" It is a terrible setback for

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MAY BE YOUR FAMILY'S

husband refused.
She said she did not regret
having pressed the charges.
"Knowing what r do now, 1
would do it over aga in. I saw
it as a selfish act for mysell at
first, but now I see it as a
beginning
for
other

Middle class to be hit hard

THE INN PLACE

WMPO
SATURDAYS
9 til Noon

Christmas visitors
Christmas visitors at the
home of Mrs. Allen Brewer
and David, Sliversville were
Mr , and Mrs. Kenneth
Brewer, Teresa and Kenneth
II, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Close, son, Roy, Waterford ; Mrs. Marilyn Beall,
Cnlumbus; Mrs. Joann Dob- ·
bins and Dennis, Columbus ; ·
Mi ss Ronda Bea ll and
Dominic De Genero, Columbus: Mark Beall , Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Brewer,
Portland ; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Brewer, IAmg Bottom; and Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Fitch, IAmg Bottom.

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CaseyKasem

By TIM0'111Y KENNY
found him innocent of raping ooly 2 !)ours and 46 minutes
·SALEM, Ore. (UPI )- The his wife, Greta, 23, following following a six.&lt;Jay trial.
restaurant cook acquitted of an argument at their
His wile, who has filed for
raping his wife smiled about apartment on Oct. 10.
divorce, disagreed .
the verdict in the landmark
Rideout, 21, was the first
"The jury was so full of
trial. But his wile insisted his man in the country to be close.minded people. It was
testimony was a lie and charged with raping his wile unbelievable, " said Mrs.
feminists ca!led the acquittal · while the couple was married Rideout who was not in court
" a terrible setback for and living together.
when the verdiCt was
wtUlen, all women."
" I think they looked at the · announced.
"I'm pretty happy," John evidence," a smiling Rideout
"He lied.! didn't ," she said
J. Rideout said Wednesday sa id of the jurors , who of the trial testimony, adding
night alter the eight-woman, handed down the innocent that she had offered to take a
founnan jury unanimously verdict alter delib erating lie detector t•st b11t h•r

(

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MEIGS INN

held for Christmas

SILVER

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Jury acquits husband lli landmark rape case

1 7 ounce baby may make it yet
SAN DIEGO (UPI)- Little
Mignon Faulkner, who
weighed ooly 17 ounces at
birth, now has a better than
even chance to make the
record books. All she has to

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 28,1!178

dison Twp. trustee the past
nine years.
He was a member of the
GaUia County Fox Hunters
Association and was a
licensed auctioneer for. the
State of Ohio.
Mr. French was a member
of the Bulaville Christian
Church and a member of the
Masonic Lodge Silome No.
456, Cheshire. He was a 30degree Mason and meinber of
the Scottish Rites.
Funeral services will be
held at Bulaville Christian
Church 2 p.m. Sunday with
Rev . Chester Lemley, Rev.
Alfred Holley and Rev. Steve
Rollins officiating. The body
will lie in state at the church
one hour prior to the services . .
Buri a! will follow in
campaign Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Willis Funeral Home from 6
until 9 p.m. Saturday and
Masonic services will be held
7:30 p.m. Saturday.

BERTIIA WILLIAMS
Bertha F. Williams, 76,
former Jackson County
resident, died Tuesday
evening at Piqua Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Williams was born In
Meigs County, the daughter
of the late George and
Amanda Styles Howett. Her
husband, Leo H. Williams,
preceded her in death in 1977.
She was also preceded by one
sister, Una Bolin.
She is survived by two sons,
Ralph of Bradford, Ohio and
Charles of Beaumont,
Texas, one daughter, Mrs.
Willis (Pearl) Hariing, Piqua,
eight grandchlldren and eight
great-grandchildren, one
· brother, Dana Howell,
Pomeroy and one sister, Mrs.
Vena · Whaley, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be
held Friday at I p.m. at the
Hughes - Van Fossen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Cecil Cox
officiating. Burial will be in
Burlingham Cemet ery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9.

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THREE PERSONS were injured and three vehicles
demolished during this five-vehicle accident on U.S. 35
Tuesday afternoon. The Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports that a chain reaction began when a south·
bound pickup truck operated by Morris Martin, 68,

Three.

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(Continued from page I J
passed off the left side of the
roadway, and struck a utility
pole.
McAngus displayed visible
signs of injury and was trans·
port ed by the Pomeroy
Em ergency
Squad
to
Vet erans Memorial HospitaL
The McAngus vehicle was
demolished.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle mishap
Wednesday at 9:40 a. m. on
SR 588, just east ohnilepost 4.
According to&lt;the patrol, an
east bound auto driven by
Joseph Blazer , 16, Rio
Grande, went out of control in
a curve, passed off the left
side of the roadway, and
struck an embankment.
Blazer displayed visible
signs of injury, but was not
immediately treated. There
was moderate damage to the
vehicl e.

Ewington , struck the rea r of an auto driven by Mike Wills,
21, Gallipolis. Wills and a passenger, Cheryln Wills, 20,
Gallipolis, were treated lor injuries at Holzer Medical
Center and released. Martin wa~ cited on charges of
assured clear distance .

Hamburger will cost a lot more
WASHINGTON (UP! ) That thick, juicy hamburger
soon may be as dear to
Americans as a sirloin steak.
The Ameri can Mea l
Institute predicts ground beef
will jump 40 to 50 cents per
pound next year , up from the
average of $1.20 per pound in
mid-1978.
The cost ol steak was
expected to increase by about
25 cents per pound. Sirloin
steak sold for about $2.56 per
pound this year.
Meat production will drop
to 38 billion pounds in 1979,

down from 38.7 billion pounds
the previous year and a peak
of 39.7 billion pounds in 1977,
the institute predicted.
The AMI said 1979 per
ca pita conswnplion of red
meat - mostly beef and pork
- will he about 180 pounds,
six pounds less than in 1978.
Po ul t ry co n su mption,
however, should increase
from 57 pounds to 60 pounds

CORRECTION
[n a court action by two
employes of the Meigs Co unty
Hea lth Department against
the Meigs County Board of
Health the payment of money
reported sho uld have been
Veterans Memorial Hospital Gene Lyons, $946.21 minus
ADMITT ED - Joetta deductions making a total of
Gary
Aspin ,
Krider, Long Bottom; Louise $739.15;
Bair, Little Hocking: Mildred $1,074.97, acco rding to
Roush, Little Hockin g; Howa rd Fran k, co unt y
Kathryn Weaver, Pomeroy; a uditor .
The checks were made
Carole Coleman, Reedsville;
Janetta Betzing, Pomeroy. payable to Lyons and Aspin
DISCHARG ED - Karen and to their respect ive atLyons, James Lowe.
torneys. The employes also
had to pay attorney fees from
the ~mo unt of the settlement.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call at 4: 19
p.m. Wednesday . lu th e
Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments
·for Evelyn Jewell who wa s
taken t o Holzer Medical
Center.
GAMES TONIGHT
Basket ball teams of
Wahama and Southern High
Schools will play at 6:30 this
evening at the high school in
Racine with reserve play
tarting at 6:30p.m.
SLIDES ON AGENDA
Edson Roush will present
slides of the Holy Land at a
New Year's Eve program to
be held at the Alfred United
Methodist Church Sunday
from 7:30 to midnight.
·There will be special music
from representatives of
various churches an d
refreshments will be served.
The public Is Invited by the
Rev . Richard W. Thomas,
pastor.
1
WATCH SERVICE
Local speakers and singers
will be featured at a watchnight service to be held at
the Pom eroy Wesley an
Holiness Church, Route 143,
Sunday evening beginning at
7: 30 p.m. The pastor, Rev.
Dewey Kin g, invites the
public.

per person.
AMI Presiden t Richard
Lyng told a news conference
Wed nesday beef prices will
begin rising this spring and
will be "sharply higher" by
swmner.
Lyng said he believes meal
production will not fall short
of demand, but if it does, the
United States could count on
importing Australian beef.

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. . . . . d&lt;l. . . ., Pup~!~,~·

FOR
All THE FAMILY

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THE : ~=: : : : : : : : :::::::~t:::::::
SHOE BOX

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The 1979 Rabbit. J
Just
l
hatched.
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A i)OLIIl CILl g

h~lly ila tc hba c l,.

Or
lei
we say ilopp111g. Tl1e new 1979 Rab !Jil

;

has lois ol lrunk room. plen ty of pt !Ople room
a11d qu ite a bil of cJppml in lllP silClwroom. It'll
18ke you fr o111 0 to 50 i.1 1pil 111 8 ..3 secollCI5 of
fu PI rn, ected fun. So break o ut of your shell. In a
Rab iJi l

•

Riverside Volkswagen
195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
'

446-9800

GAlliPOLIS, 0.

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , U ., Thursday , Dee. 28, 1978
PROBATE COURT OF
Friday. Dec . 29 --:::=--=c-=--::-::
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~ 'V2.ll!JJ
•
UdlfJ~~ ~~'U
December 29 , 1978
Thmgs look promt s 1ng lor you
th1s com mg year b eca use your
ambt!1ons an d yo ur ab il1 11es w1ll
fu se harmon iousl y, What you

E S TATE
OF
HIGGINBOTHAM .

case No . 225-tl
On December 18, 1978, in
the Me 1gs Coun ty P'robate
Court, Case No 225&lt;~1 , Conn ie
W i l L 2540 W i ndage Or ,
Fatrf1etd . Ohio AS014 was
appomted Actm m istrat r ix or
the es tat e of Ceclt Hlggin ·
both am , deceased , late of R
R 1, De)Cter . Ohio
Ml!nn1ng D Webster
Probate Judge
Cle rk
(12 1 21 , 28 (1 ) .4, Jtc

DECEASED

Case No 22562

else co uld come under your

NOTICE OF

contr ol as o f tod ay Handl e 11 so
APPOINTMENT
that th e re tns will remam 1n
OF FIDUCIARY
On December 18, 1978, in
your hands Fmd out mor e of
what ltes ahead for you m 1979 the Meigs County P' robat e
Court. Case No 225 62 , Gilbert
by sen dtng tor your co py of Beeg le, 309 Mann Avenue ,
Astro·Graph Letter Ma•l 50 Fat r born . Oh10 45324, was

cents fo r each and a long self

addressed stamped en\lelope
to Astro-Graph P.O B o)( 489 .
Rad to C tty Stat to n , N Y 10019
Be sure to specify b trth stgn

AQUARIUS !Jan 20· Feb. 19) An
en terprise that yo u have been

app omt ed Executor of the
es tate of M y rtl e B McBr ide,
deceased , late of Rose Va ll ey
Road , Sy r acuse, Oh1 0 45779 .
Mann 1ng D Webs t er
Pr oba te Judge
Cl erk
1121 21. 28 111 4 , Jtc

1nvo tved 1n wtlh another co uld
mak e a turn at th 1s t1me . enabt.n g both to benefit hand -

somely.

PISCES ;Feb. 20-March

10)

Someone y o u ' re very land of
but h ave n ' t seen as mu ch o f as
yo u ' d l•ke to lately co uld
reen ter yo ur hfe . You ' ll p1 c k up
where y9u left o il

ARIES (March 11-April 19) Set
yo ur Sights h•g!l today Don t
e ven co ntemplate se ttl ing for
seco nd-bes t Vi ctor y IS •n the
a1r Yo u have what 1\ tak es to

w"
TAURUS

(April

20-May

20)

Co horts w111 ha11e as m uc h la1th
111 your 1deas as yo u do today
They 'll se nse that you k no w
tt1e be st way to ge t th1 n gs done
and be wtl l1ng to fo llow your

lead

GEMINI (May 21-J une 20) A
person w1 th whom you we re
successfu l in the pa st may
ha11e a new proposa l fo r you
today It co u ld tu r n out to be as
b•g a w•nner as the las t o n e

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Today you may have th e opportuni ty to wm over a b o ld and
assertive al ly to help further a
co llect ive c ause You ' ll make a
great team

VIRGO !Aug. 13-Sept. 22) Take
advantage o f opportum11es o ffered to you wh e re o ld friends
are W11t1ng to Introduce yo u to
new peop le E)(C itl ng things
co uld happen

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Ralher
than cl1 ng to somet hing that
has prove n to be unproduct•ve ,
seek way s to make fres h beg mnmgs toda y Use the pa s t as a
start tng point

SC ORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 12} Althou gh y'ou ' re somet1mes reluctant to alter your views ,
don ' t hesr tate to d1sca rd o ld
opmlons o r old ideas for better
one s t oday

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2'1 ) Conditio ns th at co uld rmpra ve your lo t, fina ncia ll y and
care er w1 se , are s hilling for yo u
today Be alert fo r any mdrcators
~ NEW S PAPER

ENTERPRISE ASSN I

• PREVIOUSlY ownw C'ARS
LOW M)lEAGE
• TAll PERFORMAHCE

1976 CU11ASS

SALON
Elec spli t bucket seats,
p s., p b ., ai r . til1. cru ise ,
auto .• low mi leage, road
leve lers ,
front - rear
defroster . Nice car.

'3995

1977 FORD

GRANADA
Stiver w ·r ed vi nyl top , 2

dr ., 13,000 mi. , p.s., p.b. ,
air, auto

'4295

Located on W. Va side of
Pomeroy-Mason
Br idge.

(304) 713-5717

I d, t\

) tlil

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1,5(1

l!l.t\ ...
lid,.;'

100
""

f.l, ·lo •rf'llfl'

C'h.tr).!t'
115.
I·~

,,t f'&lt; 1'\IIIIILIIj.\ 1' 1111'1 than Lllll."l'l 'LlliVl'
llit) " tull bt· dmt~t~l ,,t tl 11' I t1.1~
I ,,it'

h1 lilt null'~ , ltml uf Th;mk.o; and
Oln lU:II\" li t'N\IS t ~t•r wurtl , $:tOO
111111111\UII\ f.t~sh ltl&lt;llh'illlt'l'
,11 t '

Tilt'

Pub l i~ lw t

lt'St'I'Ws llw

l'l !ifk1 /LS11Jit· fur lllllrt' thalllllll' Ult'tLI' ·
lt'&lt;'l lll~l' ' Tr•••t

PhtNW 991-tl.Jii

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Munda)

Nt"-'11 uuSutunl&lt;ly
Tut•stlil\
thru Fmia~

son, John.
Mrs . Nellie Cox
is
recuperating from heart
surgery at her home here.
Mrs. Bertha Parker spent
Christmas and a following
week with relatives in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Joseph
Hi gginbotham and baby,
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Whitaker, New York,
spent Christmas with Rev.
and Mrs. Floyd Shook.
The AlmaDBc
Press
By
United
lnLernatlonal
Today is Thursday , Dec. 28,
Ule 362nd day of 1978 witb
Ulree to follow.
The moon is approaching
its new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury,
Jupiter
and

Saturn.
The evening star is Mars.
Those born on Ulis date are
WJder Ule s ign of Capricorn.
Woodrow Wilson, 28th
president of the United
Stales, was born Dee. 28,

On Ulis day in history :
In 1832, John CalhoWJ, at
odds with President Andrew
Jackson, became Ule first
vice president to resign.
In 1846, Iowa was admitted
to Ule Union as Ule 29th state.

f.I~WAioiOIN G

Surui;H

___ I'! ~l!.m_or_y _

_ _

IN

MfMORY of f rn est Dol e
Johnson wh o pass('d a way
Df'c 1B 111"1 1
H1&lt;. prPsrncP. 1n our ho mr w n s
loved
By all. ond now ~m. memory
ofter
Wi l r&gt;
r h.lclrrn norl
Grnnrl
l"hddren

Card of Thanks

-·- - - - - - ·- - - - - ·

BAtlE Y S
STORE
:t:t t
N ~nd Ave . M 1ddlepNt , Oh10
Wdl he clo sP d Dec 25 tO Jon 'I
PARA SOL BO UTIQUI::
BemJty
So lon announces Mnry Newel l
has ret ur ned I a wor k Npw
Yea r's Speci al FreP ha1r rond t·
!toner to C'very r u stomer th r u
DPC
31
PhonE' 985 4 141
OpeLOi or o; Sondra KNn~ . M ary
NC'well l ocated nt'x t to SkatP
A Way Roll er Rtnk

POM f~OV ~ orr&gt;c; t Pr o
rlt&gt;r ts Top pr•Cf' l or o; tnnrl1 n~
•ow t1mh£' r Cn ll f.l lj') SW1 S or
.t(p nl Hon hy , I A&lt;lt&gt; H570

Oll) HJRNI TIIRE Iff' hn• ec; h r n~ ~
hr&lt;rh. 11011 hPrl~ rf('~ lo.s plr ,
(O mp1£' t£' h Oll !,f' h olrl ~
Wr1tr
M D Millrr Rt 4 PomNoy o r
cnfllj(/'} .7fbfJ

CA !\H t-: Of.l tun"
~N v l (£' Fr yr&gt;"'

r or ~

ff' rll"'"

nnd mPta l..
Rn'if' r s
S ol v o~w
SR 1').J
Pom eroy

WA NTfD TO buy old t ~wo l ry
Cn tl '-Ill'} S'JI:l'J or wn t/. Kay
Cf' n l HI S 'Jnrl M1dd leporl
OH

Pomeroy Landmark

·• e- Jack W_Carsey, Mgr.
t!'ii!. Phone 992-2111
---- Services Offered
- · - -- - --

Yard Sale

---- - ----

WIL l CAHf l or th f' f'l rif&gt; rl ~ m oLrr
hornf' PhonP 91./'l I J I tl
r
WA1 f R WH( rirdl11 19 W1 ll tam T
G ront '/ .1/ '}H'I~

- - -Pets
- -for
- -Sale
-

Plelnllfl
mJ 7, u , 21 , 21 C1l 4, 11, 6tc

,

-

19th Century

Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

'

'
'

4-30-tt'-:'

MORE: COFFEE:, $11lII/Hilf IT'S FRI'SH
AND STE'AM1~6 HOTl

Speclllitlngln
woodstove, Oil Furn~ce
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone : 7•2 -3110
Kim White, Proprietor

'I

Ph. 992-2848

J&amp;L

:'

!IELLE~

'if\1\11.\.ft ~'if

~

'

.
...,,'
-·...'

• ' ·t

....

ro5T-QIRISTMAS

BL.M-1? .. ,

BOReD .. .'

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

HAMMOND &amp; LOWERY
ORGANS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
&lt;NEW&amp; USEDl

PETE SIMPSON

Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginther 985-3106

SALES REP.
FOR
SUND&lt;NS HAMMOND
ORGANS

J&amp;L INSUlATION

' ''
' '
'

Phone 949-2118
Allers P.M.
11-26·1 mo .

BoX 3

FOR AL L THEIR TRt•UBILE. I
6UT TMEY'R E GOIM ' TO
9E 81G ABOUT IT ...

••·-..

...

PHONE 992-2772

Chester, Ohio

11-3-1 mo.

10·30 ·C

AKC R EC~STfRfD Saxer puppc es
b wf'Pk s old A n1r e Chns tmas
~rlt 51'15 ea Cali 9!.J'} T/76

)CI'/0

J&lt;lm

Armstrong Carpeting
REA L ESTAH LOANS VA · No
m o n ey
down
{e l lg tbl e
VPINen.;) FHA A~ low ns ~ .....
rlown (oi l non Vete ren s ond
gpn eral publ1c) To purchase
rPol P ~ !oiP or ref1no nce 30
VfARS Tt:HMS IRHA ND MOH
TGAGE CO . Tl f: State S1
At hens Phone 6 14 5'-/2 305 1

Auto Sales

E. L.l.l.ll ::!!;J..:...I
POMEROY, O.

MAIN

)Q J(I CAMAf.IO SS Good condr
t1 on A c.pccrl lili'J 'l'Jb')

START THE NEW YEARRIGHT - In this lovely

lli /5 DODG f COLT 45 000 mt A
rlnor 01 r con rl11t oner goorl ron
rilfLOn S'lOOO t.rm lj !.J') 31 ro

home ,
wood
burning
ftreplace ,
patio,
ni ce
kitchen , located 1n the
country close to Pomeroy .

191'}
'1 4 ~

DODGE
7451

PICK UP

S'IUO

Rent
--- ·-For---- - -

COU NTRY M081lf HomP Park
Rout e JJ north o f Pornerqy
Lorg e lo ts Coli 99'1 7tt79

3 AND 4 RM fu rn "'hPc1 onrl un
l 11rnished
op t s
Ph onC'
Q9') 5434
TWO B ~ DRO OM k tt che n lurn 1sh
Prl npl Cnll bel orf&gt; 1:1 om
1N ? 'J'lHH

SIX ROOM hou &lt;;e and h ath nror
Royal Oak Pork 949 'JMA

---,---- -For Sale

OUALITY CONDITIONED mtxr. rl
hoy Wd l de-ltver 99:? !'101 .

$20,500.
NEW YEAR -

New roof.

PfA HAUlf HS CB So~e!&gt; fqu 1p
mPnt now on so il~ oil 1n slac k
Hod1os and orcessor1es through
Chrto;tmas Open eve ry day ex ·
C'£&gt;pl Su nday and Moncloy
~Veninqs
by oppointmP. nt
PhoP rPo rtlo t' d . Oh t c
'lObo!

~.M l T H

AND W&lt;'sc;o n m odel :~4 'n
S1tJO f.=or P.s t Summers 56:.! 45 SR
l 'lt1 , Por tl nnd 45770

R\Jl l A ND HARDWARE Rt! !lonrl
l'lh ro N ~w VPor 'o;. Inventory
~&gt;al P A ll woC'Id onrl co ni ~ r ov&lt;' "
Plrctr.r on d kcro!'irnf' ht•ater !&gt;
Inn! ho.,eo; . mnchan ir o! tool"
~o ckP.I c;e t wrrmrh nnd rlrr trit
opp ~ 1anc11~
tlro &lt;: tt cn lly rC'rlu c·
od

PA l~ SN{)W li!P.!. &lt;. t?P 1A IP ~~ th~n
'&gt;O{I , ..,,1.-.~ !-'lH M '/ 6:JJ9 nlr Pr

•
·:M MCH&gt;H 14(.l d ,,., ~.- t.-.p ·np"' '
&lt;.. r./ 1
f }.p•&lt;:t•[lC'
•n 1nrl• 1 L1('il
'" lt r·hnll(' "'""" t• r.r1•. r~ , . , ' •
!-,lJ:, AftN f•pn• 1,10_. '1 ,1 1

14/0 5 yl votr0)(1~'1 BR

I Q6H Vr!logf'., 60• 1') '} BH

1Qbd Windsor 51 x 10? BH
I &lt;.II(! Ktrkwoorl 11 .co0 J BR
I::I&amp;S MOI::Ittl: HOMf SAlfS
PT f.' \ fASANT W VA ,

I ' , ACR~ I ') x 60 mob de ho mP
nf'ar De)( ter Q'f') 5fi 5H

bedrooms , dining room,
many features. Cheap at
S31 ,600 .
WHY PAY RENT? -

1907

Whether you rent, or
whether you buy - you pay

for the home you occupy.
Call on th is home - close to

shopping. ONLY $11,900.
WANT TO BUILD? - Here
Is 21 acres of the most
beautifully
secluded
property
around .
Electricity and water on a
township road close to

Pomeroy. ASKING $23,000 .
EXPANO - 3 bedrooms,
formal
dining ,
full
basement with rec . room ,
two large porches, natural

gas
two

forced a ir heat, large
car garage and work-

shop. One-lhlrd acre. You
can walk lo shop. $23,500.
HAPPY NEW YEAR II
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Associates

Kathy Clelond
Leona Cleland
9'12-2259, 992-6191, 992-2568

TOTAL HECTRI( mahilc
hnme
f urnJr;h[' rl , :J b£&gt;rlr
wo~he r onrl dr'(N
Atr rondi
!toned I lo1 :no It l• ontag{'
S1'1 000 Ph onr/ tt 1 'JH'Jb

.
----------_R!la) Es_!a_!e _IOJ ~a_!e_

HOMfStn:S l or sn iP I OHP and
11p Middl eport nr.or Hut l'ond
((1 11 qq') .,41:11

l HllH lli::DROOM tromP hemP
Mtddl.. port Ca ll 9li2 3AS7

tn

t:ARM f OR o; ole H ou~P 'J barn!.
trntler Lo rge ponrl 10 on ,..~ or
li'} OC'fP S 1 4'} ')5111-

WANT TO SELL? Call us
for an appraisal and why
you strould list with us .
WANT TO BUY ? Call us. If
we don't have 11 then we'll
find tt for you .

belhs, full basement and 2
porches . $25,000.
REALLY NICE - New 3
bedroom ranch . Balh, city
wafer, family room with
sliding
glass
door,

Eve. 992 · 2449
Rodn ey Down~ng , Broker
B11/ Childs, M a nager

carpeting and kit.

,..

range.

$29,500.
RENOVATED
3
bedrooms. on the edge of
town. Cily like water, new
oil furnace and one acre.

$23,000.
BARGAIN -

3 bedroom

renewed home with nat.
gas, clfy water , bath, In

.

Racine. Only $12,000.
LIKE NEW Frame
ranch, 3 bedroom In !he
counlry. Sliding glass door
In dining area . Garage and
1 acre of prlvaty. S35,500.
NEW LISTING 5
Incomes on this one. 4 - 2
bedroom
epts. ,
over

LAND FOR SALE
87 ACRES - Bradbury - $200.00 per ac.
5 LOTS IN MIDDLEPORT - $5,000 per lo1 . S2LOOO for

business rooms . Brick wllh
lillie uokeeo'- 54:4~·
Storage - Block construe·
tion with natural gas heat,
shower·bath, load ing ramp
and plenTy of parking.

a ll f ive. (Adjoining )

$35,000.
New Listing -

t ACRE LOT In Middleporl - 53800

ments up, all renT ed and
business room down..,$3 ,500

DOWNING-CHILDS.
BROKER

BRANCH MGR.

OFF. 992·2342
HOME 992-2449

measure
Apex

For Fru EstimateS

ll-9-1 mo.

4 Apart·

down balance at $250.00
month . Income $590 month .

G. Bruce T..!Grd
Helen L. T. .!Grd
Sue P. Murphy
AIIOCialel

Housinq
Headquarters

iliiii!,.:_~ji- 21 Scottish

12 2tl

GASOUNE ALLEY

.

.. .

EXCAVATING dozer. loader and ·
backhoe work . dump trucks
ond lo boys lor h1re. w tll haul
ldl dtrt to sod hmeslo !'le and
grove l Co li Bob or Rog er Jef·
l ers , day phon e 992 7089 night ;,
phone 991·3525 or 991 5237.

new nat . gas furnace, 1112

KNOCKS , you s ttll have to
get up and open th e doo r .
D e it now.

-

Pomeroy, 0 .

Cell992-7113

.

LOCATION - 3 large
bedrooms, -formal dining,

Office 992 ·2342

·--

220 E. Main Street,

19 Cloth

zoo

Be sure and chec\.1 Whendidt.~ou At 8000
......"' the wheel bearinqs, have l.)Our last md €S '
check-up?
Skee1ix!

•

99'1-3325
216 E. Second Street

OPPORTUNITY

OWNER MUST SELL - Th e own e r ot thi s
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this lin e
home for a low, low pnce of $20,000. There
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
living room w-tireplace, formal dining, eat in kitchen , bath w -shower, garage &amp; a king
,
s ized yard. Good Ioca.lion on Mill St . Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
446- 3643.

18 Fairy queen

HO USf
t:OR sole
l ocotiOr'l
Business Services
··•
Ma so n WV f ou r bed room s pltt
lrvf'l buill tn kttchen w tth BRADFORD, Auct1o neer Com·
pl e te Se rvice . Phone 949-2487
oven, ronge gorh oge disposal
or 949 LUOO Ro cin e Oh1 0 Cntt
onrl bar Famil y room , dtnl ng
Brodlord
r oom w hole housP carpe tin g
Full .,1ze basem en t Centr a l mr HWOOD BOWI::RS RI:: PAIR
'
on d forc ed em gas heat A ll
Sweeper s too!i lers i rons, all: "'
dropps plus wa sh er ond dr yer
sm all appliances l awn mower . ~
Backyard 10 It h1 gh ced ar
ne)(t to Stol e Htghwoy Gorog e
l encP nnd cerlor deck s l or
nn Route 7 Phone (b1J) 985prtvoc y Heated garage C!ose
3615
..
to ~c hoo l store pork and l en ni ~
court Controct Cory l Gtbbs. SI::WING MACHIN !:: Hepotrs, ser·
vice , oil ma kes 992 2784 . The
Colt 6 14 949 274b
Fabnc
Sh op .
Po meroy .
A uthonzed St nger Soles and
Serv ice We shar pen Sc 1ssors

DOWNING-CHILDS
REAL ESTATE

WHEN

EWOTr
APPLIANCE II

NEW THHH bedroom home
h r e&gt;plocP o; un deck I •.. acre
wood ed lot 614·667 :JH90 Tup
pN SPloms

brick home, wood burntng
fireplace, l lf2 baths, 3

BOOK CO LLf CTOHS 1as·r to WT/
Hi .. !O r lf'&lt;; and Srh oa l book s
Al so glo ss on~
potiNy
74'J.:J'l55
RUlLAND HARDWARf 827 Moi n
Sl 14'1 '1155 W e ho ve to mak e
room f or sprmg merchond1se so
oil .. tac k '" ~tort&gt; t O per cP nt
off Th 1s meons !i.PII1ng ~ome
morc hondise at co st So ge t
your Chri stmas g1ft ~ now Oppn
H (.l thru Chrto;trno s No r nrking '
prohiPms

lCISS PIO trt(' Schoonpr 2HxB 1 HR
I "13 ~oyo l Emha .,~ y bflx 14 3 I:!R
1 1.1~9 Sto r so)( 101 BR
I (.l'/3 Sto r b0•14 1 BH
1&lt;.16fl5ta rb(),.. l/ 'lBR

•

.

. .

.

.

'

"• ~ • 5,...• '"'

Yf~, THIS IS HI$

MAJE.STY •.. :t MI:I\N,

f

AUTOM081ll:: INSURANCE been ,
can cel led? l ost you r op erators
license ? .Phone 992 2 143 .

.

OH, "((U IC.N°W
WHAT= MEAN

c

••
-••

!~::::::::::::~::::~~:;;::;:;;;~~~~~;:;::;~;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-';H;~;,;·E;O~I~l:·~~~8;:~
SHE SAID SHE

·- i - - 1

CHI HI 'AHUA. CREAM co lored 3
Years old poper tromed ln sh
Sett~t spoyedond ~ hots young
dog 'W2 ·2488 8 30 dm to A 30
pm
.

25 Stampede Thursday, Dec. 28
27 Type of eel -- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - 29 Belated
30 In full cry
31 One kind
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
of party
32 Snake
37 Attention
38Card game __________________-,

BRIDGE

Bridge fine arts at play
to hts

WEST
• 972

"

8

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer : North
West
East South
Pass 2+
Pass
Pass 4 NT

Pass
Pass

39 Unfaltering 1-::-:-f--1--+--140 Enghsh
river
I

Pass

7+

Pass

Opening lead : + 2

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTJl S
FMYVG

K

VYQQVI

PI U X I

EP

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Here is another psychologIcal play described in " The
Fine r Arts of Bridge."
South arrives at seven
spades , whic h is c old against
any lead but a lrwnp. Need-

less to say, a trump ts

Q E G K S; opened a nd South is looking
VERYUJ

D QK S.

WHY DON'T

'IE GO TELL
TH'VARMINT
OFF?

LITTI..E RED-HAIREt:' GIRL
LIVES.. LINFORTUNATELif,
DOESN'TKNOW rM ALIVE

,,
'•
,;
•.

'

'

•

•

+A

l;

'

••

•AK 7 4 2

I'M SICK AN'TIRED
OF PAW TREATIN'
ME LIKE A
DADBURN

I'M JUST LOOKING .4T
THE HOLISE WHE~E TI-lE

• 64

"Jl08
• Q 10 5
• Q643 2
+ K J 97
SOUTH
+KQJI0 85!

flARNF.Y

UJHL( ARE I{OU HIDING
.BEHIND Tl-115 TREE ,
CI-IARLIE BROWN ?

NORTH
12-21!-A
+ A
"AK 7&amp;S!!
• 86
• 10 8 5
EAST

"Q 9 4
e J 93

© 19'18 king Feature• Synd1cat.e, Inc.

Business Opportunities :

_____ .._Gl_ve AW'!_Y_ ___ _

20 Chinese
pagoda
21 Stake
22 Roman
historian
23 Cuban
province
24 Hellespont
swinuner

NKTS
PTKUXID
FMQQD
Veslerday's Cryploquole: THE HAPPIEST PART OF A MAN'S
LIFE IS WHAT HE PASSES LYING AWAKE IN BED IN 'mE
MORNING.-SAMUEL JOHNSON

THOUGHT YOU'D

Goll 1poh~

.

Yesterday's Answer'

n r - r r n - r r - - - - - ' - -- - - - - Q T M D Q
KTEMUG
DID I HE:AR SOMEONE SAY
''l?tiSTY'1' WELL I 'M THE
PYVV
QO I
DWKXI
BYQO
OIL 7HAT KE EPS THING:7
RU NNING !OVEN IVHEN
BETZ
KUG
QOITIYU
YOUR MOMS AROUND I

M &amp; M Home Improve ment serv·
ing Gol1ipo1t s o nd area. We
spenclile
in
vinyl and
alummum s.tding
For freO..
est'imotes. co li trl4 ·367·0178 .,;

AMBITIOU S COUPLE
need ing
m ore income. Unusuol OP· ·~~
por tunity tor good earning s. "
Wo rk tog e ther Po
~·time o r ~·
full ·ltme Ph one 9 .7'0'20- for .:
oppoinfment.
. .
. . . - .- . - . 1•
•
'

Frozen Dead" 10; 1 ·3£}- NB A Basketball 17
1 .40-lronside 13, 2 : 3~News 3; 2· 4Q---News 13 ."3: 0~Mov ie '' A Dandy in Asp1c" 3, 3 30-News 17,
3:50--Mov ie " N ew Front ier" 17.
S . O ~Movi e " Monkey Busine ss" 3; World at Large 17 .

One lette r s1mpl y stands for ~mother . In this sample A is
used for the t hree I.'s, X for th e two O's . etc Sin g le letters,
apost roph es, the le ngth and formation of t he wo rds are all
hints. Each day Ihe code let ters are differen t

UNDERSTAND!

HONAI&lt;I::R'S CB and elec tronic
~ qutpment . Rt .33 SOb 2nd Sf
M ason, WV 25760

12 OQ- News 6, 13, Monty Python 33
12 :3D- Barelta 13; Movie " The Hero" 6; Juke -Box a.
1 oo-M,dnight Special 3,15, News 8; M ovie " T he

36 ai~rl
In disgrace ~-+--+--+-+--+-

M'(. MJ\.JE:.r,.Y •• · .

' YOU MEAN YOUR MOM UP AND
LEFT.. . JUST LIKE THAT?

PULLINS fXCAV'ATING Comple te
Serv1ce Phon e 992 2478.

Gun smoke B. Mov ie
"Queen of Outer Sp ace" 10 ; Mo v ie " Beast of
Morocco" 17 .

1
alion
UliJ 33 Man's
nockn ame
ll!llll'"""i"Greek
mckname
35 Israeh

rF~R~A~N~K~&amp;~F.~R~N:IF.~-~~~------~----~---------------------------------------------

WILL do ro.:;,ling, co nstruction,
plumbing an d heattng . No job )
to o Iorge or to o smoll. Phone
742 -23 4H
~

HATHR OO M S AND Kitchens ,
remodeled, cerom 1c til e, plum ·. ·
bing, carpentry , and general
m otntenan ce. 13 yeo r s e)( ' .
pen ence 992·3685
"

11 : 3Q-----Johnn y Carson 3, 15;

Gl

&gt;I 1 ,., c., 1.. u r '""' ""

Preview 6, Bonkers 8; Fam1 ly Feud 10; $100,000
N ame That T une 13 ; Pop Goes The Country 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; M acNe ii · Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 OQ-Diff'renl St rokes 3,15 , Donnv &amp; Marie 6, 13;
Wonder Woman 8, 10,
Was hing ton Week In
Review 20,33, NBA BAskelball 17.

Hulk 8, 10; Congressional Outlook 20,33
9 3Q-Turnabout 20; Rea l People 33.
10 ·00-Qu lncy 3, 15 , Flying H'gh 8.10, Night Gallery 17 ;
News 20; Every Tub On Its Own Bottom 33.
10 :3Q-Love, American Style 17; Monly Pyt hon' s
Flying Circus 20
11 00-News 3.8. 10. 15; Dic k Cavett 20; Hogan's He roes
17 , Sounds! age 33.

stone

•@
'm ......,..,......

7:3Q--H ee Haw Honeys 3; Dat mg Game A; Ga tor Bowl

9 · 0£}-Rockford F des 3,1 5, Gator Bow l 6 , 13. Incredible

29 Fashion
30 Exclam-

•il
•

hills•de
22 Heliacal
25 Equals
26
Length X
I wasn't
aslt.,nq about w1dlh
27 Thing
40ur carr
under foot
28 - Faol , Jr.

specialty
2 Son
of Jacob
3 Lying-in bird
4 Craggy spot
5 Sir , in colon 1a l India
6 The gums
7 From
the hea rt
8 Forked
9 Goads
Jl Dtscard
13 Malay
island

Styl e 15; Carol Burnett &amp; Fri ends 17. Consumer

Su rvi va l Kit 20, Biq Blue Marble 33

8 . 3D-Wall Streel Wee k 20,33 ·

' crowmn
.g

EXCAVATING, dozer bockho e
and dtlche r. Charl e-s. R Hot ·
f ie ld
Bo ck Hoe Service ,
Rutlo11d , Oh1o. Phone 74',1 2008.

HOWt:RY AND MARTIN Ex f
co vot1ng
septic sy c; tem s .,.
dozer , backhoe, dump truck :
li meston e. grovel. blacktop
povmg. Rt 1"3 Phon e 1 (6 14 )
6q8 .7331

xI I 1r 11 J

HANDY BRAVE TYPIST PALACE
Answer. There's an extra lell er amid "shulfled"
papers-MAYBE 1- " PER - H-APS"

14 Thrice· Lat
15 Son of Bela
16 Rumina nt's
chew
17 Floa ting

1%5Gen~ r nl6(hrl'l'li:JR

l96HP M CS'l •l1'1B~

191.7 t:OHD l TO VP ' Y good cond1
t1on :JOt! tr7S 3119

~

GOOD LUCK!

Your Headquarters For

AmhN ~ I SOx 1/ 'J B~
Chnrnpton bOx I'I 'J IW

IN THE (

I Jum ble s

~~~~~~=~ 12lJ Sally
Cheal

50 LON&lt;;, AND
Homes for Sale
-Mobile
· ----------

tj

6, 13 ; Mu ppet Show 8, News 10, Lov e, American

Now arrange the Circled leners to
torm the surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by th e above canaan

by IHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
II Dame Ellen 1 Ago
42 E uropean
5 Actress
river
Sl J ames
DOWN
10 Regardong
I Trattoria

- _,

JIM KEESEE

10.

17

Jumble B• No. 13, containing 11 0 puutes, Ia IYIIIable for $1 .75 postpaid
!rom Jumble, c/o lhl1 newsp:rer, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07Mt. fncludeyaur
name, addrell, zip code an make checkt pa~tble to Newaptptrbookl.

I

USMC

6:0Q-News 3,8, 10 ,13 , 15; ABC News 6; Andy Gr iffith 17,
Zoom 20,33
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13 , Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20,33
7 OQ-C ross-Wits 3; PM Magaz ine 4; New lywed Gam e

~Mw.ee'

RI S~ NG

STAR Kennpls Boa rdmg
and q room tng
al l h rPe d~
Ch\'s.h trC' 3b1 029'J

HOW NICE O F
'EM ... ALL

THEY &amp;TILL lHINK YOU
SHOUL D BE PU.,.t SHED

~

•

YeSie rday s

ORPIIAR ARIIIE--'111' ftOrUB
? LE
__S_HE
_~'S=S=E=;:;E:-;N;====-""":;;:-

........

......

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Racine, Ohio

WHERE 'THE 5HORT
5P~IN'TER WA5
UI\JEXPECTEDI..Y
$UC&lt;:E5!&gt;FUL .

(Answers tomorrow)

J.ll'J LF: ORPHAN ANNJF:

Gomer Pyle,

Tyler Moore 10, Odd Couple 15; Beverl y Hillbillies

NUIJER

Print answer here:

..----------,.-

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

Neighborhood 20,33 ;

(] I

CEU.ULOSE
INSUlATION
'6.50 per bag

Battl e of the Planets 4,
Hol lywood Squares 15; Mer v Gnf fm 6 , Porky P1g &amp;
F r iends 8, Sesame St. 20,33; Batman 10 ; Dinah 13.
4 ·30--Bewltched 3; Gi lligan's Is 8, Brady Bunch 10,
Petticoat J unction 15.
S: DO-Star Trek3, Be ver ly Hi ll billles8 ; Mister Rogers'
Emergency One 13 ; Brady Bun ch 15 : I Dream of
Jeannie 17.
S:JQ-News 6; Sa nford &amp; Son B; Elec Co 20,33, Mar y

RUFIAN

11 -3: l roP.

3.3Q-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; You Bet Yo ur Life 20.
4 0£}-MJster C ar t oon 3 ,

riJ

•.

8, 10.
2 ·oo-one Life to Live 6, 13, Blue.Gray Game 17

3 : 00-Another World 3,4, 15 ; General Hospital 6 , 13,
Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20 .

LUGEY
1'5 1HAT
'{OU'Rfi

1 : 30-0ays of O ur Lives 3,4, 15: As The World T urns

2 3D-Doctors 3.4,15. Guiding Light B. 10; American
Shorl Slory 33

I []

BORN LOSER

I'll. HZ-2114

Call992-~772

by HennArnoldandBobLee

4f~~~f\C~

I RYPOG I

,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~~~ ®

one letter to each square, to form 'f:t
four ordinary words
fl

. . . . . . . to . . .

Cellulosic (wood ' fiber)
Therma I insulation
5ave30 pel. lo50 pet.
on healing cost
Experience ond
fully insured
Free Est.

\..!;!)

Only 15

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

~ JU5l' 111"-T
~ou AA'J~ 'TH!i

8; Midday Magazine 13 ; America Alive 15, Movi e
" Men in War " 17; Li ve from Wo lf Trap 33
12 : 30-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13, Search for Tom orrow 8, 10
1 DO-Holl ywood Squares 3; All My Children 6, 13,
News 8; Young &amp; the R estless 10. N at For Women

6: 2S--Sociefie s In Transi tion 10; 6 3£}-R omper Room

' '

_

.....

6 00-P TL Club 15, 700 Club ,8, 6: 1Q-News 17.

''

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-tlc '

4; love ol Li fe 8,10, Sesame St. 20 , 11 55-CBS
News a. House Call 10.
12 · 00- Newscenter 3, News 6, 10 , You ng &amp; the Res tless

Sunrise Semester 10.

OF YOU,EMY-

Service
.......

'

20 ; Once Upon A Classi c 33
11 . 30-Wheel of Fortune J, 15 ; Fam il y F eu d 6 , 13; News

.
FRIOAY,DECEMBER29,t971
5:45- Farm Report 13, 5·5o-PTL Club 13; 5 55-

~· I

"

12.3D-Ne ws 8; 12· 40 - SWAT 13.
1:00-Tomorrow J; 1: 20 ~ Movi e " Hero's I sla nd" 17.
1 so- News 13, 3 15 - News 17, 3·35 - Movie " Ne ath
Anzona Skies" 11.
&lt;.SO - Wan led - Dead or Alive 17 ; 5 20 - World al

17.
10:00-Card Shar ks 3,4, 15, Edge of Nigh! 6, All In The
Fam1ly 8,1 0, Dating Ga me 13; Movie " Let' s Do 11
Agam" 17; Otlo The Zoo Gorilla 33 .
10 :3Q-Jeopardy 3,4, 15, Andy Gri ftllh 6, Price Is Righ i
8, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 ·IJO-High Rollers 3,4, 15 , Happy Days 6, 13, Elec . Co

La rge l7

I'

.

15,13. Emergency One 6, Hogan ' sHeroesB : Match
Game 10 ; Lucy Show 17; Marie Curie 33.
9 : 3Q--Brad y Bunch B; Hogan 's Heroes 10; Green Acres

SURE -- DON'T
MIND IF I DO~
THAT'S VfRY

'·

News8 ; Schoolies 10. Three Stooges Little Rascals

17.
7 3D-Fa m ily Affair 10; 8:®-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10;
Leave It To Beaver 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
B 3D-Hazel 17 ; 9.00-Merv Gntfln 3; Ph il Donahue

9 . 30 - Pilot " Almost Heaven " 6, 13 ; Probe 4
IO :oo-Oavld
Cassidy Man Undercover 3,4, 15 ;
Family 4, 13 ; House Divided 8 ; Barnabv Jones 10,
News 20 ; Mary Russell J: .
10·30 - You Bet Your Ute 20; Wag es of Congress 33 .
11 :OQ--News 3. 4.6 .8. 10,13, 15; Dick Cavett 20, Hogan' s
Heroes 17; L ilias, Yoga and You 33.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Starsky &amp; Hul ch 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie " Honeymoon
wi th a Stranger " 10, Movie " I, the Jury" 17.

T~OVGHTFUL.

.1,

~

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

with

-

Blown lnsulatiorr
JIM KEESEE

CAPTAIN F:ASY

'
I •

MOORE'S

'

20th Century Know-How .

Real Estate tor Sale

PIGS t-=OR sa lf' 94 9 7H 57 aft er S

Pomeroy
Open Evenin!ls TiiB: 00 p.m .

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

W") SA6H

ll4 ~i

992-2126

')J '/ /P~t. m

TIRE SA LE

J.II CK up Ji.tnk nu to hodi ec: huy
mg 1unk cor., .,rrnr non hot

1'} )( bO mobtl e homenea r Dr'xter
l/9'1 SH5H
'

Cecilia Grlffllh , whos e last
known place of residence was
Route 2, Box 69, Jamesville ,
North Carolina 27846 , Is
hereby not ified that on the 1st
day of November , 1978 ,
Cli fford Griffith, being the
plaintiff, flied his c omplaint
against her as defendant in
the Court of Common Pleu ,
Meigs Cou nty, Ohio, Case No .
17,011 , praying for a divorce
from sa id Cecilia Griffith on
lhe grounds of gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty,
plaintiff also prays tor other
proper relief ; sa let cause will
be set for hearing on
February lOth, 1978.
Clifford Griffith,

HW .. oiP

-

THE SWEEP
Service

'

r---------------------~
For The Best

•••k• ..

Chimney
Sweeps Guild
Insured
'
Don ' t leta chimney fire put
a damper on your life
Call. ..

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
(lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

..•

"
'

20 Yrs. Experience
Cell : Tom Hoskins
949-2160
ll ·2B·t

I

WIFE!

i

guaranteed

Reference.s Available
Phone 742-202•
11 ·16·C

0.

'

Inside Penellng &amp; Celli~
tile
Free Estimote - all work

••

.•••
'

repair.

" GIVE US A TRY "

}i.,

•

News 13.

7.00-Today 34, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28,1978

GET YOUR
REAR OUT
THERE' AND
SPEND
NEW YEAR'S
WITH YOUR

. I 7A
••
''•
'. .,

Roofing, gutten, new end

Reasonable Prices

St. Rl. I2A toward Rutland,

SNOW

W~

RfWARD Bi llfold stolen out ol
Mtddleport
r or , Mopl p Sl
Please r etu rn paper s but keep
money Ca ll '185 ·3tl39 or leovP II
at polk e stolton m Mtdd leport

PUBLIC NOTICE

11• mile off Rl. 7 by-pus un

GRA VFI Y T~AC T O !l onrl mowN
Hnv ff'J ~ ol r CIAQ :;:t()H

/ J/ 70H I

NfAR SYHACUSE Pork
:S?OO
month lmmerl1off'ly nccupon
(y :J bed roo m rlo t~ hle c or port
Rrf p rp nrf'
No
P e t ..
:104 75~ AM5 or 15'1 :l041.l

LOSl OAIMO ND RING in We stern
Aul o Stor e , Mtrld leporl Sotur
day If found please lea vn at
Wes ter n Auto .

Phone 992-2181

')J'J / 1!J(l

Wr('("kl'r
Ohm

WANT TO BUY NEW OR USW
PLASHR MOLDS 'lli') J7b9

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

I

Construction ·
Maintenance

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2 160
11 -17· 1 mo.

fiiUWOOO SIS onrl SJO o
p1 r k t1p I1 11Cklonrl rlf' pr&gt;nrlmq on
tn d f'O!=jf'
Cnrl
Fn~rl!lng
!JH'l 41 3/

~ u tl nnrl

DUf TO my retu rn to governmrl"' l
~E'fv •c e . 1 om no longPr f' ngog
ed on publtc acco unt1 ng nor to~
rp turn preporo11 0n
L1cen.,erl
Roger Luck eydoo
Publ1c A ccountant MiddiPport
OhiO

FOUND IN Flatwoods oreo a
&lt;; moll block and wh1t e lemn lc
Hu.,k 1e Call99'1 !BS7

.

HA~ O

~1Pf WOOD

carpentry, Ele&lt;lrical,
Palnllng

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

IWO I ll fCJhi C' &lt;. p! Oif'rlOt lo£'
llfll l C'(lh tnf'l &gt;; ftJ ff !JOI I!lf'' 4
rnf~ .. tonrl..;
nl.--.rni tP I"' IPr l ron
~ rtn hol oPf f'r
I roqPt &lt;:mel
r nmhr- 1 Q0119f'!;
hf' l y l htn~
yfl t•t llrf'rl l or y0111 nwn
h L ,... tn r"~ S&lt;.ISU Fron 1r nd oltqn
Bl"o r
t:q1nrm f' nt
m Pnt
1 4] i005

SK AH ·A·WAY announces N rw HF APT in MtddiE'port Suitable
Yrar o; Party Sot L&gt;ec 30th .
lor one Kay Cnnl 99'].S'Jtr7
Sk ating 'I 30 to I ? 15 RocPs ,
Pvenmg s.
pmes ball oons Opfln WPd
I~ x 00 mobdP home n£&gt;or Ronnp
Fn ~o t roven1ng 7 30 to 10 00
99? 5HSI:I
~~~s 'J&lt;.J'l 9 or f.J8S ·999b

Lost and Found
- - ------. - - - -

&amp; HOME MAINTENANCE

JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.

••
-·

T~M B f fl

IF YOU ho vf' 0 SNVIfe IO ofler
won t l o buy or ~P II .,ome lh mq
at' lonking lor work
or
who te-vN
you II ge t r esu lts
fo o; ter w1 th o SPnlt nP I Wont Art
Cnll997 ·7 156

G UN SHOOT HoctnP Vol unteer
hre Dep t fvl" ry Sa turda y 6 ' 10
pm at thetr butldi ng 1n Elo sh on
f al"l ory chok e guns only

~ I

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

( HIP
WOOD
Pol£'&lt;.
r1.1n~
r!J ntnrtN 10 on lorg£'&lt;.1 C!'nrl
Sl7 p N ton Bunrllnrl !&gt;ln h SIO
ppr ton 0Pit vrr,-. rl t o Oh1o
Pnllrt Cn
tfl ') Pomprny
qw} '/Mlq

wr DfSIIU to Pxpress ou r heart

GIJ N SHOOT ~ an n e Gun ( luh.
hN.,. Sun rlay 1 pm Fa ctory
r hokP gun s on ly

hoy

OHIO VAUfY
ROOFING &amp; ROME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

J. R. Construction
Cci ·

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING

O.,i

SALE PRICES

WA NT TO BU Y N~W OR USW
PI ASH R MOLDS '-197 3'lbli

Notices

~~0111

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Wanted to Buy

I WIS H to thank all my fn pncio;; for
thP bcautdu l cords and pra yrrs
wh de I w as o pol len I 1n HoltP.r
Hosp ital Al so Hr&gt;11 Koch for
h1 c: viS tl !i to c; ee me May C oci
Bl r~o:, each on e
l tll inn Napper
IPII I honk s ond apprPnolton In
our relol 1ves
fr 1enrh•
on rl
n!' !Qhhors for th€'1r kmd nP!."oncl help show n us dunng fhP.
rfeo th ol my h u~ban d and stP.p
l ol hPr Hpn ry ~r v mP. We ol c;o
w 1.,h to tha nk RP v Don WolkN
onrl Hilton WolfP for the 1r conso ltng wo rds Moqoru&gt; Gnmm
ond Mor1lyn Powell Powell l or
th £'1r beautdul hym11 s onf'l th E'
orgon1s t Gerold Powell Thf'
~o c1 n e
Em ergenry
5quorl
M1 ldrPd SpPncer thf' f w tng
~ unP ra l Homf' ond th o~ £' w ho
c: ent fl owers load. onrl (Onio;
Mny Gael Bles5 You
Mn. Hf'nry frvnlli'! Mo:o:1 pe Sho •n

-

Appliances .

olrl 45 onrl 7~
ph o no~roph
rN o rrl c;,
Cnll
QQ'} t.TIO or Contoct Mortm FtH
nl tur(&gt; .

l OSl SHXJ rewa rd DoR m VICi nlly
o f Cherry Ridge nl'Or b81 Wh tf f&gt;
l £&gt;moi P with bloc!&gt;: s p o t ~ . NomP
on the co llar Jes" Huff man
PhonP
304 · bl5 · biJ7
or
flf'j 09 18

"Your Chevy Dealer"

nttlor•td
\'J ol~ , ..,v,l l,

lo' ·· tlon d

WANT TO b11y

FOUND SHOWN plastic frame
glosses . 134 S 5th A vf:' . M1d
rl leporl 99'J ·74H J

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

tll/ l'f\t JI ICI"

(I)NJ)t 110 NBO
l,t, j\,1 71011

17 , 6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6·5D-GOOd Morning ,
Wesl V.rginla 13. 6 .55-Chuck Wh ile Reports 10;

TELEVISI01V
VIEWING

I ~"

.

II" II

( ll~l \ TMA &lt;;,

COIN S pnckf't wntr h r&gt; ~
rlan r ingo; wprlrf tn g hand~
d1ntnon rl ., Colrl or "t~v rr Coli
flnqN Womslf'y 747 :J:J3 1

lwfort•pulllit'ahon

UlJ ,'

, ,,... :0'11;

OJ D

&lt;PM

II'}'

\ icth• IJI I H&lt;.l l'l 'n"' '

""1'1~"

lut~ht trl H'/l't'l a n ~ mls dl'O.:IIIt'&lt;l ob·
Jl't twna l TIt' PuiJh!iiWr Wi ll nut Ill.·

NOTICE

By Bertha Parker
Attendance at the Free
Methodist Church Dec . 24
was 135. The Christmas
program, under the direction
of Shirley Friend, was well
received. Candy was given to
all that was present.
Mrs. Emma Fox, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Howell spent
Sunday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Walker and Brian.
Miss
Pearl
Sharver,
Athens, spent the weekend
a nd Christmas with Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Schaefer and
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story and

l'lnl ll

'- I

n ~ht

F1 1d&lt;ty afll'l 11111111

I .aurel Cliff
News Notes

Dcuw111

•

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursd"y , Dec. 28. 1973
OIC'KTRACY

Business Services

I 11J\t IIMI ' llltll ,,. , ., 1 qtn.•••
,,1. 11 '11' •lt l" Lorlf' l• •Li dtJI 'I d r..
l, ,, ., f ' " '' I nit trf' ' " (' t • nit I •
, • I '' 1 l.,nl t VIJ oH ~ • lnr
I Mrlln

l' ' lll•ll r'd

CnrnpC''Iny

11\IIHIIlUUI I ~

4P M.

( 12) 28 , ltc

(H I 1

I !Ill' I

!25
.t 75

Willi\!' 1:&lt; ~ 1'\'ILl !o: 1~ '1' ~'I IIII Jll' t t\,a\

( 121 28, 29, 31, 31C

Jani ce Lawson
CL ERK

IHPO Scunr• fC'f • ~ lt111
Alt••t I• l d .1 (.lQ') 'll~{tl

nr

Mni.nle Hnmt•:-;al t·~ ami Vtwd salc!&lt;i
ott L( Jllt'lf l&gt;lll}' With l'iiSh Wllh
n1ckr l5 t t'Hl l'har).!t' fur atl'l t•.arry-•
IUJ.! lli•x Numi.H.•r In C&lt;tn• uf Tht• Sen·

\lt&gt;lllt•\'1'1 tlw

tlwda~

A form co nt ain ing t he
proposed and actual e x .
pend1ture s
of
Re ve n ue
Sha nng F unct s and econo m 1c
impact of
An tirece ssi on
Fiscal Assistance fund s for
th e Village o f Syra cuse , Ohio,
1S avai lable fo r p ublic in ·
spe ct 1on a t elfhe r th e Clerk's
Off ice , Sy ra cuse Munic1plll
Bulld •ng , or the Clerk's
r es id ence, water St .

ltv•' I''
r'" ''' &lt;lo 'd

CAR t: ff.l WAll iNG
H)ll
VOU
A T I:!ANK~ ~ o.,
Hnn~f't · ~ llf(• 0111'i (o .. t•oh y Cr.
~ ~ qt f'ntly f'~pnlldtnn th .,nlf'•
l rurP C! nrl lll' Prl " Lrprf"' L'Il ' ""'"
OLI'O ••ll hl nwny
111 l ht•
Ounl1f1 t' d IPnrl~ ~ ••pp l ol"'rl lrf'f'
No cnn v n ~ · · tll fl If yn•• ntP th1'
••11ht pf' t ~o n ynu w ttl hr lr0111
pcf 111 our ~ urf'~~ h li mPi hnd thnt
w1 ll h('lp you (' Orn 11p to S'l(l(l tn
s:mo n w('('k to ... tnr t rl you ot "
w ttlrn q to work hnrn In f"Oft1
w hot ynu orP wo1l h
r oll
~ "i:1 Ot&gt;litl
hwnl Oppnt tllll lty

Not ice is he r eby g iven that
on Janua ry a, 1979 at 10 a .m . •
pub liC saiP. w111 be neld at the
offices of
the
Clt 1ze ns
Nat 1onal Bank , Middleport ,
Ohio to sel l fo r cas h the
foll owing co ll a tera l to wit :
1972 Oldsmo bil e 442, 2-ctoo r
harctto p, Serial No . JF 87K2
M1J6891.
Citize n s National Bank,
Middleport , Oh io, rese r ves
the r ig ht to bid at th e sale

1856.

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

1 ~ \\l unb 11 1 Unth•r
Ci~ :-h

• . ,. ,.,,,,._· , ·nil

u•1', ' /Nlll
H I)IJ O.,ft' ~ll'~f.!

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) New
protect s you launch today have
sol1d prospec t s for success
Get to work . for the rewards
Will be we ll worth yo ur eff orts

1' 1 P&lt;&gt;t"l N TO 'I .

,.,·

r-------~--------------~------------------------------~----------,· :0 :
'•

For Sal"

Help Want e d

WANT AD
CHARGES

l:iwh

PROBATE COURT OF
ME IGS COUNTY.OHIO
ESTA TE O F MYRTLE B .

Clas~ifie~s

For Best Results Use Sentinel

C ECIL

DECEASED

go alter , you 11 get
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) M e BRIDGE ,
A ma tter mana ged by someone

.

•

at just 12 tric k s.
If he d1scards two dia monds on h earts, comes t o
his hand and rUns tr umps,
there 1s almost no c hance
thai both opponents w1ll unguard diamonds and South
will be one down.
So the correct line of play
is for South to leave the
hearts entirely alone, come

hand w it h

the ace of

diamonds and r un off a ll his
trumps He w11l disca rd one
club , one dwmond and four
hea r ts f rom dumm y or
maybe two clubs a nd three
hearts.
Whatever happens that
hea rt suit 1n dummy is going
to exert a lot of pressure on
both East and West. West
will want to hang on to a ll his
hearts since his gu a rded
queen 1s a potentlal stopper.
Ea st will wa nt to keep his
three hearts in c ase West
only holds t wo Somehow or
other, there is little c hance
tha t both of them wo n't
u_ng uard diRmo nds a nd
South will romp home.
'

Your partner ope ns on e
notrump . Yuu huld:

+K864

1 2-1'11· 1~

¥ K 7 54
• J 3
+ A97

In standard Amerkan how
do you pla n your b1ddong "~
If you use Stayma n, respond t wo clubs with the
mtention of ra ising etther
major suit to four . If your
partner dentes a four-curd
major go to three notrump.
If you are not play ing
StaymanJ·us t ra tse to three
notrump ireclly .
1NE WS I'APEH F.NTF.RPHISF. ASSN)

(Do you have a question for
the experts ? Wrrfe " Ask Ot e
Experts. ·· care of th1s newspaper lndtvsdua l ques l sons wllf
be answered d accompanied
by stamped. self-addresse d
em·elopes The rnos t mterestmg auestwns Will be used in
/h1s column and wiU recesve
copies of JACOBY MOOERN I

�I

•

12- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 28, 1978

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP! ) - A 1,200-pound
safe containing 52 vials of drugs used for research,
valued at nearly $1 million, has been stolen from a
University of Mi chigan building, poll ee said
Wednesday.
Some ol the vials contained heroin and Valium,
po)ice said. Others contained drugs still being studied
and whose effect on humans are not known and
possibly dangerous .

from $607 to $640.
Under new program rules,
a family of four with no net
income will receive a $191
food stamp allotment. The
net monthly income limit for
a food stamp family will be
$542.
Food stamp allotments are
adjusted twice a year, in
January and July , to reflect
changes in the cost of food.

Discount house destroyed

new

$1 million in drugs stolen

ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP! )- An early morning lire,
fought by at least 150 firemen destroyed a discount
house at the Country Fair Shopping Center in
Zanesville, authorities said.
A Zanesville Fire Department dispatcher said all
available units in the city plus volunteers from
surrounding communities were at the scene of the fire
on the city's north side.
The dispatcher said the blaze was first reported
shortly alter I a.m. There were no injuries reported"

Judge awards back pay
BOISE, Idaho (UP!) - A federal judge has awarded
six women, fired from the Boise Police Department for
·alleged lesbianism, a year's back pay and an
allowance for attorney fees.
U.S. District Court Judge Ray McNichols said the
money should he paid lor a period of one year from the
March 1977 date of discharge of the women who sued
lor $10 million and asked for their jobs back. It was
McNichols who a month ago awarded the women a
partial summary judgement but did not order them
reinstated .

Coal firm must pay back pay
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Pittsburgh-based
Consolidation Coal Co. has aweed to pay $370,000 in
back wages to 78 women denied jobs as underground
miners because of their sex, the U.S. Labor
Department announced Wednesday.
The department said the settlement was the largest
ever in the coal industry for a discrimination
complaint.
Under the agreement, Consolidation Coal also
agreed to fill 20 percent of its miner trainee positions
with women. The agreement is in effect until the end of
1980.

Newyear will marry Jan. 1
DENVER (UP!) - In keeping wth the spirit of his
name, William Newyear, a teacher in Evanston, Ill.,
had planned to get married on Jan. 1, but his fiancee
convinced him it might be better to expedite things.
Although Newyear had hoped to be married on New
Year's Day, he has settled on New Year's Eve at the
request of his fiance , Lori Jayne Kaspar.

Ohio soldier dies in wreck
ROANOKE, Va . (UP! )- An Ohio man stationed at
Fort Bragg , N.C., was killed when his car smashed
through a guard rail and plunged down an
embankment on the Blue Ridge Parkway.
Park rangers said Bruce William Undercoffer, 25, of
Loveland, Ohio, died about two hours after the accident
Wednesday at Community Hospital in Roanoke .
A passenager, Teresa Ann Strickland of Roanoke,
was in satisfactory condition at Lewis Gale Hospital in
Salem.
•

Brothers indicted again
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The two brothers charged in
central Ohio's so-ealled ".22 caliber" murder had a
trial date set in Franklin County Wednesday and were
also indicted in Licking County for three of the killings.
Gary Lewingdon , 38, IGrkersville, indicted in 'six of
the murders in Franklin County, and Thaddeus
Lewingdon, 41, Glenford, named in five of the same
killings, will be tried Feb. 26 in Franklin County
Common pleas Court before Judge George B.
Marshall.
The two, who are being held in the Franklin County
jail under $600,000 bond apiece, are scheduled to be
tried jointly but defense attorneys may ask for
separate trials .

regulati ons

dem on strated
foll owing:

are

in

OlD REGULATIONS
In most cases, purchase

higher-i ncome households to

ga in etigibit ity.

Deductions were : ta)(es

and

mandatory

payroll

w i that dingup
, towar
k -r month,
era ted
expenses
$30

medi ca l costs, tui tion and
fees, child care costs to allow

Racine, Ohio

5 PIECE
BATH SETS

disaster or casualty eKpenses
and
sheller ofcosts
thai eKCeed
30 percent
net income.

SHEET Bl.AN KET

SALE

READY MADE
.

D APE 1ES
0

limits set

0

White and Pastel Colors - Polyester
and Cotton Blends - Machine
Washable - No Iron

by Secretary of Agriculture;
people whose only income

was public assistance or
Supplemen t al Security In come were automatically

el igible.

Household assets lim it was
$1,500 (did nol apply to
households receiving public
assistance or Supplemental
Security Income.)
First vehicle not counted,
regardless of cost .
States could determine
penalties for fraud.
Students not eligible if
claimed as dependents by
parents who were Ineligible ;
no work requirement .
Separate interviews to
determine eligibility for
vari ous governrt~ent benefits.
States had to determine
~ligibilily
of households
within 30 days .
Benefits
began
upon
determination of eligibility.
Stales required to insure
participation of · eligible

Bath mat, contour mat, lid
cover, and 2 pc. tarik cover set.
Easy care. machine washable,
assorted colors.

'10

Three
different
patterns
with
assorted
colors.
Famous
Cannon
quality.
You'll
really save.

Households had to have

access to cooking facilities.

NEW LAW&amp;
REGULATIONS
purchase

required

(expected to add up to

37

thousand
low-income
Ohioans.)
Simplified certification
wi th thr ee possible deductions: Standard - adjusted to
Consumer Price Index ;
Earned income - subtract 20·
per cent; Dependent care and
excess shelter costs .
Income limits bas·ed on
Federal non-farm poverty
level ;
no
automatic

eligibility (Expected to result

in over 67 thousand higherincome" people being drop-

ped .)
Household assets lim it Is
51.750 ; S3,000 for households

with one person over 60
(Appl ies
to
households
receiving public assistance or

Supplemental Security In·

come .)
Fair market value over
$4,500 of car counted unless
used for self-employment .
Tougher penalties for fraud
required by Federal law .
Studen ts not eligible if are
or co uld be claimed as

88

They 're dusin.g the book on " signifi cant part of local journalism whenth1s yea r comes to . its end. RichardS. •Dick)
Owen JS retJn_ng as fhllllisher of this ll l'WSpl:t pe r Hlld as rlresidenl of the Ohio Valley Publishing Cu.
We who helped him gel out a daily newspaper· in this eornmumly f?r i! nwnber of years salute him fur mr accomplishm~nt which places hun tn the triumvirate of ncwspapering in
lhts valley :
• William Giddin~s Sibley, who moved to Gallipoli s from
Metgs County Ill lhe e arly 1890s, look the then-ratlieal step of
convertmg weeklies mto dculies.
. • Harold Watts Wetherhol t, wh o married a Mei gs County
g:Jrl, strea~lmed local journetlism tu keep it in step with the
best praeltees of the profession.
• Ri~hard S. Owen made it possi bl e for the newspapers of
small elites lo survtve mflalion and keep their ow n identities.
Each of these three men had a shrewd business head: Ea ch
had a vision of what wet s desirabl e, set his goal, Hnd achieved
that goal.
Because they were here. we ttre here.
In the three decades from combat aviator to retired
publi sher , Dirk Owen has led a life one expects from a suece~ful American in the fn~e enterprise system. From the war
he went into nationl::ll advertising of H big-city newspaper:
From lhal lofty perch lhe dtHIIenge of rural journH iisrn
beckoned to him.
The new year 1979 will mark lhe 20th anniversar v of the firs!
step in expansion . The f ;,- tll i1 Ji.~ n..,;h ·r,.;J,,, . i1ttd alreadv
.
(Continued on pag e l2)
1. .

Jetliner crash-lands;
10 killed, 50 injured
By CLYDE JABIN
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP! )A disabled United Airlines
jetliner that was !creed to
circle an airport for more
than 30 minutes because of a
landing-gear problem crashlanded in a residenti al
neighborh oo d Thur sday
night, killing at least 10
people and injuring another
50, five critically.
.
Most of the 185 people
aboard scrambled to safety
through emergency exits and
holes torn in the fu selage.
At least 10 bodies, including
three
children,
were
recovered from the fuselage
of the downed plane,
authorities said . Rescue
workers searched under the
collapsed nose gear of .the
plane during the night
searching for other victims.
The jetliner may have run
out of fuel while it was

•

e
VOL. XXIX NO. 180

POMEROY·MIDDLEPO~T,

at
OHIO

$3 .99 Bat towel sale
$2.99
$2 .49 Matching hand towel sale
$1.89

$1.49 Matching wash cloth sale
$1.09

Permanent press- and machine washable expertly made - limited quantity, 8·4 and 63
inch lengths.

!7
. l9.99 PAIR ••••••••••••'650
REGULAR

00

REGULAR $10.99 PAIR ••••••••••
.

-

r_..-~-.-------------..------·---..----_...._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.._.

·I

REGULAR STOCK

!

Shooting
•
continues
in Iran

1·19 SKEIN

By SAJID RIZVI
TEHRAN, Iran (UP!) Troops firing automatic
weapons chased anti-shah
demonst.ra tors tlti'ough
congested downtown streets
and fired on rooftop
protesters who chanted
"death to the shah " and
"victory is close."
Gunfire rang through the
streets today as witnesses
reported at least three killed
in
overnight shooting
directed at groups who
poured into the streets in
defiance of the curfew and
taunted the troops.
Two of the dead, all

---------,

CANNON
BED ·SHEETS

I

Fine selection of solid
colors, patterns, white, in
king, queen, full, and twin
bed sizes. Pillow . cases to
match .

I

dependen ts by Ineligible

households; may have to
register for 20 hours per week
work .

Sing le

Interview

(Continued from page I)
Union members are further
seeking an additional floating
holiday for the first year of
the new contract, and two
floating holidays during the
second year.
Buckeye Rural Cooperative
Manager Clyde Ramsay has
said throughout the strike
that it was impossible for the
cooperative to "live with" the
old contract.
According to Ramsay, the
old contract is overly vague,
and thus not satisfactory to
Buckeye Rural.
The strike by Local 2359 of
the I.B.E.W. affects service
to
Buckeye
Rural
Cooperative members in
Gallia, Meigs, Lawrence,
Vinton, Athens, Jackson,
Pike, Ross, and Scioto
Counties. ,
Buckeye Rural offers a
standing $10,000 reward for
information leading to the
arrest and conviction (on a
felony charge) of anyone
vandalizing or destroying
·
cooperative property.
&lt;

Tradition broken

will

determine eligibility for food
stamps and Aid to Dependent
Children.
Stales must furnish food

L_....-.-..-..-..-..-.._.._..._.._...__._.._.._.._...__...._._._._._,_..__.._.._.._.. _____- - - - - - - - - · - - - - - -...

SELECT GROUPI

"No covered dish."
That is the word from
Paul Cascl fo reference to
the annual New Year's Eve
party of Drew Webster
Post. 39, American Legion,
to be held at the Post home
Sunday evening.
easel
said
that
traditionally those at·
tending the party are asked
to bring their favorite
covered dish . However,
this year, Casci says,
tradition is being br.oken
and the covered dishes are
not to be taken. Tbe Post
will provide refreshments.

J

PLUSH ROUND

CANNON
SHEETS

AREA RUGS

AND

REGULAR $17.99 - 52 IIIICH ROUND
100% Dacron Polyester - Fashionable Decor
for any Room in the House - Fashion
Colors - Just 11 to Sell

PILLOW
CASES
No Iron Percale and Muslin - Not
Every Size -:-- Assorted Patterns and
Colors.

1h

.,••

PRICE

JANUARY WHITE SALEI

FOR THIS SALE!

20% OFF ••
ENTIRE
STOCK
OF
BEDSPREADS .
Full bed sizes,
ns, king
mostly quilted styles, solid
patterns. Many spreads with
pillow shams to match also 20

01nd queen,
colors and
drapes and
percent off.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM -

20~FF
TABLE
COVERS

Entire
stock
Included,
rounds, oblongs,
ovals,
and
square,
vinyls
and cloth
wh'ite.
sol1ds.
patterns.

SALE PRICES START AT

SATURDAY TIL 5 PM

Elberfelds In Pome
.
(

'2.39

'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

BUYS MARKET - Kenneth McFann, Albany, is
pictured ringing up a sale during his first day at the Young
Super Market , Pearl and Locust Sts., Middleport , which
he purchased Wednesday. The market operated for 30
years by the Youngs will be r enamed McFann 's Market.
The establishment will operated on a seven day week .
McFann , formerly of the South Point and Ironton area,
and his wife, Belva, are residing in Albany with their
daughter , Penny, 16. They also have a son, Kenneth L.
McFann, who resides at South Point. Mrs. Dorothy Young
has operated the business fo r the past 11 years follo w1ng
the illness and death of her husband, the late Joe Young,
&amp;.

Good selection of colors in this
Red Heart Hand knitting yarn.

___ __._

and demolished two vacant waukie, Ore., carried his 4houses before skidding to a year.,ld nephew from the
wreckage and was told that
stop in a field .
One passenger called the his brother, John, and John's
r elatively "soft" crash- wife, Cathy, were safe with
landing a Hmiracle, 1• and minor injurles.
" I want you to print this,"
others praised the skill o1 the
pilot and crew in preparing Heltzen told a reporter. "The
them for the impact. There Lord Jesus saved our lives.
We were praying and the
was no fire .
McBroom survived the Lord told me he was going to
crash and was reported 'in do a miracle. "
Mrs . Theresa Salisbury
good condition at Woodland
said the house next to her was
Park Hospital.
It was the first major crash demolished by the jetliner but
at the Portland airport, which ·the reside nts were away on
went into operation in 1957. vacation. She said !here was
Most ol ·those aboard were a loud explosion and then
able to escape from the plane silenoe when the plane hit.
"I .went outside and there
through emergency exits and
holes torn in the fuselage and was so much smoke I couldn't
wandered to nearby houses to even see the house across the
seek help. The jetliner body street," she said, adding that
remained intact except for four of the surviving passenthe collapsed nose and a gers later came to her door
and asked for a glass of
shearedoff right wing.
Steven Heltzen. ~2. of Mil- water.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1978

$1.49 WINTUK
KNITTING
YARN
•
$

ci r c ling Portland
International Airport,' Darrel
Buttke , a spokesman for
Portland International Airport, said.
The pilot of the plane,
Flight 173 from New York
with a stop in Denver, was
identified as Capt. Malburn
McBroom, of Loveland, Colo .
He radioed the control tower
with an " amber alert "
because of the landing-gear
problem, then 32 minutes
later - at 6: 17 p.m. suddenly signaled:
"Mayday! Mayday'
Engines are flaming out! We
are going down ! We're not
going to make lhe airport ! "
The jetliner was 31&gt; miles
south of lhe airport and on an
approach pattern when it
went down in a wooded area
of scattered homes and
apart ment buildings. The
plane sheared off treetops

en tine

TOWELS

No standards for training
staff or providing bi -lingusl
workers.

No

'9.49 TWIN SIZE FinED
'7.10
'10.49 FULL SIZE FinED
'7.80
'9.49 TWIN SIZE FLAT
•7.10
'10.49 FULL SIZE FLAT
•7.80

YOUR
CHOICE

househo lds.

Buckeye. • •

BANK

..

lr--·-~-~-~-- w-~-·-·-·~·--·-r---~:~:~:::-·'::':~:..-:-;:::.-:"~:::.:;~~:-"~~;~.;~·-·-·-,:--~::::-::::::~'::::-:::::-;::.'::':.;::=-'1
REGULAR 112.49 - 114.49 and' 115.99
WHITE ~Ill
I: I -'o;.LJt;,"
~· -·

household
member
to work,
court
-or dered
al i mony
or
support pay ments, unusual

Income level -

9:30 A.M.

Home· Furn 1shings Deportment - 1s t Floar - f xce IIen t SavI ngs on
·
1
11
Sheets - Bedspreads - Draperies - Towe s - Rugs - Quant t es
l.lmlted to Stock on Hand.

deducltons ; enabted certain

workers increased ; bi -lingual
workers must be hired in
certain localities ; states
must train hearing off icials
and other reviewers.
Househol ds do not need
access to cooking facilities to
qualify .

HOME NATIONAL

Because they were
here, we are here

OPEN FRIDAY N'GHT TIL 8

requirement in effect.
Burdensome certification
involving eight possible

si bilily for training eligibility,

RACINE

BEGINS FRIDAY, DEC. 29th

the

within 30 days of application
filing.
Benefits retroact ive to f irst
day of month of application.
States required to notify
people receiving
public
assistance,
unemployment
compensation and
Supplemental Security Income
about availabili ty of food
stamps .
State agencies ' respon ·

People

An Editorial

Contrasts in the old and

stamps to eligible households

Meigs County

Ids In Pomero

El e

••
Nationwis~____, Low.
(Continued from page 1l

WASHINGTON (UPI) - 'lbe Gl Bill helped veterans
of tbree wa.,_ through college, but ft was discontinued In
1978. Now, with enUstments declining, the Army is taking
a hard look at Its old drawing card.
Effective Jan. I, the Army will begin a test program
that will cut minimum enlistments from three to two
years and permit qualified high school graduates to
accumulate up to S7 ,100 for coUege.
A spolesmBD said the Army hopes the test program
"will raise the mental level of the enlistees" and "fill
combat arma slots, especially In Europe."
'lbe program al110 may help cut the volunteer army's
discouraging rate of first enlistment dropouts.
he GI Bill that assisted mllltary per110nnel with their
advanced schooling In three wars was discontinued In
September 1978.

FALSE ALARM
:Pomeroy firemen answered
·afalse alarm call to the Rock
'~prlngs area at 6:25 p.m.
Thursday. According to a
report received by the
~Ieber, a car was on fire.
However, the {irell)en found
ho car on fire and returned to
!heir Illation .

TREE PICKUP SET
'lbe annual Christmas tree
pick-up will be conducted in
Middleport on Tuesday, Jan.
2. Residents are asked to put
their Christmas trees al the
curb in front of lhelr homes
and they will he picked up by
the street department free of
charge.

SEOEMS unit since it' began
operating in October, 1974,
has resigned due to a recent
move out of Rutland. EMT
Marj orie Davis, also of
Rutland, has been tapped to
fill the vacancy.
Stewart and her husband,
Tom, recently purchased a
new home outside of Rutland,
and although there is no
. SEOEMS requirement that
the station chief live in the
village, Stewart said, "It's
hard to stay on top of things
when you aren 'I right there .''
She added, " besides, after
four years, the squad is
getting tired of listening to
me holler . Despite the
fulfillment , the responsibilities and occasional
CLEVELAND (UP!) This week's winning Ohio basales eventually wear you
Lottery numbers:
down. It's just time for a
change."
Gold number - z.
White number "- 29 . .
Stewart's husband is a
Blue number - 312.
crane operator at Kaiser
Wln-A-Thon
Aluminum at Ravenswood.
They have three sons: Robert
12004.

First baby of '79
to get_royal start
fabric from The F'abric Shop, Pomeroy;
three boxes of Newborn Pampers from the
Racine Food Markel ; a baby planter from
the Pomeroy Flower Shop ; a pair of
bedroom slippers from Marg uer ite's
Shoes, Pomeroy ; three boxes of Newborn
Pampers from Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy,
Pomeroy; a case of Heinz strained baby
food fr om Twin Cities Gatewa y
Supermarket, Middleport; a cut flower
arrangement from Dudley 's, Middleport.
A $10 savings account from the
Pomeroy National Ban k: a case of Gerber
baby foods from the Mark V Super Market
in Middleport ; a tan teddy bear. Moore's,
Pomeroy; a free meal to lhe paren ts.
Crow's Steak House. Pomeroy: a $3 grfl
certif ic at e from th e Sewing Center.
Middleport; a $10 savings accoun t fr om
the Citizens National Bank , Middleport ; a
pair of Poll Parrot baby shoes from Hartley 's Shoes, Pomeroy; a $5 gift certificate
from Village Pharmacy, Middleport; 10
gallons of gasoline, Welker 's Ashla nd
Service, Pomeroy; a two piece baby set ,
Goessler's Jewelry Store, Pomeroy; a fre e
meal for the parents at the Meigs Inr,
Pomeroy; a $5 gift certificate from the
Kiddie Shoppe , Pomeroy ; a crib toy from
Western Auto, Middleport ; a $10 gift
certificate from Powell 's Super Valu ,
Pomeroy; a bottle of champagne from the
Pomeroy Wine Store, and a $10 gift
certificate from Elberfeld 's in r omt•ro.v.

Union workers charge
Ramsay won't negotiate

Rutland SEOEMS Unit will
have new station chief
After four years of
operation, the SEOEMS unit
at Rutland will have a new
station chief effective with
the new year.
Joan Stewart, Rutland, an
Emergency Medical
Technician (EMT) with the

Derby plans announced

Meigs County 's first baby of t979 and
his parents will get a royal start, thanks to
32 Big Bend merchants who are
participating in The Daily Sentinel's
annual Baby Derby.
A number of gifts will be presented by
the business firms to the baby and the
parents. According to the rules of the
described as youths in their
contest, parents of the first baby of 1979
early 20s, were killed as they
must he legal residents of Meigs County
shouted from the rooftops in
although the father may be in the armed
the southern quarter of
forces and the family stationed at a distant
Tehran, racked by rioting for
point.
the past week following the
The exact time and date of birth must be
authorities ' abortive attempt
specified in a written statement from the
to reopen Tehran's schools.
attending physician and the statement
Residents .in the capital
must be received at The Daily Sentinel
said they feared the situation - - Office, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, no later
could worsen Saturday, the
than midnight on Jan. 10, 1979.
day the anti-shah movement
Gifts to be presented include:
has called for nationa l
Three cases of Beech Nut baby food by
mourning to remember this
Waid Cross and Sons, Racine; a $5 gift
week'sddead .
certificate from t he Heritage House of
Witnesses said t roops fired
Shoes, Middleport; a case of Kroger
on groups of 400 to 500
cailned milk from the Pomeroy Kroger
demonstrators in nine other
Store; a package of Birdseye diapers from
localities of the capital but no
Stiffler Stores, Inc .; two Royal Crown
casualties could be confirmed
toboggans and two cases of Royal Crown
immediately.
from the Royal Crown Bottling Co.,
The soldiers fought off yet
Middleport ; a baby planter from Francis
another
attempt
by
F1orist , Pomeroy; a baby bunting from
screaming youths to crowd
Landmark, Pomeroy; a three piece feeder
around the U.S. Embassy,
set from K. &amp;C. Jewelers, Pomeroy; a $10
whose parking lot was filled
savings account from the Racine Home(Continued on pa~e 12)
National Bank; a $3 gift certificate for

NEAT TRICK -Ever try to spin a ball on your finger? It's a neat trick; especially ·
during a hectic ball game. That appears to be whal Southern's Jim O'Brien ( 44) is doing in
this action photo. Wahama player on right is Todd Rawlings (21). Southern won·the game,
Members of the In·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.;.;.;.:-:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:-:·:::
88-56.
ternational Brotherhood of

Arniy taking hard look
at its old drawing card

.

of Rutland, William of
Middleport and Larry, at
home. Stewart says she will
continue as an active EMT
with the squad and assist in
smoot h
transition
of
leadership.
Davis has been an EMT
only since completing her
training last summer, but she
that
with
the
says
(Continued on page 12 )

Electrical
Worker s since the strike began on Dec.
(I.B.E.W.) , union employees I.
of Buckeye Rural Electric
"We didn 't want this strike,
Cooperative, Inc., charged that's why we worked without
yesterJay that the mont h old a contract for three months ~"
strike is continuing, due to one of the workers manning
Cooperative Manager Clyde the line said.
Ramsay's
refusal
to
The contract between the
union
and the cooperative
negotiate.
Interviewed at the picket expired Sept.- I.
Local I.B.E.W. members
line set up in front of the
Gallipolis Offices of the took a strike vote in August.
Electric Cooperative , the At that time, a committee
striking workers said that was formed to negotiate wrth
their union was willing to Buckeye Rural, and was
negot iate
with
th e
cooperative, 11 Anytime
Ramsay is ready to participate in real negotiations."
Sheriff James Proffitt
The electrical workers
advises
that he would like to
stated that there had been
extend
his thanks to the
only one meeting between the
cooperative and the union Meigs County React 'team

Sheriff thanks React members

7more bodies found
By ROSALIND ROSSI
CHICAGO (UP!) - Tbe
ske leta! remains of seven
more bodies have been found
in shallow graves in the crawl
space beneath John Wayne
Gacy's
house
by
investigators using garden
tools and a map drawn by the
accused sex slayer.

granted the authority to call a
str ike if the negotiation
proc ess
prove d
unsatisfactory.
Astrike was called at10:30
p.m., Friday, Dec . 1,
following an eighth round ol
neg otiations.
Uni on Members are asking
that their old contract be
renewed with an additionall6
percent raise over the next
two years.
Ra msay
ha s
sa id
(Con tinued on p•ge 12)

"Seven more bodies were
found today. I guess you
would say unearthed because
some were taken out and
some are still in there,''
Detective T.R. Smith of the
-cook County sheriff's police
said Thursday. "You just
don't dig them outlike a sack
of potatoes."

Ga cy, 36, was to be
arrai gned today in Cook
County Circuit Court on
charges of murd~ring Robert
Piest, 15, of suburban Des
Plaines, who disappeared 21&gt;
weeks ago after saying he
planned to meet with Gacy to
discuss a part-time job.
(Continued 'on page iz)
l

for its work during the flood
earlier this month .
Sheriff Proffitt advises that
Meigs County React Team
President
Guy
Hysell
reported that during the four
days, Dec. 8, 9, 10, and 11, the
Team CB monitoring station
logged a total ol281 hours and
169 calls in regards to the
high water and routes to
follow to by-pass the blocked
roads 1 etc.
.React members on duty
were Guy Hysell, George
Folmer Jr ., Robert Bowles,
Charles Wright , Nathan
Biggs, Tobey Myers, Charles
Blake, Jed Webster, Franklin
Casto, Ora Watki11s and
Grandma.

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