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!H2- The SWJday Thnes-Sentmel , SWlday . Nov . 25. 1979

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IPPHS-St. Albans I

BEAVER - A top team of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars when they
meed Dec. 2 here will be the VFW's
newly fonned Political Action Committee .
Post 9942, Adams Rd ., will host
delegates from District Twelve,
representing VFW units in Athens,
Ross, Vinton. Pike, Jackson. Meigs.
Scioto Gallia and Lawrence coun-

Playoff Scenes

ties . T~ulbyJohnsoniswnunander .

_...,.

Stanley Komoroski, Athens,
Distnct Twelve conunander. said in
the past the VFW was not permitted
to engage in politics and that most
members felt they could do little to
influence national events . But the
· a1 action
· comfonnation of a pol1·t IC
rruttee, he said, provides a legal
method for the VFW as a group and
for the individual member to par-

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hclpate m
era e ec wns . .
"The corruruttee g1ves us a means
of helping our friends seeking electiou to the U. S. 3enate. House and
the Presidency," Komeroski e• ·
plained . " We consider our friends
those who support veterans
programs and a strong nahonal
defense ." . .
Kamoroski srud the VFW may endorseasmanyaslOO-l:iOcandidates
In the 19M elections . But he sa1d an
endorsement would not necessanly
mean giving a candida!~ money .
He said that VFW s contmued
growth for the last 25 years has
enabled it to outmaneuver some of
the attacks against veterans by
Congress and the President. But he
said the VFW foresees more cuts in
veterans benefits, further reduction

Free seedlings are avaiillble

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Veterans' group meeting
planned
v

POMEROY - The ordering and
Ianting of trees by 4-H members can
be a very rewarding learning ex perience and for this reason the Ohio
Division of Forestry will furnish WO
trees of any one species only free to
each 4-li member . Only one species
may be ordered by each member .
Species are white pine, red pine,
green ash, and black locust .
The applicant must be enrolled as
a 4-H or FFA member . He must
plant the trees on land where they
may reasonably expect to grow to
maturity and may be harvested as
timber products . The trees are not to

be used for shade, ornamental.
Christmas trees, or windbreak purposeo. They must agree to protect
the trees from livestock and fire and
must permit a representative of the
Division of Forestry to inspect the
tree planting if they SAJ desire .
An additional two hundred
seedlings of pine only are also
available from the West Virginia
Pulp and Paper Company .
Anyone interested m ordering the
trees should contact the Meigs Coun ty Extension Office before Nov. ?B.
All orde!'ll must be sent to Columbus
prior to Dec. I, 1979.

·
h · 1 beds d
ed
m A ospJta
an fa renew .

a ttac k on. veterans pre erence m
federal hmng .

~ Middleport Christmas parade tonight

A past state corrunander, Art
Tabor, F1at Rock, will represent the
h' VFW th
t
0 10
at e mee mg ·

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-.us a. e :•

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T0 datlV

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Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

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(USPS 145·960)

VOL XXVIII NO. 157

enttne
POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1979

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BLACK ~

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(.'out'h ."iufforrl, f)ll Tm1 , . Tlwmp.wm

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CONDOMINIUM COOPERATIVE
THE DifFERENCE

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Otd yo u ever wonder about the difference between a condominium
and coo perat 1ve ? In a condominium. you get actua l title to the space
w 1t hin your unit plu-s an undivideo interest a tong with other owners to
Th e stru cTu re , grounds and com mon el ements (pool , parking area.
hallwa• s. recredt ionat area . etc . ) .
·
1n a cooperat 1ve, the "coop " corporation owns everything within
the co mplex includ i ng your unit and you get stock in the corporation
pl us a lease to your untt In effect , coops do not enjoy the same
f avorab le mortgage treatment by banks as you get when you own and
have title to your condomtnium or home .
Another difference between having title to your home or apartment.
a nd own 1n g stock in a coo p, is that your mortgage taxes and
ma1ntcnance charges are comp le te ly independent from other unit
owne r ~ and you have no responsib ility tor your neighbor's mortgage,
t axes or charges if he shou ld default In a co·op, all th e stockholders
are re~ponsible i f one stockholder de t autts on his mortgage , taxes, etc
If ther e 1s anything we ca n clo to he lp you in fhe field of real eslat&lt;
pl ease phone or drop in.a1 L!AOINGHAM REAL ESTATE , 511 Second
llo ve ., Gallipolis . Phone 446 ·7699 . We ' re here to help .

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Annual Pomeroy Otristmas parade Saturday

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ELBERFELD$
STOP IN AND LOOK OVER OUR COMPLETE LINE OF

APPLIANCES.

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HOUSEWARES DEPT.- 1ST FLOOR

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from General Electric

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Your Family DeseNes Prorection
--Help Prorecr Wirh A GE HOME

SANTA CLAUS made his first appearance Saturday when he arrived in
the annual Christmas parade held in downtown Pomeroy. Santa is shown
with two year old !Uchle Wamsley and Richie's mother, Olarlotte Wamsley of Racine . Santa passed out treats to the children from the new stage

loca~ontheupperparkin
~·~g~l~m~.------------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bobby Glen Saunders, 46,
Gallipolis, a special deputy with the
Gallia County Sheriff'• Department

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died in the Hoher Medical Center
sbortly after a head~n colllsion
Saturday night on the Silver
Memorial Bridge.
According to West Virginia State
Pl&gt;lice, SaWiders' car wu struck by
a vehicle traveling east in the westboWtd lanes of the divided, four-Wte

bridge operated by Dencil D.
Jividen, 53, Buffalo, W.Va .
The accident occurred about 10 :45
p.m. Saturday night.
According to WJOfflcial reports,
Saunders was trapped in his vehicle
which calll!ht on fire .
The fire was eningulshed by a

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Crash takes 157

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r&gt; od f •o

JIDDA, Saudi Arabia (AP) - A
Pakilltanl airliner Oying Moslem
pilgrims home from Mecca
caught fire, exploded and
cra.shed sborUy alter taking off
early today from Jidda, and all
1&gt;7 persons aboard were believed
killed, Pakistan International
Airlines reported .
PIA officials said they did not
rule out Mbotage, but PIA
engineel'll in Karachi , Pakistan,
the plane 's destination , said they
believed a short circuit caused
the fire and expiO!IIon .

I • !' ·' • !• J',l ', t• ' l ,,r ) 11'11·

h '&gt; 1,111 f J! r · -N • r1 (j .t ' l · ! •, l, . h
It •II , fi. IJ I I 1 '

HANDY 2IN I
APPLIANCE

46.00

5

Battery Included

Mod el EC33WH /
3603-00 I
Wh1te

Deluxe
Can Opener I
Knife Sharpener

Comb1nat ro n ca n ooene 1 an d

• Uses 9 vo tf o 1~ 0l 1n e ba tf e ry
• Installs eas11y w1th two soews
• Sounds early wor n mg wh en smoke enters
sensmg cha mbe r
• Ci!CU II tes• button checks banery horn and
electnca l con11nu,ty
• A1r entermg sm o ke a la rm I S con tmu ouslv
mon itored

Eight arrested

Ha na ~

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AUTOMATIC TIMER

f re e · oper at •on

Clean ··

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• Compact l 1ghtwe 1gh1
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S t 01 a~e ~eep~ e~e e~ ~ C[) ld

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DOG WAITINU - This young Tcrrier type animal who is blonde and
white sits by itself- wa1ting . Watling fo r some nice person to come along
who wants a real smart .lovable pet Won 1 someone come forward so that
this homeless male creature can have a future ? If mterested call your
Humane Soc1ely at 992.fl260.

17.98

se rr ated edge b la des . long

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• Hangmg sto ra ge rack
'll ou nt s eas1ty to wall or
cab1net

Fold· Stir· MixBeat-Whip

-~~
DAN

Stewart enters
guilty plea, gets
15 year sentence
A Jury trial in the Meigl! County
Conunon Pleas Court wu averted
thls morning when Tom Matthew
Stewart, 31, Middleport, entered a
plea of guilty to aggrava~ murder
charges .
Stewart was charged with
aggravated murder by the Meigs
Grand Jury on Oct. 10 as the result of
the Sept. 16 death of his stepson,
Keith Landers, 17, a 1979 graduate rJ
Meigs High School at the Stewart
residence in Middleport.
Stewart allegedly killed his stespson with a .38 caUbre revolver. Ac ·
cording to reports the shooting occurred at 12:30 a.m. Sept. 16 at the
residence loca~ at 235 S. Fourth
Ave ., Middleport.
Mr .and Mrs . Stewart were
separated and in the process of
being divorced when the shooting OC·
elUTed, according to reports.
A jury wu scheduled to be seated
today in the Meigs CoWlty Common
Pleas Court to hear testimony in the
case . However, Stewart entered a

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• Pl ug mto outlet . plu g
appJ,ance int o 11mer

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S T O RE H A S
ULCN

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Dan Meadows

1n " even when you·re away , use .1
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~ h ed ute ea ch lighl to go on and
off accordi n9 to your normal da1
1y schedule

;

l:() Food Processor ~

,,

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the Super Fast

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• To help your homf" took " l 1ved

JU S T

PHILADELPHIA (API
Eight persons were arrested
early Sunday as authoritieo ended a 12-day protest occupation of
Hanity Elementary School by
parents demanding the principal
be replaced .
Personnel from the sheMff's
department went to the school
about 4:30am., knocked on the
door and asked to be admitted .
When they were not, they broke
the locks on windows and entered
the west Philadelphia facility, of·
ficlals said.

Electric Slicing Knife
Model EK1 0/ 3715·013

kn de shar oene r
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56.95

5

EASTERN BAND-The Eastern High School marching band was the only
band that participated in the annual Ouistmas parade held in downtown
Pomeroy Saturday afternoon . The parade officially opened the Ouistmas season and was sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Jim Frecker was the parade chairman.

Two area residents killed In separate traffic mishaps

SENTRY rr~ SMOKE ALARM

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CARRIE BETH BEARHS second runnerup in the annual Big Bend
Regatta Queen coolest took part in the annual Olristmas parade held
Saturday in downtown Pomeroy. A large crowd attended the annual
parade .

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PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

i~~~~-=~========~~=~=~~-=-~=====·=--~~--~--~----=,

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plea of guilty when he appeared
before Judge Jolm C. Bacon canceling the jury trial.
Stewart wu given a 15 year to life
sentence by Judge Bacon and was
remanded to the custody of Sheriff
James Proffitt .

Meigs strike
in lOth week
Both sides in the 10 week old Meigs
Local Teachers stMke continued
silence today as to the status of the
strike situation.
It was reported that negotiations
between the Meigs Local Teachers
and the Meigs local Board of
Education being held in Colwnbus
last week under the auspices of the
Ohio Department of Education
broke down ThUI'!IIIay morning.
Nf8otiations Wl!re dl.!continued
until yesterday afternoon, according
to reports, when negotiating teams
were swrunoned to Colwnbus by a
representative of the Ohio Depart ment of EducaUon. However, SWl ·
day evening , It ·was reported that
negotiations had again broken down
between the two groups.
Neither the teachers group nor the
board hall issued any statement for
several days in regard to the
progress or Jack of progress being
made In negotiations .
Today marked the 1001 week of the
strike which began on Sept . 24 .
Schools were not officially closed Wl UI Oct. 16.

MaBon County depuny sllenlt .
Jividen wu taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital where he is listed in
satisfactory condition . State pollee
have charged Jividen with DWI pending further investigation .
At 9:1a A.M. today on SR 218 in
Gallla County, one half mile south of
SR 7, William GutheMe, Rt.2, Bidwell, an employee of Gerald Smith, a
private trash collector in the county,
was fatally injured when struck by a
garbage truck opera~ by Willard
Smith.
The accident occurred in the
driveway of a private residence.
Gutherie was pronoWJced dead at
the scene by Gallia County Coroner
Dr . Donald R. Warehime. He repor·
.... . .·.·•... ··.·.·.•. •.•.•.•· ·.·.·.·.·.·.·

PARADE TONIGIIT
A parade at6:30p.m. this evtnln«
wtU officially ..,.. the boUday
season ID Mlddlepor1. Mlddltporl
me...,banta wiD bold 1 mooDllgbl
oale-wlth opeclal prices on rtr1aln
ltellll-iD colljuncdou wilb the
eveulng's activities. Santa, wbo wiD
appear ID lbe parade, wiD dlslribuk
trealll to yoqoten following the
parade.
Mlu Candy lugelo to
parade cbalrmau.
·.·

:- :·:-:-:-~:-:-: -: -:-:- :··

:-:-:-;.:-:-··

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight with a low of
3:i to 40 . Increasing cloudiness
Tuesday with a chance of showers.
High low to middle S«m. Probability
of rain 20 percent Monday night and
30 percent Tuesday .

tedly suffered head and cheot injuries.
Meanwhile, the Thanksgi,1ng
holiday weekend drew to a close
Sunday, with the four-day traffic

death toll climbing.
By 6 p.m. EST, 3116 penons had
died in traffic..-ela~ accidents
across the nation.
Continued on Page 10

Meigs deputies probing fire
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigating a Saturday fire
which destroyed a home owned by

Elbert Mullins,RD., Dener.
The fire occurred at 10 :30 pm . at
a home occuppied by Mr. and Mrs .
Oliver Mullins . Salem Center
firemen responded . The lire is still
under investigation .
Sam Arnold, 69, Syracuse, was
cited to court on charges of failing to
keep his vehicle on the right half of
the roadway following an accident
Saturday at 2:50pm. in the village
of Syracuse, the Meigs CoWJty
Sheriff's Department reported .
According to the report, Arnold
was turning to the right onto
Brigegman Street, near the
Municipal Building, when he went
off the road on the left and struck a
hedge owned by Buster Diddie and
continued on and struck a utility
pole.
Arnold was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Syracuse
ER squad where he was treated for a

SQUAD CAllED
The Pomeroy Emergency 5QWld
answered a call to 127'&gt; Mulberry
Ave ., Saturday afternoon for
Margaret Va dish who was ill . She
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted.

la&lt;:eration to the lip and releaaed .
There was heavy damage to the
vehicle .

Rutland man cited
One driver was cited following a
two.Yehicle accident Saturday on SR
124, three and six-tenths of a mile
westofSR 7.
Called to the scene at 4:20 pm.,
the Galli a -Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports a west bound auto
operated by David C. Davia, 18,
RuUand, ran off the right side of the
roadway and struck the rear of a
parked vehicle owned by Frederick
Wolfe, 34, Rutland .
The Wolfe vehicle was
demolished. There was slight
damage to the Davis auto. Davia
was cited on a charge of excessive
speed .
TICKErS ON SALE
Tickets to the awards dinner to be
held Wednesday, Nov. 28, at the
Meigs Inn at 6 :30pm. may be purchased at Pomeroy Olamber of
Co mmerce office , New York
Oothing House, or from Fred Crow
or Paul Simon. Tickets are ~.50
each.
To be honored at the dinner are
Dr . Ralston Russell , Paul Cuci and
Kenny Wiggins.

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"The most important thing we'll
do today is fill your prescription!"
SENIOR CITIZENS
Remember every Thursday is Double
Discount Day. 10% +another 10% off on
every prescription .
~ The Medical Shoppa .,~
.!~
Phar"'acll
W
519 laCK SON PllC • Srtiflt&amp; Vi\Ll t ~ 11 lAlA • G ~l 1 ro&gt;n ~r. ' '" ~ • ~ f. 11

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SUCCESSFUL EVENT- Mr. and Mrl. Millard Van Meter, left, and
Mr.and Mrs . Melvin Van Meter are pictW'ed SWlday at another suc ceasful open house held at the business, the Pomeroy F1ower Shop, But·
temut Ave., Sunday afternoon . Door prizes went to Nonna Baker,
Pomeroy; Judy Dixon, Pomeroy, and Sharon MarUn, Sandyville, W. Va .
Refrealvnents were aerved and favors distributed. Organ miiBic wu
provided by Kyle Allen and Mn. Margaret Eskew registered the over 400
guests. Othenl worldng with the open house were Wanda Rizer, Debbie
Grueller , Cllarlotte Wilford, Jane Harris, Jean IGoes, Betty Jo Woodring ,
~berta Van Meter and Me lvin Van Meter. Jr .
1'1

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ORGAN PRESENTED- An Allen Digital Computer Organ wu presented to the Middleport Fil'lll
Baptist Cllurch in ceremonies held Sunday afternoon .
The organ wM presented by the family of Paul S.
Smart in remembrance ol Paul S. and Frances M.
Smart . Paul M. Smart, aeveland, speaking for the
family of the late Mr. Smart emphasized the dedication
of his late father to his chureh, cornmWIIty, family and
profession and presented the organ to the church. Accepting the gift for the church was EdiMn Baker who ,

.,

in his remarks, paid blgii tribute to the late Mr. Smart.
Grandchildren of the late Mr. Smart provided an organ
lamp. An hour~ong concert on the new organ Will
presented by E ugene Wickstr9m, Athens, after which
the family held a reception in the church soc1al rooms.
The Rev . Mark Mcaung, pastor of the churdl, gave
the invocation and the Rev. George T. Siddall, IIOIHnlaw of the late Mr. Smart gave the benediction. Pictured at the presentaUon from the left are Paul M. ·
Smart, Eugene Wickstrom and EdiP1 Baker. The
church was filled to capacity for the event.

�3- The Daily Sentmel . M.irlrlleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Monday' Nov . 26, 1979

2-The Daily Sent

1 Mi

Ea~t;;;; ·N~rth Gallia and
SW five cop preview wins
Eastern, North Gallia and South western posted victories Saturday
night in the annual SV.\2 Cage
Preview at Paul R. Lyne Center at
Rio Grande College .
. Qn the basis of the games played ,
It appears this season 's SV AC race
Mil be similar to one just completed
m football , very competitive and
close all the way .
Coach Jolm Boston's Eastern
Eagles provided fans with the best
thriller of the night , a hard-..arned
32-30 win at the buzzer against the
defending SV AC champ1on Southern
Tornadoes .

Tuncley, ~ - 'Z7

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

A

'Your
~'Birthday

Tim Dill's jwnp shot proved to the
cli ncher in Eastern's two point win
over Southern .
Trailing 16-14 go~ mto the final
stanza . the Eagles caught fire out scoring Southern , 1&amp;-14 to win the
two quarter contest .
Dill led Eastern with eight points
while Brian Bissell, Gene Cole . Brett
Matthews , Greg Wigal, Joe Bowers
and Mike B1ssell bad four points
ap1ece .
Dave Foreman. scruor cente r
pa ced Southern with 10 poomts, Ja ck
Duffy had eight and Dale Teaford
.
'

.SlX .

In the reserve con test prior to the
varsity ti lt. Coac h Howard Caldwell 's Little Tornadoes defeated
Coach Dermis Eichinger's Little
Eagles. 23-l:&gt;.
Richard Wol!e paced the winners
with eight points . Spurlock, Riffle
and Sayre had four points each for
Eastern.
Coach Ted Lehew's North Galli a
Pirates, using a run and gun offense,
bombed Hannan Trace. 46-20.

tknlember 27, 1111
Some na.ppy surpnses are m
store thts commg year r6{1ar d rng
ventures wh1ch a t li rst appear 10
hold only small promrse As you
get yoursell mvolved . you 'll ltnd
wa)' S to enlarge them

SA Gin ARIUS (Now_23-0.C. 21)
trs posstble that yew cou ld be a
btl o t a stugg1sh staner todll y
but once )'Ou get movtng you 're a
strong lmtsher and wtll SUCC8SSIu ll)' complete &gt;Nhatever you
begtn Ftnd out more or what t1es
ahead lor yo:J tn the year lollo w mg your b •rl hd ay by SBnd tng tor
you r copy of Astra-G raph Lell er
M a11 $1 lor each t o As tr a - Graph
Bo)l( 489 . Radto Ctty S tatt on N y '
10019 Be sure t o speCify btr1h

da te
C APRICORN (O.C. 22-J•n. 1SI)
Treat your htends cordtall)
today but don ·\ try to butler
them up S mcenty w11l wm thetr
good Will Hollow pra•se w on t

AQUARIUS

(J•n. 20-F•b. 19)

Fmanctal c ondlltons could tm
m tJed today but you should
come ou t on the p lus stde ,, you
use your smart s be pracltC&lt;~ I
Bnd prudent
PISCES (F•b - 20--M•rch 20) 'fou
can be a reat achtev9f tod ay so
d o n I waste your l tme on tnstg
ntftcant goat s Spend your HnAr
Q•es on ttnngs wrnch rfiall•r
matter

ARIES

(M•rch

21 -April

19)

Somethmg that has been mo st
unpteaSBnt tor you could Qutte
suddent)' ~ termtnated Howe...-er you ma)• not tully approctate
the benehctat eHoc ts un l tt later
TAU~US (April 20--lbJ 20) 11
would De a mtstake to let emotion be the reason tor c!ingtng to
a dectston that ~n · t ....-ortong out
Don ' t hesitate to altet wn.at 1sn 1
rtght

GIEMINI (M•J 21·June 20) You

Will luncl!on much better to day

Cage smndings
ALL GAMES

TEAM

W. L T OP
I 0 55 36

Gallipoli s
ChilliCOthe

waverly
Athens
Cou r! House
Pt Pteasdnl
Wheelersbur g
Portsmouth

0

0

0

0
0

Me1g s
1

I
0

0
1

39
35
I 59
1 36
0
0
0 0
0
0
0 0
0 0

35
39
65
55

8y th e A ssociated Press

Akron East 8&lt;4 Can . Glenoak 67
Akron e tl et 7 1 Ravenna 67
Akron F1res tone 61 Revere 52
Akron Hoban 8. MedinaH ighland 55
Akron Springfield 9S Field 59
Alter 70 Hamilton Taft 62
Barberton 85 Medina 82
B eac t1wood 78 Cardina l 4o4
6edvercret!'k 6'1 Day Wh ile .41
Berkshire 61 Kirtland 52
Be thel 67 Greeneview u
Brookf ield 67 H uboa rCI SO
Brook vi le 82 Tw i n Valley N !17
Brunswick 91 Bedford 52
Buc keye Centra l 4J N ort hmor 38
Can McKinley 93 New Philadelph ia

All SV AC teams are in actwn Uus
weekend .
Friday night, Miller is at North
Gallia; Elk Valley visits Kyger
Creek ; Southwestern goes to
Eastern of Pike County , Fairland
plays Hannan Trace, and Eastern
hosts Waterford .
Saturday night, Southern - LS at
Miller .
BOX SCORES
SOUTHWESTERN 135) .. Baker 3
0-6 ; Russell 3-2 8; Newberry 4 o 8,
Forgey 11 5 , Burleson 2 0 4 ; K .
Sizemore 1 0 1 , and Potter o 2 2
Totals IS-5-lS .
KYGER CREEK (231 -· Gilmore 1
3 5 ; Wt'stfall 3 3 9; Sm ith 2 2 6 , Por
ter 1 1 3 ; and VanSickle 0 0 0 Totals
7 -9 -2).

SOUTHERN 110) -· Davis 1 0 2.
DuHy &lt;08 ; Rees 1 0 2; K. WOlfe 1 0
2;

Foreman 4 2 10; Teaford 2 2 6

Totals IJ-4-JO.
·
EASTERN IJ2) -- Bisse ll 2 0 4.
Cole 2 0 4; Matthew 12 4; Wigal 2·0
4; Bowers 2·0 ·4; M . Bisse ll 2-0 4; Dill

4 08. Totals ls-2-32 .

HANNAN TRACE (201 -- Beaver 2
0 ·-A ;

Campbell

1-1-3;

Eucltd 63 Gt&gt;neva 53

Saturday 's Scores

Jones

102 :

Meadows 0-00 ; Webb 1 3 5; Chap
man 1·0·2; . Pack 2 ·0 ·4. Totals 8-4 -10.
NORTH GALLI A (401 -- Peck 1·0

77
Can Tim ken 6.4 Akron Sou th 53
Celi na 56 To I . Bows her 35
Ce nter vi lie 79 M iam isburg 52
Chagnn Fa l ls 52 Kenston ,.9
Cha mberlain 66 Char don 5A
Chtlli co1he 39 waver ly 35
Chi ppewa 61 Akron Coventry 56
(in . Ba c on 73 Ci n . Prin ceton 52
Cin . M c Nic ho las 77 M ilford 49
Cleve . Orang e 78 Aurora 42
Cleve . St . Joseph 87 C leve land Ht s

Fairborn S aker 69 West M i lton 51
F air-le~s 71 Tuslaw 37
Findlay 75 Col. Walnut R idoe 38
Fi nneyt own 68 Indian Hill67
Firetand 84 A mht'rst Steel
Fort Jennings 69 Miller City 57
Frederickt own 56 R idgedale 49

n

Gall ;poi;•55Wa•hinglonC .H 36
Gar away S-4 Conotton VAl leo; 42

Garfie ld His 73 Maple His . 60
Goshen 6.4 B lanchester Jl
Grove City 99 Cot. Franklin Hts 54
Houston 66 Fort Recovery 6-4
·
Huntington 71 Adena 68
Indian Valley S. 61 Kidron cent.

Calh . 42
Kenton 55 Ridge-mont .t6
Kent Roosevelt 88 Hudson 6-4
Keystone 7-A Wellington A7
Lakewood St . Edward 76 Parma
Normandy 5.4

62
Col . Centennia l 76 L i berty Union A7
Co lumbus Grove 86 Holgate 76
Col. Watterson 50 Upper Arlington 49
Col. Wehrle SO Bloom Carroll 39
Cory -Rawson 6.5 Arlington 59
Cuya hoga Falls 73 Lyndhurst Brush

51
Day
Dunbar
62
In dianapolis
At tucks 52
Day Fairview 4 7 Lima Senior 42
Delaware 55 Pi ck erington 52 OT
De lphos Jeff erson 67 Ohio City 37
Dover SB Massillon Jackson 52
Elgin 62 Mount Gilead 55
Elvr i a Cat h. 66 Elyria W. 57

-vat...,.

I oHer a total program to help
protect your lamlly'o
ond build Bnandal MCUrtty for yoom
retirement veers. c.H me fO( ....._

MilE SW!G£1

..

,Middle

.,_,, .,.

A

992 -660~ ·

ort 0.

IIIIIIIIIA .. Cf

~lltt

F1rm l~ and

Ace ide Ill Auurtnce

Comp1ny
fill~'\~ Ottce
C•~ 'lfii,....IOn ~htWlt!

,-----------------------------~~

:

·

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

:

OPTOMETRIST

Reserwl' scores : Kvger Creek 18
SWHS 7; Sou th ern 28 Eastern 15;
Nor th Galli a 31 Hannan Tra ce 21

I

2; H owell1 ·0-2; Miller 3-0 -6 ; Ba rnes

1 2·4; S. Howe ll 3 S 11 ; Payne 6 3 15
Totals lS -10-40 .

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30

to 12, 2 to 5 !CLOSE AT NOON

:

t
t

L_o~.!~~~s· ~-:_:_~s~~o~RJ!~·.:.':o_M_E~~~·-----j

0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0 0
0 0
0 0

ron ton

Junior guard Keith Payne led the
way with 15 points while Scott
Howell added II and Mark Miller ,six
points respectively.
Pacing Coach Donnie Saunders ·
Wildcats were Greg Webb with five
points while Tim Beaver and Graig
Olapman had four points each.
North Gallia took a commanding
2IHi lead at the end of the first stanza.
The Pirate reserve squad also
won, 31 -21.
Greg Dee! led the attack with 11
points while Bruce Shriver and
Steve Franklin scored eight points
each .
Toby Sheets led Hannan Trace
with II points .
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's Southwestern Highlanders defeated
Kyger Creek, 35-23 Saturday night.
Scott Russell and Dale Newberry
led the Hlghlanders with eight points
each while Todd Baker added six .
Kyger Creek's offense was led by
senior forward Jolm Westfall with
nine points . Senior Greg Smith
tossed in six points.
Coach Keith Carter 's reserve
squad posted an 1&amp;-7 victocy over the
Highlander reserves .
Ed Moore paced the Bobkittens
with six points while Scott Lewis led
SWHS with three .

Steelers edge Browns 33-30 in thrilling overtime bout

High school cage scores

Janson
0
Wel lston
0
Logan
0
Saturdav 's results :
Gal l tpo lis 55 Washington CH 36
Chillicot he 39 Waverly 35
Tut'sdav 's games :
Jackson at M in f ord
V1nton County at Wellston
Waverly at Portsmouth West
Log an nt Ne lsonville York
Wa Sh tngton CHat C. r eenfteld

0
0
0

Sy the A'!! sociatt'd Pr ess

NU GGETS ~ sig net s

Bo Eilts, forward .

FOOTBALL
National Football League

ac ·

t•vated Ele~ Pr ic e. defensive tack le ,
from the 1n1 ured rE:'s.ervc list P l aced
J~ Cam pbel l, detensi vt? end , on the
rn1ured reserve

and stand a good c hance ot
achieving )'ou r goats 11 you kNp
your methods flextble Don ·t let
o thers get you off- tr ack
CANCE~ (Jwne 21-July 22)
You ' ll know what n eec1s dotng
today but your put -off s could
requ1re greater effort th a n the
tasks themselves . They ' ll have to
be dealt with eventually
LEO (Jul)l 23-Aug. Zl) I! you ·re
menag1ng somethmg tor another
today treat 11 with the 1m par .
lance 11 deserves Mak tng too
ligh t o t 1t cou ld oHend the one
you want to help
VIRGO (Aug . 23-&amp;.pt. 22 ) Don t
be hurt today tf you sound out an
1dea and you don 1 rec.en1e the
type ot feedback you ·re r-. o p• ng
lo r Your ltstener may no! gri:ISV
you r lull thought

THE DAlLY SENTlNEL
IUSPSlU...t

~~~~ · --~· -

Why drive all over town? Do your giN shOppmg lhe easy way lhrough the fu ll-co lor
S uperamerica Ho u se grft ca ta log. You 'll save t1me and
gas. and everythmg rs fu lly guaranteed

GIVE QUALITY ..,UPERAMERICA HOUSE
SURPR ISES THIS YEAR.
You' lllmd cheeses. nuts. ca ndy. frurl s . servr ng trays. s pe ·
era! glassware and dinnerware Plus ma ple syrup from
W1scons 1n . honey, laney preserves, an o ld fash1oned
coffee gnnder, p1c nrc sels. luggage . And for lhe lrttle
people. Klaus lhe cuddly mouse .

SUPERAMERICA~
~~~ I1WIY tluul Q

!J'lS Slue!

LIBRA (84tpt . 23-0cl. 23) n us
should be a profil able day m sev er al respects 11 you rely upon
your practical JU dgment

On tne

o ther hand . w1sh!ut thtnkmg
could produce deftctt s
SCORPIO (Oc:t. :24-No'l. 22) You
may expeu 6flce some trus tr Ahons todAy regard tn Q s.omethtng
you d ttto. e to buy However your
common sense Will overru le yOUI
extra\lagant

INfW SPAf'fl-l

wflims

~ NIHIP I1 1Sf

ASS '-1 1

HERE

IT
COMES!

Giants 14, Redsk.ins 6
Washington is tied with Dallas
rather than Philadelphia because it
couldn't stop Billy Taylor, who
rushed for 126 yards, 14 of them in a
one-man drive capped by his !-yard
dive for the clinching touchdown in
the fourth period .
Vlk.lngs 23, Rues 22
Tampa Bay, a winless team in
1976, had an opportunity to Win th e
first division title of the 1979 season
thanks Ill Chicago's 20-0 loss to
Detroit last Thursday.
But Minnesota, whose best
weapon may be the blocked kick,
employed that tactic to perfection
and kept the Bucs from wrapping up
the NFC Central crown. The Vikings
got their paws on two extra points, a
field goal attempt and a punt while
Tommy Kramer passed for three
TDs and Rick Daruneler kicked
three extra points and a field goal.
Bills 16, Patriots 13
Buffalo's Joe Ferguson hit L&lt;lu
Piccone with an 11-yard touchdown
pass just II seconds frOm the end of
the fourth period to force overtime ,
then hooked up with Jerry Butler on
a 51-yard pass to set up Nick MikeMayer's game-winning 29-yard field
goal at 9: 15 of overtime against the
Patriots.
The loss dropped New England
back intn a first-place tie with the
Dolphins, each team at &amp;-:&gt; in the
AFC East, one game ahead of the
Bills.
Dolphins 28, Colis Z4
A week ago, Miami Coach Don
Simla relegated Bob Griese to
benchwarming duties, handing the
• starting quarterback job Ill Don
Strock . But when Stroc k was
knocke d silly by the Baltimore

defense, Griese regained his touch
with two TD passes against the
Colts .
Saints 37, Faicoos 6
The Saints' defense forced six
turnovers and chalked up five
quarterback sacks en route to the
rout that ended their " jinx " against
Atlanta, which had recorded threestraight miracle-finish victories
against them.
Archie Manning passed for 263
yards, hitting Henry Childs for 37
and a score and setting up TD runs
by Mike Strachan and Chuck Muncie
to help keep New Orleans tied with
L&lt;ls Angeles ato~ the NFC West,
each team at 7~ .
Rams 26, 49ers 20
Los
Angeles'
r eserve
quarterbacks, Bob Lee and Vince
Ferragamo, passed for a TD apiece
and Sid Justin ran 80 yards for a
score with an abortive San
Francisco field goal attempt to beat
the 49ers.
Justin's dash came after a ki ck by
Ray Werschlng hit the back of a 49er
blocker and was deflected into
Justin's hands.
Chargers 28, Chiefs 7
Dan Fouts passed foc 350 yards 19 yards shy of the single-t;ame club
record he shares with Tobin Rote and three touchdown passes as llie
Chargers, J().J , battered Kancas City
and moved one game ahead of
Danver in the AFC West.
Raiders 14, Broncos 10
Booker Russell raced 72 yarda to
set up Ken Stabler's 3-yard TD pa ss

to Dave Casper just befoce tlle half.
then bulled m from the 1 in the third
penod of the H.a!ders' victory over
Denver.
Bengals 34, Cardinals 2ll
Ken Anderson passed to Isaa c
Curtis for TDs covering 43 and 19
yards, Pete Jolmson ran for scores
from the 2 and 4 and Chris Bahr .
Matt's brother , kicked field goals of
38 and 33 yards to carry Cincinnati
past th e Cardinals in Sunday's onl y
game not inv olving a playoff
contender.

Host Gallipolis employed a
me:laclng full-eourt press , forcing 25
Waslungton Court House turnovers,
and the result Willi a ~-&lt;&gt;pening
56-36 basketball victory over Coach
Gary Shaffer 's Blue Uons here
Saturday night.
Coach Jim Osborne's lads came
out swanning, and never let up
during the 32-minute contest, played
before a full house in the GAHS gym .
Although there was a lot r:1
movement during first hal! play,
neither team managed to do much
scoring. Gallipolis led !Hi after one
period, and 17-14during the halftime
intermission.
The Blue Devils broke it wide open
in the third stanza. scoring 22 points
to the Blue Uons eight. That gave
the borne team a ~22 advantage
going into the final period.
A ~oot desperation shot at the
buzzer by senior guard Bill (Big ,
John ) Armstrong brolll!ht the crowrl
tD its feet . Armstrong scored 15 of
his game-high 'll points in the third
stanza. GAHS outscored the visitors,
!6-14in the last quarter.
Washingtor\ Court House led only
once in the game, 4-3, on a short j urnper by David Cassidy with 3:07 left
In the initial canto . Annstrong 's long
jumper at the 2:49 mark put the Blue
Devils ahead to stay.
Gallipolis connected on 22 of 4IJ
field goal attempts for 55 percent.

The Devils were II of 19 at the foul
line for 57 percent. GAHS picked off
W rebounds, five each by Kent Price
and Jeff Cameron . GAHS had U turnoven.
The Blue Devils were credited
with II assists, six by sophomore
guard Char tie Boggess.
Wllllhington CH placed two men In
double figures. Keith Eckles, lh1
senior center had 10 polnta along
with Dennis Daluner, 6-1 senior forward.
The Blue Uons connected on 13 of
t2 field goal attempt&amp; for 30.8 percent. The visitors were 10 of 13 at the
foul line for 76.9 percent. Court
House led 25 reboWids, eight by
Eckles.
GAHS mentor Jim Osborne's only
remark following Saturday's victory
was, "Our defense is way ahead r:l
our offense."
Beaides Armstrong's T/ markers,
Kent Price added seven . Big Jeff
Cameron, along with Charlie
Boggess and Nick Robinson each
had four points. Greg Atkins added
three.
Osborne played all 13 men dresaed
for the opener.
Friday , the Blue Devils travel to
Athens tD open Southeastern Ohio
League play against the Bulldogs.
Saturday, Wheelersburg Mil play at
Gallipolis in a non-eonference
outing.

WI TER QUARTER

'fben )W Deed lllOIIeY 10
keep )0111' car ~ or

REGISTRATIO
Rio
Grande

b

SOUTH

IDw quidltt; ell5lly :nl
wMho"'*'albL b1
can bcirrow wMh IMI
where peoplr save wMh
1M. Cl)' I.IJIII &amp; ~
'l'e to! WII)'S 10 hr.lp.

and
Community College

9 a.m.-9 p.m.

DAVIS CAREER CENTER

CALL THE

MIDWEST
Missour i 55 Kansas 7
N . I !linois 28 OhiO U . 27
Oklahoma 17 Nebraska 1.4

DAILY SENTINEL

Oklahoma St. 13 Iowa St. 10
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 31 Southern Meth . 7
Texas 13 Baylor 0
Texas -Arlington 4a Idaho St. 0
Texas A 1h.M 30 Texas Christian 7

COLLECT

FAR WEST
Arizona 27 Arizona St, 24
Brigham Young 63 San Diego St . 14
Cent . Michigan 34, San Jose St . 32
Co lorado21 KansasSt . o
Hawaii 2-' Colorado St . 10
Long Beach St . 16 Fuller ton St 13
New Mexico 17Wyoming 3
NotreDame40Miam i, Fla 15

Between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:00 p.m.

Oregon 24 Oregon St . 3

1-614-992-2156

Southern &lt;:PI 49 UC LA 14
Utah St . 41 Fresno ST . 31

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College

NOVEMBER 26

Ill)' pel ream, !Ilk

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

E . Carolina 3S, William 'h Mary 14
Georgia 16 Georgia Tech 3
Maryland 17 Virginia 7
Memphis St . 23 Cincinnati 17
Miss issippi 14 Miss issippi Sf 9
N. Carolina 37 Duke 16
S Carolina 13 Cle ms.on 9
Tenne ssee 20 Kentucky 17
Tulane2.4 Louisia na St . 13

•

tJetback
mthe
elmer's -seat
atCrtyLean.

ATTENTION

College results

GAHS 55-36 win in opener

BASKETBALL
National Ba sketbalt Association

. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS -

Eagleo Zl, Packers 10
While t'ranco Harris was rushing
for 151 yards foc l'lttsbW'gh, Leroy
Harris was amassing 137 for
Philadelphia, 80 of them on a fourthperiod jaunt that preceded th e
Eagles'
clin ching TD, Ron
Jaworski's third scoring pass and
second to Harold Cannichael.
" Leroy has feet that go 100 mlles
an hour and a body that only goes 30,
but that was the big play ." joked
Jaworski .

Pressure defense earns

TRANSACTJONS

DE N VER

'ibe nation got Its chance to watch
Texas· two teams whoop It up in the
National Football League last
Thursday. Today, Pennsylvania has
mor-e reasons to cheer . It has twice
as many winners .
The Houston Oilers defeated the
Dallas
Cowboys
J0-24
on
Thanksgiving Day . On SUnday the
Pittsburgh Steelers edged Clev~land
33-30 in overtime and th e
Philadelphia Eagles defeated Green
Bay 21-10.
_ As a result : - The Eagles own
first pla ce outright in th e National
Conference's East Division with a 94 record while the Cowboys, at &amp;-:&gt;,
share
seco nd
place
with
Washington, a 14-6 loser to th e New
York Giants on Sunday, and ..
- The Steelers share first place in
the American Conference's Central
Division with the Oiler s each at J().J
while the Browns are' second, tw~
games back at &amp;-:&gt; .
In Sunday 's other games ,
Minnesota shaded Tampa Bay 23-22,
Buffalo mpped New England 16-13 in
overtime, Miami beat Baltimore 2&amp;24, New Orleans ripped Atlanta 37-&lt;i ,
L&lt;ls Angeles trimmed San Francisco
26-20, San Diego defeated Kansas
City 2&amp;-7, Oakland downed Denver
14-10 and Cmcinnati outlasted St.
!.&lt;luis 34-28 .
Tonight, the New York Jets viSit
Seattle.
11
Th is was a very, very pressurepacked game where we showed we
could come from behind against a
good team ," defensive tackle Joe
Greene said after the Steeler s
scored 10 points in th e final 4:Y,
minutes of regulation play, then beat
the Browns on Matt Bahr's fourth
field goal of the game. a 37-yarder
with nine seconds to go in overtime.
Franco Harris ' third touchdown of
the game, on a 3-yard run , cut
Cleveland's lead to three points and
Bahr tied it 24 secoods from the end
of the fourth quarter with a 21-yard
field goal .
Terry Bradshaw, who completed
30 of 44 passes for 364 yards - all
career highs - against Cleveland,
scrambled 28 yards from his own J.4
oo a third-and -10 play to set up
Bahr 's game-winner .

•wltleble 11

R1cho Sh«k

De... ,,
lOOII fOI !hrl

••vn m your
nlltghborhood

SECOND AND PINE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
-- -...._.,.

......--~-

1.~ ~M tu

...U.OOO lhrt.

1 ho. I'" l.u.., C·~

·-------------------~----------~

Most •!ems
at~

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

GET YOUR FREE C ATALOG AT THESE LOCATIONS

(C.: 1979 ~·J peramerica . Drviston of Ashland 0•1 Co . Inc

Smart Santa Shop The SNck•... MOlt Stores Open Late Nights Til Christmas

a•AL.a•

�~

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov . 26, 1979

•

Tinsley difference zn outcome of tilt
CHARLESTON, W.Va . ! API Q.larterback Scott Tinsley threw for
two touchOOwns and scored a third
himself Saturday as top..-anked St .
Albans defeated Point Pleasant 2HI
to gain a berth in thts week 's state
Class AAA football championship
game .
The Red Dragons rna t.ch 12-0
records
with
second-rated
Bridgeport in next Saturday's title
game .
Bridgeport
defeated
defending
state
champion
Parkersburg 7-9 Saturday to earn its
championship game berth
The loss was the first of the season
in 12 games for Point Pleasant ,
which was !&lt;reed to play the game
without two injured regulars .
quarterback Glen McClellan and
running back Brian Stepp .
Point
Pleasant
sputtered
offensively, thanks to the injuries

and a fired -up. swarming St. Albans
defense . On only one play tn the
second half did the Btg Blac ks cross
their own 23 yard line, and on that
play - a first down on the Poi nt
Pleasant 34 - the Big Bla cks
fumbled .
St. Albans defenstve lineman
Terry York led a Red Dragons '
defense which held the Btg Bla cks to
just 57 ya rds in total offen se . York
twice
sa c k ed
lltg
Starks
quarterback Tony Thompson , who
was starting his first game of the
season , and also recove r ed a
fumble .
"Our kids did a great job on

dt•fenst•," seild St

Albans Coat'/!

l-Im ncr Criddle, who will now ha vt· a
teom 1n the state rhampwn stl lp
game for Ole second time 1n fou r
y_t·ars
Tinsley , who eornpl('ted 5 of 12
Jl'ISS&lt;'S for 74 yards against an often lea ky f'otn t Pleasant defense . got Sl
Al bans on the scor eboard for lht·
first tim e with just 2:19 left in th&lt;·
first half by throwing an 8-y ard Tl&gt;
pass to reserve w1de rect'lver CreF!

Hodges llodges entered the scoring
wh1ch cover ed just four plct}S
afte a short Point Pleasant purl , fur
the fir st tim e on that play .
A 26-yard pass from Tms ley to
driv~.

lku n · Arthur came two plays beforl'
T111 slt·~

·s Sl"ortnJ., pass

St Albans scored Its fintt l two
l.OUI'hdowns in the fourth quarter .
Aftt-r ('hris Almek picked off a
'llu 1m pson pass and returned it to
Uw lltg lllacks· 30 rard line, it took
Tm slcy JUSI two plays to pass St.
\!bans to another score . On first
dnwn . hl" threw 21 yards to Arth ur to
l1ll' niin· yard line, then hit Amic k on
the next play for the tou chdown .
Alter ano ther short Point Pleasant
p11nt . Tmsley directed the fina l Red
Dragons ' scorin ~ dri ve, an ll -yard,
H-play drive whirh th e Junior
quarterba ck ca pped himself wit h a

two-yard rur with l: 30 left.
Nick 1\trcaso nussed two 22-yard
fie ld goa l attempts for St. Albans.
but did convert all three extra point
luc ks .
Arntck, in a ddition to his
mtercephon. kept Point Pleasant
backed up a ll day with punts of 58, 38
and 48 yards .
St. Albans led 205-57 in total
ya rdage as the Dragon s picked up
131 yards on the ground , 87 by
Demetrius Watson on 87 ca rries
Derek Christian gamed 42 yards on
17 carries to break the 1,000 yard
ma rk for the season. He now ha s
I ,ol8 yards.

Thompson mtsfired on all eight of
hts pass attempts and the Btg Blacks
turned the ball over five times on
tu rnovers, four of the m on fumbles .
Jay Minton gamed 60 yards on
nine carnes for the Big Blacks, but
the rest of the backfield was limited
to minus three yards .
Scor e by quarters
Pl Pleasant
0 0 0 0 0
Sf Albans
7 0 0 14 11
St A ~ Hodges 8 pass from Tin
sley ITu r caso kick l
St A -- Am ick 9 pass I r om T1nsley
(Turcaso kick )
St A
T i nsley 2 run (Tu r ca~o
k1Ck)

A 7.900 es t

East
W . L. T . Pel . PF PA
8 5 0 615 150 196
B 5 0 615 334 137
)Jl:S

1.4Y

J.LJ.

417
JOB

146
1 16

18&lt;1
304

169
769
.615
231

315
334
319
190

174
115
3 10
344

692

2 40
180
170
191

201
159
181
131

.692

152

.615
.615
462
131

284
2•8
103
159

231
155
225
135
186

.692
.538
.462
308
. 15.4

263
135
205
193
189

200
119
280
2.50
275

538
538

248

New Orleans 7 6 0

301&gt;

0
0

.308
077

228
154

146
269
307
365

Houston
Pittsburgh
Cleveland
Cincinnat i

San Q;ego
Denver
Oakland
Seattle
Kan . c;ty

U

I 0
4 9 0
Central
10 3 0
I0 3 0
8 5 0
3 10 0
10

0

4

0 538

7 6
6

6

0

.500

5 8

0

.385

East
Philaaelphia 9 4 o
Dallas
8 5
Washington 8 5 0
N. Y. Giants 6 7 0
St. Louis
3 10 0
Central
Tampa Bay 9 4 0
Chicago
7 6 0
Minnesota
6 7 0
Green Bay • 9 0
Detroit
1 11 0
West
Los Ang .
7 6 o

o

Athmta

4

San Fran .

1 12

9

PORK
ROAST

Some men taste it all: Rich
w~rm flavor. Smooth even
taste. Solid satisfaction.
Only from the camel Filters
blend of Turkish and domestic
tobaccos.

LOIN
$119
ENDS................. ~~~ ..•.

09

FRANKIES

each

departmen

SJ.ooo.oorer year .

to

8 PAK

$1

99~

$359

COFFEE

. LB.

Reg., Drip or Elec. Perk

Limit 1

CARDINAL

TOMATO

$1000 purchase

••$101
... 2 1&amp;"·
Con•

....

• 01

SOUP.~~-~~... 4/88c

PUDDING CUPS ......................... ;i.e;
DEL MONTE

69c
PEACHES
NOODLES ............... ~~!.~~-... 59c
29 OL
•••••••••••••••••••••••••

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

RALSTON 14 oz. BRAN or 12 oz. CORN

12 oz. pkg 0''
pkg. 99~

OZ.

RICE CHEX. ••• •••• ••• •••••• •••••••15••••
•• ••,
OZ. pkg. 93~
WHEAT CHEX •••••••• •••••NABISCO
•• ••••••••• U••••••
oz. $} 09

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY

COCONUT CHOC. DROPSBAKERY
••••••••••••••••
BUY

3

As an i ndepe ndent insurance
agency, our primary function 1S
to provide policies wh ic h afford
financial protection in case ot
loss .
But, we also have a vital 1n
terest in loss preventi on . as
should our clients . We en courage
care , caution and safety
preventive measures whi c h can
keep that car accident from hap ·
penlng , that building t i r e tram
starting, that home burglary
from being comm i tted .
Prevention saves life, limb and
property .. . and helps control in ·
surance costs and premiums .
When losses do occ ur, our
policyholders can c ount on pro ·
tectlng and serving in time and
need . But we still sav - preven
tion is the best policv .

Uli ·OJ
Lvs.

BORDEN GLACIER CLUB

ICE CREAM .............. ~.:.A.~. $1 19
2

DALE C. WARNER

VALLEY BELL OLD FASHIONED
Warn1ng The Su rg eon General Ha s Oetefmtned
That C1garette Smok1ng Is Dangerous to Your Healt h

OEL MONTE

16

01

DEL MONTE

16

o1

DEl MONT£

16 01
Con•

OH MO~H

32 o.r
Bonlo

NESTlES QUIK ............ __ ..... _______ .. _.. _2 c:~ $TI
DUNCAN HINU

SUNDAE CONES·· .. &amp; FOR ggc

WITH

1n

INSTANT

COFFEE

1 0-oz.
Jar

... . . . . . . . ,~ s, ••

;•.-t ~}-

19 oz.
BOX

IDAIRY VALUES I
PLASTIC

2% MILK .........................~2.~.A.~ .. 89~
CAROl NAL

•:,:·

MAXWELL HOUSE

ROMAN BLEACH ................................ ~:~ 69~

CAKE MIXES

•

COOKING OIL .......... _........... !~.~:. s 1 79
CARNATION COFFEE MATE
"H.·~.~· s P'

WINDSHIELD WASHER FLUID .......... ~:~

DUNCAN HINES Asst. Flavors

5
H

MONARCH

CHEER 4:~:z.

IHOLIDAY SHACK FIXIHS I
I! RAN or 11 ow CO RN

2 c.". 79(
4,.
TOMATOES ... ........ ..... .......................• c."
2 89(
STEWED TOMATOES •"""' "•" •"' " .... , ., ,
79(
CATSUP .............. .. ... ... ,,.. ,, ..,.... ,.,, .. ,,.,
SPIIACH ........................................

FAMILY BROWNIE MIX .

MONARCH

MONARCH

DEL MONTE FRUIT AND

12

,_

POTATOES ~~. $139

MONARCH

CHEX. CEREALS •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ...

romurov

2

PORK &amp; BEANS .....~.~~- 69~

SEEDLESS RAISINS ................ .

(11116, lie

__ ___

BAG

U.S. NO. 1 OHIO

DATES IOVEMBER 26-DECEMBER 1, 1979

DEL MONTE

Clerk

.._

APPLES

LB.
BAG

DEL

DEL MONTE C HUN~ . Sli C ED OA CRUSHED

Ol

99

e

ITS OUR BIB

19

Can

RALSTON 14

SI!_PERIOR

SLICED

VAUGHAN'S- YOUR
CHRISTMAS BAKING SUPPLY CENTER

1 6 -oz

Attest :
Jane Wa lton

992-714)
102 w . IV\;., n

LB.

ONIONS

FRUIT COCKTAIL

H D Brown , Jr
Pres1den t

INS.

79c .

PER HEAD

NEW CROP
YELLOW

DEL MONTE

2. Tha thiS rental shall
be charged
retroactive
from January 1st . 1979, un
til the sa id water and sewer
departments of the villa~e
of Pomeroy vacate sa1d
premises .
Passed th is 19th day of
November . 1979 .
Clarenc e Andrews
Ma yor

1zor

USDA FANCY RED, GOLDEN DELICIOUS
OR WINESAP

LETTUCE

THURSDAY ONLY

PINEAP PLE .. ... . .....

49

FRESH CRISP
ICEBERG HEAD

ALL WEEK

pay

09

BOLOGNA ................L.B~. 89¢ BACON.:~.~~.

1na

l •mll Tw o wo!h

Alfred A. Duff, Eunice T. Duff to
Ronald R. Cremeans, catherine S.
Q-emeans,_l..ot, Pomeroy.
·

CENTER

SUPERIOR BY THE PIECE···················

•

8 PAK

Allen E . Ball, Rita Ball Lewis,
Franklin Lewis to Edward Ball ,
Hazel Ball, 3.5 acres, Chester.
Glenn Vance to Eugene Durham,
Marie Durham, Right of Way, Meigs

SUPERIORS

-RESOLUTION -

rer

:~~PS . . . . . . .~~-.!.1

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

BE IT RESOLVED by
the Council of the Village of
Pomeroy , all
members
thereto occurring
I. That due to the tinan
cia l condition of the Village
of Pomerov it will be
necessary to c harge as re n
tal for the ofiice space now
occupied by the water and
sewer oeparrmems ot the
village of Pomerov , the
sum of S6,000.00
year '

....

LOIN

CENTER

VAUGHAN'S

RC COLA
RC COLA

Margaret Faye Hamilton to
Olarles D. Hamilton, 37.61 acres,
Sutton .
Otarles D. Hamilton to Margaret
Faye Hamilton , .55 acre, Sutton .
Violet Srruth, Affidavit, Olive .
Roena Pear I Johnson, Paul T.
Johnson to 'I'bornas G. Cooper,
cathy y . Cooper. Parcel, Salisbury.

PORK

UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Thursday ' s Games
Detroit 20, Chicago 0
Houston 30, Dal l as 24
Sunday ' s Games
Buffalo 16, New England 13, ot
Pittsburgh 33, Cleveland J(J , ot
New York Giants 14, Washington 6
Cincinnati 34, St . Louis 28
New Orleans 37, Atlanta 6
Minnesota 23, Tampa Bay 22
Philadelphia 21 , Green Bay 10
San Dieoo 28, Kansas City 7
Los Angeles 26, San Francisco 20
Miami 28, Baltimore 24
Oakland \A , Denver 10
Monday ' s Game
New York Jets at Seattle
Thursday, Nov . 29
New Engl"nd "'Miami
Sunday, Dec . 2
Baltimore at New York Jets
Chicago at Tampa Bay
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
Denver at Buffalo
~troit at Philadelphia
Green Bay at washington
Houston at Cleveland
San Francisco at St. Louis
Seattle at Kansas City
New York Giants at Dallas
M inne!tOta at Los Angeles
Atlanta at San Diego
Monday , Dec . 3
Oakland at New Orleans

Madge Y Blac kwood, aka
Margllfet Blackwood to Cecil Black wood , 62 .98 acres, 34.50 acres .
Scipio .
Sharon stark to Sherman Gerlach ,
Gamet M. Gerlack, Lots, Pomeroy .
Cecil Mason, Tiny Mason to John
lloore , Lerone Moore, 5 acres, Bed·
ford.

WHOLE

SA USA GE ........L.B:.

National Conference

- -· -- .

~~~ ...............~;.!.109 PORK

BOSTON BUTT

PORK

west
3 0 .769 333 1 11

~

~~~:~N~:~~:

HOME MADE

American Conference

6

Mary A. Jacobs,l..ots, Pomeroy .
Genevieve G. Harvey, Exec ., Edna s. Hart, dec . to Arthur Eblen,
Adria Eblen, E. _ Lot 433, Pon&gt;en)y

Gerald Kell y, Bonnie J . Kelly , to
Paul Eichinger, June Eichinger ,.~
acre, Salisbury .
Paul Eichinger , June Eichinger to
Gerald Kelly, Bonnie Kelly , .048
acres, Salisbury.
Madge Y. Blackwood , Admix .,
Paul T . Peck, dec. to Thaddeus Dye,
OOacres, Columbia .

CHOPS............... ~:.

At A Glance
By The Associated Press

I

Property
T ranS f ers

PORK

National Football Leilgue

5

Thomas E . Smith . Cynthia T .
Smith to Nancy Jaspers , Corbett
Oeek, Parcel, Sutton .

...

"'he Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov . 26,1979

QUARTER LOIN

Pro standings

Miami
New Eng
t:HJtfaiO
N. Y . Jets
Baltimore

•
M e Igs

'

,.

.

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday , Nov . :IIi, 1979

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday, Nov . 26, 1979

YOU C AN 'T WIN

T~t:

IN WASHINGTON

INFLATiON GAM[

RUL[~ o B~GIN AT '~TAf&lt;T '

~PIN 1-'0i N IE R AND 6 0 TO &gt;O PAC[ IT
INDICAH2&gt; . F1R2JT PLAYtR TO BAC I&lt;: DuWN TO ' :o&gt;TART' WIN&lt;l.

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

show

Then he 'd asSJgn them to play the
three lead roles tn " Charlie 's
Angel&gt; ...
( ..arter ·s supporters and detractors alike have been dumbfounded
by ht.s mfunatmg practice of attrartinl&lt;(

exc.:ept ionaHy
to se rv e tn

talented

people
his adnumstratiOn, then mist reating th em
1n absurd or Implausible roles .
The most recent example of the
pn•s1 dcnt 's penthant fur puttmg the
right man Jll the wrong job i!S the
belated transfe1 of Hobert S. Strauss
to the position of c ha innan of car -

ter 's 1980 campaign committee .
That ·s precisely the type of job
Strauss should have held throughout
the Carter administre~tion - a senior
poli tical a dviser to a president who
sorely needed such counsel .
Strauss en joys the well -deserved
reputallon of being one of
Washingt on 's most sophisticated
political operatives . But Carter , to
his own detriment , allowed tho,..
talents to bf· frittered away for more
than 2 1...l years .
After he moved mto the White
House m ea rly 1977. Carter
des tgnateLl Strauss as Special
R e pr esentative
fo r
Tr a d e
Negottatwns . That ·s the political
equivalent of assigning Walter
Cronkite to the news department of a
small rad10 statwn .
As the president began his lonK
downward slide 1n Ire popularity
polls . Strauss was ra CI11!=: around the
globe to negotiate trade ag reements

invnlvmg
Korean
fo otwear ,
Japanese oranges and assorted
other esoteric u11port tlerns.
Ear lier this year , when it became
apparent to vi rt ually everyone m
this city 1except C.a rterl tha t Ute
presi dent was tn deep trouble
politically . Stra uss Implored Carter
to g1ve him a senior political post- a
move that m~ght have headed off tile
challenge to the president from
within the Oemocratlc Party .

SOLRC'f~~

Of ENERGY
BU f.NOS AJHES . Argcntl!la 'AP 1
- Laun Am erica can suppl y 11
percent of 1ts

en eq~y

needs by 1995

through th e development of non~
conventional sources of ('nergy.
a rrnrding to ll report by the
Ba nloche Foundauon of Argenttna .
The stud y. funded by the U.l'i
Development Program . mdJcates
tl1ese non-&lt;:onvent tonal sources solar power. wmd. plant and ammal
wa'ites. gt'Olhennal. waste he at and
alcohol - a ccount foc unly 0.8
!)(•rcent of LatHl Amenca·s e neq.{}
prodlWtlon
ll ~ ay s solar powPr has t.he
greatest pol enual 0\.: cr i~ per cent
of l.L~lm AmerlCa·s population lives
in tile three Jreds best swted for
solar enerl{y . \1exieo. th e Canb bean
and Brazil

Tu separate two g lasses lhat have
stuck together . place tile bottom
glass m hot water a nd fill th e top one
wtth cold water

Ins tead, Carter destgnated
Strauss as a special ambassador in
charge of advancing peace ut the
Middle East. Nut until the eve of the
fo m1al entry into the presidential
race of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy , 0Mass .. was Strauss futally patred up
wtlh a job appropriate to his
awesome political skills .
Other examples abound . Former
\\~ sconsin Gov. Patrick J . Lucey
and form er Umted Auto Workers
President Leonard F . Woodcock.
both conswrunate politicians , were
awarded ambassadorships by Car ter and shipped off to Mexico a nd
China, respectively .
Lucey clearly was the wrong
c hoice for the Mexi co Cit y
dip lomati c post . if for no other
reason than his inability to speak
Spantsh. He now has resigned from
the job and joined Kennedy's entourage as deputy ca mpa ign
manager .
An early supporter of John F . Ke nnedy in the 1960 presidential race,
Lucey probably would have joined
this year's Kennedy campatgn m
any event But Carter missed a
chance to take advantage of his
political expertise during the initial
years of his admi11ll&gt;1ration .
Similarly , Woodcoc k's union
seems destmed to be among Ken nedy's most active supporters . But
tile former UAW president could
have provided Carter with in valuable political advice during the
past year if he hadn 1 been dispatched to Peking, on the other side of
tile globe .
Annie Wexler , one of the country's
most savvy political operatives, was
buri ed in the Commerce Department burectucracy early in Ca rter's
term. She was elevated to the Wlute
House staff onl y when presidential
aides began a frenzied search in the
spring of 1978 for a successor to
Midge Costanza, who resigned after
becorrung an embarrassment.to tile
administration .
Carter might not be struggling
today to salvage his political career
1f he had properly used the political
talent that was readily available . Instead , his belated efforts to remedy
the situation could prove to be too tittle too late .

By DooGraff

GO DOWN

I POINT

COLUMBUS, Ohio i AP 1- At least
stx state colleges and universities
have told a Senate committee lilat
th ey need nea rl y $14 miWon to buy
more land for lilcir campuses, at
costs ranging fr om 110 ,000 lo
1250,000 per acre
The tr requests a nd projects
eannarked f&lt;r 30 other higher
education in stitutions a re mcluded
m
the
two.year
c ap it al
lmprovements bill on whi ch the
Senate Finance committee has been

holding hearings th is monlil .
Se nate leaders sa id Iiley may trim
as much as 1200 million from tile
nearly 1775 million , House-passed
proposal. 'Ine btU mcludes $488
mtlllon for brick s and mortar
prOJft'ts m college campuses.
An a nalysi s of the Wliversity
projects, based on r esponse to a
ques ti onnair e sent by finan ce
Ch a1rman Harr y Mes hel. DYoungstown . w.,; prepared by the
LegiSlative Bud~e t Office .
The
107-page
do cume nt

J

I

Shop for credit
Hy I DUlSE COOK
A.&lt;Soriated P ress Writt&gt;r
Shop for credit before you shop fo r
g1fts lilis Chi-istmas
HOW you pay affects WHAT you
pay for goods and services and you
can wa ste hundreds of dollars 1f you
don't know wha t to loo k for .
" Se ns ibl y use d , c redi t i.s an
un porta nt financial tool," says th e
Federal Heserve Bank of New Yor k
tn a conswncr guide "Misuse d. it
can result in default . bankruptcy
and loss of reputation."
There are two ma jor types of
cred it . closed an d open .
A closed-end loan is a one-time
arrange ment. You bor row a fi xed
amount for a fixed penod of tim e
and repay it ln regular insta llmen ts
- usually monthly .
Open- end cr edit , also called
revolving credit. is re usa ble. You
can borrow over and over, up to a
pre-t&gt;et level, without ma kin g a new
ap plica tion each time . Hank cards .
retailers and ove rdraft checking
progr ams involve r evolving rredit.
The federal Trulil~n - Lendin ~ law
requires creditor s to tell you how
much you have to pay to use the1 r
money . There are two important
figures . the fmance charge a nd til e
annual percentage rate.
The fina nce charge is the dollar
amoWlt yo u pa y ror th e credit It

summari zes til e data prov1ded by
tile institullons a nd offers three
methods that senators m1ght use 1n
try1ng to a tt ach prt ori!J es for th e
projects.
It also contains an anal ysis of each
pro ject, focusin g on questions of
justification and factors raised by
responses to U1e questionnru.re .
Cleve la nd St a te Uni versity is
seek1ng $7 million for land
purchases. th e largest r ea l estate
req uest of the six schools
It 's in addition to S6 mtllion
appropriated for la nd m the 19 77-79
biermlWTl. according to the bud~et
office report The $7 million ts
expected to be used to buv 26 acres
at a cost of S2!i0,000 per acre, the
study sai d.
In additlon , a uruverstty request
for a Convoca twn Hall will require
the purchase of eight addit ional
ac res at an estim ated cost of 1200.000
per acre .
The ll ouse vers.wn of the bill
In cludes 13 m illi On for land
atquisitwn at th e Cni versit y of
Akron , but " it is not dc&lt;:tr how the
land to be purcha st•d IS to be used by
the univer Sity ." tlw study .c.aid
The $1 mlllion appropriation for
Youngstown Sta te University would
be used to buy 60 acres at a cost of
$1 6,667 per acre . TI1e land would be
acquired for futur e parkmg Sltes and
ot her uses, includin g spec ia l
recreational and research f~c1li ti es
Shawnee Sta t e Co mmunit y
Coll e~e seeks $970 ,000 for land
acquiSition and site preparation.
with $754.400 to be used to p;1rcha se
four acres with buildings a t a cost of
$188.600 pe r acr e.
The bill con tain s an appropriation
of S828.00C for land and s1te
development at Columbus Technical
lnslitute. But tl1e college states the
appropriat ion 1s in rrru r and
un nePded Slnt ·e It ·s already
contained Ill an earlier bill . tile study
sa td .
TIH! institute sa td tf a requested
parkmg garage ts deleted from the
bill . however . it would request
$325,000 for land to use for
developing surface parking .
The Terra Technical College is
seeking the lowest per~ c r e amount
for property. saying a proposed
branch ca mpus in ~' indlay would
require the purchase of fi ve anes at
a cost of $50 ,000 .

" That isn 't any o ld lran,an stuff you r e puttino 1n
there, is II ?·

L- - .- -----

•
•

The lntematlonal Year of the
Olild was the prograrp topic used by
MiSl!IMary V. Heibel at a meeting ol
Friendly Circle at Triruty Ch urch
Tuesday night.
.
Seripture quotations concerning
children followed the reminder by
the leader that the United Nations m
1976 made plans for the Interna tional Year of the Child to be observ ·
ed in 1979 to promote the welfare of
children everywhere_

The good news

'Ohio Perspective'

Berry's World

I

j

Today's commentary

Right man, wrong job
WASHINGTON ! NEA l
If
President ('_arter were in tile
bu.sme~s uf producing televiswn
r&gt;ro~r aJns , he 'd score a dazzling
coup by c on v mnn~ Robert Hedford.
Sylvester Stallone and Paul
Ne\I!TIJan to co-otar m t he same

Editorial opinions,
comments

'Year of the Child' program topic

•'

Sl r Humphrey Cdbt·rt set ~ ;u\ on
lu.-.. hr ~ t np to /uucn('a m 1~7 8

cover s interest charges and any
ser vice fees, insurance premiurru; ,
ete. Su ppose, for example, you
borrow $100 for one year and have to
pay 17 in mterest , plus a Sl service
fcc . The finance charge is $8 .
The annual percentage rate sometimes listed as tile APR - is
the relat ive cost of credit on a yearly
ba sis. Aga in , suppose you borrow
1100 for a one-year period and pay a
finance charge of S8 If you can keep
the en tire $100 for the full year,
paying back the whole amount at
once, the annua l percentage rate is 8
percent
It is more likely , however, lilat
you will pay ba ck the money in 12
monlilly installments of S9 each. You
don 't get to use the $100 for a full
year ; you gel to use less and less of
tile money each monlil . The a!111ual
percentage rate is 14.5 percent.
The Ia" also requires lenders who
gra nt o pe n~nd cred it to tell you how
they C'aiculate in terest They may
base c ha rges on the adjusted
balance. on the ave rage dail y
Ual a n c~ or on the previous ba lance.
The ad justed balance method is
the simp lest and it is also th e
cheapest fcr tll e customer. The
&lt;Ted itor takes the unpaid balance,
subtracts ony payme nts, then
fi Kw·es out the interest on the
d.1ffere nce . Suppose. for example ,
you have a balance of $400. You pay
1300 during tile billing period. Te
creditor cha rge• interest on $100 . At
l 1...1: pe rcent a month - the most
common ba sic rate for revolving
credtl - you would pay $1.50 in
interest .
The average daily balance melilod
is mor(' complicated and mor e
('ns1 ly It ta kes in to a ccount wh en
you pay ~s weU a s how much you
pa y. ll1e creditor adds up your
balances for ever y day in the billmg
period. then di vtdes by the number
of day s to get a n average . Th e
mtcrest ch arge is applied to tile
average . Ta ke that same $400
IJalance . Again, you pay 1300 . The
cred ito r gets your pa yment on the
15th da y of a 30-day billing period .
Your total balances for the monlil
will be$7.500 - 15daysat$400and 15
ol $100 . Divide by 3() and you get an
a\·erage datly balance of $250 The
mten·~1 . at 11 '2 percent , is $3.75 more Ul an twi ce as much as yo u pay
if the credi tor uses the adjusted
balance meUmd .
The previous balance method is
th e worst deal of all . You get no
credit at all for payments made
dunng a billin g period . You pay
1nt er es t on the fult am ou nt
outstan ding at the end of the last
blilm g penod Un der lil is system .
you would pay S6 in interest on the
$400 acrount - no ma tter how much
yo u paid during the month .
If you have a problem with a
tTedi t card or cha rge account , you
may he protected by tile Fair Credit
Billin g Act.
The act sl"l5 down rules for
rred1to rs and conswner s to rollow in
case of dis putes over billing error s.
llt'r t'·s how tt wor ks:
If you get a billlilat has a mistake ,
send a written notice to the creditor
withm 60 days of the time you get the
bill.ll . Yo u get no credit at all for
payments ma de during a billing
pt"riod You pay interest on tile full
amount ou l•ta ndin g at tile end of tile
la st bll lin ~ period . Under t his
system , you would pay $6 in interest
oo the $400 areount - no matter how
much you paid during the month .
If you have a problem with a
crl!d it card or char ge account ,you
may beoney
You don't have to pay tile dtputed
am ount unt il the arg umen t is
settled If the origina l bill turns out
to be right, however. you not only
have to pay tile amount that you
questioned , }'OU a lso havt' to pay any
fin ance (·har ges that accumu latL'd tn
U1e meant une

L ggs lose ;t s m uch quality in a day
at rou1n tPJnpt"•rature as they would
m •• ~ e t'l&lt; 111 Uw nJfiiSt ra tur

It is certainly not being played according to the usual script in such
situations .
Assassination of the strongman
has not been followed by civil war,
seizure of power by a vengeful opposition or a military takeover.
Instead, South Korea is moving
toward something it has had little
experience with to date
democratic rule - m a more or less
cooperative effort of all the coun try's major power centers.
Opposition politicians and tile
inheritors of the late Park Chung
Hee 's ruling party have agreed on a
basic plan for revising a constitution
that Park had tailoril18de to his own
authoritarian specifications and
choosing a new goverrunent in
national elections next year .
Both potitical sides are on record
publicly as opposing the strongarm
system under which Park held
unquestioned power for 18 years.
And in this they are reported to be
supported wbere it really counts -in
the anned forces .
These developments come as particularly welcome news to the
United States , which almost ac·
cide!1tally became deeply involved
in Korean affairs.
A backwater of the Japanese Empire little known to the outside
world, Korean could have been swifUy overrun by Soviet land forces
upon Japan's sudden collapse. A
token U.S. contingent hastily moved
into the soulilem provinces to effect
the partition agreement .
Forty years, one war and
nwnerous political crises later, tile
Korean connection is among the
most complex the United States has
developed in the post-World War II
world . Some 38,000 American troops

P HOTO SHOW
NEW YOHK 1AP 1 - An exhibit of
166 photog raphs by Henri Cartier Bressn" is being shown at tile
International Center of Photography
lilrough Jan . 6, 1980
Fol lo wing
Jts
New
York
engagement , the exhibition will
begin an extensive national tour . A
two-yea r ;· Jlerary for the show
in cl udes ,he Art Institute of
Ch1cago ; Museum of F'me Arts ,
Boston ; Co rcoran Gallery of Art ,
Washington ; Seattle Art Musewn ;
Philadelphia Musewn of Art ; Dallas
Museum of Fme Arts; Cleve land
Museum of Art, and tll e William
Rockhill Nelson Gallery and Atkins
Museum, Kansas Oty .

I Hoofs and Paws
By Marlon C . Cnwford
Meigs Cowlty
Humaoe Society
POMEHOY - I noted with in·
terest an item that was in the paper
a week or so ago about the Village of
Syracuse.
I've been saying for years that if
the Ia ws were enforced there
wouldn t be animal problems .
Pet owners that insist on allowing
their pets to run loose are not only
breaking the law, but endangering
the lives of your animals. The county
officials should be doing what
Syracuse is doing - picking up all
strays and fining owners, but , well ,
that would take some time and effort
so I guess it will never be done .
Congratulations, MByor Pic kens
and your council 1
Glad to see someone doing
something about the animal
problem . Now don't think I'm being
mean to want to take away those
eats' and dogs ' freedom - I lovt
animals very much, but I would like
to see people care for them in the
same way I do . I never let my pets
out of my sight . Mine will never be
hit by a car, stolen, or hurt by
anyone .
While on the subject - have you
read about the dognapping going on
in various ctties nearby with the
animals being sold by ' 'parts east."
Quite a few were picked up recently
in a raid in Huntington and if any of
you are missing beautiful animals
that you feel might have been stolen ,
it might be worth your time to give
the Huntington Hwnane Society a
call and describe your missing pet .
That nwnber for your convenience IS
1~23-2'123.

Anyone missing a real pretty
black and white Border collie ' We
got a call Saturday evening from a
truck driver who hit a large dog on
Route 33 between Leading Creek
Road and Bradbury Road .
We went immediately to that area
and found the driver's grill all over
the road and lying in a pool of blood
nearby was a real nfce male dog who
probably didn't know what hit him .
So, if you are mWing such an
animal - you needn't look for him
any longer - he will never suffer
again . Now for those of you who
think a fenced.tn yard Is "out of
sight" - I have done a Utile research
and can give you a pretty good idea
of what it would cost you to put up a
pretty decent sized fence in your
back yanl to protect your pet and yet
allow it to have tis necessary exer·
cise .
If you have a small or mediwn
animal you ·can get a roll of 2 by 1
type fencing, 111 inches high for~.
For a large dog you would need the
6lknch fencing and it costs ~ . The
studded tee posts you would need to
secure the fenrtng pv~ry 8 to 10 feet
cost S2.4Seach. By attaching one end

Wedding
plans
completed

remain as a deterrent to a new Communist invasion . U. S. investment 10
the Korean economy comes to more
than S300 million And the influence
is mutual, with Korea increasingly a
factor in the American domestic
economy , culture and politics .
Democracy may be beginning to
bloom in Korea , but II remains an
exceedingly fragile flower . There
will be many opportunities for
disaster before elections are ac·
tually held and a popular govern·
ment takes power .
But at the moment the future looks
promising . Korea's leaders - both
those in power and those who would
like to be - seem to be agreed that
the possible fruits of conflict with
each other would not be worth the
like ly cost to the co untry's
e xuberant economy and to its
security .
That may be self interest but it is
also good sense .

of that 100 foot roll to one corner of
the rear o • your house and taking it
out to make three sides attachJng it
to the other rear corner of your
home you lutve a ntce size fence and
need never worry about your animal
being ltilled by a car, other anlmals ,
etc . Wouldn t the expense and effort
be worth the peace of mind that you
would have'
If you want to know where to get
the fencing at the price I quoted , just
give me a call at 992-7880 or possibly
you can do some checking around
and come up with an even lower
price .
If you can get your hands on some
locust posts you could cut down on
the expense of that fen ce and personally I think they look a heck of a
lot better ... more rustic looking . For
those that want a more solid fence
than the 2 by 1, there is, of coUI'lie,
the 1 by 2. It is more expensive
though - with a cost of $73 for a 100
foot roll 48 inches high .
Let's see, a week or so ago I told
you that we have plan.. you can lutve
lutve for a good dog house Uust go to
our Thrift Shoppe in Middleport and
pick one up, free ), now I 've
suggested the type fence you can get
- now for those of you who want a
dog to put in that dog house and in side that nice fence , just give us a
call and we 'II accommodate you.
If we don't have wlutt you want at
the moment - just leave your name
and phone nwnber and w. will call
you later on when we get just the
animal you want ... dog , puppy, cat
or kitten . Just call~ .
In closing I would like to have each
of you read the following poem by
Oar a Putnam, that I think you 'II get
a kick out of.
EQUAL RIG tiTS
U Mother'd ever been a pup, or even
just a boy,
Some of the things that bother her
I'm sure would not annoy ;
Like when she te115 my O!ristopher
in accents shall' and clear,
"Out with that bone ! You cannot
bring the filthy thjing in here! ''
He droops hJs little shaggy ears and
looks so hurt and sad;
I know he feel! just Uke I do
sometimes when I've been bad And really dido 't mean to be .
My Mother does forget you have to
keep your treasures safe ,
Just like her rings. And yet while lit ·
tie boys are luckier,
Wlth pockets in their j08Jill for
lmlves and bait and chewing gum
And toads and jelly ~. a little
dog has nothing .
It really isn't fairWlth all this tall&lt; of equal lights ; But
no one !leel1l8 to care .
I'm going to urge all mother dogs, If
ever I've a chance,
When they are making puppies to
put pockets in their pants .

INVEST!TUHE AND HEDEDICATIDN
CEREMONY- Til"'"' members of HuUand Brownie
Troop 1293 were invested and re-&lt;ledicated in a
ceremony Tuesday afternoon at the RuUand United
Methodist Church . Parents were guests and
refr eshments were served followtng tile ""remony . In
the group were, left to right , fron t row, Amber Eblin,

Nicole Hartwell, Angie Elliott, Tracee Leark, Usa
Darst, and Tracy Milam ; second row, Vicky Priddy,
Shelley Black, Melislla Pettry, Sherri Blair, RoMea
Davis, and Angie Black ; and thin! row, Pat Hysell,
leader , Tracy Michael, Cylinda Frederick, Laurie
Black, and Judith Eblin . Members of the trovp not present for the ceremony were Stephanie Walker , Jody
Tillis, and Julie Hatfield.

New leaflet offered by cancer society
More than 112,000 Americans will
be told that they ha ve cancer of the
colon or rectum this year . Smce
early detection IS crucial to saving
lives, there i.s gr eat interest in a simple n•w application of an old
diagnostic test. acconling to the
Ame rican Cancer Society .
The most recent publication from
the American cancer Soctety, ac·
cording to professional education
chairper.10n Rhonda Dailey , H.N.,
~tes . "The test is called Gua1a c
test for hidden blood. A cancer
growing inside the colon or large
bowel can cause bleeding. The
presence of blood in the stool, which
can be detected by this test, may
mean that an unsuspected cancer
may be present and the patient
should have other tests . "
The Guaiac test used to be done in
physician's office on a stool
specinlen collected by the patient.
Now there IS a do-it -yourself Guaiac
test kit. A patient is instructed to
place stool samples from three consecutive bowel mov ements on
specially-prepared slides . The
patient is advised to follow a special
diet for at least one day before perfunning tile test. The slides are then
analyu&lt;l for the presence of invisible blood .
"The Guaiac test is onl y a
preliminary one . Condit ions other
than cancer can cause bleeding
within the boweL If there IS a
positive findin g," Dr . Mansfield,
medical adviser for the local Cancer
Unit suggests, ·' it 's time for a procto
or other tests ."
She pointed out that two out of
three pat1ents with colo recta l cancer
can be saved with the variety of
treatment s available today .
·Thanks to tile team approach ci
using various methods - surgery ,
radiation, drugs - we can do a great
deal to help patients," she said, " but
the outcome depends very much on
how early we are able to spot a cancer ."
F'or the purposes of early detection , the Meigs County ACS Unit ad-

SECOND BIRTIIDA Y - The
...,ood birthday of Ryan Wilder muth was celebrated re&lt;eoUy al
lbe home ofltlJ parenls . Mr . and
Mn Jtm WDdHmuth, Galloway .
A big bird cake theme wa•
carried out. C:U..II """" frl•nds
and relaUves of Ryan.

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

vises au men and women over the

age of 4{) to have regular physical
checkups including Guaiac tests
and-or other tests a physician may
suggest . " Any change in bowel
habits, should also be reported to a
physician ," according to Mrs .
Dailey .
The Meigs County ACS Unit has a
new leaflet , " Facta on colorectal
cancer ," available free of clutrge, at
American Cancer Society, Meigs
County Unit, Post Office Box 692,
Pomeroy, Ohio ~769 .

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mro. Herber! Rouob

Mr . and Mrs . Lester Housh, Mrs.
Vicki Cundiff and Jeremy Roush
visited Mr. and Mrs . Don Riffle and
family at Wheelersburg Sunday.
Sidney Kane of New Brighton
spent a recent weekend with Mrs.
Eula Wolfe and son, Aaron, and
• helped Mrs. Wolfe, along with her
family, celebrate here 80th birthday.
Mrs. Kay Meeks of Etna Greene,
Ind., and Mrs. Clara Smith of
Colwnbus spent two weeks with Mr.
and Mrs. Elmer Pickens and son .
Mrs . Mildred Scarberry is spending the winter wilil her daughter ,
mrs. Etta Mae Johnson at Lancaster.
Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs .
Glenn Tucker were Susie Scarberry,
New Lexington; Mrs . Mildred Sea rberry, Mrs . Etta Mae Johnson , Lancaster, Mrs . fcie Tucker, lncdy
Tucker and Gillman Tucker.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
Colwnbus enjoyed a vacation
through the New England states
recently.
Hoger Sawyer of Sycamore, Ill.,
was a Saturday dinner guest of Mrs .
Eula Wolfe and son, Aaron. Mike
Swartz spent Saturday through Wednesday with the Wolfes returning to
Dixon, fJI. , on Wednesday.
Vistting Mrs. F'ocie Hayman at
her home were her daughters, Mrs .
Lillie Hart, Mrs . Linda Jewell of
Letart, W. va., are are assisting in
ea.utg for her. Others calling were
Mr . and Mrs. Milo Richardson of
Port Huron, Mich. , Mr . and Mrs.
Lewis Ours, Mrs. Mabel Shields,
Mrs, Claro Mae Sargent ol Racine,
Rev. David Harris , Mrs. Huby
Wolfe , Mr. and Mrs. Allen CUnningham and children ci Cottageville, W. Va., Mrs . PhylliS
Young, Mrs . Minday Seymore and
two children of Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Hayman, Mr. and Mrs .
Bruce Hart, Mr and Mrs . Bill Mitchell all of Colwnbus, Mrs . Bertha
Hob~on of Racme Mrs. Hayman is
recuperating from a heart condition.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy spent Saturday through
Tuesday visiting M11!. McDade's
brothers Herbert Roush who recently suffered a heart attack and
Howard Roush who is a surgical
patient at Veterans Memorial
H&lt;&gt;'Ipital, and her mother , M11!. Edna Roush and Mrs . Gladys Shields
and other relatives

Plarui have been completed for the
wedding of Mary Helen Blaettnar ,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. J ohn
Blaettnar, Wright St., Pomeroy, and
David Robert (Chip ) Haggerty, 461
Beech St., Middleport .
The wedding will be an event r:l
Dec. !at 6:3() p.m . at Trinity Church
wilil the Rev . W. H. Perrin of·
ficlating . Mrs. Fred Blaettnar will
be the organist, and the soloists will
be Mrs . Linda Mayer and Miss MBry
Boggs .
Attendants for the bride will be
Mrs . David Glowenski and Miss
Kathy Blaettnar, both sisters of the
bride , Miss Kellee Burdette, Miss
Debbie Phillips, and Miss J eannie
Drachenburg ,
Michael Childs of Middleport will
be best man , and the ushers will be
Richard Ha ggerty, Mark Hagg erty ,
Hick Blaettnar , and Charles
Caldwell
A reception honoring the couple
will be held at Royal Oak I ooge .
Miss ~'tephant e Jar oa and Miss
Gwinn Cald well will be registering
the guests.

Thanksgiving guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Arthur Slusher were Mr. and
Mrs . Ren Slusher , Alexandria , Va .
and Mr. and Mrs . E. V. Roop and
daughter, Floyds, Va .
Mr . and Mrs . Bert Glinun of
Letart Falls lutd as their Thanksgivmg dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Grirrun, Christy and Amy,
Columbus; Mr and Mrs . Steven
Grirrun and son, Nathan, Cambridge; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Glinun and David, St. Clairsville;
and Mr. and Mrs . MBtthew Nonnan
and Geoffrey, Bridgeport .
Joining Mrs. MBrjorie Goett
and Robin Campbell for Thanksgiving dinner were Mrs. Ernest Powell,
Lester Hart, and Kurtis Braley.
John Everett Wiles of Almena,
Kansas has spent the past several
days here visiting with his brother,
Orval Wiles and family .

TOUR TONIGHT
The Bend 0' the River Garden
Qub members will tour Dudley's
Greenhouse in Parkersburg followinga Christmas dinner this evening .
Members are to leave Pomeroy at 1
p.m .

Mee ting slated Dec. I 3
The Past Officers Qub of Racine
Ouipter, Order of the Eastern Star,
will hold a meeting on Dec . 13 at the
Masonic Temple . It will be the annual family &lt;ltristmas dinner party
to begin at 6 p.m . Mrs. Laura Qrcle
has announced conunittees for the
dinner meeting.
They are Halph Webb, chalnnan
of dining hall and table, Mrs. Bert
Grimm and Mrs . Grella Simpoon ,
chalnnen of the decorating commit
conunittee; Mrs . Bernard Diddle,
devotional leader, wilil Mrs . Ralph
program leader. Each member will
present a portion of the program. All
members are to take their own table
9ervice. A gill exchange will be held
and there will also be a short
business session after the dinner .

F/ou 'er s!Jou ' site nam ed
Mrs . Margaret Ella Lewis, chairman for the Meigs County Garden
Qube Association annual Ouistmas
flower show, announced today that
the show will be held at the Cllester
Elementary Sehool , Saturday and
Sunday.
Location of the show was changed
this weekend when the Meigs Local
School District teachers strike was
not settled. Entries are to be taken to
the school before noon on Saturday .
The judging will begin at I p.m .
Hours for public viewing of the ex·
hi bits is from 1 to 8 p.m . on Saturday
and from 1 to 4 p.m . on Sunday . All
entri es must remain 111 place until 4
p_m . on Sunday .

FELWWSHlP MEETS
The Light and Ufe Men's
Fellowship of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church meeting recently
in tile social room opened with a
testimonial session . Franklin Martin
had a reading about the cross following an opening prayer. The 400t
Psaim was read by Steve Eblin and
reports were given by LJoyd Wright ,
secretary, and Ed Van Inwagen ,
financial. Mike Wright and Seldon
Baker, Jr. will have devotions at the
next meeting . Refreshments were
s~rved .

It was stressed that children have
lights - rights in all areas of life,
physical, mental , spiritual, and
educational with special emphasis
this year . Miss Heibel displayed a
variety of children's books from her
collection on a candle lighted table.
One book in tile collection was from
England in 1876 given to her late
mother, MBrtha MBtthewson Reibel,
an ABC book.
The leader noted that there are
many books about r.hildren which
are actually books for adults . E~
cerpts from the various books ma~e
the point that books for children' help
instill a feeling of sell -wmth in a
child , guiding them to be sharing ,
responsible little folks in the home ,
school and community.
A prayer on Thanksgiving from a
child 's book of prayers dedicated the
offering received by Miss Mary
Elizabeth Chapman. Miss Elizabeth

f1ck presided at the business
meeting during which time plana
were completed for remembrances
for the elderly and ill members of
the church during the holiday

season.
Other holiday plans were made.
The &lt;ltristmas sock savings were
brought in by the members , and articles al food were added to the food
pantry, a continuing project .
The nominating committee , Mrs .
Donald Hauck and Mrs. Kenneth
Harris, gave their report. The pre ·
9ent officers were re-elected for the
coming year . A schedule of the new
year's program chainnen and
h~s were completed by Milts
Reibel, vice president. Mrs . Albert
Woodard and Mrs . Elza Gilmore, Jr.
served a dessert course to 14
members seated at a table
decorated in the Thanksgiving
motif .

Sorority meets, hears speaker
John Ri ce, Me1gs County Extension agent, was guest speaker when
Alplut Omicron Chapter of Delta
Kappa Gamma Society, Int . met
recentiy at the Meigs Inn .
R.J ce talked on conservation,
espec ially solar energy, and he mentioned lots of things which can be
done right now to conserve energy .
He showed a film "Solar Energy,
Heady When You Are ." Rice explained that solar energy is not just
an idea but an intense reality .
He also spoke to the group on
precautions regarding the use of
woodbumin g stoves and the safety
of chimneys . He was introduced by
and presented a gill from the
chapter by Wyckle Whitley of the
proft&gt;ssion.al affairs committee .
M£t r~are t Henso n conducted o

Holiday
program held
by church
A Thanksgiving program was held
at the Apple Grove United Methodist
Church Sunday morning, Nov . lB .
Mrs. Russell Roush led the service
with Mrs . Darrell Norris at the
plano .
The hymn "Co unt Your
Blessings" was sung by the
congregation . Scripture was read by
Herschel Norris from Psalm 95.
A hymn, "My Country 1'is of
Thee, " was sung, and Mrs. Dallas
Hili read a poem "Our Country Was
Founded on the Bible."
Other poems were : " In My
Heart ,"
by Dolly
Hill ;
"Thanksgiving Greetings," Mandy
Bussell ; " Happy Thanksgiving' "
Tracy Norris ; "The Day, " by Chriss
Shank"; A Prayer of Thanks ,"
Aimee Hill ; " His Beauties
Everywhere ," by Brenda Hunt,
Scott Barton and John Barton ; ''God
is Good to All," by Stacey Shank ;
" Children Should Go," by Michael
Bussell; " See Me, " John Barton ; "I
Thank God ," Joey Jarrell , "Happy
Thanksgiving, " Kimberly Housh ;
"From Head to Toes ," Dolly Hill ;
"Our Thanksgiving ," by Lori Hili.
Other poems were "Thanksgl ving
Day Recipe ," by Christy Roush ;
"What I Am Thankful For," by Jan
Norris ; " A Priceless Heward ," by
Peggy Hill ; " Thanks for
Everything," by Cindy Roush.
Others reading poems were Brian
Hunt , Joe Housh, Connie Milliron ,
Bryant Young and Edna Barton .
Mrs . Roush had a quiz of Bible vers es spelling " Thanksgivin g."
Prayers to open and close the
program wer:e by Mrs . Dolly Wolle.
With 52 attending , t.ne orrenng was
$89 .62.
That evening, a 6 pm . turkey din ·
ner was held at the church annex
preceding the worship service.
Tables were decorated with fall
arrangements . Rev . Dave Harris offered prayer. Attending were the
Rev. and Mrs. Harris and son ,
Nathan, Mr. and Mrs . Dallas Hili,
Mr . and Mn. Roger Roush , Mr . and
Mrs. Bill Davidson, Mike Rhodes ,
Sharon James, Mr . and Mrs . Her ber! Roush, Mr . and Mrs. Herschel
Norris, Clarence Norris. Mr and
Mrs . Rus.'lell Housh, Cindy Housh.
Mr . and Mrs Dor~~) Parsons . Joey
Jarrell, Mrs . Marshall Housh, Courtney and Joe , Mrs. Darrell Norris,
Hyan and Tracy, Mr . and Mrs. Scott
Shank, Chris and S!B""Y , Mandy
Russell and Mrs. Lucill e Rhodes .
On Sunday , Dec . 2. Rev . Harri s
will be at the church for mornin g
worship service at 9a .m .

WEEKEND GU&amp;STS
Mr and Mrs. Bruce Wallaee, Buck
and Natali e and Mr . and ~ s Alan
Wallace, Alison and Keith of canal
Wmchester have been the weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs . Dwight
Wallace and Nanc¥ . The Bruce
Wallace family also visited with her
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Gail Buck .

short business meeting . Haliett
Wood told of plans for the Dec . 8
meeting to be held in Wellston . An
auction was conducted by Myrtle
Fri, Emily Sprague and Geneva
Nolan with proceeds going into the
scholarship fund .
Olive Page, Nan Moore , Mildred
Hawley , and Jeanette Thomas were
hostesses for the dinner preceding
the meeting. Nan Moore had the invocation..
Attending from Meigs County
were Ethel Chapman , Mildred
Hawley, Lee Lee, Nan Moore,
Geneva Nola n , Olive Page ,
Margaret Parsons, Maxine Philson,
Mary V. Heibel, Emily Sprague,
Hos ahe Story , Hebecca Tate,
Jeanettr Thomas , Ann Webster,
Wy ckle Wtutley, Roberta Wilson,
and DoroUty Woodard .

Katie's
Korner
!J_v K1111e Crow
It's the season to be thankful . Jim
Fugate, Pomeroy , for instance , was
delighted to receive so many birthday cards fr om friends and

r ---

:

Social Calendar

relatives also , the many lovely gills.
He extends his sincere thanks .
Up Hacine way, Jean Allure , kindergarten teacher , and a dandy, is
ever so grateful for the help parents
ha ve given her in painting the four
classrooms
She extends thank&gt;; to John Lisle,
Joyce Manuel, Michael Hill, Suzanne Wolfe, Karen Johnson , Ken and
Qui.s Jacks, Paul and Kathy Grady,
Ted and Marsha Bussell and Marvin
and Jan Hili . Of t'O urse Jean pitched
in too.
The Pomeroy Cllamber of Commerce extends thanks to those who
completed the construction of the
stage on the upper Pomeroy parking
lot.
They extend thanks to Clluck
Mullen, Mike Mullen, Brian Mullen ,
Bruce Teaford , KeMy Klein, Paul
Stmon, Don Snyder, Jim Frecker
and Guy Morris.

MONDAY
PERSONS interested in joining
GAA at Southern High School meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m . at the high
school.
MEETING of OH Kan Coin Club
this evening, R.Jverboat Room,
Meigs Branch, Athens County
Savings and Loan, W. Main ,
Pomeroy . Out of town coin dealers
present for trading starting at 7.
Coin auction foUowing the meeting ;
refreshments .
TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING , Middleport
Lodg e 363 F and AM, 7 p.m .
Tuesday ; work in fellow craft
The staff at Francis F1orist were
degree .
invtted
and attended a design school
HARRISONVILLE Senior atizerut
held
in
Columbus
recently .
Tuesday 7 p.m . at town hall .
The
school
concentrated on
Refreshments of cookies, coffee and
European trends and floral designs .
tea .
There was also a workshop on wed Ml DDLEPOHT -POMEROY
dings and high style arrangements .
Branch, American Association of
Present were designers from
University Women , 7:30 Tuesday
Holland , Sweden, and Denmark. The
night at the Riverboar Riverboat
representative from Holland has a
Room of the Meigs office, Athens
TV show in Holland and does all the
County Savings and Loan Co . Pro ·
official cars at the Rose Bowl parade
gram focus will be "Managing
held on New Year 's Day .
Resource.s for Tomorrow" under the
Aeconling to Bill Francis the
direction of Mrs . Dorothy Qliver .
group enjoyed the activities very
LADIES AUXJUARY of Veterans
much. No doubt Bill will be creating
Hospital Tuesday in east-west dining
!lOme of the new designs.
room at 7:30 p.m .
Bill Hobste tter , Hut! and ,
AMEHICAN LEG ION AUX celebrated
his birthday on Nov . 20 .
IUAR Y, Drew Webster Post 39,
Belated
best
wishes and may you obPomeroy , 7:30 Tuesday at the hall .
serve
many
more
.
Initiation for all new members for
the past three years, both senior and
HAVE A GOOD WEEK !
junior members.
OHlO ETA PHI Sorority Tuesday
7:30 p _m . at Columbia Gas office
DIET CLASSES FOR MEN
Middleport . Denise Wolfe in charge
Slinderella Diet Oasses are now
of cultural program . Hostesses are
being organized for men , Mrs . Joan
J ill Jjzon and Kay Walker .
Newsome, instructor, 81Ul0unced today. lnfonnation on the classes can
PAST MATRONS of Pomero y
be obtained fr&lt;m Mrs . Newsome ,
UF..'i Tuesday 7:30 p.m . at tile home
992-3382.
of Mrs. J . W. McMWTay, Mason .
At Middleport this mek, Peggy
Hill
lost the most weight, and Rhon WEDNESDAY
RDush
was the rwmer -up, while
da
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
at
Point
Pleasant
Linda Wamsley
Uons Club meeting noon Wednesday
lost
the
most
weight,
and Pamela
at Meigs Inn .
was
the
nmner-up.
Harmon
SPECI AL MEETING , Middleport
At the Mason class, Vicky Cottrell
Lodge 363, F and FM , 7 p.m . Wedand
Delores Johnson tied for losing
nesday for Installation af officers by
the
most
weight, while Kim Hall was
invitation; all MBsons invited and
tile
rwmer-up.
Jane Johnson was
guests welcome .
recognized for having lost the most
w.ight in all of the Slinderella
MfODLEPORT LITERARY
classes
for the past six months .
CLUB. 2 p.m . Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Richard Owen . Mrs
Hoy Cassell will review "Adam
Bede ". for roll call members are to
name their favorite Confederate
Of some 3,000 kinds r:l lizards In
State .
the world, only two are poisonous .

�8- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov . 26, 1979

Your Best Buys Are t"'outtd in the Sentinel Classifieds
LEGAL NOTICE
APPLICATION TO
ORGANIZE A

WANT AD
CHARGES

NATIONAL BANK

Oa fed November
2. 197Y
APPLICATION
ACCEPTED FOR
FILING ON
November 8, 1979

- HE COMPTROLLER OF
THE CURRENCY
WASHINGTON ,
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA
APPLICATION

W E,
THE
UN
OERSIGNED , 1ntending to
organize and operate a
nahonal

cnr dan ce

bonk

tn

rH.

wtlh

the

•r Jvtsion!. ot lf)e Nattonal
lhereby
lJnk Act. os amended. do
make appltc at ton to

me

Comptroller

at

t tlt'

Cu r r ency lor permt55ton to
orqa ntle ~atd nat10nat
O&lt;'lnk ,

and

propo'ie

as

I OIIows

\ That tne ma1n othce at
&lt;;dtd N alional Bank be
locnted

at

Court

rwcJ

Second Str€ets . 1n the Ctty
ot Pomeroy , Me ,gs county ,
OhtO

1
That , tn order of
preference, sa1d Nat 1onal
Ba n k have une of the
follow ' ng t i lies
Bank Om• of Porrwroy
N

1 00

1%1
I ill
:l.ZI
3.7!1

I ~

I MI
3 00

F.J~ch

the muumwn
4 l't'rtl.s per llfUrd per

word

I S WlX'!b

IS

() \ ' tr

da) Ads runnu~

otNor than con-

~·ut l\'~ dMys Will be
Llw I tla y ratl'

dulr~ed

t'

\1ul;rk

1-!.!ltlt' ~~~~ t~-lld

Yurrl

~Ito.~

ttrt' li•Tt' ~h'\J only w rth
l'ltSil wrl11 unlt&gt;r 2!1l'enl charl(t'
f.,r ads •· arn:m~ &amp;t• 1'\' runt..r In
(~reu f l'tlt' ~'!lli/Wl

l'h.t Pu bl!.stwr

~st.'f'Ve~

the

n .:h t tu t!dll ur reJe..:t any ad:;
dt&gt;t'med
ob;tl'l rurutl
The
P\Jbhshtor wrll rrur. bt&gt; respoMtblt&gt;
tur murt' than ont rnrurrect Ill ~ rt wn

~

Ban k Ont' ot

Mt'ttl~

NOTICE

Coun

ly, N A
'\-'.t~t ll')

B.t•

Coun t,

Nnt•onn l

1&lt;

!n••
101&lt;'!1
( ,li.J· t al Irt'•C·n
to
oe
3

rnclt

r \ ' (t' IVNI

tJ '(

&lt;; rlid

~~Cif10rld l

Bctn !o- lo .' H'l· ·,n,,-, .., .',Sut·d
t;,
· I be ~l l lota lf'd rl"&gt;

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLJNES

fuiiUW'&gt;
(dp,•al
5.100. 000
Su rpl us
lU DOO
r o t ol
Cap1tai• Zat •on
110.000
N umber of shares
au th or•zed
16.000
N umber ol Shd re ': o
•".;.sued
4 ()()()
Par value
per share
25
Sale prtce
ON "&gt;hitff"'
JQ
J
Ttte11 H0WdrCT H Hop
w voo

ot

100

.\1•.uH.la~
f'&lt;UIIIl 011

lhru Fnda)
4 I'M
tht· ria y bt-fon: publl t'!llLOn
Sundil)

4 f&gt; M
Fnda! uftrmoon

Br o ~ld
Or·o eF t

'-:olr Pt'l (O IUtnbu•,
, .. •,o le and cor;clu&lt;&gt;•ve Ay+·nt
'(• r···Pf f' Sent iinrl clppl'd ' l or
lht · u nJ~:;&gt;rS • CJrlf'd r:Je l orf' HIP
Cornptr ol lt.&gt;r o t lht&gt; Curr(•n
c v . dnd
to rc- cc ve a l i
ro rrcsponuen l f'
rlnd
documen ts .n rps pe ct o f
f h1S ilppl•c at ron
5 T hat sa1d Nat •onal
Bank be organtzed tor the
sole purpose of fa cili tat ing
the ac qu1s it ion
of The
P om e r oy Nat iona l Ba ni&lt; .
Cou r t and Second Streets,
Pomeroy , Oh 10 by B ane
One Corporat •on, 100 East
Broad Stree t . Columb••s .
OhiO
IN
W T NE SS
WHEREOF .
tf lt•
un
11f'r stgn ec! fl it'-'(' ru·rpun l o
'-.l~ t our ~tands on thp u,~ l t"'
':&gt;t' l to rth obovt'
Romrn • J Gt•r DPr ,
(OilJt""lbUS, OhiO
Edwtn ~ Btllmun.
Columbus. Oh •o
Wtll•am S Harr~s. .
Colurnhus. OhtO
George R L
Me tl•n g .
Columbus, Oh 10
Thomas E RainPy .
Columbus. Oh•o
1111 19, 26, 2tc

NOTICE ON
FlUNG OF
INVENTORY AND

APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohto , Metg5
County , Court of Common
P l ed\,
Prob.af e Dtvi'&gt; IOrl
To lhP E.w.ecu t or ur ua
rn•n.s trator ot the eo:.tar p to
'lUC h ol th e f ollo w rng a~ Jrf'
rt.' 51dents of t he Stat(' o t
Ohto , v11
lhP survt·.,tnq
s pouse , the ne)(t ot ~(lrl . th''
ben~fiC1ar1e-S
under
th+'
w i ll ; and t o the atTorn ey or
attorn eys represent.ng any
of th e aforement .o ned per
sons
George Dewe-y Pullms
aka
Dewey
Pu l ltns ,
Deceased . Case No _ 22783,
1543 Nye St , Pomeroy ,
Oh 10
You are hereby not if 1ed
that the lnvenrorv and Ap
pra1semen t of the est ate of
ttH•
i'\fon•men t ioned .
dPt.PtlSf'U , late ol Sil•d Coun
ty. were I II PO mlht':. Court
Sil•d ln..,entor " clnd Ap
pra ,&lt;.:.ernent will oe l or
heetrtnQ belo r (_• t h1~ Court
on the 13 1h dEl)' of Decem
ber 1979 . rtf '1 00 oclorl'l.
PM
Ar1y Pt.'r~on deStrtng 10
ltle cxcepttons
th ere t o
mus t ltl e th em at least ltve
days prior to the date set
for hearing
G1ven under my hano
and se al of sa1d Cour.t, th•s
?3rd day of November 1979
Robert E Buc k
Judge
By Carolyn G Thomas
Deputy Clerk
111126.1 12 13, 21 c

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OH 10
ESTATE OF ROSCOE
SATTER Fl ELD , DECEA
SED
case No . 22851 Docket M
Page BJ
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November lS, 1979, in
tne Meigs county Probate
Court, Case No. 228.51 , Dan
Satterfield , 19S7 West
Alexis
Road . Lot
1-4 ,
Toledo, Ohio was appointed
Executor of the estate of
Rosc oe
5anerfield ,
deceased , tate ot Village ot
Middlepor t , Meiq s County .
Ohio
Ro1Jer 1 E Buc K
Probate Judge
Clerk
111119, 26 11213 , Jic
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ESTATE OF JESSIE COT
TRILL, DECEASED
case No. 22874
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 15, 1979, in
the Meigs County Probate
court, Case No . 22874,
Alpha Collrill , Fifth Sl .,
Syracuse , Ohio 45779 was
appointed Adm i nistrator of
the estate of Jessie Cottrill ,
dec eased , late of Fifth St .,
Sy ra cuse, Ohio 4577 9
Robert E Buck
Pro bMe Judge
Cler k
(11! 19.26,! 17 .1 J.3 tc

1979 FORD F 150. 4 wheel
dr tv e.
fa ctory
t opper
A uto . P 5 . P B
S6800
Pnone 98 5 4339

HA V E
YOUR
fro phy
mounted
B irch f •eld ' s
T cu •dermy on 174, east of
Rvtland 614 742 2178

NEW LOCATIONS l or
Gene Harr is and Fr•ends at
th e Eagtes in Gal t•polts
eve ry
Fr1dav . SaturddY
and Sunday
OPENING
NOV E MB ER
30. Log Ca b1n Gd t Shop
Located 2 miles nor ttr ol
on
Rt
7
C he s ter
" Homemade Item s so ld •n
a
H ome mad e
AT
mosphere ·
NO HUNT I NG day or night
on the tottowtng farms
Charles S Beller , Alma
Peter son , Den Stiles , Jay
St\ leo; Violators w ill be
pi"tlsec uted

Notices
GUN
SH OOT
EVE RY
oU N DAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY ~ACI NE
GU N CLUB

1917CUTLASS SUPREME .
A M tape deck. c rut se con
rrol, tilt wheel E ll. cl'l l ent
condl t ton ~4500 992 57 86

1972 CHE VY NOVA , 350
t&gt;ngme. auto, $1000 After 5
p m 992 3897
1915 GRAN TOR I NO Ford
station wagon . Power win
dows , A .C. , cruise control.
Asking 52500. 742 ·2008
1971
THUNDERB I RD,
P .S., P . B ., A .C., radial
lires . AM F M . $3500 . HI
J594 .

NO
HUNTING .
no
trespassing on my property
tn OI1VE Townsh tP F M
Myers

1973 PLYMOUTH ROAD
Runner. 340, 4 speed New
l 1res and mago;, 99"1 7768 or
9'12 5&lt;111

HUNT I N G,
no
wrth no e•
ce pt1ons on my property
Judy M cGra w Sell

GU N SH OOT t· ..,·ery Su nd ay
17 DO ~="an o r ·f c t1o k e only

Corn Hollo w Gun Club.
Rul l and Pro c ~~ea::. donated
to Boy Seoul Troop ')49

NO
HUNTING
or
tre spa ss tng da y or night on
th e Charles Yost and Ivan
Well f arms
GET TODAY ' S MARKET
VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER
CON T ACT
EO BURKETT BARBER
SH OP , MIDDL E PORT .
OH
IN THE

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
Carolyn Sue Reynolds. ,
Platnf1tt ,

s' . Defendant.

c.ue No . 173JS

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO :
Ronald
Franklin
Reynolds , Sr., whose ad ·
dress. •s unknown :
You are hereby notified
!hat you have been named
a defendant in a legal ac
ti on ent i tled Carolyn SL:e
Re ·,mold~ .
Pla•nt •ff , vs
Rona ld Franklin Rey nolds,
Sr. Delendan r Th •s act1on
has be en as. ~t gned Case N o
1 ?335 and ~~ oc nd.ng •n the
Cou r I of Common Plea s of
M e tgs Coun t y. Pornero ·{ .
Ot1 to 4516o.,t
The ob Pc ' ot the c om
plo .nt l"i th e ob ta•n•n g o1 it
dtvorce
and
th e
fer
mtnat•on of n mnr ri rtge
contract oe tween the par
11 es. the settlement Of the
property r1ghts of ftle par
ties . and the restoration of
plaintiff 's maiden name .
You are required fa an
swer the co mplaint wtthin
28 days after me l_ast
publica1ion ot this not1ce .
whi ch will be published on
ce eac h we-ek for six sue
cess•VP weeks
The las !
publ•calton w•ll be made on
December 17. 197&lt;;~ , and lh('
18 days lor answ er Wtll
com menc e on that da te
111 c a ~ r· of you r failure to
a n swer
or
oth erwt.,e
res pond as required by the
Oh•o
Rulf'S
ot
CtVtl
Procedure,
th e
ftnal
he.uing on lh1S matTer will
be held after the expirat 1on
ot 28 days after the last day
of publicat ion of thiS noti ce
or as soon thereafter as can
be schedu led bY the Court
Larry Spencer
Clerk of Cour 1
ot M eigs County ,
Ohto
ill) 11, 19, 25 112) 3, 10, 17 ,
6f c
1

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
EST ATE OF WILLIAM C.
PECK, DECEASED
Case No . 22857
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 13, 1979, in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 228S7,
Madge
J.
Bla c kwood .
Route 4, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 ,
was
appointed
Executrix of tne estate of
William C. Peck , deceased ,
late of Route 3. Albanv.
Oh io 45710
ROber t E BUC k
Pr oba te Judge
Cler k
i 111 l'J 70·1?1 ) lc

To get more juice out of an orange
or lemon , roll the frwt on a h"r d

COAL ,
LIMESTONE .
sand, gravel,
calc i um
chloride . fertilizer,
doo
food , and all types of salt .
Excelsior Salt Works. Inc. .
E . Ma1n St , Pomeroy , 9'92
3891.
FIREWOOD FOR sa le
Now taking orcJers W i ll
de l •ver. 747 7056
FMERGE NCY
POWER
alterna tors own the best
buy WIN POWER Ca ll 513
188 2589 .

For Lease
1955 PACKARD in running
condit1on Cal l 991 7706

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY
Fitzpatrick Or
chard , State Route 689
Phone
Wilkesville , 669
318S

Wanted to Buy

c H 1P

11.100 0 . Poles max
d1ameter 10 " on largest
end $12 per ton Bund led
slab SlOpe r ton Del1vered
to Oh io Pa llet Co. Rl 7.
Pom eroy 997 7689
OLD FURNITURE . ' ce
boxes. bras s beds , 1ron
beds. desks. el c . comp lete
nouseholds . Write M D
Miller Rt 4. Pomeroy or
cal l991 7760 .
WANTED :
SAW logs
Payment upon delivery to
our yard , 7 : 30 to 3 30week
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339 , Ba.-low, OH 678
2980

ANTIQUES ,
FUR
N I TURE . gltt"&gt;S. ch in a .
anytning 5ee or call Rufh
Gosney . a nt•que s . '1 6 N
2nd , Mtdd lepo rt , OH 1.197
3161

¥&gt;

Ronald Frankl•n Revnolds .

ROOFING

YOU'&gt;&lt;E L EAVI N G FOR
HOME TOMORI&lt;Q W?
F INE-I'LL PIC K YOU
THE AIRPORT-

For Mobikt Home
lmurance_
I • 111 \ , . " IH' III .r I• •t t~l\111\t '

lllt li W\' pil ' klll~

. IIIII

1111\ I

111• ol11k hull It' I h.ll 1111'1'1'&gt;

Auto &amp; Truck
R epair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

~c 1 1 11
~t·J

..,pt'( lfi ( IHT&lt;h . ~''"'
!tw lll..,lrl.tilvt·to

Ill. I I (

4 30 tf c

-"""'''

1 ' 1 1\-'l" l'; ~t ·~.

Wt · 1t· lw.t · wlrn1 y w1 llt'('d

h !! mohik h· t ill(' in
.... ur:tnt t '. Comt· 111 the pro
1, ...,..,,, •IJ.tl..., lt Jr trw !-pt•t· i:t J
poll!\' lu lit \'IIIli :o-pt'i ili1
l lC'i'lh .

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement
dows

Featuring :
men's &amp;
women'$ styling, per m s.
Call for appt . or walk in .

Win -

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

992 -2367
Main St .

Pomeroy, 0 .
10 19-1 mo .

MY LAN

&amp; Famous Name Brand

r
kFLEEBE±
J r J

PIANOS

I I

PETE SIMPSON
Sales ReP. For
Sundins
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd . Racine, 0 .
0
h
I
o
Phone 949 -2118 evelngs.
after s p.m . weetcenas
after 12noon.
11 ·19 ·1 mo .

MoNTGOMERY

MU5-TACH&amp;~

IU9Ll5 OF FAT 1!

'00 00 YOU THI&gt;JK
'/OUR FATHAIR
WA5- PAINTI&gt;JG ,

ANTIQUE POCKE1 wal
c nes . Willing 10 pay top
dollar . Call
I 5911913
even 1ngs
WANTED
HOMEMADE
gifts taken on Consignment
for gill shop . Call 985 4311,
98S 4123. or 98S )951
BUYING US SI L VER coins
dated lQ64 or before
Pay,ng top pr .ce
Call
Brown ' s. 992 5113
OLD COINS poc k et wat
che"' flass r. ngs. w edd1ng
band s. dii=tmond s Go l d or
s• lver Call J A Wam sley,
747 2331
Tr easu re Ches t
Co1n snop, A the ns. OH 591
6467

Help Wanted

BRANCH
REPRESENTATIVE

HOUSE COAL . lump or
stoker , will deliver . 742
2183

APPLES - ROME beaufy
apples at $.4 per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669 -3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689
LUMP
locally
1126

COAL , delivered
$39 per ton 992

GOING OUT of Bu~tnE" ss 3
bla c k and t an coonhounds
AI I hunting equ 1pmenf.
plus dog houses Reason tor
selling , ill health Contact
Jon n Ande rson ,
Rt
3,
Pomeroy 991 7096 or 991
1038

CLEARANCE
SALE
Component systems in
matched sets of mix and
match Speakers for home
enterta i nment
centers .
radios, automobiles and
patios . Combination AM
FM stereos and tape deck .
casset te or 8 tra c k , CB
base s1atwn':&gt; ~nd mobile
un•ts
Portable
AM FM
rctd•os w 1Th tape player and
r eco rder Digital AM FM
clock radios and compa c t
AM FM pocket radios Por
table recorder Te levisi ons
portable and console
models . Regency scanners
Antennas
and
masting .
Many optional accessories
and general electronic sup ·
plies France TV and Elec
tronics , 39260 Bradbury
Rd . Middleport , OH . 4S760
997 2716 .
1600 Loadster '1 ton
w•th 16 ft van bed. S3BOO
997 6173 Alter 5. 99') 6106

CAPITAL FINANCIAL
SERVICES
An Equal Opportunity
Employer .

BUCKEYE
WOOD ond
co a l burner , S75 C:hannel
Ma s t f'r
stereo
I SO
E ven1ngs on I y , 949 27)')

1916 TRAN S AM . blac k ,
auto . AM FM ca~s ette.
tilt wheel , a1r Call 843 2965
after 6 or anytime on
weekends .
1915 INTERNATIONAL
heavy duty 'h ton pickup .
35,000 miles . Good codi tion .
Meigs Equipment 992 ·2176 .
1976 FORD BRONCO , good
condition,
33,000 m iles.
AM FM lape. P S . P B , 4
w heel drt ve \ •MOO After S
p m . 99? 1 4 00or~7 5169
1969
'l doo r
Chevelle
Malibu
1967 LeSabrC' 4
door Butc~ . 1972 Buick
LeSabre, 1974 Chevrolet 1 J
ton Che.yenn e tru ck 10 1 2
foot self co ntained lrtJck
r_:;;,nper
98 5 38 39
or
985 331 1.

Ri l iNG STAR
Kennel
Boarding Call 367 0192
POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Tay lor . 614 361 7220 .
HILLCREST
KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
i ndoor ·outc;Joor tac i I ities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans . 614 446 · 7795 .
BOSTON TERRIER pups .
AKC. Sho!s Only 1 lefl
51 IS 997 3905

WOOD STOVE S by Beller
N Bens , G la ~sv1ew, Leyden
Hea rth . Old T1mer . Fire
v1ew
Suburban
mobile
hom e wood heeters. UL ap
proved, and Suburban fur
na c emasters .
Outdoor
Equipment Sates. Jet Rts
7 and 35, Gallipolis , OH
Phon e 4-46 3670 .

OPPORTUNITY with a
large ttnanctal rn stttu
tron for Hi~h Scnoot
graduates who are •n
tere5ted 1n a future rn
the Consumer ftnanc e
busines5
Starting salary will
meet the neecJs of you
and your family now .
Exceptional employl!!'e
benefits .
Relocation
may be necessary now
or in the future .
Phone Mr. Barcus at
446· 2745 for
•ppoint ·
ment .

Auto Sales

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies Ruth Ree11es . 614·
Barding
and
698 3190
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products . Wes tern
boots . Children 's $15 50.
Adulls $19 00

_Giveaw:~y____ _
M E DI UM
SIZED CO II te
type , male, lovable, brown
and whife . Shots and wor
med Humane Socie ty , 991
6160 .
PART SLACK Labrador
puppy . 5 mo . Good with
chi ldren . 992 -3618

Mobile Homes- Sale
1912 LYNN HAllEN lb6S 3
bedroom
1970 Vinda le 11x63 with ex
panda , 2 bedr
1970 New Moon 1h60 3 bdr
19 73
SkYI1ne
12•55
2
bedroom
1977 Bon anza 17)( 5'), 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALE S. PT PLEASANT ,
wv 304 67 5 4424
1973 14x70 VINOALE lxl4
e)(pando , 2 bedr , p., acre
rural water , septic tank ,
central nea t and A .C. Car
peted Pri ced reasonably .
El&lt;Cellent condit ion . 614 ·
142 2182 .

Lost and Found
LOST or
stolen : from
Fores t Acres Park : Mate
bluehck crossed with Red
bone Ha s one eye . Childs
pe t
R e ward
lor
•n
tor mal ton Conta c t Randy
Hyse ll . New L ima Rd , 741.
3065 Al50, would the man
that called abou t this dog,
please call back .

servicesOilerecl
WILL CARE tor !he elderly
in our home Have vac~n ­
cy . Trained
and
e)(
perienced 992 ·731,.

Real Estate for Sale

19/ 4

BOBCAT STYLE loader . 30
hp
53950
D,tc h W'l ch
trencher. J 20. 4 wd , w
trailer , U500 _ Call 614 457
3139

1979
ELECTROLUX
sweeper, 3 monftls old Rug
shampooer and all t~l
tacnments . S400 . Judy , m
5001

FOR SALE
1 Used Homelile

Saw $90 .00
1 good used 16 cu .
ft . Frigidaire
Freezer
Only S17S

POMEROY
LANDMARK

~
~-

Jack W. Caney
Mgr .
Phone 991 · 2181

R E DUCE SA FE and last
w•th Go Bf' o;,f' T nblf'h .=t ncl
E Vap
" wd ter
p!lls '
Nelson Drug

i&gt;y

FOUR 1400
36 5 bv 15"
Grllnd PriK fires . 460()
m'l!&gt;s . S250 . Call 992 7603
after Sp m

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
PHON~

742-2003

MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful
S bedroom
home, 2 baths, li'w'ing
room, dining room,
family room , mOdern
kitchen and full base ·
ment . A real dream
home . Call for more in

to
MIDDL!'PORT
Large 9 f6om home W1fh
full basement nnd i rar
gar,lgc
Located
on
Locu st St Sell ing pr•ce
t15 .000 00
Extra
101
may be purchased
ST . ROUTE 143
5' &lt;
acres w i th 1969 New
Moon tr ader Will sell
I ast at only S 15,000 _()()! !

ACREAGE - 3.65 ocres
on Sl . Rf UJ Sell price
$10,600.00 .
RUTLAND - Lovely 4
bedroom nome Hash •d
lots of care You m+.st
see tnis one! ! As .... mg
$35,000 .00 .
POMEROY
Ex
ce llent Buy ! ! 3 tedroom
nome on East rJiain St
Well w orth S"l~ .SOO 00
we are s.e lhn9 our p.--o
pert. es. May we h f' lp
you s.e ll yours? Just 9PJe
us a call .
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc.
Pnone 742 -lOOl
Velma Nlclnsk';' . Anoc .
Phone 742 ·30'2
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr .
9roker 092 -S7Jt

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Gutter work,
down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
drieways .
!FREE ESTIMATE)

Roofing , gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates .
All work
guaranteed . JO years e~c: ~
perience. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Clilrk
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797 ·2745.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
•
RACINE, 0 .
949 -2748 or
992·1314
II I I Pd I

9 28 ·1 mo . Pd .

Real Estate for Sale
OWNER WILL sell 40acres
or
more
with
1978
Hollvpark mobile home
14x70 with expando, plus
14x36 family
room
at
ta ched.
fu l ly carpeted,
rural water . some pasture ,
fenc e.
standing
timber ,
some walnut . sun deck
fr o nt and b ac k Loca ted on
New L•ma Rd Cal l 61-4 7.42
2 182

~

..

~'ND rJY

,

REA

608 E
MAIN
pOMERQY,O.

NEW
LISTING
Beaufifu t 2 story home
with river view, full
usable baseme nt . 3
bedrooms . 1 1 ' baths. .
cent ral a •r cond , level
lot, many new features
540' ()()() .00
NEW liSTING - Great
location in Middleport .
n ice 7 bedroom in good
cond1t•on . basement,
level
lot
JUST
$18,800 .00
NEW
LISTING
Apartment with large
garage below, rented
and in gOOd condition .
S1l, SOO.OO . (Ideal for c ar
repair business) .
NEW LISTING - New
ranch style
{brick),
almost 1 acre , beautiful
l i ving room with brick
walls , eq u1pped kilchen ,
3 bedroom s, 2 baths ,
s tora ge
bu tlding ,
garage,
c l ose
1n .
531,500 00
NEWLISTING
lnlhe
country lovely stone 11;,
story home 1112 acres,
equipped
kitchen ,
washer &amp; dryer , bae menl. 3 B R . SJO,OOO.OO .
BEWARE OF 0\IER
PRICED
PROPER ·
Tl ES , PLEASE ALLOW
OUR
FRIENDLY
FULL TIME STAFF TO
HELP YOU
WHEN
BUYING OR SELLING.
REALTORS
He nry E . Cleland, Jr .
'1'12-6191
Henry E. Cleland, 5r .
'1'12 . 225,
ASSOCIATES
r.....~ger &amp; Dottie Turner
742 -2474

Joan Russell '•'·2660
OFFICE '1'12·22n
NEW HOME . 3 bedroom,
2lf7 baths, rec room with
fireplace.
large deck ,
ba$ement and garage . 1
acre 101. C•ll 992 3-454. If no
answer , ca ii992 ·S45S.

- - For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Rout e 33, norttl of
Pom ero.,.. Large lots .Call
991 7479
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap
ts Phone 997 5434

lOX 55 two bed room mob i le
nome i n Racine area _ 992
5858

IN SYRACUSE , I bedroom
tra i ler . water and garbage
pi c kup
furnished .
2
working people or couple
with 1 chi ld . No pets.
Depasit required . 992·3269
HOUSE FOR r(•n t
ctrer~ C tl l QQ7 '7 8 8

Ra cine

Auctions

-----

BIG AUCTION every Wed .,
7 pm . Hartford Community
C~nter , Hartford, WV, -4
miles abOve Pomeroy ·
Mason Bridge .

~---=

)

'

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonabl e
rates . Scotchguard
99'1
6309 or 7~7 1348.

PROPER INS ULATION ;s
cheaper than heat ing oi l
Take advantage ol a good
investment Call 997 3288
for mor-E;&gt; in formal ton
HORSE SHOEIN G
Call
992 3788, ask for Darre ll
McClanahan
PIANO
TUN I NG , L ane
Daniels. New phon e num
ber, 741 "1951
Serv •ce to
schools and home St nce
1965

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING VA FHA LO
AN S LOW OR NO DOWN
PAY ME NT
PUR CHASE
OR
R EFI NAN C E
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
II E . S1AT E. ATHE N S
614 59') 3051
LARGE LOT on dead ena
street with water and
sewage
Will t. nance to
reliable couple at q P et
992 -5786 . No realtors

COMMERCIAL BUILDIN
G on 132 fl . tot at 1600 Nye
Ave , Pom eroyd , O H W ill
finan ce at 9 Pet t o r e l iabl e
couple No realtor s 992
5186
HOU SE FOR ~ALE beh•nd
Jones Boy s 15 500 (i!!l 304
273 ~29 Sharon Stark

GE E WHIZ .M A DAME ·UH· CO LETTE~ ::: DID "-l 'T
ER. - SA'I!
MEA".~ TO CR ITI ( 1 2 ~ YOU R 1-1PPE:AR,.l,~,JCE !
I'M ourA
I J U$T THOUGHT 'iOU 1"-l\/ITED o\\E
PIPE TOtlAC CO!
TO COMMEt-JT 0 "-1 THE LIK E-NE-SS ~
DRIVE "JTO TOWN

LOOK! 'IOU JU~T MI56ED
GETTif.J' MURDERED
THE MAFIA!

e.v

WITH ME .. WILl- YA .
FL055 .. WHILE'
r GET 5&lt;1ME -

OR Ol-IVAIRE
HARDYf!

$9,.500.
10 ACRES - In Chester
Township at Flatwoods .
About 1/7 fenced . good
old 9 room home and
lots of good outbuldings
Asking sao,ooo
RIVERFRONT
ModNn bri c k wiTh 2 car
garage. 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths , and 4 lo ts Ci
ty water and c arpeting .

$.43,000 .
NEW LISTING 44
acres
1n
Rutland
Township. Located at
the Old gun club .
BUILDING LOTS - In
many toc at •on s
Call
992 3325 or '1'11 3876

Rousing • Headqumters
NEW HAllEN br ick home .
304 882 22'17 or 614 949 2687
after 6p .m

tJ

Til

DRIV ER.

Now arrange !he ctrcled letters to
torm the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by the aOOve cartoon

r

1 I I I I] 'l I I I

I

(Answers tomorrow)

BRIDGE

17110 Monteomf'r'P Rd .
t.lftCW.,UI•. OltiC
6 I~ ' " ~14S E "enln91
1 Mtlf'l Eut ol W &gt;lkH.,I II•

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BORN LOSER
5UPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRA tt.ER NOW AI/AILA&amp;LE

111[; VJElfW ~

•~lrno

~ 11-1/&gt;.T

~WSI&lt;S

3+4=3+4

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

N.-L f\E:S"-

Last laugh slam success

MJl.n

NORTH
+QJI 02
• A63

5!::~1" ..

tAK

Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

+10963
WEST

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC_

1:1

i

+AQJ8 75 4

ORPHAN ANNIE-FAME

,.

Vulnerable . North -South
Dealer · South
Nortb

Easl

Soulb

Pass

l•
3•
4

Pass

5t

Pass

3+
3+
5+
s+

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

+

Open1ng lea d • Q

By Oswald Jacoby

ALLEYOOP
LI!FT YOU;&gt;;' WHAT
ARE \'01..1 TALKING
ABOUT? YOU 'VE
BEEN SOUND ASLEEP
RIGt--41' THER E IN

ll-4AT TRUCK

OBVIOUSLY!
COME ON, NOW,
I WANT TO
SHOW 'YOU

AROUND!

I

and Alan Sontag

fmesse When West quieted
down I showed my hand and

Oswald : ''Some hands arr
easy to bid. Others lend them ·
selves to all sorts of possible
bidding sequences There are
numerous ways for North and
South to bid today ·s hand You
may not agree with the1r
bidding. but they d1d gel to a
fme six-clubs contract "

claimed tht" contract"
! :'&gt;IEWSI 'A I-'I::H E:--ITERPRISE ASSN

1

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to ··wm at
Bfldge ... care of thiS newspaper, P 0 Box 489. Rad1o C1!y
S ta/l on. New Yorti&lt; , NY
10019 )

61fM~

m

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery various sizes of
pool kits Do it -yourwlf·or
let us install for you . 0 .
Bumgcudne-r Sales, Inc .
m 5774.

found One m e~c h h~nd ."
Oswald " I p layed thiS hand
'" a rubber bridge game long
before there were any conven ·
twns to find how many aces
your portner m1ght hold. I
also got a real horse laugh
from West when I f1nessed m
clubs and lost to h1s smgleton
k1ng."
Al an " The lost laugh had to
be yo urs since yo u had played
safe to guarantee your slam
against all reasonable card
combinauons ..
Oswald " Of course I took
my k1ng of hearts. l ed a dia ·
mond to dummy. cas hed the
ace of hearts to disca rd one
spade. ruffed a heart . went
back to dummy with the last
d1amond and lost that trump

t74

L1TI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

EXCAVATING,
dozer,
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and to boys
lor h ire. w i ll haul fill dir1 .
top soil, limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Je ffers , day phone
7089,
n•ght phone 991 3S25 or 992
5232

mno

+2

+A
.K

DOZER.
END Lo•der ,
brush
hog .
Wil l
do
basement5, ponds, brush ,
ttmber, land clearing .
Ch~rles Butcher . H1 ·19..0

AUTOMOB ILE
IN
SURA NCE
been
con
celled?
Los t
your
opera tor 's l icense? Phone

• 97542
.\110 66

SOl'TH

PAINTING AND sand
blasting . Free estimate, .
Call 9•9 7686

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excava ting,
septic
s.ys tems, dozer, ba&lt;khoe .
Rl 141 Phone 1 16141 698
1331 or 7411593 .

• 643

• Q J 10 B
. .J9 532
+K

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel Also , lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking Phone 7A2 -2.t.SS .

SEW ING
MACHINE
Repairs.
service,
all
m•kes
992 1284 .
The
Fabri c Stlop,
Pomeroy .
Au thorized Singer Sales
and Service . We shar~
Scissors .

f.AST

+K 9 5

Hours 9·1 M .. w., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment .
107 Sycilmore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0.

CALL 992-7544

Alan "I see that there IS
some problem m the play
also South has some worrtes
about the black k1ngs I also
note that there w1ll be a hap·
py endin g tor any Sout h play ·
er who reI ies un the 52 per .
cent c hance that when vou
hold II cards 1n a su1l. -the
mJSStng two cards will be

I I 26

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Sheltered
5 Secret society
10 Seaside
1% Fragrance
13 Shrewd
negotiator :

GASOLINE ALLEY

What are ~ou
doinQ with the

15 Skelton

baseball
player.~

6 Macaw
7 Portend
8 Final word
11 Dread
14 One kind

or Buttons
16 Fmale

WaiF

queeTill and

9 Fat

slang

map of
the cit~.

5 Some kings,

Yesterday's

~Word with
of age
pigeon
17 House · Sp.
17 Condense
2S Of oranges,
:!2 King Arthur's 18 Finished

Christum

Z7 Jewish
celebration

ZS Brief

WINNIE

appearance
ABOUT MY
MOVING •NID
YDUR OLD

I ..I ThOUGHT YOU
WERE 3 01N6 ID

TRY

LIVIN G A T
HOII\E .. .SE:E
HOW IT \', OI&lt;KS
.,..-,...~OUT .. .

APA'&lt; TMENT

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers.
toasTers, irons, all small
appliances . L awn mower .
Nel(f to State Highway
Ga rage on Route 7, 985
3825

1 GOT HOME FRCM A

elATE AT MIONIGHT. ..

ANO OAO WA6
WAmM5UP
FOR ME l

29 Space

infraction
38 Greek letter
l9 Turner or

30 Steal
a glance

fold
21 Startle
24 Khayyam
25 Rose of

A111wer

35 Football

lemons, etc

19 Created
:!0 Accordion

abode

:!3 F:gyptian

Kmg Cole

40 To the

32 A Ford
- degree
33 Actor .Leo n - 41 Nice sununer
34 Janice
42 Sandwich
of films

baseball

bread

.,--~--r,~r.:--

30 l:luccaneer
31 Wobbled
33 Ra1nbow
shape
36 Gennan

43 Creme de

SAVE UN CARPET
DRIVE A-tnru
SAVE.A LOT
RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4"

and up
Cash &amp; Carry

la creme

/

H Back-biting

.,_,-+-t----t--

45 Flower part

...... __., -__
... -··
,

46 Quaker
pronoun

DOWN
BARNEY

1 "- du
Iieber"
%Card game

(SNIF) IS MV MAN
SNUFFY GOIN' TO BE:

..,_,,-t-+---t-+--

3 Jug part
4 Double
curve

ALL RIGHT, DOC?

SALE ON ALL

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR

~5 , 000

RT . 124 - Beautiful 2
acre spot with large
tre-es lind picnic area . 7
room family home . nat .
oa$ furnace , rural
water .
carpeting ,
fireplace , n ice t~ itchen
and
1 c ar garage

e&gt;EAVER

Jumbles SILK Y ABOVE MISLAY GENTLE
Answer What lfle guys wh o l l1rted w tth the wa tlress
wc1e playmg to1- BIG STf AK S
Monday, Nov . 26

~SALES
I

BRADFORD , Au&lt;fione-er ,
CompleTe Serv ice Phone
9-49 2487 or 9.49 1000 . racine ,
Ohio . Critt Bradford .

FISH POND Well
stocked on 1 1/3 acres
and 12x50 mobile home
on St Rt . Ask•ng just
$12,000
BUSINESS - All stock,
equipment &amp; bui !ding
witn 3 bedroom apart
ment and extra level lot .
Only $27 ,500 .
22 ACRES Woods,
brush and wild grapes .
A ·FRAME spe&lt;:ial Only

~POATTE I
.Answerhere. A[

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Texa co Station in
Syraucse 991 3743 or 992
37S2 .

216 E . Second StrMt

M lcSI-Ii PII::OVIDE
PROiEC:iiO"-J
AC:.AINST AN EAGER

1

CAP!'AIN EASY

Satu,days

10 19 1 mo

Pets for Sale

MONDAY,NOVEMBER 26,1t79

Hammond Oraan~

MAM'Z&amp;L.L.e' .. ME

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces-

Television
Viewing

10

11

Wt•'ll t ·nw•r ll l' W or 1 1~1·d
rnohik h t lllle!-. . YtJ U c an
t "\Tn gt·t ~ca ...tmtd . rt&gt;ntaJ
t• tttHnnwrcial in.,u l-iUlfT

byHenr 1ArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles
one lener to each square . to tom~
tour or01nary wcrds

Greilt Christmas Gift
Both New&amp; Used

All types roof work , new
or repair gutters and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
94n&amp;62
11 14 mo.

!...9 ~~ Ill

~

For Sale
POOL PLAYER S MEET
WILLIE MOSCONI Sal..
Dec 1st at Harry 's Cyc le
and Bill •ards, 1486 Hebron
Rd , N ewark, OH . 522 5235
He will give 3 lree e)(hibi
tion snows 12 noon , 3 :00,
5 00 p m Between shows .
he w•ll answer your ques
l1on &lt;&gt;
rtnd
St Qn
h 1S
au toqrMpn o on ·r I org e !
Sa turda y , D ec
l s i .=~t
H .-'lrry · .,
('(Cie
and
R1ll1ards. 1487 H ebron Rd .
Newark , OH 5'n 5735

NO

GU N
SHOOT
Ra ci ne
Volunteer
F i re
Dept.
Every Sa tur day 6 30 p .m
At the tr b u lld tng in Bashan .
Fac tory cho ke guns only

Garage
mile oft Rt . 1 by ·pass
on Sf . Rt 124 toward
Rutland .

DOWNING ·CHILDS
Phone 992 -2342
Middleport, 0 .

DEER HEADS mounled
Perry Kennedy . 741 '1917

H. L WRITESEL

:14

11.,

tr ~s pa ss 1n g

suriQ&lt;:L' before squ l•eziJ ~~ .

1916 FORD F 250 4 wd
Good clean Truck Toppers.
w •de tires . white wheels,
new dual exhaust . '192 ·5896 .

Roger Hysell

'\1)1\f\'Mf )e}'lt ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

DICK TRACY

Business Services

1973 OLDSMOBILE
4
brand new tires i n goes
shape- . 992 709&lt;~~

SHturtill)

Tue!ldJI)'

E.rt'&gt;f

COU NT Y
HUMANE SOCIETY 992
626(J
Pe t s available for
adopt ion and tnformat.on
ser v 1ce

at

In mcmvf) l ·.jtrd vf Th&amp;rW
and Ob1tu.an 6 l't.'I IL~ Vt"f wurd.
$.1 (lJ 1111111111Uirl { 'wffi Ill 8tf1J ~1101

Auto Sales

M EIGS

IS WvrW or Under
Ctl.'lh
Charge
!day
2dMyll
Jd.11ys
6d.11ys

Notices

9--The Daily Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , Nov . 26, 1979

lo

IN STOCK

One letter samply stands for another . In this umple A it
used f or the three L's. X (o r the two O' s, etc Single letters .
apostrophes. the lenjth .and formati o n of the words are all
haots Each day the code let ters are ditrerent

·9~~dup

lnstalledwitn Pad Freoe

GOOD REMNANT
SELtCTION

CRYPTOQUOTES

PEANUTS
I.

6'x 12' to 12'x 16'

$38

00

andup

.. MIX T06ETHER AND ADD
SLOWL'r' ONE CUP SELF
~151N6

RUTlAND
FURNITURE
Rutland, 0.

l,ONGFELLOW

FLOUR TO MIX ..

00 NOT MAKE BATTER
TOO SOFT.. IT MUST DROP
FROM A TABLESPOON INTO
HOT FAT ABOUT ONE INCH
DEEP IN FINING PAN ...

~

f.IOW CAN '{OU Tf.IINK
ZUCCHINI FRITTERS AND
STILL GET 006 FOOO'

XPRAYV

GDHRPRA
TLI:I
DH

NWDCAWN

GLB

I PNW
AYDDG

EPYY

SDB

LRT

LRT

PR
DCH

NWV

I W D YV

XCRXWPRV,

TVKHVXXPDR.

K 1. H L G L R T L R T L
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: TRIPLE-X-RATED MOVIES ARE
AN INVITATION TO BARBARISM BASED ON CONTEMPI'
FOR WOMEN AND A DENIAL OF THF. DIGNITY OF THE
HUMAN SPIRIT.-HUGH CAREY

6 00-News 3,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News
6; Zoom 20; Carol Burnett 17;
Planet of Man 33 .
6: 3()-N BC News 3.15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News 8, 1O;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20;
Japan : The Changing Tradition
33.
I : 00-3's A Crowd 3: Muppel Show
6; Tic Tac Dough 8; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son II; Dick Cavett 20,33.
30--- That Nashville Music 3; Nashvil le On lhe Road 15; Newlywed
Game 6: Joker's Wild 8: Family
Feud 10,13 : All In The Fomlly 17 :
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
S:oo--Little House on the Prairie
3, 15 : 240·Robert 13 ; Edward !he
King 6; While Shadow 8,10 :
Predalors 70,33: Falcon Football
17 .
9 00---Movie "Beggar man Thie f"
3, 15; NFL Football 6,13: Mash
8,10 ; Song by Song 20,33 9: 3()WKRP in Cincinnati 8,10.
lO.oo-Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20;
C1ty Notebook )3.
I0 · 3o-Cop;ng wilh Kids 20; Poldork
II 33 .
II · 00- News 3.8, 10 . 13 , IS ; Dick
Cavell
20 ;
11 . 15-Love
American Style 17 .
II 3()-Tonlghf 3, 15; Rarry 0 8; ABC
News 33 : Movie " Indiscreet" 10;
Movie "High Time" 17 .
1200-News 6,13; 12 : 3Q--FBI 6;
Char lie ' s Angels 13 .
l : (X)--Tomorrow 3; News IS ; 1 : 4~
News 13 .
45- News
17 ,
1 50- Movie
" Sylvia " II : 4 15--0pen Up 11 .

'
TUESOAY, NOVEMBEIU7,m9
•~Farm Report 13; S: so--PTL
Club 13 .
6 00-100 Club 6,8, PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10; 61~World al
Large II.
6 30-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17 , 6 . 4~Mornlng Report
3; 6 :55-News 13.
I 00-Today 3, 15 ; Good Morning
Amer i ca 6 , 13 ; Batman 10;
Tuesday M6rnlng 8 ; Three
Slooges ·Litlle Rascals 17; I : I~
A .M . Wea!her 33 .
: 30- Family Affair
10 ;
If' s
Everybody's Busi ness 33; 7 55Chuck Wh ile Reports 10
8 : IJO--{;apt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leove II
to Beaver 17; Sesame St . 33.
8· 3()-Romper Room 17 ; 9:00-Bob
Braun 3: Big \/alley 6: Porky Pig
1!. Friends 8; One Day AI A Time
10 : Phil Donahue 13, 15, Lucy
Show 17
9 »-Bob Newhart 8 , Love of Life
10 ; Gr'*n Acres 17 .
IO ·IJO--{;ard Sharks J , IS; Edge of
Nigh I 6: Beol l he Clock 8,1 0:
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
" Assault on a Queen " 17
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
S10. 000 Pyramid lJ , Andy
Griffifh 6; Whew 8, 10.
11 :()()-High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6. 13 . Pr ice is Right 8.10.
11 30- Whee l of Fortune 3.1 5;
Fami :y f-eud 6, 13; Sesame St .
20; Know Your schools 33;
11 · 5.s--News 17
12 : 00- Newscenter
3:
News
6,8,10,13; M indreoders IS; Love
American Style 17 ; Pearls 33.
12: 30--Ryan· s Hope 6,13 : Search for
Tomorrow 8.1 0. Health Field 15;
Movie " The Slrlpper" 17 : Elec .
Co . 20,33 .
Oil-Days of Our Lives 3, 15 ; All My
Children 6.13; Young 1!. !he
Restless 8,10
3()-As The World Turns 8, 10;
2 Oil-Doctors 3, IS ; One Life to
Live 6, 13; 2 : 2s-News 17 .
7 30---Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Lighl 8.10; G;gglesnorl Hotel 17.
3 00- General Hospital 6. 13; I Love
Lucy II : Poldark II 20.
J JO---One Day At A Time 8 ; Joker's
W i ld 10; Fl intstones 17 . Con.
sumer Survival Ki t 33.
4 oo---M 1ster Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15 , Merv Griffin 6: Beverly
Hillbillies 8 . Sesame St 20,33 ;
Six Mill ion Dollar Man 10; Real
McCovs 13. Spectreman 17.
4 30--Bewitched 3, Tom &amp; Jerry lJ;
Merv Griffin 15 : Gilligan ' s Is . 17.
5 00--1 Dream of Jeannie 3. Sanford
&amp; Son 8. M i ster Roger ' s Neigh·
borhood 1 . . 33 . Mary Tyler
Moore 10 . Mv Three Sons 17.
5 30---Carol Burnett 3. News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8: E lee . Co 20 :
Mash 10: Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream ot Jeannie 17. Doctor
Who 33
6 011-News 3,8, 10, IJ , IS ; ABC News
6 ; Carol Burnett 17
6 : 3()-NBC News3 , 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6 ; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17 , Over Easy '10.
I .00-J's A Crowd 3 ; Tic Toe Dough
a: Pulse 6; News 10 ; Newlywed
Game 13; Love American Style
15 ; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20,ll .
I JO- Hollywood
Squares
l :
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; Hollywood squares 10: Sha No
Na 13; Til Honor Soclefy 15 ; All
in fhe Family 17: MacNeil·
Lehrer Reporf 20,33 .
8 Oil-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3, 15 ; Happy Days 6, 13; Bugs
Bunny 8, 10 . live from the Met
20,33: Ral Patrol 17 .
8 :3o-Angle 6,13; F•l Albert 8, 10;
NBA Basketball 17.
9 :00-Movle "Beggarman, Thiel"
J, IS ; Three's Compony 6, 13;
Movie " High M;dnight " 8, 10;
9 : 3()-Taxi 6,13.
10 :00-Horl to Harf 6,13; 11 : 00News 3,6,8, 10, IJ, IS, L•sf of the
Wild 17.
11 : 15- News 20; II : 30- Tonight
3,15; Barney Miller 6,13: Bar.
naby Jones 8; ABC Ne~ JJ ;
Movie "Father Goose " 10: Movie
"Road lo Rio" 17 .
12 : 05- Movle "Adam's Woman"
6, )J ; 12: 40-Movle "Tho Baby
Maker" 8; 1
Tomorrow 3;
News 15.
17;
1:4G-NBA
1: 35-News
Basketball 17; 2: JG--News 13;
4 : to-Movie "Ten Million Dollar
Grab"
5

:oo-

p.

�10-The D&amp;lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Nov . 26, 1979

First reading given on employee pay hike

Area deaths
BARBARA BETZ

Mrs. Barbara Jane Betz, ~1. a
resident of 608 Third Ave., died SWI day at 8:25 am . in St . Mary's
Hospital, Huntington . W. Va .
following a short illness .
She was associate director of nur lling at Holzer Medical Center

Mrs.

Betz was born Sept. 24, 1928,

in Gallipolili, daughter of the late
WUllam J . and Hazel Virginia Har tenbaugh Woods .
Survivors lnclude her husband,
James N. Betz, whom she married
June 21, 19tll, at Keene, N. H . Two
children survive : J . Timothy Betz.
GalllpollB, and Sally Betz, Columbus. Two grandsons, Adam and Andrew Betz, also survive .
Three sisters survive : Mrs .
Russell (Patricia ) Sessor , Sarasota,
F1a .; Mrs . Katheryn Preston,
I..exlngton, Ky.; and Mrs. !Wnald
(SUsie) Thalin, Gallipolis; one
lrother, William J. Woods , preceded
her in death.
She graduated from Gallia
Academy High School in 1946, and
Grant Hospital School of Nursing in
Columbus in 1948. She was also a
graduate of Ohio University With a
BS in nursing in 1977.
She had served the nursing
profession 'l/ years .
Mrs. Betz was a member or St .
Peter's Episcopal Cllurch, a member of the board of the Episcopal
Cllurch Women, Diocese of Southern
Ohio ; a lay reader of the Episcopal
Cllurch, a past vestry member, and
also a member of the church choir .
She W88 a delegate to the Tr! Annual Convention of the National

BUYING U. S.
SILVER COINS
1964 and Older
We Pil'r' 9k for dimes ;
S2.40 forQuilrters ;
54 .80 for Half Dollars ;

$11 .50 for Silwer Dollars
••

•

•

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0

••••••••••••••• •••••

•

60c Piece for War Nickels
$1.1b . for Sterling
S1 ,7S ea. for Half Dated 1965 to
1969.

Also Gold wedding band s, class
rings, dental gold, platinum , gold

filled jewelry .
Silver plates 1.33 lb .

Prices Good thru Monday
1-S P.M . Daily

TREASURE CHEST
COIN SHOP
592-6462
Atheni, Ohio
Top of hill, 14S Pomeroy Rd .

Episcopal Church 10 Denver , Colo.
earlier this year . She had served as
a church delegate for :1JJ years to the
Diocesan .
Mrs . Betz was aJ.so a member of
the Ohio Nurses Association, the
American Nurses Association,
National League for Nuraing,
National League for Nursing Administrators , the Ohio Hospital
Association, Gallipolis Emblem
Club, Episcopal Cllurch Women ol
St . Peter 's. and had served as Wlited
thank offering chairperson for five
years and was a nurse for the Vinton
County Camp for 12 years .
Funeral services will be held 2
pm . Wednesday at the St . Peter's
Episcopal Cllurch with Rev . A. H.
Mackenzie officiating . Burial will be
in Mound HlU Cemetery .
F'nends may call at the new parish
hall in St Peter 's Episcopal Cllurch
on Tuesday from 6-9pm .
ln lieu of flowers, the family
request,; gifts to the St. Peter's
Episcopal Clmrch building fund, In
care of Rev . A. H. Mackenzie, 541
Second Ave ., Gallipolis.
Funeral arrangement,; are under
the direction of the Waugh-Haliey ·
Wood Funeral Home .
Pall bearers will be Schos.s Carey,
Thomas W. Morgan, Steve Lee, Tim
Unkhom, Tom Keenan , Jeff Paddock, Paul Nibert and Dr . Charles
E . Holzer .
FRANK H. MCPHERSON
Frank H. McPherson, II, Minersville, formerly or Coolville and
Stewart, died at his residence Saturday morning following an extended
illness.
Mr . McPherson was born in
Belpre the son of the late Daniel and
Mae Swan Mcl'herson .n 195Jhe was
preceded in death by his wife,
Grace . He was also preceded in
death by two sons, Dodnald Lee and
Richard Dale.
Mr . McPherson was a former employe of the Athens County and Slate
Of Ohio Highway Department,; and a
former farmer.
He is survived by one daughter,
Margaret Burkhammer. Minersville; three sons, Harold of Galena;
Pa!li E . of Coolville, and Carl E . of
Guysville; one brother .. Ray of
F1orida; nine grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews .
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev . Don Walker and the Rev .
Timothy &amp;lyder officiating . Burial
will be in Rockland Cemetery ,
Belpre . Frends may call at the
funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9.

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Middleport Vlllage Council
meeting in regular session Monday
night gave the first reading to an ordinance providing aalary increases
ranging from five through IJ percent
for village employes in 1!81.
The new salary schedule """
drawn up by Mayor Fred Hoffman
who said unl""" the pay of employes
is increased the village will not be
able to hold workers on their jobs.
Council members were In
agreement and all felt that new
avenues of income must be explored
to provide additional monies for

(USPS 145-%U)
BIDWEI.J.. MAN KillED - Willlam Gutherie, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was
fatally injured Monday rna~ in a traffic accident at a private residen-

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_,

·~
·'
··. ·.· e
. -' . I

UNITED NATIONS ( AP) - The
U.N. Security CoWlcil was expected
to begin debate today on the
U.S. -Iranian crisis in response to a
request from Secretary~neral
Kurt Waldhetm contending that it is
the most serious threat to peace since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis .
The United States, which for
nearly two weeks blocked an Iranian
request for the debate, agreed
because it believed the debate would
result In a strong resolution demanding release or the 49 Americans
JESS L ANDERSON
J""" L. Anderson, 84, Route 3,
Racine, died Sunday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr . Anderson W88 born March 28,
1895, a son of the late Moses and
Eliza Spence Anderson . He was also
preceded in death by his first wife,
Laura Farley, two dall!!hters, a
brother, a sister, and a grand daughter.
Surviving are his wife, Audrey ;
five daughters, Dorothy Wigington,
Nitro, W. Va.; Laura Jones, New
Haven; Zelpha Bogg.,.., Portland;
Freda Clark, Cottageville, W. Va.,
and Jessie Jarrell, Racine; eight
stepchildren, Clarence Weddle, Portland; Lawrence Weddle, East
Uverpool; Marie Dailey, Racine;
Ralph Weddle, Rodgers, Ohio;
Grace Curran, East Uverpool;
&amp;bert Weddle, Pennsylvania;
Cookie Dodson, Racine, and Charles
Weddle, California .
Also surviving are a sister, Kathryn
Adkins, Huntington, W. Va ., 12 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren,
30 step-grandchildren and 4J stepgreat -grandchildren .
Mr . Anderson was a retired United
Mine worker at Acme, W. Va.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Wednesday at the Racine Cllurch of the Nazarene with the Rev .
Morris Wolfe officiating . Burial will
be in the Letart Falis Cemetery .
F'nends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home after 7 !hili evening.

, • 1·

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I

f

Serving the area's banking needs since 1904.

Fs
'a e

Farmers
Bank

--- -

Member FDIC

POMEROY, OHIO

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at

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ce off SR 218in Gallia County. Gutherie, an employee of a prtvate trash
hauler, was struck by a garbage truck driven by Willard ~th of Bidwell.

- - -- - - - - - - - " " - - - - - - '

held hostage in the U.S. Embassy ln
Tehran for three weeks, a State
Department official said.
The hostages were visited Sunday
for the first time aince their ordeal
began Nov . t by an American official as tens of thousands of
Iranians held the daily antiAmerican demonstration outside.
The official, Rep. George Hansen,
R-ldaho, reported the captives were
still being kept with their hands tied
loosely and were "anxious" but
healthy. He also reported one of
them W88 recovering from chicken
pox .
In Tehran, revolutionary leader
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini today
urged his Wamic followers to
mobilize against the United Slates
and said ali Iranians must learn to
handle a weapon.
In a speech to revolutionary guards, the Moslem patriarch envisaged
his nation of J5 million people
producing a 2lknillion strong anny
within a few years. "Our Islamic
principles say everyone should know
how to shoot and how to ride a horse,"hesaid.

Two area.

• •

!Continued from page 1)
The National Safety Council
estimated that 500 to 600 people
would die in . traffic accidents over
the weekend, which began at 6 p.m.
Wednesday .
The traffic death toll for the
Thanksgiving weekend of 1978 was
508. The higbest four-day holiday
death COWlt was 7&amp;! in 19611.
At least 18 persons were killed in
14 accidents oo Ohio street,; and
highways during the Thanksgiving
weekend, the Highway Patrol S8ld
Sunday night .
The patrol counted the state 's
holiday weekend traffic fatalities
from 6 p .m . Wednesday until
midnight Sunday .
The dead :
SUNDAY
WARREN - Dennis L. Richmond,
22, Bristolville, in a one&lt;ar accident
oo Ohio 45 in Trumbull County .
LEBANON - Imogene Moore, 45,
Monroe. in one-ear accident on a
Warren County road.
SATIIRDAY
CINCINNATI - Paul Taylor Jr . , 7B,
Cincinnati , a pedestrian struck by a
ca r on a Cincinnati street.
NORWOOD - Roderick Weibel ,
41, Norwood, when his truck struck a
utility pole on a Norwood street.
SI'. CLAIRSVII.J..E - Louis R.
Sutherland Jr ., 17, Woodsfield, in a
two-ear accident on Ohio 78 In
Monroe County.
TROY - Donald Klipinger , 19,
Covington, a pedestrian struck by a
car on Ohio 48 in Miami County.
FRIDAY
CELINA- RichardS . Zizelman, 22.
and three passengers, Robert J .
Alexander, 19 ; Gary L. Coats, 20 ;
and Michael J. Dresher, 19, all of
Celina, in a one-ear accident oo Ohio
liB In Mercer County .
PARMA - Loreen McKinney, 21,
Cleveland, in a one&lt;ar accident on a
Parma street.
ATHENS - !Wse A. Moritz, 26,
Amesville, In a two-ear accident on
Ohio 5W in Athens County .
COLUMBUS - Rooald Powers,
10, and his sister, Usa, 8, both of
Columbus, pedestrians struck by a
car on a Columbus street.
NORWALK - OWen V. Libbee, ~3.
Norwalk, in a one&lt;ar accident on a
Huron CoWIIY road.
THURSDAY
WAUSF.ON - Scott Beckwith, 16.
Toledo, in a one&lt;ar accident on a
Fulton County road.
BUCYRUS Gertrude C.
Steinberger, 80, Fremont , In a t wocar accident on Ohio 103 in Crawford
CoWlty '
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
CIN CINNATI - &amp;bert J. McHugh,
IW , Cincinnati . a pedestrian struck
by a car on a Cincinnati street.

Waldhetm in a letter to Security
CoWlcil President Sergio Palacios
de Vizzio of Bolivia said the tension
between the United Slates lllld Iran
"could have dangerous consequences for the entire world." He
asked that the council "be convened

IIOSI'IT\L '\E\\ S
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admisaions-Sheryl Littie, Middleport; Charles Evans,
Pomeroy;
Margaret Vadish,
Pomeroy; Clara Kauff, Middleport .
Saturday
Discharges-Mary
Newlun, Kim Annstl'Ong, Hennan
Michael, Tracy NewlWI , Lula
Toban .
Sunday Admissions -Nancy King,
Middleport; Eura Largent,
Syracuse; &amp;bert Van Meter , West
Columbia; Hattie Armes, Syracuse .
Sunday Discharges-Robert Jeffers, James Cunningham, Pearl
Games.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV . 23
Mrs. Frank Cltapman and son,
Debra Davis. Mrs. Phillip Denny
and daughter , Howard Deacon, Mrs .
Dean Hill and son, Janet Lemley.
Nadine Randolph , Douglas Rees,
Sherry Thompson, Mabel Triplett,
Mrs. Russell Viers and son .
BIR'niS NOV. 23
Mr . and Mrs. Micahel Sirrunons,
daughter, Gallipolis ; Mr . and Mrs .
Dorsey
Ohlinger.
daughter,
Middleport .
DISCHARGES NOV. 24
Gladys Adkins, Judy Barthelmaf,
Mrs. Roger Berkeley and son.
Tharon Camp, Mrs . Lance Clifford
and daughter , Mildred Coughenour ,
Helen Dempsey, Patrick Denny .
Bert Fayne , !.ester Gibbs, Mrs.
Donald Green and son, Nondus
Hendricks ,
Mildred
Jividen ,
Bradley Kemper, Ruth Larkins,
Mrs . James Magnueson and son,
April McCormick, Mrs. Joseph
Mingus and daughter, Roger
Williams, Velma Young .
BIRTHS NOV. 23
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Simpson,
daughter, Jackson
DISCHARGES NOV . Z5
Larry Call, Mrs. David Facemire
and daugher, Marlin Jones, Anna
Jones, Erik McMannis, Joanna
McNeil . Jeremy Powell , Rhoda
Rutt, Nina Saylor, Mr.s Fred Staley
and son.
BIR'niS NOV . Z5
Mr . and Mrs . Roger Evans,
daughter, Oak Hill; Mr . and Mrs.
Rooald Conrad, daughter, Ja ckson ;
Mr . and Mrs . Gary Scarrett, son,
Wellston; Mr . and Mrs. Anthony
Plzzino, daughter, Addison .

urgently In an effort to seek a
peaceful solution ."
Diplomatic sources said they expected the I~ council members to
consult privately !hili morning and
to meet publicly in the afternoon to
start the debate .
These sources said they expected
council members generally would
make it very clear that they con sidered the main issue rele88e of the
Americans held by Iranian students
demanding that the U.S. government surrender the deposed shah for
trial in Iran.
Iran's U.N. delegation asked
Tehran for instructions. Acting
Foreign Minist.!r Abolhassan Bani
Sadr asked on Nov . 13 for a COWlcil
meeting to hear the Iranian
revolutionary regime's charges
against the shah and the United
Slates. But the COWICil refused to
grant the Iranian request because it
had oot replied to a council
statement Nov. 9 urging immediate
release of the hostages.
Waldhelm 's request for a council
meeting was annoW&gt;ced at 3 a .m
Monday Tehran time and there W88
no Immediate reaction from the
Iranian capital. On Sunday, Pars,
the official iranian newa agency, annoWlced that Bani Sadr would fly to
New York today to addr""" the coun cil and demand that the United
States surrender the shah . But
several hours later a govenunent
spokesman said the trip was delayed
a week because of the Ashura
religious holiday and the national
referendum Dec . 2 on Iran's new
Islamic constitution.

A teachers strike in the Meigs
Local School District moved along in

Death toll down
t'raffic deaths during the fourday Thanksgiving weekend were
lower than expected, probably
because there was less holiday
travel than in previous years, the
National Safety CoWlcil said
Monday.
The final death toU for the
weekend that ended at midnight
Sunday was 466. The Safety Council had predicted 500 to 600 people
would die in traffiNelated accidents.
The traffic death toll for the
Thanksgiving weekend of I 97B
was :iOB. The highest toll on
record was 764 in 19611.

Prime rate cut
NEW YORK (APl - Some
major banks cut their prime lending ratea Monday to l~t percent,
responding to lower costa for
acquiring fwlds and to coollng of
demand by businesses for loan.. .
Bankera Trust Co . of New
York, the nation's eighth-largest
bank ranked by deposits, reduced
its basic lending rate '.rom a
record IS+ percent. It was the
first reduction in the prime since
the key rate began rising sharply
last August .

Blair indicted
TO END MARRIAGES
A suit for divorce and an action for
dissolution have been filed in Meigs
County Corrunon Pleas Court .
Norman D. McCain, Rt . I, Long
Bottom, filed suit for divorce against
Glenda P . McCain, Marietta .
Richard Uter. Pomeroy, and
Pamela Liter, Pomeroy, filed for
dissolution of marriage .
FIRE SCHOOL SET

All Syracuse Firemen are asked to
attend fire school being held every
Tuesday at 7 p.m . at the munic1pal
building .
MEETS TIJESDA Y
The Meigs Area Holiness
Association will meet at 7:00p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Clturch ol
the Nazarene with the Rev . R. D.
Brown as speaker .

eye on the service and if it does not
improve to remove the franchise of
the company and seek another one to
serve the commwtity .
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate said
the company has not paid for its
franchise which was due in September . He was advised to btu the
firm for the fee .
Roger Luckeydoo, a village
resident, requested that COWICil
make some improvements to the
traffic flow in the Fourth and Walnut
Sts. area . CoW&gt;cil agree to have the
salety conunittee study the matter
and report at thenext meetinR .

An official report W88 received
from the Meigs CoW&gt;ty Board of
Elections giving the tally for voting
oo the referendum action against the
permissive auto license fee at the
Nov . 6 election at 417 no votes and
JOI yes votes .
Clerk Grate read a communication from the Bureau of
Unemployment stating that a clairn
by a worker for benefits baa been
denied.
According to the report, the employe was discharged for being
frequently tardy and absent .
Another communication was read

from the State Auditor advlsintl the
village that it will be required to pay
a fee of $30 a IIICilth into the
fireflghtera dependency fund.
Last year the fee for the year waa
only f60 . It W88 agreed that Councilmen Horton and Horky will continue to service on the lireflghtera
dependency board during 1!81.
CoWICil discussed the issuance of
pennlts to haul garbage and It waa
agreed to continue issuing only two
such pennits at this time. ColDic!l
membera were asked to think about
increasing the annual license fee
from the present $25.

en tine
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1979

PR ICE

mTEt.l'l Gt.NTS

Despite rumors~
strike continues

U. N. Security Council to debate crisis

I

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VOL. XXVIII ~0 . !58

while Councilman Olarles Mullen
voted against it because he had mt
received a copy of the provisions in
advance as had other council mem bers .
Mullen said that sometimes he
does not receive his mail and copies
of the ordinance were sent by Mayor
Hofbnan lo coW&gt;cil members via
mail prior to the meeting .
COMPLAINTS AIRED
Mullen expressed complaints
against the PointView Television
Cable Co. which is serving the community. He said repair service is
slow and he ur~ed council to keep on

•

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the Meigs
General
- '.-..~~'[ .,.,..~ f~
Hospital
.
~·
" ""·dr
was
established
i'- . - I
in what was
the old
post office building.
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village employes .
Mayor Hofbnan reported the
budget in some areas may have to be
reduced in order to meet the new
pay schedule . He pointed out that
wage increases placed in the ordinance provide increases ranging
from ll through 13 percent for employes with longer service.
He also pointed out that during
I!r79 increases were kept at seven
percent while inflation moved along
!hili year at 13 to 14 percent.
CoWICilmen Carl Horky, Dewey
Horton, William Walters and Marvin
Kelly voted for the first reading

BURLINGTON , Ky . (AP)
Joseph Blair , who was arrested
after a five-hour standoff with
police Nov . 19 at a blue jean
plant, was indicted Monday on
two coW&gt;ts of kidnapping by the
Boone County grand jury .
Blair, 23, of Clarksville, Ohio,
signed hlmseU into a anclnnati
mental hospital after being
released on bond two days after
the incident.
Blair was accused of holding
two Levi Strauss Co. warehouse
managers hostage at gW&gt;point at
the Florence distribution center
while demanding to see his
girUriend .

KENNY WIGGINS

Wiggins
will be
honored
Kenny Wiggins, Mineravtue, will
be one ol three men to be honored at
a 6::.! p.m . dinner Wednesday, Nov .
28, at the Meiga Inn. The event is
sponsored by the Pomeroy Ouunber
of Conunerce.
Wiggins will be presented an
award of distinction along with Paul
Casci, Middleport, and Dr. Ral5ton
Russell, Columbus.
Wiggins is secretary -treasurer of
Royal Crown Bottling Co., Middleport. He graduated from
Pomeroy High School in 1947 and
was the president of the senior class.
He is a member of the Minersville
United Methodist Cllurch and is
presenUy superintendent there . He
has taught the Banner class at the
church for the past 25 years . He was
counselor of the youth fellowship
group for IS years.
He h88 been a sponsor and coach
of the Hit 'N Misses girls' softball
team for IJ years. He helped
organize the Men's Slo-Pltch Softhall League and Meigs Girls' Softball league. He also helped organize
the Meigs-Masoo Girls' Softball
team. He has maintained the
baseball field in Minersville the past
21l years .
Tickets may be purchased at the
office of the Pomeroy Ownber of
Commerce, New York Clothing
House or from Fred Crow or Paul
Simon at l6.50each .

its lOth week today with no setUement being made .
It was reported that both the
teachers association and the board
of education met Monday night.
Teachers met at Carpenters' Hall in
Pomeroy while the board of
education met at the Meigs Jwtior
High School.
The board of education meeting
was an executive session and no
report was issued from that
meeting. There """ no report forthcoming from the teachers·
meeting.
However, rumor has it that the
teachers were expecting the board

EXTENDED OIJTLOOK
Thunday througb Saturday.
cool tbrGagb lhe period. A chance
of !lbowen or snow Ourrteo Thuroday and Friday and In lbe north
Saturday. Overullhl IOWI In lbe
2111. RIPs In tile 301 Thunday
and lbe mid 301 to lower tCll
Friday and Saturday.

Weather
Showers likely torught with a low
in the low to ffi!d tos. Showers ending
and turning colder Wednesday. A
high in the mid to upper tos.
Probability of precipitation in percent is :10 today, 70 tonight, and 60
Wednesday .

28

of education to act upon a package
which would settle the strike.
On the other hand, it was
suggested that the procedure would
be for board action on such a
package to follow approval by the
teachers.
Meantime, the situation is moving
along in its Hlh week with schools
having been closed aince Oct. 16.
Makeup days apparenUy will be
required from that time W&gt;til the
strike is settled.
Such makeup time could cause the
loss of Ouistmas vacation for the
2800 students of the distri:i 88 weU
as require Saturday classes. The
strike is approaching setting a
record for the longest teacher.~
strike in the Slate of Ohio.
Meantime, it was annoW&gt;ced that
the district's board of education will
meet in regular session at 7:30pm.
Thursday at the Meigs JWlior High
School.
Officially toth the teachers
assocl8tion and the board have
maintained absolute silence on the
strike situation for over a week .

AcriON ILLEGAL
Middleport water customen
are advlaed that II la Wegal to
tamper wltll water meten ..boxes and tbal uyone doing thla
11! snbject to fines UDder botll
village aod otale laws. Damage la
ocCiliTIDg to meter boxes by Inexperienced people lllrniDg lbelr
water oo or off at lhe meter. U
water musl be turued off at lbe
meter, please notify the water
department and a service man
will be oeut to do this.

Deadline drawing nt'ar
Fmal !lays of the leaf pickup in
Middleport will be Wednesday and
Thursday of !hili week .
Residents, who have leaves to be
picked up, are asked to phone the
mayor's office at 992-Jl~ or main·
tenance department at ~711 .
Pickups will be made !hili week
only to residents who notify the
street department that they have
leaves raked and ready for pickup .

SWORN IN - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews who was rMiected
to the mayor's post in the November election was sworn in Monday by
Probate Judge Robert E. Buck. Andrews W88 elected on a write-in vote.
Plctured, left to right, Judge Buck and Mayor Andrews. Andrews will
begin his second four year tenn Jan . I.

Christmas parade
draws big crowd
Under the chalnnanship of MISS
Candy Ingels, Middleport mer chants pulled off one of the best
Cllri.tmas holiday parades in a
number or years Monday night.
The business section of the town
was packed with spectators who turned out to greet Santa and even the
weather cooperated even through a
few sprinkles fell just before the
parade moved through over the
parade route .
Middleport merchants staged a
moonlight sale In conjunction with
the parade and Old St . Nick was kept
busy for a long time following the
parade distributing candy treats to
youngster.~ in the drive through area
of the Central Trust Co .
Lead by the Middleport police
cruiser, this year 's parade was
enhanced by some excellent float entries mcluding an excellent presentation by the Middleport First Baptist Clturch which was a replica of a
large Cltri.stma8 package with the
archway interior showing a live
Nativity scene, and the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce which
featured an attractive " around the
tree" scene with lights , packages
and a couple of attractive Santa
!wipers. There was a Nativity
theme entry by Heath United

Melllodist Cllurch and of course,last
but not least waa Santa and hla elvea
on his special float . There were marching units galore including three
high school bands-Eastern, Kyger
Creek and Wahama - which made
with the holiday music along the
parade route and there were attractive queens used as accents in
the parade lineup. Fire equipment
with sirens whailing and lights
revolving added to the parade.
Taking part were Middleport fire
trucks , Pomeroy fire equipment including a miniature vehicle, the
Wahama High Band , Meigs County
JWlior Miss Julle Gibll!, Heath
United Methodist Cllurch Doat, Middleport First Baptist Cllurch float,
the pom-pom Slylettes of M88on, W.
Va.; Vinton County Junior Miss
Michelle Riscbel, the Meigs CoWlty
Jaycees, the Eastern High Band, the
Rangerettes of Mrs . Judy Riggs,
Carrie Ginther, Southern High
homecoming queen; Meigs Junior
High cheerleaders ; the Pomeroy
&lt;llamber ol Commerce F1oat;
numerous Girl Scout and Boy Scout
troops, some costumed as packages,
marching; Cleland Realty, an antique car; the Kyger Creek High
Band , Santa on his float, and Orange
Township fire equipment .

Santa's appearance highlights annual Christmas parade

NAnvTTY SCENE - A Nativity theme W88

out

by Heath United Methodist 01urch In Mondsy night's Cllristmas

at Middleport.

'

parade

EXCEllENT ENTRY - This excellent entry by the Middleport First
Baptist Cllurch was a highlight of the annual Ouistmas parade in Middleport Monday night . The float was a replica of a Ouistmas package
with a live Nativity setting used inside. The float carried out the theme,
''Happy Birthday. Jesus" .

.

SANTA CLAUS ARRIVES--Santa In aU of bla glory waa well preaented
on his apecial float at the Middleport C1uimnas parade Monday night.

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