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                  <text>)).12- TheSunday Times-&amp;!ntinel,SWiday, Dec. 2,1979

Quickel, Miller attend workshops

Hoofs and Paws
By Marlon C. Crawford
Melp Co. HUDIIIDe Society
POMEROY -Each year the local
Humane Society has two bazaars
' 'for the llJiimals ... nus year the
0u1stmas Bazaar will be Friday
and Saturday , December 7th and
lith, 9am unUI4 p.m .
Please - any of you who love
anlmala and like what we do for
them, we need contributors and purchMers. We have many on;!oing
and lljKOIIling projects that will
need all the financial a.ssistance you
can give 118. We are very proud of the
nwnber of animals that we have
~ able to care for with nothing to
care for them "in " but a few dog
hollSes - but with the coming of winter and cold weather our temporary
housing is going to take more effori
and ingenuity than utilized in the
past. We are solving that dilemma ,
slowly but surely and with alot of
people's help .
Proceeds from our bazaars really
is one of our biggest shots in the arm
and I think if you 11 visit our shoppe
this weekend you will see all sorts of
great Items - homemade bread,
pies, cakes. candy, all sorts of crafts
such as woo:l-turned items of use
aroW1d the home tike candle holders,
pen holders, etc., there will be plants. candles, and variollS Christmas
decorations and ceramic items .
Those on diets are going to be
really tempted to cheat 'cause let
me tell you. our society members
are great cooks and bakers . See you
there Fliday and Saturday '
The month of November hasn t
seemed as filled with tragedy as has
occurred in the past few months . We
had a few bad ones however - just
enough to keep us on our toes, i.e. :
Irish Setter taken from a family
because they did not do light by the
animal in getting it the necessary
distemper shots - so, you guessed
it . We had to don the black hat again
and take the poor beautiful boy in to
the vet to be put to sleep . He was just
a young dog, too - probably not a
year old .
Then a dog got his head stuck m
the hollSing of one of those --e ye
sore" jWik cars that we see around
the county . After several neighbors
trying to dislodge the animal and
failing, the HS was called and we
called in a gentleman who has a
wrecker and all the right equipment.
It took awhile - because people
that we ask to help us can't always

drop everything they are doing at
the time to jump for us - but after a
few people getting impatient, the job
was finally accomplished and dog
went running off.
nus was another hunter 's dog and
those poor animals have been the
victims all month long It seems Two
were caught in traps - the famollB
steel leg hold . Another was reported
by the police as being caught m a
trap but both the police and the HS
representative showed up and - no
trap, no dog, no nothing . Strange .
We had a beautiful small Manchester · ·Monuna" and her three
babies this week - but found homes
for them right away - we have
others but I want to tell you exactly
what was accomplished during
November before listing our cut orphans up for adoption .
Emergency ru ns made to
veterinatians , to rescue dogs m
distress, and to pick up and deliver
animals. T/ ; dogs placed, 29 ; cats
placed , 21; dogs euthanized 3; cats
euthanized 0; cruelty and neglect
cases investigated by our Humane
Officer 5; inqwlies called in to our
answering service, 321 ; calls made
by our placement service, 179. Other
than a few more new members and

many contributions dunng the
month - that was it, folks .
Now then, we have a YOWII!
terriec, male, about 5 or 6 months
old who is tan anrl white and really a
ni~ little guy - but we mllBI find a
home for him this nest week .
Anyone want a smart, lovable !ella,
who needs a goo:! home ' '11len, we
have Border Collies. Boy , do we
have Border Collies ! Would you
believe seven of them, all beautiful,
both male and female, black and
white, some with brown mixed in
there - all appear to be healthy but
were taken from an Wlhealthy envirorunent . They have been raised in
a small enclosure that was probably
big enough for one dog - and have
not been given a very good start at
life so need patient new owners who
have enough love and time to make
it up to these gentle beauties. We are
always fllSSy about who gets our
animals but will be particularly
fll88y about these seven - so if you
are interested in seeing these
animals please call992~:!li0.
In Gallipolis, the Hwnane Society
there has two cute little puppies,
Manchester and Siberian Husky
type - five weeks old -one female
and one male, anyone wanting to
check on these little guys should call
441&gt;-1316 evenings only .

ty .
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The Rural !nltlatives War~..,
was held at the Ohio University Inn
in Athens, Ohio Nov . 28 and 29.
They concentrated on many of the
new JrogJ'arD8 that have ~
recently annoWiced by the Presi·
dent. Areas that were covered In this
workshop were health, education,
hollBing, conununity and economic
development.
The dinner speaker waa Jack H.
Watson , Jr., secretary to the cabinet
and assistant to the president for In·
nergovenunental afiainl.

of worbbopo on federal grants
sponaored by Senator John
Glenn.

A'M'END

SESSION- Bill
Quickel, left, 81111 John Mlller,
right, reeently anended a aerles

POMEROY - Senator John Glenn
has been sponsoring a series of
workshops around Ohio in an effort
to bring a better understanding of
federal grants and programs to the
local level .
Two area residents, Bill Quickel,
Pomeroy, and John Miller, Mayor
Elect of Rutland , attended this
workshop.
With the recent announcement of
the Presidents Rural Initiative Pro-

Responding to questions during a
citizens meeting at Shawnee State
College, Rick Butch , ORTA chief
design engineer. said . the feeder
system lS a future possibility, but added that legislation mandates that
any ORTA system must operate
without a deficit
The Portsmouth meeting was
coordinated by the Ohio Valley
Regional Development Commission
iOVRDCi at the request of ORTA.
IT was the second of a series of 14
public meetlns being held to get
citizen comment on the proposed
high speed rail passenger service .

During them eetlng a history of
ORTA was presented, and different
propo88ls were explained, with
charts showing the routes to be
followed by the proposed high speed

trains.
LANDS SAFELY
CHARLOTI'E, N.C. (AP) -

An
Eastern Airlines DC-9 landed safely
at Douglas Municipal AillJort on
Saturday with its landing gear doors
open, scraping the runway as it
touched down, FAA officials said .
Jiro Harben, FAA control team
supervisor, said Flight 353 landed
safely, although the scraping of the
doors callSed sparks. Eastern officials in Miami said there were 23
passengers aboard the flight from
Newark , N.J ., to Charlotte.

•

Phone 446-4290
~"" ~."" f,~.,..c

w- C*too

(USPS

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llkw:lm •"ffll1l lllonoo o

p 78800

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Butch said inital plaru; are for high
speed service between Cincinnati,
Columbus, Cleveland and Toledo.
and tt any acceptable plan must
assure operating revenue equal - at
least - to expenses.
Most questions, as expected, concerned the lack of any immediate
plaru; for service to Southeastern
coWities. Butch said such service
might be possible after the main
routes are established and
operative.
After the series of publi c
meetings, a single recommendation
will be presented to the legislature
next March, with the issue expected
to be presented to Ohio voters on the
November 191!0 ballot.
He also discussed power sources,
costs, fares and other details of the
proposed system, and asked for further conunent by mail or telephone .

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By

Willis T . Leadingham
Realtor

FlEXIBLE MORTGAGE
There's a new tvpe of mortgage loan wh ic h would tailor the pay ·

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ment schedu le to the borrower 's needs and abil ities. Instead of level

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payments for th e life of the loan , payments could be smaller for

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period and la rger for another period dependlno on your future earnmg
prospects
Under th e proposed regulations , the borrower and lender would

•
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negoti ate the repayment sc hedule as long as each 'J)ayment would
cover interest cost s a nd would be on a fu l ly ammorfized basis after
eight years Thus , a young cou ple could arrange smaller payments
during tht' in i t ial Vt'ars at t he te-rm or an elderly cou p le could have
smaller payments following retirement .
As an e•am ple , take a 30 -year m o rtgage where the normal mon
thly principal a nd i nteresl payment would be approximatey $210 Us
i ng the fl cx1b le oavmen t olan , the borrower wov l d pay as l itt le as $100
per month for the f1 r st eig ht years, then S2~ for the remainder o1 the
term Th 1s type o f home loan is b~ino phased in on a state by state pro

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cess

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If ther e 1s anything we can do to help you in the field of real esfaft
pl ease phone or drop in at l l A Dl NG HAM R: EAL ESTATE, S11 Second
o ve ., Gallipolis . Phone 44ld699 . We're here to hetp.

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$sooo

2 Americans dead
SAN JUAN, Puerto !Uco fAP)
-Terrorist gunmen ambushed a
bWload of U.S. Navy personnel
on their way to work near San
Juan this morning, killing two
servicemen and wounding eight
others, Navy officials reported.
It was the first fatal terror attack against the U.S. military in
Puerto Rico, where proIndependence violence has
mostly ~limited to attacks on
property . By mid-morning, two
hours after the killings, no one
had yet claimed responsibility .
The Navy said names of the
dead and wounded were being
withheld WIW nen-of-«&lt;n could
be notified .

• L •gh t•o c han n~l onCI•&lt;IJ ton
• -"''w'd • Trrr a n~ • n utbm~l w tltl

oo.ua 11 na \ori~T n iJ r OwO&lt;Xl
fr0111 (Of\C~IJI!M1( a,l~r'

p!IK &amp;n l •n• SI"llJfl h iJrd
'i•mula tfil WOOCI

501u:Js

SALE
REG.
$710 . 00

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,.. . th r oQh1 41utom&amp;l o( !!.r!ttrm~ &lt;:M!1•Qnl!'cl to
subllr shoJOf'\ o f color an trac k

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p•Qo9ram t o program . Cl"l af1nto l I O &lt; "'"n~ l
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room I•SiJt11
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1on lr"\l ph&lt;n.phor\ to hfol p ~~ ~ ~p c o • or~ v •~ •d

7114''
Comb. Saw Blade

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ll:tybo"•d (Otl lf OI
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PRICES EFFECTIVE DEC. 3RD THRU DEC. 8th, 1979

on1. II)'}'"'"'''

REG .
5880. 00

A Gift - A - Rama - Store!

675-1160

Point Pleasant

Store Hours Monday-Friday 8 a.m. To 5 p.m .. Saturday 8 a.m. To lL noon

SALE

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Elberfelds maintain their own serv1ce department to repair and maintain what we sell.

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
312 Sixth Street

Reign assailed

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wolhor• "f1elu• al

4' X

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CD XSheathing

Precut Studs

Alloclaled ..._
President Carter's popularity
amoiJ8 voters in rural Ohio appears
on a significant downturn, but these
same voters don1 think much of Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy .
The country's economic crtsls
seems to have cost President Carter
significant l08!1ea in voter support in
Gallia, Pike, Meigs and Scioto counties In southern Ohio.
Voters In those COWitiea accoWited
for 7,1196 of the president's 11,117vote margin over Gerald R. Ford in
the 1976 presidential election, according to the Dayton Daily News,
which cooducted a survey to determine the mood of rural Ohio voters.
''He's not nearly as popular as he
was in 1976," said Scioto CoWity
Commlaaloner RDbert Cross, a
Democrat. •'He lost a lot of people in
thla area on the econmnic Issue .
We're looking for leadership."
"I doo 't think Carter has fulftlled
hill duties as president," coaunented
steelworker RDbert J. Simon of West
Portvnoutb.
"He bun 'I stopped inflation ;
maybe a new man could. Thla Ia Appalachia and, in 1976, he promised a
lot for the working man. They
respected Ilia pnmlse 8lld th~
he would he)p to a degJ ee. He llasn 't

SAVE

RCA
XL-100
25"

Expert technicians~

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WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

ELBERFELDS
IN~.mPOMEROY
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POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1979

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy says the '17 ·
year reign of the deposed Shah of
Iran was "one of the most violent
regimes in the history of
mankind'' and contends the interesta ol the United States lie
"with the Iranian people ."
The Massachusetts Democrat,
vying with President Carter for
his party's 1980 presidential
nomination, did not criticize admlnlatratloo handling of the 4week-old hostage crisis In an in terview Sunday with San Franruco television station KRONTV.

Going to court
ClEVELAND (AP ) - With a
strike by Cleveland school
teachel"'l in Its seventh week, the
llchool board says it will go to
court to try to get the schools re opened .
Plans for the court action wen&gt;
annOWiced after negotiations
ltaUed once again during the
treekend .

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•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Accidents leave
five people hurt
Five persons were injured during
four Saturday accidents investigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
A Nevarre, 0 ., man , Do!an
Wiggins, 39, was cited on a charge of
OWl following a two-vehi cle
collision in Meigs CoWity on SR 7, at
the junction of CR 2, at 2: 45 a.m .
The patrol reports a north boWid
auto operated by Wiggins attempted
to pass a vehicle driven by William
Musser, 20, Pomeroy, just as the
MllSSer auto started to turn left off of

against gWIS."

MEETS TONlGHT
Meigs Local Olapter 17 of the Ohio
Association of Public School Em ployes will meet at 7: :ll tonight in
the Meigs Junior High School
Cafeteria, Middleport .
All non certified employes of the district are
urged to attend.

Khomeini 's plan to set up an Ialamlc:
republic. Today and Sunday, the
voters completed the change from
the monarchy by voting on a coastitution making Iran a tbeoc:ratlc:
state with Khomelnl aa the nation 's
leader for life .
Although overwhelming approval
was expected in the two-day vole,
middle-of -the-road and leftl.lt
political parties boycotted tile
referendwn because the 711-fear~
Khomelni would become supreme
political leader without the electoral
approval of the people .

enttne

helped ."
A Gallipolis appliance repairman
who described himself as a
Democrat said the gasoline situation
has soured him on the president .
"I'd rather see that California guy
(Ronald Reagan) in there becallSe
he's more of a conservative. nus
here inflation has got to stop
somewhere," said Ray Perry . But
Perry, 52, said he couldn 'I support
Kennedy because the senator "is
Waverly hollSewife June Pfiefer
said "li he (Carter) can pull us out
of Iran, 111 say he has done a good
job. "
Howard Bender, Sr., a meatcutter
who lives in Portsmouth, described
Carter as "a little inept" but added,
"there's no way I'm going for Kennedy. He stands for too much
welfare and gW&gt; control. I don't
think he is the best man now, but I'm
hard-pressed to think of somebody
else."
Portsmouth steelworker Donald
!Uchards echoed similar thoughts,
saying that he doesn't believe Carter
has "the intestinal fortitude to stand
up to the political pressures from
Iran and the oil companies."
Neither does !Uchards care for
Kennedy. "Any man who would
walk off and leave a woman drown
and not say anything about it for
several hours doesn't have any
human compassion."
Despite the undercurrent of disencbantment with Carter, several
Democratic leaders refuse to count
him down and out. Scioto CoWity
Democratic Chairman William An·
derson thinks public opinion on Carter would reverse itself if he were to
win release of American hostages
held at the embassy in Tehran.
These
Democratic
Party
heavyweights also say the conservative profile of rural voters
won 'I allow Kennedy to capitalize on
Carter's slipping populality .

The shah ani ved In the United
states from Mexico Oct . 22. He WI·
derwent treatment for cancer and
gall stones in New York and is to
recuperate for an indefinite period
in Teus.
Egypt has offered the shah
asylwn, and Egyptian officials said
they betieved the deposed monarch
was likely to remain in the United
States for several more weeks .
Khomeini 's forces overthrew the
shah in February, and in a referendwn in the spring more than 90 per cent of the electorate approved

•

SEO area favors
President Carter

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Todaf

VOL. XXVIII NO. 162

at

!!eparately at the Foreign Ministry
were "proved to be" spies and must
be kept and guarded carefully.
Laingen and his aides happened to
be at the Foreign Ministry when the
students occupied the embassy on
Nov . 4 and demanded that the U.S.
government return Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to Iran for tri31 .
Ghotbzadeh said last week that the
three diplomats could leave the
COWitry if they could get to the airport safely, but he reversed this after the students at the embas.•y complained .

Over Sen. Kennedy

C£state :•

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••
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••

14~-960)

Americans who on Sunday began
their fifth week of captivity in the
U.S. Embassy .
Another of the militants said the
shah '• move from New York to
TelUIS was "another trick taken by
the CIA to protect the shah. But
everyone in the world knows he cannot be protected against the will of
God and the will of the people . ·'
qthe embassy occupiers also said
that one of the hostages had confessed to being a CIA spy, and that
Olarge d'Affaires L . Bruce Laingen
and two senior aides being held

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GoiMpotis, Ohio

111ft ......

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Specials

Particle Board

Tehran Radio annoWiced the
Rl:volutlonary Council has set up a
center for national mobilization to
carry out Khomelni 's orders to
create a people's anny ready for
battle against America.
The government radio also said
Iran will ask the Organlzalion of
Petroleum Exporting CoWitries to

································~

Davis, a Cleveland lawyer who was
nominated for the state board that
will guide the city's financial future,
has declined the job.
Davis, a partner in a law firm that
represents Cleveland Electric
illuminating Co. in the city 's antitrust suit against the utility , said
Friday that sitting on the new state
board would be a conflict of interest.
City Cow;cU President George L.
Forbes had said Thursday that he
would nominate Davis and
Qeveland Browns owner Art ModeU
to the board. Forbes and Mayor
George V. Voinovich together are to
make five nominations and Gov.
James A. Rhodes will pick three of
those persons to serve on the board .
The Ohio Senate will have to confirm the governor's selections.

2" X4" · 92 5/a

CONtituUon.

abandon the dollar as the currency
for the International oil trade
mediwn of payment and Instead ll8e
a "basket" of strong currencies .
Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said the shah 's flight SW&gt;day
from a New York hospital to an Air
Force base outside San Antonio was
part of "a plot against our
revolution. U the United States
decides to continue the crisis ... the
trial of the spies here will begin.'·
"U the shah leaves the United
States for another coWitry, we will
try the hostages," said a spokesman
for the students holding the 50

417 SecOIIO Ave.

ATIORNEY NAMED
CLEVELAND fAPJ - James C.

4' X 8' X W'

TEHRAN, Iran (APJ - The
shah's move to Texas brought new
threats to put the American
hcllltages on b1al as Iranians voted in
a relerendwn to approve Ayatollah
Rubollah Khomelnl's new Islamic

C.. K. SNOWDEN

gram, and a corrunitment to deal
with the pressing concerns of rural
development, a Rural Initiatives
Workshop as held in cooperation of
the White HollSe and Ohio Universi-

SEO 'feeder line' for ORTA
PORTSMOUTH - Southeastern
Ohio eventually could be served by a
"feeder line" of the proposed Ohio
Rail Transportation Autholity 's
iORTA) high speed rail passenger
service, an ORTA spokesman said at
a meeting here .

Shah's Texas move brings renewed threats

7.

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES - Bunny Kuhl and Evelyn
Hollon tied for the sweepstakes award which is based on the total number
of Jibbon points accumulated in the horticulture classes. Mrs . Kuhl is pictured here with her blue ribbon Christmas cactus which she exhibited! at
the show. (See Page 7 for additional pictures and stones . I

Columbia customers
getting rate change
Most residential customers of
Colwnbia Gas of Ohio will notice a
cbange in purchased gas costs
beginning with their December bills.
Th
hange is due to implem~~~tion of a new Gas Cost
Recovery (GCR) provision which
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio ordered into effect in October.
Columbia filed revised tariff
sheets today (Dec. 3) with the
municipalities involved to reflect
new base rtes, exclusive of gas

damage $1,000
F ;__,
.u. '-'
Damages were estimated at $1,000
as the result of a chimney fire at the
home of Mr . and Mrs . Maurie Miller
on RDute 143 at 2:04a.m . Monday .
Pomeroy Fire Oriel Olarles
Legar said the blaze apparently
started around a flue pipe in the
chimney. There was damage to
paneling near the chimney and there
was smoke damage .
At 8:54a.m. Sunday the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called for
Mabel Kesterson, Pomeroy, who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted .

rates. Gas costs will be C&lt;Xnputed
Wider the new GCR proVISIOn an~
added separately to cllStomers
b11ls.
.
. .
.
Columbia offiCials sa1d all communities served under negotiated
o~dinances have been contacted ~d
g1ve~ an opporturuty to co_nvert thell'
elristlng rate contracts to mclud~ the
new GCR clallSe. Conunurut1es
which have not yet converted may .
do so by amending therr current contracts. . . .
CR
uta .
The m1tial G
comp twn,
beginning with bills rendered after
December 10, results in rate
decreases for many customers due
to refunds to Columbia of Ohio from
1ts major wholesale suppliers,
Columbia Gas Trnsmission Corp.,
and Columbia Uquefied Natural
Gas Corp.
A Columbia representative said
commWiities not covered by the
GCR provision still are governed by
the Purchased Gas Cost AdjllStrnent
iPGA) provisions and will receive
the effects of these refunds at a later
date . nus IS due to timing dif.
ferences in calculating the two
clauses .

Two passengers in the Musser
auto, Bill Defter, 19. Pomeroy, and
lUck Kauff, were injured and transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment .
Both vehicles incurred heavy
damage .
Two persons were injured during a
one-vehicle accident on CR 52, just
south of SR 7, at !0:58p.m .
The patrol reports a north bound

Deer, theft
complaints
being probed
Saturday at 2 a .m' a deer was
killed when it jwnped into the path
of a vehcile traveling east on SR 681
driven by Lester Hawk, Rt. 2,
Coolville. There was no damage to
the vehicle the Meigs CoWity
Sheriff's Department reported .
The department received a report
Saturday morning that a 13 point
buck had been taken fr001 the
property of Phillip Burbridge ,
Pagetown . The deer had been field
dressed and was hanging in a tree
near Burbrid@e's trailer .
Deputles reported that the Wildlife
Division was notified and will assist
in the investigation.
A theft report was received Saturday morning from Hilton Wolfe , Jr .,
Racine.
Wolfe advised that a battery was
taken from a vehicle at his body
shop . Gas caps were missing from
two other vehicles and Wolfe feels
that some gasoline was taken .

auto operated by Sandra K. Jooee,
18, Oleshire, swerved to avoid a
deer on the roadway, ran off the left
side of the pavement and struck an
embankment .
Jones and a passenger, andy
Brumfield, 17, Galllpolis, displayed
visible signs of injury, but were not
immediately treated.
There was heavy damage to the
vehicle .
Rusty Bookm8n, 20, CrookBvllle,
0., was injured during a one-vehicle
mishap on SR 55i, at 3 a.m.
Officers report an east bowld auto
operated by Bookman went off tile
left side of the roadway, recroaed
the pavement, went off the right
side, struck an embankment and a
fence and overturned.
Bookman claimed injury, but WBll
not immediately treated .
The vehicle was demolished.
Bookman was cited on a charge of
left of center.
Officers investigated a head-on
collision on CR 23, three miles weal
of SR 325, at 10 :50 p.m.
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Jeffrey McGinnil,
16, Patriot, and a Weill bound vebldoe
driven by Lawrence Dyer, :Ill,
Columbus, collided in a curve .
McGinnis was cited on a charge of
left of center. Both vehicles incurred
heavy damage.

Weather
Partly cloudy and not as cold
ton1ght . Lows from the upper 2llll to
the low 30s. Mostly SWIDY Tuesday.
Highs in the low to mid 408. The
chance of precipitation 18 near zero
tonight and Tuesday.

22
~U!J!i 'til

Qlqrt!itmns

Syracuse resident masters art of clockmaking
ByKaUeCrow
Syracuse - Time on his hands .
Phillip Bearhs, Syracuse, has
mstered the art of c lock making .
Bearhs has accomplished an art
that for most of us it would be irapossible, but not for him .
He takes cyprus logs from
F1orida, and cuts them into two
inch slabs . The pieces are then
sanded three times, cracks filled,
then sanded again .
Bearhs purchased a special bit
to cut a hole in the back to place
the works of the clocks . The
clocks, wall and mantle, come in
all shapes and sizes.
Three coats of sealer are applied before the final liquid which
is ultra;!lo. The ultra.glo dries lo
a very hard finish .
Bearhs conunented that the
clocks when finished are
reasonably scratch resistant.
The work is very tedious and
time consuming. The clocks are
to Bearhs a piece of furniture and
when completed the grain is
beautiful . '11ley would add beauty
to any decor.
The clocks range from $35 to
$75. Two clocks will be on display
in the Steamboat Inn . Bearhs
may be reached by calling 9923269 or 949-2421.

UNFINlSHED PRODUCT - Phillip Bearhs, Syracuse, who has
mastered thr art of clock making is shown with a piece of cyprllS before
any work on th t&gt; wood h&lt;i.s been done .

COMPLETED PRODUCJ' - Phillip Bearhs, Syracuse, displays the
finished product -a beautiful wall clock. Bearhs makeB both wall clockl
and mantle clocks from cyprllS wood he obtained in F1orida. The flnia1!ed
product is beautiful and will add to the beauty of any home,

�l-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomero) . 0 .. Monday, Dec. 3,1979

2-The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Dec. J, 1979

Editorial opinions,
comments

/You BEGGED FoR
You

K(NNEDY.
JuiNI::"D A DRAFT Kt=:NNEDY
GRouP.

&amp;o

RVNNIN6. §o

IN WASHINGTON

Southern opens with 81-51 win over Miller

Vov WANltD Kft-~N£oV.

/

KENNEDY'&amp;

NOW

W~AT'C)

COMMENTARY

H['~ NOT

JACK.

By Greg BaUey
The Southern Tornadoes opened
thetr cage season Saturday night at
Miller with an impressive 81-51 victory over the h&lt;l'lt Falcons.

Donald F. Graff

,.... _ __,THE MATTER?

How infirm a foundation

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

In the rush of events now shaking
the Moslem world, by far the m&lt;l'lt
bizarre bas been the seizw-e of the
Grand Mosque in Mecca.
It IS difficult to imagine an outrage
of a similar magnitude in Western
circumstances. Occupation of st.
, Peter's in Rome by snake-llandll.ng
WASHINGTON (NEAl - The
Washington~sed organization .
IWJdamentaUsts from Appalachia
special interest groups opposed to
In fact. there have been no senous
would still be considerably short of
mandatory deposits on beer and
sanit.ation problems in Michigan
the mark .
soda containers continue to pour
since the voters of that state reAt this point, the desecration of
millions of dollars into high"j)Owered
jected almost S2 nnillion worth of inIslam's holy of holies appears to
campaigns to thwart the recycling of
dustry claims and voted 63.J7 to aphave no connection with the crisis in
bottles and cans.
prove a deposit law ml976 balloting .
Tehran , oil politics or any other
In statewide referenda throughout
"'The people of Michigan not only
~EJf\ point of common interest or tension
the 1970s, opposition to proposed
have stopped a costly and wasteful
CJ\E.c~.,.
between Islamic lands and the rest
deposit laws has been financed
trend; they seem to have reversed
""'
"'
of
the world. It shapes up 8ll the
ahnost exclusively by beer brewers,
OW" plunge into a throwaway sociell!!!!::!:::;~:;::;;::;:;:~~==~~~~==:;
:,~:fA:..
work
of a small band of religious exsoft drink bottlers and the glass.
ty," says Michigan Gov. William G. •
tremists consumed by their own
aluminum and steel industMes .
Milliken . ·· our experience
fanaticism and with no interest
Ballot measures in Colorado,
WJderscores the need for a national
whatsoever in that greater world.
Massachusetts, Nebraska and
beverage contamer deposit law ."
But if the battle for the mosque
Alaska have fallen victim to proIn Maine, which passed a deposit
has nothing to do with the broader
paganda campaigns funded by the
law in the same year as Michigan,
political situation, it has a great deal
bottlers of Pepsi Cola, Coca Cola,
an industry~cked repeal effort
WASHINGTON ( AP ) The
in the future for president to support
to do with situation of the coWJtry in
Dr. Pepper and Seven Up; the
was troWJced this year by a resoWJ·
Iranian crtsis may ·be restricting
my position as president and to
which it occw-red.
brewers of Budweiser, Coors.
ding 84-16 margin .
President Carter's campaign
provide unity for our coWJtry and for
For aU that it looms so impressiveMiller, Pabst and Schlitz beers; the
That experience suggests that
travels, but donl assume it is losing
our nation in the eyes of those who
ly over today's world scene as the
Can Manufacturers Institute , the
where voters are fanniliar with
him votes .
nnight be looking for some sign of
leading oil exporter and the most inAmerican Iron I Steel Institute and
deposit laws - and less susceptible
It is a basic rule of thumb in
weakness or division in order to perfluential power player in the
the Glass Packaging Institute .
to the industry's nnisleading , decep·
national politics that, up to a point, a
petuate their abuse of the hostages. ••
Mideast game, Saudi Arabia as anaThat pattern was repeated this
live and inaccurate claims- the concMsis is always good for a president.
Translation : I'm not being
tion is a fairly recent invention. It
year in the states of Ohio and
cept enjoys broad popular support.
This is especially true when the
political. Don 1 criticize me or you
was pieced together in a seMes of
Washington, where initial surveys
For example, one standard scare
crisis involves a foreign power at may hurt the hostages.
desert wars dw-ing the early
indicated that there was overwhelm·
tactic is tbe baseless warning that
tacking U.S. interests, as the
And it was no accident that Carter
decades of the cenlw-y when one
ing public support for deposit laws.
deposit laws will lead to massive
Ayatollah RuhoUah Khomeini and
held that news conference during
local sheikh, tougher and craftier
In Washington, opponents amassWJemployment in the bottling, brewhis fanatic followers have been
prime evening time, and in the
than his neighbol"!l, overcame them
ed a treasury of more than $900,000,
ing and container industMes . On the
doing for a month .
stately East Room of the White
one by one. He was Abdel Aziz ibn
including a $9!&gt;,000 loan from the can
basis of those claims, the Maine
Such crises stir patrioti c
House rather than in the workaday
Saud and the last of his conquests
industry; generous contrtbutions
AFL.CIO opposed the initial proemotions. Citizens tend to put aside
auditorium he usually uses. He
was the Hejaz, the coastal siMp
from Owens Illinois , Anchor Hock·
posal three years ago .
other considerations + their heating
aimed for the biggest poesible
along the Red Sea containing the hoing, Brockway, Kerr and other glass
But this year the labor federation
bills, for example + and unite againaudience, and the most "'presidenly cities of Mecca and Medina and
manufacturers; and large donations
reversed its position and strongly
st the common enemy .
tial" setting.
technically up to World War I a part
from Reynolds, Kaiser and other
supported the law . ""Our outlandish
And they tum for leadership to the
Earlier , Republican presidential
of the Turkish Empire.
aluminum producers .
fears of losing jobs have been quell only person in a position to exercise
contender John Connally grtped that
During the course of his own sucThe proposal was rejected in a
ed." says an AFUIO official who
it in such a time : the president,
Carter was unfairly asking cancessful empire building, Ibn Saud
59-41 vote. "'They used almost Sl
notes that no job losses have been
whoever he is.
didates not to make inflamatory
made many enennies, not the least
million essentially to buy the elec·
Identified anywhere in New England
Thus Carter, who is scheduled to
statements while himself denoWJ·
important being the previous local
lion with an advertising campaign
since enactment of the law. ··In ad -officially annoWJce hts re-election
cing the Iranians . It was in a way a
rulers of the Hejaz, the Hashennite
that terrorized and confused peodition to Mame and Michigan,
campaign Tuesday, stands to benefit
tribute to Carter's political sense.
fannily. In the post-World War I set·
ple," says Philip Morley of Citizens
Oregon, Vermont, Connecticut, Iowa
greatly from the Iran cMsis.
There is a great danger in all this
llement, the Hashennites were com·
for Returnable Beverage Conand Delaware already have deposit
First, it allows him to appear
for Carter , however. The Iran crtsis,
pensated for their eviction with the
tainers, the Seattle organization that
laws that save energy. money and
' 'presidential ," above the grubby
like aU crises, must eventually end .
thrones, under BMtish supervision.
promoted the meas w-e .
scarce resources.
business of politics.
You can be sw-e the president's
of Jordan and Iraq . It is one of the
In Ohio, a similar ballot initiative
Other states cannot continue to
Second, it allows him to hog-tie his
political opponents will no longer be
ironic twists of Arab politics that
was overwhelmingly defeated by a
postpone the inevitable legislation
opponents, both Republicans and
silent then . EventuaU y, voters must
Jordan's King Hussein and the
72-28 margin after opponents spent
necessary to salvage the almost :;
Democrats . Carter can paint any
decide whether the man they turned
Saudis are currently the closest of
$1.5 million on a campaign that inbillion beer and soda bottles and
crtticism of his leadership as an
to delivered the leadership they exallies on most Mideast issues .
cluded dire warnings about diseasecans now bemg discarded every
irresponsible threat to the well pected .
carrying insects congregatmg in
year .
being of the hostages .
empty soda bottles and cans.
The industry groups really haven 't
Here's the way the president
"They conjured up visions of an
been buying victory wtth their explayed it at his nationally broadcast
army of cockroaches poised at the
travagant spending. Instead,
news conference last week:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A
Michigan-Ohio border. waiting for
Today IS Monday , Dec . 3. the 337tr
they've been renting a costly delay
"'I will have to continue to restnct
veteran
Ohio lawmaker says the
approval of the referendum so they
day of 1979. There are 2B days left ir
at a price that"s far too high for the
my own political activities and call
State
Highway
Patrol should be
could invade Ohio," says Sandie
the year.
nation to continue to pay .
on those who nnight be opposing me
to
spend
its
time on the highallowed
Nelson of Envirorunental Action. a
Today's highlight in history:
ways
not
investigating
possible
In 1967, surgeons in Capetown
acts
by
public
employees.
illegal
South Africa , reported the first
IN THE
right angles to the line la st Meigs County, Ohio, lmown
Rep . Myrl H. Shoemaker, DPUBLIC NOTICE
COMMON PLEAS COURT mentioned and 1n a and designated as sub .
successful human heart transplant
Sea
led
bids
will
be
ac
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
Boumeville,
referred this week to
Wester ly direction 45 fee t " B" OO Bein g sixty (6()) feet cepted at the Federal Land
On this date :
OHIO
to C'l point in the East line of
fronting on Clift Street and Bank Association , 2:18 Up
the fact that the patrol has been
In 1666. former Confederate
said Schoneberger ·s lo1 ,
running in a northerly per R1ver Road . Ga llipolis.
-PROBATE DIIIISION ·
called
upon numerous times for inthence along sa1d Gehart direction at right angle OH
President
Jefferson
Davis
was
put
4563 I, on or before
ELIZABETH ANN LUCAS
Schoneberger 's East line to with said Cliff Street two December
vestigations
at such places as state
14 , 1979, a t 12 :00
Administratrix Witn the the place of beginning , ex
on
trial
foc
treason
in
federal
court
hundred ( 200) feel
noon , for the following ·
Will Annexed ot the Estate cepting the coal and ot her
mental
hospitals,
the bW"eau of
Deed Reference
Vol
in
Virginia
.
1975 Chev rolet Impala, .t
of Ralph R . Carman , m1nerals and the right to 225, Page 579, Meigs Coun
workers'
compensation
and
dr
,
PS
,
PB
,
AC,
Rad
ial
Deceased,
In 1917 . President Woodrow
mine the same without in
ty Deed Records
Tires
Plaintiff,
elsewhere
in
state
govenunent.
cvmbrance to the surface ,
PARCE L
4
The
WUson asked Congress to declare
F ede ral Land Bank
· Y$·
and th e r igh t to fencP. said
following described rea l reserves
Shoemaker. who heads the House
right to rejec t
MABEL C. CARMAN
war on Austria-Hungary.
lot
estate situate in the Sta te of all b1ds the
The ca r can be
Whose last known address
Finance
Comnnittee and bas been a
Being th P. same property
Oh io . County of Meigs and seen at above
In 1944, during World War D.
adO ress
Is Wheeling, W. \Ia . Other · convered to the said
Township
of.
Sutton
and
state
representative
since 19&amp;.1, of.
wise unknown ,
Amencan foc ces crossed the Saar
Rober 0 . Sc hmoll fr om the
Village of Mmersv!lle and
12
J
3.
'
·
5.
6.
7,
Sic
I
fered
his
idea
of
a
solution
In the
trustees of the St Paul 's
bounded and described as
River in Germany.
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, Evangeli ca l and ~eformed
follows · Beginning at the
form
of
a
bill
and
said
he
hopes
for
In 1961, the United States deployed
DEVISEES, LEGATEES, Church of Minersvillt&gt;,
south co rner of a two acre
PROBATE
COURT
DISTRIBUTEES,
AD · Ohio , by deed dated
prompt
hearings.
lot deeded by v B Horton
a platoon of troops along the border
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
MINISTRATORS, EXEC · February 16th . 1948, and to Daniel DeWolfe in 100
The measure establishes a fiveOHIO
between East and West Berlin as
UTORS AND ASSIGNS. IF recorded 1n Deed Book No
acre Lot No. 301, Town 2, ESTATE OF JESSIE COT ·
ANY, OF EACH OF THE 16 1 Page 185, M_eigs Coun
member
State Criminal InRange lJ of the Ohio Com
F:ast Germany began strengthening
DECEASED
FOLLOWING :
ty 6eed Records
panr ·s P urchase. thence TRILL.
vestigation
Commission
and
. 22874
the Berlin Wall .
ARTHUR
CARMAN ,
PARCEL 1 Betng the
Nor h 66 De g . East I 21 fee t Case NoNOTICE
OF
Deceased,
provides for a special prosecutor to
foll owing cJe!.cribecJ real
to a sta ke , thence Nort h 45
In
1977.
the
United
States
said
it
APPOINTMENT
ALBERT
CA I! MAN , estate , situate in 100 acre
Deg . West 51 4 10 feet to a
move against public employees upon
OF FIDUCIARY
would g ive refuge to 10 ,000
DecHsed.
lot No . 301 in Town '1 and
stak e ; thence south b6 1 )
November 15, 1979, 1n
RALPH II . CARMAN, Range 13 in the sa id County
ordel"!l from the commission.
Oeg . West 115 8 10 fee t to a !heOnMeigs
Indochinese
··boa
t
people
."'
County Probate
1. k. a. Ralph R. Carmen , of Meigs , near the school
stake ; thence along the Cou rt , Case
"I simply believe that the primary
No 21874,
Dece~~sed,
house on sdid 100 Acre 101
road to the pla ce of eg1n
Alpha CoTtr ill , F1fth St .,
MARGARET CARMAN No . 301. described as
responsibility of the patrol, and the
n1ng
Ohio 45779 was
DAVIS, Deceased,
tollows , that 1S to say
Be ing the same lot or Sy ra cuse, Administra1or
pw-pose for which patrol officers are
of
MARGARET
DAVIS Beginning at the Sou thea st
par cel of land conveyed to appointed
the
es
tate
of
J
essie
Cott
rill
,
SMITH, Deceased,
corner of a lot belonging to
John Baum , Sr by Minn1e deceao:.ed , lat e of Fifth St.,
HENRY
CARMAN , Frederick
Schretne r ,
Kautz and husband by deed
4577Q
Deceased,
deceased ; thence along fhe
dated June 2, 1916, and Sy racuse. Ohio
Rober t E Buck
ELMER
COFFMAN, East line of said lot 150 feet
recorded tn Vol 113, page
Probate Judgf'
Deceased,
ro the Northeast corner of 486 of the Deed Rec ords of
Clerk
MARY CARMAN COFF · the Schreiner lot ; thence
Meigs County, Ohio
MAN, Deceased,
North about 80 DeQ E a51 80
Being a por ti on of the !Il l 19. 26. 1111 3. 3tc
HELEN
COFFMAN feet : thence South parallel
real estate conveyed by
BAIER, Deceased ,
with the West line of Ph1ll 1p
Irene McDowell and Jack
PROBATE COURT
ELMER
CARMAN . Bear 's tot to the streeT run
McDowell to Karl Grueser
OF MEIGS
Deceased.
ning toward s the Ohio
by deed dated June 1. 1945.
COUNTY. OHIO
Defendants .
River ; thence along said
and recorded in Vol 158.
OF WILLIAM C.
N0 . 22Jl9 Street 80 fee t to the place of
PC'lge '157 of tne Deed ESTATE
, DECEASED
- SERVICE BY
beginn inQ .
Records, Meigs County , PECKNo
. 22857
Case
PUBLICATIONExceptmg and reserving
Otlio .
NOTICE OF
TO THE DEFENDANTS the coal and other mi nerat s
~eference
Deeds Vol
APPOINTMENT
ABOVE
NAMED : therein with the right to
263, Page 389 . Vol 163 .
OF FIDUCIARY
You are hereby notified mine the same without in
Pa9e 225 Deed Records .
On November 13, 1979, m
that you have been named c umbrance to the surface
Me 1gs County , Oh 1o
the Me1gs County Probate
Defendants in a le9a1 ac and all ways and ri9h1 of
and the demand of tne cou
rt , Case No 22857.
tlon entitled : " Elizabeth way along any m 1nera1
Complaint tS to sell DE"fen
Ann Lucas, Administratrix seam are hereby reserved . dants ' inte res t in the Ma dge J . Blackwood ,
Route 4 , Pomeroy . Ohio
With the Wi II Anne•ed of And being the same land
above .
45769 . was appointed
the Estate of Ralph Car · deeded March 11th . 1868 to
V.:&gt;u are required to an
Executnx of the estate of
man, Deceased , Vs . Jacob Massar by V B Hor
swer the Complaint Wtthin William
C P ec k, deceased ,
Elizabeth
Ann
Lucas
.
and
C.
A.
Horton
and
ton
twenty
eig_
t
'lf
d.ays
afTe
r
tne
late of Route 3, Albanv ,
etal. 11 In the Common PleC'ls recorded in Record of
last publt cat1on of this Oh10
45710
Court of Meigs County, Deeds of Meigs County,
not1ce, name ly , bv not later
Rober t E Buck
Ohio ·- Probate Division, Ohio, Vol 33, Pages 376 and
than the 11th day of
Probate Judge
1 Q80 ,
.case No . 22319, the demand 377 .
February
or
being for me sale of the en
judg me nt by default wtll be !Il l 19 . 26(123 .3 Tc Clerk
tire Interest In the real
The 30 feet by 40 feet of
rendered aga tnst you
estate
hereinafter above desc rib ed la nd
EliZabeTh Ann Luc as
described in order to pay heretofore deeded to the
Administrator with
the debts of the decedent, German Protestan t Church
the Wi II Annexed
LAFF - A-DAY
RalPh I! . Carman, and the of Minersville . Ohio , is
of the F. sta te of
costs of admintstration . hereby reserved and ex
Ralph R. Carma n.
The real estate Is described cepted in this transfer
Deceased
as follows :
Crow . Crow and Porter
PARCEL
1:
The
The aforesaid real estate
Attorneys tor Pla in flff
following Real Estate being the same real estate
situated In the County ot conveyed to Florence Car .
! 11 1 3. 10. 17. '14 . Jl [ 1) 7.
l ,1 1 t
Meigs, In the State of Ohio, men.L who was also known
and In the Village of Miner as t-lorence Kerman, by
svfll~! to·wlt : Being a part Jacob Massar and wife by
of lou acre lot No . 301 in deed recorded In Deed
Town No . 2. Range No. 13, Book 93 at Page 296 of th e
In said county ot Meigs, Meigs County Deed Recor
particularly described as ds.
follows: Beginning at the
PAR CE L
3
The
Northeast corner of a lot following Real Estate
deeded by Frederick situate in ftt e Village of
Greenland, the largest
S.c hrelner
to
Gehart Mir;-ersvi ll e, Meig s County ,
SChoneberger, thence Nor Oh10, and more par island in the world, has the
""AH- NA/11 ; ou don "I really care about "Monday
" Th ts ...,,,~ v. lwn I buy a prt"sf'nl
•• th 80 Deg . East, 45 feet : ti c utar ly described as greatest ice mass outside
N1g!H rooliJrl:i - you·,e counting CLICHES!'
thence at ri9ht angles to follows : Being sixty (60)
lor Al I don 1 hav(' lo worry
this line anU m a Southerly fee oft thE- westerly side Gf of Antarctica .
ahoul !' tlt'S or rt' lurns ..
~recti on 3S feet ; thence at Lot No 53 in MinPr sv ille ,

No jobs lost, no hugs found

....____

Washington today

TodRy in history

Back home in the desert , there remained problems. Force rather than
loyalty boWJd many of the tMbes to
the new Saudi state. There was also
the problem of religious mllitants of
the Wahhabi sect, enlisted by Ibn
Saud to further his own cause but
who became a post-tlllification
nuisance . Ibn Saud crushed them in

1929.
Saudi Arabia's rise to immell8e
wealth and influence in recent
decades bas obscured these exceedingly shaky foundations upon
which the nation rests . The push to
modernize the social structure and
diversify the economy, which in the
long run should strengthen the state,
in the short run have aggravated its
weaknesses.
As puritanical as they may appear
to the outside world, including most
Moslems, the vast Saudi royal fannily has become increasingly worldly
in comparison with the greater part
of the population . In the view of the
more critical faithful, they have
been drifting away from true Islam .
Industrialization . expansion of
education and the flooding of the
country with foreigners - by the
Saudi 's own count, 75 percent of the
work force is now non-&amp;udi - are
resented.
The Grand Mosque was seized, according to the current explanation,
on behalf of a self-!rtyled messiah by
ultra-&lt;lrthodox members of a tMbe
subdued 50 yeal"!l ago by Ibn Saud.
The incident may or may not represent a resw-gence of tribal bostility.
It may or may nol signal a rebirth of
Wahhabi mllitance .
But it certainly demonstrates that
there is much more beneath the
Saudi surface than is represented by
the throngs of sophisticated, globetrotting princes and sheikhs with
which the West has become so
fanniliar .
Saudi Arabia, which outwardly
gives every appearance of being the
Arab world's most stable and rational state, may inwardly be just
the opposite. A surprtsing situation
perhaps, but then that's pretty much
the way it is aU over the MO!!lem
world these days.
Bizarre.

Ohio Perspective

Berry's World

trained, is the protection of the
state's highways and freeways," he
said, adding he doe8 not mean to
cast dispersions on past in.
vestigatlons by the agency.
The envisioned commiasion would
consist of three members of the
Legislature, no more than two of
whom could belong to the same
political party. the state attorney
general. and an appointee of the
governor from the highway safety

department.

The conunission would investigate
allegations of crlmlnal activity sent
in by agency executives . It would
name a special prosecutor who
would seek to obtain indictments
either in the county where the ctime
was believed to have been committed, oc in Franklin County
(Columbus).
The special prosecutor would be
named for a two-year term, and
would be limited to one term, under
the finance cbalrman 's bill.
He said the commission would
have the advantage of combining
representation of the eKecutive and
legislative branches of govenunent.
"It will always be a bipartisan
body . It will employ a special
prosecutor who will serve a limited
term. These features will remove
whatever vestige of political gain
that exists in the prosecution of
allegations of miaconduct by state
employees," Shoemaker said .
Enactment of his me&amp;8UJ"e •'would
provide for the State af Ohio a highly
qualified, professional investigative
agency to inquire into charges of
criminal activity by public employees," he concluded .

Senior Jack Duffy had one of his
best night. as he hit 13 of 19 field goal
attempts and 6 of 8 free throws to
lead all scorers with 32 points. He
also gathered in si• rebounds .

Jwtior Oal~ Teaford hit the first
bucket for a 2.() Tornado lead that
built to 14-4 before the quarter ended. Then foul trouble hit Southern
with Jonathan .) ws , Duffy. and
John Davis goln!! to the bench. The

GAHS edges Wheelersburg
•
In defensive bout, 41-36
'"You "re not gomg to score too
many points when someone 's got a
hand in your face," said visiting
Wheelersburg Coach John Eaton
following the Pirates' 41-36 nonconference hardwood loss to Coach
J im Osborne 's Gallipolis Blue Devils
Satw-day night .
He was Mght. Both teams had a
poor night from the field -Gallipolis
sank only 12 of 41 field goal attempts
for 29 percent while the Pirates were
12of 45 for 26 percent.
Fact is, however, 1t wasn1 much
better at the foul tine. The Blue
Devils, although winning it at the
chanty stripe. canned only 17 of 34
attempts for a cool :;o percent.
Wheelersburg was 12 of 29 for 41 percent .
Forty.five personal fouls were
called during the 32-minute contest,
'l/against the visitors. Four players
fouled out - Mark Woodrum and
Pete Busa for the Pirates and Kent
PMce and J eff Cameron for the Blue
Devils.
Both teams were guilty of 23 tur-

novers.
It was a bitter defensive struggle
from the opening tipoff. Gallipolis
never trailed in the first half ,
leading Ill-&lt;! after one period and 1614 at halftime . It was tied once in the
first ball, 10-10 at the 6:43 mark.
The 'Burg came out strong in the
third period, scoring the first four
points to take the lead for the first
time, JiH6, on a ta~ by All-Ohio
Candidate Scott Gray . Only other
Pirate lead came on Gray "s long
jumper with :; 29 left in the third
period .
Kent PMce 's tap-in with :i:06left in
the peMod put the Blue Devils on top
to stay .
Gallipolis led 31·24 after three
periods. The Blue Devils built up

their biggest lead of the game -nine
points - on two free throws by Bill
Armstrong with 7:23 left in the contest.
The Pirates came stornning back
to outscore GAHS I(). I over the nen
five minutes. Scott Bays' two free
throws with 2 :28left tied the score at
34-&lt;!Jl.
Todd Nibert's two chaMty tosses
(2:21) and one free throw by Greg
Harrington with I : 42 left put Gallia
on top, 37-34.
Chuck Warner sank two free
throws to pull WHS within one, 37-36,
wtth 1:32left. Seconds earlier, Gray
had stolen the ball and raced in for a
layup, but it rolled off the rim . That
nniss appeared to be the game's tur·
ning point. Greg Harrington picked
off the reboWJd and was fouled on
the play .
Big Jeff Cameron's tip-in with 53
seconds left gave GAHS a 39-36 advantage. Armstrong's two free
throws with 32 seconds left completed the game's scoring .
Annstrong paced the Blue Devils
with 19point.. Cameron picked off 17
rebounds and tossed in eight
markers
the Galliarut. Gray's 12
points and 10 rebounds led the
Pirates attack.
The victory left Gallipolis with a 21 season mark. WbeelersbW"g dropped to I). I in its season opener.

Gallipolis plays at Logan Friday .
Wheelersbw-g will host Ashland, Ky.
Saturday's box :
WHEELERSBURG IJ61
Player
Fg·o Ft·a PI lib Tp
Gray
5·18 2 3 I 10 12
Elswick
0·2 0·0 3 3 0
Evans
J-9 0·0
3 6
WOOdrum
:.! ·6 J · l
~
3 7
Shaw
01 0t 3
0
Busa
0·2 1·3 5 0 I
Warner
2·4 2-6 3 3 6
Bays
0·3 4-9 3 3 4
Pyles
00 0·0 0 1 t
Totals
ll-45 12·29 27 30 36
GALLIPOLIS (41)
Player
Fg·a Ff·a PI Rb Tp
Nibert
1·6 2-4 0 7 4
Price
2-6
1·1 5 9 5
Cameron
3·7 2·5 s 17 8
Boggess
0·3 0·1 0 1 0
Armstrong
4·12 11 15 I 1 19
Harrinoton
1·4 1·5 3 2 3
Robinson
0·0 0·0 0 0 0
Totals
12·41 17·34 18 38 41
Score by quarters :
Wheelersburg
8 6 10 12- ·36
Gallipolis
10 8 13 10· ..
Otticials -- Dan Ross and Ron Bor
don

..

.

!!Dod

Cage standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
w L p
Chillicothe
1 0 11 ..
Ironton
1 0 55
Athens
1 1 221
Gallipolis
2 1 155
Waverl y
2 1 166
Logan
2 1 167
Wellston
1 1 121
Portsmouth
0 1 59
Wheelersburg
0 1 36
Meigs
0 1 so
Jackson
0 2 97
Court House
0 3 141
Pt . Pleasant
0 0 0
saturday's results:
Gallipolis 41 Wheelers~urg 36
Athens 88 Marietts 64
Columbus Central 55 Logan 5.,.
Tuesday's games :
Coort House et East Clinton
Chillicothe at Lancster
Friday's games:
Wellston at Meigs
Gallipolis at Logan
Athens at Waverly
Ironton at Jackson
Court House at Wilmington
Ashland at Wheelersburg
Whitehall al Chillicothe
Saturday's games:
Wheelersburg at Jack~:m
Portsmouth at Waver!

DP

a•

49
18.!1
146
122
148
111
61
41
69

Falcon to hit double figures. Blaney
had 9 points and Cook had 8 to lead
the Falcons.
Southern out-rebounded the hosts
U-31, and the Tornadoes had only 10
turnovers. The winners hlt 34 of 69
shots for 49 per cent and sank 13 of 17
free throws.
The FalCO!lB had 2-4 turnovers and
hit 24 of 56 shots for ~ percent . They
sank an icy 3 of 24 foul shots.
In the reserve contest Voach
Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes took an
easy 52-56 win. After leading 9-4 in
the first quarter, the Tornadoes led
28-10 at halftime to put the game out
of reach.
Tom Roseberry and Jay Rees had
14 and 12 point., respectively. The
nen Tornado game iB Friday night
at Hannan Trace .

s

M

16 .00 s.. 81
13 26 36 51
Southem 1811 - Duffy 13·6·32: B.

131

163
0

Saturday's victory over "The
Bw-g" was Gallipolis • first in 54
years. GAHS defeated Wheelersburg 24-21l in the 1925-26 post «&amp;son
tournament. The two teams never
met again until 1973-74 when the
Pirates bombed Gallia 's SEOAL
champions, 62-40, at Wbeelersbw-g.
The Blue Devils also lost to WHS 5244 the following year, 56-44 in 197:&gt;-76
and 42-36 in 1976·77.

Why drive all over town? Do your gilt shopping the easy way through the lull-color
Superamerica House gilt catalog . You'll save time and
gas, and everything is fully guaranteed.

GIVE QUALITY SUPERAMERICA HOUSE
SURPRISES THIS YEAR.
You'll find cheeses. nuts. candy. frUtts . serving trays . speCial glassware and dinnerware. Plus maple syrup from
Wisconsin, honey, laney preserves . an old lash1oned
coffee grinder, picnic sets. luggage. And for the ltttle
people, Klaus the cuddly mouse.

visitors 1~13 . Freed&amp; OJapman and
Pam Crooks each bad 4 points for
the locals . For Belpre, Angie Wigal
had 8points.
Meigs· nen game and league
opener is Tueaday at Morrison Gymnasiumat ~ : JOp.m . against LoRan.
By quarters :
M
14 27 42 61
B
12 19 30 40
Belpre (401
Backus 318:
Nesselroad 2·6·10 ; Griffin 3·1·7;
Shutts 3 06 : Bruner 1-0 ·2; Hapnev 2·
1 5 ; Bertram 0 ·1·1 ; Devore 0..0·0;
Muscari 0-0 -0 . Totals 14-12-40.
Meigs (61) - Wilson .46 ·2·10; Oli\ier
10 1; S. Ash 4S· I3; Riggs 0·0·0:
Chapman 4·4 12 ; Lightfoot 3·1·7;
K;ng 0·00 ; Smith 1 0·1: T. Ash 4-0·8;
Bartrum 2 1 5, Orehel 1·0 5. Totals
24· 1HI .

SUPERAMERICA"
Jludl muY tllllll Q gus $Unf

Weekend Sports Transactions

By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
National Foo1batl League
NEW YORK GIANTS + Signed
ZC'l chary Dixon, runnlna back

lbetf

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~.

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ltwt t'lln •

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:a Hlifiii"'OMW''' \ to.

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jitft(li'DPt'Wl~

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10

GET YOUR FREE CATALOG AT THESE LOCATIONS

SECOND AND PINE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
·~

1979 ~ · ~petamenca . D1vts1on ol Ashland 011 Co . Inc.

·-•

Wolfe 2·0·4: Teaford 6·4·16 ;
Foreman .t· l ·9 ; M . Wolfe 2-G·" i
Davis 3·0·6: Rees 1·0·2: K. Wolfe 2·2·
6; Ca rdone 1·0-2. Totals M·U-11.
Miller (51) ·· Da~is 3.0·6: T. Spen
cer 3·0·6: Blaney 4·1·9; Cook 3·2·8;
Rot&gt;erts 2·0·4; Nutter 1·0·2; Dunkel
3·0·6; Emmler 4·0·8: B. Spenc~r 1·0·
2. Totots 24·3-SI.

A8k me abca. I

lnr •ra~~~ee

-~
FamDfe•

I oHer a total program to httP

protect your fomlly" 1 woy ot•~~tnt~
and bu~d 8nandol Mrurily lex 1001111

vean. Coli me lot dotollo

r&lt;tlrenwpt

IIIAE SWIGER
Middl

ort. 0

n ..f~ ••••

By Quarter!. :

roc

Marauder girls
post first win
By Greg Balley
The Meigs girls • basketball team
opened their season Saturday night
with a fine 61-40 victory over visiting
Belpre .
After a close first quarter, the
girls of Coach Joy Bentley took control and steadily increased their
lead . The local gals put the game on
lee as they outscored the visitors
1~10 in the last quarter.
Meigs placed three girls in double
figures In the well-balanced attack,
led by Sonia Ash's 13 point. . Dodie
OJaprnan had 12 points and Terry
Wilson had 10.
Wllson and OJapman also controlled the boarda with II reboWJds each.
Meigs got off 75 shots, making 24 a!
them for 32 percent . Meigs was hot
at the foul tine,sinking 13of 18shoL•
Meigs let Belpre get away only 36
shots with 14 of them
for 37 percent. The visitors made 12 of 2-4 fouls
hots. Nesselroad led the losers with.
10 points.
The reserves of Meigs fell to the

quarter ended IS-13.
But in the second quarter, Coach
Carl Wolfe's club outscored the hosts
24-13 for a 4(;-26 halftime advantage .
All 12 men on the Southern roster
played well . Davis had 4 steals and 6
points, and Teaford hit double
figures with 16points .
Teaford led aU rebounders with 15
caroms, and Dave Foreman had
eight, all In the first half.
The Southern defense allowed no

~tato Form l~o """
Accident Aslur•ne•

Compeny
•••~~•••c•

ltlmt Otlu

~·~'liTlQj!IO n

llimts

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Dec. 3,1979

~The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'lmeroy, 0 ., Mllnday, Dec. 3, 1979

Philadelphia clinches NFL playoff berth
By ALEX SACHARE
AP Sports Writer
"It's a hwnbllng experience,"
said Plltladelpbia Coach Dick Vermeil after his Eagles became the first team to clinch a berth in the
National Football League playoffs
by beating the Detroit Uona 4+7
Sunday.
"But I 've said all along the
players win games, and I really
believe that," added Venneil . "!
told the players I'm just thrilled that
they took me along."
With two weeks to go in the
regular season the Eagles, 10-4, lead
the National Conference 's East
Division by one game over
Washington, which beat Green Bay
3&amp;-21, and Dallas, which defeated the
New York Giants 28-7.
Although the Eagles may !lti.ll be
caught in the divisional race, they
bave assured themselves of a wildcard playoff berth by virtue of
baving a better conference record
(9-2) tban either Tampa Bay or
Olicago, who are battling for lbe
Central Division lead and are also
involved in the wild&lt;ard scramble.
Tampa Bay failed to lock up the
division for the second SUCCt!SBive
Sunday by dropping a 14-() decision
to Olicago. The Bucs, 9-6, now lead
the Bears by one game and can clinch their first division title by winning either of their last two giiiJlell,
agalnst San Francisco and Kansas

Louis had his etghth 100-yard running day and Dan Fouts of San Diego
passed for more than 300 yards for
the sixth time this season.

lledaldDI 38, Pacten l1
Joe Theismann threw four touchdown passes and Washington erased
a 21-7 halftime deficit to beat Green
Bay.
Cowboya za, GlaDis 7
Roger Staubach threw three
touchdown passes to Drew Pearson
as Dallas snapped a three-game
losing streak. Dorsett nL!hed for 108
yards to join John Brockington as

the only rwmel'll ever to surpass
1,000 yards in each of their first
three pro seasons.
Bean 14, Buea 0
Olicago turned a blocked punt by
Bruce Herron and an intercepUon by
Gary Fencik into touchdowns and
picked off five passes in beating '
Tampa Bay .
Steelen fi,Benc•i• 17
Terry Bradshaw threw two touchdown passes to Lynn Sw8IVI and
became the first Sleeler quarterback to pus for 3,000 yards In one
season as Pittsburgh beat Cln-

cirmati. The Steelers , 11-3, can clin ch the AFC East tiUe with a VIctory
next Monday night in Houston.
Harris g .. ined 92 yards in 20
carries to give him 1,027 yards for
the season, the seventh time he has
surpaased 1,000 yards, tying him
with Jim Brown for the NFL record .
He also moved into fourth place on
the all-time NFL rushing list with
8,404 yards, behind Brown, O.J . Simpson and Jim Taylor.
llrowll8 14, Oilers 7
Mike Pruitt scored both C1eveland
touchdowns and gained Jll yards on
.:15 carries as the Browns beat the

aty.
In other NFL games Sunday, the
Plttsurgh Steelers beat the Cincinnati Bengal5 37-17, the Cleveland
Bro110'11ll topped the Houston Oilers
14-7, the Lee Angeles Rams trimmed
the Minnesota Vildnga 2'1-21 in overtime, the Denver Bronros defeated
the Buffalo Bills 19-16, the Atlanta
Falcons upset the San Diego
&lt;llargers 28-:lfi, the Kansas City
Chiefs outscored the Seattle
Seahawks 37-21, the New York Jets
beat the BaiUmore Colts 30-17 and
the st. loolB Cardinals defeated the
San F'rand!lco'49ers 13-10.
Mlaml beat New J!:ni!and 3&amp;-24 on
Thursday night. Oakland plays at
New Orleans tonight.
Among the outstanding individual
efforts, Franco Harris of Pittsburgh,
Tony Dorsett of Dallas and Mike
Pruitt of Cleveland surpaased the
1,00C)..yard rushing mark for the
season, rookie Ottis Anderson of st.

DOUBLE TEAMED - Eastern's Gene Olle Is
double teamed during action in last Friday'! non-

make player
trades

on a 6-yard scamper with 2:ii3
remaining as St. Louis won its debut
under interim Coach Larry W'JL.on,
who replaced Bud Wilkinson, fired
last week . Anderson is the first NFL
rookie to post eight 100-yard games .

Todd Wll1lama and freshman Brad
Walke led the Oak Hill Oaks to an
81~ non&lt;anference victory over

By The Auoclilted

Pre"

satunlay's Results
Tournaments
crusader Classic

Chilmpionship

DePauw

71,

Capital

Consolation
Thomas More 77 Muskingum

68
60

Ohio Westev•n Toum11ment

Championship

Elmira

s.N .C.S4

St.

59

Andrew

Ohio wesleyan 93 case western Re
serve 72

Conference
Hootier· Buckeye
Hanover 95, Bluffton 63

Other Games
Akron 101 Walsh 74
Augusta 73 Otterbein 55
Bethany 17 Marietta 70 OT
Bowling Green 77 Baldwin
Wal ·
lace 58
Centre 87 Oh io Dominican 62
Cleveland St . 99 John Carroll 79

Cumberland 8'1 Tiffin 73
Dayton lOll Ashland 71
Defiance 84 Heidelberg 75

North Gallia Saturday night.
It was the first time the two schools
ever met in varsity sports competition .
Also hitting double figures for
Coacb Nonn Persln's Oaks was Randy Yates with 10 points.
Oak Hill jumped into a 21 ~ lead
then acored 30 points in the second
stanza to take a 51-20 lead at the half.
Mark Mlller, 6-2 senior, led the
Pirates with 31 points. It was his second straight high scoring effort.
North Gallia shot a cool 35 percent
from tile Door and collected just '1:1
rebounds.
Oak Hill won the reserveWt,51-33.
Coach Ted Lehew's squad, 1-1,
goes to Glouster Tuellday, plays at
Eastern Friday and Portsmouth
Notre Dame Saturday.
Boll score :
NORTH GALLIA (6S) - Peck,
2·4·8;

T.

Howell,

1·3·5;

PREVENnON
IS THE

BEST POLICY
As an inde pendent insurance

agency, our pri mary function Is

are over, when our roeter Ia made up
for !!pl'ing training, then I '11 conrem

myaelf... he said.

\

BLUE CREEK, Ohio (AP) ~ For

with 10 children and :15,000 Christ-

Carl Rudd, Chriatmaa In Dayton W8ll
always the brightest of holidays . But

mas lighta, he needed a bigger
place, so he moved to the country.

Apple Grove News Notes
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Barnette of

Visiting Herbert Rouah were
James Spencer, Bob Morris, Don
RicbardHill, Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner,
Mrs. Eula Wolfe, Mrs. Gladys
Shields, Mrs. llooald Russell and
Micbael and Mandy, Cindy Rouah,
;.tr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and Kimberly, Herschel Roush, Mrs. Rus:oell
Roush, Kyle Wickline, Mrs. Iva Orr,
Trscy Pickett, Mrs. Margie Hunt,
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt, Effie Pickens,
Becky Michael.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush

to provide poli ci es whi ch afford

of St Albans, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Mlller of Gallipolis visited Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill entertained Monday evening in honor
of their daughter, Debbie Roush,
who was celebrating her birthday.
Attending were Mr. and mrs. Marshall Roush, Joey and Cortney, Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Norris, Tracy and
Ryan, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill.

At Phenix City, Ala .
Championship
Ithaca 1.4 , Wittenberg 10

NCAA Div . II Playoff•

ca r e,

ca u tion

i!lnd

At Findlay, Ohio
Semifinals
Findlay 7, Pac ific Lutheran 0

TIUSTI.EOOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio !API
-Favored Fantastic Spot took the
featured allowance race at
Thistledown Sunday, rurining the
mile in 1:39 2-5 to pay $4.40, $2.1l1 and
$2.20.
Second place Whistler's Father
returned $6.00 and $3.00, and Zayer
Shane paid $2.1Ml for finishing third .
The trifecta combination of Sir
Roger Scott (7), Spanish Breaker
(10) and Limited Liability (6) paid
$4,626.30 on 16 winning tickets .
The crowd of 5,049 wagered
$888,722.

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992 ·2143
10'2

w. Main

Pomeroy

USDA CHOICIE BONELESS

CHUCK
ROAST

LONGHORN

lB

s}89

BIGGEST SAVIIGS I

•

YOU STILL HAVE PLENTY OF TIME TO
ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS GIRS.

Wright 51 S4 Oakland S8

Zavier 81 Kenvon 70
Youngstown St . 99 Steubenville 81

i

Located on Cherry Ridge , turn east at Darwin onto Rt.
681, go 4 mi. to Milepost 13. Turn south on gravel road,
W 1'12 miles to grove.
u

W WATCH FOR SIGNS

SEMI-BONELESS

99'
CHICKEN PIECES
JUST THE BEST
PICK OF THE

$}49

WHOL£ OR

HAM .......~~~......~~·.

UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

We will not be open Christmas thru Jan. 1. We wil •
resume business on Jan. 2. See you then.

LB.

U. S. GRADE A GOLD, RED DELICIOUS, OR WINESAP

5
7
CORN·········· ~~~
SALE DATES

AUTHORIZED CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

DEC. 3.a,

1979
Pomeroy

324 Main St.

OWN EO AND OPERA TEO BY

SACREMENTO

-

Jack &amp; Judy Williaml
Open : Mon . thru Wed . 9·S, Thur . 9·11, Friday 9· 5, Sat. f ·l .

Ohio 9'12 -2 17~
W. Va. 773-9S77
Satisfaction Guaranteec!
or Your Money Back

-~

..

TOMATO JUICE •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~. S!r

8

PEPSI

KLEENEX

JUMBO PAPER TOWELS ·················59'
MONARCH
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••••••••••••••••~.2~. 59'

DORITOS .......... !.0::. •••. 79~
FOLGERS
2-Lb.
REGULAR. DRIP a• ELECT. PERK

DREAM WHIP. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~.IN~. s1.09

6 14 23 22- 65
21 30 18 12- 81

pkg.
16 OL

With Deposit and Purchases

INN MAID NOODLES ••••••.•••••••• ..S.~. 49'
MONARCH PEACHES •• ~~.0!.~1!c.e~••~~~ 39'

99

Can

KEEBLER 100's COOKIES
CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES .......·~;~ spt
ICED OATMEAL COOKIES .............. .'~;;· sI"
CiiiCiER SlAPS COOKIES .... ..... . .':;;· 99&lt;

KRAFT

MARSHMALLOW CREAM .••••.•••••• H.~Z; •. 79~
CARDINAL

UEBLUI

TOMATO SOUP. •••••••••••••••• J9Y!.~.c:~•. 4/88'

VAIILLA WAFERS ............................ .';;.;· 79&lt;
N-BISCO

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.
CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT
Between 8:30 a.m.
-

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and 5:00 p.m.
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1.:t.14 992-2156

IlLLA WAFERS .. .... ..... .. . ................... ,';;;• 79&lt;

TENDERLEAF TEABAGS •••••••••• .t.~.~·...s1.99
4 roll pak 89'
SOff PRINTS .•••..•........•.......•.•.....

ATTENTI-O N

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE CHEESE

PIZZA'!!!!!!!D1s~orgg¢
MIX ~~~a~b PKG.

---

ARGO RED lABEL

LIGHT CORN SYRUP•••••••••••••••••••.s1.09
1 gal. 69'
A-1 BLEACH·······························
NUSOFT FABRIC SOFTENER ••.•• ~~.~ •.89'
MONARCH PORK &amp; BEANS .•••••4p.~;·69'

Ortrs.

GARVIN'S

COTTAGE CHEESE
LB.

79¢

llUE IONHIT lOfT IOWl

MARGA Rill .. .. .... .. .... .. .... .. ..... ...... .... ....

" Whether you ' re lost in o slronge neighborhood , or just going to
lote for d inner, o telephone booth is a wekome sight
" That's why it's important 1ho1 we keep them in wool.:iQg order. In
my job, I do more than collect the change from lhe coin box . I olso
make •ure lhot lhe instrument is wool.:ing correctly. If it needs minor
repoi" I do them on the •pol.
" Thai way. we make. sure !hot you gel o working phone when
you need it . That's one reason I' m proud to be
one of lhe people General Telephone is talking (
oboul when they soy ' We keep you talking '."

be

C'j j

=I

David Reinsmilh,
Paystalion Collector,
Wilmingtan, Ohio
One oltlte 100,000

GTE proleuionals
who ant watiing
to bring ycw
I:&gt;Mterond1110t1t
elficientlelttphone _.ice.

GARVIN'S

BUTTER MILK
lf2 GAL

PURINA

89¢

....iiiiii

DOG CHOW····································
FROZEN FOOD VALUES

l ·lb

2

:~':· ,5
5

59

HOSTESS
TWINKlES
15 OL BOX

7tc

•••••••••••••••

Tub

11-oz.

Pkg.

ASSORTED VARIETIES

BORDEN'S JUMBU IKI::AJ

ICE

ASSORTED FLAVORS

v~;~~

................. '2 19

FROSTY ACRES FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE . .......... .................. J..?rs-. 89c

~

W

i

HOURS 10 TIL DARK W

FRESH SWEET

In the first U. S. Census, taken in
1790, the center of the new nation's
population was a point 23 miles east
of Baltimore .

Wi"enbero 49 Transylvania 45

!

W

POTATOES~~.~-.~.1299 APPLES···4ULBAG 79~

VAUGHAN'S

Oberlin 50 Hope 41

Ohio NOrthern 99 St. Marys 77
Ohio State 78 Ohio u . Sl
S . Mississippi 86Cincinnati 8A

FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

ECKRICH
SMOKED, POLISH OR BEEF

U. S. NO. 1 OHIO

By quarters :

North Gallia
Oak Hill

i
i

KAHN'S

Walke , 9·0· 18 ; Yates, A·2· 10 ; Davis,

Lewis, 3-1-7. TOT ALSJ:!-17 -II .

~

BRADFORD'S

BA CON............. ~~.89~ SAUSAGE .......~. $}69
COME IN - TRY A SAMPLE
$1
59
BONELESS
WIENERS......... ~~~...
BUDGET PAK
BEEF
LB $}99
LB $229
LB. Jig¢
STEW..................:...
CUBE STEAKS...........~...
CH ICKEN ............If

4·0·8; Will iams, 6-1022; Dunn, 1·2·4;

Indiana SO Miami 52
Liberty Baptist 87 Mt . Vernon Naz ·
arene 65
MOrehead 119 Wilmington 68
Mount Union 92 St . Mary 's, Md . 77
NC ·Charlotte 6A Toledo 60

~

CRISPY SERVE

Miller ,

Kalinoski, 1·2 ·4; Waugh, 1·0·2, and

L-----------~--~~-------1

~

CHRISTMAS TREES

KAHN SPECIALS

14-3-31; Barnes, 2 1 5; S. Howell,
2·5·9; Payne, 3·1·7. TOTALS 24·17·65.
OAK HILL (81 1 ~ Mose5, 3-() -6;

Hiram61 DE'nison57

et&amp;)tlmc but tbe nel thing. We're

r--~-~~--~~--~-----------

w

safety

preve ntive measures wh ich can
keep that ca r acc ident from hap ·
pening , that building fire from
sti!lrfing, that home burglary
from being committed .
Prevention saves life, limb and
propert y ... and helps con trol in ·
su r ance cos ts and premiums .
When losses do occur, our
poli cyholders can count on pro·
tec ting and serving In time and
need . But we stil l say ~ preven ·
lion is th e best ~licy

At Youngdown, Ohio

Semifinals
Youngstown St . 5'2 , Alabama A&amp;M 0
NAIA Oiv . ll Playoffs

not in It for the money, only to show
the real meaning of Christmas. We
want to tell the real story of Cllrist,"
he said, admitting that the cost of
electricity is starting to hurt.

But , w e also nave a vital lnterE&gt;st in loss prevention, as
should our clients . We encourage

MON ........................ 9tll7
TUES. -WED .. . ............ 9til S
THURS ..................... 9tii 12
FRIDAY ... ...... ........... 91il7
SAT . .. .... .... .. ........... .. 9til2
For Your Convenience

NCAA Oiv. Ill Playoffs

were at Pleasant Valley HOIIpitalln
Point Pleaaant Tuelday wbel"e mr.
Roush consulted Ilia clotW.

and then to Kenwood, near Cincinnati, and finally to Loveland . I
had been trvlng to get it for years.
Loveland dldn 'l even have anybody
wbo knew how to set up up. It 's a big
job."
Last year, an estimated 100,000
people visited Rlldd'a rural display
which , now wttb 40,000 light bulbo,
Illuminates tbe country sky.
Rudd covered the billa with
llbepbenl flprea. There are four
naUvity ICenel. He built a replica of
the city ~Bethlehem.
Many ~ the figures move. Scme
him IIOUIId. There is plenty of
Dllllie.
"~ him got their minds on

loss .

CHEESE ................. ~...

Ohio College Football
By the Associated Press
Saturday 's Results

"This year, the display Ia going to
be the biggest in the world," said
Rodd, 50, wbo manages a campground in Lebanon.
Last November, he bought the
huge Christmas display from the
city of Loveland to oet up on hia fann
on Ohio 1:15 between Pcrtlmouth and
West Union . He said It originally
cost $250,000, but he didn't pay
anything like that.
"I got a real good buy onlt," Rudd
said, declining to IBY bow much he
paid. "It originally came fnm
f.reece, then to N81bville, Tl!llll.,

f inancial p rot ec t ion in case of

aelf."
McNamara conceded that the
Reels could use SOOle veteran pinch
hitters, bowever.
· "Yes, we need more esperlence on
the !lench," be said. "A little more
clfenle, that would help ."
McNamara said be hadn 'I worried
yet about where Dave Collins and
Ken Griffey would be in the Rem
outfield, who would succeed Joe
Margan at ~nd base or whether
Dan Driessen and Cesar Geronimo
would still be starters after
lackluater years at the plate.
'1 'II walt unW alter the meetings

... You might even say they glow
LllngJvllle, ffil'll . Louise Walndling

league loss to Waterford. Providing a close defense is
the Wildcats' Joe Rauch (35) and Bill Eichmiller (31 ).

Oaks hand Pirates
81-65 cage defeat

C01nolation

TORONTO (AP) - Oncinnati
Reds general manager Dick Wagner
says If the National League clubmakes any trades they likely will be
made at baseball's winter meetlnga
this week.
But Manager John McNamara
says the Reds, who won the Western
Division championship last season,
are not grasping for just any trade.
"I don l see where (a trade) 15
mandatory for us," McNamara
said. "If we can improve our
ballclub by making a trade, we will.
But It's not that drastic. We already
bave a good, solid nucleus. U we
don't (make a trade), so what?"
McNamara didn't say the Reds
would spum a trade if the right deal
came along, however.
'1 wouldn't llke to go into
apeclflca, as far as our needs, for the
simple reason If we don l make a
trade," he said. "But everybody is
looking for pitching . If we could get
a tell-handed pitcher, that's an area
we could help ourselves. "
'lbe Reds bave onlv two lefties on
the roster, reliever Dave Tomlin and
rookie Clutrlle Lelbnndt, since
veteran Fred Norman cholle to enter
the free agent market in the recent
re«~try draft.
Wagner has said repeatedly that
the dub is producing playable talent
in Its farm system. 1be Reds drafted
one pitcher, Dave Goltz, In the reentry draft but dropped out of the
bidding when the price got too steep.
"Our club Ia sound enough to be
competitive for a long time,"
Wagner said before the meetings
began. "Trsding is the most overtalked part of our business. It's getting more and more difficult
(because of high-priced free agents)
to make moves to Improve your-

and scored the winning touchdown

STARTING DEC . 3

Olllo College Basketball

Reds may

Oilers. He 's only th e fo urth
C1eveland rWlller to post a ).(}()().
yard season, joining Jtm Brnwn .
Leroy Kelly and Greg Prwtt .
Rams t7, Vildngs 21
Nolan CromweU ran 5e yard.-.. fn r &lt;.1
touchdown on a fake field goal rru dwa y through overtime as Los
Angeles opened a one-half game
lead over New Orleans in the NFC
West . Ex -Viking Bob lee, a recent
Ram pickup, quarterbacked the winners in the second half and overtime.
Broncos 19, BDls 16
Jim Twmer's 32-yard field goal
with three seconds left gave Denver
its victory and lifted the Broncos into a tie with San Diego for he AFC
West lead at 10-4. The kick offset a
brilliant passing show by Buffalo's
Joe Ferguson, who completed '1:1 of
46 for 316 yards.
Falco01 28, Chargel'll 26
Steve Bartkowski 's 6-yard touchdown pass to Wallace Francis with
21 seconds remaining gave the
Falcons, 13t-jl0int underdogs, the
win over San Diego.
Chiefs 37, Seabawb 21
Ted McKnight scored two touchdowns as Kansas City bolted to a 2~
halftime advantage and a 37-7 lead
early in the final period before
easing up.
Jets 30, Colts 17
Richard Todd, frequently booed
by Jets fans this season, completed
12 of 26 passes for 215 yards and two
touchdowns and ran for 35 yards as
New York snapped a three'!(ame
losing streak .
• Cards 1:1, 49el'll 10
Ottis Anderson ran for 129 yards

There is a collection boll, but
visito.-. are not asked to contribute.
"I'll never charge nothln' as long
as I'm alive," he said.
Rudd gives handicapped and
elderly people a personalized tour in
a Jeep, or if there's snow, in a sleigh.
The display will be open to the
puhllc Dec. 14-31 unW 11 p.m., he
said . The !ann is north of Blue Creek
near Lynll.

99e

�- - - - --·-- ...
I-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Dec. 3, 1979

Apple Grove News Notes
By Mn. lll;rbert RoiWI

Mr. and Mn. Ed Morru, Jason,
Erin and Aaron ol Bowiln8 Green,
and Mrs. Anna Wheeler called on

Mr. and Mrs. Dol'!lll Parsons SWIday.
Thanklglvlng Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill were Mr. and
Mrs. Dlln'ell Norm, Tracy and
Ryan, Mr' and Mrs. Marshall
Roush, Courtney and Joey, Dean
HIU and Art Hill.
'lbanklglving Day guests of Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe were Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Cuper, grandson, Kevin Dye, of
Ollwnbus, Mr3. Jane Hill of Moore
Haven, Fla., Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Wallace Hill and 11011, Tim, Mr. and
Mr3. Marvin Hill, Andy and Jenny .
Mr. and Mr3. Jerry Johnson and
family, Mary Sue Darst of Racine
were 'Thankagiving Day guests of
Mr. and Mr3 . Bob Smith and Martin
Cunningham.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy vlalted from Saturday UU Wednesday with her mother, Mrs. Edna
Roush at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and with Mrs. Gladys
Shields and other relatives.
Vlalting Mr. and Mrs . Gerald
Hayman
over
Thanksgiving
weekend were Mr. and Mrs . Gene
Jewell and daughter, Bobbie, of
Letart, W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Hart of Colwnbus, Mr. and Mrs .
Wallie Stover, and Mrs. Irene John·

Guests were Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Addie
Petrie of Racine and Mrs . Hel•"
Slack.
Mr . and Mrs. Bruce Hart or
Col wnbus spent the Thanksgi v:ng
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Bell. Mr . and Mrs. Hart were
evening diMer guests of Mr . and
Mrs . Robert Hart at Racine
Thanksgiving Day. On Friday
evening, Mr . and Mrs. Bell, and Mr .
and Mr3 . Hart were guests of Mr .
and Mrs. David Hensler at Racine .
On Saturday evening, Mr . and Mrs.
Hart accompanied his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Hart, Brice and
Beth Ann, to Cottageville, W. Va ,
and visited Mr . and Mrs. Allen Cunningham and children.

7- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday , Dec. 3, 1979

Draperies, blinds block heat escape
ByMelgoCo.
ExteOBioo Service
The windows of a house lose heat
laster than the insulated walls that
they are in . To correct this, different
window treatments can be used .
More important than the drapery
Iabrie is the way the treetment is at-

!ached to the window in controllm~
hea t loss or gain . Covering the lop of
the drapery with a corruce or valan ·
ce helps to stop air movement .
Sealing the edge of til€ drapery to
the wall can also help .
The roller shade is still one of the

Mr . and Mrs. Don Bell vtsited
Thursday evening with Mr . and Mrs .
John Oumey at Pine Grove.
Mr . and Mrs. Lester Roush am
son, Johnnie, Mr. and Mrs . Dick
Smith of Middleport, Mr . and Mrs .
Roger Manuel and children. Mr enrl

Mrs. Jim Connolly, Brian and
Shelly, of Syracuse , Mr . and Mrs.
Gary Roush and children, and Mrs.
Vicki Cundiff spent Thanksgiving
Day with Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle
and family at Wheelersburg .

most effet:tive ways to reduce heat
Joss when it is sealed on the sides,
but, of course, will cut off light and

view.
Remember! When the sun is
shining, open the draperies lor free
heat. At sundown or on dark days ,
close the draperies to keep heat in·
side .

I
I

I
I

OPTOMETRIST
0FFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON
ONTHURS.)-EASTCOURTST..POMEROY .

Vlalting Mr. and Mrs. Marshall

Adams and son, Raymond, over the
'lbanksglvtng weekend were Mr.
and Mrs. Larry O'Brien and
children, Jlnuny, Unda and Carol,
Mr. and Mrs. Vemoo Cady and
daughter, Lori, West Jefferson, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike O'Brien and children
andMr.andMr3. Raymond Proffitt .
'lbanklglvtng Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush, Cindy and
Edward, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis
at Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Ruasell, Mandy and Micllael, Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and son,
Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush
and daughter' Kimberly.
Thlnksglvlng Day guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp were Mrs.
Kenneth Bass and daughters, Kendra and Corrine, of Clifton, W. Va. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush, and Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and son,
Jeremy.
Faye Roush ol Pennsylvania
visited her father, Howard Roush at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and her
molher, ~ Roush, at Racine, a
few days.
Vlalting Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and
son, Jeremy, SWlday, were Mrs.
Glorta Manuel, Mrs. JoaM Wilford,
Tabitha and Alicia of ·Racine, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Bll8h, Mr. and Mrs.
Rocky Hupp and son, R J ., Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush, Irene Hupp and
Mandy Russell. Don Manuel visited
the Hupps on Mooday.

MEIGS -

FIFTH AND SIXTH Grade Girls
of Southern Local to be at Racine
Junior HJgh Saturday at 9 a .m . to
receive basketball wlifonns .
HAM DINNER and Christmas
Bazaar Saturday at Portland
Elementary. Serving frcm 5 p .m to
6:30pm. Santa will be oo hand from
5:30to 6:30p.m.
WESTERN BOOT CB Club Saturday 7 p.m. at club ho~ . Plans lor
01rta1rnas party to be made. Per·
lOllS wWiing to exchange names and
help with party asked to attend . Bring covered dish.
CHRISTMAS Bataar at Racine
United Methodist Cllurch annex,
Friday, 10 am. to 7 pm . and Satur day, 10 a .m . to 3 p.m. with wtde
variety of handmade items to be sold
88 well 88 candy and baked goods .
Lunch will be available.
MEIGS OOUNTY SAWN, Eight
and Forty, BMual Olristmas dinner
party Mooday evening. Members to
leave for Shoney's at Point Pleasant
at 6 pm. from the home of Mrs.
MarY Martin . $5 gift exchange .

The Zion Church of

dlreeted by Wilma Dllvidaon and
Kathryn

Johnson. Those parSherry Amold, Jeff
Arnold, John Arnold, Melanie Ar·
nold, Matt Riffle, Tine Riffle,
CMolyn Elam, Bill Elam, Terry
Johnson, Jeff McElroy, Joey
McElroy and Teresa Johnson.
Robert E. Purtell, mlnlster, spoke
on the subject, "Thanksgiving from
the Eyes of Paul."
1be Thanksgiving eve program
CllllliiJied of congregational singing

wre

01 the traditional 'lbanksgtvtng
accompanied

by

Ann

Lmnbert. Matthew Riffle read the
IICI'iptw'e,
Thole who participated by using
their taii!Dta were Sherry Arnold,

nJESDAY
OHIO ETA PHI CHAPJ'ER , Beta
Phi Sorority, 7:30 Tuesday
night at the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co. Kathy Doidge to have
the cultural report; Sonja OhiinHer

JoDI Amold, Melanee Arnold and
Jeff Arnold. A wCIIllell 's trio sang
which consisted of Charlotte

Lambert, Linda Riffle, and Pat Ar·
nold. A quartet cooslsted of John and
Ann W'llllam8 and Bob and Marge
Purtell.
Arnold sang a solo . Jolut
Wllllams gave a reading .
~ts of pwnpkln pie and
JlWICI! were served at a fellow:;hip

Pat

fOllOwing.

---------------ORDER of Eastern Stars,

FaUaPTO.

'111111ksgivlng Eve.
1be flrlt program was a puppet
play "Just Before Thanksgiving"

hymns

BEST OF SHOW -Betty Dean was the best of show award in the artistic
arrangements division with 11€r exhibit in the blacklight class, "In the
Lane, Snow is Glistening." She used an abstract design in blues and
greens before a black velvet backdrop.

LETART FALLS PTO Monday
7:30pm. at the school. Amy Hill of
the Dabble Shop s peak er .
Refreshment. .
EASTERN ATHLETIC Boosters
Monday 7:30pm. at high school.
HEMLOCK Grange products party Monday, 7 p.m. at Grange Hall .
Bring cookies . Everyone welcome.
INSTALLATION of officers ,
Racine Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30p .m .
Monday at the Masonic Temple .
Members are to take sandwiches or
cookies .
BAKE SALE Saturday beginning
at 8:30a.m. in front of Racine Home
National Bank. Sponsored by Letart

C2Jrlst, Rt. 143, held a Thankagiving
prGIIl'8Dl oo Sunday evening and on

ticipating

1

Pomeroy, Tuesday 7:30p.m.

MONDAY

Program held

sterna

Warnrng The Surgeon Gener al Has Dete rmr nr·d
Thai C1gare1te Smok1ng Is Dangerous 10 Your Healrh

\

I

~-- Social Calendar

'l'llanDgivlng Day guests and
visiting over the weekend with Mrs.
Kathryn HWJt were Mr. and Mrs.
~BearbsofPortamouth, Va.,Mr.
and Mrs. Olarlea Burri and Billy
Wlbon of Bolivar Dam, Arthur
Wlbon, Oleryl WUaon and friend,
Keith Uttle, of Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mn. Wayne Wllaon, Robin and Ron·
ole, Mr. and Mrs. William Wickline
and acn, Kyle and Scott.
Mrs. Pearl WIUis entertained with
a dinner In honor of Mrs. Caroline
Miller Sunday at her heme. Mrs.
Miller na celebrating her birthday.

' •

I
I

JUNIOR BEST OF SHOW - Larissa Long, nine-year-old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Long, Fiv e Points, took the junior best of show award
at the Christmas flower show judging Saturday. She was also the reci·
pient of the iunior horticulture award.

Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson of
Not PIUA~~t vlalted Mrs. Pearl
Nonil recently.

/

L---------------~---------------·

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

Carrie.

/

,.,

r-------------------------------1
: N. W. COMPTON. O.D. I

111111.

Mr. and Mr3. Erwin Gloeckner,
Clarence Story and daughter,
Rosalie,
of
Darwin
were
'Ibanklglvlng Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. David Gloeckner and daughter,

Christmas comes to C'hester Sunday

To learn more about window treat me nt and other energy savings
techniques, call the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service at
992-6696 and request that your name
be added to the free mailing list lor
Energy-Saving newsletters and fact
sheets about the next several months .

and Su:wn Well to be hostesses
CHESTEH
COUNCil.
:m
Daughters of Amertca Tuesdll) I :10
p.m . First nomination of offi cers
Layette ~hower for En una and t:t·ith
,&amp;,sh)py .

WEDNESDAY
SOUTHEAST Ohio Garden Tractor Club Wednesday 7:30 pm. in
seou l building located behind
firehouse in Cllester. All interested
persons invited to attend .
niURSDAY
EVANGELINE CHAPTER 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30pm.
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Ouistmas party to be held with $2
gilt exchange.

Racine
Social Events
By Mn. Fraocia Morris
Rev. and Mrs. W. P. Rollyson of.
Lowell, Ohio, attend~ the worship
services at Bethlehem Baptist Chur·
ch and Racine Baptist Church Sunday morning. He was a former interim pastor here. They spent the af.
ternoon with friends .
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cutshall of
Columbus spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
Mrs. Gary Carter and baby and
her brother, Gary Sellers, were
guests ol Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie and
Jozie , Gallipolis, and Philip McKenzie and friend , Kim Parlin, of Ohio
State University, spent Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rif·

ne.

Mr. and Mrs. Mack Howard and
Helen Riffle of Hartford spent Sun·
day with Mr. am Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre and Eric
or Bowerstown visited relatives
Saturday .
Bruce Beegle of Columbus spent
the weekend with his parent., Mr .
and Mrs Bob Beegle. Vera Beegle
and Tommy Beegle joined them Sunday lor dinner to celebrate Bruce's
birthday .
Mr. and Mrs. Bryce Sayre and
children of Jackson, Mr. and Mrs .
Dan Sayre, local, and Mr. and Mrs .
Dave Sayre, Antiquity, all enjoyed a
family ~e t -together Suntiay with Mr .
a11d Mrs. Herbert Sayre.
Mr . and Mrs. Delbert Morris of
Athens, Mrs. EL•i~ Roush and Mrs.
Marte Chap!!Vln of Pomeroy visited

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW-Bernice Carpenter took the reserve best
of show award for her entry in "Snowbird", a class showing motion. Mrs.
Carpenter used t~ vines with contrived flowers .

It was Christmas, Ou-istmas
everywh€re in the Chester Elemen·
t.ary School auditorlwn over the
weekend as the Meigs County
Association of Garden Clubs staged
its BMual holiday show . The theme
this year was "I'm Dreaming of a
White Cllristmas. ''
The show was dedicated to Mrs .
Dulcie Reibel of Morristown who
returned to meet and greet the many
friends she made as a Meigs County
Garden Club member and also as
director of Region 11. Mrs. Reibel
was recognized and presented a gift
by Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis at the
show opening on Saturday.
Following the judging by Mrs .
Aida Cullen, an accredited judge of
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, five special awards were
presented.
Mrs. Betty Dean won the ''best of
show" for her modem design under
blackllght, •:ln the Lane Snow is
Glistening."
The ''reserve best of show" went
to Mrs . Bernice Carpenter "Snow
Bird", a class calling for motioo.
Winning both the junior best ol show
and the junior horticulture award
wu Larissa Long, nine year old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Long,
a member of the Redbud Junior
Garden Club.
Shelia Taylor captured the
creativity award for her "Snowbound" exhibit, and tying for the
horticulture a ward which is based
on points lor ribbons won were BWJ·

ny Kuhl and Evelyn Hollon .
The show featured several special
e~hibits.
Judy Titus showed
evergreen specimens, Ellen Bell had
a display on books from the public
libraries, and there was a display of
crafts.
First, second, third and fourth
place winners in each class of the
show were as follows:
ARTISriC ARRANGEMENTS
''The First Snowfall", Ruth Er·
win, Bunny Kuhl, Chloris Grimm,
and Evelyn Hollon.
"Snowbound", Shelia Taylor,
Peggy Crane, Melanie Stethem , and
Shelia CurtiJI .
"April Snow" Melanie Stethem
'
'
Bernice Carpenter, Sally Andrews
and Pat Holter .
"I Found Her Little Footprint. in
the Snow", Wanetta Radekin, Ruth
Erwin, Eva Robson, and Helen
Johnson .
"Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let II
Snow", Janet Bolin , Betty Dean,
Geneva Nolan, and Crystal
Rayburn .
"Snow Bird", Bernice Carpenter,
Pauline Atkins, Evelyn Hollon and
Betty Dean .
"Frosty, the Snowman ", Suzanne
Warner, Ann Elizabeth Turner ,
Shelia CUrtis, Neva NichoLson .
"Whiter than Snow, Lord", Ruth
Erwin, Pauline Atkins, Linda
Mayer, and Evelyn Hollon, with a
second division winners being
Jackie Frost, Bernice Carpenter,

CREATIVITY AWARD-Sheila Taylor won the creativity award lor her
artistic display in the class, "SnowboWld '."She depicted a fireside scene
using pompas grass as her plant material .

Sheila Taylor, and Ada Holter .
"When I Marry Mr. Snow ", Erma
Smith, Maida Long, Judith
McKnight and Linda Mayer .
"The Horse Knows the Way to
Carry the Sleigh", Ann Elizabeth
Turner, Maye Mora, Bernice
Carpenter, and Kathryn Johnson.
"Christmas Where Snow Peaks
Stand Solenm and White", Pauline
Atkins, Eileen Buck, Evelyn Thoma,
and Geneva Nolan.
' 'Thy Snow Capped Peaks I Love
to See", Janet YoWlg, Melanie
Stethem, Crystal Rayburn , Alice
Thompson.
"The Snowdrop ", MarlaMa Mitchell, Sheila Curtis , Mace! Barton,
and Mary Nease.
"ln the Lane, Snow is Glistening",
Betty Dean, Suzy Carpenter. Pat
Holter, and Ada Holter.
"To Hear Sleigh Bells in the
Snow", Janet Koblentz, Melanie
Stethem, Ruth Erwin. and Karla
Chevalier.
"This uttle Fellow 's Afraid of the
Snow", junior class, Larissa Long,
Donita Manuel, Donia Crane, with
fourth place ribbons to Bethany
Mayer, Robin Manuel, and Joey
Q-ane.

RORnCULTIIRE DIVISION
Houseplants , foliage; Joyce
Manuel, first and second, Bunny
Kuhl, and Evelyn Hollon : blooming,
Ada Holter, Evelyn Hollon.
African violets : Bunny Kuhl, first
and third, Pauline Ridenour, second.

and Joyce Manuel, fourth.
Christmas cactus : Bunny Kuhl,
first; Wanetta Radekin, second.
Berried Branches : Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie, first and second; Mrs.
Harold Lohse, third; Mrs. Ridenour,
fourth .
Preserved plant material: natural
dried, Evelyn Hollon, first, third and
fourth, Mrs . Ledlie, second; treated,
Janet Bolin, Judith McKnight,
Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Ledlie.
Dish gardens, junior horticulture,
Renee Buckley, Caralyn Barton,
Larissa Long , and Donita Manuel.
Dried roadside or field material :
Larissa Long, Valerie Roush, Donia
Crane, third and fourth.
Hanging planter : Ada Holter,
first.
In the class for outside door
decorations, the winners were Mrs.
Dorothy Morris, first, Mary Nease,
second, Janet Koblnetz, Uurd, and
Evelyn Hollon , fourth, lor wreaths;
and Bernice Carpenter, Shelia
Taylor , Ada Holter, and Betty Dean,
first through fourth respectively, for
swags .
In gilt wraps, the ribbon winners
were Betty Dean, first and second;
Geneva Nolan, third , and Evelyn
Hollon , fourth. Stabiles class winners were Bernice Carpenter, Shella
Curtis, Betty Dean, and Pat Holter .
In the class for C'hrtstmas corsages the winners were Janet
Koblentz, ftrst; ~neva Nolan, second, and Evelyn Hollon, third .

Coleman
ordained
Larry Ray Coleman was ordained
to the Qu-istian ministry at the :llon
Church of Cluist on Nov . II . 1be
program
consisted
of
congregational singing with Steve
Stanley leading, and Ann Lambert
accompanying. Dan Arnold had the
prayer.
Linda Miller sang a solo accompanied by Shelia Coleman. Ron
Miller read scripture . The evening
message was "The Sceptor" by
Robert E . Purtell, host minister.
Denny Coburn, minister of the
Gallipolis christian Church, gave the
charge to Mr. Coleman. Following
the benediction, the congregatioo
was invited to the sociall'OMl for a
reception for the Colemans .
Coleman ill the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Loren Coleman of Pomeroy and
Sheila Coleman is the daughter of
Mr . and . Mrs. Wilbur Wiseman,
Chesapeake. Coleman and his wife
will continue his education beginning in January at the Kentucky
Christian College, Grayson, Ky .

Mrs . Ura Morris and Mr. and Mrs .
Clifford Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpsm,
DBrin and l.ba, of Baltimore, spent
Sunday with Mrs. Helen Simpson
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.j
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Grinun
visited at the home ol his brother in
Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mrs. Anna Wines and Karen spent
a weekend with Mr . and Mrs. Neil
Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wines
and Mr. and Mrs . Larry Grinun at
Westerville.
Mr. am Mrs. Allie Monette of. Cin·
cinnati were guests ol her brother·
in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs .
Russell Cummins and children.
Other guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Morlan, Debbie and Kathy , of
Columbus. Mr. and Mrs. Cwrunins
were hoots to a going-a way diMer
honoring her brother-in-law and
sister, Arnie and Pauline Monette,
who are moving to Florida. Mr. and
Mrs . Dennis Manuel , Denise and
Troy, joined them ~~ C~e dinner .

FLAG PRESENTATION-The American Legion
Auxiliary of Racine Post 602 purchased slx classroom
flags for the Letart Falls Elementary School. The flags
were presented Friday by Mrs. Thelma Walton , presi dent, and Mrs . Julia Norris, of the Auxiliary . Mrs.
Mrs . Dougias Circle and Florence
Circle attended the funeral of Riley
Pigott at Coolville Saturday.
Mr . and Mrs. Tom O'NeU and sons
and Mrs. Evelyn !ngrani of Columbus, 0 ., visited here on Saturday .
Mrs . Mary Circle spent
Thanksgiving day with Mr . and Mrs .
James Circle and Mrs . Nellie Gibson
of New Haven, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Orvy Gruner of
Hebron Ohio and Mr . and Mrs. Ber nard Gainer of Barberton , Ohio
vialted Mrs . Dean Brinker on Friday
evening .
Mr. and Mrs . Douglas Circle at·
tended a birthday dinner honoring
Rocky Pitzer at his home in Bashan.
Recent visitors at the home of
Douglas Circle were Milton Circle of
Phoenix, Arizona, Dale Harden of
Canton, 0., Earl Harden of Weston,
W Va .. Jill F.arich and brother.
David. of C&lt;Ji wTibU,, (J. Mrs . F.mest
Johnsoo and reresa and l.Jsa
Blazer, Chad Johnson, aU of Belpre,
Ohio and Robert Johnson of Columbus ,O.

Walton, front, left, is pictured presenting the flags to
Bill Downie, Jan Norris , and Eileen Buck, front, with
Mrs. Norris, back, left, and Pauline Hill and Roger
Roush. Valerie Johnson, not present for the picture,
will also receive a flag for her classroom.m.

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. Dean vance Hill
(Lori Chapman ) of Apple Grove, are
annoWlcing the birth of their first
child, a son, Dean Vance, Jr. The
baby was born November 19,
weighed sill pounds, and was 19 in·
cheslong.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Chapman,
Syracuse, and paternal grandparents aTe Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Hill, Apple Grove. Maternal great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Hutton, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Emma Chapman, Rutland. The
paternal great-grandmother is Mrs.
Dolly Wolle, Apple Grove. The
maternal great-great · grandmothetis Mrs . Edith Ryther, Syracuse.

While a female lobster may lay up
to 124,000 eggs a year, at least 99 per·

Mrs. Iii!! &amp; sun

cent of the larvae swiftly become
food for fishes and for each other.

�8-ThP Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec . 3, 1979

Your Best Buys Are },ound in the Sentinel Classifieds
PUBLIC NOTICE
Su tt on
T o wn s h ip
Tr u s t'ees
w ill
m e et
T u~sQay ev en i ng , Dec . .c. at
8 j.l .m . in The Syracuse
Mun ici pal Bu i ldi ng .
At th is m ee ti ng the use
of
F ed er al
Revenu e
S h a r i ng
and
Ant i
Reces sion F iscal Asslstan ·
ce F unds tor 1978 will be
ava i labl e for publi c i n ·
spec t ion .

Paul Moore, Clerk

Rt . L Raci ne, Oh io
1121 3. l tc

WANT AD

CHARGES
I!J Wonil or- Under
Cu.h
Cbarce

I day

1.541
UO

U$

3.00

3.7$

Each W"Of"d uver l.hr minimum
15 words ill 4 cents per wOI""d per
da)' . Ada runni.n&amp; other that! conthe 1day rate .

The St•te of Ohio, Meigs

In memory . Can! o1 Thow
and Obi tual")' 6 t.."eff l.! ~ wunt
13.00 rrununwn . Cash 1.n ad ·

County Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Division
To the E xec utor ... or Ad
m ini strator .. of the estate ,
to such of the following as
are res idents of the State of
Ohio, v iz ·
the su r viv ing
spouse , the nex t ot kin , the
benef ici ar ies
under the
wil l; and ro t he attor ney or
attorne ys r epresent 1ng any
of the af orem ent ioned per ·

1vance.

Roscoe Satter fi eld , 190
Ma pl e Stree1 . Middleport ,
Ohio, Case No . 22851
You are hereby no1ified
that the I nventorv an d Ap
praisement of the estate oi
th e
af o rementi o ne d ,
deceased late of said Covn
t y , wer e l iled in tl'l is Court
Sai d Inve ntory and Ap
praisement w i ll be for
hear i ng before this Court
on the 20th day of Decem
ber , 1979, a t 1: 30 O'C lOCk
P .M
Any pe rson desir i ng to
f i l e exc ept ion s theret o
must file the m at ledst f i v e
ddy s pr 1or t o the date set
f or he ar1ng .
G iven under m y hand
and seal of sa i d Court, thi s
29th d ay of Nov ember 1979
Robert E Buck
Judge

!ter1J on

sons .

B v Carol y n G . Tho m as
Deput y Clerk
1111 3, 10, 21c

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF
ROSCOE
SATTERFIELD , OECEA SED
Case No. 12851 Docket M
Page 8J
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 15, 1979, in
the M eig s County Probate
Court. Case No. 1?851 , Dan
Sa tTer fi el d ,
1957 West
Ale xi s Ro ad , L ot
: 4,
To ledo, Ohi o w as appo i nted
E xec ut or of th e esta te of
Ro s c oe
Satte rf ield .
decea sed, lati! o f V i llage of
M i dd lepor t , Mei gs County ,
Oh io .
Robert E . Buc k
Probate Judge
Cler k
11111 9 . 26 1111 3. 3tc

A nationwide study has
concluded that nearly onehalf of children aged 6 to 14
fix their own breakfast at
least twice a week.

ASTRO·GRAPH
Berntce Bede Osol

December 4, 1m
fh1s co m ing )'ear you are likel y

to lo r m M!Veral very beneliCial
alliances TheM arrangement s
w ilt prove to be good both tor
vou and your pertnere
SAGITTARIUS (No. . 23-0ec. 21)
A.l!hough it"t \18ry u nc harac utns-

t te ot yOIJ . you may have trouble
seeing the other person·s point
o l view today An open mind ~ ~ a
mu st In RIJQO!Ialions F1nd out
m o re at wtlat lies ahead lo r you
1n the year following your birth "
dey hy sending l or your copy ot
As tr o-G raptl letler Mail $ 1 lm
eac h to Aslro-Graph , Box 489
Radio Cll y st ation . N Y . 100 19
Be sure to specify b1rth date

CAPRICORN (O.C. Z2-Jan . 11)
Be wary ol tenctenctes today to
wo rry about how hard someth1 ng
you want to accomplish Is gomg
to be . Negative thoughts halt

you r progrets.
AOUARI08 (Joft. 2CH'ob. 181

Before voluntDerlng to manage
something lor ano ther today . be

certain you know what you ·re
getting Into. Things could be

more complicated than they
appear on the surface.
PISCES (Fob. 20-...rch 20)
Have talth In your own ideas
today regarding somethlnQ you 'd
like to see changed . If you worry
too much about what others may
th1nk , It won ·t get done.
ARIEl (Morch 21-Aprll 18) Better be prapared today by having
a fte•lble schedule Neglected
dut)l will rear Its ugly head and
demand to be taken care of.
TAURUI (AP&lt;II 20-Moy 20) I
hope you charged prudently the
pall montn . roaay 11 tM day
when c reditors wil l have their
handa out lor paymen1 of any
billa Incurred .
QI!MtNI (May 21· June 20) If you
apend your time lor the ~fi t
of othera today vou 'll have fewer

lumpa to awallow. Your personal
lnterMII aren't favored
CANCE~
(June 21-July 221
Guard what you uy and to
whom you IIY It today . ,._ great
deal more than what waa Intend·
ed will l)e made out ot any neg a.
live remarks, giving )'0\J I

rew

headache•.

LIO (Jul, :13-Aug. 22) ll'o good
to Chrlatma... lhop early. but
take extra care today to make
certain you 're getting lull value
You ten d to

VI~QO

(Aug. 2l·8op1. 221
Chancel are the melancholy you
feel today Is tell -induced. Tally
the reallliat in your life. You 'll
see the ledger 11 longer on the
cood side.
LIBRA (h
" "pt'".'23"-"o.=t."23"') fftfSiy•
thinking muat be avoided today
Thercughly Investigate all possi bilities open to you and you
stand a good chanc e ol over coming any m1 stakes
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22 )
Depend upon ~· o u rself IOdrl'f and
you wont sutt er unexpected
headaches Sources ot lletp you
usually can rely on will no t be
a vai l ~tb le
I"'E" W S PAI"'rR F ~ T E I'IP R I S~ ASSN I

Auto Sales

M E I GS
COU N TY
HUM A N E SOC IETY . 992
6260 . Pet s avail ab le f or
ado ption and inform at ion
1n ves t igati ve
serv ice
Agent .

1979 FO RD F -1.50 , 4 whee l
d r ive,
fa c tory
to ppe r .
Auto .. P .S ., P .B
S6800.
P hone 985 4339

uo

3da,..

8days

secutive days wUJ bt charged at

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY ANO
APPRAISEMENT

lor your money
1p41nd unwisely

1.~

1.00

2d.lys

Noti~~s

Mobi.lt Harne sales and \'ard
sa.lea are accepted ooly with
cuh with onJer . 2!J cent ch&amp;rse
for ads carrying Bo1 Number In
Care of Tht Sentinel .

The Pu btiaher ruerves tM
ed.Jt or reJect an y ads
deemed objec tional. The

GUN
S HOO T EVE R Y
SUNDA Y 1 PM . FAC T O R Y
CHO KE ON LY . R AC IN E
G UN CL UB .
NO
HUN T IN G,
no
t respass ing with no e•
ceptions on m y p ro pert y
Jud y M c Graw Self .
G UN
S HOO T .
Ra c in e
Volunteer
Fire
Depr .
Every Sa1urday . 6 : 30 p .m .
At their building in Ba shan .
Fac tory c hoke gun s onl y

Lost and Found

right Lo

Pubh!!her will noll be responsibJe
I Of" mort than orw Incorrect in-

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

LOS T . PEKINESE , lu ll
blOOde-d , c ream w ith black
fa ce . 7 m o . old . Answers to
Pudgey . Belong to l inte
girl . Laurel St .. Pom er oy .
992 7460 .
LO ST : BLACI&lt;. an d white
dog . Mo1her wa s tull
beag le . 3 years ol d Has
co l lar . Bunker Hil l ar ea .
Call 992 -7086 .

Mobile Homes - Sale

M&lt;tldaY

Noonoo"Salurday

ru .....,
lhru F'riday
4 P .M .
the day before pub.hcaUoo

t ---'-----'--- .
Sunda y
tP .M.
Fnday afternoon

Notices
GU N SHOOT every Sunda y
l:l :OO . Facto r y choke on ly .
Corn Hol low Gun Club ,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Sc out Troop 24~

GET TODA Y ' S MARKET
VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER . CONTACT
ED BURKETT BARBER
S HOP , MIDDLEPORT .
OH .
HAVE
Y OUR
troph y
mounted .
B i r chf ie l d ' s
Ta xi d erm y on 124, easr of
Ru t la n d 61&lt; 742 2178.
FAYE ' S
G IFT
Sh o p ,
Powell
St ,
Middlepor t
Open 110 5d ai l y .
RACINE
G UN C LUB ,
DEC 31 LAST DATE TO
PAY DUE S FOR 191l0, $10
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Carolyn Sue Reynolds ,
Plaintiff ,
-vs Ronald Franklin Reynolds ,
Sr.,
Defendant.
Case No. 17331
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO :
Ronald
Franklin
Revnolds, Sr. , whose ad dress is unknown:
Y ou are he reby notified
that you have been named
a defendant in a legal a ction entitled Carolyn Sue
Reynolds , Pla intiff , vs.
Ronald Franklin Reynolds,
Sr .• Defendant . This action
has been assigned Case No.
17335 and is pending in the
Court ot Common Pleas Of
Meigs County , Pomeroy ,
O h io&lt;.5769 .
The obj ec t ol the c om
plain t is the obtaining of a
di vo r ce and
the ter
minat ion of a marr iage
contr ac t •etween the par ·
ties , the se ttlement of the
property rights of the par
t ies, and the restoration of
plaint iff's ma iden name
You are required to an
swer the complaint within
28 days after the last
publi cation of th is noti ce,
which will b e published on
ce each week for si x sue
cessive week s The la st
publi cation wi II be made on
D ec ember 17, 1979, and the
28 day s for a nswe r wil l
commence o n t hat dd te
In case of vour fail ure to
answe r
or
orherw i se
respond as r e quired by the
OhtO
Ru les
ot
Civil
Proce dure ,
the
f i nal
hearing on th is matter will
be held after the expiration
of 28 days after the last day
of publi cation of this noti ce
or a s soon ther ea f ter as can
be sc hedul ed by the Court .
Larry Spencer
C lerk of Court
of M e igs c ounry ,
Oh 10

1111 11 . 19 ,25 112) 3. 10, 17,
61c
NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County, Court of Common
Pleas , Probate Division
To the E xec ut or or A d
mi n istrat or of fh e est ate to
suc h of Th e fo ll ow ing as eir e
r es idents ot the State of
Ohi o, viz : - t he surv ivi ng
spouse , the nex t of kin , th e
benefi ciar ies
under th e
will ; and to the attorn ey or
attorneys representing an y
of the aforementioned per
sons :
George Dewey Pullins
aka
D e w ey
Pullin s ,
Deceased , Case No . 22783 ,
1543 Nye St . , Pomeroy ,
Ohio .
You ar e hereby not if ied
that th e In ventor y and Ap
p r ai sement of t he est ate o f
th e
a f ore m e nt io n ed ,
decea sed , late o f sai d Cou n
t y, w er e fi led i n th is Court
Sa id Inventory and Ap ·
pra isem en t will be for
heari ng befo re th is Court
on the 13th d a y of Decem ·
ber , 1979, ar l : 00 o 'c loc k
P .M .
Any perso n desiring to
f ile exc eption s ther et o
must file them at least five
days pri or to the date set
fo r hea ring
G 1ve n un der m y hand
an d se al ol sa td Cour t , th i s
73rd day nf Novem ber 1979
Ro be r t E Buc k
J udge

Bv Ca ro l y n G Thom as
Deou t v Clerk
( 11 1 16.( 11) J . 2t (

1972 LYNN HA VEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindal e 12)( 63 w ith ex
panda. 2 bed r
1970 New Moon 11x 60 3 bdr
19 73 Sk y l ine
11 x. 55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52 , 2 bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALE S. PT P L E AS ANT ,
wv . 304 -675 4424.
1973 14x 70 VIND ALE 7x l4
expando, 2 bed r , 1J,. acr e
rural water , septi c tank ,
central heat and A .C. Car ·
pered . Priced reasonably .
Excellen1 conditi on . 61.4 ·
742 ·2182 .

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end S12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ron . Delivered
lo Oh io Pallet Co .. Rt . 1.
'Pomerov 992·2689 .

OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds . iron
beds , desks, etc ., complete
households . Wr ite M .D
Miller . Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
cal l 992 !760 .
WANTED
SAW
logs
Payment upon deliverv to
our yard , 7 : JO to 3: 30 week ·
days . Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Bar low, OH . 678
1980
ANTIQUES .
FUR
N 1T u R E , glass , china,
anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney . antiques, 26 N .
2nd , Middlepor t , OH . 992
J 161.
ANTIQUE POCKET wal
ches . W i lling to pay top
dollar . Call
1 592 2973
ev en i ngs
BUYING US SILVER coins
dated 1964 or before
Paying top pri ce . Cal l
Brown ' s , 992 -5113 .
OLD COINS , pocket wal ·
ches, class rings , wedding
bands , diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J . A . Wamsley .
742 23 31
Treasur e Chest
Coin Shop, Athens. OH . 592·
6462 .
WANTED
HOMEMAD E
gifts taken on consignment
lor gift shop . Call ~85 4317,
985 4133or98S-3951
WANTED TO BUY : beef
type cows Prefer alre ady
br e d 614 593 5132

_

Auto Sales
_=--c=:::____

CO AL .
LIME S TONE ,
san d , g ravel , c al c ium
chlor ide,
fertilizer , dog
food . and a ll t ypes of .. 11 .
Excelsior Salt works , Inc. ,
E . Main St .. Po meroy , 99 2
3891.
FIREWOOD FOR
s al e
Now taking orde r s . Wi ll
deliver , 7•2 ·2056
E MERGENCY POWER
alternators -own the best ·
buy WIN POWER _ Call 513 788 -1589.
APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or c hard , State Route 689 .
Phone W i lkesv il le , 669
3785
HOU S E COAL , lump or
stoker , wil l deliver . 742 ·
2183 .
APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at S4 per bu . Best for
apple bu"er . Call 669 3785,
Fitzpatri c k Orchard , SR

689.
G LASS F I REPLACE doors
w ith black
finish plus
tubular grate w ith blower,
li ke new Asking $100. Call
99 2-71166 .
LENNOX
CENTRAL
heating and A .C. w i th ducts. 992·2560 or see at 1262
Powell St .• Midd leport .
ONE LOT men ' s dres s
shoes , S5 pr . No exchanges,
no refunds . Bailey ' s S1ore,
Middleport
1969 PLYMOUTH 6TX
51 ,000 miles, $800
1978
Kawasaki KM 100, .500
miles, l ike new, $500 . 992 ·
2729 .
420 CASE Dozer . Game
chi ckens to gi'Ve away . 991 ·
7692 .
CHAIN SAW , Stihl 041 , 1
year old , used very litt le,
st i ll like new . $2.50 . Phone
742 ·2131 or conta ct John
Wise .
DIAMOND RING , While
gold, size 71h. Cost S225
new, will sell for SlSO .
Beautiful Chr istmas gift
949·2660.

1978 MA L l BU
S 1ati o n
wagon , 605 W Ma in Sf .,
Pomeroy , OH .
1976
CHEVROLE T
MALl B U. four door , si x
c yl , auto .. P .S., P B .
anxiou s to se ll Good con
dit ion . 9.t9 2t&gt;f/J .
1978 DO DGE MAGNUM ,
b la ck I top , AM FM tape ,
P .S., P . B ., t i lt wl1ee l, 21,000
m iles, S6200 . I ngel s Fur
n it u r e. 99 2 2635 .
197 6
O LDS
C UT LA SS
Suprem e , 4 door sedan ,
vi n yl top , 260 V 8, auto .•
P .S .. P . B , AM radio , A.C..
power vinyl S&gt;eats , tinted
glass, no rust , good t ir es ,
mid ·slze, good condit ion
May be seen at Po meroy
Motor Co ., Pomeroy , OH .
Contact Russell 1. W i lson ,
Admin istrator . 597 7183 or
99221 16.
1968 OPEN KADE TTE . 4
cyl. , 4 sp ., 53. 000 rr.i les
or bes t offe r Af f pr 6, 991
6323 .

s..soo

1969 VOL KS WAGE N VAN ,
e • ce ll e nt runn i ng con ·
d i t ion , no rust . Interi or ,
body l i k e bran d n ew S1950
247 3095.
lli 7-4 FORD LTD , e lec tr ic
win do w s. seats . cr u ise con
fr o t. stereo . new ti res . w in
te r 1Zf' d $975 147 30&lt;;1 5

SET 0 F support boards
and extra thick mat1resses
tor bunk bed . Mattress
covers inc luded . All in ex ·
cellent condition . $75 . 992·
7288 .
R ING NECKED pheasan
ts , rocsters and hens . Cal l
667 -325 2.
TWO UPRIGHT pianos,
asking S.SO ea . Two Magic
Chef ranges, gas . 1- 36 " ,
SIS. I- 20" . SIO 992 5544 .
1964 CHEVROLET &amp; ton
pickup and .4 pigs 1J weeks
old . 742 2431 .
REDUCE SAFE and fas t
with GoBese Tablet s a nd
E Vap
" water
p i ll s " .
Nel son Drug

For Mobile Home
lnsuranc2.
Yo u \ ;t • ~p c · nt a lot 11f t im r
.m&lt;t 111urwy pi c king o ut
nu 1hi l 1' h r mw that m €"e t s
yuur ~ pn.· ifi c n et'"d s . Nn w
get th e in s u ra n t·e t o

c·vrn ge t

~ea.':loo n a.l .

n: ntaJ

o r co mnw n·ial i n ~ uran n·­
c ove ~e s.

We "re h e n- whr r 1 yo u n eed
u s for mo bil e hom t· in

s u r..tnce. Co me to th e p r o
ft-ss i1 111 al~ fo rt h t' Spt'( ·iaJ
polic y t o fit your s pr cifir

net"d s.

FOR RENT 2 bedroom
apt . Furn ., util ities pai8d ,
adults , no drunks John
Sheefs, Rt . 7, 3 11"1 miles
south , Middleport .
LAR G E TR AI LER lol for
r ent 742· 31 22or 741 3186
APT IN Pomeroy . 3 rooms
and bath . 992 ·5621

ELECTRIC
HOME ,
located
in Burlingham
area Will rent or trade tor
c ily property . 992 2711.

l2x60 2 bedroom
home
5858 .

near

mobile
Ra c ine . 991 ·

FI VE R OOM House in
c ou n tr y
Con ve n ien ces
843 2653

Services Offered
WILL CARE tor fl"le e ld ~ rl y
in our ho me . Have va can
c y . Trainee
and
e)l
perlenced .
1314 .

-

m
---- - -

HOTPOINT
and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
He•dqulrters
Appfllnces _
"!1IH &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK

~Jack W. Cars•v
Mgr .

Phone 992 -2181

WI LL DO bab ys1 tf ing n l ilt:
evf"n ing s 949 2005

11 ·U · mo.

PETE
SIMPSON
Sales Rep. For
Sundins
Hammond Ortans
Tyree Blvd ." Rilcine o
o·
h
1
•
Phone 949·2118 evelngs
after
p.m . weekenas
after 12 noon .
11 -19· 1 mo.

o

POS ING A'S AMY JON ES,
C OLLEG E S TUDENT,
FLASH ES A

MONDAY , DECEMBER 3,1979

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

Fe11uring : men's &amp;
women's s1yling, per ms.
Call for IIPPf- or wlllk in _

992· 2367

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

• t nsulatlon
• Storm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement Win dows

rJ

CAPfAIN EASY
I':EMEMBE R .- IlL HA VE A

WHERE V E~ HE R Ol-0 ,\ ,AN "S
:;:._-..
HIC' IN C:· OU T ~ )\)L' "R:E GONN A ( IN :
-=-A _
&gt;&lt;_E l 15 &lt;,_1 Hll\\ ;
'ii-1
_~

G Ut.! ON THE 6tRL ALL l HE

J-----\

TIME ! 5 0 DOtJ' T TR Y A&gt;J Y
FUN'-I Y $ TUF F!

O IV -. 1-\0P
{'.IH ADDA
51MRI N '
AT~ !

I

Free Estimate

I
77JlO Monltom • ,., lite! .
L•niJ tv ltl•. Ohio
6 1•

Ut ·•"145 Evettlng s

1 Mrl l'S E.u t O! Wlllll',Y ill•

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

DOWNING -CHILDS
Phone Hl -2342
Middleport, 0.

TRAUR SALES
SUPER

GOO SE

ST OCK

~ ~

I

Now arrange the ctrcled leMe rs to
form the surpr1 se answer . as sug .
gested by lh e abOve cartoon

Saturday·s

I

I I Jrnr 1 I I I )

Jumble s l RO lH

(Answers tomorrow )
MOTIO N

MI DGE

GALLt.Y

Wh a t da d al wa ys be l u~ ve:::. 1n w hen Jun1D1 s

Answer

repor t card 1S all A

~ - HE RE D I TY

Jumble Book No . 12,contalnlng 110 puut u . i s avai! 1ble lor i1 .T5 poatpald
from Jumble, clo th !t newspaper , 8 01( 3-4 , Norwood, N .J. 07648.1nclude your
n•m•, addrus_ lip code and m1ke chec ks payable to Newspaperbooks

BORN LOSER

11-U:.I&lt;£

m

Monda y, 1!&lt;" 3

0\JL'l' lW 1\11~

2+2 =4-Ci'h

BRIDGE

9 28 -1 mo. Pd .

mo

SAl" DOWN AI
T HE P IAI-JO .

[)O N' T LOOK.
N OW, M AC. 8 UT
I" TH INK WE"VE
GOT COMPA~ y·

TRAILER NOW AVAILAB L E

10· 19· 1 mo .

W HY l"H E Y ALL
LAU 5HED W HEN HE

I I [j

Pomeroy, 0 .
10-19-1 mo .

Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Eotlmates.
All work
gullrlntHCI . 20 ye1rs ex perience. Coli A tf1ons,
collect, Gerold Clark
79HU7 or Tom HOikiM
. 797-2745 .

ll · J

LQUI LOR -+~~

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

3; Nashvi ll e on the Road 15; Newlywed
Game 6; Jo ker ' s Wild 8 ; Family
F eud 10; All In Th e Fam i ly 17;
Ma cNeil -Le hrer Report 20.33 .
8 oo-Beren sl ai n Bear s' Christmas
T ree J, I S; E dward the K ing 6;
Bi ll y Gr aha m C rusade 8 ;
Eve~ in g
of
Ch ampionst1 1p
Skat 1ng 33; Whi te Shadow 10;
Fal con Football 17 , From Chi na
to Us 20.
a 3G-L itf le Rascal s Special J, 15;
9 . 00- M ovie ' ' Friendships,
Secrets &amp; Li es" 3. 15; NFL
Footbal l 6, 13; Ma s h 8, 10; Fred.
War ing 33. M ovi e " The Second
Time A ro und " 17
9 30--- WKRP in Cin c innati 8, 10;
I slander 20.
10 OD-L o u Grd nt 8. 10; News 20;
10 :3o-Qver Ea sy 20
11 00-News 3,8, 10, I S; Dick C.! vett
70, 33 ; H arry 0
8; Movi e
" A ssign ment K " 10; Mo vie ''The
M en " 17 .
11 DO- News 6 .1 3; 1 2 : 3~ FBI 6 ;
Charli e' s A ngel s 13.
12 •~ M cM i llan &amp; Wife 8; 1 :DOTomorrow 3: New s 15, 1· 30---News 17.
35---M ov ie " Blg House, U SA" 17 ;
1: 40- N e w s
13 :
3 : 20Unlou c ha bl es 17 ; 4 2{}-{)pen Up
17
7 31&gt;-- That Nashvill e M us ic

e.
Main St.

one lener to each square to lorm
fou r ordinary wcrds

FAR ENOUGH -

Mlck's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
Introduces-

s

Television
Viewing

Unscra miJ ie these lour Jumbles .

AL L i:&gt;IGHT, YOUNG
LAOY-THI S HAS GON E

Answer: THERE (

'

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
Help Wanted
BABYSIT T ER NEEDED
in my home , 3 days a week .
Middleport , Referen c es
required . 9'92 ·3142
CARRIER NEEDED in the
Pomeroy area . CALL THE
DAIL Y SENTINEL , 992
1156 between 8 : 30 and 5 : 00
pm .

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Sadd les and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies . Ruth Reeves. 614·
698 ·32'90 .
Bord i no and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care produ cts . Western
boots . Children ' s S15 _.50
Adults S29.00 .
RISING STAR
Kennel .
B o araing . Call 367 0292.
POOOLE
GROOMING .
Judy Ta ylor . 614 367 7220 .
HILLCREST KENNEL S
Boar ding , al l breeds . Clean
indoor ou tdoor fac i lities
Also
AKC
registered
D oberman s 61-4 446 ·7795 .

WARM F 1v E room house'
in Bradbury , modern k i t ·
c hen and bath , 2 bedrooms,
laundry , dinin~ and living
room , all c arpeted , block
g arage, c ar port. tool room
and ext r a storage build i ng ,
all with conc ret e floO r s
C all 991 5310 .

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
I. EW LISTING 2
bedroom frame home in
Tuppers Plains . ..::it ·
c hen , din ing room , bath
and full basement
$23,000.00.
RACINE - 6 1!1 ac res
w i th n ice J bedroom
home. Living room ki t
chen , ba th, L shaped
fam i ly roo m , laundry
and storage . Se ll price
$39,600 00
ACREAGE - 3.65 ac res
on S1. Route 143. Sell s
tor $10,600 .00.
HYSELL RUN - A lit
tie over 7 acres with 2
bedroom home . Lots of
possibiliti es with this
one. Call for more info
A•kinQ sn.soo.oo.
MIDDLEPORT
Large 9 room home on
L ocust St . Se lling P rice
S25,000 00.
POMEROY - Lovely 3
bedroom hom e o n E ast
Ma in. Only $25.500 .00 .
ST . ROUTE 143 - 1969
New Moon tra iler wift1
5111 acres . Sells for
$1 5,000.00.
We need listings _ tf you
are thinking of buying
or selling, tive us a call
for friendly , courteous
sPrvice .
("t,eryll emley , A Sio&lt;
Phone 742 ·100 3
Ve lma Ni&lt;iniky , A !.SOC.
Pho,.. ~ 741 ·109 .,
Geor9e S. Hobstetter Jr .
B rn k ~;&gt; r n 1 SJJ9

Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans.

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE , O.
949· 2748 or
992-7314
11 -J.(Pd .)

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9 -1 M ., W., F .
Other times by appoint ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

Poor sluff unfrocks hero

mi le off Rt. 7 by -pass
on 51 Rt 114 toward
Rutland .
J4

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Mlso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

CALL 992 -7544
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also , lime haul ing
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742 2455 .

Wt: '&lt;T
+8 1532

PAINTING AND sand blasti ng . Free estimates
Call949-2686 _

2" E. Second Street
FAMILY - 11 rms ., 1111
baths , 5 or 6 bedrooms,
dining, basement and 1
car garage $17,.500.
HEAT SAVER
2
bedrooms , bath , one
utility bill , front porch
facing Rt . 7 in T . P.
workshop and gara~e
started
Asking
just
$18 ,000
MINERS - 1 acre fenc ·
eeL Modern 3 bedroom
ranch , a l l etec . home,
garaoe and handyman
tlldg . 5% down
BARGAIN - 3 bedroom
ranch , bath , nl ce full
ba~ment . F irelace in
the li ving . SI.OOO .OO
down balance about
$250 .00 a mo .
A
BUY
Large
business room, bath and
2 other rms . Ideal tor
couple . S600 .00down
LIST YOUR HOME
WITH US ON THE
PROTECTION PLAN
AT NO COST TO YOU.
992-3325 or 992 ·3876.

Rousing
Headquarters
NEW HOME . 3 bedroom ,
2'/"1 baths , rec . room witt1
fireplace , large deck ,
basement and garaoe. 1
ac re tot . Cal l 992·345.4 . If no
answer, c all992 ·5.455 .

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
22 FOOT TERRY c ampin9
tra i ler set up in park .
Util i ties pa id at S.40 per
week or sel l at S-4200 .
2897 .

m

Business Opp__!y_
00

YOU NEED extra
money? Are your earnings
deflated by inflation? Does
your work lack opportunity
and challenge ? If you are
interested in full or part
time opportunities for
husband and wife teams or
si ngles, send resumes to
PO Box 729 ·E . c-o The
Daily Sentinel , Pomeroy ,
OH 45769

Giveaway
THREE C H I H UAHUA S ,
wormed , sho ts. Humane
Soc iety . 992 6260.
B RIG HT
YOUN G
mal e
Sa i nt Bernard type, brown ,
white and blac k , look i ng
tor a home on a farm .
Humane Soc iety , 992 -62 60.
FEMALE MINIATURE
terrier . AI I shots
and
papers .
G ood
with
ch i ldren . 992 7152 .
Y OUN G SHO RT h ai r ed
t err ier , bl on d and wh1
m al e M ed i u m siz ed c o ll ie,
mal e, b r ow n and wh ite.
Border co lli es , six , o l ac k .
wh i te , bro wn , to good
home . males an d f e m a le .
51 Bern ard t ype, brown ,
whi te an d b lac k . needs bi g
f a rm . :l sma l l mmtaf ure
DOOd les. m ales . 1 sil ve r . 1
b l ond . Sho t s . worm ed
H u mane Soci ety , 992 6260.
B l ac k
w il h
11 11r1w 1 rtllb y mal e. b lr~ c k
,l nu w !H i l'
tabby
Wt f h
v-.hi te. hl itc k an d w h1 tc.
l em ~ t e
H umane Societ y
I~Q'j 6),.&lt;,.0
V fT TE N ~ .

DOZER,
END Loader ,
brush hoQ _ W i ll
do
basements, ponds, brush ,
timber, tand clear i ng .
Charles Butcher . 742· 29«&gt;
SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
servic e,
all
makes
991 · 2284 .
The
Fabr i c Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Si nger Sates
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors .

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING VA FHA LO
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGA G E .
n E . STATE , ATHEN S
614 592 3051.

TWO 'fiAv5
.O B 0UT I T, A~"'IE .'

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,
septic
systems , dozer , backhoe .
Rt . 143 . Phone 1 (6141 698
7331 or 742-2593 .

wE' '•E GOT T ' GE T
YO U

0.... T

01="

&gt;='

'o'EP .1

8 UT 6 EE , LE M

I

AN' THAT'S

WH EN THE TRCU B"- E
BE GINS .' /'I'I E8~

Ti-lE Ol...D TOW N

1 MAS JUST BEGUN

-·coME

l ASCO!

HST
10 972
• 2
+AKQ JI 06 3

+8 5

BETT E'!:

GOl:;: S A Mi l E:; BL E SS ING. ,
H C ~--&lt; E -r.' rlec;::-so";;..E-BOo"'-

OF~

AS A
6 110S T

WUZ 8 f TT ER Q£.f
O' I= O RE I S T RUC K
6 0L0.1

.4 H~T

TEL..LIN '

BE LLY- C ~£.-JJ~

1-' i ND

!r um ps The n he c a s hed
dumm v"s ace of hea r ts and
ruffed ~ a second hea rt wi th a

SOUTH

. AKJ 1096 4

ll. LREt.DY T RIED T' \I I D N A!:' 'iOU~

t-.0

th 1rd &lt;"l ub l o see wh at mt ghl
ha pren Goat South thankfullv
dt sra rded a dtamond and
ruffed wtth dummy·s queen of

·"K---

". 4
t(IJ9 7

ANNIE

4 30 tf c
EXCAVATING ,
d020r ,
loader .and backhoe work :
dump trucks and to -bOys
for hire . will haul fill dirt .
top soi l , limestone and
Qravel. Call Bob or ROQer
Jeffers , day phone 992-7089,
n iQht phone 992 352S or 992
5232 ..

s pades wa s an ove rb td Th en
a fter l':&lt;isl dec tded to scH..: rt fl t·c
&lt;.It f1ve clu bs. Soulh passed
wher(' upon North W l' nt on lo
fi ve spa des The def ense st a rt ·
t•d by cashtng two club tnck s
T h4..•n East dectded to lea d &lt;l

NORTH
12 :t
+(I
" A J R5J
t A K I ll fi 4
• 72

"' :J

For Lease
BUSINESS BUILDING for
le as e. Former Warner
Beauty Shop . Approx . 1100
sq . ft . Call 992 2117 or 992
1528aft er Sp .m .

Roger Hysell
Garage

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

IMMEDIATE OPENING .
Night Lab T echnician .
Shift is 11 pm 7· 30 am Sun
day
through
Thursday .
M i nimum Qual ifications in ·
e lude 1 year acceptable
labratory experien ce , ML T
IASCP J. CLT IATWI or
equ iv alent certification .
Compar i t ive wages with
liberal
fr i nge
benef i t
pa c kage . Contact person ·
nel offi ce, Pl easant Valley
Hosp itaL V t~ ll e y Or , Pt .
Pl e a sant ,
wv 25550 .
304 675 4340

Real Eslate for Sale

TWO BEDROOM trail e r .
Syra cuse . All uti l ities paid .
Furnished $50 per week
992 2897 .

PIANOS
Great Chriotmu Gift
Both New I Uoed

All types roof work, new
or rePi! i r tu"ers .and
downspouts,
vutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guoronteed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call How•n:l
949-2162

We"Jl t· ovn n rw o r used
m o bik homes. Yo u can

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e
Park , Route 33. north of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Ca l l
992 7479
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap ·
ts . PhOne 992 -54 34

&amp; Famous Name Brand

THAT SC RAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henr1 Arnold and Bob Lee

(!;!.} ~ ~r!!:)~L!:J ..

m a t (" h .

For Rent

LM. . . . .

197 5 B U I.C K 9 pa ss Es1d1 t'
w agon One own er 992
7615 .

ROOFING

--------

__:_=c;__:

1~75 GRAN TORINO Ford
sta1ion wagon . Power win ·
dows, A .C. , c ruise contro l.
AskinQ S2SOO . 742 -2008 .

H. L WRITESEL

Hammond Oroan•

1f Jt\IN} ~ )t W

Dec 3, 1979

UIVER TREMBLY,

Business Services

I

For Sale

._'!"h.o Dai.lv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday,

DICK TRACY

"Q

OF

low tr ump. West. who had

• 8 53

.J£. r;lf'l iNT '5

+9 4

r ... • 'A'-L G RAS$.

c:hu cked a hea rt on the third
d ub overru ffed and l he goa t
had bee n sacr i ficed··

Vuln era ble· Bolh
Dealer: Nort.-,
\\'psi

N orlh

1•

East

Soulh

2+

1+

Pass

Pass

P&lt;:~ss

5+

5•

f'a ss

Oswald " Let"s cha nge the
story a tn fle and put ou r hero
1n t he South seat Hero South
d1d d1sca rd on the th trd club,

Pa ss

but he elected lo chuc k h ~&gt;
queen of hea rts Then he led a
low hean fr om dummy. ~~: o t m

f ' t~ ss

Pass

AUTOMOBILE
IN
S URANCE
been
c on
c elled ?
Lost
vour
operator 's license? PhOne
992-2143 .

lhat rurt w1th &lt;:1 small tr ump.
dre w trumps a nd w as hnmf'
Wtlh game and rubber . ·
Alan 'The los1ng dtamond
w as tlt sca rded on the dee of
hea rts a t the f' n d ·

Ope ntng lead+ 8

ALIEYOOP
r

WELL , [ 1 D B E fv'\ORE

. . NOT UNTI L 1 G E

TH AN HAPPY 1D
SEND 'IOU~·- ~ --­
TO MOO FOR

TIM E MACHINE U P TO
O PERATIO NAL LEVEL ,
AI&gt;JD THAl W ILL TA KE
SEVER AL DAYS.'

A WHI L[.

TH E

WH ICH STILL

LEAVE S M E
WI T I-4 NO THING

m

CXJ .'

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

•\iE I,I, &lt;; i'A I'I&lt;H

AS.SN

t

(For a copy of JA COB Y
M ODERN. sen d $1 to ··wm at

··Jn some r espec ts
South ts the hero ol bnd ge
Osw a ld ·

IN STOCK for immediate
del i very : various slles oi
pool kits . Do ·it -yourself or
let us install for you . 0 .
Bumgardner Sales , 1nc .
992 ·5724

E~TI-: H I'H I S E

Bn dge. ·· care o f th1s newspa -

columns On othe r occa s1ons
he is the goa l. bu l he ts al ways
declart&gt;r . ··
Al;m ··South's JUmp tu four

per. P 0. Bo)( 489, Rad to Cily
S t a t1on . N e w York . NY

roo r9 J

A&amp;H Upholster i ng , ac ross
from fhe Texaco Starion in
Syrau cse 992·374.1 or 991 ·

3152
BRAOFORD, Auctioneer ,
Complete Serv ice . Phone
9.49·2481 or 9.49 ·2000 . racine ,
Ohio , Critt Bradford .
608 E .
MAIN

POME'J!OY , 0.

NEW LISTING 16
acres and 3 room house
near the mines . A
STEAL
AT
JUST
S7,SOO 00
ASTOUNDING BUY 8-"' very nice ac res,
newer
Ranch
type
home, J bedrooms, 11h
baths, rec . room, lovely
kitchen , garage, barns .
T HIS YOU MUST SEEL
$76,315.00 .
NEW Ll STING 2
level acres, all util i t ies
installed , i deal for home
or trailer . Cal l for more
information .
6 ACRES IN TOWN 11!1 story frame with 3
bedrooms, built ·in ki1·
chen, N .G . hot water
heat, lots of other
features . S29.SOO .OO .
NEW LISTING - About
n. acres of wooded land
near Rutland . Lots, and
Lots of use for this
piece . LOOK
JUST
$25.375.00.
OLD RT . 1 - About 34
acres, Iaroe concrete
block bldg . and mobile
home, has own water
system . Owner now
needs more room GO·
INGAT$17 ,900.00
THE ANSWER
TO
YOUR
HOME HUN TING PROBLEM CAN
BE FOUND HERE
WITH
CLELAND
REALTY .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Sr .
992-25/ol
Henry E . Cleland Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussoll949-2660
Roger &amp; OoHfl! Turner
742-2474
OFFICE 992·2259
CO MM E RCIAL BUILDIN ·
G on 132ft. lot at 1600 Nye
A ve , Pomeroyd , OH . W ill
f inanc e ar 9 Pet to r ei iable
couple . No rea ltors . 992
5711&lt;1.
HOU S E FOR SA L E beh ind
Jone• Boys . SSSOO. Call 304 ·
773 5029. Sharon Stark .

- - - -- - Auctions
BIG AUCTION eve r y We d ,
7 pm Ha rtford Communitv
Center, Hartford , wv , 4
m i les abov e Pom e r oy ·
M ason Bridge

GASOUNE All.EY

by

Slip her two
bucks and see

ACROSS
I L• gal affai r
5 Otd a kmt tin g job
II Actress

Shoppinq
Fairies
don't need

what happens '

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR:
Sweepers ,
toasters , irons , all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·
3825.

mone4'

newest

Velez

lake

WINNIE
AL L I HAVE 10 :::&gt;0 15
CONVI N CE MY PAR ENTS

fOU'IZE OV~ (
TWENTY-Ot-..E
WHY JXJNT

THAT IM '1NA1UiZf '1
ci&gt;JOUG H TO HANDL E

YOU .JUST
IAOVE OUT?

TH E RESPONSIB ILITY

r S "JO' A:c- :OASY
A.5 -:-~AT :
DC'J T

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w,ANT T() HUR.T \\Y
MOM A N::&gt; ::&gt;AD _

Sc ottish name 6 Foeman
7 Mos lem
pre fix
tttle
16 Sandwi c h
8
Kansas ctty
favorite
9 Enn oble
11 Marsh e lder
10 Contributed
18 Full y
16 Obstmate
a tlended
20 Couga r
19 Diamond
or c1 vet
nu.mber
21 Boggy
ll ll
22 Loca tton
23 Set n ght
'

28

SAt&lt;E5
ALIVE!!

38 Ve rdt

FERGOT TO
STIR M Y
ST EW

41

118

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profoun d
Ca na r y
lood

36 Snooz e
31 Dawn
det(y

25 Corrunise ra t10n

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LONGFEI. LOW

On e lett e r s imp ly !) lands f o r a n oth e r In Lhi s sa mple A is
used for th e thrt&gt;e L ' s. X for th e two O 's. e tc Single letters,
apostro phes. t h{' le ngth and f ormat iOn of l he w ords ar e all

P.ci FrH

Rutland, o.

pla ywnght

DAILY CRYI'TO(j li OTE - Jlere's how &lt;o work it :
AXY DLRAAXR

IN STOCK

RUTlAND .
FURNITIJRt

opera

book
31 Evaluated

24 French

lib

39 M;.ik e eye.')
40 Become

SALE ON ALL

Call 742 -2211

~i\~

11.3

copy

··I PLUMB

*4!!up
Cash &amp; Carry

and up

l1o

Pugtltsttc

:11 lla nrl l&lt;·

30 Rousseau

'.'c l•a

~

3ARNEY

I remember I
29 Locale

Put
together

23

l

Colont st
32 So l.at
33 Islet
34 Boxer Lee
:13 ~el - u smg
ft shenna n

27 - mind

22 Alluvta l
deposit

,. I

25 l ;rieved
26 Fa, hion
Zl lll humor

SAVE. A' LOt

$3800 .

Yesterday's wwer

5 Earmngs

15

SAVE-ONCARP[
DRIVE A llrn.F

6'x12' ro 17'x16'

Tncky
convtct

14 Heavy

name

GOOD REMNANT
SEltCTION

sctences
I

13 U S S.R.

P IANO TUNING, Lane
Daniels. New phone num ·
ber , 742-2951. Service to
K hools and home since
1965.

lnstalledwith

device
2 Of the ear
3 One o( the

na me

HORSE SHOEING . Call
992 ·3288, ask for Darrell
McClanahan

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

OOWN
I liold1ng

12 ltal tan boy's

S a. G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
c l eaned .
Free
e5t i mate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard . 992
6309or 742 ·2348 .
PROPER INSULATION Is
cheaper than heating oil .
Take advantage of a good
investment . Call 992 3288
for more information .

THOMAS JOSEPH

h m ts Each da y thl' cod e lt&gt; ll ers are differen t

CRYPTOQVOTES

CH RISTMAS WILL

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Yesterday's Cryptoq110le: TIME IS OUR MOOT VALUABLE
M)SET, IT I~ WORTH FAR MORE TO US THAN MONEY
WHICH WE SAFEGUARD SO CAREFULLY.- DR. PAUL
PARKER

'

TUESDAY , DECEMBER 4,1979
5 45--- Farm Report 13; 5 : 5()---PTL
Club 13
6 00-700 C lub 6.8. PTL Club 15;
Health F ie ld 10; 6 · 2~World at
La rge 17.
6 30---C on cern s &amp; Comments 10 ;
New s 17. 6:45- Morning Report
J; 6 : 5~Good Morn ing , West
Vi rgini a 13; 6: 55---N ew s 13.
7 DO- Today 3. 15 ; Good Morning
Am erica 6, 13; T uesday Morning
8; S alman 10; Three Stooges·
littl e Rascals 17
7 · 15- AM Weather 33 ; 7 : 30Fa m i l y
Affair
10;
It ' s
E ve r ybody ' s Bus i ness 33; 7: 55Chu c k Whi te Reports 10 .
8 DO-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Family
Affa ir 17 ; Sesame Sl 33.
8 J~ Romper Room 17 ; 9. DO---Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Phll
Donahue I S, IJ; One Day At A
Time 10 ; Lucy Show 17 .
9 Jo-Bob Newhar t 8 ; Love of L He
10; Gr een Ac r es 17
10 :DO-C ard Sharks 3, 1S ; Edge ot
Night 6: Beat the Clock 8, 10;
Morni ng Maga1ine 13 , Movie
" Ca mpbell ' s Kingdom " 17.
10 30- H o llywood Squares 3, 15;
S20 000 Pyramid 13 : Andy
Gr iff ith 6 ; Whew 8, 10, 10 :55House Ca ll 10; CBS News 8.
11 oo-High Ro l ler s 3, IS ; Laverne &amp;
Shi r ley 6,13 ; Price is Right 8,10.
11 30- Wh e el of Fortune 3, 15;
Fa mil y Feud 6.13; Sesame St .
20 : K now Your sc hools 33;
l l · 55-- New s 17
12 00- N e w scen l er
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Mindreaders 15; Love
A mer i can Sty le 17; Pearls 33 .
9
12 JG--- Ry an ' s Hope 6, 13, Searc h for
Tomorrow 8; Health Field IS :
Movi e " Monkey on My Back " 17;
El ec. Co . 20 ,33 .
00- Days of Our Live s 3, 15 . Ali My
Children 6. 13 . Y oung &amp; the
Restl ess 8, 10.
1 30--- A s The World Tur ns 8, 10;
1 00---D oct ors 3, 15; One Life to
Li ve 6, 13 , 2. 25- News 17 .
2 J~Ano th e r World 3, 15 ; Guiding
Li ghl 8, 10 ; Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .
J 00---Genera l Hospilal 6, 13; I love
Lucy 17 . Poldark II 20
30-0ne Da y at A Time 8: Joker ' s
Wi ld 10 ; Fl intstones 17 ; Over
E a&gt;y 33.
4 DO-M ister Cartoon 3; Password
P lus 15. M er v Griffin 6: Invisible
Chi ldre n 8; Sesame St 20,33 ; Six
M ill ion Dollar Man 10; Real
M c(o y s 13 , Speclreman 17 .
4 3D- Be w i t c hed
3:
Petticoat
J unc tion B. Tom &amp; Jerry 13;
M er v Gr iffin IS : G illigan' s Is . 17 .
00--- 1 D r eam of J eannie 3; Sanford
&amp; So n B: M ist er Rogers ' Neighbo rh oo d 10 .33 , Mary T yler
M oore 10; M y Th ree Sons 17.
5 31&gt;--Car o l Burnett 3; News 6 ;
Gom er P y le 8. E lee Co. 20;
Ma&gt;h 10 ; Ha ppy Da ys Again 13 ; I
Dream ol Jeann ie 17; Doctor
Who 33
6 QO- New s 3.8. 10, 13, 15; AB C News
6. Zoom 20: Car ol Burnett 17;
Writing f or a Rea son 33 .
6 · l~ N BC News J . 15; ABC News 13 :
Carol B urnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
Bob Newha r l 17, O ver Easy 20 .
00--3's A crowd J . Ti c Tac Dough
8, Pul se 6: News 10; Newlywed
Ga m e 13. Lo ve Am erican Style
15 . Sa nf ord &amp;. Son 17 . D ic k
Ca ve ll 20.33.
3D- Ho llyw oo d
Squares
3:
New lywe d Ga m e 13; love
A mer ica n Styl e 15; Sanford &amp;
So n 17 ; Di ck Ca v ett 2(1.33 .
· JO- H o lly woo d
Squares
3;
New lywed Game b : Joker' s Wild
8: Hollywood Squares 10; Sha Na
Na 13. TV Hono r Soc iety 15 ; All
In Th e Fa mily 17; MacNeilL ehre r Report 20 ,33.
B ·DO-Misadve ntures of Sheriff Lobo
3. 15; Happy Day&gt; 6, 13, Billy
Graham Crusade 8. Nova 20,33 .
B 00-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3. 15; Happy Da ys 6. 13; Billy
G rahe~m Cru sade B: Nova 20,33 ;
California Fever 10 ; Movie " His
K ind of Woman " 17.
B JO- Ang ie 6. ll
9 OQ-Movie " Sf tves" 3, 15 ; Three' s
Company 6, 13; Hawa i i Fi ve-0
8, 10; World 20; Great Radio
Comedians 33.
9 3Q- Taxi 6, 13. 1Q :oo-Hart to Hart
6, 13; Paris 8. 10; News 20.
tO 30- Eii zabelh R 17; Like It Is 20.
11 · 00- New s 3.6 . 8 , 10 , 13 ,1 5; Dick
Cavett 20,33.
I I 30- Tonighl 3, 1S ; Barney Miller
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8: Movie
" The Anonymous Venelian" 10.
12:00- Movie " One Eyed Jacks" 17 ;
12·os--- Movl e " Aloha . Bobby &amp;
Rose 6. 13 .
·
1 2 . &lt;~Movle " S'"'"f Killing" 8;
· :00- Tomor; ow 3; News 15.

�16---Tbe llBlly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec_ 3, 1979

HOW TO MAKE A MERRY CHRISTMAS

by Lane end Miller

ME

P£ii!!Y, l ()Ot.i'T

HIII/E MUCH

N6tn.tER,
PATTY

S..VEP FOR
CHRISTMAS
I'RESet.ITS
THIS

WHAT'RE
WEGONNA

~UOWANd

View from the Statehouse
By Slate RepresenlaUve
Roo James

DD 7

(1)-Proclorville,

92Dd H0111e Dl.otrlct I
In legislaJve activity last week,
the last session of the year, the Ohio
House ol Representatives approved
legislation designed to save con-

sumers · money by elirninsting a
proposed sales ta• on returnable
containers that is scheduled to go into full effect on December 1, 1!179.
Designated as an emergency
measure, House Bill 904, which I cosponsored, was WI8Dimo118ly approved by the House.

/ l·J

YEARBOOKS ARE IN
Meigs High School yearbooks are
in and can be picked up at the high
school, Monday through Wednesday ,
from II a.m. to I p.m. in room 211.

MEETS WEDNESDAY

Pomeroy Lodge 164, F &gt;&lt; AM, will
meet in regular session at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday for the installation of olfien . All Master Masons are invited.

on highways
By Tbe Associated Preso
Accidents on Ohio roads resulted
in at least five deaths thia weekend ,
the Highway Patrol said.
The palrol cowtts the state 's
weekend traffic fatalities from 6
pm. FMday until midnight Sunday .
The dead :
SUNDAY
ATHENS - Bryan M. Cale, 18, of
GuysviUe, in a two-car accident on
U.S. !iOin Athens County.
LEBANON -Ronald Alkire, 29, of
West CarroUton, in a one-car accident on Interstate 75 in Warren
County_
AKRON - Angeline Joseph, 21, of
Massillon, in a two-car accident on a
Summit County road.
SATURDAY
DEFIANCE - Roy C. Hill, 66, ol
Cecil, in a two-ear accident on Ohio
IH m Defiance County.
CINCINNATI - Timothy Johnson,
26, or Cincinnati, in a two-car accident on a Cincinnati city street.

75th Anniversary
Open House
Sunday December 9

p.m.

Completes course

We're
having
our
75th
anmversary open house and we
want you to be a part of it. This
Sunday from 1 to 4 pm we'll have
free refreshments and our Dress
A Doll contest winners will be on
display.
Come m to the Farmers Bank
this Sunday and be a part of our
75th Anniversary celebration.

MARION - Gina M. Thompson or
Rt . 2, Pomeroy, a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course at the company's Robert M. Wopat Employee
Development Center here. The course covered all phases of billing
procedures, including customer bill
inquiries.
Thompson is a service repesen·
tative m the company's Athens
distMct.
Courses at the development center
focus on such things as telephone
technology, company practices and
management skills. Hundreds or
General ol Ohio employees attend
arumally _
:-;.:-:-

POMEROY, OHIO

•
•

...... ... .
··········

.-.- .-.-,-.·.·,·,·.·.

..

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedoeoday througb Friday,
fair WedDnday. A cbauce of
showers Thursday and Friday.
IHgbs from tbe mJd 4GB lo tbe mid
50s Wednesday aDd Friday and
from tbe 50s lo tbe low 60o Thursday. Lowslo tbe 306.

Farmers
Bank

•

I

}-.ive killed

MPmh€r FO! C

:-:-:.:-·--.'.'.

. . . . . ·.·.··.·:.;-·:-:-.·.· ·.·.·.·.·,·.·.·.·.

Have you ever
all the
J.Og _,unt
•
•

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0 Air Conditioner
=: Dtshwasher
=: Sec·unt\ Lr~htm~ ::J Ltghted D"" Bell 0 Shaver
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0 Alarm Clock
0 Aquanum Filter
0 Aquarium Hea ter
0 Baby Food
Warmer

0 Barbecue Sp1t
Turner
D Battery Charger
0 Blanket
0 Bottle Wanner
0 Broile r
0 Broom
0 Bun Warmer
0 Burglar AIJrm
D Cakulrttor

0 Can Opcn('f
DCarvin~ Kmfp
D Chafing lh sh
0 Charcoal Lrghtt-r
0 Clocks
D Clothes Dryer
0 Coffee Maket
0 Com Pufper
0 Crepe~ aker
0 Crock Pot

0 Deep Fat f l)·er

0 Dehumidifier
0 Dt:oicers
(pavement.gutte-rl

0 l!oor Be ll. Chmws
0 Dnll
~D utch (h ·en

C:: Egg Crw &gt;ker
C l:]ertnc

1-!ertl ln~

8 Electrosta1 K
Clet~ner

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Fan texhau'i! 1
Fa n tnrcula tlf1 KI
Fan tfurn&lt;t(l'l

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:\lann

0 Fr rt'pl ;tn·
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0 FloiJ I" I'~,J r . ., ht•J
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0 Food l,rort&gt; ... -..nr
0 Fo11d Wttrmt&gt;r
0 F reezrr
0 FryinJ.:" f 1an
D C cna~ow I )nor
Opener

D (~en t&gt;ral i.J)! hltrl,l.!
D Outd um Decnr:t
ttve l.r~htrllK

&lt;exlenor ' ~"'
_ lrj(hh _elr '
._. lard L1gh! :o.
' i'• »t lr~ht.
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=~ (~ ra ~.:, Chppt'r"
:J Cnddl t&gt;
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~~ ll ;m lui-lt' r
=.... IL-m Cll ppt' r~
~- !L nll lH I TKt' r
(11okn

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~""'} lk:t r l':trl

~~.1 llt-d gt· Tn_m r~lt' r"
, H 11! fl 11_1.! lou ,; t· r
~~ ll"t Pl:ttt'
l""J Hum 1dlfwr
D kt&gt; Crt' am \Ll hn
1

Q k t&gt; Cru . . ht'r

0 let&gt; Cutw .\l;r~\'1
U 1\lum rn&lt;H r·rl
ll "u"e \ um lwr
:J lr 11\l
lJ lr1t t'!lll!ll
U Ju•n· Extr&lt;Kl,•t
0 Latht·
C l.a wr.mo\n· r

=: ~! eat Gnnder
:::C ~I Kro wa'e Oven
~ \l uv1e Projector
:::C Oil Burner. ~l o t o r

=

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~ Ph "no~r(lph

:J flh"tll·t·n largrr
C Ph11[n Find

l. r}{ht~

ftmn
111;rtt· \Y;mrH·r

:-:= 1 1 &lt;~rt:r hlt· lt t·~l!t' J
~~ l'n·.,-, t,rt· C1nkt-T
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0 Shoe Polisher
D Sl ide Pro)ector
0 Snow Bluwer
:::J Spraye r
C Sterilizer

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0 Sunl amp
Swm1mmg P1K1I
Pump . Heater
D Tape Recr 1rder
n Te&lt;1 Ke!tle
D T1mer
0 Tooth Hru sh
D TIJil Stt'r

=

:::J Tra :-h c~~mpacltJr
0 TV 1black and
white I

; l T V ICf JI!1rl
lJ Typ(' wnti ·r
~ Vacuum Cleant&gt;r
::J \ "d ponzer
;:] \" Jbra tor
C Waffle lnlll

~ \Varmmg

Trdy

[-] Wnshmg M(l:ch111e
C Watn Heater
= Water Pr~ Ht.•ater
C Watn Pump
C Weed Cutt er
\Vok

=

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But ch ances are vou're usmg more than
you used to: most folks are .
So. if you think twice about how and
when you use electricity. you can make it
even more valuable.
We have some booklets available
with lots of energy saving ideas.
And the y're yours for the
asking .
At Ohio Power. we want
you to get the most
out nf your electric

Ohio Power Company
,.
,.

'

,•.

•

Working

trrg-~tlwr

;, the only'" :.

one sister, Elaine Cale, Rt .
2,Guysville; lwo brothers, Jeff and
Todd Cale, Rt. 2, Guysville, grandparents, George and Jennie Bailey
Abbott , Pomeroy; Ernest and Dovie
Branham Cale, Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at I p m . at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . David Holdren
officiating. Burial will be in MI . Hermon Cemetery. FMends may call at ;
the Jagers Funeral Home, Athens,
today !rom 7 to 9 and Tuesday from 3
to 5 and Ewing Funeral Home
Tuesday !rom 7 to 9.

Dairy product costs
boost grocery bills
By The Associated Press
A new round ol pMce increases at
the dairy counter helped boost
family supermarket bills again last
month, an Associated Press marketbasket survey shows.
There were several special sales
on pork chops, but the decreases
were not great enough to offset the
increases in the price of eggs and
milk .
The APdrew up a random list ol 15
food and non .food items, checked the
price at one supermarket in each of
13 cities on March l, 1973 and has
rechecked on or about the start ol
each succeeding month. Chocolate
chip cookies were dropped from the
list when the manufacturer discontinued the package size used in the
survey.
Here are some or the findings in
the latest AP survey:
+The market basket bill increased
at the checklist store in eight cities,
up an average of 2.4 percent, and
decreased at the checklist store in
five cities, down an average of 1.8
percent. On the average, the
marketbasket but at the checklist
store went up eight-tenths of a percent duMng November . That compared with a decrease of two-tenths
of a percent in October _
+Since the first of the year, the
marketbasket bill has increased at
the checklist store in every city, with
rises ranging from 3 percent in Salt
Lake City to just over 12 percent in
New York . On the average, the
marketbasket bill was 7 percent
higher at the start of December than
it was II months earlier _
- Higher prices lor eggs - in
demand as a substitute lor ex·
pensive cuts of meat - and lor milk
boosted marketbasket bills last
month as they di&lt;j during October .
Eggs increased in pMce at the
checklist store in 10 cities during
November after nsmg in six cities in
October. Milk pMces which were up

VETERANS~ORUL

Saturday Admissions-Madolyn
Olafin, Pomeroy: Clifford Christy ,
Middleport ; Raymond Little,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--Marcus
Nice, Shirley Utile, Candace Lam ·
bert , Donna Daniels. Margaret
Vadish.
Sunday Admissions-·Mabel
Kesterson , Pomeroy ; Basil Hsynes.
Pomeroy ; Gloria Frederick. Middleport; Arma Alley, Racine; Anita
Newhouse, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-None .
CAGE MEETING

I There will be a meeting ol all team
1 representatives of the Meigs County
I Church Basketball League at 7:30

~----------------------------------------~
Surprised' Electricity doe s so many things
around the home, it's easy to forge t just how
much you count on it.
Most likely, you don't have everything
listed above. And just as likely we forgot to
mention some things you do
have .
The point is this: while the
cost of electricity has gone
up, when you consider all
the things it does for
each day, it's still an
excellent value.

BRYANM.CALE
Bryan M. Cale, 18, Rt . 2, Guysville
died Sunday evening from injuries
received in an automobile accident.
Mr. Cale was born in Key West ,
florida . He was a 1979 graduate of
Federal Hocking High School where
he was a member of the basketbaU
team, year book staff, !rack team ,
served on homecoming and prom
corrunittees and was a prince candidate .
He is survived by his mother and
step.father, Nina Abbott Hawk and
RoUin K. Hawk , Rt . 12, GuysviUe ;
his father , Max Cale, Jr., Pomeroy ;

lfO"iPIT\L '\E\\ "i

I

1
I

Area deaths

pm . Tuesday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church . The only
order of business will be the
scheduling ol the league _ This will
be the last opportunity for any team
which has not joined to get into the
league . The league is open to all
•churches in Meigs County_

MEETING SLATED
Olester Township Trustees will
meet Wednesday , Dec . 5, at 7:00
p m . at the town hall .
TO END MARRIAGE
Linda Hswley, Middleport . and
Norman Hawley, Middleport, filed
for dissolution or marriage in Meigs
Co•Utty Common Plea• Court.
The marriage uf Ruth Ann Epling
and [.arry Eplin~ was dissolved .
Ruth Ann Eplin was restored to her
former name of Ruth Ann Grillin .

in six cities in October, went up at
the checklist store in live cities
during November, reflecting a
seasonal decline in production. Collee pnces also were higher - 14' in
six cities last month_
- The price of center -cut pork
chops dropped during November at
the checklist store in eight cities.
Hog fanners have increased production to take advantage of the high
bee! prices caWied bY small cattle
supplies and almost 3l percent more
pork was produced this November
than was produced in the same mon·
th last year .
No attempt was made to weight
the AP survey results according to
population density or in tenns of
what percent of a family's actual
grocery outlay each item represen ts. The AP did not try to compare ac·
tual prices from city to city. The
only comparisons were made in terms of percentages or increase or
decrease .
The 1tems on the AP checklist
were : chopped chuck, center rut
pork chops, frozen orange juice concentrate, coffee, paper towels , butter, Grade-A medium white eggs,
creamy peanut butter, laundry
detergent, Iabrie softener, tomato
sauce, milk , frankfurters and
granulated sugar. The cities
checked were: Albuquerque, N.M.,
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas,
Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York, Philadelphia, Providence,
R .I., Salt Lake City and Seattle .
WEEKEND REVIVAL
A weekend revival wUl be held
Thursday through Sunday evenings
at 7:30 each evening at Freedom
Gospel Mission, Bald Knob. with
Noah Burgess as evangelist. There
will be special singing each evening .
The Rev. L. A. Gluesencamp,
pastor, tnviles the public.
CLASSPAR1Y
The Willing Workers Class of the
Enterprise United Methodist Church
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the home ol MarjoMe Bowen lor a
ChMstmas program and gift exchange.
BAKE SALE PLANNED
The EnterpMse United Methodist
Olurch will hold a ChMstmas bake
sale starting at 9 a.m. Saturday at
the Wamer Insurance Agency, W.
Main St. , Pomeroy. Homemade
pies, cakes, breads, candies and
Christmas cookies will be sold .

'I'hi8 legislation Ia in response to a
recent declsioo by the Tax Cool·
missioner, on behalf of the Governor's administration, that sales taJ
should be collected on returnable
containen beginning Saturday_
The Tax Commlasioner retied on a
1978 decision by the Ohio Supreme
Court which held that containers and
their contenta should be viewed as a
whole when in the pns•eas'on of the
retailer, and valued as a whole for
property tax p~.
The Tax Commlasloner determined that, s'nce contents and cont.ainen are viewed and valued as an
entity for tax PW'JlOIII!S, the same
should hold true for sales tax pur-

poses.
Under existing law, there Ia no
specific exemption for the part ol the
sales price attributable to the
deposit on the container. Therefore,
the entire pMce of the product - including container -Ia taxable.
However, when consumen return
bottles or containers for a refWid, no
sales tax would be refunded. According to a rule ci the Tax Department, mercllandise mWII be returned whole to a retailer In order for
the purchaser to receive a refund of
any sales tax paid. No sales tax can
be remitted if the entire purcbaae
pMce is not refunded. Ill the case of
bottled beverages, returning empty
bottles would not entitle the consumer to a tax rebate.
House Bill 90t seeks to prevent this
"taxation without representation,"
taxation that was not Imposed by
any elected law-rnalcing body, but instead through a state bureaucracy.
Consumers taxes for returnable botties expect their tax money to be
returned when they return the containen to the store. If this new sales
tu is imposed, aslt has begun to be,
no tax rebate would be pennltted.
Further, such a tax on the container
and not the product itself establishes
a bad precedent, detrimental to consumers and hanllful to the e&amp;Wie of
recycling.
This legislation seeks to stop this
sales tax and, in turn, relieves consumers of an additional tax burden.
The Ohio House of Representatives,
through its swift action on House BiD
904, echoes the bill's concern for the
consumer's pocketbook.
In other legislative action, the
Ohio Senate voted unanlrunously
Wednesday to adopt a state capital
improvements budge! that ~ '191
million less than the HoWle awoved
vel'liion. Serio WI consideration by
the conference commiUee will n&lt;t
begin until around the first of the
year . The entire General Assembly
will return from recess on January
2, 1980.
PLEASE NOTE : The deadline
to apply for Ohio's Energy Credit
Program has been extended from
November 30, to December 31,
1979.

At Riverfront Coliseum

11 killed in rock concert disaster Monday
CINCINNATI (API - Eleven
people were either suffocated or
trampled to death by a rock concert
crowd pushing to enter only two
open doors in Riverfront Coliseum to
see the BMtish group ''The Who "
Monday night .
Police Lt . Col. Joseph Staft said
the dead were seven young men and
lour young women . He said their
identities would be released this
morning .
The concert drew a sellout audien·
ce or more than 18,000 people and
was a preview to the group's movie
"Quadrophenia," which opens soon
in Clncinnati.
"I want an investigation . I want a
report irrunediately," asserted new
Mayor J . KeMeth Blackwell at the
scene.
Lt. Dale Menkhaus, who led 25
police officers in a crowd control
detail, estimated that more than
6,000 people were crowded on the
coliseum's plaza level waiting for
the doors to open . Part of the seats

1,%00 ATTEND EVENT
Over l ,200 persons attended open
house held Saturday and Sunday at
Hubbard's Greenhouse, Syracuse.
Door prizes went to Paul Fitzwater, Point Pleasant; Herbert
Roush, Letart Falls; Jean HaU,
SyraCWie; Kim Calbert, Pomeroy
and TerMe Starcher, Pomeroy.
Relrehments of cookies and punch
made by Alberta Hubbard were served_

Side were not aware of the extent of
the tragedy . Young women broke into tears when they learnO!d of the

deaths as they left the building and
peered at the debris - a crutch .
dozens of shoes, bottles. coats. scarves .

"We decided to let the concert go
on. If we stopped it, we would have
had a worse panic,' ' Menkhaus said .
"Some made it. Some died Within
two or three minutes," said Isy
D'Agostino, a nurse from Dayton .
"It 's a real sad way to go ."
"Apparently there was such a
large swell m the crowd that there
were some young people who get
caught up in the swell . They were
suffocated or got trampled ," said
city Safety Director Richard
Castellini
He said he will ask City Council to
pass a law requiring that all seats be
reserved at future events. "You
don't have this kind of problem at a
Reds or Bengals game_ It's the
urgency of getting a seat that makes

•

e
(USPS 145 960)

at

Ind.
"It 's unfortunate , but people act
like that at these things . The closer
w the group inside, the worse it got.
We all fell down in there, too, " she
said .
Todd Scott and his date. Dawn
Gilmore of Dayton, survived by
bracing tlJeir elbows outward to
proted their rib cages.
" I !ell faint. I couldn't breath, "
Ms. Gilmore said .
Jeff Chaney of Carlisle, an Anny
veteran, said he tned to revive three
of the victims. His ellorts failed
mostly "because people jWII didn't
seem to care .
" l couldn't believe it. They could
see the people all piled up and they
still tried to climb over them JUS! to
get in ." Chaney satd _ He said one
girl was clinging to his leg, but by
the time he pulled her lree, she was
dead.
News of the deaths brought parents storming to the Coliseum to find
their children, but security guards

refused them entrance. "Go home
and see il they come home . You
can't come in without a ticket," said
one guard to a middle-&lt;~ged blonde
woman _The woman beat on the door
and swore before leaving in tears.
"This drinking. this pot, thia is
awful . The city should do something
about it," said Lee Smith of Cincinnati while awaiting word on the
fate of his 111-year-&lt;&gt;ld son. "I'd go
down to the city, but it wouldn't do
any good. They · got their tax
money.''

Paramedics, police and
firefighters trained in lif~ving
techniques were visibly shaken.
"We have all sorts of life-BBvlng
devices. We have drugs . We have
highly trained people, and none of it
did a bit ol good. They just died . We
couldn 't save a one of them," said a
tearful parlijl)ed.ic. "My name's not
important," he shrugged , preparing
to go to one of several hospitals to
help with the injured.
iContinued on pa~e 10)

en tine

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 163

this happen ,'' he satd .
''This is a terrible tragedy ... sa1d
City Manager Sylvester Murray .
who said he would open an in·
vestigation today _
"This is not violence . tt is pushing
We had this trouble some tune ago
when the 'Led Zeppelin ' appeared
here," Murray said.
Coliseum officials could not be
contacted for comment. Access to
offices was barred to reporters and
telephone calls were refused .
Electric Factory Concert.' of
Philadelphia, Pa ., sponsor of the
concert, also had nu conune nt
· 'Hwnan nature was very strong
in there," said Helene Berk of
Cleveland, a student at the Umversity of Cincinnati who attended the
concert.
"The group was excellent You
can l blame them for what happened "
She was pulled !rom the bottom of
the pile of people by her date, Todd
Tash, a student from Richmond ,

TU ESDAY . DECEMB ER 4. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Additional guards put at embassy
By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN , Iran ( AP ) - Iranians
reportedly voted 60-to-1 for
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeim 's
Islamic constitution, giving the
Shiite Moslem patriarch supreme
power lor life , but there was no word
of how many boycotted the referen dum.
Khomein1 's militiamen increased
the guard at the occupied U.S. Em·
bassy , apparently in anticipation of
a U.S. attempt to free the !iO
Americans held hostage there by
students demanding the return of
the deposed shah. Foreign Mini•ter
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said all the
hostages were stU! being treated and
fed well , and he denied reports that
they were kept tied to chairs .
Final results of the referend um
were not expected until later in the
week. But inWal return.t from the

.. .
auu.sTMAS PLANTS - George Albert Hill,
Letart Falls, is shown watering some 1,100 beautiful
poinsettia plants that he has in his greenhouse. George

,.., ·"·
....
··.',f.&lt;&gt;
'"'·'
''"~~·
.

5.50 aNend open house
Approximately 550 Big Bend
residents turned out for the annual
open house ol Francis F1orist, E .
Main St., Pomeroy Sunday afternoon.
Door prizes were awarded to Kate
Jarrell, Pomeroy; June Van Matre,
Mason ; Elva llBlley, SyracU8e;
Nancy
Beaver,
Middleport;
Emogene Crooks, Middleport, and
Barb Hackett, Pomeroy.
The Happy Harvesten aass ol
TMnity Church, Pomeroy, served
refreshments to the guests and Santa was on hand to distribute treats to
the children attending_

were reserved and the rest were fir st -come. first -BCrved.
'The group likes to do a little
sound test," Menkhaus said. When
the crowd heard the music, it sur~ed
forward.
'1ltey opened only two doors .
They have about !iO. I suggested they
open more, but was told there wasn l
enough personnel to open more,"
Menkhaus said.
Dick Ogburn, a concertgoer from
Lelington, Ky ., said, "People were
going down. I saw people's heads
being stepped on. I fell and I couldn't
get up. People kept pushing me
down _I was afraid for my life. They
only opened two doors and told
everybody to move back . I'm never
coming to a rock concert again ."
Menkhaus said it took nea rly 30
minutes before his officers could
mount a charge into the crowd. "We
found the lirst bodies about 15 feet
from the door outside," Menkhaus
said.
The concert continued. Those in·

•

"'"'-

.~ .t,._.A

-•~•

.

-:f.!/_· •

.

•
'

Supports Carter

••'

(RENO NEV . J- Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, whose cMtlcism of
the exiled Shah of Iran generated
protests fr&lt;m the Carter ad·
ministration, moved Monday to
make clear hia support lor the
president's efforts to get the
AmeMcan hostages in Tehran
released .
The Massachusetts senator.
who said Sunday night that the
shah "ran one of the most violent
regimes in the history of
mankind," told a Democratic
Party luncheon that "we all support our country's ellorts to end
the crisis. "

Wrong one hurt
ST. LOU1S lAP)- A car bomb
that injured a union official's wile
was actually meant for her
hWiband, who was maimed by a
slml1ar explosion six years ago,
police said Monday .
.
Explosives experts meanwhlle
were trying to determine if there
is a link between the bombing
Saturday and one last month that
claimed the life of a reputed underworld figure with union ties .
Investigators sa1d the latest
bombing was intended lor
Thcmas J. CaUanan, business
agent of the violence-prone
Pipefltters Union Local 562 .
Callanan, 33, lost both his legs
and several lingen in a car bombing !lix years ago.

Producing wells
NEWARK, Ohio cAP I - 01 312
oil and gas wells completed in
Ohio in November, 307 were
producers, according to the Ohio
Oil and Gas Association.
The total completions compare
with 160 completed wells in October and 176 completed wells in
November 1978.
So far this year, 3,134 oil and
gas wells have been rompletO!d in
Ohio, th&lt;' association has reported

vote Sunday and Monday pointed to
and his brother, Dave, are two of the few local growers.
George also raises tomatoes and cabbage in the sum·
mer.

Lester selected
Harry Lester, general superin·
tendent of Southern Ohio Coal Com·
pany , Meigs Divls'on. today was
elected vice president and general
manager of that divtsion _
Southern Ohio Coal Company, a
subsidiary or the Ohio Power Com·
pany, is one of seven mining
divisions of the American Electric
Power System.
Gerald Blackburn, executive vice
president - Fuel Supply for the
AmeMcan ElectMc Power Service
Corporation said that the election of
Lester as vice president reflects the
position he holds in managing the
largest single underground mining
complex in the AEP system.
The Meigs Division . which
operates three deep mines in Meigs
and Vinton counties, will produce

more than 3,600,000 tons or coal this
year lor Ohio Power Company ·s
General Gavin generating plant at
Cheshire and is projected to be
producing coal at an aMual rate ap·
proaching 5-million tons in the early
1980s.
The mines, which are in the final
stages of development, produced
just over 2-nullion tons in 1978.
Lester has been general superin·
tendent ol the Meigs Division since
1976. He joined Southern Ohio Coal
Company in 1972 and held various
engineering and management
positions until his appointment to
general superintendent.
Lester studied mining in Great
BMtain and was associated with Ute
National Coal Board in that country
in various management capacities .

FUNDS ALLOCATED
COLUMBUS - The Oblo Enviroomental Protection Agency
aooouoced Monday that Racine
od Syt'B&lt;use viUages wiU receive
$2l,t!i0 each lor new waste water
treatment and collection system.
The award lor Syracuse will be
made at I p.m. De;-. 5 in the
Mayor's Office and at noon Dec. 5
at Racine.
Funds are allocated from tile
emergency village capitl improvement rotary fund _
Senator Oakley C. Co!Uns, Rep.
Ron James, and Rex Sprague,
Assistant Director Ohio EPA,
will present the checks.

landslide approval by those who
voted .
The charter mandates theocratic
goverrunent in this predominantly
Moslem nation, and opponents claim
it will confirm Khomeini as a die·
tator .

33 hunters
draw fines
Deer hunting season has brought
on a wave of court actions against
violators of hunting laws according
to records of Meigs County Court
Judge Charles Knight.
Thirty-three defendants were
llned lor vaMous hunting violations
when they appeared in court Mon·
day.
Fined were John Jones, Fairborn.
$100 and costs, taking an anterless
deer without special permit ; Eddy
Jones, St . Paris, Ohio, $25 and costs,
possesston of deer taken illegally :
Thomas Riffle, Columbus, Samson
Darst, Rutland, SIOO and costs each,
spotlighting; Rupert steele, Columbus, Christopher Burns, Columbus,
and Luther Lovejoy, Columbus. $JOO
and costs each, spotlighting; Harvey
Weiker. Wayne, Ohio, $1!i0and costs,
attempt to take second deer, $25 and
costs, take a deer without having it
tagged, Theodore Willford , Long
Bottom, $25 and costs, take an anterless deer without special permit ;
Robert Thieman, Columbus, and
Robert Carper, Columbus, $:;() and
costs. spotlighting: Wayne Cripe.
Lewisburg, $l!i0 and costs, attempt
(Continued on page 10 I

RepoMs from Isfahan, with a
population of 671,825, said the vote
was 38,672 for the constitution and
1,637 against. In the smaller northem city of Bandar Gavaneh a vote
of 13.~ was reported, and in Ardebil, near the Soviet border, the
t.ally was !i0,000-112, the government
sat d.
Leftist and centMst political partie5 had said they would boycott the
referendum as did leaders or the
Kurdish, Arab, Baluchi and
Turkoman ethnic minoMties . The
politicallactions denounced the constitution as a tool ol dictatorship
while the minoMties, many of them
Swuu Moslems, opposed it because
Khomeini and his Shiite Moslems
rejected their demands for
autonomous home rule .
Officials had predicted the boycotts would have little effect on the outcome of the vote . At several polling
stations, reporters saw Moslem
priests sitting in front of the baUot
boxes mstrurting people to ''vote yes
only _" The clerics, and anyone else
who chose to watch, could see
whether voters deposited the green
·yes" ballot or the red "no" vote.
Meanwhile, the American
hostages began the 31st day of their
confinement, and a sokesman for the
captors denied reports that eight of
the hostages had been singled out for
intensive
interrogation
in
preparation lor possible espionage
tMals .
However, there was speculation in
Western diplomatic circles in
Tehran that the students were likely
to single out the top officials among
the hostages for more intensive
grilling
IContUiued on page 10 1

State champion
twirlers chosen
West Virginia's representatives to
the Nationa l Baton Twirler' s
Association finals were c hosen

yesterday at the Oflicial NBTA West
Virginia State Championships held
at the Wahama High School gym·
nasium in Mason. Judy Riggs _
contest director. say s nearly 250
twirlers !rom throughout the state
participated in the even t which got
underway at 10 a.m. Sunday and
culminated with the presentation qf
htgh pomt trophtes at around 8 p.m.
The contest. which Mrs Riggs
termed a huge sueress. was spon·
sored by the Wahama High School
Athletic Boosters
Solo Stat e C'hamp ro n.' chose n
yesterday

W&lt;' re Karen

Htm·

of

Charleston in the 11·14 age ,roup.
l.aRon l.an gdalr of Wl(:- rton m

ttl('

15·20 age category and Kan•n
Backus of Wierton in the -i-10 agt'

group. Patge Carney of Charle ston.
r eigning senior champion , was

named runner-up to Mtss Lan gda le
tn the lf&gt;-20 solo competition .
Miss Langda le and Miss Bare will
represent West Virginia in the junior
and senio r division I for girls 11 -Wr
Nationals tn January in St . Paul.
Mmnesota while Miss Backus will
represent the state in the national
fmals for girls age ten and under at
Disney World m Orlando. Fla . 1n
Vhn: .

siate High Point (;rand Champion
winners art· .J.J Ratliff. 8. of
Gassaway . m the juvenile 17-10 1 age
group : Mona Simmons, II , of Sutton.
in the jWlior ' 11·141 age category :
and :'&gt;tkktStmon . 15 . of Riple\ , tn tht•
!'i t-nlrlr

1 ag e

15-201 division

\telor.ie Fields uf :\ew Haven. the
onh· local partinpant. rec-eived a
src~ n ( t placr award rn the beginner~
has lt ., , . ·r: ompr tr t1on. a_l!r 9--10
d1 , · i ~ Jor1

NO QUORUM
Pomeroy C.ounril laiiO!d tu meet
Monday night due to a lack 0 1
quurwn .

F ull'n H;trn stun of Chtult-st1111
\\u .~ nall.ll'li thl' btl\··, stat t· r ha11 1j)IOI1
\\h ll~·

th(•

Hrph~ ~· - P;.~rk t·rs bur~ ;·m:!a

Han ~~ t · rt'tt es 1 upped
( "nr p tit I• ·

the

State

( 'il dOI PI•· •l

.,

IIIGH · POI!I;T WINNERS - Judy Riggs, director of the Official NBTA West Virginia State Championships
lorld Sun day at Wahama High School, presents a trophy to J.J. Ratllffe, Gassaway, State Hieh-Point Grand
Champion twtrler m the juvenile 1age 7·101 division. Looking on are Mona Simmons ol Sutton, third from the left,
State High-Point Grand Champion in the junior (11-141 age group, and Nikki Simon of Ripley, right, senior (age lf&gt;201grand champion . Mrs. Riggs saJs nearly2!i0 baton twirlers from throughout the state participated in the contest,
sponsored by the Wahama High School Athletic Boosters.

'

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