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                  <text>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

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.-.- .-.-,-.·.·,·,·.·.

..

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

•

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}-.ive killed

MPmh€r FO! C

:-:-:.:-·--.'.'.

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

Have you ever
all the
J.Og _,unt
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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
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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
,.
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,•.

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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

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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

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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·

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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.

'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome roy, 0 ., Tuesday. Dec 4, 1979

Republicans take own poll

(THERE'S ONE NOW!)

y

ACTUAL-L'l', I'M A SOYHOMORE OV
EG'l'PTIAN f\NCE~TRY FROM
VOCATELL0,1DAHO . . .

ToiUJy's Commentary
By Don Graff
Once upon a tune the Uruted Nations would have ben the first pla ce
to turn in a situation such as the Ira nian crists .
That tune was back 10 the post wu

Ohio Perspective

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COLUMBUS, Ohio !AP I - Voter
approval of a government spending
limit in Ohio and other states will
send a message to Congress that it 's
time to put a Ud on federal spending,
too, the Ohio Association of Realtors
says.
The realtors' group is on record in
support of an attempt to place a con·
stitutional amendment limiting
state spending on the June 1900
ballot .
The proposal is bemg advanced by
a group called " Ohioans to Limit
State Taxation ," headed by Rep .
James E . Betts, R-Rocky River .
The group faces a March 3
deadline in its attempt to gather
284,000 signatures to win a spot on
the ballot . Backers of the amendment say they have about half the
needed signatures.
Trustees of the association, the
largest trade association in Ohio
have voted to support the measure '
"That means that at state and
local levels, realtors will be workmg
for public awroval of the amendment at the polls ," association
., president Donald E . Fender Jr .. of
says .
' Hillsboro,
Ohio has enjoyed a reputation for
less extravagant with the tax·
'' being
payer's money than other states,
Fender said, and has been relatively
conservative in Its taxation policies.
"•.· "But. mescapably , Ohio too has
experienced great growth in govern'·''' ) ment spending because that has
,.. been like a contagious disease and
•... no one has eluded it completely," he
'. said .

..

The Betts amendment would lun1t

increases in per-&lt;"apita state government spending to increases in persona I income.
It would also prevent property
taxes from nsmg as a result of increases in valuation and would
prohibit the state from shifting to
local governments the costs of state
programs .
There are a nwnber of events
which justify the need for a lid on
spending , Fender said .
They include an inflation rate
"which is still running out of control
in the national economy, " escalating
energy prices. a decline in the
dollar's buying power, high interest
rates and curtailment of money
available from lending institutions .
"Slowly but surely, the nat10n's
taxpayers are arriving at the conclusion that it IS Wlthin their power
to rein in goverment spending, ..
Fender said .
He cited the spending lirrut
proposal whi ch captured 74 percent
of the vote in Catilomia and the 611
percent approval garnered in
Washington State. The association
points out the current state budget is
at a record high level, but says Inflation has much to do with the tax
yield that makes the larger budget
possible .
" As our association sees 1t. the
spending limitation issue . ought to
be on the !.&gt;allot and 1t ought to pass.
It is a measure which Ohio can llve
with . without damagmg truly essential public serv1ces . ·'Fender sai d

.'

\1.

.-.

Sermonette

::;

A few months ago , while at my
~: father-in-law's home in Waveland
~: Mississippi, I went out to change th~
;., oil in my car. I crawled under the
, , engine, screwed out the oil pan boh
:·~ with a wrench, then went back into
: :• the bouse to read a good book while
:~ the Qsed oil drained into a small tub.
; ·: After awhile, I grew weary and took
,. a nap.
Upon arousing, I went outside to
::·; see if the oil had stopped dripping .
}; .Finding that it had, I wanted to plug
! ~ up the oil pan and pour the clean oil
'' in the engine, but foWid to my
dismay that the bolt was missing . I
felt all around the ground beneath
the oil pan. No bolt. I looked aroW!d
the car, on the fender , on the trailer
hitched to it. No bolt. !looked at the
place where I had been reading and
;:.:.taken a nap . No bolt.
::·: . My wife came home and I told her
of our plight. She looked around the
:;· car. No bolt . Our two children also
.; looked carefully, and even crawled
under the engine and ran their hands
through the grass there, and found
nothing. Other people came and also
_)&lt;loked around somewhat. Nobody
~f&lt;?Wid the bolt.
.. So we were in a real fix, being a
thousand miles from home . With no
~ .oil in it, the engine would certainly
;;? burn out and the oil pan would not
;j.bllld any oil without the bolt pi ugging
it'. Thus, without that one bolt , our
entire automobile was useless .

...

1:

(

So, the next morning , l went to a
nearby jWlkyard and got a boll off a
discarded engine of the same make
of car as mine, and found that 1t fit ·
ted into my oilpan perfectly That
solved our problem.
In the Bible. we read of one man
who disrupted the natural course of
the whole world . His name was
Adam . "1berefore as sin came into
the world through one man and
death through sin, and so death
spread to aU men bee a use all men
sinned ... " (Romans 5: 12) .
But as I found a substitute bolt to
plug up my oilpan, God foWld a substitute to fill the place Adam should
have had, and that substitute was
God Himself made man. "For if any
died through one man 's trespass ,
much more have the grace of God
and the free gift in the grace of that
one man Jesus Olrist aboWlded for
many." (Romans 5: 15 )
Thus, instead of Adam paying the
price for what he had done by dying,
Jesus Olrist did thai in Adam's
place, making it possible for us to
live eternally some day . "Then as
one man's trespass led to condemnation for aU men, so one man's
act of righteousness leads to acquittal and life for all men . For as by one
man's disobedience many were
made sinners, so by one man 's
obedieuce many will be made
ri~hteou' . " 1Romans5 ·18.19)

which the vital interests of the great
powers were in direct conflict.
But it was presented as a civilized
al ternative to the playing out of
lesser international disturbances
through the traditiOnal processes of
threat, counterthreat and brute
force .
Disturbances such as the U. S. lranian confrontation , at least in ~
itially
The fa ct that that confrontation is
only now. after a month in which to
develop into a full-blown and convoluted crisis, backing into the U.N.
fonun may be taken as a measure of
the extent to which the organization
has failed to fulfill its original prospectus.
. Not that the U. N. does not have
much to its credit - sheer survival
through more than 30 frequently tur bulent years being far from the least
of achievements. But most of its constructive work has been through its
several affiliated specialized agenCies, most notably in the health and
educational areas . As the coordinator of a handful of multi nation peacekeeping forces , it has
perfromed usefully m several con flicts in which the great powers have
been mterested parties rather than
di reel pa rli ci pants .
.,. ·
And it has proved to be of service
to the multiplymg smaller nations of
the world in a number of respects . It
provides a forum in which to a1r
their views. mostly complaints in recent years . And it is wasy on the1r
foreign office budgets . Many
governments, too strapped to be
represented tn every other country ,
conduct business with each other
through their U. N. delegations .
But as a factor in mainstream mtemallonal politics , the U . N. has
been of steadi ly decreasing

significance .
Its response to the Iranian cr~sts
may reveal whether there remains
any hope of it ever being anything
more, whether, as The New York
Times puts it editor~ally. "It has
become merely a place or still f unetions as an institution ."
The conglomerate of petty Interests into which it has degenerated
may be mcapable of meeting the
test. It may be exposed, again in the
words of The Times, "as utterly
helpless , unable to speak even for
the most elementary ingredient of
diplomacy, the safety of diplomats ...
On the other hand, that may be
putting it too harshly . Even a United
Nations as originally envisaged
might well have been incapable of
meeting this particular test, involvmg as 1t does a nation that has
chosen to play the total maverick,
acknowledging no standards of international conduct other than those
it chooses to itself decree .
The charter presumes that all
players would at least conform to
such basic rules of the game as
r esponsible, responsive governments .
Mlstakingly, it now appears .

process ing and tabulating the
ballots.
Respofllle hasn 'I been exactly
overwhelming, perhaps suggesting
many Republicafll! are still holding
out for Harris or Gallup .
Of the 10 million fonns mailed since June. "between 300,000 and
400,000 " have been filled out and
returned , " some with money and
some without," Smith said.
Of those with money, the average
contribution has been about $11, he
said .

vote for their presidential ch01ce
weU in advance of the convention .''
Th ym Smith, a co mm ittee
spokesman, said, "Our goal is to
send one to every Republican In the
country .''

He conceded the survey was an
unorthodo• way of raising fw1ds for
GOP candidates for Congress . But
he defended it as "an attempt to get
away from the fat-eat image and
generate more involvement in the
party ...
He claimed the first S5 of the contribution mostly pa ys fnr mrtiling.

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Not that the U. N. ws ever design ed to be a supranational authority . It
was never intended , for principal ex·
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Editorial opinions,
comments

WASHINGTON !AP I
The
Republican Congressional Committee Is conducting a program
designed to ta ke care of millions of
neglected Americans : those never
polled by Gallup or Harris.
The corrunittee, whose mission is
electing more Republicans to the
House and Senate, has been mailing
a "1980 presidential survey" to GOP
voters and invitinll,, them to express
the1r preference for candidates and
return the ballot by mail + along
With a minimum $5 contributiOn .
The survey fom1 also contains a
check-box for contributions of "SIOO ,
$50 or $15 ."
In a " Dear F'riend" letter accompanymg the straw ballot, committee chairman Rep . Guy Vander
Jagt, R-Mlch .. asks :
" Have you ever been asked your
preference for presidential candidates by professional pollsters
George Gallup or Lou Harris ?
Probably not since they usually poll
less than 2,000 people .
" That's why the Na ti onal
Republican Congressional Committee is launching this project to
reach millions of Americans across
the country to give them a chance to

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3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy . o ., Tuesday,

[)e(·.

4, 1979

Basehalrs annual nteeting

Today's

Trade rumors flow like wine

Sports
World
By Will Grimsley
TORONTO 1AP ) - When l'ony
LaRussa, the young skipper of the
Olicago White Sox, gets into a nose to-nose debate with an wnpire on a
controversial decision, he can plead
his case with a lot or "wherefores"
and ''whereases " and other legal
gobbledegook .
But he doesn't abuse the privilege.
"!did it once this year against an
umpire l knew real well, " Larussa
said. " He snarled back, 'Paisan , you
can take all that fancy talk and stuff
it. ' I haven~ tried it since."
LaRussa, 35, dark and handsome
is a rare breed of baseball manager:
Somewhere down the line in his
career as a nondescript infielder for
nearly a half-dozen nondescript ball
clubs, he decided that it would be
smart to cushion his future with an
alternate skill.
So he spent five winters and the
quarters of nine years to get a law
degree at Florida State. Having
passed his first two exams , he is
awaiting the result of the last. which
would give him a Florida license .
Then he can hang out his shingle ,
becoming the only man in the world
who can argue a strike call with Ron
Luciano and also plead a case before
the Supreme Court .
"You know what I wrote my thesis
on 1 " the boyish White Sox skipper
said during a break in the annual
baseball meetings here . "Collective
bargaining and Peter Seitz' ar·
bitration ruling in the MessersmithMcNally case which erased the
reserve cia use.
" It was a fascinating study . You
know what' My conclusion was that
Seitz, the arbitrator, blew it. When
he made the ruling, Marvin Miller,

Norntan signs
with Montreal
TORONTO (API - Fonner Cincinnati Reds Manager Sparky An derson says he believes that Joe
Morgan, the National League 's Most
Val118ble Player when the Redo won
cnuecullve World SeriN In urn; 111111
11'111, will sign with the Loa Angeles
Dodgel'll.
"He11 be signed, no question about
that, " Anderson predicted at
baseball 's winter meetings . " U you
ask me with whom, l 'd say Los
Angeles. If you ask me about Davey
Lopes, I'd say he11 go to center field
and Joe will play second base .
That's just my opinioo ."
Anderson, wbo now manages the
Detroit Tigers, said he saw Morgan
last week before Morgan left for a
golfing vacation in Hawaii .
"He 's in a great frame of mind ,"
Anderson said, although Morgan's
possibilities for signing with another
club have become limited .
San Diego and San Francisco, two
of the four te81Tl5 which selected him
in the recent free agent re-entry
draft, appear to have filled their
gape at second base.
The Padres acquired Dave Cash
from the Montreal Expos, who on
Mooday signed pitcher Fred Norman, another free agent who jumped the Reds, to a three-year contract .
And the Giants seem ready to annoWlce that former Pittsburgh
Pirate Rennie Stennet will sign a
loog-term contract
Morgan was believed to have been
paid $450,000 last year by Cincinnati
and has probably boosted that
asking price.
"You have to remember that Joe
is J7 years old and coming off a so~
year (hitting .250 with 32 runs batted
in)," Anderson said. ''Te81Tl5 have
to be asking themselves, 'How many
more years wiU be play• One• Two'
Three •• That's what is going
through their minds . ''
Morgan has missed several games
in each of the past two seasoflll
because of injuries .
AJl his physical problems mounted
and his batting average sagged,
Reds fans at Riverfront Stadi urn
booed Morgan on occasion, and
Morgan said he no longer felt appreciated in Cincinnati.
By the end of the season, both
Morgan and the Reds had made it
evident that he would not return .
Morgan then said he would like to
be drafted by a West Coast team
near his home in Oakland, Calif . He
was chosen by the Dodgers . the
Giants, the Padres and the Texas
Rangers .
Norman. also 37, said that he wan ted the security of a long -term ron ·
tract which the Reds would not offer .
and that he was delighted to land
with the Expos .
" I don\ want to get mtu tht•
money. but I'm geltln~ three tun e'
wh:lt I would have ~vl'r gult en '\·1th
t.h&lt;' Reds ." Norman said

director of tne t"layen; 1\::iSOl:laLJon ,
and baseball had a lready made
progress in a compromise
agreement in negotiation .
''I think Seitz acted too impulsively. He wanted to be the man
who destroyed the reserve clause . I
came up with precedent that showed
the action could have been appealed
and possibly reversed in the courts."
LaRussa , son of a Tampa, Fla .,
milkman, is a refreshing departure
from the normal run of baseball
managers, who play a game of
musical chairs, bouncing rrom one
club to another.
If such a life should prove hectic
and boring, LaRussa has an escape
hatch . "111 probably practice during
the offseason," he said . "Better than
loafing and fishing .'·
LaRussa completed his regular
college education at the University
of South Florida in the winter and at
nights , finiShing with honors, while
playing ball with the A's, Braves,
Cubs, Pirates and White So• . Then
he turned to managing in the
minors.

Toledo
posts
•
v1ctory

TORONTO IAP 1 - 1111ljor league
baseball 's annual wmter mectmg~
are off to their LL'iual slclrt - few
developments but a lot of in tn~ue .
After heanng Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn describe the free agent
draft as " a tune bomb li cking
away" Monday, the baseball brass
~at down to bu.si.ness in aU corn ers of
the sprawlinM Sheraton Centre Hotel
complex .
It was cat-and-mouse. cloak-anddagger time once agam. General
managers, their assistants and field
managers became con men, trying
to outwit nvals like mternational
spies
Everyone is lookmg for help ,

looking for a player or play ers
they 'rc s ure w!U bnng them a pen nant 1n 1900 . Of course , they didn 't
want to give up talent , or too much of
it.
The trade market was open. There
was huddlmg all over the place
There was plenty of wheeling, but
very little dealing
A private chat between Amencan
League President Lee MacPhail and
Red Sox General Manager Haywood
Sullivan on a level high above the
lobby even brought a joke : Were
they really try in~ to work out a trade
of administrative aides?
Buzzy Bavasi of the CaUfornia
Angels was runJJing around talking
to everyone . No one really knew
what he was looking for or what he
was actually ready to giv e up in a
trade.
The Baltimore Orioles reportedly
were trying to unload unhappy Jim
Palmer, who has g1ven a list of clubs
he m1ght be willing to accept The

Top Twenty
The AP Top Twenty
By The As sociated Press

1 he Top Twenty teams m The
Assoctaled Press ro lt cqe f oo t ba ll
poll. with f1rst place votes in paren
theses, record s an d total point s
Potnts ba se d on 20 19 1B 17 16 1s

13 12 11 10 9

14

2 1
1 Ohio St
1 A labama
J So Ca li f
4 Flor ida Sf

Pro
standings

5 d 3

A 7 6

116 11 11 001 1.267
1')9)( 11 00) 1, 265 1 1

119 11 100 II 1.257
i ll 001 I. IOJ
1111 101 01 1.068

5 Ok la .

6 Ark .
( 1 1) ( 10 I OJ
7. Nebraska
110101
8_Hous ton
( 1 1)( 1010 )
9 Bng Young 1111 11 001
10 Pittsbur gh
110 I 01
11 Texas
(9 2 0
17 Purdue
19201
lJ x Wash
19201
14 Michigan
18301
15 . Tulane
19201
16_5 _Carol inn
18301
17 Auburn
18301
18 Clemson
183 01
19 . Baylor
17 401
20 . Temple
19201
x
Inc ludes f orte11 b y Ar
St ate

951

'108

dun!;!. oce.

One major leag ue executive, who
asked not to be identified , said the
Ne w York Mets were offering
veteran nght-hander Craig Swan to
eve ryone. " They 11 sit back and see
what happens," the mformant said .
Swan, 29, had a 14-13 record and a
3.30 earned run average with the
lowly Mets this year.
Another strong rumor circulated
tha t the Philadelphia Phillies were
trying to lure slugger D'dve Winfield
from the San Diego Padres . One
source said the Phils were offering a
package of starling pitchers Nino
Espmosa and Larry Christenson ,
reliever Tug McGraw and outfielder
Bake McBride. in e•change for Win-

WRAP BOTH YOUR
AND CARIN

Ndi!Ondl

893 1 1

Ba s ke tball Assoc•at•on

848

At A Glance
By Th e Associated PreH
Eastern Confere nce
AtlantiC DIV ISI On
W L Pc1. G B
Bo~ton
18 5
183
Ph ila
19 7 . 7)1
I i
New York
12 13 -180 7
Wa shington
10 17 455 7 ~ :1
Ne w Jersey
10 16
385 9 1 'I
Central Divi s•on
Atlant a
16 12
571
H ou st on
13 11 542
San Antonio
13 II &gt;42

718
677

1&gt;06

d89
452
386
287
2d4
222
106
65
1zona

Clevelan d

12 16

429

lnd•an a

11 16

40 7

&lt;! • 1

De tr oil

8 16

333

6

Hannan Traee,
North Galll·a ~~v;;t'

4

Modwest o;v;s;on

MtlwcwkPf'

Sea llle

Two games involving SV AC
schools are scheduled this evening.
llaruJan Trace, a 72-49loser against Fairland last Friday night hosts
Symmes Valley while North Gallla
takes its l-1 record to Glouster .
Friday night, league encounters
tlnd .KnJer a-eelt vl.Vttng Southwestern ; North Gallia playing at
Eastern and Southern, the defending
league champs, travel to Hannan
Trace . Saturday night, North Gallia
meets Portsmouth Notre Dame .

8

70•

.500 5
~ ~ :~ :n3
•o

Ch•cago
Ut a h

Play tonight

19

1

l

269 11'

1

4 70

167 1]1

:1

17
17

9
9

65-&lt;

654
593

II 16
10 16

385

401

Monday 's Game
Milwaukee 96, Utah 89

Tuesday 's Games
Phoenill: &lt;'!1 New York
San D•ego at Cl evel and
Boston df Detr oi t
Los Angeles at San Antonio

Wednesd•y's Games
Atlanta at Boston
Phoen •x at Ne-w Jersey
San An ton io at Philadel phid
New York at Wa!hingt on

protect• o n tor you r ca r. lor your hom e and fo r it s con ·
1en 1s And sepa rat e po il c •es o il en cos! yo u mor e. 1n
trme as wet! as money .

680

16 11

11nenta l lnsuran c;e Compa mes . And II you own a
h orn e and a car . PCP o tt ers you exce pti Onal va lue
Se p arate pol1 c res o l ten mean drlferrn g amount s of

1 19

Paconc o;v,;ro;

LOS Ang
Phoen •x
Por t land
San Diego
Go lden St

We have an mnovat1ve po l•cy called PCP - Pe r
su nal Comp reh enS ive Prot ec t1 on~l rom The Con·

Western Conference

By The Associated Press
Toledo. which is favored to wtn the
Mid-American Conference college
basketball crown it shared last
season, scored a victory in its home
opener Monday night. outscoring
Massachusetts 84-74 in a nonconference battle .
Jim Swaney hit on II of 14 field
goal attempts and scored a gamehigh 28 points to put the Rockets on
the wiMing track after they fell in
their .....- opener at Nortll
Cuollna -Char1olte
last
w
eekend.
Toledo got balanced scoring with
Harvey Knuckles, Tim Selgo and
Jim Lehman each adding 12 points .
Curtis !'hauls had 21 points to lead
Massachusetts.
In other games involvmg MAC
teams Monday :
Central Michigan , which shared
the crown with Toledo last year,
bumped into Michigan and tumbled
96-78 at Ann Arbor. The Wolverines
used 34 points by junior Mike McGee
to send the Chiwewas to their first
loss against one victory this year .
Eastern Michigan's Anthony
White hit a last-&lt;~Ceond jwnper to
lead the Hurofll! past Oeveland State
53-52. The victory was Eastern's first after losing to Minnesota in the

field and a couple of pitcber11,
possibly including Bob Owchinko or
Bob Shirley .
Sullivan had no comment, but he
was dangling slugging third man
Butch Hobson as trade bait in hopes
of finding an experienced catcher
and pitching help. He, too, was
playing a waiting game .
Sullivan wants to make a deal, but
is in no rush. He's trying to keep
conununications lines open to his old
boss, Charlie Finley, for a possible
trade . But Finley's bid to sell the
Oakland A's for a move to Denver
appears to bar any deals.
The 24 major league clubs got one
b1t of business out of the way ln a
hurry. the draft of non-protected
players. Nine players left off 46-man
rosters were picked by seven clubs,
three by the Minnesota Twins .

Onole s appeared to be con centrating on the Angels as a means
of accomodating their veteran pit-

.

'

,, 1

PCP . on 1he o th e r h and. g•ves you one amount of
property p rotec tiOn to r yo u r home and 11 s co nt en 1s .
And one amount o t hab!l rty pro tP.C\ 1011 f o r your ca 1

and home Plu s . PCP g1ves you 1hc optiOn to mcl ude
hosp1tal . dlsablill'flncome and mortg a ge 111e In-

'I""'

su r a n ee 111 the same plan

PCP 1s easy to under stand , elf1cient and times aving , and in many cases , more economical.
Come see us o r ca ll We'l l be glad to
show yo u what PCP ca n do to make
you-and yo ur property - more secure

Cleveland at Indiana
Los Ange les at Houston
Detroi t at Kansas City
MilwauKee at Denver
Chic ago at Golden State
Utah at Seattle

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E . MAIN

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992 ·5130

opener last weekend .
Ohio University dropped its
second game of the season, a 77-64
loss at St . Bonaventure, while Nor thern Illinois , 1).2, was edged by Northwestern !'&gt;8-57.
Western Michigan opened 1L'
season by rolling past Lake Supenor
State 112-6-4 .
Tonight, Kent State and Bowling
Green take on non"onference opponents . . Kent enertains Niagara
and Bowlmg Green is at Duquesne .

This Christmas,give
the gifts that'll nave
everyone talking.
e

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uw

1t' 1. ;I \
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rould bf' more

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( J• " \len, \fytt-' i( fl l ' · I 'I H nw llf'xl rn the liv1r1g room
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r'lt ! Mtr "I", 1\; 'lou',l' I J' 1()/'1 tlw !r f'(' , ~Hld JU':. l Wil ! Ch
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Nor rr1 Pule

Put a new Phone
in
life.

o.e. Itt aiM! HIIO

Fll .. T..Unl wu •

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•••So ...... kooping .... FostM&gt;I tp0-;1 go;ng
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tf you M'rld tn on Festival w..bnd,
~ fDW hit h;t ol Hollywood\ bootfrom 'Chino S,otdoooo•' to 'Cal- Suito'
to · - ol .... Body Snatdwt' --plus

by

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'Sommy DeMo, k' Show&gt;
HIO wbkriben. gtt ft1,, ltind ol
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~*"'-· The btggMt and belt mcl'tl'tel,
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Knockout 1pOI'b progrorm that can't b. teef1
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And no convnerciol•. Not or. . That\
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But ....,. ;mag..,.? ~ """ cd&gt;lo

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So d ip tt. coupon bela.¥, Ot" tutl gl't'e us o
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�4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Tuesday, Dec. 4. 1979

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Dec. 4, 1979

Gallipolis' Dan Staggs First Team All-Ohio
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Spor!s Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eric
Ellington, playoff champion Cincinnat i Moeller's record-&lt;~ettmg
back, and two-way star Jeff
Bu:Jixmg of Toledo Whitmer are The
Associated Press ' Players of the

Year m Ohio Class AAA high school
football .
The Class AAA State Coach of the
Year IS Joel Cockley, who gwded
Dover to 10 straight victories and the
No. 4 state ranking in his first season
at the school .
Elltngton , a a.&lt;oot-9, 190-j&gt;ound

1979 Class AAA All-Ohio Temn
COlUMBUS . Ohio l AP )

The
Assoc i ated Press ' 1Cil79 Class AAA
AII ·Onio high schoo l football sc lec
fions . made with
the re c om
m e ndat ions of a statewide panel ot
sportswriters a nd broad casters ·
First Team Offense
Spl i t end Thad G1bbs. Cincinndfi

Br own . Fremont R oss . Ed Ha1 rs to n .
Manst 1eld Mdlabar . Sco tt Norr~ s .
Port Cl1n fon :
Gary
Crom ley ,
Bowl•ng Green . Ri c h Patr!ja . Man
sti (' l d Mad•son .
Chuck
Hobb s.
To ledo Woodward , AI B edle , To lf'do
STart , Wll l •e Gentry , Fremonr Ro ss.
Kyle Decker . Toled o Whi t m er

sen1or. earned the Back of the Year
honors . He led greater Cinl'innati in
s&lt;.:u ring Wlth 96 points, piling up 1,013
yards in 10 regular season games
and breaking the Crusaders · career
rushtng record formerly held by
Rand y Keith
The running of Ellington and
jUilior fullback Mark Brooks.
coupled with Tom Lockwood's
passing, led Moeller to its fourth
playoff crown and a 12~ re~ular
season .
Bushong, a 6-3, 219-poUild senior
and the Oluo Lineman of the Year,
excelled as a defensive tackle and
tight end for Whitmer, ~I d~

Princ eton. 6 -2, 180, Sr , tight end Jud

the regular season and beaten 1n the
senufinals by Mo.ller .
His coaches accorded him an ef.
ficiency rati.tg of 116 percent on both
offense and defeiiSe. He had 78 solo
tackles, 15 or them for losses, forced
two fwnbles and recovered another
one, had four quarterback sacks and
three deflected passes . On offense ,
he caught 13 passes for seldomthrowing Whitmer. Four of his
blocks resulted in touchdowns .
Moeller Jed the first team all-state
seledions, chosen with the recommendations of a statewide panel of
sporta writers and broadcasters.
Besides Ellington , center Joe

Apke and linebac ker Rick Naylor
represented the Crusaders .
Alsu named to the No . I offensive
line were split end Thaddeus Gibbs
of Cincinnati Princeton, tight end
Judd GrO'Ui of Berea , son of fonner
Cleveland Browns ' great Lou GrO'Ul;
tackles Doug Compton of West
eaiTolllon and Dan Staggs of
Gallipolis and guards Greg King of
Cincinnati Oak Hills and Torn
Moriarty of Euclid.
Ellington's backfield mates in·
elude Ravenna quarterback Greg
Powell, who passed for 1,400 yards
and 14 touchdowns and ran for
almost 500 yards and seven scores.

and running
backs Steve
Strausbaugh of Toledo Whitmer,
Dave Kaminski of Panna Padua
and Alex Wasil of Westerville North .
Besides Bushong and Nayor , the
first team defensive unit consists of
ends Orlando Lowry of Shaker
Heights and Lee Grinormeau of
Toledo Rogers , tackle Tony Guiliani
of Westerville South, Massillon middle guard Bob Simpson, linebackers
Mike Boren of Col wnbus Eastmoor
and Dave Preston of Warren Harding and deep backs Mark Ruggles
of Logan, Eric Humbert or Cincinnati Forest Park and Bob
Wheeling of Centerville.

Doug Comp ton , West Carrollton , b 6,
248 , Sr ., and Dan Staggs , Gallipolis ,
6·J , 240, Sr .; g uards Gr-eg Ki ng , (i n
cinnati Oak Hills, 6 2. 125, Sr , and

Powel l, Ravenna , 6 I , 185, Sr , run
ning bac k s Eric El l ing t o n . Cin
ci nnar i M oeller , 59, 190, Sr, Steve
Strau sbaugh , Toledo Wh 1tmer , 6 1,
195, Sr ., Dave Kam 1nsk 1, Parma
Padua , 6-f oot. 185, Sr , cmd Alex
Wasil , Wes tervil le N or th , 6 t oot , 180 ,

••
•
••

Cock ley , D over
BA CK
OF
YEAR
Ellington , Cincinnati Moeller

••
•
•
,•

'

•
•

•
•

COAC H

OF

YEAR

liNEM A N OF

•

Team Game - Tony 's Carry Ou t

693 .
MONDAY MIX EO
November 19 , 1979
Standings

No . .J
H 1gh Ind . Ga me mo~d Roach 201. Ron
Smrth 179; ( Women )
176, Drema Roach

Roa ch 167

High Series

28
30
20 36
(M en) Ray Sm i fh 192, Bill
Shirley Sm ith
167 , orema

- (Me n ) Bil l Smi th

528, Clyde Sayre 511 , Ron Smith 501).
(Women )
Debbie
Dobbins
486,
Drema Roach 467 , Sh irley Smith -466
Team High Game - F ry e's Penn .
ZOil 797 .
Team H igh Seri es - Frye' s Penn

ZOi l 2315 .

Roach 's Gun Shop

Pomeroy Bowling lanes
Early Sunday Mi )(e d
League
Nov .25, 1979
Standing!!.
Team
Pts.
3 In One
61
Sa rah Gibbs,
Deputy Registrar
62
Ja ck's Dairy Bar
60
Waldnig Trucking Co
58
Pi c kens Hardware
56
Roya l Crow n
38
High series
Jonn Tyree 595 , Mel
Barnett 504 ; Jerry Rought 552 , Debi
Hawley 502
H i gn game
Jerry Rought 22 1.
Oebi Hawl ey 203 ; John Tyree 2 12 ,
M e t Barnett 183
T ea m St? r ies
Ja ck 's Dairy Bar

graces of Coach Tom Flores .
Branch caught seven passes for
121i yards in the Monday night
National Football League game. but
the last two were the keys - a 66yarder that knotted the score at 3!'NS
with 3: 19 to play and an eight-yarder
that made it 42-35 with just under
two minutes left.
·'Maybe this got me out of the dog
house," Branch said after the game .
Branch didn't explain why Flores
started Rich Martini in his place
Monday, but he said he wasn 't disappointed tbat he had.
" I 'm still part of the team ," he
said. " It lakes 45 guys to win the
game, and I'm still one of the 45."
The victory kept Oakland 's hopes
of a playoff berth alive .
" I just told our team we have a
chance ... just win the last three and ,
well, that's it ," Flores said .
New Orleans has to count on
beating San Diego and Los Angeles
losing to Atlanta next week . That
would set up a head-to-head RamsSaints clash for the NFC West title .

38

)8

Team gam!':'

"'llti.s 1s one oi my most disap-pointing losses ever," s1ud Samts
Coach Dick Nolan . "When you've
got a 21 -potnt lead, you've got to
keep it. "
The Salllts had a 21-point lead ,
twice.
After Oakland went out in front 7-&lt;J
on a 3-yard pass from Kenny Stabler
to light end R.aymond Chester in the
first quarter, the Saints went ahead
~1 with a four-touchdown second
quarter.
. Fullback Tony Galbrea th scored
on a 2-yard run 90 seconds into the
second quarter and on a 17-yard pass
from Archie MaMing with just un der five minutes gone in the period .
Chuck Muncie scored on a !-yard
plunge with four minutes left before
intenni,.,ion, and tight end Henry
Childs took a :!S-yard pass from
Manning in for a score with 2: 18
remaining.
But 0-dkland came back to make it
~14
when Arthur Whitttngton
scored as time ran out in the first
hall .

-GOODYEAROUR TIEMPO'S (The All
Season Tires) ARE STILL
AT A LOW,
LOW PRICE.

1987

Team

Royal Crown 692

We Are Now
STUDDING
TIRES

The Saints went up by 21 points
again in the third quarter when
linebacker KeMy Bordelon intercepted a Stabler pass and relur·
ned it t9 yards for a touchdown .
Mark van Eeghen narrowed It to
~21 on a !-yard run with 2:01 left in
the third quarter, and Oakland
scored 21 points in the final period +
all on passes by Stabler.
Tight end Denick Ramsey scored
on a 17-yard pass two minutes into
the final quarter , and Branch got the
final two.
His final score was set up by a

CARRIER
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t

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bizarre turnover. Muncie fumbled at
the New Orleans 41 . Oakland safety
Mllte Davis scooped it up, ran to the
lJl and bounced the ball forward to
linebacker Ted Hendricks , for
another seven yards.
l'W() running plays got the ball to
the 3-yard line, and Stabler hit Branc h for the winning touchdown from
there .
"I've been with the Raiders for
eight yeal'!l, and we 've been in a lot
of that type of games ," Branch said.
"The Raiders play that kind of foot·
ball ."

ATTENTION

DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

f

Between 8:30 a.m.

t
t

and 5:00 p.m.
1-614 992-2156

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FRANK IES ....'.'.~-~ ..89
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ALL STAR BUnERMILK ...••.................... :~.~.~~ .... 89e
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DAVIS-QUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY

•'

Tony 's Carry Out

1956.

Home
Insurance

'•

•n

Charles Smith 213 ,

Oebi Hawley 187
Team Series -

Bushong , Toledo Wh it mer
Special Mention
T oby Jenkins , Elida . Rob Bollen
ba c h er , Fremont
Ross .
Er ic
Walke r , Tol edo St Joh n ' s , Tyrone
Byrd ,
Toledo
Sc ott ;
T om
Wo leslagel , Fremont Ross . Gr eg

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

28
26

Jack 's Dairy Bar

Rlchrd Russell 207 . Oebi Hawl ey 210.

Jolt

" Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy "
992-6677

Jell Wilson 55-1, Betty Smith •86.k
Becky Kloes ,..• .

H igh Game -

Er1c

Bill Quickel

November 18, 1979
Sa rah Gibbs , Deputy Regi5ter
60
J In One
56
Jack'sOairyBar
56
Waldnlg Truck.ing Co .
54
Pickens Hardware
S2
Royal Crown
34
High Series - Larry Dugan 576,

5•2. Helen and Pat Carson

J oel

YEAR

Frye 's Pennzoll
French ' s Sunoco

Tony 's Carry Out
42
Swisher -Lohse
28
H igh Series - Char lie Smith 53 1,
A . L. Phelps, Jr . 502, Debi Hawley

Sr

''

POMEROY BOWLING LANES
EARLY SUNDAY MIXED

EARlY WEDNESDAY MIXED
November Jl , 1979
Longshon
67
Headquarters
65
Zlde's Sperl Shop
••
Smith -Nelson
.c.t

6 5 1 1, 201. Sr . quarterback Greg

1

Local howling

Team Game 776 .

Tim Mori ilrty , Eucl id , 6 3. 245 . Sr ..

•

receptions that gave the R.a1ders a
42-35 victory over New Orledns
would put him back in the good

2025

cen t er Joe Apke , Cin ci n na t i Moeller .

••
'

NEW ORLEANS 1AP l - &lt;A.kland
wide receiver Cliff Branch said he
hoped the two late-game touchdown

High Game John Tyree 234,
Larry Dugan 22'0. Bet1y Smith 188
Stephan ie Rought 166
'
Team Series - Jack 's Dairy Bar

Groza , Berea , 6 3, 225, Sr .. tackles

F i rst Team Defen se
Ends Orla ndo Lowry , Shak er
H eights, 6 4, 220 . Sr , and Lee
Grinonn eau , Toledo Roger s. 6 1, 705.
Sr
ta c kl es Jeff Bushong , Toledo
Whitmer , 6 3, 219, Sr , Tony Guiliani .
Westervi l le Sou t h , 6 foot , 245 , Sr ,
and Dennis Ca rpent er , Elyria . 6 l,
240. Sr . , m iddle guard Bob Simpson ,
Mass i l i on ,
6 f oot,
205 ,
Sr ,
lineback er s R ic k N ay lor , C1nc,nna t i
M oe ll er , 6 4, 215, Sr . , Mike Bo r en .
Columbus Eastmoor , 6 3. 230, Sr ,
and Dave Pr eston. Warren Harding,
6 2, 205 , Sr . , deep backs Mark
Ruggles , Logan , 6 2, 175, Sr , Eri c
Humbert , Cincinnati F orest Park . 6
foot , 190, Sr , al"'ld Bob Wh eeli ng ,
Cen terv i lie , 6 foot, 170 , Sr
Second Team Offense
Split ends Robbie Wood s. Dover ,
and Sh awn Mayernik, M entor Lake
Catholic. tigh t end Doug Swafford ,
Clayton Northmont: ta c kles Tony
Floyd , Canton M cK inle y , and Mike
Muchni c k i , Witlo ugl1b y South . guar
ds Gregg Lowe . Lakewood St Ed
ward , and Bob Priess , Mansfield
Mad ison ; ce nter Forrest Gregg Jr ,
Parma Padud : q uarterback Bruce
Gi ll a rd , Zanesvi l le . runn i ng ba cks
Bob Cay!.on , Wa rren w es te rn Reser
ve , Chri s Colla ros , Wi ntersvil le. and
Tim Starks . Cleve land H e ights
Second Team Defense
Ends B ob H illiard, LakewOOd St
Edward, and Cory Earl , Lorain.
ta c kle s Jim N ied , Maumee , e~ nd
John Angelo, Your'lgstown Chaney .
m idd le guard Ron HausfeiO , Cin
ci nnett i Roger Ba con .- l ineba cker s
Mark H oceva r , Warren Howland ,
Shawn , Sim ms , Fremont Ross, and
Mark Whit e, Strongsv ill e ; deep
bac k s Mark Rogers , Westerv i lle
North , John
Grim sley , Ca n ton
McKinley . and Tom Hardy , Parma
Pad uc1
T hi ret Team Offense
Sp li t ends
Marty
Guzzetta ,
Massillon , and Er ic Redman , Lan
cas t er . f ight ends Ed Wash ington ,
Cleve l and St . Joseph , and Ma rk
Cra wford . E ast Liverpool , tac kl es
Jeff M cKi nne y , Columbus Wa ln ut
Ridge . and Steve Finical. Man sfi eld
Seni or ; guards Doug George, Board
man .
and
Mit c h
Hathaway ,
Mac edonia Nordonia ; c enter D ave
Prater , Lima Senior . 5 11. 195. Sr :
quarte rba c ks D an SchOdowSkl, Par
ma Padu , and Jam ie DeVore .
Dover ; runn ing bac k s Garcia Lane ,
Youngstown Sou th . James Blac k ,
Dover . and Chris Mit ler , Day ton
Meadowdale .
Third Team Defense
E nds Dave Schmi tt er , Logan . and
Mike Barnett , Zanesville ; ta ck les
Dan Carpen ter , Elyr ia , and N ate
Rodgers, Warren Western Reserv e ,
m i dd le guard Mike
Traczyk ,
Cleveland St Joseph . li neba ck ers
Jan Bailey, New Philadel ph ia, Jon
Burger , Elyria . and Scott Stri cher c
zuk , Solon ; deep ba c k s Ga r y On
drus , Oregon Clay . Jim Cord iak ,
Lakewoo d Sf . Edward , and Jeff
Williams , L orain

Branch, Stabler combine for 42-35 victory

Country fresh Dlentbol.
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Warnrng The Su:geon General Ha s Oelermmed
Thai Ctgarelle Smok1ng Is Dangerous to Your Heal1h
KING 16 mg "ta r". t 1 n,g n1coune. tOO 's 1~ "tar" 13 mg mco11ne. av. per c1garqne. FTC Aepon MAY 78.
I
•

•

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.We

Federal Food

smmAY .9 ro iu

ne KeserYe 1ne Right To Umit

8 PAK 16 OZ.,
BTLS.

109

·Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

�7 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Dec. 4, 1979
fi- 'The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, v ., l'uesday , Dec. 4, 1979

Birthdays

;\nne lirrl/t'/1
POMEROY--Anne
Elizabeth
Brown, daughter of Dr . and Mrs .
Harold Brown, celebrated her first
birthday on Aug . II.
A party was held in her hon or at
the Brown home. "Teddy Time" was
the theme carried out and decorations were in pink and white with the
centerpiece being a Teddy Bear
cake .
Attending or sending gifts were
Dr. and Mrs . Brown, Nathan Brown,
Mrs. Agnes Brown, Sarah Brown
her great-grandmother , Mrs . Belt;
Sayre, Mrs . Ruth Massar, Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Brown, Mr . and Mrs
Qifford Phillips and Mr . and Mrs
WLI!iam Lambert .

•'

,
.'
••'
•

.•
•
•

•

•

Mr . and Mrs . John W. Grate. New
Haven, entertained on Monday , l'iov .
5, with a party hononng the1r
daughter, Tamara Nicole, on her
first birthday.
A Winnie-the-Pooh theme was car·
ried out in the cake and decorations .
Attending were her brother, Aaron
Matthew, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Grate, Mr . and Mrs . Otis Hesson,
Mr . and Mrs . T. J. Ferrell .
Sending gifts and cards were Miss
Lois Gibbs, Mr . and Mrs. Mike
Nicholson, Ryan and Bridg1t , Mr
and Mrs . Terry Schupbach, Staci,
Jeni, and Jana, Mr . and Mrs . Pa ul
Hesson, Paul II , Heath , Mr . and
Mrs. James George , Chris. Jodi and
Jamie .

~---Social

Calendar

TIJESDAY
OIDO ETA Pill CHAPI'ER, Bel..
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7: 30 Tuesday
night at the Athens CoWJty Saving~!
and Loan Co. Kathy Doidge to have
the cultural reoort: Sonja Ohlinger
and Susan Well to be hostesses.
CHESTER
COUNCIL 323
Daughters of America Tuesday 7:30
p.m . First nomination of officers .
Layette shower lor Emma and Keith
Ashley .
ORDER ol Eastern Stars ,
Pomeroy, Tuesday 7:30p.m .
MEETING of all team represen tatives of the Meigs County Church
Basketball League , 7 :30 p .m.
Tuesday at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church to schedule
games.
WEDNFSDA\'
CHRISTMAS Bazaar Wednesday
9:30 a .m . to 4 p.m . at United Pentecostal Church , Middleport .
JNSTAIJ.ATION of officers at a
regular meeting ol Pomeroy Lodge
164. F and AM , 7 30 p .m . Wednesday .
SOUTHEAST Ohio Garden Tractor Club Wednesday 7:30 p.m. in
scout building located behind
firehouse in Chester . All interested
persons invited to attend .
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB , home of Mrs . Nan Moore, 2
p.m . Wednesday . Mrs . Charles
Gaskill to give a nostalgia review;
Mrs . Bert Grimm, "Sadat , in Search
of Identity" . Roll call, my first
literary club reVJew . Business
meeting w1U be held
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Middleport First United Presbyterian
Church , 7:30 Thursday at the
church Group I to have the pro~ram . Group II hostesses. InstallaOon of new officers by Mrs . Walter
WaddeU .
EV ANGEI.JNE CHAPTER 172
Order of the Eastern Star, 7 :30p.m:
at the Middleport Masonic Temple .
O!ristmas party to be held with $2
gift exchange.
CHRISTMAS PROGRAM and gilt
exchange when the Willing Workers
Class of the Enterprise United
Methodist Church meets at 1:30 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Marjorie
Bowen.
WEEKEND REVIVAL, 7: 30 each
evening, Thursday through Sunday
at the Freedom Gospel Mission,
Bald Knob, with Noah Burgess
speaking and special music each
evening; public invited.
ANNUAL CHRISTMAS bazaar at
Meigs Senior Citizens Center, 9 a .m.
to 3 p .m. Thursday and Friday; a
public ham dinner will be served
from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday with complete meal for adults, $2.50 and $1.:i0
for children under 12. Many handmade items for sale during bazaar.
FRIDA\'
ARRANGE FOR personal visit
from St . Nick through Otuo Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi sorority,
no later than today by calling Kathy
Doidge , 992-6246 ; Nancy Hill, 9926143, or Conrue Dodson, 992-3236.
SATURDAY
BAKE SALE. Saturday , beginning
at 9 a .m . at Warner's !nsurance
Agency, W. Main, Pomeroy;
homemade candy , Christmas
cookies , pies , cakes, bread . Sponsored by Enterprise United
Methodist Church.
MONDAY
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS 7 30
Monday night at the tugh ~hool
band room .

Announce birth
Mr . and Mrs . Paul Rice or Hutland
are announcing the birth ol a son on
Nov . 16 at Holzer Medical Center .
The baby bas been named Steven
Paul . He weighed six pound!! , one
ounce . Paternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Harold Rice, Rutland,
and maternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs . Edgar Abbott, Pomeroy .
Great-grandparents are Mrs. Lester
Foremen. Mason. and Mr. and Mrs.
Arlee Abbott, Pomeroy. Steven also
has a brother, Shawn , two .

Receives
loss pin
Me!J.s.sa Hottman re&lt;-e1ved her :;o
pound pin at the Mason Class of
Slinderella held last week at the
Catholic Olurch . Five new members
were welcomed and Terri Michael
was recognized as the member having lost the most weight, with
Virginia Johnson, the runner-up .
At tbe Middleport Class, Peggy
Lewis lost the most weight while
Peggy Hill was the runner-up . Patsy
Ross lost the most weight in the
Point Pleasant class, with Lillian
Olapman as the runner-up. Three
new members were accepted .
Wormation on classes can be obtained from Mrs. Jo Arm Newsome,
instructor, 992.J382. a asses now being held are Mason, 7:30p.m . Mon day ., 10 :30 a.m . Tuesday, Catholic
Omrch ; Middleport,
Monday,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m ., Heath United
Methodist Church; Pint Pleasant,
Krodel Park Oub House, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. A class is also being
organized in the Pomeroy area for
men to be held al7 : 30 p.m . on 'Ilmrsday .

Women
informed of
truth of rapes
" Women should know the truth
ahout rape in order to better protect
and prepare themselves from a
possible attack," says Ceal Thompson, staff coordinator for REACH
IRape Emergency and Crisis Help 1.
REACH is an organization of volunteers who help rape victims . Their
services are available through
CRISISLINE.
Truths ahout rape include the
following :
- Women do not "ask for rape ." A
woman's clothing, behavior or activity does not provoke a rape . Rape
is a violent crime, not a seKual
crime . Even if the rapist thinks the
act Is sexual and enjoyable lor the
woman, it is not. Nothing that a
woman wears or does justifies a
brutal and violent act upon her.
- All women are vulnerable to
rape . The rapist is not necessarily
seeking a young, attractive woman,
but a woman who Is easy to attack.
Young children, older women and
women with physical handicaps are
especially vulnerable. But no
woman is immune from attack .
- Most often women are attacked
by men they know : family members
- fathers, husband!!, brothers, a
friend or neighbor, or simply
someone the woman has seen
before .
- Most rapes are welli&gt;lanned .
The rapist is not a sexually unfulfilled man, carried away by a sudden uncontrollable sexual desire. As
a matter of fact, most rapists have
access to sexual partners. Their
motive Is usually to dominate ani
control.
A woman can be raped by her
husband . Any act of sexual conduct
to wtuch a woman does not consent
is rape .
- A passive woman is not willing
to be raped. Many people believe
that a nonnal healthy woman cannct
be rnped if she puts up a struggle.
However, ~an unarmed attacker
poses a serious threat of physical injury to most women. Many women
are afraid to fight back; they are
trained neither physically or mentally to deal with the attack .
- Rapists represent all races and
classes. In 93 percent ol rapes, the
rapist and victim are of the same
race. Rapists a re as likely to be
professional, white-eollar men as
working class or WJemployed men.
The REACH program is designed
to help rape victims whether they
wish to report the crime to the
authorities or not . !nfonnation is
confidential . The specially trained
REACH volunteers are availble
through CRISISI.JNE at 4&lt;16-5554 in
Gallia County, 286-SS54 in Jackson
County and 992-5554 in Meigs County .

Have Christmas
tree shower

Lori Ta )'/or

1.

Lori Ann Taylor , daughter of
Ronald and Brenda Barr Ta vi or
Fostoria, recently observed · he1:
third birthday . Joining Lcri for lwr
birthday observance were her
maternal grandparents, Dale and
Pauline Barr, Reedsville ; MerriU
and Mlly Taylor, paternal grandparents, Pomeroy ; Marie Offutt,
Tuppers Plains, maternal g" algrandmother.

Richard Neal Blevins, Route I,
Dexter , celebrated hi s first birthday
Thursday . Present for I he party
where cake and ice eream were
served were his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Elbert Mullins, his uncle,
Oliver Mullins. ""d his aunt, Debby
Mullins

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mora
entertained Sunday evening with a
uruque surprise, a Ouistmas tree
shower, lor their son and daughterinlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mora
recenUy married .
'
The guests attending brought new
or used Christmas decorations for
the couple's new horne. An evening
luncheon was served from a
candlelight Christmas decora ted
table. Attending were the honored
couple's daughter, Jennifer. Mr . and
Mrs. Max Eichinger. Max and
Becky Eichinger ' Scott Hill, Mr . and
Mrs. Allen Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs.
.John Fry , Mrs. Altona Karr, Mrs.
J" ckie Fr"st, Mike alld Debbie
Hrian Bissell, Me Iissa Thomas '
C.eorge Ml'ra . Janet " "d Judy Mnra '

Syracuse Auxiliary
disbands this year
By Janice LawMn
The Syracuse Ladies Auxiliary ol
the Volunteer Fire Department was
organt.zed April 20, 1!159. The duties
of the Auxiliary were to assist the
fire and emergency units. And in
later years it assisted the town .
To do this the Auxiliary held jitney
suppers, bake sales, soup sales,
chicken dinners, sold cotton candy ,
made and filled Easter baskets
made candy Easter eggs, had a con:
cession stand at the local ballpark,
put on plays, and made apple butter .
A Sympathy Circle was formed .
This provided a complete dinner for
the families who bad deaths In town.
The food was donated by the members except for the meat . Some ol
the families gave donations . This
was kept in a special fund at the
bank and meat for the dinners was
purchased with this.
The Auxiliary has paid the insurance on the emergency squad,
bought coveralls, sheets and pillow
cases, and paid for first aid courses
for the squad. They bought boots,
coats, and gloves lor the fire department. They paid nearly $2,000 on the
new fire truck . They paid for the
sidewalk at the swimming pool,
equipped the kitchen at the
municipal building with stove,
refrigerator, cabinets, tables, and
chairs .
At one time, there were 30 members in the Auxiliary. Now through
death and other interests only seven
remain . Seven CB/Ulol hold suppers
or any of the other numerous moneymaking activities. Of this seven
four work and three have health
problems . So not even the sympathy
dinners can be fixed. They haven\
been for almost a year. But at each
death in town a pot ol flowers has
been sent.
At Christmas time the Fire Department and the Auxiliary have spon-

'J'renton Um•is

Announce birth
Jason and Tonya Davis are announcing the birth of their second
child, a son, born on Nov . 2 at the
Holzer Medicnl Center, Gallipolis .
The infant has been named
Trenton-Joe Keebaugh Davis. He
weighed eight pounds IS ounces and
was 21 Inches long . Mr. and Mrs .
Davis have a daughter , Stacy
Talisha, 21 months old.
Maternal grandparents are Marvin and Marjorie Keebaugh,
Pomeroy ; Levanchia C..in, greatgreandmother, and Bertha Randolph, great-great-grandmother,
both ol Reedsville. and the late
Lcuise Keebaugh. Trenton-Joe Is the
first boy in the family ol Mrs. Marjorie Keebaugh in four generations,
and the first in two generations in
the family of Marvin Keebaugh.
Paternal grandparents are
Clarence and Jean Davis, and Elva
Davis and Clara Redman, greatgrandmothers, aU ol Mason, W. Va .

sored a visit from Santa Claus on the
Sunday afternoon before Cluistrnaa.
For several years now the Auxiliary
has stood the entire bill lor the candy.
Now after 20 years, it seems all
this must come to an end. After the
treats are paid lor this year our
treasury will be gone and so will the
Auxiliary . But maybe people will
remember the good that was done
for the town, by the bard work (and
it was bard work I by these ladies
who gave of their time and themselves for these projects.

EXTEND THANKS
Mona and Merle Johnson, cochairpersons, today extended
thanks to workers and contributors
who gave $105.09 in the mental
health drive conducted recently in
Rutland . Given a special thanks
were the workers who included Patti
Dugan, Kay Gilmore, Syndla
Weaver and Cathy Morrison .

BAZAAR WEDNESDA \'
A Christmas bazaar will be held
Wednesday in the basement of the
Pentecostal Church, South Third,
Middleport, from 9:30a.m. to 4 p.m .
Chri.stmas items will be on sale.
CORRECTION
Grandmother ol the daughter of
Kristin Shea Swan, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Bill Swan, Ashland, Ky .,
born Nov . 3, is Mrs. Marvin (Ruth)
Swan and great1!fandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Swan, Portland .

TRUS'I'EE&lt;! TO MEET
Bedford ToWIIIIhip Trustees will
meet at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the
home of Helen Swartz.

A LASTING GIFT

FROM SANTA

Health Review
By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
Clinical Associate ProfrASor
of FamUy Medicine
Ohio Unlvenlty College
ol O.letlpalhlc Medicine
" NEGLECT" BEST MEDICINE
FOR BEIJ..'S PALSY
QUF.si'ION : My husband awoke
one morning with his face all
screwed up funny . His doctor called
it Bell 's palsy . What is this '
ANSWER : This disease is one ol
those neurological disorders we
have been discussing recently m this
column. Bell's palsy involves
paralysis of the seventh cranial nerve which serves the face muscles .
There are a total of 12 nerves which
supply the essential structores ol the
face and neck . These nerves can be
divided into two groups . Impulses
from the motor nerves move the
muscles of the face, jaw, eyes , neck
and tongue ; whereas, sensory ner.
ves send messages back to the brain
informing it of pain, heat or touch.
Specifically, the seventh cranial nerve supplies most of the muscles
which move the lips, eyelids, cheeks,
nose, forehead and eyebrows .
When this nerve is paralyzed on
only one side - which is often the
case- the person is unable to smile,
chew or whistle without appearing to
be smirking or screwing up his lace.
The eye on the affected side cannot
be closed and speech is slurred .
Also, the victim 's whole face gives
the appearance ol drooping on the
side ol the paralysis .
QUESTION : What do you think
caused my husband to have this
problem'
ANSWER: Paralysis of the seventh cranial nerve has many causes ,
including brain tumors , meningitis
and accidents . Further, the
degenerative diseases I have
discussed in recent articles can
result in such paralysis . However, a
true Bell's palsy affects only the
part of this nerve located outside the
central nervous s ystem and L•
seldom serious or life threatening .
The exact cause of this palsy is not
known, though some evidence points
toward allergic reactions and cold
Viruses which get into the nerve as
possible factors .
Since your husband's physician
~s diagnosed Ius ailment as Bell's
~y, the chances of recovery are
uceUent. A negative prognosis
(likely outcome of an illness I would
be in order if a more serious distur·
bance in the nervous system had
been the culprit.
QUESTION : Why didn't my

husband's doctor prescnbe ~ny
medication lor him?
ANSWER : Intelligent neglect is
often the safest approach with this
palsy . Osteopathic physicians talk a
great deal about the ability of the
body to heal itself and Bell's palsy is
a good example of a disease to which
this philosophy can be applied. It is
usually sell limiting and will begin to
disapper in about three or four
weeks . The patient should recover
completely in three or lour months.
Although major drugs are not
needed, your husband's doctor may
Wlsh to massage the face muscles in
an upward direction to aid in a more
complete return to normal function .
Also, oil drops in the eye will help
prevent drying out of the eyeball
because ol inability to close the eye .
These are both methods, however,
designed to support the body's
recovery mechanisms and are net
used as a primary therapy to treat
the disease itaelf.
I s hould ment10n that a cortisone
drug is available which can shorten
the course ol the illness. While this
drug is a primary therapy and may
be useful in some cases, 1t must be
started as soon as symptoms begin
in order to be at all effective.

Gt•nc&gt;ration Rap
lh lld• ·n and 'w· Hullt ·l
PARENTS SHOULD ADD SENSE
TO THEIR RIGID CENSORING
By Helen and Sue Hottel
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My father is so afraid of my
mora!B being contaminated that he
won l even let me read "Catcher in
the Rye," which is on our high school
book report list. He makes sure the
only movies I see are Disney types even PG is a little much lor him.
As for television, it's turned off at
9 p.m., when the good stuff (if there
is any) starts . He figured "Roots"
and " Holocaust" were too violent lor
me. and besides there was some
S.E.X . inthem!
My mother doesn \ agree entirely,
but he's boss and she stays quiet .
Must I keep on reading nursery
stories until I leave home' - PROTECTED OUT OF MY MIND
DEARPOOMM :
What keeps you fr&lt;m reading
those banned classics (and other
good books I outside the home' When
one parent is wrong, the other too
weak to change things, then I say
disobedience is justified. -SUE
DEAR PROI'ECJ'ED:
r Just reread a story which might
give your censoring father fits. It
described child abuse, starvation,
youngsters abandoned to die from
hunger, wild animals or fear; cannibalism, imprisonment, burning
. alive; not to speak of deceit,
jealousy, a weak father and a cruel
step-mother.
It was - " Hansel and Gretel."
To be consistent, good ol · Dad
should burn your nursery tales also .
-HELEN

RAP :

Has 92nd birthday
Mrs . Nora Bobo celebrated her
birthday on Saturday , Dec . I , at

OF3
BEAUTIFUL
STYLES

~d

EACH AT
ONE LOW PRICE ·

The CLINTON • L2504E
Mode rn sty \1 ng . Oak wood grained !1n 1ih appli ed to
d urable wood pr od uc ts on top
an d ends w1th se lec t ha rdwood
so lidS fra m1ng top Fr on t and
bas e of Simu la ted wood. An t1que 1
Oak c olo r fm 1sh . Caste rs

'54400

Early Amen can ~'. •1ng.
Maple w ood-g ra ,nea 11n1sh
appl1ed t o durable w ood
pr od uc ts o n top and ends
wdh selec t h ardwOOd so lids
lram1ng to p Gallery o l sohd

WIT

THIS WEEK ONLY!!!

· \ E LECTRONI C
.
VIDE O GUARD
TUNING SYS TEM
Tuners have no mo v1ng parts to
corrode . wear o r c au se IJICiur e

~
-~--HAMPSHIRE • L2506M

\- "ftl.

Mapl e Fr on t a ncJ ba se o f

Simu lated wooo Brack et
foot dcs1g ned base . Casters .

the home of Mr . and Mrs . Arthur
Eblen on Harrisonville Road. Mrs .
!lobo makes her home with the
Eblens .
Visiting her dUring the day were
Mrs . Doris McDonald and Jim,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Sue DeLong,
Pl:mieroy, R. D.; Frank Bobo, Ounbar, W.Va .; Mrs. Blanche Edwards,
Hobson, Mrs . June Th&lt;mas and
Shari, Cheshire.
Mrs. Clyde Van Cooney called
from Arizona to wish her mother a
happy birthday .

1

pro blems

The SEGOVIA • L2~08
Med1terra nean sty l1ng Wood g rained f1n 1sh applied to
d urable w ood produc ts o n top
a nd ends w1th sele ct hardwood
solids tram1ng top. Fro nt and
ba se o f s1mulated wood .
Dark Oa k color (l 2!&gt;0BOE ) or

TRI -FOC US
PI CTURE TUBE
lor the sharpest Zen 1t h
p1 c tu re eve r.

TRIPLE - PLU S CHA SS IS
des1gned to be the mos t
rel1able Zen it h ever

P ec a n co lor (L2SOOP)
C asters .

CHROMAT IC
ONE- BUITON
TUNING

PLUS • Vollage Regutallng

Selec t pre -set Color level and
Tm t plus P1c ture Control
ad JUStme nts .

t

----

SJ"OP IN TODAY!
-·

--

-

-

Electronic Power Sentry

• Picture Control

Syllem

• Automallc Flne-tuntr19
Control

One-Knob VHF ond UHF
Channel Selector

• Illuminated Chann111
Number~

NOW'S.THE TIME---m -BUY!
-

-

---

-

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
"Two In One Store"
106 N. 2nd Ave.

DONATION BOX PLACED
A box for gilts for Meigs County
folks at the Athens Menial Health
Center has been placed in Davis !nsurance on Second St. Pomeroy .
Residents are reminded that pickup
time for the gifts is Dec. 10. Mrs .
Mary Martin, 992-7022, is head of the
&lt;llristmas project and questions
pertaining to suitable items should
be directed to her.

Middleport, 0.

RETURN HOME

RAONE-Capt. and Mrs . Karl
Russell, Melissa and Kenny , return ·
ed to their home in Jacksonville, N.
C. after spending the thanksgivmg
weekenJ here with their parents.
Mr . and Mrs . Roy Smith , Don and
Mike and Mr . and Mr• . Kenreth
Rllssell.

Since the arrival of our baby and
my husband's recent big promotion,
I have no friends left. I can only ·
guess what happened :
In the case of one girl, her hu.•band
Is violently against children, so
evidently that, along with jealousy
over Jake 's advancement, turned
lhemolf.
Another couple is always "too
busy" to invite us over. or they cant
afford the gas to visit us (but they go
elsewhere 1). I think they're also
jealous.
Yet another so-called friend said
she would invite me to lunch -four
months ago. So far, nothing . I'm not
at the office anymore, so I can no
longer do her office favors.
When I have a party, they don t
show up or even send regrets.
Several other people have dropped
UBI!at, it seems.
I don' borrow or gossip . I try to be
nice . Why mUBt people resent our
success so much they want nothing
more to do with us'- FRIENDLESS
FRIENDLESS:
U one friend abandons you, then
you might blame jealousy or
thoughtlessness. But when all do,
perhaps you should loo~ to yourself .
Are you coming across new-mother
stuffy, or new-job superior' Have
you somehow turned people off'
Why not ask these questions of the
woman you considered your best
friend . Perhaps she lllevel with you.
-HELEN
FRIENDLESS :
Remember too, people get busier
and bualer . Maybe you're expecting
more ol casual friends than they can
easily offer . Working women are
short on time, as you should recall
from your office days. -SUE
(GOT A PROBLEM ? Or a subject
lor discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both , il you
want a combination mother daughter answN - 1n care of this
ne w ~ra ve r

1

C'raft exhibit, demonstration given
A teaching: demonstrC:I tlon and ex-

hibtt uf Christmas crafts by Mrs.
Charles Knight and Mrs. Curti&gt; King
was a highlight of a recent meeting
of the Chester Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs . Richard Barton .
Mrs . Knight displayed Queen
Anne 's lace nower heads which had
been cut in July and carefully pressed in heavy catalogs . The large ones
are to be used as ornaments and the
small ones as a design on stationary .
She also made a pine cone wreath
using nora! tape on the wire frame
to prevent slipping . The larger cones
were used on the outside area, while
the smaller ones Wf&gt;rf' li~Prl tOW;l r.-1

lhe center For a good des1 ~n . the
cl uster of mate rial for the focal
area s were placed at the poinl&lt;of a n
imaginary triangle . The cones were
t·ut c rosswis e to provide added intert!St .
Mrs . King created a winter des1gn
of pine cones . candlerings and cotton
tn a brandy snifter . Usin g dried
material, ribbon and baubles, she
decorated a wooden spoon , bread basket and hearth broom lor holiday
decorations .
It was noted that $1 per member
had been sent to the Meigs County
Christma• flower show fund .

Mernt)('r~

vulunleerl'rl to make etrrangt'rnt:'nls and pruv 1de sa ndwic hes
and roulu es for the show hel d over
the weeke nd .
Mrs. Leona rd Erwtn was devotiona l lea der a nd used the
Thanksgivmg theme. She commented on the different slagcs of
family life using as her top1c. "The
Home has a Heart ."
Mrs . Pa uline Collett , Bel pre
Garden Club, sent thanks for the
hospitality e xtended her when she
was guest demonstrator at an open
meeting of the Cl ub at the Chester
United Methods1t Church. Mrs. Col·
let dis played 20 arrangemenL&lt;,
many featuring unusual weathe red
wood and dried materials . She
answered questions and commented
thatarrangmg is an art fonn , a fonn
of free eJlpression. Twenty-four
members and 19 guests from seven
gard e n c lub s e n JO y e d t he
demonstration .

Missionary Baptist
Assn. meets Friday
The first annual banquet of the
Providence Missionary Baptist
Association was held Friday, Nov . 30
at 8 p.m. in the cafeteria of the Rio
Grande College.
The Rev. and Mrs . Ear I L.
Strother of the First Baptist Church,
Rendville, were chairpersons lor the
banquet and the Rev. Mr. Strother
served as master ol ceremonies . The
opening song was "Lift Every Voice
and Sing" with the Rev. J . D. King,
pastor of the Triedstone Baptist
Olurch in Gallipolis.
Following the dinner there was a
recognition service. Service award
plaques were presented by the
Rev .L. V. Gause, moderator of the
Providence Association and pasUl'
of the United Community Baptist
Olurch in Chillicothe, to Mrs.
Dorothy Thomas, president ol the
Women's Auxiliary; Mrs. Bernie,
Borden, dean of Christian Education, Mt. Carmel Church, Bidwell;
Mrs. Lula Hampton, Noami Baptist
Church, clerk of Providence
A:lsociation; Jessie Roberts, First
Baptist, G!ouster, president of the
Sunday School Convention ol the
Providence Association, aU having

resigned their offices. Recognition
was given to others who have
faithfully worked in the Association
over the years .
Mrs . Sirother sang two solos, " I'd
Rather Have Jesus" and " If I Can
Help Somebody As I Pass Along."
Guest speaker was the Rev . I. T.
Bradley, president of the Congress
ol Christian Education of the Ohio
Baptist General Convention, and
pastor of Christ Memorial Baptist
Church in Columbus . His subject
was "Rejoicing in the Work of the
Faithful ."
Mrs. Barbara Scott, supervisor of
the Hattie Jackson Guild Girls of
Providence Association, and the
guild members were hostesses for
the affair. The Rev . W. L. Taylor of
the MI. Olive Baptist Church in Ironton had the closing prayer.
Serving on the conunittee with the
Rev . and Mrs. Strother were the
Rev . Vance Watson, the Rev .
Douglas Carter, the Rev. Grover
Turner, the Rev. John D. King, Mrs .
Thomas, Mrs . Borden , Mrs .
Florence Richards , Mrs. Hampton.
Mrs . Sarah Stone , and Ma urice
Payne .

Birth
announced
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Hubbard are announcing the birth ol their second
child, Stacey Talisha, born on Nov.
21 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed seven pounds,
eight ounces and was 21 mches long .
Maternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Frank Imboden, Racine .
and the paternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs . Bill Hubbard,
Syracuse .
Paternal
great·
grandparent is Virgie Stewart, Point
Pleasant, W. Va ., and the maternal
great-grandparents are Mrs. Freda
Warth, Hartford. W. va . and Mrs .
Neva Grimm , Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Hubbard ha ve a four
year old son , Scottie

Officers were elected a.tthe recent
meeting of the Meigs Count y Christian Fellowship! held at the Zion
Church ol Christ .
Elected were Ma rge Pewtel.
president : Jane Hazelton, ftr st vice
president ; Regina Swift ,second vJ&lt;,
pr e si de nt ; Vir g mi a Wyat t ,
secretary; Evelyn Smith , trea surer:
Ida Murphy, card lady ; and Marge
Will , news reporter .
Theme of the m eeting was the
hom of plenty Wlth De bbie Melton as
song leader, and Marilyn w1Jcox,
pianist. The opening hymn was " He
Lilted Me" and Nonna RUSS&lt;ell bad
prayer. Mrs. Hazelton rea d " K een·

24.

:·, :,. ~

I HOLIDAY

l

;~ .

SEASON

~

~

\

~

I
i
I
I
1
I

\ I C/~ ' i
- - · .1 -~ .
OJ'
, ,.......
:
\ \
;

DRESS
SHOES
30% OFF

\

~

\
s trap s.
san dl c s .
&amp; p ump s

1

I

l con'nle·

.,

I

\

Be r e ad y for Ho!J d ~ y
P ar t1 es 111 sl1 ck ank le

bv. f

lI

I
1
1
\

i

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New Holiday Hours : Ope n T il 8 Fn . thru Christm as

I

'

I

CHAPMAN SHOES
" Next to Elberlelds in Pomeroy "

..-...-...-.. ,_...._..

APPEARING THROUGH THE HOLIDAY
SEASON AT THE

INN PLACE

DONAHUE
3 PIECE GROUP
WITH VOCAL

WEDNESDAY &amp;THURSDAY NIGHT

9 til 1
FRIDAY

I
I

l
I

.._...-- .._.._...._....-. ,_..._..._..._....._... ,_..._.. ,_.._.....- ..__._.~~

&amp; SATURDAY

NIGHT

10 til 2
Enfoy Yourself At The

ASKED TO BRING GIFIS
Members of the Rock Springs
Grange are asked to take their gifts
lor patients at the Athens Me ntal
Health Center to either Mrs .
*'ram:!:!~ &lt;;o( ·~ leJn ur Mrs &amp;rbara
Fry by Dec 10 .

I

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES

I\

wac. - SARAH
DEAR POLLY - f never wash my
rolling p1n but wipe It cl ean With a
ball of line nylon net.
To keep loa ves of bread from get·
ling damp while in the lree2er l put
them tn two plastic bags with a
heavy paper towel in between U1em.
If you should put too much salt tn
beans add a grated potato and simmer .
To straighten candles that have
bent from the heal lay them on a
piece of paper in the back of a
lukewarm oven and leave about 15
minutes. When removed roll on a
llat surface . I Polly 's Note - lithe
paper is placed on a coolo e shett
there will be less rolling required to
make them smooth.) - VANCE
Polly will send you one of her sign ed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
colwnn . Write POlLY'S POINTER
in care of this newspaper.

Uig Christmas " with Catherine
Russell singing " Pass it On."
Devotions by Merle Johnson were
t ak en from Psalms 110 on
'Tha nksgiving 10ith Mrs. Melton giv ·
Uig praye r. Officers' reports were
read , along with a thank you note. It
was announced that food will be collected for a needy famil y with aU
food to be turned in by Dec. 15.
Mrs. Pewtel and Mrs. Ann
Lambert sang "follow Me" to close
the mee llng Refreshments were
served in t he social room . Next
meellng w1U be at Bradbury on Jan.

r·-·------·- ~~----·~~..._...._._.._.._, __ ~ ~.--; ~· ..------· --l

.

Polly Cramer
t:OAT STILL SMELLS MUSTY
By Polly Cramer
POLL \''S PROBLEM
DEAR POLL\' - What can I do to
remove the musty smell from a coat
lhat ,... once left nt for too long?
- CAL
DEAR CAL - First try hanging
the coat outside on a sunny day .
Leave it all day and even the next
day if need be. You could put it in a
closed drawer with lots of crushed
newspaper and leave it lor a couple
ol weeks. Do protect the coat fabric
from the newsprint. A box of baking
soda (open, of course) could also be
put in a box or drawer with the coat
and left for a time . Has it been dry
cleaned' That, too, might held . POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When a room
has a musty ardor air it well and
then set open boles with kitty litter
in them in various spots around the
room. Lime will absorb the moisture
and help keep your cellar dry . Al.JCE
DEAR POLLY - Many ol the
readers, especially Myrna, may be
making their own Christmas
candles. Do tell them not to melt the
wax in a can that is set directly on
the stove burner. The can seam
could split and one could be burned
badly as well as make a terrible
mess. I put the can ol wax in a large
kettle~ hot water . The was Is not so
scalding hot and it seems to take
care of the problem of bubbles In the

Christian Fellowship
elects officers recently

I~

POLLY·s POINTERS

A thank yo u note was read from
the famil y ol Martha Rose . In an impressive ceremony, Mrs. Reid
Young, outgomg president, Installed
the new officers . They are Mrs .
Ric hard Baton , president ; Mrs.
William Buckley, vice president ;
Mrs . Dale Mac hir, second vice president; Mrs. Rand y Young, secretary;
Mrs . Richard Koblent.z, a!&lt;'listant
sa-r etary ; Mrs. Charles Knight,
treasurer ; and Mrs. Howard Knight,
assistant treasurer .
InJormat10n on the amaryllis was
given by Mrs. Buel Ridenour, and
Mrs. Oris Frederick reported on
parrott tulips. On Nov . 29 several
member s toured the Gl ass House
Works. Mrs . Charles Kuhl was the
tour chainnan .
Mrs. Robert Wood and Mrs. Kirk
Chevalier assisted Mrs. Barton in
s.e rving a dessert course . The dining
room was decorated in a Thanksgiving motif .

MEIGS INN

�8 - The Dailv SPntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 4, 1979

9- The Ually :&gt;en\IJlel , Mtdilleport ~ Pome ruy , lJ , Tuesda y, IJce ~ . 197Y

Your Best Buys Are f.,ound in the Sentinel Classifieds

DICK TRACY
YES , AND AN

Notices
-

WANfAD
CHARGES

~--

1$ Wonb or Under
Cull
Cllort!•
I day
1.00
1.:.
2d.ys
1.50
190
}_(I)
2.~
ldays
&amp;days

3.00

3.75

Each word over the minimum
15 W'Orda is 4 centa per word per
day . Ada~ other than CU'I secutive dily11 ~~nU be charxed at
tht! 1 day rate

ln memory , Card of ThatW
and Obituary · 8 cents per word ,

13.00 minimwn
.

Cuh

Ll1

-~_li-~ ~&lt;~.nted

~---

M EIGS

COU NT Y

HUMAN E SOCIET Y 991
6260
Pe t s available l or
adop t ion and intormtt tio n
se rv ice
I nves f ig afiv e
Agent

GU N
S f&lt; OO T
EVERY
S UNDAY 1 PM FA CT ORY
CHOKE O N LY RACINE
GUN CLUB
HUNTING ,
NO
no
fr espass•ng w i th no ex
cep tion s on my prope rty
Judy M cGra w Se lf

&amp;d -

'lUll~

MobUe H&lt;.me sales and Yarrl
!lalea are al'~pted only wiUl
cash llrith order . ~ ~nt charge

for ad:! carryllijl Box Number in
Care uf nw Sentin~l.
The Publuher reserves t.be
_nght to edH or ~ject any ads
deemed objecti onal.
The
PubhMer will not be re:sporuibl.e
foc mor-e than o~ mcorrect III Jtertmn

GU N
SH OO T
Ra ci ne
Vo lunt eer
Fire
De pt
E very Saturday 6 30 p m
At their bu ildi ngin Bashan
Factory c hoke guns onl y
GU N SH OOT ev ery Sunday
12 00 Fac to ry c hoke onl y
Corn H oll ow Gu n Club ,
Rutland Proceed s donated
TO Boy Scou t Troo p 249

Phont' 992-2156

N"OTICE
WANf-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

""''"''

Noon oo"S.s t urrb )'

HAVE
YOUR
tr ophy
mo unt e d
B•rch fi e ld 's
Ta)(idermy on 124, eas t of
Rutland 614 742 2178

RA CI N E GU N CLUB .
D EC 31 LAST DATE TO
PAY DUES FOR 1980. i tO

Tuesday
thruFnda y
4P.M.
ltw day bl!fo~

GET TOOAY ' S M ARKET
VAL UE FOR YOU R GOLO
OR SILVE R CO N TACT
ED BURKETT BARBER
S H OP . MIOOLEPORT .
OH

publ.lt:Hltull

489

tOO t9
da te

Sunday
&lt;PM
fo' r1day afternoon

PUBLIC NOTICE
Se aled bids will be a c
cepted at fhe Federa l Land

Bank Association, 12B Up
per River Road , Gallipolis ,

OH 45631. on or before
Dec ember 14/1979,_at 12 .00
noon , for ftle ollow1 ng
1975 Chevrol et Impala , 4

dr ., PS . PB , AC. Rad ial
Tires

Federal
Land
Bank
reserves the ,-ight to reject
all bids _ The c ar can be

seen at above address

Radio C1ty statton. N Y
Be sure to SPttetty bH th

CA.PRfCORN (O.C . Zl-Jan . ,V}
In deahng w1th another today you
m1ght he~e oreconce•~ed n~a ­
, ,~e not1ons as 10 now th1 s per son will react Ho wever . he or
she w ltltreat you m o r e la1rly than
you surm1sed
AQUARIUI (.Mn. 20-Feb . 111}
That little extra effort you may be
asked to put out today workw1se
'' go•ng to oa~ a larger dl'lldend
than you rBBII~e Do your bllst

PISCES {Feb. ZO..March 20) TI"Ml
Chip on the other gu y' s shoulder
tsn 't 'o'ery big . With the leest
amount ol tlflort on your part .

you ·u have thl l person purring

In

no t1me

ARIEl

(Mirch

Somethmg

tn

21-Aprll

wh ich

11}

~ou · re

•nvo1vea wil l !Ike a potltlve turn
and w ork out nicer than you

11213, 4. 5, 6. 7, 5t c

anti cipated

ASTRO· GRAPH
Bernice Bede O sol

You r tea rs Are

groundless
TAURUS {April 20--Miy 20) In a
matter on wh ic h othert are not
so well Informed aa you. try not
to be too In fluenced by their
opinion• Your views are much
more acc~.Jrate

IMey 21~Juno 20)
Allhough It may come aa a

OIMINI

aurprlae. you r check book won 1
be et heavily dented 11 you
auumed Fundi will 1tretcM far ther ~II.JM of eome unuaual
ci rcum"ancea

CANCI" (Juno 21-July 22)
GOOd things will be happening

OK.mbtr 5. 1171

IAQITTAAIU8
Just

when

aoprec•ates

(~ -

you

D-O.C. 21)

Mpee up . Condfllont hl\'lng 1n
lntluenc. on your teetlnga of
well· belng end MCurlty are tt lrry
They tortellaomethlng gOOd

nobody

VI"QO (Aug . 21-hpt. Ill) You 'll

someo ne

heve much more luck todly If
you get othert to go along with
your ldeu ret,.,er than gotng
along with tl"1elrl It won "! be 11
Ol fflcutt u you think
(lopt. n-Oct. H) •
break comes t oda~ from an area
you 'd teaat expect . so be patient
11 at rtrat things too~ dade. You

think

yo u .

to brighten your outlook
tnd gt\'e you a much more optlmlttlc perapectlve.
LIO (July 21-Aug, Ill) KM!&gt; your

today

Before the year l ollowmg your
blrtnday 9f'1dl . lh1nga will have
turned out tor you In a most to r lunate we)' Look to r t he unusual
to happen at the most unexpect ed umes

1mportant wtll come along today

to reward you 1n a most gener ou s !ashton You ' ll deserve •I
Getting al ong with other SIQn!i 1s
one a t 1he 9.8C t 10n9 you· !l en IO'f 1n
you r Astr a-Grap h Letter wh1ch
b&amp;g1ns wit h your btrlhday Ma1 l
S 1 l or each to Astr o -G ra on Aor

uau

Meigs
Property
Transfers

•

•

••

•
••

Mildred K. Meadows to Robert
Barton , Patricia J . Barton , lots,
Pomeroy .
Donald Adleta , Patricia Adleta to
Danny Crow, Carol A Crow. Lots ,
Pomeroy .
Guy V. Sargent , Bertha M.
Sargent to Doyle Sargent , Nellie
Sargent, Parcels , Bedford .
Harry Lodwic k, Jr ., Juanita Lod wick to Paul E . Hawk , Betty J .
Hawk, Lot, Olester.
Meigs CoWlty Commissioners to
Trustees of Greenwood Cemetery,
Trustees of Sutton 'l'wp ., Vacation of
Twp , Rd ., Sutton .
Elmer Owen Hall. dec . to Oifford
E. Hall, Dorothy Hall Redway, Cert .
ofTran.s ., Lebanon .
Jolm Redway, Dorothy Redway to
Clifford Hall, Parcel, Lebanon .
Cory I Tyler , aka Caryl Tyler to
Cecil Stacy , 8 acres, Salem .
Cllfford Morris , Letha Morris to
David L. Shuler , Carla J . Shuler, 5.1

acres, Otester .
Olarles Pyles, Shirley Lorene
Pyles to Trustees of Chester Town ship, Parcel, Chester .
Minnie Clem to Dannie R. Jacks ,
Wanda T. Jacks , Lots, Chester .
Robert Chambers, Troy C. Cham bers to Jeffrey R. Darst , Kitty S.
Darst, · Lot 97, Jine's Add , Mid dleport .
Donald A. Maurer , Betty J .
Maurer to Benny R. Spears ,
Ouistine J . Spears,
acres, Sut-

ton .

4..,

Dorothy Rife, formerly Dorothy
Nleri to J. D. Story , Tina Story , Lot
36in Sub. 2, P . Jones, Middleport .
Jack W. Carsey , Neadl E . Carsey
to Richard W. Vaughan, Ruby A.
Vaughan, Parcels, Pomeroy .
Ella Rachel Hannwn to William
M. Hannwn, Barbara A. Hannwn ,
9'.03acres, Olive.
Roger Duncan , Diane Duncan to
Fred C. Evans, Furl T. Slade.

BABY S ITT~Q

N EEDED
.n mv home . 3 dav s a w eek
M td dteporf . Ref er e nce'.:&gt;
reQuired 9"92 3241
CA RRIER N EEDED •n the
Pomeroy area . CALL THE
DAILY SE NT INEL , 9'&gt;2
7156 between 8 30 and 5 00
Pm.

iM MED IATE O P E NIN G
N ight
Lab
Tec hni c ian
Shi ft is 11 pm 7 30 am Sun
day
tnrougt'1
Thursday .
Minimum qualif icati ons in
elude I year acce ptabl e
labratory experi e nce, ML T
IASCPI , CLT IA TW I or
equival e nt ce rtifi c ation
Comparitive wages with
liberal
fringe
bene fit
package
Co nt ac t per
son nel
office . Pl e asant
Valley
Hospital.
Va lley
Dr , Pt
Pleasan t , W V
2SS50 304 61S 4340
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF JOSEPH
STANLEY , DECEASED
Ca'.:&gt;e No . 21896
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 28. 1979. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Case No
22896,
Love y
Welch
Stan ley ,
Route 2, Pomeroy , Ot"lto
45769 was appointed Ad
min istra tri x of the estate of
J o~ph Stan lf&gt; y , dec f&gt; a~d .
la te of Route 2. Pomeroy.
OHio 45769
Robe rt E Buck
Prob ate Judge
Clerk
( 11 ) .:1 , 11 , 18, 31c

Lost and Found
LO ST : LITTLE
girl ' s
brown m3le co llie pup Cal l
Pat Morrissey , 985 4 29~ on
Rt 248 . ius I ov t of Chest er

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Rout e 33, north of
Pom er oy . t ~rge lots .Cal l
9'&gt;2 7479 .

t5 Phone 992 54J4
CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x
diameter 10" on largesl
end . S12 p -er ton . Bundleo
sla b . SID per ton . Delivere-d
to Ohio Pa l let Co ., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689 .

OLD

FURNITURE , ice
bOxes . brass bt"dS , iron
beds , desks, etc , complet e
Writf&gt; M D
households
Mil ler Rt . .:1, Pomeroy or
ca 11 992 7760.
WANTED
SA W logs
Payment upon delivery t o
our yard , 7 30to3 ·30week
days B lant&gt;y HardwOOds ,
S R 339, Barlow , OH . 678
2980
ANTIQUES ,
FUR
NITURE , g l ass . ch ina ,
anything . See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, an ti q ues , 26 N
2nd , Middleport, OH 992
3161.
AN T IQUE POCKET wat
c hes Willing to pay top
dollar
Ca ll
1 592 2973
evenmgs
---~---·

BUYING US SILV ER coi ns
dated 1964 or before
Paying top pri ce
Cal l
Br own ' s, 992 5113.

----·---

OR DINANCE
NO . ID87 ~ 79
An
Ordinanc e
to
ESTABLISH A STREET
LEVY
FUNO
AND
STREET LIGHT FUND
WITHIN THE IIILLAGE
TREASURY .
HOMEMADE
Be it ordaine-d by the WANTED
Council of the Village of gifts taken on consignment
Middleport as to trows : lor g1tt shop Call 985 4327,
Sec . I . That Village Coun
985 4133 or 985 3951
c il hereby establish a
Stree t Levy Fund within
WANT ED TO BU Y beef
the Village Treasury .
SEC. II . That one half type cows . Prefer already
( l ~) of the prese nt J mill
bred . 614 593 5132
Current
Expense
Levy
sha l l be deposited to the
cred it of the Street Levy WA NT TO BUY . body par
Fund and expended o nly t s for 1973 P i nto . Af te r 5
for Stree t Resurfa c ing and p m c all9'&gt;2 3659
re lated expenses .
SEC. Ill . That ll illage
CAB office
Council hereby establish . a POMEROY
Stref.&gt;f Light Fund withm now open 8 a m 5 p .m 7
the V i ll age Treasury .
days a we~k
SEC I v . That one naif
( 1 2) of th e pr es.ent 3 Mill
Cur r ent
Expense
L evy
sha II be deposited to the
credi t o f th e S tr~t Light
Pets for Sale
Fund and expended for
Stree t Lightin~ o bl i gations . HOOF HOLLOW , English
Sec. V . Th•s Ordinance and we ster n . Sad d les and
shalt ta ke effect and be in
Horses
and
force from and
afte r harness
ponies . Ruttt Reeves . 614
November 12, 1979 .
Barding
a nd
Pa ssed me 11th day of 698 3290
Riding Lessons and H or s.e
November 1979
Care produc t s . Western
Attest . Gene Grate
boots
Ch ildren·s S 15.50 .
Clerk
Adults S29.00 .
M . L . Kelly
Presiden t of
Cou nci l RI SING STAR
Kennel.
112J 4.1 1,2tc
Bo arding Ca ll 367 0291

iNEWSPA.Pfll FNlfAPRISE ASSN 1

Russell Branham, Rinne) Duncan ,
Parcel , Sutton .
Roger P . Daniels, Helena R .
Daniels to Ohio Power Co .,
E:asement, Sutton.
Metta Benedum to Wayne W. Up ton , Elizabeth L. Upton, Pa r cels,
Oltve .
Irving Karr , Jr , Virginia H. Karr
to Irving Karr , Jr ., Virginia H. Karr ,
Parcels, Pomeroy .
Dorothy Rile to Myron Franckowiak, Remalee Franckowiak , Pt .
Lot 293. Middleoort .
Gladys Walker , aflid ., Salisbury .
Gladys Walker to Bernard R.
Grueser, Donna J . Grueser ,
acre, Salisbury .
Sharon Dorinda Nardei, Anthony
M. Nardei to Victor Young UI ,
Katherine M. Young , lots, Pomeroy .
ThollW Y Bartley , Martha BarUey to Estil L. Johnson, Reva M.
Johnson, 9 acres, Salem.
Candy B. Reeves to Warren David
Reeves, lots, Scipio- Pageville .
Warren David Reeves to Walter
W. Blackford, Sr., lots, Scipto
(Pageville 1.
Hollis Searles, dec ., to Estella A.
Searls, aka Stella Searles, Dennis
Searles, RoUand Searles, Katie
Searles Robinson, Isabelle Searls
Brandberry , Ada Searles Taylor,
Hazel Searles Taylor, John Searles,
Robert Searles, Baker T. Searles.
Baker T. Searles , dec ., to Freda
Searles , nka Freda Brooks, Don
Searles, James Searles , Edith
Searles PhiiiiJIII, affid. for trans .,
Rutland .
Estella A. Searles, aka Stella
Searles, dec ., to Dennis Searles ,
Rolland Searles, Katie Searles
robinson, Isabelle Searles Brandberry , Ada Searles Taylor, Hazel
Searles Taylor , John Searles ,
Robert Searles, Don Searles, James
Searles, Edith Searles PhllllJIII, affid . for trans ., RuUand.
Asa A. Hoskins to Ron E. Eastman , Linda F . Eastman , parcel ,
Bedfo.d.
Roy Parker , Pauline Parker to
Mary Parker, I acre, Chester .
Marion R. Hawk, Sarah Ethel
Hawk to Jay Hall, Jr., lot , Pomeroy .
Muriel M. Young , Rufus W. Young
to Elmer Michael Still , PamelA L.
S1 ill . lot , Middleport.

1"'•

Hammond Oraan•

Wanted to Buy

POODLE
GROOMIN G .
Judy Taylor . 614 J67 7220
HILL C RE ST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds C lea n
indoor -outdoor f ac i lities
Also
AKC
registered
Doberman'.:&gt; . 614 446 7795 .

Auto Sales
1979 FORD F 150 , 4 whee l
dri ve , fact ory
top p e r .
Auto , P .S. , P B . $6800.
Phone 985 4.339
1975 GRAN TORINO F ord
sta tion wagon . Pow er win
dows , A .C., c ru ise co nt ro l
As kong S2500 . 742 2008.

1978 DODGE MA G NUM ,
bla c k t top, AM ·FM tape ,
P s .. P . B , tilt wheel , 21,000
miles , $6200 Ingels Fur
ni t ure . 9912635.
1976
OLDS
CUTLASS
Supreme , 4 door sedan,
vt n y l top , UJJ v 8, auto .,
P S . P B . AM ra dio. A .C ,
power viny l seats , t inted
glass , no r ust , good ti r es,
mid ·size , good condit ion .
Ma 1 be seen at Pomerov
Motor Co , Pomeroy , OH
Con ta c t Russe ll I Wilson ,
Admi n istr a tor , 592 7283 or
9'&gt;2 2126

TWO BEDROOM troiler .
Syrac use . All util ities pa id .
Furnished . SSO per week .
9'&gt;2 2897
FOR RENT
2 bedroom
apt . Furn .. utilit ies pai8d ,
adult5 , no drunks John
Sheets, Rt . 7, 311, miles
south, Middl eport .

197 4 FORD L TO , el ectric
wtndows . seat'.:&gt; , cru •se con
trol , ste.- eo, new t1 r es , w •n
terize-d $9 75 2.:11 309 5
1975 BUI C K 9 pass Estate
wagon One owner
992
7625

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
'12 FOOT TERRY c amping
trad er ;et up in park .
Utilities pai d at MO per
week or se ll al ~ 2 00 9'/2
2897

_ __,_F or Rent
F I VE
ROOM house •n
Coflven1e n ces
co untrY'·
8d) )6))

HOUSE , F-OUR r ooms anrl
ba lh 992 3090 .

PIANOS
Great Christmas G ift
Both New &amp; Used

PETE
SIMPSON
Sales
Rep. For
Sundins
Hammond Orglns

Tyree Blvd . Racine, 0 .
h
i
o
Phone 949 -2118 evelngs
after s p.m. weewenas

a·
LARGE TRAILER lot tor
rent 7.:123 121or742 3186

after 12 noon .
APT IN Pomeroy . 3 rooms
and bath . 992 562 1.

11 ·19 I mo .

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
Fe•turing :
men ' s &amp;
women's styling, per ms .
Call for appt . or walk in .

992-2367
Main St.

COA L .
LIMESTO NE
sa nd , g ravel , ca l cium
c h loride.
fertilizer , dog
fOOd , and all t ypes of salt .
Ex ce lsior Sa lt Works , In c.,
E . M ai n Sf ., Pom eroy , 992
3891

TRAll.ER SALES
'

21110 Monttomtr'f Rd
L al"lg 1 ~ •11 f' ,

FIRE WOOD
FOR sale .
N ow taki ng orders Will
deliver, 742 ·2056.

Pomeroy , 0 .
10 19 1 mo.

Ohio

614 " ' 41 •S E Vl' n in•;n
7 Mlll'1 E.a\fOI Willll' \~ lllt
~ UP E~

G OO~E

5TOC~

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
Roofing, gutten , and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates .
All work
guaranteed . 20 years ex perience. Cilll Athens ,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or- Tom Hoskins
797 ~ 27~5 .

TQAILEil N O W AVAI L AB L E

E MERGENCY
POWER
alternators ·own the best
buy WINPOW E R Call SIJ
788 2589.
APPLES
C I DER
H O NEY . Fitzpatrick Or
chard , St ate Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville , 669
3785 .
HOU S E COAL , lump or
stoker , will deliver . 742
2 183 .
AP PLE S - ROME beauly
apples at $.4 per bu . Best for
apple butt er . Call 669 ·378 5,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689 .
GLASS F I RE PLACE doo rs
with
black
finish
plus
tub ular grate wi t h blower ,
l ike new Asking $100 . CCIII
9'&gt;2-7861&gt;.
1969 P LYMOUTH 6TX
51,000 mi les , $800
1978
Kawasaki KM 100, 500
m iles, lik e new , SSOO 991
2729

410 CASE Dozer Game
c hickens to give away . 991 ·
7692
CHAIN SAW , Stih l 04 1.
year old, u'5oed very little ,
st i ll lik e new . S250. Phone
741 213 1 or co ntac t John
Wise .
--~----

S.ET OF su pport boar ds
and extra thick mattresses
for bunk be'd . Mattress
covers included . All in e&gt;c&gt;
ce llent con dition S75 . 992
7288 .

RING NECKED pheasan
ts, roosters and hens . Call
61&gt;7 ·3252
TWO UPRIGHT p i anos,
asking S50 ea . Two Magi c
Chef ranges. gas 1 ~ 36 ",
SIS . 1 - 20", $10 . 9'&gt;2 55._.

1964 CHE VRO L ET &amp; ton
pi c kup and .:1 p igs 13 weeks
Old . 742 2431.
REDUCE SAFE and fa51
with GoBese TAb le ts and
E Va p
" wa t er
p i lls ".
Nelson Drug .
CHR ISTMAS
TREES ,
Main St ., Rutland 9a .m . ro
Sp .m .

9 -28 -1 mo. Pd .

Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours9 -1 M ., W .• F .
Other times by appoint ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

CALL 992 -7544
For Lease
BUSINESS BUILDING tor
lease . Former Warner
Beauly Sho p . Approx . 1100
sq . ff Call 99 2 2117 or 992
2528 a fter 5 p .m

Giveaway
FEMALE M I NIATURE
terrier
Al l shot s and
papers .
Good
with
cnildren 99 2 7152
YOUN G SHOR T haired
terrier , blond and wht ,
m.ale Medium sized co lli e,
male , brown a nd white
Border collie s, six , black,
white , brown , to good
home , mate s a nd female .
St . Bernard t ype , brown ,
white and b l ack , nef.&gt;ds big
fa rm 2 sm a ll miniatu~
poodles . m a tes, 1 silver , 1
blond . Shots , wormed
Humane Socie t y, 992 ·6260.

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarlot"
Appli•nces
1ates" Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK

w. Carsey
Mgr .
Phone "2 ~ 2111

Jack
'

I •

- --

--

~-

--:-

Services Offered

WI LL 00 babysitt ing n the
9_.9 2005

e 'Y ·~ nings .

HAVE
VACA N CY
1n
priva te home tor elderly
on ly
Board, room and
la undry
992 6022 , N o
d r i nk ing allowed
~~o~b~i~
le~
H~
om
-es-. ~
5a~
le

19 72 LYNN HAVEN 14X65 3

bedr oom
1970 V i ndale l1x63 with ex ·
oan do , 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr
1973 Sky l i ne
12x55 1
hedroom
19 71 Bonanza 12x51, 2 bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES , PT P LEASA NT .
wv 30 4 t:-75 4.:1? 4
197] 1.:i x70 VI ND A L E 7x14
f' tq: .Jndu

l bec1r . I

J ..

acre

ru r a l wat er . o;ep t. c t ank .
re ntrn l he d t dnd A C Car
peted . Pr1 ced reasonably .
E ,; ..: , ,ll ,~ n t cond it. on
to~ J
l.J.'

Jl~l

mile off Rl . 7 by -pa ss
on St . Rt . 114 towa rd
Rutland .

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4

[I I (J:IJ

CAP'l'AIN EASY
I HAT 5 WHAT HE
TOLD U5. PAL -- YO U
WAt.J T A DIF,:ERENT

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

S rJ R. Y, A5K HIM
YOU R? ELF:

4~ L

\ THROBEt~

r

KP\JC'\';.' 15--

HE KE EPS
$H0W1~ 0

10191mo .

S &amp; G Carpet C l~ a ning .
Steam
c l ea ned .
Free
estimate
Reasonable
rat es . Sco tc hguard
992
6309 or 742 2348.
PROPER IN SULATIO N •!a
c he aper th an heat .ng oi l
Take advantage o f a good
investment . Call 992 3288
for more in formtt t ,on

HORS E SHO EI NG
Call
992 3288, ask for Darrt:&gt;t l
M cC lanahan
PIANO T U NIN G. Lane
Da n iel s New phon e num
ber , 74'1 2951 . Se r v1 ce to
sc hools and home si nce
1965

Auctions
BI G AUCTION every Wed ,
7 pm . Hartford Commun i t y
Center , Hartford , WV , 4
miles above
Pomero y ·
Mason Br idge

MOUNT AI N CUR . grey .
male , loveable Iri sh Se t
ter, fema le , r e-d Shots and
wormed . On e sm a ll blond
poodl e Human e Soci et y.
9'&gt;2 6260 .

CO MM ERCIAL BUILDIN
G o n 131ft . lot at 1600 Nye
Ave .. Pomeroyd , OH . Will
f in ance at 9 Pet . to rel i able
coup le No realtors 99'1 ·
5786

F I VE MAL E,
pups 992 6397

fema le

608 E .
MAIN
PQMEI!OY , 0 .
NEW LISTING 16
acres and 3 roo m house
near the mines . A
STEAL
AT
JUST
57 ,500 .00.
ASTOUNDING BUY 8~
very ni ce ac res,
newer
Ranch
type
home , 3 bedrooms, 111,
baths , r e-c room , lovely
kitchen , garage, barns..
THI 5 YOU MUST SEEL
576,325.00 .
NEW L1 STING 2
level acres, all uti li ties
installed , i deal for home
or tra il er . Call for more
information .
6 ACRES IN TOWN 1'11 story frame with 3
be-drooms , built ·in kit
c hen . N .G . hot water
heat , lots of other
teotur es . 529,500.00 .
NEW LISTING - About
72 acres of wooded land
near Rutland . Lots, and
Lots of use tor th is
pi ece
LOOK
JUST
$25 .375 .00 .
OLD RT . 7 - About ~
acres . 1a roe concrete
b lock b ldg a nd mob i le
home , has own water
sys te m
Owner now
needs more room . GO
INGATS17,90000
THE
ANSWER
TO
YOUR HOME HUN ·
TING PROBLEM CAN
BE
FOUND HERE
WITH
CLELAND
REALTY .
REALTORS
H e-nry E . Cleland Sr .
991-lSOI
Henry E . Cleland Jr _
9?2 ~61fl

ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussefl 94t·2UO
Ro,er &amp; Oo"i• Turner
742-2474
OFFICE tt2·2Ut

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Real Estate lor Sale

HOU SE FOR SALE beh ind
Jones Boys $5500 . Call JO•
273 S029 . Sharon Star K.
NEW HOME 3 bedroo m .
21,.2 baths., rec. room with
firepla ce , large de c k ,
ba sement an d garage 1
acre lot Ca l l 992 ·3454 If no
answer ,c all991 ~5 5
W AR M FIVE room house
in Bradbur y , modern ~it
c hen and bath , 1 bedrooms,
laundr y. dining and l i ving
room . a ll car peted , block
garage, ca rport , too l room
and e:xtra storage building ,
al l w i th con c r ete floors
Call9'&gt;1 5310.

Answe1

· ·• Rousmg '
Headquarters

~ed by the at&gt;ove cartoon .

SWA SH

liQUOR

STUDIO

Why 1t1ey all laug hed wne n he sal a ow n at
the t)tano
THEAE WA S NO STOO L

J•.

BORN LOSER

ll ~ IIP d . J

Tut-sd&lt;~~ .

WB'OJ?W~
'DJ ~ID 114f-

1H5iJ 1}.)1-'Y

6U?GTl~.u:,
!311.-L- '?

SHUT OFF

CO YOU SUPPO'S£
lljE.'{ CO&gt;\'T T/&gt;.1&lt;&amp;
'otW(S CI.-LIB"?

DID 1\-\6Y

lh·4' I

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

1\-\B

- -

RJW~/2:~

H. L WRITESEL

Match point game playing
t w11 d1.amonds

ROOFING

'\ORTI I
• A .1

All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleaning and paintint .
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Price!
C•ll Howard
949 ~ 2162

11 14 mo.

•

# IL L HA U L limestone and
gravel. Also, l i me haul ing
and spreading . Leo Morri s
Tru c kinQ . Phone 742 ·2-t55 .

'

•· Ei.. L. . s u ~E Gto .. c:
:;o E~ :;;t;t :-E"SottE
D:; Q PLE CPC. Z i , 8 v· r
&lt;;TQPPE::,

T ... '

oi ·C .... t. PPERt;, 0

,_~ ·

ON~

~,....·

........, S . . . "E'

13--:_.7 -,:.,.:: E .,.
r:a ow ":'L'
_E "

, o ,,

" "'0

·,,· r:,

s.

JE ,V fT
T ....

G-

E IE"Jy

iJ L &gt;- 0 '~ -

c..· .·

., "'

Br.r:~:

•wt.~

'-11lllt' t lllll' n r o t ht•r hf' ' tlltulll

+I ll!:! H I'd
• K (..J H!
1o :~

I 14AD TO .. YOU
W~Af

A

BEAR H E IS
VJ\-IEN 1-4£ Hti..S
NOTHING Ill IXJ'

..

'·{ .

,.

GASOUNE ALLEY
~,--~-~--

- - -·

Silly ' You can't see
ot her people's faw1es.1
Onl4 LjO ur
own !

Co uld you tahe
me t o the

bathroom?

WINNIE
WE CANT
• TO Tf' INK 1.

M '55ED AL- n- S
F07. SO """" NY

:ZECOV:'R
Tl-l E: Y5.A IZ 5
APA RT.. .

. ~ L T V\ :: ..:A N ,~MKE:_
THE MOS-OF EVE:Z&gt;
MOVIE'.~ OF OuR.
I=,_;~J(~

YEARS.
ELWOOD
BOW ERS
REPAIR
Swee pers ,
toa 5ters , i r ons , all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
Ne)( t l o Stat e H ighway
Gara ge on Route 7. 985
3825

PAW!! WOULD 'IE MIND
CHOPPI N' ME AN ARMLOAD
OF kiNO L I~J'W O OD ?

For Mobil!! Home
Insurance.
¥111.1 've srwnr e1 I! Jt ( Jf t imf'
and m oney pic kin,!!( out t
mobilt&gt; home that mt'"rts
yo ur "JX'"f'ifk neC'"d!:&gt;. No\.1,:

·'o

1;!1'1 l)lt' tll~Ur&lt;t t H ' t" to

m a tc h

PEANUTS

CH RISTMAS 15 (0,1\INC.

CHARLIE BROWN

L4'ELL . 1 1~ ~.\Nr s ARE
FULL RIGHT NO~ .. COULI:'
liQU PV~ IT SOME PLACE
llik E~E I'LL REAIE\1BER ,T ~ '

I'VE MADE OUT A LIST
TO f.lELP ~CL ' DECIDE

WhA7

:c Gc7 .\IE

zrr-

'

--- ;1

· · ~ ~ ~· ~·1~~
\\
'·

I
__1

I

.

.l" '
-

••

\:

l

'--

~

--'

1n In other word s. South
should h&lt;:t Vl' let Wes t hold tht•

1-(1..' 1

fJ rs l spad(• Thf•n South co ul d
a hear t on the act• uf
set up three long
h&lt;&gt;arts &lt;md gl:'l th ree dtdmond
d 1seard s

d t ~ca rd

+1

spadr s.

8 . Pu lse 6; News 10; Newlywed
Game 13; Love American Style
15 ; Sanford /l. Son 17 ; Dick
Cavett 20,33 .
30 - Ho l lywood
Squa res
3;
Newlywed Ga me 13 ;
Love
Ameri can Sty le IS; Sanford &amp;
Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
30- Ho llywood
Sq uares
· 3;
New lywed Game 6; Joker ' s Wild
8; Ho llywood Squares 10 ; S ~a Na
Na 13 ; TV Honor Society 15; All
In The Fam ily 17 ; MacNeil.
Lehr er Re port 20 ,33.
ll 00-Misadventvres. of Sheriff Lobo
3. 15 ; Happy Days 6, 13 ; Billy
Graham Crusade 8; Nova 20,33.
8 GO- Mi s adventures of S~erlff Lobo
3, 15 ; Happy Oa ys 6 , 13 ; Billy
Gra ham Crusade 8; Nova 20,33 ;
Cal ifornia Fever 10; Movie " His
K 1nd of Woman " 17.
8 JQ-Angie 6, 13.
9 oo-Mov ie " St . l ves " 3, 15; Three's
Company 6, 13; Hawaii Five -0
8, 10; World 20; Great Radio
Comedians 33.
9 3o- Tax i 6, 13; 10 . GO-Hart to Hart
6. 13 ; Paris 8, 10, News 20 .
10 ;30-E lizabelh R 17; Uke II Is 20.
11 00- N ews 3,6 , 8 , 10 ,13, 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20,33.
II 3o-Tonight 3, 15 ; Barney Miller
6. 13; Barnaby Jones 8; Movie
·' The Anonymous V enetian " 10.
12 00-Movie " One Eyed Jacks " 17 ;
12 0'&gt;--Movie " Al oha, Bobby &amp;
Rose 6, 13
12 4o-Movie "Street Killing " 8 ;
I 00--- Tomorrow 3; News 15 .
45- N ew s IJ ; 3 · 00- News 17;
J ·05- Movie " Clash by Night"
17 ; 5 2Q-Love, American Stylf
17

WEDNESDAV, DECEMBER 5.1979
5 45-Farm Report 13; 5 :5(}-PTL
C lub 13; World at Large 17 .
6 ·00-700 C lub 6,8; PTL Club 15 :
Hea llh Field 10 .
6 3o-Christopher Closeup 10: News
17 ; 6 : 45-Morning Report 3;
6 · SO- Good Morning,
West
V irg in ia 13 ; 6 55-News 13
7 .00-Toda y 3. 15; Good Morning

America
6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; Three
~or th
becamr somewhat
St ooges -Little Rascal s 17.
&lt;.J nno \"(•d an d fmall y turn('d to
15 - A . M Wea l her 3 3; 7 30Vu lneri.lblr Both
E;.~s t . a nd sa 1d "Yo.u r analvs1s
Family
Affa i r
10;
It 's
Oeak r Sou t ;J
1:-. good Too b&lt;Jd ~· ou h1d hk t·
E verybody ' s B us iness 33 ; 7: 55--\o;orth
Ea st
South
rnont·y h&lt;ts gonf' o ut of s t yli· If
Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
~-IJU
had jumpt&gt;d tu l"ur
8 oo--Ca pt . Kangaroo 8,10: Fam ily
2 '1
.1 +
spadt•:-.. ;.~ s you s hould han
Affair 17, Sesame St . 33
~ ...
f 1&lt;JSS
I &lt;1\S
Pil s~
th l' &lt;' han(' r~ are that vour 8 3D-Romper Room l7
I' a:-.:-.
p;; rtnl'l would hiJ\I P pl ;t ~' i'd
9 00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
that ro ntrar t My partnn w;Js
Por ky Pig 8; One Day A t A Time
llt.Hd
put
to
htd
four
dubs
l·k
10 , Phil Donahue 13.15 ; Lucy
1Jpen 1ng I••ad • K
sur('l \" wouldn "t hJv e bid f1ve
Show t7
Four sp aJt•s 1;.; a IJ~' do""n an d
9 30 - Bob Newh art 8: Invis i ble
wht •n \ht• S (" (J f('S i:J H ' ln . \" IIU
Chil dren 10 ; G reen Acres 17
w ll l fmd thai y(Ju r plu s 100
10 oo-c ard Sharks 3, 15 . Morning
H~ f)s" a ld Jaeoh~
t'&gt; n l KO!n~ t o tw worth m ut"h
Magazine 13 ; M ovie " Day of the
and Alan So ntaJ!_
\ ~\1. \I' -\I ' ... H r .\ H lll'lil \ r . \,;.; \
Badman'" 1r
10 30 - Ho ll ywo od Squares 3, 15;
100 you have a quesr,on for
You nrvPr kn(1W 'Ah ,l\ , . .
S20 .000 Pyrami d 13. Andy
rhe e ~ perrs ? Wure Ask the
f.{id ng to ht• a had rP sult 1n a
Gri ffith 6. Wh ew ~ 8, 10.
E11
perrs
.
c
are
o
f
t
h1s
newspa
m ~Hc h powt g&lt;
m w until ttw
10 55-CBS News 8 ; House Ca\1 10.
per lndrvrdua / ques/rons w1JI
scu r es a r e 10 .
I I 00- H igh Roll ers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
be ans wered d accompameo
Playi ng at fi vr c lu hs . South
Shirley 6.13. Pri ce is Right 8, 10.
by s /ampe(1 . self-&lt;utdressed
w :.~:-.tt•d no t um· tn ch u&lt;"ktng
11 30- W hee l ol Fortune 3, 15 ;
ht s (" Ontr&lt;:~ct n u l tht· fro nt
envelopes The most rnter es t Family Feud 6, I J ; Sesame St .
mg ques 110ns w11/ be used rn
d0o r H 1.• gr&lt;thht.•d J urnrny s
20.33
t hiS co lumn and Will rece1ve
d &lt;"f' of spades at t n f k on•' :wd
l'l 00 - N ewscen ler
3.
News
cop1es o l JA COBY M ODERN J
Pve ntud ll \.' lust J h t&gt;~Jr l &lt;tnd
6,8. 10, 1J , Mindreaders 15; Love
Ame r ican Style 17.
12 3Q- Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tom or row 8, 10. Health F ield 15;
Mo vie " M irac le i n Soho" 17;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
E lee Co 20, 33 .
.~CROSS
39 Jewish son g
1 00--Days of our L ives J, 15 ; All My
I Ptck up s peed 10 Mtgratory
Chil dren 6,13 , Yo ung &amp; the
5 "S&lt;lng of
Restless 8. 10.
worker
Jo-As
The World Turns 8, 10 ;
Bernadette"
II Ban~ed up .
1 oo-Ooctors 3, 15 ; One Lite to
author
as a car
Live 6 , 13
It Beloved person 42 Ked
2 30--Another World 3. 15 ; Guid ing
12 Unwilling
Light 8, 10 .
mittals
J
oo-Gener
al Hospital 6, l l ; I Love
13 Glazer' s
DOWN
Lucy 17 . Conne cti ons 20.
TV partner
I Gone above
J J()-One Day At A Time 8; Joker 's
Yesterday 's Arulwer
14 Qu1et
2 Venerate
Wild 10 , Flintstones 17 ; Over
IS Sea eagle
16 Renown
29 Sculptured
3 Ci ty
Easy 33
.t oo- Mister Cartoon 3; Password
16 Half a
sli cker 's kin 22 Sort
slab
P l us 15 ; Bever ly Hillbi llies 8;
sawbuck
23 Energy
4 Buildmg
31 HtUer 's
Sesame S&lt;. 20 .33 ; Real McCoys
17 Spoil
wing
source
lather
13 ; Spec treman 17.
18 Snare
5 With cautton 24 Roofing
4 30 - Bew if c hed 3: Af te rschoo l
32 Restaurant
Spec ial 6, 13 , Gilligan ' s Is . 17 ;
19 Hgt .
6 Happening
matenal
patron
P etticoat Junction 8 ; Merv
20 Nautical
7 Cravat fabn c 25 Martha Gri ff i n 15 .
37 Asian
cha in
8 l"ke 3 Down 26 Made
.S {)()- I Dream o1 Jeannie 3; Mlst~r
the grade
holiday
21 frosty
9 Attempted
R oger s' Neighborhood 20 , 33 ;
23 l£an-to
27 Ha ving a
38 Not worth
10 Gave a
Sanford &amp; Son 8; Mary Tyl er
Moore 10; M y Three Sons 17.
24 G.I. Joe 's
ruddy culor
a nast y look
5 JO---Carol Burne tt 3; News 6;
chrontcler
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co. 20;
25 Cursed
Ma sh 10, Happy Days Again 13 ; I
the da y
Dream of Jean nie 17; Doctor
Who 33
26 Group
o 00- News 3,8, 10 , 13 , 15; ABC News
of wo lves
6; Ca rol Burnett 17; Zoom 20 .
27 Bleachcr6 Jo- NBC News 3,15 ; Carol Burnett
ites
6; ABC News 13; CBS News 8. lO;
28 Black
Over Easy 20; Bob Newhart 17 .
7 C()-3's A Cr owd 3; Tic Tac Dough
cuckoo var
8. Mat ch Gdme PM 6 ; News 10;
29 foxy
N ewlywed Game 13;
Love
30 Menlo Park
Americ an Sty le 15; Sa nford &amp;
monogra m
Son 17 ; D ick Cavett 20,JJ .
7 Jo-C ounlry Roads 3; Newlywed
33 .\ lans
Game 6. J oker' s Wild 8; T~e
mrknarne
Judge 10 ; Family Feud 13 ; Wild
34
the luw
Kingdom IS; Basketball INBA)
35 Dock ~
ll : MacNei l -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 00-- Real Peop le 3, 15: John Denver
worker s'
6. 13; B il ly Gra ham Crusade 8:
umon
Grea t Performances 20; Young
3jj Mac Lame.
M ave r ick 10; Movie " Miracle on
to Beatty
34th 5 1 •. 31
3' 15;
9 : 00- 0 iff ' renl
38 La uder.
Strokes
Charlie 's Ange l s 6, 13 ; 9 : Jofor one
He llo, Larry 3. 15.
DAILY CRYPTO(!UOTE - Here's how to work it: 10 ·00-Bes t of Saturday Night Live
3. lS . Barbara Walters 6 , 13;
i\XYDI,Bi\AXR
Ups
ta irs, Downsta i rs 17; Bogart
lo I,ONGFELLOW
33 .
One letter stmpl y !llan t.l s fn r another . In this sa m ple A i s
11; ()()-N ews 3,6,8, 10, 13,20; Last of
u sed for th r three f .'s. X rnr t he two O's. et c. Sin gl e )etters.
th e
Wi l d
17 ,
Wodehou5e
a postrophes . t he l&lt;'n,:! lh :~nd fo rm ation o f the words arc al1
P layhouse 33 .
hi nts Each da) t he ro de l etlf'r~ are different
11:Jo-Ton ight3.1 S; LoveBoato, JJ:
Black Sheep Squadron 8; Movie
CRYPTOQUOTES
" Tr iple Cross" 10; Movie " The
Wild One" 17 ; ABC News 33.
FIQ
FBY C
R
QRM
R
VI A Y
VJ
12 4o- Baretla 6, 13 ; Hawaii Flve ·O
8
DO-- -T omorrow 3; News 1S,l7 ;
V I.DB YU
HRDDHY BID - LOD
LZ
I OS -- NBA Basketball 17; 1 :50News
13.
BYU C Yf PHLOQY . - HRHHJ AIWB Y
J ·J.S- Movie " For~ .... nes of Captain
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: MEN WHO NEVER TAKE BACK
Blood "
17;
5 : 35- Love,
THEIR WORDS LOVE THEMSELVES MORE THAN THE
Ame r ican Style 17.

,.

KNOW

ht..~n' planned tfJ ]osr 11 1n such
llltJ nner that t:a st could not

SOl 'TII

• K 9 &amp;2
+ H JIOH :I

IN STOCK for i mmediafe
delivery : variou s sizes of
poo l kits . Do i t yourself or
1e1 us instal l tor you . D .
Bumgardner Sa les, Inc.
9'&gt;2 572•

DOWNING ~ CHILDS
Phone "2 ~ 2J42

t·a rl'full\ th;1t -, tnn·
South had lO l ost:' a hl'drt trwk

• 82

AUTO MOB I LE
IN
SURA N CE
been
can
celled?
Lost
your
operator 's l ic en~? Phone
9'&gt;2 2 U 3.

We 're ht'no Wht&gt;n y 1111 llf' (·d
u s for mobi lr ho.mf' In
s u r~&lt; ' t" . l"l)tnf' !11 !lu- pro
lcs~ llmaJ ~ fo r th r .,p~·~ · • .tl
po licy to It t yo u r '~•&lt;·~o: tli (

~·xpla 1n ed

UST

•z

+ 7H

NE ?

EXCAVAT IN G ,
dozer ,
loader a nd bacKhoe work :
dump trucks and lo boys
for Mi re , will haut fill dirt,
top 10il , limestone ,and
g r a v e- t Cal l Bob or R09er
Jett ers , day phone m 7089,
night phone 991 3525 or 99'2 ·
5232 ..

Wr"ll n rvrr new or usf'd
mobi lt:' homrs . You l"&lt;tll
even get Sf'ason al . n·n tal
or c ornnwrl"i&lt;t l i 11 ,ur. 111 1.r
n 7\.' t' ra,,.t&gt; :-.

4

•vJ

• A 71

"'•' •·E I T.-,t.P 'S
S01t E 0 ~-E

'JF Bt.C....,I'--

SE WING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
servi c e.
all
makes
992 2284
Th e
Fabric
Shop,
Pomtrov .
Aut hor iled Si n9er Sale!.
and Ser v •ce . We sharpen
Scissors

BRADFORD , Aucfion~r .
Complete Servic e Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000. rllcine ,
Ohio, Cr in Brad f ord .

~ ; f)

WEST
.KQ .Ji 5

DOZER , END Loader ,
brush
h og
Will
do
basements , ponds, brush ,
t im ber. land
c lear i ng .
Charles Butc he r . 742 ·:1940

A&amp; H u pholst er ing, across
from The Te xaco Stati on in
Sy rac use 997JHJ or 9f11
37S2

.J

• ' 5

PAIN T ING A ND sand
blasting Free est imates
Ca ll 949 2686

HOWERY AND MART I N
sep ti c
Excavlltino.
sys tems , do zer , bac khoe .
Rt . U3 . Phone 1 1614) 6911
7331 or 742 2593.

.1,

L:t s l was orw nf th o ~{' "ll l&lt;.l rt
Ah· cs who like tn pnmt oul
t ht ·1r (j pponent s· rm st akt·:, lk

I:! I

. QHi

1'4E

Middleport , o .

Now arrange lhe Ci rc led lette rs to

lorr1 the surp nse answer as sug

Jumble Book No 13, conl•tning t tOpuutes. ls naliable tor S\ .75 postpaid
from Jurnbte, ere this newspaper. Bo•
Norwood , N .J. 07648.1ndude your
n•m• . acldreu, zip code and make ch•cks p•yebte to New s pa ~ks .

RACINE, 0 .
949-2741 or
992-7314

nee-ds.

CAMP,

(Answer s tomorr ow 1
Jumbles O F 1 EN

216 E. S.~d Str"t

FAMILY - 11 rms ., J&gt;,_
baths, 5 or 6 bedrooms,
dining, basement and 2
ca r garage . S17, SOO •
HEAT SAllER
2
bedrooms,
bath , one
utility bill, front porcn
facing Rt . 7 In T . P
workshop and garage
started . A!oklng
ju!t
$18,000.
MINERS - 1 a c r e fenc
ed . Modern 3 bedroom
ranch , all elec . home,
garage and handyman
bldg. 5% down .
BARGAIN - 3 bedroom
ranch, bath , ni ce full
basem.nt. Flrelace In
the living . 51 ,000.00
down balance about
$250.00 a mo .
A
BUY
Laroe
business room , bath and
2 other rms . Ideal for
couple . UOO .OOdown
LIST YOUR
HOME
WITH US ON THE
PROTECTION
PLAN
AT NO COST TO YOU .
99'z .l325 or "2·1176.

NUDISi

XX](X I I )[X I]

AnswenHEvt

T1Mf!7.'

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

[ Cl] . ()

HO W THEY
D IN ED AI iHE

UP

AT THE

30 ft c

FINANCING IIA ·FHA LO
A NS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MOR TGAGE .
77 E . STATE , AT H E N S
6" S92 )()5 1

----------

and

~WI MOLE~

Free Estimate

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

7 00-3'5 A crowd 3; Tic lac Doug~

I GowAN-4?~....,.,----,
I (J [)

Vinvl &amp;
Aluminum Sidin!l
elnsuJ•tion
• S Iorin Doors
eStorm Windows
eReplacement
Wt" dows

TUESDAY, DECEMBER4, 1979

·· ··--· ··

......,. . .......
~ _

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

1 .1

YOUNG S HORT ha ired
terr ier , blond and wht ,
male . Medi u m sizOO co ll ie ,
male , brow n and wh ite
Bord e r
So,fadtemp
KI TTEN S, black with
yellow, tabby , male , bla c k
and whit e, blac k , t abby
with white , black. and
white , female . Humane
Society , 991 6260

Real Estate for Sale

HOTPOINT

Roger Hysell
Garage

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

DRY
HARDWOOD
firf&gt;wood , $.30 truckload 12
ga double gun in good con
dition 742 2359
RAWLE IG H PRODUCTS .
va nilla s,
sp1ces.
p1 e
fil li ngs Cold r emedies and
vi t ami ns . 992 7815 .

uOURNALISTI C
ICCJ UR:TESX Ms JONE S.

OVVE5T

MONTGOMERY

For Sale

1968 OPEN KA DE TTE, 4
cy l . .:1 '.:&gt;p ., 53 ,000 mil es S400
o r bes l ott er After 6, 9V2
6323
1969 VOLKSWAGE N II AN ,
exce llen t r u nnin g
co n
d1tion , no rust . Int eri or ,
bOdy l•ke brand new S19SO
147 3095

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

&amp; Famous N•me erand

LCRANF-d-}-,----,
DIJ
... ... ·-..

A LOTTO
LEARN AB OUT

Business Services

J A ND 4 RM turnt shed ap

OLD CO l N S, pocket wal
c hes , c lass rin gs, wedd i ng
bands, diamonds Go ld or
silve r Call J . A. Wamsley ,
742 2331 . Treasure Ches t
Coin Shop, A th ens., OH . 592
1&gt;462

could be celebr&amp;t lfiQ by even1no
SCORPIO {Oct . 2•-Now. Z2) An
~rr1table situation could spur you
to action you wouldn "t ordinarily
tak e It will turn out to be an
ext remely WIH an d fortu nate
course t o pursue

YOUR COLLEGE
PAPER . WELL ,YOU'V~

For Rent

Television
Viewing

Unscr amble these tour Jumbles
one letter to each SQuare to form
lour ord1nary woras

DICK- PLEASE
-YOU'LL WAKE
THE BABY ...

FO~

INTERVIEW,

,••.
1

TRUTH.-JOSEPH JOUBERT

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 1'uesday, Dec. 4, 1979

Deer accidents
checked Monday
Two deer were killed in two
seperate accidents , one on Monday
and one on Sunday the Metgs Cowtty
Sheriff's Department reported.
Monday at 9::/ll p .m . on county
road three a deer was killed when it
ran into the path of a vehcile driven
by Louis M.Christian, Rutland.
Sunday at 9:10 p.m . a deer was
killed when it ran into the path of a
vehicle driven by Raymond A.
Nelson, Rt. 3, Albany , as he was
traveling on SR 143.
Under investigation by the depart ment is vandalism to a large sign at
Eastern High school. The sign,
located on the front lawn, was torn
down sometime Friday evening or
early Saturday morning .

MEET WEDNESDAY
The Chester Township Trustees
will meet at 7 p.m . Wednesday at the
town hall in Chester.

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

Guard ...
rContinued from page 1 l
· 'We are checking all the
docwnents and files we found in the
embassy and questioning all the
hostages about their spying acli vi ties,.. the spokesman told the
Associated Press by telephone .
The students told a news con ference Saturday that one of the
hostages, William Daugherty, had
confessed to being a CIA agent, and
that another captive, Malcom Ka!p,
was suspected of bemg a spy .

ACTION FILED
A s uit in the amount of $3,421.08
has been filed in Meigs County Common PLeas court by Racine Home
National Bank against Dan Bowers
and Chris Bowers, Rt. I, Middleport .
Isaac Jackson, Tuppers Plains,
filed s uit for divorce against Doris
Jackson. Tuppers Plains .

EXTENDED FORECAST
'lbunday through Saturday,
lair Thunday wltb a chaoce of
sbowen Friday aad a cbauce of
show~., or snow flurries Saturday. Hlgba from tbt upper .00 to
the lower 50s Tbllf!lday and
Friday and from tbt mid 30IJ lo
the mid t&amp; Saturday. Lows
tbrongb tbe period from the upper 2011 to tbe lower 308.

Weather
Mostly clear tonight. Lows in the
lower 30s. Partly cloudy and
becoming windy and wanner Wed·
nesday Highs in tbe mid to upper
~ - The chance of precipitation is
near zero tonight and 20 percent
Wednesday .
OPEN HOUSE PLANNED
The Fanners Bank and Savings
Co. will hold an open house from 1 to
4 p.m . Sunday in observance of its
2f&gt;th anniversary .
A slide show, with sound, showing
Meigs County historical scenes Wid
prepared by Mr. and Mrs. Don
AdieU., will be shown and dolls and
toys created in the annual doll~oy
contest of the bank will be on
display . Refreslunents will be served to the public .
BWODMOBILE VISIT
The Meigs County BloodmobUe
will be at the Pomeroy Elementary
School Dec . 17, from I :30 p.m . to
5:30p.m.

11 killed
(Continued from page 11
Followmg the concert, the crowds
came out the same doors without the
pushing.
Few were aware of the tragedy.
Some were looking for clothing they
lost in the scuffle to get in.
"It was either my shoe or my foot,
and I elected to save my foot," said
one youth after the concert . He went
to the event despite the tragedy
around him .
CINCINNATI (API - Here is a
partial list of the victims who died in
a stannpede at a rock concert Monday evening at Riverfront Colisewn .
The Hamilton County coroner's offlee reported that three youths
remained unidentified early this
morning .
The victims were :
Peter Bowes, 15, of Wyoming,
Ohio.
Teba Ladd, 20, of Cincinnati.
David Joseph Heck , 19, of Kentucky.
Conrue Burns, 18, of Miamisburg.
James Warmoth, 20, of Franklin,
Ohio.
Bryan Wagner, 17, of Fort
Thomas, Ky .
Karen Morrison, 15, of Cincinnati.
Jacqueline Eckerle, 15, of Cincinnati.
Walter Adams, Jr., 17, Trotwood.
Steve Preston, 19, Cincinnati.

33 hunters .•.
(Continued from page 11
to take second deer; Harvey W.
Cripe, West Milton, Ohio, $150 and
costs, attempting to take second
deer with deer slugs.
Terry D. Colley, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
$50 and C06T.S, possession anterless
deer; Bill H. Hood, Rt. I, Gallipolis,
$100 and costs, taking anterless deer
without penni! ; Theodore Connolly,
Reedsville, $100 and costs, taking
anterlesa deer without pennit ;
Harry Prifogle, Colwnbus, $100 and
costs, spotlighting; Wakefield
Presley , Cedarville, $100 and costs,
attempt to take second deer, $20 and
costs, falled to tag dead deer; Clay
Voyles, West Carrollton, $25 and
costs, falled to tag dead deer, $138.~
and costs, attempt to hurt second
deer; Joseph Beasley, Spring
VaUey, S25 and costs, failed to take
deer for tagging; Walter Presley,
Fairborn, $25 and costs, falled to tag
dead deer, $138 .~ and costs, sttempt
to hurt second deer ; Walter Garnes,
Dexter, S25 and costs, falled to tag
dead deer ; LaiTy E. Hartman,
Uma, $150 and costs, attempt to
take more than one deer, $100 and
costs, illegal tagging; Mike Gard,
Reedsville, $100 and costs, taking
anterless deer without penni!;
George Ratcliff, Reedsville, $100
and costs, taking a doe in wrong
zone;
Raymond Showalter,
Cuyahoga Falls, $25 and costs, hunting without permission; Paul
McKenzie, Springfield, $100 and
costs,lllegal tagging of deer; James
McKenzie, Springfield, $100 and
costs, untagged deer; Vincent J .
Julian, Colwnbus, $25 and costs,
hunting
with out permission ;
Stephen Hy••U, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $50
and costs, hunting deer without permit; Curtlll Dalton, Rt. 2, Albany,
$50 and costs, hunting deer after
hoa..; Dermis M. Wolfe, Rt. 2,
Racine, $50 a-d costs, illegal hunting.

Plant discussion
CALDWELL, Ohio (AP )
Residents of the Noble County area
are expected to talk about a
proposed coal gasification plant at a
meeting in Caldwell tonight.
" Anyone concerned about the environmental impact of the project
should attend the meeting and express hiB or her views and ask
questions of Department of Energy
and (company) representatives,"
said Glenn Sweany, senior project
coordinator of Conoco Coal Developmen! Co., a subsidary of Consolidation Coal Co.
The plant, now in the design
stages, would be managed by
Conoco.
l!lGG REPORT
OOLUMBUS, Ohio [AP) - Eggs
- Prices paid to country packing
plants for eggs delivered to rna j&lt;r
Ohio cities. Cases included cons wner grades incl uding U.S. grades,
minimum one case sales.
Carton Large A 7().74, Mediwn A
6&amp;-72 , Small A 54-00.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white IK)..89, mostly II(H!2, mediwn 71187, mostly 78-3J.
Poultry prices at Ohio fanns, light
type hens too few .

SQUAD RUN
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to South Second
Ave., at 9:42 a.m. 1'uesday for
George Hackett, Sr., who was taken
to Veterans MemoMal Hospital.
OHIO \lALLEY LI\IESTOCK CO .
Gallipolis, Ohio

December

1, 1979
Feeder Steers, good and choice.

150 to JOO lbs ., 8• to 91 ; 300 to .a&lt;~ lbs ..
81 .50 to 9&lt;1 50 ; ,j()() to 500 lbs . 76 so to
87 ; 500 to 600 lbs , 71.50 to 76 .50 ; 600
to 700 lbs . 68 to 75 ; 700 to 800 lbs 600
to 71 ; 800 and over 55 .50 to 69.50.
Feed~r

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL XXVIII

NO. l64

at

Feeder Bulls, good and choice. 150
to 300 lb$ .. 81 .50 to 96 ; 300 to 400 lbs ..
77.50 to .,, 400 to 500 lbs 72 50 lo

8&lt; .50; 500 to 600 lbs . 67 .50 to 71 50 ; 600
to 700 lbs .. 645.50 to 68 .50. 700 to 800

lbs ) 51.50 to 67 .50 ; Bulls. 1.000 lbs
and over, SO to 57 .50 : Slaughter
Cows : utilities. 47 .50 to 52 .25 ; can

ners and cuners, 38 .50 to 44 .75 Spr
ing cows, by the head , 375 to 720 .
cows / calves, by the head , 475 ro 800 ;
veal calve~ 82 .50 to 91 ; Baby Ca l ves.

135
HOGS - Top hogs, 1t0 to 13() lbs .

45!0
)6

25 to 18 .15 : Boards, 2.4 to 25 ; Pigs.

by the head. tO to 15 .50 ; Sows. 450
lbs . and over , 78 .50 to 31..50 .

She needs
•
Room
serv1ce.
Only a day for an extension phone.
5~

Hyou're tired of competing with the NFL
(and losing), maybe it's time for on el(tenso&lt;&gt;n
phone from GTE . For o price this low, you
can have 0 phone in any room in the house .
You con MCOpe to the bedroom, the sewing room or ...,., the bathroom. And you con

stop yellong 1nto the . .
idt
. All11 takes to get Room Servic.e 11 o qu
tnp to your GTE Phone Mort . Just_pod&lt; out
the phone that goes W1th your fovorite room .
toke it home ond start eniOY'ng the sweet
sound of silence.

(Cj i #11;.~':}1!
328 W. MAIN POMEROY, OHIO

ATHENS LI\IESTOCK SALES
December 1, 1979

CATTLE

PRICES

-

Feeder

Steers, gOOd and cnoice. 300 to .500

lbs .. 70 to 89 .50 ; 500 to 700 lbs , 65 to
74.2S ;

Feeder

Heifers, gOOd

and

choice. 300 to 500 lbs .. Slo to 75 .50 : 500
to 700 lbs, SO to 65 : Fet&gt;der Bull s,
good and choice, 300 to 500 lbs .. 6V to
84 . .50 ; 500to7001bs . 50to75.
Sl&lt;!uohter Bulls (over 1000 lbs .). 51

10 S9 .2S; Slaughter Cows, Ut i li tii~S .
38 .50 to 50 .15 , Canners and Cu11ers
35 to •1 75 . Springrr Caws (by the
head). .t2 to 57 1Cow and Calf Pa ir s
(by the unill , s.a to 790 ; Veals.
choice and prime , 69 to 89 .50 . Baby
Calves, by the head , 50 to 91 .
HOG PRICES - hogs, No . l , Bar
raws and Gilts . 200 to 230 lbs ., 3' SO
to J8 .2S : Butc ner Sows, 14 to 30. But
cher Boars , 11 25 to 25 .85 ; Feeder
Pigs, by the nead. 8 to 24 .50 .

SHEEP

PRICE S

Lttmb s . so 50 to 59 10 .

"8 to 65

~
Slaughter
FPed~r L ambs

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WI:.DNESDAY. UECI:.MBER 5. l979

Students reject Security Council's appeal
GRAND OPENING - Grand opening for the Log Cabin Gift Shop will
be held Friday, Dec. 7. The gift shop is located two miles north of Chester
in the Alta Backwoods Model Home on Route 7. Pictured here are, I tor,
partners of the shop, Jane Coates, Lila VanMeter, and Norma Hawthorne. ''Homemade items sold in a homemade atmosphere'' is the theme of
the gift shop. There will be a door prize awarded on Saturday, Dec. 15.
The hours at the gift shop are Friday, 10 a .m . ..S p.m. and 7 p.m .-9 p.m.,
Saturday, 10 a .m.-6 p.m ., and Sunday, 12 noon-5 p.m.

FUNDS RECEIVED
November gasoline excise tax
checks totaling $10,084,029 were
distributed by State Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson's office to Ohio counties, townships, cities and villages.
Amounts received by Meigs County villages include Middleport,
$2,179; Pomeroy, $2,322; Racine,
SB:!ll ; Rutland, $550, and Syracuse,
$715, for a total of Sfl,386.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Jack Ginther, Chester ;
Eric Hart, Pomeroy ; James Sears,
Middleport;
Sallie
Cadle,
Shrews burg, W. Va .; Heili Bailey,
Albany.
Discharged-Alma Young, Robert
Van Meter .

SQUAD CAlLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 30028 Pageville Road,
Pomeroy, at 2 38 p.m . Monday for
Enuna Douglas, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital .

MEET WEDNESDAY
The ladies auxiliary of the Mid dleport Fire Department are to meet
at the fire station Wednesday at 6 :30
p.m. to travel to the Holiday Inn.
Gallipolis, for their annual Christ·
mas dinner .

AMATEUR AU1110RS MEET
The Southeastern Ohio Amateur
Authors and Artists met recently at
the Pomeroy Public Ubrary.
Don Salmona, Racine, pruided
over the meeting dUJ'Ing which lime
original works of those attending
were presented. The next meeting
was set for 7 p.m. on Jan. 28 at the
Pomeroy Ubrary .
The short poem selected for
publication was written by Mrs.
Nellie Parker Wid reads:
AotumD
Leaves stripped bare, mid the
branches haog.s a pear,
P1!rfect, golden there.
Attending were Don, Carol and
Melinda Salmons, Peggy Bush,
Racine; Nan Mykel, Michael Axtell,
Sarah Moshier, . Galllpoli.s; Nellie
Parker, Jayne Hoeflich, MyMam
Jacobs, and Joann Oark, Pomeroy .
The group has planned a monthly
newsletter as future project.

TEHRAN, Iran l AP) - The
students holding 50 Amencans
hostage in the U.S. Embassy today
rejected a Security CouncU appeal
for their immediate release, but
Tehran state radio took a more conciliatory tone, saying the U.N. action
"left the way open for negotiations ."
It was one more sign of conflict
between the hard line adopted by the
embassy militants and the approach
of Iranian officials toward the month-old crisis.
On Tuesday . Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini 's regime made new and
stronger threats against the caplives. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy
carrier force south of the Persian
Gulf doubled in size.
The Securtty Council resolution
was adopted Tuesday on the fourth
consecutive day of a debate in which
every speaker called for the release
of the hostages. Iran boycotted the
meeting, claiming it was rigged in
favor of the United States .
The resolution contained no condemnation of the Iranians . Besides
the appeal on behalf of the hostages,
it called on Iran and the United
States to " resolve peacefully the
remaining issues between them"

•

and urged them to "exercise the ut most restraint" and refrain from
"the threat or use of force."
A spokesman for the embassy
militants said of the appeal for the
hostages ' release, "Since the
Security Councll is orchestrated by
the United States, it is obvious it
would say such things because it is
the defender of the superpowers and
embarked on its deliberations according to the orders it received .
" tv, it is also obvious that the
United States has great influence on
this council, which has nothing to do
with the oppressed people of the
world, its opinion is worthless as far
as we are concerned and will not affeet us in any way," he told The
Associated Press by telephone.
But Tehran Radio, in the first
semi-official commentary on the
resolution, seemed to stress its
positive asped.s - from the Iranian
viewpoint - ignoring the call for the
hostages· release.
"The Iranian government has not
been condeiTUled and the United
States has been warned, indirectly ,
against military intervention, and
this has left the way open for
negotiations," the radio said.
The radio commentary also contrasted Wlth previous statements by
Khomeini rejecting any decision by
the Security Council in advance as
dictated by the United States .
The lraruans seized the embassy
and those inside it on Nov . 4, deman-

•'

Car sales down
DETROIT ( AP) Auto
dealers may be in the giving
mood as the holidays approach,
but Americans still aren't
buying .
Despite rebates and other
dealer incentives, sales by the
nation's five major automakers
dJ opped 21.3 percent in November from a ,eM ICO to the loweot
levels In five yean, automaltero
said Tuesday.
New deliveries totaled 606,204,
compared with 769,855 a year
ago . The daily selling rate of
24,248 was the third-lowest of the
decade, eclipsed only by the
:!ll,220 in 19'14 and 18,131 in 1970.

Beaches pounded
HONOLULU (API - Gale force winds and heavy surf have
pounded Majuro Atoll in the Marshall Islands for a second time in
a week, leaving some 5,ro:J to
7,000
residents
homeless,
authorities say.
Reports from amateur radio
operators reaching Honolulu and
Guam said sill persons were in·
jured, none seriously.
The winds and waves of up to 20
feet first hit the atoll Nov. ?:/,
causing damage that has been
estimated at $26 million . The
wind and waves returned again
over the weekend.

Fairboard
president
elected
Donny Zirkle, Pomeroy, was elected president of the Meigs County
Fair Board at the group's
organizational session Monday
evening on the Rock Springo
Fairllr'OUI'dll.
Other officers elected for the next
year include Bill Downie, vice
president, and Hugh Custer .
treasurer .
Wallace Bradford, president of the
board for over the past 10 years .
declined nomination for reelection to
the top post.
The group selected Bradford to
serve as delegate to the state con·
vention to be held on Jan . 3-5 in
Colwnbus with Downie named alter nate .
Bob Gillwn. representing Show
Case Attractions, met with the board
and several shows were booked for
next year 's fatr including Wendy
Holcomb, a banjo player , who
travels with a group on Thursday
and Sonny James, a countrywestern musician for Friday night.
A show was also booked for
Tuesd•y night.
Wednesday night was kept open
pending the development of a youth
night program.
The tractor pullin~ contest, a top
attraction on Saturday night during
the past fair will remain in that time
slot.

Thomas Danner named
'Trooper of the Year'

lbs .. S..t .SO to 61 ; BOO and over 50 to

55 .75 .
Holstein Steers ana Butts t300 800

enttne

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Heifers, good and cho ice.

150 to JOO lbs 77 .50 to \10 ; JOO to .a&lt;~
lbs . 72 to 80 ; •oo to 500 lbs 6•.50 to 71.
500 to 600 lbs . 61.50 to 69 ; 600 to 700
lbs . 60 to 61 .50 ; 700 to 800 lbs . 51 50 to
59.50 ; 800 and over 48 .50 to 55.50

•

Ohio State Highway Patrol
Trooper Thomas D. Danner has
been selected 19'19 Trooper of the
Year at the Gallia-Meig.s Post,
Gallipolis .
The award was presented to
Trooper Danner, 3'1, in recogmtion of
outstanding service during the past
year . Selected by fellow officers
stationed at Gallipolis, the decision
to choose Trooper Danner was based
on leadership abilities, professionial
ethics, courteous trealment of
others, enthusiastic work attitude,
and cooperation with supervisors,
peers, and the public.
Trooper Donner is now in contention for the District and State
Trooper of the Year Awards to be
announced at a later date .
Danner joined the Patrol in 1967
and has served at Ironton and
Gallipolis . Originally from
Gallipolis, Thomas ~raduated from
Chauncey-Dover High School.
Trooper Danner served m the U. S.
Army and attended Gallipoli s
Business College . Other patrol
honors received in the past include
the Safe Driving Award .
Trooper Danner a nd his wtfe .
Beverly, live in Middleport wilh
their children . Deborah F.llen l'i.

Susan Elizabeth 15, and Leah Ester
9.

ding that the United States surren-

Kitty Hawk had arrived in the
Arabian Sea, JOining another such
force headed by the carrier Midway .
This put more than 135 planes within
reach of the entrance to the Persian
Gulf and the oll tankers moving to
and from Iran.
A White House official indicated to
reporters in Washington 1'uesday
that the students holding the em -

der deposed Shah Moharrunad Reza
Pahlavi to Iran for !Mal. The Carter
administration refused and on
1'uesday joined the 14 other Security
Council memlJers in unanimous
adoption of the resolution urging the
release of the captives.
Pentagon officials said a su U.S.
war•IUps led by the aircraft ca mer

cooperation just...in routine mat-

ters."
Radio Tehran said Foreign
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh told
the French newspaper Le Figaro the
hostages would be tMed as spies "for
sure, " but that Khomeini could
overrule any sentences and pardon
the captives ''if the United States extradites the shah."

)

'
)

'

COUPLES CONGRATULATED- - Me. and Mrs. Theodore T. (Ted)
Reed, Jr ., left, and Mr. and Mrs . Don Adleta were both receiving
congratulations Tuesday night when The Farmers Bank and Savings Co .
staged a dinner at the Meig.s Inn in commemoration of its 7:ith an niversary. The Reeds were being congratulated on the lengthy service of
the bank in the community while the Adletas were being commended for
an excellent slide presentation on Meigs County history which they comptled li1 observance of the bank's 75th birthday .

Zidian addresses
Pomeroy Chamber
Ronald Zidian, administrator of
the new Pomeroy Health Care Center , told the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday the facility is
ready to open.
"We're ready to open , we have
passed all state inspections with the
help of the staff and Scott Lucas, ad ...uu.tnotor of Veterans Memorial
HOIJPital.
''We will be taking residents at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center as
soon as we receive our license and
certification, .. Zidian commented.
Zidian noted that Mrs. Zidian is
director of social services. He pointed out there are three ways residents can pay : private funds, medicaid,
which ts paid for in part by state and
welfare department, and medicare
which is federal insurance .
He noted the center does not pay
for clothing or any spectal items
used by the residents.
A semliJMvate room is $36 a day
and a prtvate room ts $40 a da y
Zidian commented.
The center is inspe&lt;.-ted once a
week Zidian observed. " We are here
to serve the residents and the center
has an almosphere of hominess ,..
Zidian noted.
"Our place is not a place to di e.
but a happy place to live We would
like to erase this image that it LS a
place to die, .. Zidian stated .
Dr. Matthew Dayo wtll be on call
24 hours a day and pharmacist wiU
also be available 24 hours a day
Zidian noted . "We are just a step
down from a hospital, our business LS
nursing care," Zidian said .
Dave Jenkins of the Meigs County
Jaycees gave the chamber a $100
donation toward the payment of the
new stage erected on the upper
parking lot.
Jenkins explained that the
Jaycees are now m the process of
gathering food for the annual Christmas baskets and toys lor the toys for
tots program .
Jenkins said I~ baskets were
distributed last year at a cost of
$2,700.
The Jaycees, according to
Jenkins, are in need of a large room
to store the food a~d toys .
The Jaycees have two moneymaking projects this Christmas,
Rent-A-Santa and a ptcture of
children with Santa. lndivtduals
EXTENDED FORECAST
Partly cloudy Friday and Suudny. A chaoce of snow SaiUrdny.
OVernlgbt lows to tbe 381! Frldny
and In the %Go Saturday and Sunday. Hlgba to the upper t&amp; to upper 50s Friday, to the mld 381! lo
mtd tOil Saturday and In the 40s
SUDdny.
,.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:-:- ... ·.· .·.·.·.·.· ....·.·.·.•.·. -:-:. . . . . . . .

..

Weather
TROOPF.RDA'I/NF.R
&gt;I

bassy were threatening the hostages
with execution if they did not confess
to the charges of espionage and proshah activity being drawn up again st them .
The official said the Americans
" have been threatened with
execution if they fail to cooperate
with their captors" and added .
"You can asswne that l don 1 mean

Partly cloudy, windy and colder
tomght and Thursday . Low tonight
in the mid to upper ~Os . High Thursday 45 to 50. The ~hance of
precipiU.tion 10 percent tonight and
Thursda y.

...

wishing to have Santa at a private
party and any other gathering may
do so for $25 an hour.
The Jaycees alsc hope to have a
trailer on the parking lot for Santa .
Santa will be available in Pomeroy
and Middleport for pictures on the
evemngs of Dec. 13, 14, 15, 20, 21, and
22.
Jenkins reported that the boxing
program was doing very well .
At a match in Chillicothe Meig.s
won nine out of 12 matches. The next
match will be held at Metgs High
School in January . The Jaycees also
have their own Mng.
Fred Crow exprPJ!Sed a desire to
have an amateur show sometime m
February at Royal G Park .
Paul Simon , presillt'flt, welcomed
Mr. and Mrs . Zidian. Sandy Miller,
and Steve Story .
Attending were Simon, Mr . and
Mrs. Zidian, Mrs. Miller, Story,
John Anderson. Bill Nelson, Phil
Kelle y, Scott Lucas, Crow , C. E.
Blakeslee, Leo Vaughan, Dave
Jenkins, Dale Warner, Jim Frecker,
Bill Quickel, Robert Graves , Hank
Cleland, Ellen Bell , Jinna Arnott, N.
W. Compton, Marge Hoffner , Betty
Ohlinger and Joe Young.

FOUR GENERATIONS-Four generations of the Reed Family have
been associated with The Farmers Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy,
which is marking its 75th anniversary . Pictured as a dinner held at the
Meigs Inn 1'uesday night to commemorate the birthday are Theodore T.
!Ted) Reed and his son, Paul, two of the four generations still at the bank.
The elder Reed is the current president; his father , Theodore T. Reed,
Sr., was president, and his grandfather, W. F . Reed, was president. Paul,
an Ohio University student, works in the bank on vacation periods and is
currently working dally m the bank while on break from the University .

Bank's anniversary
dinner attracts 100
An excellent slide show depicting
the history of Meigs County is being
presented to the county by The Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
The special slide presentation

1

Weather helping
$148,000 projects
RACINE - Good weather through
November has allowed General
Telephone crews to progress well in
three major cable distribution
projects in its Ractne exchange, the
firm reported today.
Jim L . Parker of Athens ,
customer servtce manager, said the
three projects cost an estimatea
$148,ro:J. They are designed to
upgrade service and provide for
growth in the exchange area which
covers 42 square nules of Meig.s
County.
The largest of the three projects
will serve the east and northeast
rural sections of the exchange .
Another will serve an area north of
Racine extending to the intersection
of Oak Grove and Morning Star
roads .
The third project will extend new
cables in the southnern portions of
the exchange, primarily alorJ!!
Township Road 100 and Ohio 338.
"Studies and forecasts allow us to
plan for orderly growth through
projects such as these," Parker
said. " This planrung is ongoing in
our effort to better serve customers
efficiently,·· he said.

HEREDEC. 12
On Dec . 12, a representative form
Congressman Clarence E. Miller's
office will conduct an Open Door
session from 10 a.m .-12 noon in the
Courthouse in Pomeroy.
If anyone has any que.tions concerning the Federal Govenunent,
please stop by to discuss them with
the representative.

DALE C. ROCKHOLD

Rockhold new
forest ranger
Dale Clinton Rockhold , Reed sville, was one of 28 state park
ranger cadets who graduated Nov .
30 from an extensive law en·
forcement training course conducted by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources IODNR) .
The cadets completed 10 weeks of
in-depth study at RobertS. Beightler
Armory in Worthington, stale
headquarters for the Ohio Adjutant
General's Department.
Rockhold received instruction in
search and seizure, police ethics,
report writing , laws of arrest, traffic
control, first aid, the handling of
firearms and cardiovascular
pulmonary resuscitation .
Training included 280 hours on
Ohio law and law enforcement and
88 hours on regulations governing
the use of Oh 1n'-:: &lt;..:tal ~' pa rks.

Donald Olson, Chief of the Division
of Parks and Recreation, addressed
the graduates in a ceremony held at
the Ohio Historical Center in Colwn-

bus.
Rockhold will serve a~ a park
ranger at Forked Run State Park in
Meigs County.
~

prepared by Mr. and Mrs. Don
Adleta, formerly of Pomeroy and
now living in Athens, was given a
preview Tuesday night when the
bank staged a dinner for 100 employes and guests at the Meigs Inn.
The presentation was given a
warm reception by those attending
the dinner which was held on the
75th anniversary date of the bank's
opening in Pomeroy.
The show which has an effective
sound track of music and voices of
local residents takes the viewer
from the days of the Indian through
to present time. A wide range of
subjects is effectively covered in the
presentation.
Mr.and Mrs. Adleta had 3,000
photographs, mostly of local scenes,
from which they worked to prepared
the :&gt;JXl slide final edition shown
Tuesday night.
The show is the bank's gift to
Meigs County tn observance of its
75th anniversary. It will be turned
over to the library later and the
library staff will schedule its
showing at schools and meetings.
Sunday from I to 4 p.m. the bank
will hold a public open bouse at Its
attractive quarters in Pomeroy and
the slide presentation will be shown
to the public at that time.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., president
of the bank, addressing the 100
guests attending Tuesday night's
dinner commented that the slide
show will be a lasting gift to Meigs
County to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the bank.
According to a brief history of the
bank presented by Thereon Johnson,
executive vice president , the Farmers Bank was given its charter oo
Aug. 6, 1904 and had a capital inveslment of $50,000.
W. F. Reed was the first president
of the bank which opened on Court
St. on Dec. 4, 1!104. The bank marked
its first million dollars in deposits in
1943.
Second president was
Theodore T. Reed, Sr., and the
present president is Theodore T.
Reed, Jr. His son, Paul, who attends
Ohio University, is also an emploY"
of the bank on vacation periods.
Planning for the banks present impressive building began in 1963, according to Jolmson, with seven
buildings being purchased and razed
to make room for it in 1965. Final
plans were approved in 1967 and construction began in 1968 with the new
bullding completed in ApMI, 1969.
Before the presentation of the film
Tuesday night, Reed recognized a
nwnber of visiling bankers wbo attended the dinner as well aa local
bankers, Tom Wolfe, president ol
the Racine Home-National Bank;
Edison Hobstettei-, president of the
(Continued on page H)

~

~

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>12. December</text>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51499">
              <text>December 4, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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</item>
