<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16095" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16095?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T00:17:49+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49220">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/f230b7f118ee325349f726c704dc44f2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6e934249ae74f78ec1d30b5ea725de55</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51504">
                  <text>14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec . 5, 1979

e

A.E.P. announces load-management conservation plans

.i

The American Electric Power
System has annoWlced a new electric load-management and conservation program designed to both
reduce residential electric bills and
lessen the need for new powergenerating capacity.
Chainnan W. S. White , Jr. said
that all seven AEP System
operating companies, including Ohio
Power Company, will shortly seek
regulatory approval to introduce, in
the seven states they serve, a special
time-&lt;&gt;f-day rate to encourage
customers to install electri cthermal-etorage lETS) warm.,air
furnaces and water heaters. ETS
equipment uses electricity only at
night, from II p.m. to 7 a.m .. stonng
heat within Itself for release
throughout the entire 24-llour day at
temperatures selected by the
customer.
White added that the compani es'
decision to proceed with the time-ofday rate requests was the result of a
successful three-year field test
carried out by the AEP System in 71
homes tn five states : Indiana ,
Michigan , Oluo, West Vlrginia and
Virginia . The other two states where
AEP comparues will seek approva I
of the new rate are Kentucky and
Tennessee .
He said that the appropnate
regulatory comnussions in aU seven
states had been fully informed of the
resuits of the AEP System test
program and of the companies·
plans to fil e their requests with the
commissions. "We hope that the new
time-{Jf-day rates can be effecti ve
early in 1980, ·· he commented
White e1&lt;plained that the use of
ETS equipment in the home would
provide major benefits to both the
customer and the utility because
such use would take place du.ring offpeak hours . For the customer.
benefits would include a lower monthly electric bill resulting from the
off-peak rate , as well as a heating
system periormance that most field

test participants rated as superior to
that of conventional equipment.
~·or the utility, benefits would mcl ude both a reduction in and a
delaying of its need to build new
power..generation and transmission

facilities, and improved operating
costs due to the greater use or higheffi ciency generating units in the offpeak hours.
In Tuesday's annoWJcement, AE P

cost within perhaps five years .
White pointed out that the
proposed program is in keeping with
both the spirit and the intent of two
measures enacted by the Congress
in 1978 : the Public Utilities
Regulatory Policies Act and the
National Energy Conservati on
Policy Act, both of which encourage
the adoption of load-management
programs by utilities . He added that
AEP had studied a number of
energy-storage systems before
detennining that the proposed ETS
program was the best from the standpoints of both techni ca l and
economic feasibility .
Dorman M. Miller, AEP's v1ce
president - customer services ,
described the 71-eustomer, fivestate, three-year test as the largest
or its type yet conducted in the U. S.
He said that extensive data had been
coUected and analyzed , including
e1&lt;perience during two particularly
severe winters, and that the results
were ' 'gratifying.''
Miller reported that the participants in the field test, in submitting their reactions to the ETS
systems, indicated a high degree of
satisfaction with the operation and
performance or their space-heating
and water-heating eqwpment and
with the lower electric bills they experienced. Among the findings were
these :
- 91 percent of the customers
rated their ETS home-heating
system ''very satisfactory to good'·:
- 99 percent rated it as "very
clean to average ":
- 92 percent made favorabl e comments about the furnace operation;
- 91 percent stated that it was not
necessary to change normal living
habits or lifestyles with the ETS
operation ;
- !14 percent said they were
satisfied with the operating costs;
- 98 percent felt that storage
he• ling was practical;
- 92 percent said they wouid
recommend it to others, and
- 91 percent rated thelr hot-water
s upply as acceptable.
"Aside from the fact that our findings exceeded our !ugh hopes ror

pointed out that the IIUtial cost or an
ETS furnace and water heater combination would be substantially
lugher than that of conventional
equipment. One factor in the specific
cost involves the size of the furnace
to be installed. However, due to the
lower rate, the ETS operating cost
wouid be substantially lower, with
the resulting saving in operating
cost paying for the added capital

Area deaths
JERRY COUGHLIN
Mr . and Mrs . Carroll Norris of
Syracuse Tuesday received word of
the une&lt;pected death of their son-inla w. Jerry "Couglm , 32, at Atkinson ,
New Hampshire .
Mr . Couglin was married to the
former Brenda Noms of Syracuse
and besides his wife . is survived by a
daughter, Kristin , 9, and a son,
Mathew , 6.
Funeral services will be held at
the Baker-Hazel ~·uneral Home, 5555
Philadelphia Drive, Dayton, Ohio, at
tO a. m. Friday. Memorial services
and interment will be at the Letart
FalL' Cemetery in Meigs County at 4
p.m. Friday with the Rev . Harvey
Koch officiating .
JEAN L. SAYRE
Jean L. Sayre, 'J7, Rt . I, Portland ,
rGreat Bend 1died Monday at Holzer
Medical Center.
'\lr£ . Sayre was the daughter of
the late George Arthur and Freida
E. Mora Young .
She was a member of the Racine
Wesleyan United Methodist Church,
Uruted Methodist Women , Meigs
Co unty Farm Bureau and a volun teer worker for the Meigs County
Bloodmobile.
She is survived by her husband,

75th Anniversary
Open House
Sunday December 9
1:00- 4:00

p.m.

We're having our 75th anniversary
open house and we want you to be a part
of it. This SWlday from 1 to 4 p.m. we 'll
have free refreslunents and our Dress A
Doll will be on display_
Come in to the Fanners Bank this
SWlday and be a part of our 75th Anniversary celebration .
A slide presentation depicting the
history of meigs CoWlty will be shown_

Paui W. Sayre; two daughters, Sandra L. Sayre, Athens , and Paula L.
Sayre, Rt . I. Portland ; two brothers ,
Martin H. Young, Cocoa, Florida,
and Reid YoWJg, Rt. I, Minersville,
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev . David Harris officiating . Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery . Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

Bank...
!Continued from page A-1 )
Pomeroy National Bank, and Harold
Hubbard, president or the Central
Trust Co. Bank in Middleport. Joanne Williams was recognized as a 25
year employe of The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co. and Reed pay !ugh
tributes to the late J . Edward Foster
and the late Aten Shain who were
bank employes and gave him much
guidance when he started in the
banking business.
Directors of the local bank as well
as employes were recognized by
Reed, as well as other local persons
who have been helpful to the bank. A
framed needlepoint picture of the
bank done as a gift from Barbara
Swisher Riggs was displayed at the
dinner.
Nancy Reed , wife of the president,
and Mary Lew Johnson, wife or the
executive vice president were given
special recognition and directors
over the years were named .
A social hour preceded the dinner
and slide presentation.
Gift preSI!ntations were made by
R. B Will , Jr ., McArthur, to Mr. and
Mrs. Reed . The Will and Reed
families have been friends for
several generations.
Special guests for the dinner
meeting were Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
Bolen, Mr. and Mrs . Art Shepard,
Rudy Sulken, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Cartwright, and Mr. and Mrs.
James Harbage, in banking in
Columbus; Sam Cassidy, Bill Bishop
and Robert Showalter, banking;
James Stark, Charleston ; Mr . and
Mrs. R. B. Will, banking, McArthur,
and Mr. and Mrs . Harold Hubbardd ,
Mr. and Mrs . John T. Wolfe, Edison
Hobstetter , Mr . and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich, Mr . and Mrs. Emerson
Jones and Mrs. J. Edward Foster,
all local.

the ETS tests," Miller commented,
"we learned that the great majority
of the customers found that their
home heating ; which they generaUy
described as 'cozy ' and 'comfortable ,' had stayed at a uniform
level throughout the day. " He also
cited their frequent mention of the
fact thai they could "set and forget"
their thermostat.
From the AEP System's standpoint, Miller continued. the tests
proved that large-6cale customer acceptance of ETS systems energized
during off -peak hours cou ld
represent a major step in the conservation of its generating capacity.
"With the proposed new lower rates
we hope to gain tlus kind of acceptance for residential energy
storage and thus conserve our
existing energy supply capability,"
he said. "Tbis cannot be done by
rate innovation alone because,
without the accompaniment d
energy storage, • time-{J{-day rate
by itself would simply dictate substantial changes in the customer's
lifestyle - and in most cases this i:3
something he won't accept."
The ETS furnace IS a combination
electric furnace and heat-6torage

unit. At night, heat.ing elements in
the storage furnace raise its interior
temperature up to 1,400 degrees F .
This heat is stored in refractory-type
bricks until It is needed. Then a
blower pulls in cool air , which iB
directed through the layers of
heated bricks. The air, now heated,
then is re..:irculated back through
the home's duct system. A thermostat controls a damper that
regulates the amount or air to he introduced into the heat chamber and
thus controls the temperature ol the
warm air that e:tits the ETS device.
ETS units are in common UBe In
Europe. To make them available In
this country, EPI Corporation, Johnson City, Tenn ., developed an
"Americanized" off-peak version of
an elec.ric furnace manufactured by
Creda International, Ltd., or London .
The energy~icient ETS water
heater is similar to conventional
water heaters , except that it iB more
heavily insulated to retain heat
longer and, at I~ gallons, is larger
than most. The water heaters used
in the field test were developed and
manufactured by A. 0 . Smith Company, Kankakee , ru.

Bank

/ 1.HRAN, Iran 1AP)- Ayatollah

resigiiahon

·-

The res ignation of Mrs . Mona
Frecker as an office secretary was

INSPECI'S ELEMENT - Wllllam R. Coleman, AEP's director or .
residential and commercial customer services, lnspecl.s the Interior of an
electric-thermal-8torage furnace . Electric resistance heating elements,
energized onl y from 11 p.m . to 7 a.m ., heat the refractory bricks, which
hold the heat for distribution wtllun the house throughout the 24-hour day .

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
Humane Society Thrift Shoppe
Middleport

DECEMBER 7 &amp; 8
CRAFTS, CANDY, BAKED GOODS, ETC.

POMEROY, OHIO
Memher FD IC

~~~~~~•

w
w

~
~
~
~

i
i
i

i

w

a

i
i

i
i

w

~

~

i
i

w

iYOUR FRIENDLY STORES
w

~
i

~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

i

I

OPEN

W

I

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TIL 8:00P.M.

~

L~=~= ===~=-=-= -===~-~·-=-==-===----=~

HILO, Hawaii (AP) - A Circuit Court jury has found Stephen
Ray Simpson, 29, guilty in the
murder of an Ohio woman almost
a year ago .
The jury deliberated about two
hours before returning its verdict
Tuesday . Sentencing is scheduled
for Jan . 16 .
Simpson was accused in the
strangulation of Mary Catherine
Drapp, 24, an agriculture student
at Hilo College. Her body was
found beside her car in the
remote Fern Forest sutxUvision
near here on Dec. II . 1978.

NEW ARK, Ohio I AP 1
Doubled gasoline prices are insuring that gasoline remains at
the top of the most wanted tist for
a rural Oluo tlu ef.
Licking County Sheriff Max
Marston said fuel thefts always
increase in the autumn because
farmers work long hours and
leave equipment in fields far
from the main house .
Marston and Pickaway County
Sheriff Dwight Radctiff say the
gasoline thieves also are preying
on auto agencies, contruction firms and other busmesses in rural
areas .

WATERLINE BREAK
Syracuse residents were without
water this morning due to a break in
the main line at Fourth Street.
Water will be restored by noon
today .

r~~-

Found guilty

Gas hot item

SPECIAL BOARD MEETING
A special session of the Eastern
Local School Di.'!lrict Board of
Education will be held at 6 p.m.
Thursday . The meeting, dealing
with personnel. will be an executive

TII.USTEES MEET
The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet at 6:30 p.m . Saturday at
the home of Helen Swaru.

SYRACUSE VILLAGE OFFICIALS GET CHECK A check in the amount or $21,450 was presented to the
village or Syracuse Wednesday by Senator Oakley
Collins and Representative Ron James . They money is

to pay for engineering and planning or the sewage
system . Front, 1-r, Tracey Denardo, Senator Oakley
Collins, Syrcuse Mayor Eber Pickens, Representative
Ron James ; back, Ed Tinkle, Chuck Wilhelm, Rex
Sprague, and George Holman, Syratuse treasurer.

Goal of the EVCIRF program i.~ to
enable as 11Ulny Ohio villages as possible to
get their needed water .~ervice improvements
undt&gt;rway.
EVCIRF loans provide fundifiK for the
planning phase of sewerage or public water
supply system improvements. Without EVCIRF assistance many villages would find it

difficult to plan for the upgrading of their
community water services.
The loans to Racine and Syracuse are
among six village loan presentations that will
be awarded by the Ohio EPA for needed environmental planning projects · w;th one
million dollars appropri&lt;lted for the 80-81
biennium. To date, Ohio's EPA has presented 7/. EVCIRF loans, toU1ling$1J4.0,631.

•

Khomeini says call a 'step forward'

I

accepted Tuesday night when the
Meigs CoWJty Board of Educa tion
met 10 regular session.
Sheila Crouch was named to fi ll
the vacancy .
The board voted to continue its
membership in the Oluo School
Boards Association and Harold
Roush, who represented the board at
the state conv ention or th e
association held in Columbus last
month , gave highlights of that
session.
The annual organizational session
of the board was set for 5 p.m . on
Jan . 2 with the regular January
meeting to follow at 5 :30 p.m . All
members and co unty superi ntendent , Robert Bowen, were
present for last night's session .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6. 1979

Representative Ron James, Racine Mayor Charles
Pyles and Senator Oakley Collins; back, Chuck
Wilhelm, chief of Division of Intergovernmental and
Industrial Relations , Ed Tinkle, engineer of Common
Wealth and Rex Sprague, assistant director of EPA.

Ohio Senator Oakley C. Collins and
Repre.~entative Ronald H. James Wednesday
presented checks totaling $21,4.50 each to the
t'illages of Syracuse and Racine for planning
new wastewater treatment and collection
systems.
The interest-free loans came from the
emergency village capital improvement
mUJry fund administered by the Ohio EPA.

Board accepts
0

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 165

RACINE VILLAGE RECEIVES CHECK - Racine
Village Wednesday was presented a check In the
amount of $21,450 . The money i:3 an interest free loan
from the Emergency VWase Capital Improvement
Rotary FWJd (EVCJRF ), administered by the Ohio
EPA. Front,l-r, Tracy Denardo, program coordinator;

at

Village officials given checks for wastewater systems

session.

Farmers

(USPS 145·960)

•

•

R llah Khomeiru said today the
U.. Security Council's call for a
negotiated settlement or the u.s.lranian crisis was "a step forward ,"
the orficial Pars nen agency repor-

ted.

Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh met with the revolutionary
lead... in the boly city of Qom, Pars
said, and they "noticed that this is
not a resolution condemning us ... ''
Observers said the conunents
were the most moderate yet from
Khomeini or Gholbzadeh during the
month-long crisis. Last week
Khomeini rejected in advance any
steps taken by the Security Council,
alleging that it was controlled by the
United States.
Gbotbzadeh 's statement made no
mention of the resolution 's call for
the immediate release of 'JO
American hostages held in the U.S.
Embassy and did not outline
possible negotiations for their
release.
The Security Council resolution,

Vaughan appointed
George Vaughan, formerly of
Meigs CoWlty, has been promoted
director of real estate and right-{Jfway with the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Vaughan joined the company in
1955 and has held the positions of appliance salesman, construction
clerk, right-{Jf-way man, agent and
real estate supervisor.
He is married to the former
Paullne Zirkle, aiBo or Meigs County . The couple reside in Chillicothe
and have two sons.

adopted unanimously Tuesda y, asks
the two nations show restraint and
negotiate a settlement to the erisis,
which began with the Nov. 4. occupation of the embassy by militants
demanding President Carter send
the ousted shah back to lran to stand

trial.
Ghottn.adeh tempered his reaction
to the U.N . resolution, saying "We
are not very satisfied with it because
they have not condemned the shah.
Altogether Jhis is a step forward and
a better decl&amp;lon than the prevlot13

one."
He was apparently referring to a
Nov. 9 statement issued by
unanimous consent of the Security
Council calling for release of the
hostages .
Meanwhile , supporters of

Patrol cites four drivers
Four persons were cited foUowing
three Wednesday by the GalliaMeigs Post , Highway Patrol.
Officers investigated a twovelucle co llision on MI . Zion Rd ., at
the junction of Lewis Rd., at 3:15

p.m.
The patrol reports an auto
operated by Linda Ratliff , 28, Vinton, pulled from Lewis Rd. into the
path of a velucle driven by Richard
Northup, 28 , Gallipolis.

Village officials take office Monday ·
Racine

Village

officials

were

sworn in for the next four years at a

regular meeting of vilage council
Monday night.
Mayor Charles Pyles gave the
oath of office to Mae Deland,
treasurer, who gave the oath tu
Mayor Pyles, coW&gt;cil members,
Jeanette Lawrence Wid Ben Petrel.
and to Bob Roy and Randy Pyles on
the water board .
Maxine Wingett was named to serve as grant administrator for the
village and reports were given on a
meeting dealing with federal grants
held recently at Ohio University.
Council suspended the rules and
adopted an ordinance to accept the
application for annexation of
territory in Sutton Township to the
village .
Adiscussion was held on placing a
sidewalk on Route 124 leading to the

high school as soon as weather per·
milS and it was announced that a
representative of c•ble television
will be present for the next meeting.
The prosecuting attorney will be
contacted resarding action to '·be
taken to turn Greenwood Cemetery
care over to townslup trustees . The
village has been paying for upkeep
but receives no income for this function.
A fire contract with Sutton Townslup trustees was not renewed for
ISM with Racine Village. It was
reported that several property
owners in the township have asked
what can be done for service.
Council voted to enter into a fire
contract with individuals for $20 a
year . Those wishing such a contract
for fire protection may send their
name and address to Mae Deland,
clerk-treasurer.

There was moderate damage to
the Northup auto, slight damage to
the Ratliff vehicle . Ratliff was cited
on a charge or failure to yield.
Two drivers were cited foU owing a
mishap 10 Kanauga on SR 7. at the
junction of Fifth Avenue .
Called to the scene at 5 p.m., offi cers report an auto opera ted by
Debra Fellure, 24 , Kerr . pulled from
a pr ivate drive intn the path or a
south bound velucle driven by
Thomas DeMarco, Zl, Ashtabula, 0 .
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage
Fellure was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. DeMarco was cited
on a charge of drivmg while under
suspension.

Officers were called to the scene of
a two-velucle accident on SR 7, sixtenths of a mile south of the Meigs
CoWJty Line , atUOp .m.
The patrol reports a north boWJd
auto operated by Carol Jett, 41,
Minersville, had slowed in traffic. A
velucle driven by Sandra Fulmer,
28 , Pomeroy, failed to stop and
struck the Jett auto in the rear.
Both vehicles mcurred moderate
damage. Fulmer was cited on a
charge of assured clear distance .

Khomeini and the religious leader of
the country's Turkish minority
clashed in the holy city of Qom for
the second straight day over the
l!llamic constitution that made
Khomeiru supreme ruler for llfe,
residents reported .
Two persons were kllled and eight
wounded in the clashes Wedne8day,
but no casualties were reported
today . The situation calmed in the
afternoon, Khomeini visited the
minority leader, Ayatollah Mohammed Kazem Shariat-Madari, and
said "plotters" were responsible for
the trouble.
"Do not quarrel between yourselves and focus on the one and ooly
enemy . .. It is your religious duty
and national responsibility to concentrate on the confrontatioo with
the United States," Khomeiru said In
a state radio broadcast to the nation.

R e.~ident.~

n'.~ponsible

Each family in Middleport has the
responsibility of disposal of its trash
and garbage, Middleport Police
O!ief J. J . Cremeans said today .
Chief Cremeans said he is kept
busy ansenng compla1nts on garbage setting in various locations for
several weeks or being placed where
it can be run over by vehicles or
scattered by animals.
Some r&lt;e~dents are not using the
trash collection systems employed
in the community and are mt
hauling their own trash to the landfill .
This cannot continue, Chief
Cremeans warned .

Refund by mail when you buy any Hanes
Green Label Thermal garment and send
proof of purchase to:

Hanes Thermals $1.00 Refund
Box 2998
Maple Plain, MN .55348
Wonderful winter warmth and a big cash
refund, too' Offer ends February 15,
1980. (Limit $1 .00 Refund on top and/or
bottom).
Get particulars in men's and boys' departmen•
1st floor_
Santa Claus will be at Elberfelds this Friday and Saturday, 1 to 3 P.M. - Bring your children for a visit with
Santa.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

. to
.
·
GETTING READY for Friday's reopening Icross your fingers ) of the Shadle
Point Pleasant Volunteer f'Jre Department members Sgt. Marc Kea ms, fore.ground. and .~Jck. Ha ~r~s, .~th o~ whom
spent yesterday afternoon hosing o,ff the bridge. An added incentive for getting the span sp1c n span IS that Guv
Jay Rockefeller himself is sclreduled to be here for the reopening at 2 p m on F'ndsy

75TH ANNIVERSARY - The Farmers Bank will observe ita 75th anniversary with an open house on Sunday from 1 p. m. to 4 p. m. There will be refreshments,
a slide presentation rlepicting the history or Meigs

CoWltY, and the toys created in the Dress A Doll 111111
Make A Truck contest will be on display. The public II
welcome .

•

'

�3-The Daily Senttn el Middl
•
eport-Pomeruy , 0 ., Thursday . Dee . 6, 1979

- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday . Dec. 6, 1979

Jimmy's Whitehouse

·

:
:
:

WASHINGTON I AP ) - Secret
iervice red tape , which frequently
lelays and puzzles White House
'epllrters who have to deal with it,
nay be getting worse .
A White House press pass - hunlreds ol which are issued to repor:ers who cover the president
~ly and who have no record of
18811ult against politicians - has for
years entitled the holder to walk into
the office of the press secretary,
which is perhaps a dozen paces from
the door of the president's own Oval
Office.
But the same pass will not entitle
the holder to get into the cafeteria of
the Executive Office Building across
the street. In fact , reporters can 't
get into the EOB at all without an aJ&gt;pointment.
President Carter has no office in
the EOB. Vice PreSident Walter
Mondale has vne , but splits his time
between there and another office in
the White House itself. The highestranking official working full time in
the EOB is James Mcintyre, who, in
c&amp;'l€ you have missed it, succeeded
Bert Lance as head of the Office of
Management and Budget .
The other day the president's chief

economist , Charles Schultze, and the
head of the Environmental Protection Administration , Douglas Costle,
scheduled a news conference. But
they were left to cool their heels for
1ll minutes while the Secret Service
took its time about admitting a
group of reporters who had been invited to cover the event. The conference was delayed so long that
Schultze and Cootie read short
statements and left before answering questions as planned.
The subject of the news conference : Jimmy Carter 's progress
in cutting governmental red tape .
The
administration
public
relations man 1n charge of the event
said the delay was caused because
new Secret Service regulations had
been put into effect without notice.
Secret Service spokesman Jack
Warner said, however, that he knew
of no new regulations and didn't
know the reason for the delay .
As for the rule preventing holders
of White House press passe5 from
routine access to the EOB, Warner
sa1d, "That was a decision made by
(White House press secretary Jody 1
Powell, and we concur With 1l. " He
offered no ratwnale .

INCONSISTENT HEART PAIN
By l.awreocel.amb, M .D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I 'In 65 years
old and just retired from the insurance business . Recently I've
been getting a dull choking pain
above the breastbone , seemingly
across both lungs. Could this be a
lack ()f oxygen getting to the lungs'
My heart charts sh&lt;lw perfect func tion . Each day I exercise in my base·
ment, sldpping , etc., and never experience any pain or shortness ()f
breath. However, as soon as I go outside and begin a normal walk of say
100 yards, the pain starts and varies
according to the speed of walking.
Occasionally, I feel some pins and
needles in my toes and fingers which
I understand is due to poor circulation .
DEAR READER - Anybody who
has choking, dull pain in the chest
should see his physician and have a
good medical evaluation . It may or
may not be associated with heart
disease.
The fact that you have a normal
electrocardiogram does not mean
that you can l have heart pain . Many
people who have intennittent heart
pain have perfectly normal electrocardiograms while they are at
rest . That's why doctors sometimes
have to do more sophisticated tests
to find out what ·s causing the chest
discomfort. This might include elec·
trocardiograms taken with exercise
or , in certain cases, special X -rays
of the coronary arteries to the heart
muscle .
Heart pain is not consistent.
That's why it's so hard to tell from
the story alone in many instances
what a person has . If you 're havmg
heart pain associated with exertion,
it sh&lt;luld occur in your basement as
weU as outside walking.
I am sending you The Health Letter number 2-10, Heart Attack,
Myocardial Infarction, Angina Pectoris, so you can have a better idea
ol the symptoms these problems
cause . Other readers who want thJS
issue can send 7~ cents with a long ,
stamped, self -addressed envelope

for 1t. Send your request to me, 1n
care uf this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551 . Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
Heart attacks do not cause tingling such as pins and needles in the
fingers and toes . Overbreathing or
hyperventilation may, and it can
also cause chest discomfort . Often
hyperventilation is associated with
anxiety . I wouldn 1 be surprised if
you were anxious in view of havmg
some chest discomfort and not
knowing what's causing it.
I note that you live in Canada . In
some people, walking in cold
weather and particularly into a cold
Wllld will precipitate chest pain from
heart disease . Then people who have
astluna may not tolerate exertion
and cold combined . That may have
something to do with the difference
1n your tolerance to walking outside
as opposed to exercising in your
basement.
In any case , I would recommend
weight control. not smoking cigarettes and, most important, seeing your
doctor to discuss what your problem
is so you can be diagnosed and
treated properly .

-mE DAIL V SENnNEL
1L/SP8l. . . 1

~,~~·---·OEV~"tont:E

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON ARU

ROBERT IIOEFUOI
OIJ'Edl""
~bllaMd daily n:r.rpt S.1anilly by n. Ohio

van.,.""""'""" c.mpuy. Mill-.IA&lt;.,

lll Covt SL. Pomeroy , OIUe &amp;5711 . e..a..
0111« , _ .... liM. Edlloriol Plo-.

m..zm.

Secoad clau pollal" paid 1t PMDtroy, ()lljo,

NaUoaal..tftttlalq repraeatlltlve, LMikll
.UIOclate., :Uti EIICUd An., Ckvducl. OllJo

&lt;MILS.
Sabaaipdoa .-.&amp;n : Oellvnwt bf «WrlH
wtw!re ua~ • eeat. per week. By Metet
R.ouk wbf'N' e.rrWr ~rvke IMt 1vallab&amp;e, 0..
tlloa~

A.M.

Tbr O.Uy SnUDei, by maJJ Ill Olllu ud Wnl
Vlrpaia. oae yeer Pl .• ; 8tJ moata. ti7 .51 ;
ltlree moal!u SIUI . EJMowt.trt . ... ; tb
IDMIUu tzi.M; thfet IDODLlY fll .• .
Tbt AAod.&amp;ed 'Preu la ndutvely eaUded
to tbr .... ror p~~bllodlJII 1111 aliiiii!'WI tttap.VhN
credti.M WI tae ~WipaPf'T ud &amp;1M tbe IOC":al
IM'W'I pabu.bed ~~~ -

Berry's World
·--- ----

I

.

·~---

" Iran has cancelled all I TS debts WE try THAT? "

&lt;

t)"r8 N .,
~.x

.. ~· ... ,. "'

'-l •" ~

\ t...l.

Ohio perspective

Lawrence E. Lamb . MD

w hy don ·r

I

Martha Angle and
Rober t Walters

Sports
World

Well-packaged candidates

Editorial opinions,
comments

HEALTH

IN WASHINGTON

Today's

board, and tuition at many of them is
well below $1,000 a year .
Among four-year colleges, Rio
Grande College has a $765 tuition for
Ohio residents, while Central State
University collects tuition and fees
of $783 for Ofuoans . Rio Grande
charges $1 ,635 room and meals a
year, while Central State lists room
at meaLs at $1,773 per year .
Jefferson Technical College, a
two-year state-assisted fa cility at
Steubenville, charges $315 a ye&lt;J r to
area residenl~ for tuition and fpe~
and provides no room or board .
The Ohio College Association, a
122-year-()ld agency that promote'
cooperation among Ohio colleges
and universities, annually publishes
data on all its member schools m a
booklet ur~ing high seho ul
graduates to go on to higher
education . The data includes un ·
dergraduate enrollemt , maj or
academic offerings, admi ssi on
requirements, tuition and room and
board. The agency's member.•hip in·
NEW YORK (AP) - At the end of
September some 2,330,845 people
eludes 72 Ohio colleges and universities.
were licensed to sell real estate. One
The College Scholarship Service
month later the number had dropped
reports that, nationwide , tuition and
by 10 . ~ percent to 2,087,748, or a loss
fees at private schools this !alliS up
of nearly 8,000 a day.
an average of 9 percent At four-year
The departure from the industry
public universities and colleges, the
of more than 243,000 people is being
increase averages 6.4 percent while
interpreted as evidence of a
fees at public two-year colleges has
weakening marketplace , and in turn
risen an average of 3.5 percent.
as an omen of dark days for the real
Oberlin CoUege is the most ex ~
estate industry.
pensive Ohio school listed by the
William Moore disagrees From
the industry point of view, says
8.'1S0Ciation, with an annual cost of
S6,921. That breaks down to S4.921
Moore, the decline represents a
for tuition and fees and $2,000 for
healthy weeding out. " In the past
few years, " he said, "zillions of
room and board. Oberlin was also
people came into this business. " ·
the most expensive school listed 1n
In his opinion , many of those who
1977 with tuition and fees of $4 ,1:18
are leaving the business weren't
and room-board of $1 ,665 for a tul&lt;l l
committed to it as a profession, and
of $5,803 .
Kenyon College at Gambier an~
Bill Moore is.
Head of one of the larger Colorado
Antioch College at Yellow Springs
firms, Moore and Company, Bill
tie for second place in the charges
Moore is also next year's head of the
derby with $6,600 each for tuill on,
Realtors National Marketing In·
lees, room and board for a year . Two
years ago , Kenyon provided the
stltute , educational ann of the
same services for $5,&amp;40 while An·
National Association of Realtors ."
Moore is one of those people
tioch charged $5,536 .
Other schools charging more than
openly distressed by the low level of
$6,000 this year include Denison
competence so evident in many real
University at Granvill e; Case
estate sales people, but nobody
Westem Reserve University in
knows the feeling better than the
C1eveland, Ohio Wesleyan Univer·
c ustomer who must rely on them .
sity at Delaware ; College of Wooster
Uncounted numbers of potential
buyers have found to their dismay
at Wooster, and The Anthenaeum of
that some sales people have almost
Ohio at Cincinnati .
no knowledge about a property and,
Eleven other schools in Ohio
morCQver, have made little effort to
charge between $5.1311 and $5,980 an·
familiarize themselves with it.
nually, while 15 colleges are in the
$4,000 cost range, seven are in the
Simple but vital questions about
$3,000 range and 14 are in the $2,000
the type of eat or the size of taxes
sometimes can't be answered by the
range .
salesperson, whose firm stands to
Enrollment at Ohio schools this
make a commission of 5 percent to 7
year range from 39,118 unpercent if the sale goes through .
dergraduates at Ohio State UniverMoore grimaces when he hears
sity, to 57 enrolled at The
such tales . It's bad , he admits . " It
Athenaeum of Ohio in Cincinnati and
doesnt take muc~ to get licensed ,"
88 enrolled at Pontifical College
Josephinum near Columbus. Both of
he says. And be confesses that the
the latter are private, churchrequirements for becoming a
Realtor aren't a great deal more dil·
related schooLs.
ficult.
Thirty .four school members of the
He feels the industry is stronger
Ohio College Association have
for having lost some of these sales
enrollments of less than 1.000
people, and he hopes that those who
students.
remain will raise their level of
knowledge, particularly through
courses his institute ()ffers.
lo40W A800T A
Education, he says, is his thing .
JEWHRYJ
AR
Through certificate programs he
~MOM?
hopes to make more Realtors
ll'!l EASY
specialists in various aspects of
AND SH!' 'Ll..
their craft, ' to give them a Master's
R6AL LY LIKE
Degree," so to speak.
If
The institute's degrees are the
CRS, or Certified Resident
Specialist, the CCIM, or Certified
Conunercial-lnvestor Member, and
the CRB, or Certified Real Estate
Brokerage Manager . Each requires
the completion of five courses and a
final examination.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - The
cost of higher education is getting
higher .
Two years ago, it was hard to find
a year of college tuition , fees, room
and board in Ohio that cost as much
as Sli,OOO. Now you can do it on at
least eight campuses.
Put another way, a year at college
can equal the price of a new car.
But it doesn 1 have to cost so
much. A number of two-year
colleges and regional branches of
state wti.versities provide no room or

Business
•
mirror

WASiflNGTON (NEA l - The
speaker was political consultant Bill
Russo, but it could well have been
author George Orwell : " You are
dealing with people's percepti on or
reality .... What people bel ieve to be
true is true ."
The theme of the discussion was
'"politics in the New Decade ," and
it 's surely a ppropriate that in the
middle of that decade lies 1984, the
year Orwell made infamous in his
prescient novel about thought control.
The occasion was the annual
meeting of the American Assocla ·
tw n of Politi ca l Consultants, a forum
that recently attracted dozens of
campaign managers to Washington
to consider the prospects for politics
lD the 1980s .
They talked about " cluster
Ui r~e tm~ " and "ge&lt;K:oding'" about
unagery being more innportant than
reali ty and aOOut their " brave new
"-orld " 1n wh.i ch candidates for
public off1ce can be effectively
packaged, programmed a nd promuted
Co nsultant Ted Connane)', for in ·
stance, offered a catal og of the op·
LJOH!'i a vadab le to a candidate accus ed of unethi ca l. munoral or il lega l
acti VIty

"l11e best defense against a n attack is ·I didn 't do it ,' " he explain·
erl But overwhelming evidence of
gwlt m1ght require a modified confession along the ltnes of " I did 11.
but it 's not! ike you think ."
Fina lly, said Connaney . there's
" yo ur bas ic a pology -type of
r te levison I spot " where the message
from the guilty candidate is a
sympathy-evolung "I did 1t but I'm
sorrv
In any event. the consultan ts
understood. the m ten a for dec1drng
wtu c h

~:t pproach

to take involves no

particular res pect for candor. truth
or honesty but rather the tacti cal
a nd strategic demands of the ca m -

paign .
A5 an r.am pl e of a highl y ef·
feoti ve television corrunerc H:d ,

th~

conference pa rti cipants were shown
an ad produced lor an oppon ent of
Rep . Morris K. Udall , [).Ariz ., in
which the congressman was heard
an d see n say1ng " I ' m fo r
socJa!Jsm ."

Connaney acknowledged that the
quotation was lifted totally out of
contex1, but defended the advertisement on tbe grounds it appeared to
offer "live and in color ... evidence
that Udall's a socialist."
Russo recalled last year's campaign waged on behalf ol then.S.n .
Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass ., accused at the time of cheating his wife
and mother-in-law , perjury and
Medicaid fraud. That assortment of
charges, said Russo with a smile,
"could create real problems" in a
political race.
professional
But
Brooke's
managers found a solution. " We
made a decision to deemphasize Ed
Brooke - to take him out of the campaign - and emphasize instead the
Ed Brooke record," said Russo,
prpudly displaying a series of television ads in which Brooke made only
cameo appearances .
While working in last year 's campaign for Texas Gov . William P.
C1ements Jr ., a Republican, Russo
said he concluded it was crucial to
emphasize the fact that the candidate was a native Texan -and the
twang in C1ements' voice was a maJOr element in promoting the requisite "lifestyle message."
An other c onsultant, Bra d
O'Leary , warned against assllllllng
that the way to reach high-income,
well~ucated, " upscale" voters l.s
to offer them detailed positions on
issues or intricate philosophical
arguments.
" In the state of Texas," said
O'Leary , "the i{lforrnation we g1ve
to high-income people is ·we're gotng to stop the Conunies from coming mlo Corpus Christi and here's
how we're going to do 1t .'"
AU of those efforts at manipulations would be easy to condemn '
were it not for Russo's justification
that much of chicanery is necessary
to attract public interest because
"politics is not very important to
very many people."
If the voters insist that govern·
ment and politics compete for their
attenllon with Mork and Mindy, the
Scarsdale Diet and the point spread
on next weekend's football games,
they get what they deserve from the
practitioners of 19114-6tyle campai gning .

Braves-Toronto

By Will Grimsley
TORONTO (API - Baseball 's
best pitcher over the last decade was
all dressed up today with no place to
gt&gt;- a pawn of Baltimore's tight fisted salary policy.
"It 's not that I am unhappy with
Baltimore - it's a great city and 1
am one of its strongest boosters ,"
said Jim Palmer , three-time Cy
Young winner of the American
League champion Orioles, who in a
unique move nas offered himseU up
as trade hail.
" But I am aggravated because I
feel I am grossly underpaid and
have been for most of my career."
Few people will question that.
Only this week, in the midst of the
annual baseball meetings here,
Palmer was officially proclaimed
the winningest pitcher of the 1970s,
complling 186 victories .
Duling that period, he was a W.
game winner in eight of the 10
seasons, pitched in five World Series
and registered 44 shutouts, a record
wunatched in the majors.
Yet, going into a new season and
new decade, he faced the prospect of
a $.10,000 cut in his already substandard $200,000 salary.
"It's automatic under my contract
because I pitched in only 2.1 games,' ·
he said. "I was bothered with a sore
shoulder from June to September
but I had my full strength at the end
and contributed to the Orioles in
both the playoffs and the World
Series.
" At 34, I am sure I have several
profitable years left in my system."
Unable to convince the Orioles
that his present contract with two
years to run should be upgraded at
lea.U to a plateau of respectability,
he requested that he be put on the
open market.
"I initiated it," Palmer said from
Baltimore before setting out fur the

Super Stars competitiOn in the
Bahamas. " I have to probe new
alten1atives . Can you name another
pitcher in baseball who wtll take a
s:JO,OOOcut this year ?"
The tall, stylish right-hander said
he felt he had become a villain in the
eyes of both Oriole fan s and
management because of his per·
sistent pressure for a salary commensurate with his contributions.
"That 's why I got an agent this
year ," he said.
Palmer 's agent is Edward J .
Keating of Cleveland . He dtsclosed
that both Kansas City and the
California Angels were interested in
Palmer . Nothing had developed as
the meetings approached Friday's
end .
That JS understandable . Palmer is
a nugget that shouldn't come
cheaply on today's inflated market .
Recently the Angels' fireballer
Nolan Ryan (only twice a W.game
winner in 12 years I signed lor $1
rrullion a year for lour years
·'That doesn't bother me ," Palmer
said . " I have no envy . What bugs me
is that there are 20 or :ro pitchers
rnalung more money than I am have been for three years or more . I
only want what I think I deserve ."
The Orioles are notorious for their
payroll conservatism, refusing to
join in the free agency sweepstakes.
LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio lAP ! - Fanny
Fox won the featured $1 ,000 con·
dit10ned pace mile at Lebanon by
half a length Wednesday night and
paid $11,$3 80and $3.80.
Thunderbuck placed. $6 .40 and S4
and Boozer Byrd , third, $3.00 .
The 5-2 double of Lady No Luck
and Melody 's Senator patd $200.20.
Attendance was 1,110and the mutuel
pool totaled $114,888.

TORONTO lAP ) - What has been
a rather dull gathering of baseball
brass e~ llilelr annual winter meetmg
he ld promise of producing some in·
teresting moments bef ore the gavel
sent everyone home .
On today 's agenda of American
League club owners was a proposal
the Associated Press learn ed would
guarantee visiting team&gt; $10 ,000 a
game, rather than the present
arrangement of a 20 percent cut of
the gate receipts .
The measure apparently was
directed at Charles Finley, whose
Oakland A's drew the smallest at·

•

Ill

first major dealing

tendance in majors Ulis yea r .
It was learned that the Kansas
llly Royal.• originally proposed a
$5 ,000 guarantee , but other clubs ,
upset at F'inley ·s mab1lity to sell the
A's so tlle •earn could be moved ,

boosted the amount to $10,000 .
One team official said vtsttlng
cl ubs averaged only $2,992 per game
1n Oakland last season " Barely bus
fare , " said another .
Before the proposal became a
topic of gossip in corridors and lobbies, the big news was the trade of
f1rst baseman Cllrts Chambliss by
the Toronto Blue Jays to the Atlanta

Meigs defeats Logan, 54-28
By Greg Balley
The Lady Meigs Marauder cagers
kept their record clean Tuesday
night with a &gt;4-28 win over visiting
Logan tu raise their record to 2.().
Racing to a 19-7lead at the end of the
first quarter , the Meigs crew never
trailed, but U:&gt;gan managed to
narrow the margin to ~1 7 at the
half .
Outscoring U:&gt;gan 1&amp;-7 in the third
period , Meigs was never pressed the
rest of the contest. A balanced
scoring attack seemed to be too
much fur Logan as Meigs put nine
girls in the scoring column.
Dodie Chapman led the Meigs
scoring with 12 points while Tonia
Ash and Andrea Riggs added eight.
Cindy Dennis led Logan with eight
points as the Squaws feU to 1-2 on the
year .
Meigs once agam controlled the offense , getting 66 shots tu just 35 for
Logan . Meigs hit 36 percent of their
shots while the losers connederl on

34 percent. Logan made 4 of 15 free

throws while Meigs hit on six of nine .
The hosts also controlled the boards
wtth their 4ll rebounda compared to
just 31 for U:&gt;gan .
Terri WiLson and Sheri Lightfoot
each had s1x caroms for Meigs while
Keller led Logan . Logan had 40 tur·
novers while Meigs conunitted just
14.

The Meigs Reserves fell 29-16.
Pam Crooks led Meigs with SIX points while Teresa Weed paced Logan
,.,th ten . The next Metgs game is
Thursday at 5:311against Wellston at
Morrison Gymnasium.
Me1gs ( )4) ·· W i I son 3 1 7 , s As h 3
0 6; Chapm an 6 0 12: K ing 1 o 1: T
A ~ h J 2-8 ; Oli ver 0 0 0; R iggs J 2 8 ,
L •ghttoo1 J 1 7. Smith 0 0 O, Bar
!rum 1 0 2 , And erson 0·0 0; Drehel 1
o 2. Totals 24 -6-54 .

Logan (1S I -- Emerson 3 0-6; Har

tl e y 0 0 0. Kel l ar 1 J 5. Denni &lt;; 4 o a:
Haw~ 1 1 3 , Be lt 0 0 0, F ra ley 2 0 4,
Coff r dl 0 0 0, Walk er 0 o 0 : R1gg s o
0 0. H i nerman 1 0 1, Donncron l 0 0

0 Total s 12+28 .

Braves in a five11layer transaction .
However , the trade falled to
trigger any chain reaction . There
stiU was a great deal of talking, but
little action Major league brass continued playing games, determined to
avoid any mistakes with the Ln ·
terleague trading deadline drawing
closer - Friday midnight.
The California Angels signed
veteran shortstop Fred Patek as a
free agent draftee from Kansas City
and sent shortstop Jim Anderson , 22,
to the Seattle Mariners to complete a
deal for pitcher for John Montague
earlier this year .
However, the Toronto-Atlanta
deal, completed after a series of
talks,was the first major transaction
of the meetings which opened Monday . The Braves' pursuit of Chambliss paid off.

ATTENTION

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

-

CALL THE

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

DAILY SENTINEL

FOR THE BEST DliALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

COLLECT

MASON FURNITURE

Between 8:30 a.m.

Mon. , Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
773 · 5592

Atlant.o wanted to the big clutch
slugger , who helped New York to
three pennants, and went after him
- a rarity so far in these turtlepaced meetings.
In the deal finally worked out,
Chambliss and shortstop Luis
Gomez were traded for outfielder
Barry Bonnell, relief pitcher Joey
McLaughlin and infielder Pat
Rockett, who was aasigned to
Syracuse of the International
League.
In other developments Wednesday : -A source close to
negotiations told The Associated
Press that owner Olarlie Finley was
close to selling the Oakland A's to
Denver oil magnate Marvin Davis.
Only a few details remain to be
ironed out, the source said.

and 5:00p.m.

Mason, W.Va.

1-614-992-2156

COMMENTARY
)&gt;:

Donald F. Graff

The ACLU to the rescue
J a) walkmg will not ordinaril y get
you deported
Not , tha t 1s , unless you happen l u
be an !raman student.
J ust

ask

Mohamm ed

Hem -

matipour . On his way to pick ur
some hamburger for dinner the
other mghl. he stepped off a
Washington c urb intu the path of a
patrol car A mistake. certatnly, but
not his btg one T'hat was be1ng 1n

possessi on of a student v1sa that hac!
expired in September .
As a result . he immediately
became the front-running candidate
to be the first deportee under the
dragnet thrown out by the govem·
rnent in response to the occupatiOn
of the U.S. embassy 1n Tehran .
Not , however , 1f the American
Ci vil Liberties Union has its way . It
is challenging the inqwry into the
status of Iranian students in the
United States on behalf of all 50 ,000.
plus of them. Hemrnatipour in cl ud ·
ed .
TI1e ACLU has no argwnent with
the gov ernment's authonty to
scrutinize foreign student• or to
deport any whose papers are not in
order , only with its singling out the
lranians alone in this instance . In so
domg, in the ACLU view , it is being
selective and discriminatory .
It is the sort of distinction that to
the ACLU is elemental justice but
that to much of the public may appea r as obstructionist nitpicking .
And 1t is on an issue so emotionally

charged that the AC1 .U may become
the foc us of the wrath of that public.
Cons idering the consequences of
the last such display of wrath, it's a
wonder the ACLU is in any shape to
U.ke on the case of the Iranians .
Its long court defense of the right
of American Nazis to march in the
ove rwhelmingly Jewish community
of Skokie,.Ill ., was one of the most
bruising battles m the history of the
organization, and not only because it
relies so heavily itself on JewishsuJ&gt;port . If there ever was an unpopular
cause in the public at large , that was
it. And while the ACLU won il•
points in court, it lost something like
haU its members and was forced to
the wall financially in the process.
It now reports that it has
recovered much of the lost ground,
although far from aU . Even had it
not , the Iranian students represent
the sort of basic question of the right
way and the wrong way to conduct a
free society that it would have been
incapable of resisting had 11 meant
selling off the office furniture to pursue it .

So it is again wading into the fray,
again talung a position contrary to
inflamed majority opinion and indiffe rent to the wrath it consequently
draws upon itself.
It is the sort of behavior that requires thick skins and something
even more serviceable.
Finn convictions .

TICKETS ON SALE NOW
Sorry for the delay in starting our exciting, new daily game, The
Number. A brief delay in order to bring you the best game possible.
Your patience and understanding have been most appreciated.
As for right now, The Number 1s off and running. If you've got
a lucky number, come on and play it. We've got a hunch you're really
going to like our new daily game, The Number.

br une •nd Miller
1 H-1£1-J !3/&lt;USH O N
51-'EL LAC . DADC-'N
G t;T 50 M E l"l::&gt;F'.

YO U

The NUMBER drawing nightly at 7:29 on wcmh·tv

L •

Play The NUMBER at any of li aese Sales Agents:
CHESAPE~KE

'2-h

Hart ' s Unio 1 76
100 2nd Av enue

GALLIPOLIS
F=-ruth Ph,u-mac:y

J64 Jack son P1k e

GUYS\IIt.LE
Ruby 's Spanish Maine
Rt . so East

WELLSTON

Brenner's Grocery

130415. Pennsylvania
•I

-,

�4---The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday , Dec 6, 1979

SVAC schools well represeflted

Hannan Trace's Kerry Ours named first team All-Ohio

TIM BEAVER

KERR YOURS

BRIAN BISSElL

JIM BARNES

;-·,......
JAy BIU y

SCOTI RUSSElL

1

TIM HOWEll.

1979 Class A All-Ohio grid team
COLU MBU S, Ohoo I AP J -- Th e
Assoc iated Pr ess 1979 Class A A l l
Ohi o h 1gh school footb all select1ons .
made w1th the r ecommendat ions of
a statew•de panel o f spor ts wr 1ters
an d broacl c as ter s
First Team Offense
End&lt;:; Tom Pollock . Mogadore ,
5 II, 160, Sr , and John Kantner ,
Candl Wind1ester . 6too t . 170, Sr ,
ta ck les J1m Dyke . Orwell G ra nd
Vall ey. 6 4 , 125 . Sr . and Kerry Oun ,
Crown C•ty Hannan Trace , 6·foot,
1,0, Sr ; guard'&gt; Doug Fi sc ner ,
Newark Catholic, 6 too1, 19.5, Sr ., and
Don Phillips, M cComb. 5 10,215, Sr .
cen ter Br 1an Clark, Ce d arville , 6 ),
210 , Sr . qu.H l erbac k Doug Freea ,
Arl1ngton , 6 too1, 180 , Sr , running
back s
Tom
Dec ker ,
Columbus
Academy , 6 2, 215.
Sr , Tom
Bowman . Portsmouth N ot re Da me ,
6 1, 187 , Jr , and Br i an Lane . Sugar
cree k Garaway , 5 10, 16 5. Sr
First Team Defen se
Ends M1k e A ndrews. M l Don al d .
6 J, 185, Sr , and Rand'{ Bankes ,
Crooksv il le, 6 fooL 177, Sr ta c kles
Brad N ola n, Newcome r stown , 5 10 .
300. Sr, and Norman Sm 1th . T1fftn
Calvert, 6 4, DJ , Sr
ltneoackers
Joe Schmidt . Cov1ngton. 6 1 185_ Sr .
Troy Putnam , Frankford Adena. 6 3,
210, Sr , Duane Sanche I . Gib
sonburg, 5 10 , 185. ~r , and Ken Brtx
ter , Co lum bus A cademy , 6 foot . 170 .
Sr : deep backs Tod d E ... an s.
Newbur ·; , 5 10. 164. Sr. Jtty lm
wait e . Mar1a Ste1n M.:mon . 6 J, 180 .
Sr . and Br 1an Wr ight . Ber gho!l S pr
ing li e ld , 5 11. 166 , Sr
Second Team Offense
E nd s Cra1g Cre- amer , Brdl 1ant
Buckeve North . ~nd Dan A d am~ .
Danbur y Lak.es10f' ta c K.t es Eugnee
Johson , BataY Jd . and Larry George
Mog a dore . guaros J1 m Trus.ke .
W i lli a m sburg , and Chr1 s Kelly , Sr1n
field Cathol1 c. ce nt er G reg Stamper .
Portsmouth N otre Dame . quarter
ba c ks Dave Tobias , Cov1ng ton , and
Larry
Copeland ,
Youngs t own
N orth ; runn ing backs T 1rn Tnomils.
Beall svi ll e,
D ave
Temple .
Ayer svi lle , and rom D1 c k. er son .
Crooksville
Second Team Defense
Ends Mark Netzel . Hopew ell
Loudon , dnd Don i P arad iso, Fre
mont St . Jose ph ; tackles John Klom
fas . Middl ef ield Cardina l and D an
Heil. Sidney Lehman, S 10 1'1, 705,
Sr ; l inebackers Jac k Yur ic h , N ew
Ph il ad e lph ia
Catholic,
Gregg
H oman , Maria Stein Mar ion, Duane
Stakclin, New Wa sh i ngton Bu ck.er'e
Central , Br ian Gilc h ris t . Mogado re ,
and Eric Brown , 5ebring ; deep
ba ck s Scott Leighty , Yellow Springs,
Steve M o yer, Zane sv ill e Rosec rans ,
and
Brian
Simmermac her ,
Crestline
Third Team Offense
Ends John Robert s, Hemloc k
Mill er, and ROdger Harr1s, New
Cathli c ; ta ck les Jeff Brunie , Sebr
ing , and Mark Smar sh, L orain
Clearvi ew: guards Bob Fort1(1 , Col
umbus RPady , and Rand y Byron .
Be raho l7 sorina ifled ; cen ter J 1m
Bauman , Rittma n : quarterb ac k s
Tr ent Tate, Canal W 1nchestN , and

Ma r k Addy , Jewett Se ta . runn rng
oa ck s Rick B adantek , South tngt on
Cha lke r , Al a n Y oung , Sul l ivan B lac k
R tver . Mtk e Mallow , ChdltCOfhe
Zane Tra ce. and Bnrt Brown ,
Brilliant Buc key North .
Third Team Defens e
Ends Randy Spark s , Cardtngton,
and John Mohr . Mec han icsburg ;
tac~&lt;.les
B o b Ma ·r le ,
Brilltant
Buc k eye N orth . and Brett lrwtn ,
Tr tmp le ltneoackers Ertc Hcrze l ,
N or thw ood,
Mark
K rownapple ,
Hoard Eas t Knox , 5teve Sco1t , Port

smou th

Ea s t.

and

Terry

M c Laughlin , Garfield Heigrs Trin i
ty . deep bac k s Jeff Fease l, Bloom
dale
Elmwood, Br ian
Btssell ,
Rl•edsv d le Eas ter n. and Dave Hess.
Columbus Aca demy .
COAC H OF YEAR - Norman
L1ng1e . Mogaaore
BACK OF YEAR - Doug Freed .
Arlington
LI N EMA N OF YEAR Tom
Pollock , M ogtt dore
Spec1al Mention
Dttve Thoma~ . Crdi ngton ; Lee
R1zor . Mount Gilead : Giles Grisso.
Milford Ce nter Fairbanks ; M i ke
Sco le5 . Howard East Kno x ; M ik e
Shumaker . Amanda Clear c r eek ,
M 1ke L 1nk en hooker , Centerburg ;
J1m Oder , New Catholic; Gene
Longo , Canal
W inchester :
Ben
Ghdon1
NPwar k Cathol ic; Scott
Bro c k man
M ille r spor t ,
Arnie
Dupler . M1llersport .
Jon
Hall ,
N ewar k Cathol1e,
John Bowe r ,
Pla1n Cilv Alder . Dt'lve Pate , Mor ra l
R1dgedale
Mtke Clevenger , Portsmouth
Ens t . M 1k(' Rt st . I ro nton 5t Joseph ,
Jotm
WR 1ght , Chi l li co the Zane
Tra ce . Jell Brown, P ort smouth
Eas t . J1m Barnes . Vinton North
G.alha . Bruce S1mons , Heml oc k
Mill e r . Jeff V1c k er s, Chill1co t he
Hun1 1ngton .
Greg
Hayman ,
R ee d svil le Eastern , Mark Barth
N ew Bo ston . Randy Y ares, Oak
Hill .
M1ke Brown,
Portsmouth
N ot re Dame Andy S1no zich, lront on
St Jo5e pn
Chr1s
N ash.
Zanesv111e
R ose cran s.
Scot t
Whalen .
Stra s bur'J .
Andy
Oestrfanes .
Shadys1de , Ed Huck . Beverly Fort
Fryt' . Jpf Johnson , Bergholz Spr
•ngfteld , R ic k Gerber , Sugarcree k
G.araway. M ike Noe , Zan esv1 11 e
Rosecrans . Mik(' Su ll 1van, N ew
Philadetphta Cat hol ic . We st Steblo,
B e r g h o lz
Sp r ingf i el d ,
Ca l
Teafat1 lle r .
W oodsfiP t d .
Guy
Sc hr O&lt;k, Sugar creek Gara wav .
D.=tvf&gt; Stewart , South Charleston
Soutneaste rn , Er1c Schooler, Cedar
ville , Terrv Brennan . · Lewisbur g
Tw1n Valley North , Todd LeMaste r ,
Cedarvill e . Tyr on Pf.&gt;lerson, Yell ow
Springs ; Chuck W ild man , South
Cah r e l sf on
Soulhf' s tern ; M i k e
Strong , Bethel . Kev n ... ei ter , Tr iad .
Ch1 p Coon , Williams burg , Tr oy
Karns, A r can um . Duan e Bost1 c k .
Mec han 1csbur g
MatT
Morgan ,
B loomda l e
Elmwood . Todd BurgmP tster , Gib
son burg .
Mar•o Gar c1 a , G1b
sonburg . Doug Oates . Ar l 1ng ton .
Doug K1 sseb1 rlh , Ar l 1ngt on . John

Kuhn ,
Tiffin
Calve r t,
Steve
H ey d inge r .
New
Washington
Bu c ke ye Central ; Doug Elmer ,
Gisonb urg ,
Stpvp Conrad , Gib
sonburg . Tony Lee , Fostoria St
Wendel in
Ray Leeper , Lorain Clearview ,
Jelf Maire, Garfield Heights Trini
ry . Don Pallini , Cuyahoga Heights :
Jeff MackPy , Fairport Harding ;
Morgan Sa yle , Kirtland ; Charles
Nee ly. Lorain Clea rview . AI Balko,
Middlefield Cardinal, Chris Bowen.
K i rtland . Matt Harthun. Gaft-s Mills
Hawken , Don Smiechewicz, In
dependence,
Bob
O'Sullivan.
Mapleton ; Louis Rosalez , Lorain
Clearview .
Ken
Siba,
tn
de pendence ;
David McCreery ,
Gates
Mills
Hawken ;
John
Bergnaus , · C levela nd Lutheran
W est ;
AI Loushin,
R i c hmona
He 1ghts : Ed Drozd , Orwell Grand
Vdlley; Sam Sma lidino, Lorain
Catholic Todd Farner a, KinancL
Sco tt Crossen, Hillsdale ; George
Tadla , McDonald , Mike Williams ,
Nowayne Crest view : Dar'f-b Gu ido ,
Leetonia ; Tom Cramer. Berlin
Center Western Reserve ; Andrew
B e il , Leetonia.
Dave
Deville,
L eefonia ,
Clint Satterthwaite,
Minera l R idge ; Paul Birmingham,
Columbia ; Norm Haswel l. Su llivan
Black River , Bob Perry, Smithville ;
Bob Vickers, McDonald .
Honorable Mention
Pat Mi ckley, Danville; Scott
HochradeL Canal Winchester : Scott
Co mbs , Centerburg ; Kev i n Goble,
West Jefferson , Jim Boltz, Marion
Ca thol ic ; Dave Hartley , Center
burg ; M i ke Ni c hols, Neark Catholic;
Mike Smith, Johnstown Northride ;
Ji m He5s . DanviiiP . Tra c v Payne ,
Ce n1erburg , Ron K aelber , Car
d1ngton :
Todd Wilde r,
N ewark
Ca tho li c, Todd BiTler , Amanda
Cl ea r cree k , M ike Moss . Johnstown
Northridge . Ken Marvin, Richwood
North Union . Mark Sandes, Marion
Ca th tic : Dave Pribonic, Johnstown
Nor thridg e, Jeff White, Johnstown
Northridge , Joe Colopy, Danville ;
Sco tt Smi Th , Milford Center Fair
banks ,
Phi l Tobin,
Lancaster
F1she1·, Jon Maste l, Millersport .
Sco tt Bell , Danvi l le
Ralph M e rr i tt , Lucasville Valley .
Bruce O nev . Richmond Dale
Sou th e a ste rn ;
Jeff
Halley ,
Chi lli cothe Zane Trace ; Jay Fa 1res ,
Trimb le ; Tim Beaver , Crown City
Hannan Trace ; Scott Gragg, Ba in ·
bridge
Paint
Valley ;
Clete
Str asbaugh , Chillicothe Huntington ;
TOdd Sammons, Lucasville Valley ,
Bi ll Salyers, Franklin Furnace
G reen ; Tpdd Sibley , Crown City
Hannan \Trace;
Scot1
R.unell ,
Patriot Southwestern; Jay Brag,
Crown City Hannan Trace; Gene
Cam pbell , Trimble, Carl Ferguson,
Portsmouth NotrP Dame ; Mark
Pavton . Crooksville; Jon Bokovitz,
Ironton St Joseph ; Mark Fraley,
Ch i lli coth e Zane Trace, BiJones,
Tr 1m b le . Tra c y OePugh , Chill 1cothe
Hunt i ngton ,
Keith
Dunn , new
Boston . Ron Coriell, Lucasville
Vrt ll ey . Tim Howell , Vinton North
Gallia ; Bob El l iott . Crooksville

MIKE HAYMAN
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP J
Mogadore, the state poll and playoff
champion,
dominates
The
Associated Press' Class A AIJ.()hjo
prep football selections with Coach
of the Year Nonnan Lingle and
Lineman of the Year Tom Pollock.
Arlington, which finished second
to Mogadore in the regular season
state ratings, won the other majcr
AP award today when quarterback
Doug Freed earned the Back of the
Year honors.
lingle, a Kent State University
product, hit the jackpot in his sixth
season at Mogadore . He led the Summit County school to an unbeaten
season of 10 strrught victories nd a
playoff championship victory over
Covington.
One of the big rea.wns behind the
Wildcats' success was Pollock. The
two-time Northeastern Ohio alldistrict selection, a ~foot- 11, tOOpound senior, was an outstanding
pass receiver, defensive back and
punter.
Fred, a Moot, !&amp;&gt;pound senior,
ws just as versatile in leading Arlmgton to a!()..() record . He threw just
one interception in completing 63
percent of his 80 passes. He figured
in 29 touchdowns and I ,828 total
yards, averaging 7.6 yards per rush .
Freed also was a standout safety
with eight Interceptions, return
kickoffs at a 25-yard rate and punts
at a 15-yard average and punted for
the Red Devils.
Joining Freed in the first team allstate backfield were seniors Tom
Decker of Columbus Academy and
Brian Lane of Sugarcreek Garaway
and Portsmouth Notre Dame 's Tom
Bowman, the lone junior on the No. 1
squads.
Decker, a bruising 6-2, 215pounder, was worth 8.9 yards per
carry, scored 1lJ touchdowns and 165
points in leading Academy to a ~I
record

WHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
CARPET

TODDSD!LEY
Lane , f&gt;..!O and 16~ poWlds, rushed
for 324 yards and six touchdowns in
one game and 1,492 yards in
Garaway·s 8-2 season.
The 6-1, 187-pound Bowman shattered nine school records while rolling up 1,671 yards at a clip of 10.1
yards per try, 'n touchdowns and 177
points this year .
Pollock's mates on the first team
offensive line are end John Kantner
of Canal Winchester, tackles Jim
Dyke of Orwell Grand Valley and
Kerry Ours of Crown City Hanna
Trace, guards Doug Fischer of
Newark Catholic and Don Phillips of
McComb and Cedarvlle center Brian
Clark.
The front four on defense consists
of ends Mike Andrews of McDonald
and Randy Bankers of Crooksville
and tackles Brad Nolan, a 300pounder from Newcomerstown, and
Nonnan Smith of Tiffin Calvert. At
linebackers are Joe Sclunidt of Cov·
ington, Troy Putman of Frankfort
Adena, Duane Sanchez of Gibsonburg and Ken Barter of Colwnbia Academy . The deep backs are
Todd Evans of Newbury, Jay lmwalle of Maria Stein Marion and
Bnan Wright of Bergholz Sjpringfield .

CLEANING
Get professional
results at a
iraction of the cost.

Rent
Amer ica's No . 1
Home Ca rpet
Cjeaning
Syst~:~m

·.--------------1
:

I

~~~T

$1

ONLY

14 -HourMinimum)

(X)

PER HOUR

L-------------J
STAR SUPPLY CO.

GOOD TliRU

DEC. 6TH

FILL YOUR GIFT LIST
••
•
•
•
•••
•

SYLVANIA

FLIP FLASH
SUPER 10

~

$}34

CHRISTMAS
GIFT TAGS

CHRISTMAS
BOWS

BAGS
OF
2S

ONLY

100 Pieces

53~

Reg . Sl.OO
ONLY

~~~]····················~·····················~····················

KODAK
INSTANT COLOR FILM
PR10
OR

:•

RUSSELL STOVER
ASoORTED

•
•••

CREAMS

•

•

POLAROID SX70 FILM

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

By American Greeting
Reg . $2 . 00 A Bo•

1 Pound

$~

• Reg . SJ.7S
ONLY

••

ONLY

ENGLISH LEATHER

WATCHES

$}295

ONLY

HEAVEN SENT •
••
•• AFTER SHAVE LOTION
• EAU DE PARFUM
••
4 oz.
•
:NATIJRAL SPRAY MIST :• Reg . $3.00 ONLY
•

•••
••
••
•

Reg.

suo

ONLY

•• •••••••••••••••••••••••
COLOGNE
••
•: Reg . $3.75
Onlv

125 TISSUES
\c.enftlfn MCCullough , lt . Ph .
CMrlft NiH .. , R. Ph
Aor~•ld Kl""l"t , R. ~
Mon . """ S.t I ·OO• .m . totp .m

ONLY

•••••••••••••
View Master

STEREO
VIEWER
$129

poinl• and 16 reboWJds, while .Johnson, subbing for the injured George
McGinnis, scored IS points and also
had 16 rebounds .
Laken liS, Rodets lit
Nonn Nixon scored 26 points, in·
eluding the game-wiMing basket
with 2:i seconds left after a Spencer
Haywood steal. Los Angeles had to
reboWld from a 107·102 deficit and
the IOSB of Kareem Abdui.Jabbar after the Lakers' center waa hit with

his second technical foul .
KJnga 109, Pistons 93

Bill Robtnzine led seven Kansas
Oty piayers in double figures with ?Jl
points as Detroit lost its 11th straight
game on the road.
Pacen 118, C.vallm 9t
Mickey Johnson scored 24 points
and James Edwards added 22 as Indiana fought back from a l~inl
second-&lt;juarter deficit against
Cleveland.

Johnson , Edwards and Billy
Knight had six points api ece as In diana outscored the Cavs 20-9 in the
final St minutes of the first half to
erase most of a 52.,'19 deficit .
Nels US, SuDa 100
Mike Newlin scored 29 points and
rookie Calvin Natt added 27, including eight straight in the third
quarter to stretch a slim 63~ New
Jersey lead to 71~2. The Nets stretched the margin to 15 in ).he first

minute of the fourth quarter when
Newlin hit the first of I wo three-point
goals.
Knlclui 1117, Bulletsl04
Mike Richardson hit a drivlllg
layup at the final buzzer and converted a free throw after time expired as New York withstood a
Washington comeback frum a If&gt;..
point deficit . Ray Williams and Bill
Cartwright scored 25 points ap1ece
to lead the Knicks.

WlUTion t'l,llaiiiiiO
Sonny Parker, switched from for·
ward to guard in a lineup change,
responded with 23 potnla u Golden
State broke a flve11ame lcllllog
streak with a victory over Ollcago.
Solllcslli, Jazz N
Gus Williams, leading the llgbtning-quick Seatile fast break, scored
32 points and the Sonlcs' defenae
held the NBA's second-leading
scorer, Adrian DanUey, to 19polnta.

Three SVAC
tilts slated

MONDAY,

WALT DISNEY
CHARACTER

I
I

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Booton Celtics have lost their
first game of the season at home and
the Philadelphia 76ers have lost
their first backboard .
Darryl Dawkins, the Moot-ll&amp;,
2&gt;2-pound center who ha s
specialized in awe-inspiring slam
dunks throughout his career with the
76ers, pulled the rim off the backboard with a dunk during
Philadelphia 's 132-l:!ll victory over
the San Antonio Spurs Wednesday
night . The resulting hole caused the
glass to shower down on top of
Dawkins, who also shattered a back board at Kansas City Nov. 13.
"It's an exciting thing, bringing
down the hoop," said Dawkins. "My
contract is coming to an end and
maybe I'll be able to put more
peQple into the arena + and the
more people l bring out , the more
money I might get in my contract."
Meanwhile, the Atlanta Hawks
handed the Celtics their first
National Basketball Association loss
in 12 games at home this season as
John Drew scored 22 points, all in
the second half, and Eddie Johnson
added 21 in a !:!l).92 wipeout.
In other NBA games, the New Jersey Nets whipped the Phoenix Suns
llf&gt;-100, the New York Knicks
outlasted the Washington Bullets
107-IIK, the Indiana Pacers beat the
Cleveland Cavaliers 118-99, the Los
Angeles Lakers outscored the
Houston Rockets llli-114, the Kansas
City Kings topped the Detroit
Pistorui 109-!l3, the Denver Nuggets
swamped the Milwaukee Bucks 123107, the Golden State Warriors toppled the Chicago Bulls 97-90 and the
Seattle SuperSonics tackled the
Utah Jazz llf&gt;-96.
Dawkins' dunk with 6 :421eft in the
game was the 13th and 14th points of
1lJ he scored fer the game, which had
to be delayed for I hour, 14 minutes
while workers installed a new backboard.
Coach Billy Cunningham said he
would ''never tell Darryl not to dunk
for two reasons. One, that 's a high
percentage shot and I w o, it's in timidating ... players have a tendency to back off."
Julius Erving led Philadelphia
scorers with 28 points, while George
Gervin had 42 for San Antonio.
Nuggelll%3, Bucb 1117
Milwaukee had swamped Denver
by &gt;7 points in a pair of October victories, but the Nuggets got great inside play from Dan !Mel and George
Johnson to turn the tables this time.
l5sel collected a game-hlld&gt; 36

Sur.:t•y 10 JOt() 11 JO •"d J tot p m
PRIE!Io(RIPTIOhjS

PH tt1 1fU
Frt~ndly S.rW'ICt

Pomtfoy . 0

YHLO-BOLE
MEDICO
DR_GRABOW

20%
OFF

Three league games and a nonleague encounter make up this
weekend's action in the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference.
Friday night, Kyger Creek plays
at Southwestern; North GaUia
travels to Eastern, and Southern is
at Hannan Trace in the league
games. Saturday night, North Gallia
plays at Portsmouth Notre Dame in
a non-league affair.
Following last week's action,
Southern, the defending SV AC
cllamp, recorded the most impressive victory, a lopsided, 81.,)1
win over Miller .
North Gallia, one of the teams expected to give the Tornadoes a run
for their money this season,
defeated Miller, 76 to 74 but lost to
Oak Hill and G!ouster in other nonleague contests.
Kyger Creek defeated Elk Valley,
f&gt;9...11 to win its opener last Friday
night but did not impress in dotng so.
Eastern has lost its first two
games, 67~ to Waterford and 60-$2
to Fort Frye.
Southwestern also expected to
give Southern some pmblelll.'llost 76
to 64 to Eastern of Pike County.
Hannan Trace, the 1979 SVAC football champs have had their
problems thus far on the hardwood .
The Wildcats have been beaten
twice, 72-49 by Fairland and 41-40 by
Synunes Valley.
TEAM
Sovthern
Kyger Creek
Sovthwesternh
North Ga lli a
Eastern
H . Trace

W

L P OP
1 0 B 1 51
1 0 59 41
0 1 64 76
1 l 197 273
0 l 119 124
0 l 89 113

111ISTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (APJ Dusty Baker came up on the rail to
take a photo finish decision over
Anybody's Spray in the featured
eighth race Wednesday at
Thistledown.
Mike Moran rode the winner over
six furlongB in I: 12 ~ . The winner
paid $6.tO, $Ul and $3.
Anybody 's Spray paid $6 .:al and
f4 .:al, and Et Ground returned S2.80
for a third-place finish .
A crowd of 4,5~wagered 1615,948.
Ohio High School Basketball
By Tht AssoCiated PreH
Wednesa y N igtn
Co ley 71. HudS&lt;&gt;n 61
Greensburg Green 73, Fiel d 51

Kings Mill• 55. Loveland ••
Norton 85 , Akron Coventry 79
Revere 76, Medina Highland 49
Steubenville 8..t , Cadiz 5:!

REG. •3.29

�II-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 6. 1979

Holiddy potluck, program held Tuesday
A holiday putludt and program
by the East
Letart United Methodist Women at
the church.
The church was decorated
throughout with thing.l of Chrimnas
and the progarn by Mrs. Marlene
Fisher featured the theme, " Do It
Yourself Christmas." There was
group singing of ' 'I'm Dreaming of a
White Olristmas " , "Upon the
Housetop" and "What Child i.s

was held Tuellilay night

nus."

Mrs. Belva Fisher read the

Christmas story from the Bible anu
Mrs. Doris Adams bad p:-ayer The
group ..ng "The Magic Penny ..
after they had told what they would
gtve and received a penny . Mrs .
EUeen Buck was · 1181Tator for a
playlet on the nativity . As the story
of the birth of Christ was told
members put in place Mary , Joseph
and the Baby Jesus, the star, the
three wisemen, the shephercb, and
the angels . There was group singing
of " It Came Upoo the Midnight
Clear " and "Away in the Manger ."

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Red spot on her rug
DEAR POLLY - So many of the
Pointers have proved helpful to me .
I would appreciate hearing If you
have a suggestion for removing a
red soda spot from my gold living
room rug . -MARJE
DEAR MARIE - I presume the
red "soda" spot is the result of a soft
drink being spilled . One should work
on sort drink stairuJ promptly which ,
of colll'lle , you CBMot do this time
but should .-.member for the future .
One of the national rug-deaning institutes recommends sponging
several times with water and blot so
as to not saturate the backing .
First use a detergent solution on
the stain and that would be made
with two teaspoons of a synthetic
detergent in two cups of warm
water . Apply this with a medicine

Gent·ration Rap
Ry ftt ·l.·n and~ .. ,. Bullt ·l
IF GRANDPA IS SET IN HIS
WAYSCANTIIE
WAYS EVER BE CHANGED?
HELEN AND SUE :
Grandpa Uves with as. He 's pretty
nice euept fortwa tllillp: He WOR 't
wear a I!Wellter or ~en an undershirt in winter, then complalnB of the
cold and keeps turning up the thermostat so the rest of ua sweat. Also
he won't well!' his hearing aid so es-pects TV on extra loud, and that
grates oo our ears.
They '"Y you can~ teach an old
dog new tricks. Can you un-teach old
ways? Mom says, "Humor him ."-.

GRANDKIDS
GRANDKin'l :
I say, give Grandpa a handaome
sweater for Christma3, teD him how
tenific he looks in it, and take a
family vote on where o..thermostat
should be l!et. -SUE

GRANDKIDS :
And I add, fetch Grandpa hiJ hearIng aid when be startl fiddling with
the TV oontrol.s . One should only
concede to old age when there 's no
other solution.
{8111 be IJ'arelul Ia's !lice &lt;tilerwise . )- BELEN
- ·•
DEAR RAP:
Wilen Sheree and I got married
two months ago I thought sbe 'd
leave her stupid Pekinese wtlh bet
folks. Instead she insists on ''love
me, love my dog ," and the ugly rwt
rules our house. Besides, he hates
me .
He dig.! up my garden ; ate aU the
tomatoes be coold reach (at least
knocked them off the vine and
played ball with them) ; takes over
my favorite chair, and sleeP' on our
bed, snarling If we bounce aroond
and disturb His Majesty . He reselll3
us making love.
The other day I thought I saw
Sheree's wig left on a bedroom
chair. To keep it from being dlewed
up by Old Ugly, I grabbed it and
started to toss it up on the dresser.
Turns out the wig was Old Ugly. He
bit me. He does that often - every
time I hug my wile.
I love Sheree, but either her dog
goes or I do. Wilen I told her that the
other night, he raised his leg on my
shoe. And she laughed. What would
you 1111111Jesl? - PEAKED Ol.IT OF

dropper and rub with a soft cloth lll a
cirrular mot! on . Sponge aga.in with
clean warm water, blot with a damp
cloth and be careful not to saturate.
If possible put a piece of plastic
under the rug while you work .
If stain remains pour one-fourth
cup white vinegar into three-fourths
cup water and apply with dampened
cloth . Leave on about 15 minutes,
blot and rinse . Use the damp cloth in
the direction of the pOe of the rug
during the last blotting. Do test
anything for effect on color and
fabric . Good luck' -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When getting
gasoline at a self «rvice station lift
the hose high so all the gas will run
into your tank . This will avoid the
spillage that usually occurs when
one removes the gas nozzle from the
tank . Saves gas, money and reduces
air poll uti on too . Keep squeezing the
gas handle with your other hand
while doing thi.s. -HERMAN
DEAR POLLY - Many thanks for
the Pointer that suggested adding
celery leaves to hold down the odor
of boiling cabbage . I experimented
further when cooking sauerkratt
and adding celery leaves but they
turned a bad color . I removed them
from the top of the kraut and added a
nice stem from the leaf area of the
celery and it worked line . No smelly
house and I enjoyed the meal. IRENE
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Poiner, Peeve or Prlblem in her column . Wnte POLLY'S POINTERS
inc are _of this newspaper .

Wolf Pen
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and
Mrs. Iva Johnson were ThanksgivIng Dlly guest~ of Mr. and Mr1
Wry Barr of Rutland.
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves, Mr. and
Mrs. Jaclt Elalll, Bill, Carolyn, Mr.
and Mrs . Eugene Haning, Ronda
and Rooald, Mr . and Mn. Paul
Darnell, Jeff and Lester Frank were
'lllanlrl!givin Day gueats ol. Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Turii:emlan .
Mrs. Daniel Worley and Stacy of
!Ainiel.s, W.Va., spent Thank3gtving
week with Mr . and Mn . Olarley

&amp;nlth.
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald R..,.n,
Mandy and Michael , were
Thanksgiving guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Stne Haggy and Stephanie and
Brad.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Murphy and
family , Mr. and Mrs. John E . Murphy, &lt;llru, Mrs. Joe Evan.s were
lbanisglving dinner guest&amp; of Mrs.
J . R. Murphy, Peggy and Barbara .

side: }"ou can handily go braless,
jogging is no problem, you won~ sag
with age, and curves are as near as a
lingerie counter. Besides, the
overstuffed looi is out !... except on

Dolly Pmon. ;.. HELEN AND SUE
P .S. And even Dolly's loll indJeS.
Have you seen her latest photos•

I
\'

Thursday

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM and gift
exchange when the Willing Workers
Oass of the Enterprl3e United
Methodist Church meets at 7:30p.m .
Thursday at the home of Marjorie
Bowen.
WEEKEND REVIVAL, 7:30 each
evening, Thursday through Sundiu'
at the Freedom Gospel Mi!sion,
Bald ,, Knob, with Noah Burgess
spealdhg 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
pubUc ham dinner will be served
!rom 4 to 7 p.m. Friday with complete meal for adults, $2.50 and Sl .50
for chUdren under 12. Many handmade items for sale during bazaar .
FRIDAY
ARRANGE FOR personal vi.sit
from St. Nick through Ohio Et.a Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi sorotity,
no later than today by calling Kathy Doidge, 992-4i246; Nancy Hill, 9926143, or Connie Dodson, 992-J236.
SATURDAY
BAKE SALE,Saturday, heginnlnl!
at 9 a.m. at Warner's Insurance
Agency, W. Main, Pomeroy;
homemade candy , Christmas
cookies, pies, cakes, bread. Sponsored by Enterprise United
Methodist Church.

KN!Gffi'S OF l'ythiaJ, annual
&lt;llNtma5 dinAer, 6 :30 p.m . for
members and families . Bring
covered dish, table service. Trealll
for chUdren provided.
CHRISTMAS BAZAAR at Middleport Thift Shop Friday and Saturday frml t a.m. to 4 Pill- Spang-et
by Meigl County lfuniiDlllociet¥.
WEUEND IIAZAAK SlATED
The Meigs Comly Humane Society will hold a Christmas bazaar at
the Middleport Thrift Shop Friday
and Saturday, Dec. 7 and 8, from g

a..m. to4p.m.

'

MONDAY
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS, 7 :30
Monday night at the high school
band room.

BOOK FAIR at Racine Elemen-

tary Monday . Books may be purchased by the public from 3: 30 to 7
pm. Pre«hool to adult level books
are available.
REVTV AL beginning Monday at
Pageville Free WiD Baptist Churrll
at 7:30 p.m nighlty . Rev . Merlin
~- evangeli&amp;.

Mr . and Mrs. George Warner were
visitors of Mr . and Mrs . Richard
Warner and Erin Beth of Wllliam9011, W. Va . Mrs . Warner remained
for a few days to care for Erin and
help with new son of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Warner .
Mr. and Mrs . Tom Summerfield,
~di, Wendy and Crystal of Medina
were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Russell and family and other
relatives.
Iva Johnson spent a weekend
recenUy with Mrs. J. R. Murphy and
Barbara and Peggy .
Mrs. Anna Scott and friend of
Dayton were recent Weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mts. Eugene
Haning, Rhonda and Ronald .
Mrs . Willlam Boyce of Columbus
was recent weekend visitor of Mrs .
Bertha Rlllsell .
Mrs. Robert R!asoeU. Met. Ethel

1bank you for taking time out of
your busy schedule to show me the
Meigs Libraries . As with so many
Carnegie Libraries my firm hs
surveyed, services to the public
have been curtailed or rendered nonexi&amp;tent by such impediments as:
restricted building sites, elevated
floor levels prohibiting access by the
handicapped and aged, inadequate
librarian work spaces, lack of
storage space for periodicals, shelving loaded to capacity, and little or
no parking space .
In lim, Andrew Carnegie did not
envision the explosion of print
material our society would produce
and the enormous strain it would
place on the physical facilities he so
generously provided.
With our experience in library
design, and in particular the renovation or Carnegie libraries, we can be
of great help to you insolving the
Ubrary'sproblems.
The first step i.s to identify future
and preaent library needs; determine the cost of modernizing the existi.ng wiring, work spsces, en-

Clark and Mrs. Steve Haggy,
Stephens and Brad spent a few days
recenUy with Mr. and Mrs . Tom
Summerfield and family of Medina .
Iva Johnson spent a Sunday night
with Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
and family .
Mr . and Mrs . Daniel Worley,
Stacy of Daniels, W. Va . spent a
Saturday with Mr. Gd Mrs . Charley
&amp;nith, and Mr . and Mrs . Doyle
Knapp, Kail, Kevin and Charles .

ttte XMiiS
a.ra•r ., "'- TMHt

sm, euJkUnt
I.

OM . 1

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 tii.Noon

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
Humane Society Thrift Shoppe

llJESDAY

" Managing Resources for Tomorrow" was the p:-ogram topic
presented by Mrs . Dorothy Oliver at
a recent meeting of the Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch, American
Associaton of University Women ,
held in the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savmgs and Loan
Co., Pomeroy office .
In a prelude to Mrs. Oliver's comments, it was noted that managing
resources i.s the AAUW 's action project for today . Studies have been
conducted of the poUtics of food, the
goals of education, world pluralism,
the practice of living with less as an
economic fact of life. A look has been
taken to the 21st Century in an effort
to anticipate the and its effect upon
the individual in relationship to confonnity and creativity has been examined, and members have been
reminded of Thomas Jefferson 's
statement .... "The face and
character of our country are determined by what we do with America
and Its resources .... ''
Mrs. OUver reviewed the goals of
the topicTo generate adequate energy
while protecting the environment
and providing for economic improvement;
To protect the environment by
developing alternative energy
sources and to achieve minimum
trade-()[fs for economic growth;
And to make maximum use of
resources
especially
human
resources in a clean and orderly envirorunent.
Mrs. OUver defined "energy" as
the capacity for doing work and
overcoming resistance. She listed
the sources of energy as being fossil
fuel3 such as coal and gas now
limited in amounts, renewable
energy such as solar, geothermal
and hydroelectric, and nuclear .
Mrs. Oliver noted that she has attended various workshops pertainIng to solar energy at Ohio State
University and elaborated on her
knowledge of both active and
passive solar . The Oliver family has
plans for a passive solar home in the
future.
She said that we aU have experienced solar energy which i.s
free, widespread, does not pollute,

I

DINGO
BOOTS

SUPPERS

II

FAMll. Y DINNER SET DEC. 9
A family dinner will be held on
Sunday, Dec . 9, at the home of Vern,
F'emdora and John Story, Pomeroy,
to honor Norman E . Schaefer on his
83rd birthday which is Dec. 10.
Also to be honored will be
Schaefer's son-in~aw, William T.
Perry, who will celebrate his birthday on Dec . 9 and Perry 's
daughter 's birthday , Mildred Perry ,
who will celebrate her birthday on
Dec. 15.
Norman and his wife, Edna , are
presenUy making their horne with
their daughter and son-in~aw, Vern
and F'emdora. A fire destroyed the
Schaefer's home on Sept. 10. They
plan to move into a new mobile home
in the near future .

-Dress &amp;
casual '&gt;ntJe:.
-Dress Boots
bV Rand
Dingo

SliiiiiiiHn

CROCKEI FIYPAN

CROCKMASm
5-QT.
SI.OWCOOID

Men's
Converse
Shoes, Tube
Socks, &amp;
Bags

wmt &lt;R'M CIOOI

• Romovable cmm1t vnlll I4Ns
alow ""*Inc "nrtillty ID

........ tlectrk " - ...
• Ttllon Interior, porcolaifl

• AutcoMtk: fUfuroa sot n•nd lorpllt

11terior

• Double sitnaf litf1t
• See-throup, amber cc.er

• Col* &amp; Cletn Crtdle

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Women's

DRESS &amp;
CASUAL
SHOES

SLIPPERS

I

•DRESS &amp; CASUAL
~~

I

PURSES

•DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SHOES

I

•SliPPERS

SIGN UP FOR
GIFT CERTIFICATE
-Fashion &amp;
Waterproof
BOOTS
-Dingo
BOOTS

Winner of
$25 Gift Certificate
This Week
Mrs. Paul Smith
Middleport

I

~ YOUC~N'TGOWRO~G:VITHA

i[t

OF SHOES

Middleport, 0.

• Statm vtnb dUIIMd tociYt

Ill-over, even stetm COVIriJI
• All parts In contact wltn tsn
rernowe tor usy de111ln1

i

• Convtnltnl button ~~

• Ma(ntllc llcl holder
• ltardontd s!NI cutttr bel

Z

to dry lronlnJ instently

1
1
IJ!

~

i

$1

{tcate ~~.1

herItage house

c. ~ N. 2nd Ave. .

TOTAl CLEAN
''POWER PIERQ"
CAN OPENER/
KNIFE SHARPEIIER

STEAM OR
DIY IRON

• !:Jay to follow fabric: ruidt
• Tlluml&gt;-tlp hqt control-sw~c:llu

Open Every Night
•
TiiB P.M. thru Christmas . . "'*~~~-S-~~~~~••~t

I·

cJ~

W

··~~~~~~~~~~···

~

Jiiiilii;im

I

•LEATHER

I
I
I

I

I

II
I

I

BIRTHDAY OBSERVED
Vincent Martin 's birthday was
observed Wednesday with family
visits at the home of Mr . and Mrs .
Osby Martin and son, Adam, where
he makes his home . Visiting were
Mr. and Mrs . Albert Martin and Mr .
and Mrs . Michael Martin . He receiv ed gifts and cards. Cake and Ice
cream were served .

CRAFTS, CANDY, BAKED GOODS, ETC.

-------IQ!·------~t's:::!ll:IIJ '&lt;!":¥·------~-~- !.
Gin suGGESTIONs
1

I
I
I
I
I
I

has no labor problems , cannot be cut
off by Wifriendly foreign po••:crs,
can be collected, stored and moved .
Both active and passive solar homes
are available for observation in and
around Colwnbus , Mrs. Oliver
reported , a nd literature and information are available from
govenunent offices in this area . The
active system is the most expensive
to build since it uses collective glass,
pumps, gauges, etc .. while the
passive system has a storage wall on
the south side with banked up other
walls, concrete noors for collecting
and a masonite wall for reflecting
heat. Less than 40 percent can afford
the commercial systems.
Mrs. OUver spoke of energy conservation as a "must" for today . She
distributed handouts for simple con servation practices around the home
with ideas which can be easily appUed.

DECEMBER 7 &amp; 8

RACINE AMERICAN LEGION
AUXILIARY, 6 p.m . potluck dinner
at the hall. Members are to take
covered dish and their own table service. There will be a $2 gift exchange.

II ~~~:~~~N~
Support

trances, el&lt;: . ; estimate th cost of
building a new library ; and make
architectural designs for a new
building and for modifying the exISting buildings .
When these facts have been
established, the Board of Trustees
will be able to select the best course
of action to take to establish the
future of the Meigs Libraries .
I am pleased to submit the enclosed proposal which detai13 the work
program that will provide you with
the answers you need .
Very truly yours,
Koster &amp; Associates Archilect!l,lnd.
The Arcade
Cleveland, OH 44114

Middleport

I

"-SUE

34-

Wolf Pen
News Notes

~--- Soc1al Cale~

Dear Mrs. Bell :

I
1

PEAKED:
Maybe you should fddl bome an
untrained St. Bernard, then comprornlae : "111 take him back if you 11
aend Old Ugly to his 'grandparents.'

to · "Size

Edith Bowen. ~reshments were
served.
The guest list Included Debl
Grubb, Marge Ward, Ruby Curry,
Marjorie Bowen, Gladys Roush,
Phyllis McDaniel, Roxanne Russell,
Unda Fry, Glenda Ellis, Nora
Young, Carol Sue McDaniel, Maxine
Michael, Rachel Fry, Melissa Dawn
McDaniel, Clydia Bing , Unda
Freeman, Renita Fry, Maxine Arnold, Frances Stewart, Marie Fry,
Sherry Freeman, Edith Bowen,
Joan Varian, Peggy McDaniel,
Jayne Varian .

Letters

I

A goOd home for Old Ugly, or his
word of honor that he will Wlleam all
those old tricks. It's tough enough
adjusting to a new wife, without havIng to contend with her bodyguard . HELEN

PERSONAL

Susi Michael was honored with a
layette shower at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Varian, Mason, on Nov. 3. H051esses
were Phyllis McDaniel, Carol Sue
McDaniel, Jayne Varian, and Peggy
McDaniel. Decorations were in pink
and blue and a stork centerpiece on
the table . The archway was
decorated with miniature pink and
blue baby shoes . Streamers were
also featured in the decorations .
Games were played with prues
going to Linda Fry and Maxine
Michael. The door prize was won by

I

MY GOURD
PEAKED:

. Demitasse": Look at the bright

Susi Michael is shower honoree

AAUW~l~k~ at managing today 's resources

Library

''""'rrle

Ggegs were Amy ~·lllller ,
Wlckersllam, Mary S\ovv - and
daught•r , Arlrne Rowe and
daupter, and Ada Rowe and the
tine Carpect.er children . At anolherecent llJIIItin«, new officers were
elected. They are Mrs. Lucy
Donahue , president ; Mrs. June
Wickenham, vice president; .Mrs .
Hazel Fox, treasurer ; and Sue
Beecle, secretary.

Secret pals were revealed and new
names wen! drawn.
Members attending were Mrs.
W.,y DMahue, Mrs. Buck, Mrs .
Hazel Jl'ox, Mrs. Nora Pierson, lllrs .
Mabe! Shields, Mrs. Focle Ha)'lllllll,
Mrs . Belva Fi.sher , Mrs. Julia Norris , Mrs. Kathryn Philson' Mrs.
Margaret Gloeckner , Mrs. a Rowe,
Mrs. Mollie Fisher, Mrs. Sue Beegle,
Mrs. June Wickersham, Mrs. June
~ . and Mrs. Doris AMm• .

!

S.QUART
CROCKER
COOKER/ FRYD

• Aslow cooker - • ref'll•r cooker
--1 deep fryll
Crockery vessel phn low hut
settinc~

• Ooulfl nooks tor makina breed

tor yerutility

• 225 Watts, '"'"""' cootrolled

• RemovJblt croc k un be washed
in dishwa sher

~

_. : it., ·*'~----I'C!I--li:!!C¥-$:1tc¥~~~~»:!~s:tt's:::!IQig:tg;rY!IBrg:t'*

• 12 speed
lli•.fin&lt;ler dial

SHOP IARLY AT

MAIN ST.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
992-2811

POMEIIOY

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

During the busmes. meet.ng a
budget adjustment was repo rted by
Mrs . Kathryn Knight. By~aws were
updated by Helen Smith, and

Maurita Miller was the refreshment
chainnan.
An invit•tion sas read to the
Marietta Branch's tour of homes on

Dec . 9, 2 to 6 p.m . Reservations are
to be made with Fay Sauer by Dec.
11 for the Dec . 15 luncheon at the
Meigs Inn. Mrs. Bernice Carpenter,

it was noted, has arranged for a
demonstration
of c reative
Christmas decorations by Mrs . Pat
Holter .

,~ ~~--~-=~---~--=========--=====~--------------=-,

!#~
~
~
~
~
~
~

PHvl~,::~v

~I

w

w

�II-The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday , Dec . 6, 1979

Legion Auxiliary carries out holiday work

CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR VETERANS were
readied and wrapped Wednesday night by the JwliOfl!
of the Amencan legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39. The gifts will be taken to the veterans at the

Athens Mental Health Center and the Arcadia Nursing
Home . Workers on the projects have included from the
left, Anita Smith, Anna Wiles, Adam Martin, Kim Patterson, Unda Eason, and Jennifer Couch.

Chnstmas project work was carried out Wednesday night at the
meeting of the Junior American
legion Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, held at the home
of Mrs . Veda Davi,, advisor .
The group packaged gifts for the
veterans at the Athens Mental
Health Center. The woman veteran
there received a hat, scarf, gloves,
pocketbook, Avon products, jewelry,
note pad and pen, and instant coffee,
while the four men received
packages containing gloves, socks,
handkerchiefs, after shave , a tie,
note pad and pen , and instant coffee.
The party at the Athens facility
was held Thursday (today) by Mrs.
Davis and Mrs . Mary Martin .
Refreshments of ice cream, curcakes, favors , nut cups, coffee were
served from a table decorated in the
Christmas motif.
Games were played with prizes ti
gum, candy , jewelry, combs, and
soap being awarded .
On Dec. 15 a party will be held at
the Arcadia Nursing Home at
Coolville. Gifts, cigarettes and
favors will be presented to each of
the veterans . Special gifts will be
presented to BiU Rovnak, the
"adopted" veteran of the A.Wliary.
All of the veterans will receive in addition to a gift box, a one dollar bill
in a Christmas folder and a box of

candy and cookies.
One hundred tray favors containing candy canes were made to be used at the Chillicothe birthday party

I

By Melody Roberlll
The November meeting of the
Long Bottom Community
Association was brought to order by
their president, leona Hensley . A
reading from the scriptures, the
Lord's Prayer and the Pledge of
Allegiance were given . The meeting
then was turned over to Mae McPeek who gave the secretary 's
report, then to Ernestine Ha)man,
who gave a list of bils which have
been paid or need to be paid . A
report was given on the recent
repair of the heating stove by Francis Andrew .
Tom Hayman was commended for
the donation of his time and equirment wllich he used in the making of
a new parking facility . A word of
thanks was then given to all who had
helped in any way with the project.
The Association decided to postpone the December 26 meeting
(regular meetings are the last Wednesday of each month 1 to December
28, and to bring a covered dish, table
service for your family, and a $1 gift
(ladi"" bring ladies ' gift, gents to

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs . Don Bell visited Mr .
and Mrs . Roger Chaney and
daughter, Angela Dawn , at Reed sville Wednesday everung. Mrs Bell
vtsited Mrs . Doris Hensler Fnday at
Holzer Medical Center . Mr . and
Mrs. Bell babysat with Nathan and
Rachel Hensler, children of Mr . and
Mrs . David Hensler at their home in
Racine, while they were at Holzer
Medical Center where David 's
mother, Mrs . Darts Hensler had
surgery .
Tom Norris is a medical patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Clifford and Pauline Hill visited
Mrs . Doris Hensler Sunday .
Jenny Johitson of Racine spent the
weekend with her grandparents . Mr .
and Mrs. Bob Smith and Martin Cun ningham .
Mr. and Mrs . Gerald Wells, Man dy and Amy, of Gallipolis were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons . Donald and Mary Barnett
of Langsville visited the Parsons
Saturday evening .
Visiting Mr . and Mrs . Gerald
Hayman over the weekend were
Mrs. Doris Rogers of Columbus , Mr .
and Mrs. Gene Jewell and Bobbi of
Letart, W. Va ., Brice Hart of Ohio
State University, Kathryn Philson .
Mrs . Belva Fisher visited the
Haymans Monday .
Mrs . Eileen Roush had surgery at
Holzer Medical Center Tuesday .
Visiting Mr. and Mrs . Herbert
Roush were Robert Ashley, David
Roush of Manchel!ter, 0., and Mrs .
I!Oger Roush and daughter, Kim berly, and Ondy Roush .
Robert Montgomery is spending
some time with llis wife, Arretta
Montgomery, from his employment
on the Ohio River .
The birthdays of Wallie Morris
and Brenda Anderson were
celebrated Swlday with a dinner
held in their honor at the home of
Mr . and Mrs . Arnold Anderson . Attending were Mr . and Mrs . Wallie
Morris, Brenda Anderson, Mr . and
Mrs. Ted Wilford, Usa and Kim of
Portland, lylr . and Mrs. Am old An derson and daughter, Lori .
Weekend ~uests of Mr . and Mrs.
Wallie Morris were o,,.;~ and ~~· ll a

bring a gent's gift). Serving wiU
begin promptly at 6 p. m. Regular
meeting night will begin at 7 p . m.
during the winter months.
A combination bake sale and
bazaar will be staged Dec. 12 at 9:30
a . m . in the community building.
The ladies will have for sale handmade potholders , sunbonnets ,
crocheted and macrame items,
Otristmas candies, cookies, and
many confectionery delights.
After the business portion , the entertainment was presented by Mr.
and Mrs. BiU Thurston, Francis Andrew, Pearl PoweU.
Refreshments were served to Mr .
and Mrs. Pat Neutzling, Jenny
Newlun, Mr. and Mrs. BiU Thurston,
Francis Andrew, Mr. and Mrs .
Stanley Wells, Pearl Powell , Janie
Fitch, Ruby Brewer, Sadie Larkins,
Beth Hayman, Dorsal Larkins, Mae
McPeek, Leona Hensley, Ernestine
Hayman and Melody Roberts .
Anyone wishing to donate items or
money or jest needs information
may call ~ . 98.'i-3910 or 911&gt;
tz75 .

Blessing and children , Cathy, Bobby, Peggy and Karen of Rutland .
Visitmg Mrs. Helen Slack and
Mrs . Pearl Wlllis a few days were
Mrs. Mary Russell of Columbus ,
Mrs. Ethel Kaufman, Mrs . Betty
Webb of West Jefferson .
Melissa Coleman of Keno Ridge
Vlsited Brenda Anderson Monday .
Mrs . Dorsa Parsons and Mrs. Herbert Roush attended funeral services for their aunt, Mrs. Iva Durst
at the Smith Church at Leon, W.Va.
on MOnday. Mrs. Durst passed
away at Jackson General Hospital in
Ripley on Saturday. Interment was
in the cemetery near the Smith
Church . Calling at the Casto Funeral
Home at Evans, W. Va., on Sunday
to pay their rel!pects were Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and Mr . and

New members initiated at a recent
meeting of the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, were Linda Eason, laura
and Anita Smith, Kim Patterson ,
junwr members ; and Joan
Vaughan, Dorothy Jenkins, and
Edith Lanning, senior members .
In the group with over 32 years

The jwlior high honor roll for the
Eastern Local School District was
announced today. Named to the roU
were :
Seventh Grade, A's - Beth
Berkhimer, Tammy Calaway,
Charlotte LyOilB; B's- Brenda Bentz, Jay Carpenter, Angela Collins,
Benetta Deeter, Max Eichinger,
Kevin Fick, Lee Ann Gaul, Tara
Guthrie, Usa Hawk, Melinda
Mankin, KeUy Null, Dorsel Randolph, Jinuny Schaekel, Tnlcy
Schul, Angie Spencer, Tina Staton,
Lori Wolfe.
Eighth grade, A's - Randy Bahr,
Paul Harris, Lori Loucks, Aaron
Parker, Melissa Scarbrough; B's Roger Balser, Jodi Barringer,
SheUy Bearhs, Larry Cowdery,
Beretta Deeter, Ann Diddle, Paula
Frecker, Victor GUlilan, Troy
Guthrie, Cindy Harris, Virgil Miller,

Mrs. Dorsa Parsons .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush were
visitors at Point Pleasant Tuesday .
Mr. Roush consulted his doctor at
Pleasant Valley Hospital there .
Enroute home they were joined by
Mr . and Mrs . Issac Lewis and were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dana
lewis.
Herbert Roush spent Monday with
Mrs. Roger Roush and daughter ,
Kimberly .

on Dec . 13. Chnstmas cards were
signed by the girls, and 2li denture
cups were decorated for the
veterans .

Kural homeowners 1n Athens,
Meigs and Vinton Counties who need
to upgrade their homes rna y be
eliglble for financing from the Farmers Home Admin is trat io n

Tim Probert, Pam Riebel, Allee Ritchie, Lort Robinson, Ray Smith,
Henrietta Thomas, Scott Upton ,
Brenda White .

r---- -------: Mason County

RE11JRNS FROM FWRIDA

ward Mcintosh, who is recuperating
from surgery, and his wife .

SECRnARIAL
SCIENCE
AI

Rio Grande College
And

Community College
245-5353

Pomeroy, 0.

ALL OUT GLAMOUR-FROM VOGUE

membership in the Auxilairy
recognized at the meeting were
Leona Smith and Eulelah Webster,
not earlier listed. Members are
reminded that cakes and candies are
needed for the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital party Thursday . Donations
may be left with Mrs . Mary Martin
Wedresday .

BlACK
&amp;
TAN
Step into the new
season with Vogue's
fashionable ankle
straps.

Open Evenings
til 8
Starting fri., Dec. 7th
thfu Christmas

lhis Christmas,give
the gifts that'll flave

birtlxlay on Sunday by members of
her family. Ice cream, a cake baked
by Sheila Goheen, and coffee were
served by hostesses, Sheila, Martha
Newell, Jean Davis, and Judy Redman . The honoree received many

everyone talking.

gifts .

c ..... :

~ck tne n.111s. the bedrooms and the den w1lt1
phones hom you r G TE Phone M art Ann yot{ ll
hPar r~ bou t 1t atr year tong
A phone rs the perfpcr gilt ht&gt;ril m e rt \ pra ct rcat
[they'll u'e &lt;t rvery day[ . yet a luxury \l:lhe t &lt;Oi .ld bt· more
lw:: uno u s Uldn an e t ~ (Jn t Cr ildtepllone tn t N' txJu d01r ~
O r a 5leek Sty1 t&gt; lln t&gt; •phone ne:xt to the lrvmg room
sofa 7
M r(k fJ' M ou'i t" un t1t&gt;r ! hf' !Jf&gt;e. and JU\1 Wd!Ul
the reanron O r see \l\ltlat hdppem vvhf&gt;n yorJ qrve
an o td fr rend an o!d-filshmncd Cilndle'itlck pno nf'
You 'll lind rnoug n phone sry1r&lt;.. ~md color'&gt; to w1sh
evrryone a merry ( hr l\tm.:t\. at the GTE

rut

Phone Nl.:tn

Put a new Phone
In
lifE!.

~tree for~\~
.

ideas?

'

WE HAVE LOTS
OF GIFT IDEAS
FOR YOUR KIDDIES!!!!!

.
•
Hours :

lo s.oo
Mon lhru S;,t .
9 : 10 to 8 : 00
~ , Jo

Fl'ido:~ y

-

•

VISA'

KIDDIE SHOPPE

I

MASON - Mrs. Clara Redman,
·Mason, was surprtsed on her 88th

up a
~.,.,..,..

I

MASON - The Helping Hand Extension Homemakers Club held its
November meeting at the home of
Joy Foreman. Meeting was opened
by Mrs . Bessie Ingles with Flag
Salute and repeating Club Collect.
Devotionals were presented by
Mrs. Coral Alexander who gave a
reading, "Thanksgiving," and a
prayer. Mrs. Doris Roberts shared a
reading, "The Religious Parasite."
The secretary 's report was read
by Mary Thabet and treasurer's
report was given by Doris Roberts.
Club voted to purchase a gift for
member, Addie May Brown, who is
very Ul, and is now at the residence
of Turk Cleland, Racine, 0 .
Mrs . Catherine Raynes was
welcomed as a guest by the club .
Plans were made to eat out on
Dec . 12 and afterwards return to the
Mason Historical Center for a party
and opening of gifts.
Lois Young reported on her
holiday in New Orleans, and then on
to Acapulco . She showed many interesting pictures of ber vacation.
The Ieason, "Today 's Look with
Yesterday's Clothes" was taught by
Doris Roberts. She urged members
to check their cl011ets and if clothes
are tn good condition, but out of style
- they can be transformed into
today's fshion. She had recycled a
jacket into today's style, which was
attractive. The lesson leader said
there are three types of recycl!ng
!hal we might do : 1. simple urdating; 2. minor changes; 3. major
changes.
Mrs . Doris Roberlll won the door
prize .
Refreshments were served to
Coral Alexander, Gladys Riley,
Mary Thabet, Bessie Ingles, Gladys
Reynolds, Catherine Raynes, Loi.s
Young and Joy Foreman.

And 1t's .:t lot closer th,::m the N orth Polf'

\I

!

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Harris (Cecilia Smith I are the proud
parents of a little girl born on
November 'l/ at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The infant weighed eight
pounds eight and one-half ounces
and has been named Julie Beth.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
. and Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mason; Mrs .
Marie Smith, Clifton. Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Wilma Hill, Pt
Pleasant, and Harvey Harris .
Minerva,O.

Mrs. Ralph Spencer, Pomeroy,
has returned from Inverness, Fla.,
where she visited her brother, FA-

Ph. 992-3639

when performed by an experienced
physician.
Another test utilizes the more
recently developed fiberoptic
colonoscope which permits the
physician to view the entire colon In
addition, a screening procedure
called the quaiac test to detect blood
in the stool has been made more
practical and has added to the
possibility of detecting colorectal
cancer when it is most curable.
·'Remember the first line of defense against cancer is the regular
checkujp, including a ''procto" if
you are over 40, '' advises Dr. Mansfield. A free leaflet and other in formatwn i.s available at the Meigs
County Unit of the American Cancer
Soc1ety, P . 0 . Box 692, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, Phone 992-7f&gt;31.

News Notes

Hr -Hm, .'l•nh • /1

I
I

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

Colorectal cancer discussed
"despite the large number of
deaths from cancer of the colon and
rectum, the potential for saving
lives from the disease is greater
than for most cancers,'' according to
Dr. Mansfield, Medical Advisor for
the Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society.
"More than 112,000 new cases of
the disease are diagnosed each year,
and men and women are affected
equally, " she said.
The colon, or large bowel, is a continuous tubular organ about live feet
long which absorbs fluid and expels
solid waste materials .
Most of the deaths from colorectal
cancer are avoidable, and about
three of four patients could be saved
by early diagnosis and treatment.
Thus it is recommended that adults
over 40 have the "procto"
examination with their periodic
checkup.
The " procto" is a procedure that
pennits the doctor to see the lower
portion of the rectum and colon with
a lighted tube. This is where most
colon and rectum cancers develop .
It is neither dangerous nor difficult

Rural homeowners
may be eligible

Eastern !Jonor roll

102 E. MAIN

Long Bottom Community New members initiated I
Assn. gives report

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Dec . 6, 1979

I

I

Those attending were Mr . and
Mrs . Dean Newell, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Redman, Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Redman, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Newell, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Goheen, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Goheen,
Mrs . Clara Redman, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Carson and Jennifer . Mrs . Clara
Redman, Mrs. Davis, Mrs . Carson
and Jennifer, represented four
generations of the family that attended the happy occasion.
MUOD aOO area penollllis
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel over the hoUdays were Mr.
and Mrs. Stan Saunders and family
of Columbus; Mr . and Mrs. James
Loyd and family of Nashport, 0.,
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel and
family of Pt. Pleasant; Wilma McDaniel, Pt. Pleasant and Chalky McDaniel.
Mrs. Dan Strother and Todd ti
Louisville, Ky ., Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Grinstead, Mason, were
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mrs .
- Lucille Schwarz. Mrs. Strother and
Todd remained for a few days visit
with her mother.
Mr. and Mrs . Shennan Ford spent
Thanksgiving with their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Day and family at Pickerington, 0 .
Mrs. Mada Rardin of Chattanooga, TeM. spent several days
with her mother, Mrs. Minnie King,
·· Letart, W. Va , wllile the latter i.s
recuperating from eye surgery.
Gary Wilson of Atlanta spent the
holidays with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bliss Wilson and with his sister
and family, Mr . and Mrs. Jimmy
Dunn at Henderson, W. Va.
_ : Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rammes, son
~ .: and daughter of St . Louis, Mo .
· visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Burris in Mason . Also
viSiting the Burrises are their son
and wife , Mr . and Mrs. Paul Burris
-- and son of California.
· ' Mrs . Sarah Spencer spent the
holidays with her daughter and son in-law , Mr . and Mrs . Ron Pierfon at
Poughkeepsie , N. Y.

iFmHA ).
Archie Stegall, FmHA County
Spervisor, said that in addition to
financing the purchase of homes, the
agency also has funds available to
families who already own homes
that need insulation - weatherization
unprovements.
FmHA wiU offer loans for energy
conservation improvements to all
rural families of low or moderate incomes who cannot obtain adequate
commercial credit and are otherwise eligible for FmHA loan
assistance .
Stegall said that tllis is not a new
loan program, but a part of the total
loan program FmHA has had for a
number of years. However, the
agency is stressing the need to conserve energy and help families combat today's higher cost of home
energy.
Improvements designed to save
energy, such as installing additional
insulation, storm windows and
doors, caulking, and in some cases,
modilymg heating systems will, in
many cases, save more than enough
to repay the loan funds borrowed for
the improvement, according to
Stegall.
In addition to energy conservation , repair loans may also be
used to remove health and safety
hazards - such as repairing roofs,
providing sanitary water and waste
disposal systems, and upgrading
electrical wiring. Applicants must
own and live in their homes on a
fann, in the open country, or in a
town, rural towns of up to 20,00()
population to qualify for assistance.
The current rural housing interest
rate is 10 percent for moderateincome applicants. Families with
lower incomes may qualify for a
subsidy that can reduce the effective
interest rate down to as low as I percent per year.
More infonnation may be olr
tained at the FmHA County Office
located at 221 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 or by calling 9926644.

10

------------

-

-- -- ~-- -

For Serious Music Lovers!

HALF PRICE!

Stereo System Features a Receiver with
Slide-Rule &amp; Digital Display Tuning

Speaker System

Save $120 80

Nova - -6 by Realistic ·

Save
$40

$7 2 g
,.

39!!.~

se~~;~te
Items
849.80

----

Reg. 79.95
Each
• 2 .way Acoustic
Suspension
Design
• Floor:Shell Size

• Realistic STA-240
Receiver with 60 watts
min . RMS per channel,
8 ohms, 20-20,000 Hz,
0.05% total harmonic
distortion plus Digital
Readout and Analog
Tuning

y a pa 1r lo r the pn ce
1 8
Wh at a super ba r Ta r~ ubass w&lt;thout coloraof on e' s· wooler or lfm
t . t9 ' h&lt;qh gen t&lt;on 3 Wlde -d&lt;spersro n twee er
t
ve
nee
r
cab
&lt;
ne
t
40
-4019
urne w alnu

·Two Optimus - -10
Speakers with 8" Woofer,
10 .. Passive Radiator,
3 '14' Dome Tweeter
• LAB-220 Automatic
Changer, $29.95-Value
Cartridge

Problt"m studt&gt;nts
Iranian students in the United
Slates may be the current IOCW! ol
attention , but they are Car from
alone .
Current foreign enrollment in
Amencan institutions, according to
the reckoning of the Institute of International Education in New York,
totals some 264,0011. Iranians are by
far the largest single national contingent, but stiU represent less than
a fifth of the total. In second place is
Taiwan, with 14,0011 students of
record.
The United States has been a particular favorite of Third World youth
studying abroad because of its
leading international position and
because in recent years it has invited them
With declining enrollments posing
financial problems for many
American schools, foreign students
have become increasingly desirable
- particularly those from Iran and
other oil-rich countries . Not oniy
have they been welcomed by admissions offices, but they have been actively recruited .
Iranians alone , according a
Washington Post report , comprtse
almost a tllird of the student body of
one California institution. The Immigration and Naturalization Service found others were sending signed but blank acceptances to
recruiters abroad.
If these students have now become
a problem, we would appear to have
done more than a litUe m bringing it
on ourselves.

Budget System for the Whole Familv

System Seven:
Big Sound!
Mini-Size!

0

Save s120 8~~~

Reg. Separate
Items 519.80

Save

Reg.
279.85

S4Q85
• STA-7 Receiver- Only
3'12' High

.

:

~

C HARGEIT !MOST S TORE Si

-----===--

True "Natural Sound"
Stereo Headphones
PR0-50 by Realistic

gggs

'\

'

• Two Nova-6 Speaker
Systems
• LAB-56 Bell-Drive
Changer. Cover

Audio Power Meter
APM -100 by Realistic

I)

• Tempered
Glass Door
• Heavy-Duty
Casters

Carmel News,
By the Day

~~~~~:=:iJ

Pr otec t and s1o re components
and accessones 4-way ad1uslab le
shelv es 42· 3022

Rolling Audio Rack
A HaUoween party was helu.,
Sutton Church on Thursday evl..o\..g
in cooperation with the Cannel
Church. Patrick Johnson and Bob
BiU Lee were co-chairmen. Some
came in costume and Identities were
guessed. Games were played and
prizes awarded. The very nice party
was enjoyed by all and refreshments
were served.
Mrs. Mary Holter of Bashan called
on Mary Circle a recent afternoon .
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bickers of
Gallipolis Rd. caUed on Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lee and family Sunday
afternoon.
Angela Dawn Carleton of Racine
spent Saturday evening with i~er
grandmother, Betty Van Meter and
Sheryl Leann Johnson .
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of New
Haven , W. Va ., were at the home ol
Mary Circle on Sunday .

'I

·Realistic STA-100
Receiver with 22 watts
min. RMS per channel ,
8 ohms, 20-20,000 Hz,
0.1% total harmonic
distortion

Deluxe Audio Rack

.

.

-

·Two Minimus - 7 · TwoWay Speakers - Only
7 '/ ,6' High

Everyth 1ng !its on a bOOK shelf o r small table. yet del&lt;vers
50 ·20.000 Hz h1 -l1 sou nd ' 31 · 1968. 40· 2030

--

.

only

79

95

Accurate Stereo
Imagery Plus
16-20,000 Hz Sound

the most na tural real&lt;st&lt;C hl-f&lt;
ea~ds eve l ' Very com lortable sou
I 10 4 ounces. &lt;nc lud&lt;ng
werghs on Y
co rd' JJ -1007

H

6995
Vert1cal rack
w rth 3- way
adr ustable
shelves No ma r casters
42 -3021

lnd&lt;ca les &lt;f stereo
amplil&lt;er IS delrvenng
raled power Dual
meters rea d up to 100
wat ls RM S Easy
hookup 42· 21oo

1995

Frequency Equalizer
by Realistic

llllll il f.L 0

rrnnnn ~
Cul s hiss . rumble, surface noise , also
adr us ts yo ur mus1c system 's response
to com pensate for room acoustics.

Smart Santas Sh op E arI y ... Mo st Stores Open Late Nights 'Til Christmas

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

'

, ,j'•!J or rHJOd

DI!A~ER

PRI CES MAY VARY AT INDIV I DU AL ST O RES

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Dec. 6, !179

• 11- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Thursda y, Dec 6, 1!179

November wholesalerprices up 1.3 pet. - ; Retired dam employee
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Food
prices jumped by the highest
amount in five years last month,
helping to push overall wholesale
-prices up 1.3 percent, the government said today .
No,•ernber 's 2.6 percent increase
In food prices at the wholesale level
offset the smallest rise in energy
costs since February, the Labor
Department reported.
The food price boost - the largest
since a 4.2 percent rise in November
1!174 - came primarily in the meat
category, with processed poultry
prices shooting up 21.5 percent.
Beef, veal and pork prices also increased sharply after declining in
October, the department said.
The overall 1.3 percent Increase
follows a I percent rise in October
and 1.4 percent jump in September.
So far this year, prices at the
wholesale or producer level + one
step short of retail store shelves +
have accelerated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 12.8 percent.
That virtually guarantees that
1979 will be the worst year for inflation at the producer level since
1!174, a Labor Department economist
said.
Wholesale price changes are included in the Producer Price Index,
which reports prices at three levels:
the wholesale - or finished goods level, when goods are ready for sale
to the final user ; the intermediate
level, where they have received
some processing; and the crude
level, where goods have not yet
received any processing.
Cbanges in the Producer Price ln dex are watched carefully because
they often show up at the consumer
level in a month or two.
Retail prices are rising at more
than 13 percent a year, the fastest
rate since 1946 when the government
llfted World Warn price controls.
The Labor Department said prices
for finished energy goods in November increased 2.5 percent, the
smallest monthly advance since
February.
There was a marked slowdown in
the price advance of home heating
oil, which rose just 0.1 percent last
month after a 4.7 percent jwnp in
October. Gasoline prices went up 3.4
percent last month after jumping 5.1

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, 1tor,
partners of the shop, Jane Coates, Wa VanMeter, and Nonna 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.-li p.m. and 7 p.m.-!1 p.m.,
Saturday , 10 a.m ..0 p.m., and Sunday, 12 noon-S p.m.

*O.OONU
by (Fl(llilh LMrn. • . : .... ;.
&amp; Jedt b

by Palm -le.ch, Mwe!l. JohnnJ' Carton,
Hart -X ~ f fner · INrJ

•SPORTCOAn
bv Palm -Bucft .

s.-n

b y Harnes1 Ho!IM llejon

*PAJAMAS
BOARD MEEI'ING SET
A special meeting of the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education has been set for 7:30p .m.
Monday at the Meigs Junior High
School. The main item of business
will be revision of the school calendar so that some 31 days of classes
can be worked into the schedule.

•HOSE
lnt..-...:~ven

by

*DIISS SHim
b y Arrow . Van Hevten

&amp;

Mllntw~nan

*KNIT SHim
by LAvl &amp; H. l. S.

:..oUTIRWIAI

CHRISTMAS PARTY

by Lonc:lon Fot , Mr:Greoor
&amp; Lak,laftd

The Salem Township Volunteer
Fire Department will hold a Christmas party and potluck d!Mer at the
fire station on Monday evening, Dec.
17. Santa will be on hand to present
a gift to each child attending. Those
interested in attending should contact one of the firemen before the
party date for further infonnation.

•SWIATDI
by Janhlttl- Purllan

I

I~

'
'

I

t

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSEI'OIIEIIOT, 0.

l MAIN

~--~·-··-··--··-··--------·-··-··---·-··-··----··-·-~
F~~~~~ -~~~~ ~~~~~~~~-~~~~&amp;

11

! Gifts
i f.o r h e r -"
li

~

5

w

~

li
·w
li

li

5
5

I
11

~

a
W

·~

~

•SMALL APPLIANCES
-GE TOASTER OVENS
- SUNBEAM BLENDERS
- MIXERS
- CROCK POTS
- TOASTERS
-W AFFLE IRONS

SQUAD RUN

The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to Oleshlre at 9:33
p.m. Wednesday for Robert Cornelius who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of showers
tonight and Friday . Low tonight
aroWJd 40. High Friday near 50. The
chance of precipitation 40 percent
tonight and Friday.
:,:-:,: :,::-:,:,:-:::::::::::::::-::::::::::::::::::::::-:,:,:•:,:,:,:-:,:,:-:-:-: ·-:-·-:-:
EXTENDED FORECAST
By '111e Anoclaled Preas
A chance of sbowen early Saturday, otbenrile partly cloudy Saturday through Mooday. Rather mild
witb hlgbo m01tly Ill tbe tell DOrtll
and mid 4UI 10 mid 501 south. Lowo
mOldy In tbe 301 early Satanlay and
early Moaday aad iD tbe ZO. to low
301 early Sunday.

meafis that goods that cost UOO at
wholesale in 1967 cost $225.90 last
month.
Food prices had edged clown 0.1
percent in October, and the 2.6 jwnp
last month came as a surprise, said
a Labor Department economist who
asked not to be Identified.
" It appears that meat prices were
depressed in previous months, as
supplies ran high. We may have
been living on borrowed time," he
said .
In addition to meat and poultry
prices, prices were also up for
roasted coffee, fresh vegetables,
macaroni and sugar in coMumersize packages, the department
reported. Prices declined for fresh
fruits, milled rice and flab.
The Labor Department economist
pointed to what " might be good news
downs the Une, " a relatively small
price increase for intennedlate
goods which increased 0.9 percert
last month, only half u much lUI in
October .

The department reported that
crude material prices roee 2 percent
in November, half a percentage
point higher than October and about
the same rate as in September.
The Agriculture Department said
Wednesday that consumers can expect near-record supplies of meat
and poultry next year with a
resulting slowdown in price increases.
"Retail meat and poultry prices

Meigs CoWJty sheriff's deputies
have cited Ill-year old Michael
Triplett, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, to Meigs
County Court for hit skip foUowing
an incident on the race track at
Meigs County Fairgrounds .
According to the report TripleU
was running his vehicle on the track
and lost control on the fourth turn
and struck and damaged the inside
railing .
Seward Calvert, Pomeroy, who
was tending his horses attempted to
stop Triplett, but was unsucessful .
Triplett was located a few hours
later.
The department received three accident reports involving deer.
Tuesday at 8::11 p.m. on SR 248 a
deer was struck when it jumped into
the path of a pickup truck driven by
Henry C. Hartman. Long Bottom .
Wednesday at 2:15a.m. on SR 124
a deer was killed when it ran into the
path of vehicle driven by Paul R.
Searles, 25, Rutland.
Wednesday at 4 p.m. on SR 124 In
Oliver Township a deer was killed
when it ran into the path of a vehicle
driven by Harvey Bartlmus, 25, Rt .
I, Reedsville.
The Sheriff's department urges
area motorists to be on the watch for
deer standing along the roadway. He
suggests that drivers slow down in
order that they may stop their vehciles .
ln other matters , Herbert Eugene
Fanns, 68, Nelsonville, was retur- .
ned to Meigs County Wednesday
from Akron, to answer an indictment on charges of receiving
stolen property. He will appear in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
ASK TOWED
A marriage Ucense was issued to
Donald Guy HyseU, 22, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, and Karen Ann Smith, 18,
Rt . 3, Pomeroy.

Onion odor on the fingers can be
effectively removed by rubbing tbe
hands with a slice of lemon.

VW DASHER DIESEL

•

,gtven commendation
Richard M. Friend, Rock Springs
Road, Pomeroy, has received a letter of commendation by Senator
Oakl~y C. Collins on behalf of the
members of the Ohio Senate.
The commendation marks the occasion of Friend being recognized
for superior performance as locks
and dam leader at the Ga!Upolis
Locks and Dam.
The commendatioo reads as
foUows :
On behalf of the members of the
Senate of the 113th General Assembly of Ohio, we recognize Richard M.
Friend for his superior performance
as lock and dam leader with full onsite shift responsibility at the
·Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
Through your diligence and faith. ful efforts, tilt! Ohio River serves as
· a major waterway for American
commerce and recreation. As onsite
lock and dam leader, you have instlled in your fellow workel'll a pride
. In perfonnance which has led to
more effective flow of traffic and
greater water safety. Your
. metitorious record of service during
your seventeen years at the
· Gallipolls Locks and Dam stands as
a hallmark for all to emulate.
, Your quality performance cour: teo... manner and conscious ~egard
'

NOW IN

MEETS TONIGfrr

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

Pomeroy man
faces hit -skip
charges

may increase more slowly than the
rate for all food ," the department's
outlook board said. " While prices for
all food Items are expected to In·
crease by 7 to 11 percent In IV80,
meat price gains may be Umlted to
only 4 to 6 percent."
The department forecast la8t month that 1!1111 food prices overall may
gain 7 percent to 11 percent, with a
boost of about 8 percent most Ukely.
It Is projecting an 11 percent increase In food prices for 1979.
After months of optimistic
forecasts, key Carter administration
economists now say inflation at the
retail level - measured by the Consumer Price Index - will exceed 13
percent this year. That compares
with 9 percent inflation in 1!178.
There Is growing anxiety that tbe
Organization rl Petrolemn Exporting Countries will increue
world oU prtces later this month, fur·
ther aggravating inflation.lmported
oil prices have already I'Uen 80 percent to 70 percent this year . The rate
of increase depends on which CIJWItry is selling the oil.
Since oU is used for so many other
products, its rising price ripples
through the enUre economy.

The Eastern Local School District
Board of Education will meet at 6
p.m. this evening for an executive
session dealing with personnel.
On Dec. 11, the Eastern Board will
hold a regular session at 7:30p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School.

STOCK

RIVERSIDE VW
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446 -9800

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
,
DI!ICHARGES, DEC. 5
: John Anderson, Karen Basil,
; Robert Bevins, Ruthaleen Bobo, Ar' thur Cain, Ida Connley, Christina
~ Coon, Afl!ha CoWJcil, Olole Dlx
' Perry Oody, Deanna Eada, Kenneth
,. Feustel, Carolyn Hager, Bradley
Harria, Mark Jenkins, Murberble
~ Jenkins, Travis U]JIICOillb, Randall
t Mlglrt, Althea Miller, Vernon Moore,
Maw-een Mulhern, Hiram Northup
~ liM son, Brandon Potter, Paul
~erd, Mrs. Rodney Walbrown
~and daughler, Shamda WUUams,
t ·Tamara Wllllamson, Mary
f. Wiaeman, Mildred Wolfe.
:__
BIRTHS, DEC. 5
f. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bush,
:; daughter, Southside; Mr. and Mrs.
;-; George Rogers, 8011, Galli polls; Mr.
~ and Mrs. Charles Pratt, son, Rad-

I

II

Gin

~ HEADOUARTERS

I

I

,

Great Selections
In Men's &amp; Women's

Wearing Apparel
I

I
II

LAYAWAY OR
IF IN DOUBT BUY A

GIFT CERTIFICATE

I
II

I
I

REGISTER FOR THE

1 s-s20.00 Gift CERTIFICATES

i-----~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1

J

~cUff.

,.
,_

•~

What are the major needs in your
~· area in tenna of ecooomic develo:~ ment, housing, water supply, and
~ waste disposal?
~ This Is the question being asked by
"' the Meigs County Regional Planning
~ Commission (MCRPC ), which is
,. -king such citizen comment.
: With the cooperation of the local
~mayors and township trustees,
MCRPC Is sponsoring a sertes 11
1: local pubUc meetings to obtain this
IOcitlzen participation.
1bese meetings are free and th.
;.pubUc Is invited to attend.
;. Arrangements are being made
·, currenUy for the places where these
: meetings are to . be held. ~

J

1978 PLY. HORIZON '4395
4 Door, dark red, color with m•l·
chino red vinyl trim, radio , air

cond., automatic trans .. pewer

11
11

tires , landau model, solid white

steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels .

Local 1 owner, 350 V·B enoine,

color.

1977 CHEV.

'3695
'3895

.c dOor, small V·8, automatic,
power steering, pwoer brakes,
· locking different ial , air condi ·
tionlng, clean inter ior. or~n
finish .

1976 MG MIDGET
CONVERTIBLE

'2995

~

I-·tr·ack JOplusMPG .

~ •REVERE COOKWARE SETS

~

. 1976 CHEVY 20' TEC SAVE

•CLUB ALUMINUM SETS

11

W

I
i
I
~

fi

~

i

by Sunbeam &amp; GE

SALE PRICES
PLUS:

I

ELECTRIC PIN-UP

LAM-PS

FROM

$12

99

CHRISTMAS TREE STANDS
GE ELECTRIC TREE LIGHTS

MOORE'S

I w. 2ND &amp;w. MAIN

~
i

POMEROY, OHIO

, C.B.·Tape , AM·FM, 8

Mini Home, air on chassis and
body , less than 25,000 mi les, full
· equipment ,

1976 CHEVY UO

'4895

m engine, 2 speed axle , 825 tires,
cab to axle.

.. 1974 CHEVY C-10

'1495

~

· new 700)( lS, truck t ires. loc al 1
• owner .

fi

)972

~

~
~

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

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Ohio
lottery paid out ~.427 more than it
took In Wednesday on the new daily
nwnber game.
The lottery reported statewide
sales of $208,342.50 and a payoff total
of $241,769.50 on the winning nwnber, 317.
For the first three days, sales on
the daily game totaled $641,791 and
payouts were reported at $406,453.

BURLEY RESULTS
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) - Tobacco
sales at the Ohio burley market
passed 3.001 million pounds Wednesday, down 40 percent from the 5.5
million sold at the same time last
year.
Sales Wednesday were 96,528
pounds for U42,316.64, for a $147.44
hundred pound average. 1bis was
two cents down from Tuesday.
Top haskets continued to bring
$153.

~

auto ., P.S., P.B.. •ir cond ., gOOd

11
11

PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) - Poli ce
have identified the chopped-up body
found in Pensacola Bay last week as
that of a teen-age I'Wlaway from
Dublin, Ohio.
Escambla County authorities said
the victim was 15-year-old Melissa
Harrop Caronis.
Two plastic garbage bags, containing a head, two arms and a leg ,
were fished out of the hay last week
by a shrimper. A hwnan torso later
washed ashore near the Pensacola
Naval Air Station .

t Needs survey being taken

11

~

Body identified

"'' ·

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

W

for public safety has enhanced the
reputation of the Gallipolis Locks
and Dam among the public and commercial traffic on this important
American waterway. By your efforts , the Huntington District of the
U. S. Anny Corps of Engineers
remains a vital link in our nation's
system of inland waterways.
Thus, it is with a great deal of
pleasure that we salute Richard M.
Friend as an outstanding Ohioan and
praise him for his excellent work on
the Gallipolis Locks and Dam.
Senator Oliver Ocasek
President of the Ohio Senate
Oakley C. Collins ,
17th Senatorial District

Losing game

5
5
W

~

eGE CLOCKS
•RADIOS
•CLOCK RADIOS
•HAIR BLOWER-DRYERS

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Tarruny Milburn, Middleport; Gerald Keeton, Pomeroy ;
Roy Ftecker, Minersville.
Discharged-Albert Martin , Mabel
Kesterson .

percent in October, the department
said.
Price increases also slowed for
paosenger cars and mobile homes.
While energy price increases
moderated somewhat last month,
news for the year is more gloomy.
Energy prices were 62.7 percent
higher in November than they were
one year earlier, the departmert
said .
ln addition, food prices at the
producer level increased 8.9 percent
over the 12-month span.
Prices for all other finished goods
rose 9.3 percent during that period
and prices of equipment for
producing goods went up 8.6 percent.
The Producer Price Index in
November stood at 225.9. That

" 8' Pickup . 35() V-8, auto, P S., like

vw

'2295

. Fold ·down seat . ice box, clea n in
~ terior, table , good tires.

meeting schedule is Rutland
Fireman's Hall at 3 p.m. on Monday,
December 17. The three metings on
Tuesday, Dec . 18, are Pomeroy
Village HaU at I p.m., Racine Town
Hall at 3:30 p.m ., and Middleport
Village Hall at 7:30p.m.
The meeting program will be conducted by the finn of James M. Jennings Associates , who are
Columbus-based consultants in planning and development under contract to MCRPC.
Anyone having questions ~r wanting to make conunents may contact
MCRPC Executive Director Charles
E . Blakeslee at 992-2304 or at 1635
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy 45769.

Long Bottom

Alfred

NewsNo~s

Social Notes

By Melody Robet18
Thanksgiving was observed with a
dinner on Tuesday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cowdery and
Larry . Those attending were
Olarles Stobart and Grace Krider of
Racine , Mr . and Mrs. William
Hysell, Long Bottom, and Shirley
Roberts and Melinda of Lexington,
Ky.
Mr . and Mrs . Clyude (Bud )
Adams ' guests have been Chuck
Hauber, Reedsville, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Ruckman, Baltimore, 0 ., Mr.
Dale Evans and daughters of Logan,
Mr. and Mrs. David Evans and
family, Piketon, 0 ., Rormie Hewitt,
Don Rood, local, Lawrence Rood of
Lancaster , Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hauber , local , Mrs. Retta Ware and
family, Hebron , Ohio, Kate and Bernard Bobo, Reedsville.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs . Millard
Ball were Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball
and family, Columbus, Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Whitlock and family , local, Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Hauber and
family , local , Rev . and Mrs . Jim
Gibson, Cleveland.
It 's reported that Mrs. Johnny
(Mary) Newlun , and Tracie Newlun ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie
Newlun, have both been patients at
the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
They are back home now, please
send them a cheery card.
Mrs. Tom Hayman and daughters
were recently in Pound, Virginia
viBiting Mrs. Hayman's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Even Countiss.
Guests at the Don Reed home have
been Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Rood
and family, Lancaster, Mrs. Wilma
Baker, Reedsville.
A Thanksgiving dinner was recently given at the Long Bottom
Methodist Church by the Senior
Citizens Group. Over 60 people attended. Rev. Richard Thomas and
Sanuny Rairden gave Thanksgiving
prayer. After the d!Mer Rev.
Thomas played the piano and members sang and visited with one
another . Agood time was had by all .
Sincerest condolences go to the
family of Mr. Riley Pigott. We wiU
all miss him greatly.
Guests of the Paul Hauber home
have been Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Johnston and Jeremy, Portland, Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Hauber, Tim and
Kim, Mr. and Mrs . Clyde Adams,
Cindy Thomas, all local.
Thanksgiving day the Haubers were
d!Mer guests of Mrs. Ora Sinclair
(Sununer). Attending the dinner
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Hawk
and Robbie, Pomeroy, Mary Alice
and Mike Bowles, Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sinclair and Chad
(Sununer).
The Long Bottom Senior Citizens
Group will have their Christmas din ner December II in the Long Bottom
Methodist Church basement.
On December 12 the Long Bottom
Community Assoc. will have a bake
sale and bazaar beginning at 9:30
a.m. Many lovely handmade items
will be for sale. Also there will be
delicious homemade pies, cakes,
Ouistmas candies, and breads.
Rev . and Mrs. Walter D. Minney,
Parkersburg, W. Va . were recent
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs . Ellis
Larkins .
Leona Hensley and Mae McPeek
spent Thanksgiving Day with Mr.
and Mrs. George Rhodes of New
England, W. v •. at a birthday dinner for Mrs . Rhodes' father, Charles

Sunday School attendance on Nov .
4 was 35. Preaching followed with

Rev . Richard Thomas using
Jeremiah 31 :31-34 for scripture. The
youth choir sang a special number.
The Alfred church teen class had a
wi ener roast and hayride for
everyone of the church at Dan and
Janet Moore 's Nov. 3. Several perSOIIB attended and everyone enjoyed
it very much.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Henderson Nov. 4 were Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Williams and Aaron and Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Wllliarns and
children.
Genevieve Guthrie returned home
from Holzer hospital Wednesday.
Mrs. Maxine Yost is here with her .
Icy Taylor spent Sunday afternoon
with Charlotte VanMeter.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Swartz and
family of Marietta visited Nins
Robinson and Clara Follrod .
Mr. Richard Follrod of Pomeroy
and Mrs. Robert Robinson of Belpre,
visited Nina Robinson and Clara
Follrod Tuesday .
The children of Mr. and Mrs. Berl
Boggs had an armiversary d!Mer for
them on Nov. 4 at their home. Those
attending were Mr. and Mrs . Ray
Justis and children of Pomeroy, Mr.
and Ml'll. Robert Pullins and
children of CooiviUe, Mr. and Mrs.
RaMon Calaway of Coolville, and
Mr. and Ml'll. Jeff Householder of
Tuppel'll Plains. Calling in the afternoon were Mrs. Edna Life and
Terry Life, Reedsville.
The youth group of the Alfred
church met Sunday evening and
elected new officers. They have been
having very good meetings.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoy~ Brooks and
children entertained his mother,
Mildred Brooks, on Nov. 4 for her
birthday. They had a big dinner and
all the children and grandchildren
were present : Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Brooks and son, Coolville, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Francis and children, Tuppers Plains, Mr. and Ml'll. Dale
Sloter, Marietta , Mr. and Ml'll.
Gerald Brooks, Lowell, Keith
Brooks, Columbus , and Janet
Brooks, Coolville.
Sunday School attendance Nov. 18
was 53. Preaching foUowed with
Rev . Richard Thomas using Psalm
100 as scriptw-e. The youth choir
sang a special song.
The youth group of the Alfred
United Methodist Clrurch will have a
pancake and sausage supper Dec. 1
starting at 5:30till8p.m. Prices are,
children $1 and adults $2.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Follrod and
Mr . and Mrs. Allen Follrod of Mt.
Sterling, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. OUo
SWartz, Shade, and Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Follrod, Athens, visited with
Oara Follrod and Nina Robinson on
McPeek , who was 94. Mae McPeek's
birthday was also celebrated Nov.
24.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell spent
Thanksgiving Day at Columbus with
Mr . and Mrs. Tom Groeniveld and
Mr . and Mrs. Mike Bi"ll"U, Mr . and
Mrs . Mark Miller, all of Columbus.
Dr . Douglas Fatica of Perrysburg,
Ohio and Kenneth and John Snyder
of Lima , Ohio spent the deer season
camping at Hensley 's Haven.
Thanksgiving Day guests of Mrs.
Irene Starcher and family were Mrs.
Shirley Sparks and family , Mason,
W. Va . and Mrs. Ruth Stethem,
local.
Melvin DeMoss and Jimmy
Carlson of Brunswick, Ohio, Tom
Wallkine of Strongville, Ohio spent
several days with the St.archers deer
hunting.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hedrick of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs . Larry
Diggs, local, were recent guests of
Ruth Stethem.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young,
Paden City, W. Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. Garth Smith, Reedsville, were
dinner guests of Rulh Stethem
recently .
Mr. and Mrs . Harlan Ballard
spent Thanksgiving Day with their
son, Fred Ballard and family of
Pataskala, 0 .
Mr. and Mrs . Otto Kranuner of
Columbus , Beverly Hamman,
Columbus , and Eunice Evans of
Pataskala, 0 ., were recent guests of
Mr . and Mrs . Harlan Ballard .
A successful revival was recently
held at Mt. Olive Olurch.
Mrs. Leona Hensley and Mrs. Mae
McPeek attended a Cancer Society
meeting in Pomeroy recently .
Mrs. PhyUis Larkins and Mrs.
Shirley Salisbury attended a Hair
Show at South Point recently . A
great time was had by those attending .
Long Bottom Senior Citizens
reminders! Meetings are held every
second and fourth Tuesdays of the
month and the next Blood Pressure
Clinic will be Dec. 11 . That is also the
day the citizens will have their
Ouistmas d!Mer . Meeting time is
!rom 10 a.m. til 3 p.m. For more information call981).,'l32().
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman, Mr . and
Mrs . Richard Hayman, Mr. and
Mrs . Keith Ridenour and family
celebrated Thanksgiving at the
home of Mr . and Mrs . Elbert Fitzpatri ck, Lancaster, Ohio. It was
reported that over 36 guests att~nded .

ANTIQUE THEME TREE - This year the Sentinel's 8Mual &lt;llristmas tree is decorated not only with antique decorations, but there are
aiso antique toys under the tree . Peggy Sue Caruthers, age 3, from
Dacine, is pictured holding an antique doU. These decorations and toys
are part of the antique collection of Mrs. Beatrice Lisle, Syracuse , Sentinel employee.
Sunday afternoon .
Mr . and Mrs . Frank Follrod and
Mr. and Mrs . Allen Follrod of Mt .
Sterling visited Mr . and Mrs. Clair
Follrod.
Helen Williams visited Genevieve
Guthrie Sunday afternoon .
Mrs . Mae Hwnphrey , Reedsville
and Mrs . Edwin Hwnphrey and
grandson, Huntington, visited
Genevieve Guthrie Monday .
Mr . and Mrs. Wilbur Parker returned home from visiting their sons,
Eric Parker and family and Eddie
Parker and family at SeatUe ,
Washington .
The Alfred U.M.W. met Nov . ~ at
the church with 12 members
present . The meeling opened with
everyone saying what they were
thankful for . The song , Come Ye
Thankful People was sung. A report
was given by Nina Robinson on a
workshop meeting she and Thelma
Henderson attended at New
Lexington. Ada Grace Wmdland had
the prayer calendar for November.
The December meeting will be at the
church with a potluck Cllristmas
party for the members and their
families. lnstallation of officel'll will
also be held.
The yoWJg adult class of the Alfred
Olurch met on Friday evening and
painted the basement . They also
purchased new curtains for the
basement .
Sunday School attendance Nov . II
was 41. Preaching followed with
Rev . Thomas using Romans 12 :1-2

and Genesis 22 : 1-7for scripture.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod called
on Clara Follrod and Nina Robiluon
SWJday for dinner. Calling in the af.
temoon were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Follrod of Pomeroy .
Mr . and Mrs. Uoyd Brooks had a
birthday party Saturday evening for
their son, Kevin's 16th birthday .

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets
eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

KINGSBURY
HOME ~LES
1100 E. Mdln
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

F~~~~~~---~---~~--~~---~·

12
12

I

12

i
fi
fi
I

&amp;
a

12

~

w

12
li

w

w

w
w

W

.

W

I

~

I

~"'

11

ll
w
11
ll
I
I
w
w

Iw

I

~ ;Tj~

I
i
I
I
I
fi
i

~

~-,

In 14Kt. White or Yellow Gold

I

5

11
5
11

11
~

I

I

AI a fraction of
the price you
would expect to
pay priced at

1

!

s39

I

~

The lifetime
Christmas

ll

I

ll

~

!
i

5

11

I

a

1

95

I
I

~

I

gift...

\

CANDY'S CLASSIC COLLECTIONS

I

In

Ii

~

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

W
~

"Two In One Store"
106 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, 0.

ll

i

.

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

I

~

J

�.2-

The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 • Thursday , Dec. 6, 1979

13- lbe Daily Sentinel, Middlepvrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec . 6, 1979

Your Best Buys Are f.,ound in the Sentinel Classifieds
Frklay , Dec. 1

WANT AD
CHARGES

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

15 Words 01 UndHCUII
Olu(o
! cloy
1.00
l.Z
ldoya
1.10
1.110
scion
1.111
us
:too
3.1s
I cion

ance.

Mobtle Herne sales and Yard

IAOITTARIUI(Nov. D - -. 211

Vo lunteer
Fire
Dept
Every Saturday 6 . 30 p .m
A1 the1r buildingin Bashan
Factory choke guns only .

vetouaty well. Find out more or
what Ilea ahead for yO\l In the
romance department in the year
tonowtng your birthday by send Ing ror your copy or Astra-Graph
Letter Mall S1 for each to Astra·
Graph. Box 489. Rad io City
Station. N v 10019 . Be sure to
specify birth date.

The Publiaher I'MI!r'WI the
_rt,ght to edtt or reject any ldl
deemed

objectional . The
l'llbllaber wtll not be ._,.,,..

for men than one incon-ect inllrlion .

CAPRICORN 1 -· 112-.lan. 111
Others tend to treat yOY favor·
ably today Tht~y ' ra Hk~y to grant
you material a1CI or assistance 11
you need any at thi S t1me Don' t
hes1 tate to ask
AQUARIUS (Jan. »-Feb. 11}
Your SOCI81 rei&amp;IIOnShlpS Ofler
special advantages roday Par tiCularly promis1nQ ar e Situations
01 matter s calling lor teamwork
and cooperation

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADIJNES

PISCES

(Fitb. 20-Merch 20)
Anytl'llnQ you do tod ay tn wh iCh
you put o ut your bes1 efforts Will
not go unrec ogmzed 01 unrewarded Be as productive as

Monday

Noon on Saturday

~y

I P.M.
F'rlday altornoor

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF OONALO E .
MILLER , DECEASED
Cue No. 221111
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 21st. 1779.

i n the Meigs County
Probate Court, Case No.
',22886, Lewis Miller , Tup , pers Plains, Meigs Coonty ,
Ohio 45783, was appointed
Administrator af th&amp;estate
of Donald E . Miller ,
deceased , late of Tuppers
Plains, Meigs County, Ohio

45783 .

Robert E . Buck

Probate Judge Clerk

111 ) 29 112) 6, 13, 3tc

no
with no ex

trespassing
ce ptions on my property .
Judy M cGrttw Self

planning . Anythtn~ you prooram
11 thta time wilt work out mar .

"'The Sentinel .

H U N T ING ,

This coming yea1 you will have
ample opportunity to put some
ot your bigger ldeaa Into ac110n
Obatactes or pitfalls thlt prevl·
oosly hampered you w1/l be
removed Prom your patn

Begin to took ahead a little and
give some thought to future

sales art accepted only with
cash trith order. 25 cent charge
for ada carrying Bos: Number In

the day be'fort publ.iauon

CHIP WOOD Poles ma~~:
diameter 10" on largest
end . S12 p -er ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered

NO

o-tnber 7, 1171

In mOmory' card "' ThonkJ
and Wtuary : II Cflltl per word,
ts.OO minlmwn. Cub in ad-

Tuaday
thru Friday
IP M

M EIGS
CO UNTY
HUMANE SOC IETY . 992 ·

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDA Y I PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GU N CLUB .

POSSible
AAI£8 (M•rch 21 - April 11) Try
to spenCI your day or evenmq
w1th persons you deem expanSive m theH thmklnQ You ' ll be
l oo k.n~ l or the chance to broaCI en your exposure
TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May 20) You
have an mstmct1ve awareness of
all the 1esources available to you
today tnat could make your lite a
litHe better Have faith and put It
to work
GEMINI ( ...J 21-Jur-. 20) This is
a good day 10 shOre up any relationship ol Importance You're In
tune to wt1at 11 takes to get along
with ot hers
CAHCU (June 21-JUiy 1121 A
strong desire to establish a place
lor yoursell and also be of ser vice to others gives you extra
drive It can "t ~ anyth ing out a

sucuulut day
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your pos Itive outlook and smiling lace
draws peopN!J to you like a mag net tOday II you 're not going to a
party , why not plan one ?

GU N

SHOOT

Racine

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00. Factory choke only

Corn

Hollow Gun

Club,

Rutland . F'roceeds donated

lo Boy Seoul Troop 249 .
HAVE

YOUR

lrophy

mounted .
Birchfield 's
Taxidermy on 124, east ot
Rut land . 614· 7"'2 2178

ts for 1973 Pinto . After 5

p.m . coll992 3659

ice

boxes, brass beds , i r on
beds, desks , etc ., complete

households . Wrile M .D.
Miller _ R t. ; , Pomeroy or
call 992 7760.
WANTED :

SAW

logs .

Payment upon delivery 1o
our yard , 7: JOtoJ .JOweek ·
day!.. Blaney Hardwoods,

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Houling &amp;

Gosney , antiqves,

26

N.

2nd, Middieporl, OH . 992
3161.
ANTIQUE POCKET wal
c tles . W illing to pay top
dollar . Call 1·592 ·2973

bands , diamonds . Gold or
sil\ler . Call J. A . Wamsley ,
7.&amp;2 ·2331. Treasure Chest

Coin Shop, AIMns, OH . 592~1 .

WANTED TO BUY ; beef

POMEROY CAB office
now open a a.m . 5 p .m . 7
days a week .

Baptist Re\liVal beginning

CHRtSTMAAS
Dec . 7

and

COMMODE and tank . 992 ·
2201.

BAZAAR ,
8.

Society Thrill Shop, Mid
dleporl .

ment.
107 Sycamor1 (Rear

Pomeroy. 0 .

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor -outdoor facilit ies .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans . 61~ - 446 - 7795 .

Seated bids will be ac -

cepled at the Federal Land
Bank Association , 228 Up ·

For Rent

Team No . 3

64

Fires tone

Ka th y Hood .08 ; Bill Smilh 517 , Oeb·

SS

Eagles Club

54

Smith's Bodyh S.hop

bie Dobbins 379 .
Team high game

36

zoil .

Team No .6

10

Team high game · Team No . 3 906 ;
Columbia National Life 90 .. , 86 1.
Team high series .. Columbia
National Ute 2576; Team No . 3 2572 ;
F irestone 23..9.
High inct. oame .. Dale Davis 721 ;
Bla ine Car)er 215 ; Bill Radford 206.
High ind . series ·· Bill Radford
559 ; Dale Davis 552 , Henry Clat

worlhy 553 .
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate

Nov. 20, 1919
Standings

Team

Pts .

Friendly Tavern
60
Meigs Inn
56
Royl!d Crown Cola
56
Reuter -Bragan Ins .
5.4
No . 2
.4..4
-conrich Coal
42
High individual game · Jan Sheet s
lB.C ; Betty Smith Pat Carson 179 ,

Oebi Hawley 178
H igh series · Pat Carson 511, Jan
~

Sheets 472 ; Oebt Hawley 468 .
Team high game · Conrich Coal
472.
Team high series · Conr ich Coal
1368 .

Early Wednesday
MiJted League

Nov . 28, 1979
Standings
Team
•Headquarters

Pts .
73

Longshofs
, Zlde 's Sport Shop
·. Smith ·Nelson Motors

69
64

~

• Tony -s Carry Out
48
Swisher Lohse Drugs
31
High series ·· Jr . Phelps 577, Pat
Carson 553 ; John Tyree 551 , Oebi

hawley 539.
High game .. J ohn Tyree 216, Pal
, carson 202 ; Jr . Phelps 20 1. Debi
. Hawley 193.
Team series -- HeadQuarters 2151
Team game -- Headquarters 757 .

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Morning Glories
Nov. 11, 1979

" Te•m

Pts .

No. 1

73

-vaughan 's Cl!lrdinat

58

G . and J . Au1o PariS

54

Karr and Vlln Zandt

47

No. 5
The Fabric Shop

30
26

High Ind . game
Kelly Wilson
' ·171; Dottie Will. Evelyn Gilmore ,
Mary Porter , 157.

High ind . 3·oames .. Ootl ie Will
_,.._...; Clara M c intyre _.22.

High team

game ~~

No. 1 795 .

High team 3·games ·· No. 1 2290
Monday Mixed

Nov . 26,1979
Standings

Team
W. L.
Roach ' s Gun Shop
38 26
Frye's Pennzoil
36 28
·French 's Sunoco
34 30
No. 3
20 44
High individual game .. Russ Car
son 204, Drema Roach 176;

'~on

Smith 197, Kathy Hood and Oebbie

Team

high

series

Frye 's Penn ·
French's

Sunoco .

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Dennis E . Searles, Annlle Searles,
Jasper Robinson, KAtie Searles
Robiruion, Isabelle Searles Brand-

berry, Hazel Searles Taylor, John
Searles, Ruth Searles, Robert
Searles, Rolland Searles, Avery Sue
Searles, Pauline Searles, Donald
Searles, Elizabeth Searles, James
Searles, Lynn S. Searles, Donald D.
Whitlock , Edith Searles Whitlock,
Robert C. Brooks, Freda Brooks, to
Ada Searles Taylor,lots, Rutland.
Lelia K . Bailey, dec., to Wilbur B.
Bailey, cert . oftrans., Chester .
George Luster, Jr., Dale Dee
Luster to Ronnie K. Hubbard, Linda
Hubbard, Lot 103, Behan's Add.,
Middleport .
Jerome Cook, Ann Cook to Dale c.
Warner, Marybelle Warner, George
H . Warner , Grace M. Warner, Parcels, Bedford .
Carter's Plwnblng and Heating,
Inc . to Jay Hall, Jr ., Lot, Pomeroy .
Roger
Dillard,
Arfidavlt
Pomeroy.
'
Earl J . Wright, Beulah B. Wright
to Southern Ohio Coal Co., Coal,
Salem.
Ernest C. Schaer, Irene C. Schaer,
Thomas Hayman, Sue Hayman to
Albert R. Dangelo, Wllma Dangelo,
Minerals, Olive.
Herbert Eugene Whaley, Sheila
Whaley to Colwnlius and Southern
Ohio Elec. Co., Easement. Bedford.
Marshall C Roll8b, Deborah
Roush to Colwnbus and Southern
OhioEiec. Co., Easement, Letart.
Virginia S. Vitatoe to Worley A.
Rife, Paula A. Rife, 2ll acres,
Rutland .
·
Dorothy Woodland, Affidavit ,
Rutland.
Donald R. Hupp, Ruby Hupp to
Paul W. Hayes, Katrina M. Hayes,
Parcels, Letart.
Cosby Sue Nutter to William Roe
Nutter,I.IO acres, Olive.
Lillian Proffitt, Roy Proffitt to
Maxine Sellers. Parcels, Lebanon.
Marlene Jennings to Harold G.

PIANOS

Pomeroy area . CALL THE

DAILY

SENTINEL , 992

Gre•t Christmos 0111
Both New &amp; Used

drive.

3 AND ~ RM furnished ap
ts . Phone 992 5434.

fa c tory

topper .

Bank

reser\les the right to reje&lt;t
ail bids. The car can be
seen

at above address .

(12 ) 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 5tc

HOUSE , FOUR rooms and
balh . 992 ·3090 .

About Jesus and His love
Mother told me I had one real friend
That I could go to when troubled.
I said to Mother, "Who i.s that? "
She said, " It is Jesus," He loves you
very much .
He loves everybody all the time,
So when you are troubled go to Jesus
and pray
He will help you, my dear.
Always remember Jesus and His
love
Be thankful to have such a friend
As Jesus to call on my love,
Remember Jesus and His love for
you .
Thank the Lord
Composed by Mrs . Sadie E. Larkins,
May 11, 1979.

PIANO

monthly . AOults only . 992 ·
5834 after 5.

FURNISHED
FOUR
rooms and bath . 992 ·7706.

~

DON'\ ED(P'ECT TO
DO A &amp;OOD JO~ OF
"'AR:DENI~G WHEN
ENC:.UME!IERED
E!I'Y' TH 15 ,

FINANCING ·VA ·FHA LO ·
ANS . LOW OR NO OOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
I RELANO MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE, ATHENS .
614-592 ·3()51 .

1977 VW RABBIT . Good
p .m .

FIREWOOD

52495 Call 992 ·5304 or 992 ·
2238 .

1976 FORD F 150 pi c kup .

FOR

alternators -own the best

miles above
Mason Bridge .

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . F itZP&lt;'IIrick Or ·
cnard, State Route 689 .

stoker , will deliver . 747 ·

116 E. So~d Sll'OOI
FAMILY - 11 rm • ., 1'1
baths, 5 or 6 bedrooms,

din ing, basement and 2
car garage. Sl7 , 500 .

FiUpatr ick
689.

pri\late home tor elcSerly
only
Board, room and

Orchard , SR

laundry .

in

992 ·6022.

No

Giveaway

like new . Asking 5100. Call
992 ·7866 .

MOUNTAIN

CUR,

grey ,

male , loveable . Irish set
ter , female , red . Shots and
wormed . One small blond
poodle . Humane Society ,

pheasan ~

ts, roosters and hens . Catl

667 3252 .

TREES ,

5p .m .
HARDWOOD

RAWLEIGH PRODUCTS
vanillas,
spices,
pie
fillings . C:old remedies and
vitamins . 991 -7825 .

Can

Kingsbury
Sales .

TWO YEAR old quarter
horse .
Fully
tri!ined .
Registered to breed . S.350.

be

kitchen,

seen

Mobile

Home

heat,

near

FIREWOOD lor •a le . 985

•nd

in Bradbury , modern kit
chen and bath , 2 bedrooms ,
laundry , dining and livi ng
room , all carpe ted , block
garage , carport, tool room
and eK tra storage bui l ding ,
all with concre te floors

ELECTIIIC
Headquarters

AppU•ncos

sar., &amp; Service
I

of

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

l KNOW ... Oi..J RS 15

IT'S JUST A
PRIVATE SO-IOOL

A

OF
IMMIGRANTS, ANH!E ..
Tt1f1' CAME HERE

SOUNDS -- I

SCHOOL, I THINK
I'D RATHER GO TO

DON'T I(N()W

FILLED

KIHD OF

A ~SCHOOL -

NAT IO~

R ITZY . ~

W I TH~

FOR: T~ EMSEL'J ES AND
THE IR CMILDRE N ·

.. AND OUR PUBLIC SCHOOLS PLAYED
A GREAT PART IN FUL FI I.J.II'lG H-IO!:,E
HOPES ... BUT L.ATELY . THE'i''IE
BEEN DeTERIORATING, &amp;!!! COME
00¥~NRIGHT DAP'+GIEAOJ6 IN SOMe
AR!AS! A PITY ... STILL · .. '#./f'LL Sff ...

+J9

+K 7

• QJ 3
tQJl 0865!

,

SOUTH

+Al09 52

+3

+AKQ743

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer. Easl

3. 4.

Wrst

North

East

South

~

6•

Pass

Pass

t

Pass
OpemnR lea d t K

HOW'S

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

DOc

DOING
Wlll-4 Tl-4E
'TIME

I N ~

sometimes

m -2143 .
IN STOCK for lmmediole
various sires of

pool ki1s . Do·lt ·yourseu or
le1 ua Install for you . D.
Bumgardner

Sales,

A&amp;H Upholstering, acros•

you can't trust

You never
know,
Ph(/1/is 1

a Shoppinq Fairy ,
who can 40u
trust~

BRADFORD, Auctioneer ,
Complele service . PhOne
949 ·2481 or 9•9·2000. roclne ,
Ohio, Critl Bradford .
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers ,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .

Slate

Highway

PROPER INSULATION 1•
cheaper than heating oil.
Take advantage of a good

inves1ment . Call 992 3288
for more Information .

WINNIE
THAT'S NOTA TRUCK 1

, THEI&lt;!ES A CAR PULUNG UP I N01
NOT A CAR ...OOME SORT OF

DEAR.._rT'S A YAN I
AND I I ·IS WENClY

~i I THOJ6HT IT ~,....,..~
MIGfiT 13E WENDY RE •
11JRNIN6 FROM HER

AND HER PATE!

I 'M GOING OUT 1'0 GET A
~ETTER

LOOK AT THAT

ITIIARP/.Y
LIKe SOME-

VEHICLE.
L~

7HING ONE HK/(ILP
VSEONA &amp;&gt;ATE/

PATE.

HORSE SHOEING . Call
'1'12·3288. ask lor Darrell
McClanahan .

BARNEY

COME ON,
PAW --LET'S
,, GIT WARMED
:-, UP FER
TH'BARN I
DANCE ::::

~utland .

Lots, and

concrete

Cal1992 ·5310.
SI)( ROOM house and lo1
with outbuilding . Carpeted
throughout . Some fur
niture . 992 ·5989.

I

For Mobil Home

A PLUMB
GOOD IDEE,
MAW

Yo u 'v e s~nl a lot ofU nu:
and money picking out
mobile home that meets

get the insuranor to
matc h .

copies of JACOBY MODERN)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS

I Neighbor

1 Port in
Cork Harbor
5 Reduced
to pulp
11 " Rondo Turca "
12 Breathe in
13 Legal claim
14 Stanzas
15 - been had !
I&amp; Legwne
17 Second name
18 Nourished
19 Before
20Sea : Fr .
21 Bendix role
%3 Coin
Z4 Catnip
Z5 Way off
%$Confine
%S Furrow
30 Belgian
conunune
31 Colloidal
substance
32 Certainly
U Fi.sh eggs
35 Thrash
ll Tell's
canton
37 Tooth
covering
:19 Birthstone
t1 Writer
II Lovable
person
tZ Dog
13 Singer
Williams

of Ore .
Z Dic kens
character
3 Garden plant ;
sympathizer
t Olinese
dynasty
5 Wretched
Yesterday's Aolwer
condition
22 Director
29 " Hark! the
B ArchitecStrasberg
- angels .
lura! piers
%3 Jazz fan
31 Olurch's
7 Shinte temple 25 Patina
land
8 Show pity
26 Pat ; pet
33 Fatuous
9 Nwnber
27 Promptly
38 With : Ger.
10 Dry area
Zl! Card shark, 39 Odali.sque's
18 Wee look
at times
chamber

~ ·rr hit' ~

when you need

us ror mobilr home insurance. Come: to the: professionals rorthe lpecial

policy to fit your •peslfic
needs.
·
DOWN I

11 :00- News 3, 6.8, 10. 13 . 15; Dick
Cave11 20 .
11; l ~o llege Basketball 33 .
11 30-Tonighf 3,15 ; Police Woman
6.1 3; Col umbo 8; Movie " The
Postman Always Rings Twice"
10; Movie " On the Walerlront"
17.
12 40-Barelfa
6. 13 ;
I :OQTomorrow 3; News 15.
1: Js-Banacek 8; I :50-News 13;
1: 5s-News 17
HX~· Movle
" Pori Afrique" 17;
4: 00-Movle " Beach Party" 17

GDE

I'VE MADE UP A
NEW LIST OF THINGS
WANT FOR CHRISTMAS.
CHARLIE BROWN

I HATE TO ADMIT IT,
6l!T I CAN'T EVEN
REMEMl'ER Wl-lERE WE

DON'T WORI21f'.

I KNOW Jl!ST
WHERE IT 15 ...

JOE SPINDLE !

ERW

Is
8,

11,

s.
ICI
In
le

ld

's
a
II!

D·
D·

.

!r

d

t
•Y

t-

:y

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7,1979
5 .4s-Farm Report 13 ; 5 :50-PTL
Club 13.
6 ;OQ-700 Club 6,S ; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6:10-World at Large 17; 6 ;30Kidsworld 10 ; News 17; 6 ;4sMornlng Report 3; 6 ;50-Good
13 ;

6:5s-News 13.
7:00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6, 13 ; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10 ;

Three

;s

Stooges-

Lillie Rascals 17 ; 7 : 15-A.M.
Weather 33 .
7:30-Family Affa ir 10; Writing tor
a Reason 33; 7;55-Chuck White
Reports 10.
8:00-Capf . Kangaroo 8.10; Family
Al!alr 17 ; Sesame St. 33.
8;30-Romper Room 17 .
9 :00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day AI A Tlme
10; Phil Oonahue 13, 15; Lucy
Show 11 .
9: 30-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Lite
10; Green Acres 17.

10;00-Card Sharks 3, IS; Edge ol
Nighl 6; Beal IM Ctock 8, 10;
Morning Magatlne 13; Movie
" No Highway in the Sky" 17.
10 ; 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15 ;
S20,000 Pyromld 13; Andy
Gril!ifh 6 ; Whew 8, 10.
10 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 ;OQ-High Rollers 3.15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Etec . Co . 20.
•1 : 30- Wheel of Forlune 3,15;
Fam ily Feud 6,13; Se"'me Sf.
20,33; 11 ·55-News 17 .
3;

News

6,8,10, 13; Mindreaders 1S; Love
American Style 17.

12 : 30-Ryan's Hope 6. 13; Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Heai1h Field IS;
Movie " The Callern " 17 ; Elec .
Co. 33.
1·00-0ays of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
I. 30-As The World Turn• 8, 10;
2; llO-Doctors 3.15; One Life to
Live 6,13; 2 ; 25-News 17 .
2.30-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Lighl 8,10; Gigglesnorl Hotel 17 .
3: llO-General Hospital 6. 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Upstairs, Oownstalrs
20; Japan : The Changing
Tradition 33.

3;30-0ne Day AI A Time 8: Joker ' s
Wild 10; Fl inhtones 17 ; over
Easy 33.
4 : 00--Mister Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly

Hillbillies 8; Se..,me St. 20.33;
Si• Million Dollar Man 10; Real
McCoys 13 ; Speclreman 17.
S&lt;lO- Bewlfched 3; Gilligan'• Is. 17;
Petti coat Junction 8; Tom &amp;
Jerry 13 ; Merv Griffin 15.
S:00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers ' Neigh.
borhood 20,33 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17.
5 30-Carol Burnell 3; News 6 ;
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co. 20 ;
Ma•h 10; Happy Days Agoln 13 ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17 ; Doctor
Who 33.
6·1l0-News 3,S,I0,1 3,1 5; ABC News

Love American Style 1.5; Sanford

&amp; Son 17; Dick Cavell 20,33 ..
7; 30-Prlce Is Rlaht 3; Newlvwed
Game 6; Family Feud 10;
Joker's Wild 8; Pop Goes The
Country 13, 15, Ail In The Family
17; MacNeH ·Lehrer Report 20,33.
8: ?0-Shirley J , 15; Frosly's Winter
Wonderland 6, 13 ; Incredible
Hulk 8, 10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33; Movie "Crucible
of Horror" 17.

CRVPTOQUOTES

Well cover nr:w or used

CO\.'e ~s .

Hocking

Valley Bluegrass 20.

'8

Freestyle 33 .
6:30-NBC News 3, IS; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnetl6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newharl 17; Over Easy
20,33.
7.1l0-3's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Family of Winners Special : 6;
News 10; Newlywed Game 13;

PEANUI'S
mobile homes. You can
nrlt'n get seasonal. rental
or commlf'rrial insurance

10 : 30-Civlllsatlon 17 ;

nte

6 ; Zoom 20 ; Carol Burnett 17 ;

One letter simply sta nds for another. In this sample A is
used f or the three L 's . X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the l ength and formation of the wordJ are all
hints . Each da y the cod e lett ers are different.

~s. Now

your spttifk

home, has own water
system . OWner now
needs more room. GO·
lNG AT 117 ,900.00.

preemptor

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
AXVDLBAAXR
11 LONGFELLOW

TONIGHT

Insurance.

block bldg. and mobile

the

(Do you have a question for
rhe experts? Write '"Ask the
E.-perts, '' care of this newspaper. Individual questions will
be answered if accompanied
t!y stamped, self-addressed
enlleJopes. The most interesting questions wHI b8 used in
this coJumn and will rsceive

~tf."t~

Inc .

from the TeJtaco S1atlon In

10

News 20.

12 : OQ-Newscenter

lands flat on hls lace . When
used in a match point duph·
cate anything is likely to
happen .
In this hand, East's opening
preempt st&lt;lrted real fire-

celled?
Los1
operator 's license? Phone

~livery :

(NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

Churchill refers to preem p·
live openings as shooting dice.
Somehmes they succeed -

MACHINi'~!

can your

other

THE ANSWER TO
YOUR HOME HUN·
TING PROIILEM CAN
BE FOUND HERE
WITH
CLElANO
REALTY .
REALTORS
Henrv E . Cleland Sr.
992·2561
Henry E . Cltllncl Jr.
Wl-4191
ASSOCIATES
Jeon TrunoU Mt-2UO
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
OFFICE lt2·22st

WARM FIVE room house

GENERAL

lots

acres, large

fireplace, large deck ,
basement and garage . 1
acre lot . Call 9'92 · ~ - If no
an•wer, ca ll 992· 5455 .

HOTPOINT

A

Lots of use lor this
piece . LOOK JUST
52S,375 .00.
OLD RT. 7 - Abou1 34

NEW HOME . 3 bedroom ,
2112 baths. re&lt;:. room with

J561 .

mines .

features . $29,500.00.
NEW LISTING - About
72 acres of wOOded land

HOUSE FOR SALE behind
Jones Boys 55.500 . Call 304273 ·5029 . Sharon Stark .

Good
condition . $1500 . 99'2 -7378 .

HMM WE'Ll DISCUSS
IT 0~ THE WAY HOME ~

742 ~ 2593

6 ACRES IN TOWN l'h slory frame wl1h J
bedrooms, buill ·in kit·
chen, N.G. hot water

Real Estate for Sale

F ·1SO

7331 or

or trailer . Call for more
information .

CENTRA L

Powell St ., M1ddiepor1

. I MEAN 1 INSTEAD

Excavating ,
septic
systems, dozer, bockhoe .
Rl . 143. PhOne I 161~1 698 ·

tevel acres, all utilities

2528after 5p .m .

heating and A .C witn due ·
ts . m -2560 or see at 1262

ANNIE
01=' A PR I'Jt\ T E

instaUed, ideal lor home

lea se . Former warner
Beauty Shop . Approx 1100
sq . fl . Call 992 ·2117 or 992

sate . E xcetlent condition .
Phone 667 307-4 , Norman
Weber .

.
.,

WEST
+Q8
.108764
t AK97

THIS YOU MUST SEEL
576,325.00.
NEW LISTING 2

BUSINESS BUILDING lor

WURLITZER PIANO for

Charle• Bu1cher . 7•2 ·2940

12 ·6

+4
• 10 8 6 2
EAST

home, 3 bedrooms, 111:1
baths, rec . room, lovely
kitchen, garage , barns .

at

For Lease

Call 742 ·2008

the

STEAL
AT
JUST
57,.500.00.
ASTOUNDING BUY 8-4 very nice acres,
newer
Ranch type

S7200. 1974 Buddy 12•1&gt;4 3
$7600 .

basements, ponds, brush,
timber, land clearing .

merely over called with four c lubs. but
now West made a real second ·
ary preempt He jumped to
five diamonds'
If North had made the cor ·
rect call of double he would
have picked up &gt;OO points
w1th lwo black aces, two top
hearts and a heart ruff by
South, bul would not have
recieved a very good result
Other North-South pairs
would have been plus 650 al
s pades or plus 600 in clubs.
Church suggests that South
s hould have bid three spades
instead of four clubs over the
diamond preempt H certainly
would have worked this time,
but we hate to think of how
many bad things could happen
if North didn't hold four
spades .
Fmally, when North did bid
six clubs he was unlucky . Lots
of Wesl players would have
continued to six diamonds
whereupon North co uld
double , pick up 700 pomts and
a top score .

• A K92

3825.

NEW LISTING - 16
acres and 3 room house

bedroom , front li11ing
room , e)Ccetlen1 condition,

Paul Ours and Bob

NORTH
+H 4 3

Garage on Route 7, 985 ·

608 E .
MAIN .
. 111..1..1
.
POMEI!OY, 0 .

near

front

DOZER, END Loader ,
brush hOg . Will do

33 ; Sneak Previews 20.
9 :30-Soa p 6, 13 ; Camera Three 20.
10·00-Kate Loves a Mystery 3,15 ;
20-20 6, 13; Aii -Siar Tribute to
Ingrid Bergman Speclol ; 8, 10;

Morning , West VIrginia
works . South

rates . Scotchguard . 992 ·
6309 or 742 ·2348.

1970 HOLLYPARK 12X60 2

bedroom ,

Preempt bids up for grabs

s•nd ·

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable

rural wBter, septic tank ,
central heat and A .C . Car ·
peted . Pri ced reas.onably .
Excellent condition 6U·

FRESH CUT
THIS WEEK
SPRUCE
WHITE &amp;
SCOTCH PINE

~ fJOBB'{.

Cail949·2686.

Ne•l

Rousmg
Headquarters

742 2182 .

J•ck W. Carse)
Mgr,
. Phone tt2·2111

Large

c011ple. sooo.oo down .
LIST YOUR HOME
WITH US ON THE
PROTECTION PLAN
AT NO COST TO YOU .
992·»25 or Wl·3176.

1973 14•70 VINDALE 7•14
expando, 2 bedr ., p ;.._ acre

pool.

&amp;J

about

B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
WV . 3046754424.

swimming

POMEROY
!LANDMARK

balance

bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .

CHRISTMAS TREES

W76 FORO

$1.000 .00

business room, beth and
2 othe:r rms . Ideal for

1972 LYNN HAVEN U•65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndaie 12•63 with_. .
pando, 2 beor
1970 New Moon 12•60 3 bdr
1973 Skyline 12x55 2

dltlon 742·2359 .

AND

Syracuse . 992 ·3743 or '192 ·
3752.

living .

BUNION

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

and spreoding . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455 .

basemen1 . Firelace In

$250.00 a mo.
A BUY

Mobile Homes - Sale

firewood , $30 truckload . 12
ga . double gun in good con ·

LENNOX

one

AUTHOR

WILL HAUL limestone and

'1'12 5724.

down

female

FIVE MALE ,
pups . 992·6397 .

Ma in St ., Rutl and . 9a .m . to

What a man who takes h1s hat o ff to n obody
probably needs-A HAIRCUT

gravel. Also, lime hauling

garage and handyman
bldg . 5% down.
BARGAIN - 3 bedroom
ranch, bath, nice full
the

9'12 6260 .

the

bath ,

2

ranch, all elec. . home,

tubular orate with blower ,

DRY

-

utllily bill, front porch
lacing Rl . 7 In T.P .
workshOp and garage
s1arled . A•klng lusl
$18,000.
Mt HERS - 1 acre fenced . MOdern J bedroom

drinking allowed

GLASS FIREPLACE doors
with black finish plus

CHRISTMAS

SAVER

bedrooms,

Services Offered
VACANCY

oo .,

'OJ ru:»J, 16

HOWERY AND MARTIN

HEAT

HAVE

Answer

5232 ..

2183.
APPLES - ROME beau1y
apples al S. per bu . Best tor
apple bul1er Call 669· 3785,

CH AFF

BRIDGE

At-1..0\11 f&gt;.. OR£'Y CIF ~
If-\ 1\\e. ~.

EXCAVATING,
doter ,
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo ·boys
lor hire, will haul 1111 dlr1,
top !1011, II mestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone m -7'089,
nighl phone 992·J52S or m -

BIG CHRISTMAS Auction

COAL , lump or

PRIOR

~0£:61 MY Wlf€. ~'f

wre,t.OI\.)0" '

10·19·1 mo.

s

Jumbles

BORN LOSER

5786.

Sale, Friday , 6p .m Lohof
toy s, gifts, tools, clos.e ·ou1
items, mi sc . at Ohio River
Auction , Rt . 7, south of
Middleport .

669·

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992:2112

and Serv ice . We Sharpen
Scissors.

Pomeroy ·

11 )( I X I )

AN (

Jumble Book No. 13,c;:ontelnlnv 11Dpuulll,lsaullabtelor 11 . 7~ poatpald
from Jumble, clo this newspaper, Sa1 U , Ncrwood, N.J. OTIS43. Include ~our
n1m•. addr•u . lip cod• and mak• chiiCitB pay1ble to Newaplperbooh.

I'M IR'&lt;II-\0 TO ~T llll'Tmo51l':.O

Estimate

finance at 9 Pet . to reliable
couple. No realtors . 992 ·

BIG AUCTION every Wed .,
7 pm Hartford Community
Center, Hartlord, WV, 4

buy WIN POWER . Call 513788 ·2589.

Win-

COMMERCIAL BUILDIN ·
G on 132 11 . lot at 1600 Nye
Ave., Pomeroyd, OH . Will

Auctions

POWER

Yesle relay

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
•ervlce, all
makes . 992·2284 . The
FabriC · ShOp, Pomeroy .
Au1horlzed Singer Soles

.c

condition. 992 ·3213 after

Guaranteed A -1 condition .

RING NECKED

Lane

Real Estate for Sale

1974 FORD LTO, electric

E . Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 992 ·
3891.

Wilkesville ,

TUN ING ,

Now arrange the Circled leners to
torm the surpnse answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

I I . [J

blasting . Free estimates .

windows , seats, cruise con ·
trol, stereo, new tires, win terized . $975 . 247 ·3095

For Sale
COAL,
LIMESTONE ,

near

Jennings, Parcels, Colwnbia.
77 Easements Tuppers Plains
Chester Water Dist., Pomeroy
8 Easements Tupper.~ Plains
Chester Water Dist., Pomeroy.
Robert Olaney, Gladys Chaney to
Paul E . Will, Dottie Will, 5.04 acres,
Salisbury.
Leo D. Davidson, Mary E . Davidson to Leo D. Davidson, Mary E .
Davidson, Parcels, Rutland.
Paul R. Paynter, Mary A. Paynter
to Dolphus Burke, Jr., Wanda C.
Burke, Parcels, Colwnbia .
Vivian Coy to Maxwell Coy,
Arlene Coy, .45 acre, Rutland.
Earl H. Gilkey, Nancy E . Gilkey to
Roger Adams, Lot 8, Fairview
Hgts., Chester .
Georse Martin Sa)Te, Jr ., Daniel
Bruce Sayre, Donna Marie Sayre.
Steven C. Hines, Julia Hines to D. G .
S . Investment, Parcels, Orange Chester.

Movie " love Me or leave Me"

~NOOMIKt-....,..._..,

(J

dows

PAINTING

body like brand new . $1950.
247 3095 .

dlepor1, on Old Keilh
Goble Used Car Lo1

m

8 30- Benson 6, 13 ; 9 ;00-t!lng
Crosby Speci•l ; 3, 15 ; Barney
Miller 6, 13; Johnny Cash 8,10;

I I

i

1965.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN VAN .

For Sale in Lower Mid -

TAKINGAPPUCATIONS
The Salvation Army in Pomeroy
will be taking applications for
Christmas food baskets and toys on
Tuesday, Dec . 11, from I until 4 p .m .
and on Wednesday afternoon, Dec.
12, I to 4 p .m . Those needing this
assistance are asked to stop at the
army headquarters,
Butternut
Ave .,
Pomeroy, during
the
designated hours on the specific
days .

~0

J&amp;L BlDWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

Free

THURSDAY .DECEMBER 6, 197t

PORTIM

EASY! LOOK OUT!

0

[j

I I

CAPTAIN EASY
IF Y'WANNA KN OW WHAT'~ 60toJ' O&gt;V o
~16 MOU TH, MAYSE YOU'D BETTER
ALO&gt;V6 WIT~ U5 .. FER THE ~':IDE:

,

(Answers tomorrow)

eStorm Windows

excellent running con dition , no rust . Interior,

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

Remember Jesus
Mother was the first to tell me

cltonlng ond palntlnf .
All work guorant-.
FrM Estlmotes
Reosonabte PriCit
Call H-ord
M9 ·21U2
11-14 -mo.

• Rtplocemont

Daniels . New phone num ·
ber. 742 -2951. service to
schools and home since

niture . 992 ·2635 .

MOBILE HOME lor renl .
Flatwoods. 12•60. S150

Phone

Corner

or repair guHers 1nd
downspouts,
gutter

11 · 19·1 mo .

1978 DODGE MAGNUM ,
black t ·top, AM· FM lape,
P .S .. P . B., Iii I wheel, 21 ,000
miles, U200 . Ingels Fur ·

and balh . 992 ·5621 .

EMERGENCY

Land

All types roof work, now

lD

ALVIAd

1I I

elnsul•tlon

Tyree &amp;Iva . theine, 0 . ·
o·
h
1
o
Phone 949-2111 evelngs
after s p.m . weeKenas
after 12 noon.

Auto., P .S, P . B. 56800.
Phone 985 4339 .

APT . 1N Pomeroy . 3 rooms

1975 Chevrolet Impala[ •
dr ., PS, PB , AC, Rod al
Tires.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Television
Viewing
..
ld

[PODEK

GUN
CONCEALED
BY QUIVER
IN BABY
CARRIER

• Storln Doors

Sundlns
Hammond Organs

Auto Sales

noon, for the oil owing :

Federal

by Henri Amold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one lene r to each square to lor~
lour ordinary words

I

Aluminum Siding

PETE
SIMPSON
Sales Rep. For

1979 FORD F ·l50, 4 wheel

December 14!1979, a112 :00

per River Road, Gallipolis,
OH 45631 , on or before

The Poet's

Pts .
69

Team
Columbia Nat . Life

CARRIER NEEOED in the

Pomeroy . Laroe iols .Cail
992·7479 .

HOUSE

Dobbins 145 . Ron Sm ith 196, Drema
Roach I .CO.
High series
Ron Smith 5-48,
Orema Roach -«7 ; Russ Carson 533,

Hammond Oraans
&amp; Famous N1me Brand

Park, Route 33, north of

sale .
Now taking orders . Will
deliver , 7"'2·1056 .

'

Nov . 20 , 1979

Help wanted

2156 between 8 :30 and 5 :00
p .m .

3785

TRI ·COUNTY

4-JO·tf c

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,

INEWSP.t.PfA ENT(RPR I$( .t.SSN 1

Local bowling

CALL 9'12 -7544

KENNELS .

food, and all lypes of sail .
PUBLIC NOTICE

will bring out -,he t:Mtaf In you
Plan to go out.
SCORPIO Condttlona look
e~~:tremely good regarding a goal
lmportan1 to you . You 're on fir,.,..
ground , so take advantage or II
BuiiCI your foundation now

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

H011rs 9·1 M., W.. F.
Other Umes by •ppoinl·

sand, gravel , calc i um
chloride, fertilizer, dog

Humane

GET TODAY 'S MARKET
VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER CONTACT
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP , M IDDLEPORT ,
OH .

$15.50.

J4 mile off Rt. 1 by -pass
on St. Rt . 124 tow1rd
Rutland .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

bred . 614·593·5132 .

Teets ,

~THAT SCAAMIILEO WORD GAME

~~ ®

Printanswerhere
HILLCREST

evenings

type cows. Prefer already

Re\1 .
Merlin
Evangelist .

bOOis . Children 's
Ad ulls S29 .00.

Hysell

Garage

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

and

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor . 614·367 ·7220

General Slore , 104·106 W

Monday , Oec . 10. 7:30pm

Bording

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care prOducts . western

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass, china ,
anythino. See or call Ruth

many bet!Jutiful styles .
Mountain Leather and

PAGEVILLE FREEWILL

698 ·3290 .

••

Veterans Admin . Loans .

RISING STAR Kennel
Boarding . Call367 0292.

OLD COINS, pockel wal
ches, class r ings, wedding

Union St ., Athens . Open ti l
8 .30beginning Dec. 10.

HOOF HOLLOW , English
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 61"'·

SR 339, Barlow , OH . 678
2980

PROUDLY

VIROO (Aug. D-lepl. 221 lo
your own quMtt way you nave 3
strong Impact on lo~o~ed ones
today ana may even be responsible lor steerlrlQ them In a good
direction
LIPA (a.pt. 23-0c:t. 23) Th16 is
not the day to spend a secluded
evening at ho me. Yoo 're lar too
rulless Betna arouM people

FURNITURE,

dated 196.tt or before
Paying top price . Catt
Brown 's, 992 ·5113 .

10 pc1 . lis1 . Slop and see lhe

I

Pomeroy 992 -2689.

RACINE G UN CLUB,
DEC . 31 LAST DATE TO
PAY DUES FOR 1980, 510 .
NOUNCING just in time
for Chr istmas . On a per ·
manen1 basis we are now
selling
all
Aladdin
Kerosene l amps, heaters
and replt!J ce ment pi!rts at

I

Business Services

WANT TO BUY : body par

lo Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt . 2,

BUYING US SILVER coins

AN ·

NaT

Wantedto 8~

Pets for Sale

Eacl!. WU'd ewer the mJn1mwn
.15 wordl Y 4 cenUI per •ord per
cloy. Ado ~ otlll" lhon conMCUtive clly111 will be charged at
lhe l day rate .

Care

Notices

OLD

\!})

~

·----~--

wanted to Buy

6260. Pets available for
adoption and information
service
lnvestigati~o~e
A gent

ft \11}1.\,{} fe}'il

DICK TRACY

JEL

YNWWLP

XWYUKPW

HWQEYLUYM

F G

UHQFGP

8 30- Neslor ,
lhe
Longeared
Christmas Donkey 6, 13; Wall
Slreef Week 20,33.
9;1l0-Rocklord Files 3, 15; Movie
" Valentine" 6, 13; Movie " My
Old Man" 8,10; Lord Mounlballen : A Man for the Century
20 ; American Pop ; The Great
Singers 33.
10 :00-Eischled 3, 15; Winston
ChurchiH 17 ; News 20 .
10 ;30-Up Close With 17 ; Lock.
Stock &amp; Barrel 20 .
11 ;OQ-News 3,6,8,10,13, IS; Lost ot
the Wltd 17; Dick Cavel1 20.
II : 30-; onlghl 3, 15; Chor lie's
Angels 6 ; Movie "The Carnation
Killer" 8; Movie " Five MUII01&gt;
Years to Earth" 10; Movie
" Treasure of San Gennaro" 13;

AULFWGM,

URH

GDE

XWYUKPW

PUT THE OTHER LIST

F G

ZWLQFGP

YLFGFYFPQ

W
Q
JELPGWL
Yesterday 's Cr)'JIWquote: MAN CAN BELIEVE THE IM·
POSSIBLE , BUT CAN NEVER BELIEVE THE IM·
PROBABLE .-OSCAR WILDE
() 1t79 Kl"'

Fea-t~ft 1~1(8,.,

ltw: .

Movie
"The
Curse
ol
Frankenstein" 17 .
12 : 40-FBI 6·; 1 :00-Midnight
Spec Ia( 3, 15 ; Juke-Box 8; Movie
"The Unearthly" 10; 1· 15-News
1J.
1 ; 25-News
P
1 : JO-Movle
"Saturday's riero" 17; 2 ; 30News 3; 4 :05-Movle "Tank
Ba11alion" 17.

iI'

�14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday , Dec . 6, 1979

Christmas basket
project underway
The Meigs County Jaycees are ac·
cepting donations for the arumal

Christmas food baskets and toys for
the toys for tots programs.
Needy persons wiU be considered.
Those who feel they qualify are
asked to complete the form below
and mail to the Meigs County

Jaycees, Box 603, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Deadline for applications t.

Dec. ll .
Any appUcations after the 13th
C8JUIOt be considered . Dave Jenkins
i.s chairman for the food donations
and Dave Fox and Terry Spencer
are co-chairmen for the toys for tots.

... boys- - - - girls- - - -

Age of children ..

. ... . ...... .. .... ...... toys

Food baskets ..

both

Mail to Meigs County Jaycees, Box 603, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

Mayor's Court
Eight defendants forfeited bonds
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Qarence Andrews Tuesday night.
The group included Richard
Owens, II, Middleport, $25, posted on
a speeding charge; Rl&gt;bert Glass.
Middleport, $30, speeding; Lavemia
Blessing, Monroeville, PH., $!i0, no
operator's license; Rl&gt;bert Seelig,
Pomeroy. $3S, speeding; Floyd
Reynolds, little Hocking, $26,
James Evans, Pomeroy, $29, and
Dave Hysell , Pomeroy, $25, also all
posted on speeding charges.
One defendant was fined and four
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hollman
Tuesday night.
Fined $100 and costs on an assault
charge was Judy Stewart of Mid·
dleport. Forfeiting bonds, aU posted
on speeding charges, were Gerald
Wildermuth, Pomeroy. $31; John
Mulford, Cheshire, $28; Vida Weber,
Tuppers Plains, $30. and Steve
Peckham, Middleport, $28.

~Your "Extra Touch~~

\

l

I

PRICED FOR HOLIDAY SHOPPING.

~

OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TIL 8 P.M.

it-----·--------~----------

~

Florist Since 19S7

a.ftt~
FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
3S2 E . Main, Pomeroy

1
1

I
!
l

I

"--~ FTI2,,!;!~~--~

COUNTY COURT
Slxteen defendants were fined and
13 others I orfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday .
Fined were Danny Griffith,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, speed; John
E . Pippin, Colwnbus, costs only,
speeding; linda Westjohn , Long
Bottom, $15 and costs, speeding;
Sam Arnold, Syracuse, $15 and
costs, failure to keep on light haU or
roadway; WilUam Tabler, Stewart,
$150 and costs, three days confinement, license suspended 30 days,
DWI; Bob Arnett , Rt. 2,Racine, $150
and costs, three days confinement,
license suspended 30 days, DWI .
Forfeiting bonds were William J.
Sullivan, Mt. Vernon, Kuane Trem·
bly, Parkersburg, Paul McMurray,
Columbus, David E. Davis, Rutland,
Michael A. Singo, New Lexington,
Gerald D. CowgiU, Jacksonville,
F1a., James Tonvray, Belpre,
Donald Reuter, Middleport, and
Jerry Laudennllk, Ironton, $35.50
each, speeding; Victor Bahr, Rt. l,
Reedsville, $35.50, failure to display
registration;
Mary
Fowler,
Coolville, $62.55, no valid operator's
license; Robert Petrie, Middleport,
$42.55, no operator 's license.

The penguin, unlike other
migratory birds, does not migrate
by flying to new destinations each
faU and spring. The penguin swims.
It is the only bird that travels that
way .

l

EXTRA
SHOPPING
HOUR$

1

~

OPEN EVERY NIGHT

W

TIL 8 O'CLOCK

I REG. 119.00 ..................... SALE 111.40
REG. 123.00 ..................... SALE 113.80

BEGINNING THIS MONDAY
ELBERFELDS WILL BE

'6

r--

SALE

LimE BOYS'

WOMEN'S
TOPS

TOPS

Special weekend savings on I itt le boys kn it tops,
cut and sewn shirts, flannel shir t s, sweat shirts
and sweaters .

Reg . $9 .00 ............ Sale $7.19
Reg . $11.00 .. . .. ...... Sale$8.79
Reg. $15.00 .. . ... . ... SaleS11.99
Reg. $29.00 .......... Sale S23.19

~

group

of

earrings ,

rings ,

necklaces.

ankle

bracelets ,

lapel

pins and jewelry

ii
w

sets at clearance
prices. Hurry in
while
lasts!

5
5

supply

Reg. S2.00 ... .. . . ....... Sale 99c
Reg. $3 .00 ............ Sale $1.49
W REg. S4.00 ............ Sale $1.99
~
Reg. $7.SO ...... . ..... Sale $3.79
~-·Reg, s1o.oo ........... Sale $4.99

w

~

w
w
ii
~

hostages at the U.S. Embassy and
that death sentences are possible.
The government also struggled to
put down a rebellion in the northwest
by the nation 's biggest ethnic
minority, the Turks , whose spiritual
leader said be supported the in·
surgents' fight for "freedom and
their rights ...
The announcement on a trtal date
declaration was made by Foreign
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who
also said those Amertcans not
suspected of spying wiU be released
"as soon as possible," and that
arrangements were being made lor
aU the captives to be visited .
However, a spokesman for the
student militants holding the
Americans contradicted the foreign
minister. " We will release nobody,
nobody at all" unless the deposed
shah is returned to Iran. and " we

(USPS 145·960)

VOL XXVIII

' 1\\
. II

\

'
t.Jt'
• ,-;j

WASHINGTON (AP) The
nation's unemployment rate dropped from 6 percent to 5.8 percent in
November, a clear sign that the
economy remains healthier than
most forec88ters have expected, the
government reported today.
The Labor Department sa1d total
employment rose by 350,000 jobo
during the month, while the nwnber
of jobleM persons in the !a bor
market feU by 140,000 to just over 6
million.

DAYTIME
DRESSES

,iJ
, ·}" Popular

f

styles and co lors

reduced for two days onlv .
Reo . S1zes 12 to ' ?0 . Half
sizes

12 1 2

toJ21J2.

Sickout going

s . M, L and XL si zes . At
tra ctive plaid patterns, full
length tails, two pockets, so

per cent cotton .,nd 50 per
cen t polyester .

•..

..,.,.,

MEN'S

NO. 166

specific date lor the planned release,
or say how many hostages might be
freed . But he said there were two
types of hostages- those who did not
"work in espionage and those who
are guilty of espionage ."
Of the latter group, he said, "I
don't think those people are going to
benefit from diplomatic immunity' '
Ghotbzadeh also announced that
arrangements were being made I or
all the hostages to be vt.ited in order
to show the world thl1t allegations
the captives have been mistreated
are untrue. Some of the hostages
have not been seen by neutral observers since the day lbe embassy
was seized Nov . 4.
The Moslem militants holding the
captives have vowed to keep them
until President Carter extradites
Shah Mohanunad Reza Pahiavi to
Iran to stand trial as a war criminal.
Khomeini's forces ousted the
shah's government in February. The
toppled monarch is now convalescing at a U.S. Air Force base in
Texas following cancer and

a1

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEUSI'ON, Ohio l AP I- City
officials say municipal functiom
In this Jackson County city are
COlltinuing despite a sickout by
about 45 d. the city's 55 workers.
The employees caUed in sick
Thursday in protest of City Council's failure to re~nact a c1ty in·
come 18.1, Wellston Service
Director Denny Alexander said.
Ten supervisors who showed up
for work kept essential services
going in the city of about 5,400
persons, Alexander added.

First suit filed
CINCINNATI (AP) - The first
legal action in cOMection with
Cincinnati's rock concert slam·
pede in which II persons died
asks $1.1 mlllJon for everyone
hurt or killed - an estimated
$27.5 million .
Eleven were killed and another
u injured Dec. 3 in a crowd
pressing to get into Riverfront
Colisewn lor a concert by the
rock group The Who.

During the past five months, the
johless rate has moved like a yo-yo,
ruing fr(D} 5. 7 percent in July to 6
percent in August, back down to 5.8
percent in September, up to 6 per·
cent again in October and back to 5.8
percent.
The pattern bas been a welcome
surprise to the Carter ad·
ministration, which had predicted
that unemployment would rise well
above 6 percent because of an e•·
peeled recession that some
economists believe already bas
begwJ.
The Labor Department said m ost
of the decline in unemployment in
November occurred among women
and blacks, the same two groups
most affected by a rise in unem·
ploymenl during October.
Bregger said the recent fluctuations in the overaU jobless rate
stem from changes among the part·
time work force, while unem·
ployment among full-time workers
bas remained steady since the sum.
mer.
OveraU, the department said em·
ployment in November totaled 97.6
million out of a labor force of 100.7
million.
The department said most of the
ernplo)ment gains during Novem·
her occurred among adult women
and white workers. A large portion
of the new jobs were among white·
collar sales workers.
During the past 12 months, employment bas increased by 1.9
million, but most of that growth oc·
cw-red during the first few months of
that period. Adult women accounted
for three-fourths of the year-long
growth.
The government gave the
foUowing breakdowns of seasonaUy
adjusted unemployments rates for
different population groups:
- Adult men: 4.3 percent in
November, unchanged from Oc·
tober.
- Adult women : 5.5 percent, down
from 5.8 percent.
- Teen-agers : 15.9 percent, down
(Continued on page 10)

NEW MULTI-PURPOSE BUILDING -Progress is being made on
the new multi-purpose bullding located on Mulberry Heights. Pomeroy.
The building to be completed in the sprin~ will house the Mei~-Gallia

Mil&lt;e Stroble was named to fill a
vacancy on Syracuse Village Coun·
cil at Thursday 's regular council
meeting.
Struble will be swom in on Dec. 31
and begin his four year term on Jan .
1, 1980.
Mayor Eber Pickens named Troy
Zwilling and Willie Guinther to the
Firemen's Dependency Board.
Council commended and extended
thanks to Hennan London, chair·
man and Bill Hubbard, for the
Christmas lights and to the firemen
lor their assistance in putting up the
lights.

Ohi"

I•

Council felt the lights were cer·
tainly attractive and quite an ad·
dition to the village .
Council discussed the ef ·
fectiveness of the ordinace on dogs
running loose. It was noted that at·
tempts had been made to catch the
dogs but efforts were WISuccessful.
Council discussed the water break
that occurred this week. It was
suggested that values be placed at
various places on the main line so
the entire town would not be without
water during repair.
Council also voiced its opinion on

Janet Byers, R.N., M.S .. has been
named by Rio Grande president
Paul C. Hayes to direct the Rio
Grande College and Community Col·
lege School of Nursing .
Byers, the current director of nur·
sing education at the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing, will
assume full-time duties as Dean of
the Rio Grande School of Nursing
and Associate Dean of the Colleges
Jan. I. Until that time, Byers will
serve as a consultant at Rio Grande
helping in program planning and
staffing.
"The college is extremely pleased
that Ma. Byers has accepted the opportunity to develop and lead our
nursing program , " said Dr. Hayes .
"Her background and experience
make her the ideal candidate for

..

tl

using the new emergency vehicle for
transfer cases. It was agreed to use
the old truck for transfer .
Council i.s interested in protecting
the citizens first whereby the new
truck would be available at all
times.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
George Holman, treasurer, Janice
Lawson, clerk, Chief of Police
Milton Varian. Troy Zwilling, Willie
Guinther, Jimmy Joe Hemsley and
Kathryn Crow, council members .
Council will meet again on Dec. :Ill.
at 7:30p .m.

CLEVELANDIAPI-H~a~

the namben picked ThiU"Id8y
algbt In the ObJo Lobbery •• daDy
number dra'll'illlland the lottery's
weetly games. Dally drawing:
134 Pyramid: 51; 2GS; M78.
BoiiiiJIZ.I: M; 743; 4584; 142e3;

8971711.

Janet Byers named director

us."

WORmY CAUSE - "Sharing ts Caring" ls the
motto used by The Salvation Anny. Sally Landers c:t
The Salvation Army was at her post Thursday accepting donations for The Salvation Army. Donations are
used to help the needy with food and toys at Christmas

County Mental Health Center, Meigs County Health Department ·and T.B .
Clinic, and the Senior Citizens Center. General contractor for the
$1,245,000 project i.s the Karr Construction Company, Pomeroy.

Syracuse councilman named

People

Racine,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1979

Meigs County

BANK

Shariat-Madari
e:rpressed
misgivings about the conatitutlon
because It largely excludes Iran's
secular population from the government process and veats ultimate
power in the hands of the nation's
religious leader.
Although Shariat-Madarl Is
spiritual leader to the ethnic Turks,
he bas lived in the holy city of Qum,
100 miles south c:t Tehran, for years.
So does Khomeini, who vialted
Sbariat·Madari after the cluhes In
an attempt to defuse the crl.sls, one
of the biggest Khomeini bas faced
since his forces ousted the shah's
government 10 months ago.
Khomeinl told the nation in a
broadcast speech after the meeting
to end factional squabbling and con·
centrale instead "on the COli·
frontation with the United States."
He also met with Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who said be and
Khomeinl agreed that the U.N.
Security Council resolution Tuesday
was a "step forward" toward set·
Uing the siege at the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran .

enttne

Remember you pay 49 prompt payments and we pay the
50th.

HOME NATIONAL

Shariat-Madari, said : " We haven't
had a governor for 24 hours .
" Everything lS in the hands of the
people, and Tabriz is at peace . Any
governor or official sent to Tabriz
must have the approval of Ayatollah
Shariat-Madari ...
The spokesman said about 30,000
ethnic Turks were involved in the
takeover of the radio and 1V station
in Ta briz, 300 miles northwest of
Tehran. He said they mistnJSted
reports their leader had caUed for
cabn and were furious over the
killing of two comrades outside
Shariat-Madari 's home in Qum.
The deaths and eight injuries occurred Wednesday during clashes
between Khomeini 's supporters and
Shariat·Madari 's followers, many of
whom boycotted the constituti&lt;I18l
referendum Sunday and Monday.
The vote approved the Islamic constitution that made Khomeini
supreme ruler for life and failed to
grant autonomy to Iran's ethnic
minorities, including the large
restive Kurdish population just
south of Azerbaijan.

•

START YOUR 1980 CWB TODAY

RACINE

gallbladder surgery in New York.
The Carter administration has
refused to extradite him.
Khomeini ·,confrontation with the
Umted States is not the only cri.sis be
is embroiled in . Ethnic Turkish
rebels have claimed control of the
capital of northwestern Azerbaijan
province, and said any government
peace mission must be approved by
the religious leader whose reser·
' vations about Khomeini 's theocrati c
constitution touched cit bloody
rioting.
Supporters of Ayatollah Mohammed Kazem Shariat-Madari, Iran's
second most important religious
leader after Khomeini and spiritual
head of the nation's 13 million ethnic
Turks- about one-third of Iran 's
population· seized the radio arxl
television station in the Azerbaijan
capital of Tabriz on Thursday.
They said they ousted Gov. Noreddin Gharavi, and his fate was not immediately known. A spokesman at
the Tabriz office of the Moslem
People's Party, which i.s loyal to

•

e

SPECIAL SALE

w
w
~

nowteed today that within 48 hou~ it
wiU make a statement on a spy trial
date for some of the 50 Amertcan

have made no decision on the
visits, " the spokesman said in a
telephone interview .
Stale Department spokesman
Walter Ramsay told reporte~ in
Washington that scheduling trials
for the hostages was "absolutely
outrageous. They (the Iranians) had
no business laking them hostage and
they have no business putting them
on trial .
"Our position is that all the
hostages should be released. We
welcome the news that visits to the
rostages may be arranged and we
hope they can be arranged soon . "
There have been persi.stent, but
unconfirmned reports that about
eight hostages have been under intensive interrogation during the past
two weeks . The Americans were
seized 34 days ago.
Asked if he thought the hostages
would be sentenced to death, Ghotbzadeh said: "I hope we don't reach
that extenl But on the lace of the
earth anyt.lting is possible."
The foreign minister gave no

Unemployment figures
show slight decrease

JEWELRY
SPECIALS
Large

Santa will be in
the store this
Friday
and
Saturday after·
noons from
1 to 3.

lEHRAN, Iran ( AP) - Aya toUah

Ruhollah Khomeinl 's regime an·

SHIRTS

Cowl necks, turtle necks and
jewel necks in knitted and chenille
fabric. Sizes S, M , L, XL.

I
I
i

BRING THE
CHILDREN TO SEE
SANTA CLAUS

Spy trial da~es could be announced soon

AND

Great
~a..:'17~~ Start!

Begin depositing 1nto our Chnstmas
club account . and start looking tor ·
ward to a very enroyable holiday' Ask
one of our helpful advisers for mlo

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

! One rack of quality Russ Teen Sport
1 swear. Skirts, vests, blouses, jackets
I and slacks.
1
I REG. 1'6.00 . .. . .. . .. .... .. .. . .. .. SALE 13.60
1 REG. 12.00...................... SALE 17.20
I REG. 115.00 ..................... SALE '9.00

I
I
I
I

Additional infonnation .

I

ii

ii
I
I

Number in !ami ly .

l

SAVE THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ON MANY ITEMS SALE

~

Address

.'

I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
FOR MERRY CHRISTMAS SHOPPING

!!1
r.1

Name . .

' I

I
I
I
I
I

~

Meigs County Jaycees
Christmas Food Basket
Toys for Tots

.,

~~~~~~---~~-~----~--------------~~--------------'
I

time. The ~vatlon Anny in Pomeroy will be taking
applications for Christmas food baskets and toys Dec.
II and 12 from I to 4 p.m. Those wishing this assistance
are asked tO come to liS Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy
during theSe days and hours to fill ool their applica·
tions.

'

Before her employement with the
Holzer School of Nursing, Byers was
an instructor at Sharon General
Hospital School of Nursing involved
with clinlcal and classroom supervision. She recieved her M.S. in nursing from the Ohio State University
School of Nursing following her B.S.
magna cwn laude in nursing from
St. John College in aeveland.
Byers is active .in numerous professional organizations including the
American Cancer Society, the Consortiwn for Health Education in Appalachian Ohio (CHEAO I and the
Ohio and National Leagues of Nursing.
Byers said she made the move to
Rio Grande because of the challenge
of beginning a new program and a
belief in the need for a greater
number of working nurses .
" I believe anyone involved in any
organization often wonders what it
would be like to build that organization from the groun~ up :· said

JANET BYERS

Byers . " With Rio Grande, that
challenge is a reality ."
"Secondly, " she added, " I believe
that the need for more working
nurses makes the establishment of
associate degree nursing programs
a valuable option ."
As a consultant with Rio Grande,
Byers is traveling thorughout Ohio
and West Virginia investigating
other college programs .
Her flrst goal for the Rio Grnade
School of Nursing is the securing of
approval from the State of Ohio
Board of Nursing Education and
Nurse Registration in late March
and the Ohio Boa rd of Regents in
early April. National League of Nursing accreditation will also be
sought in the future .
The Rio Grande program wiU
begin In 1980 with a two-year
associate degree program.
In a pamphlet from the National

League of Nursing, associate degree
nursing programs are described as
"both liberal and tehnical education
of nursing services needed by society . An associate degree program in
nursing i.s flexible and progressive,
meets the changing needs of society,
and is based on sound educational
methods and a hwnanistic approach . "
The Rio Grande associate degree
program will use various clinical expertences in the area to supplement
its theoretical teaching.
In the second year of the associate
degree program the college plans to
expand into both associate degree
and baccalaw-eate degree nursing
programs .
·
The Rio Grande School of Nursing
is developing a selection criteria for
admission into the program. Interested students should complete
the general institutional adrnlssion
procedures as soon as possible.
Selection of Nursing School candidates will begin in April, 1960.
"The response from the public
since the first mention of the program has been very pleasing," said
Byers. ''Questions on programs and
appUcation procedw-es are being
received dally."
" In our travela to other schoola o(
Ohio and West Vlrginla which
already have associate degree programs, the cooperation received bas
been overwhelming," said Byen,
"The educational institutions seem
keenly aware of the rteed for additional nurses training programs."
·
Byers is married to Dr. Robin Ray .
Byers, a practlclng dentist ln
Jackson. They have one daughter,
Heather Cbristine. Byers la Qrlginally from Sharon, Pa,, where her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J.
Wolfinger, still reside.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="823">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11496">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51506">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51505">
              <text>December 6, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
