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

First reading given on employee pay hike

Area deaths
BARBARA BETZ

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

Mrs.

Betz was born Sept. 24, 1928,

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

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

$11 .50 for Silwer Dollars
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60c Piece for War Nickels
$1.1b . for Sterling
S1 ,7S ea. for Half Dated 1965 to
1969.

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

filled jewelry .
Silver plates 1.33 lb .

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Serving the area's banking needs since 1904.

Fs
'a e

Farmers
Bank

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Member FDIC

POMEROY, OHIO

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POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

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

Two area.

• •

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

en tine
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1979

PR ICE

mTEt.l'l Gt.NTS

Despite rumors~
strike continues

U. N. Security Council to debate crisis

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VOL. XXVIII ~0 . !58

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

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

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

KENNY WIGGINS

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

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

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

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

28

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

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

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

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

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

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

Santa's appearance highlights annual Christmas parade

NAnvTTY SCENE - A Nativity theme W88

out

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

at Middleport.

'

parade

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

.

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

�Z-'lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pumeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Nov . 'rl, 1979

Today's commentary

DO YOV

.IN WASHINGTON

WANT VOVR RI;BATE
IN CA8&gt;H, OR ~f.JALL W£
I-lAVE IT

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters
By Robert Walten
WASHINGTON (NEA) · Inflation
and energy clearly dominate the
political agenda beading Into Cam.
Pll4ln '80' but that doesn't mean the
lax revolt of yesteryear has
neceuarlly !'WI its cow-se.
Two or the three tax -reLated
measures that appeared on ballots
during elections earlier IIlia month
were overwhelmingly approved,
while a third was narrowly defeated .
Voters In California slapped a constitutlooallimit on increases In sLate
and local spending by a margin even
greater than that garnered In 1978 by
Proposition IJ, the tax-ort initiative
that triggered a national revolt. A
different but reLated spending
limitation was adopted In the sLate of
Washington by a 2-to-1 margin.
Only in Oklahoma did the voters
go the other way, rejecting -barely
-a measure to lower the sLate's personal Income tax.
Although filing deadlines for l!llkl
ballot propoaitiOIIlllll'e still months
away, up to a dozen more tax.
reLated items seem likely to qualify
for voter coll.!ideration next year,
according to the CoalJtion d.
American Public Employees.
'Leading the way once more is
Howard Jarvis, the "father" of
Prop. 13, who is now pushing a constitutional amendment to slaah
Califoml.a cupotate and personal
incoole-tu rates In half. An alternative JII'OI)08al, which would lower
taxes for low- and middle-income
Californians while raisin~! them for
upper-tncome individuals and
bualneaaes, may also qualify for the

11IE SWEET STING OF
SUCCESS
For pure cost effectiveness, it's
hard to beat the return on the dollar
achieved by The Sting, a
federallyflnanced
anti&lt;rime
program
in
which cops around the country have
poaed as fences to ''buy" stolen
goods.
The federal Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration has put
up just Wlder "million over the past
five years for "buy" money, and the
bogus fences have recovered some
$2211.5 million In stolen property, 00
percent of which has been returned
to the rightful owners.
Sting operations have been conducted in 47 cities. The most famous
took pLace In Washington, where 191
suspects were arrested and $2.4
million in goods recovered in 1975
when the bogus fences threw a party
lor their "customers" and promptly
arrested the attendees .

Today in history

Organizers also hope to achieve a
75 percent turnout of registered
black voters In the targeted areas.

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Nov . 'rl, the
33lst day of 1971!. There are 34 days
left in the year.
Highlights In hist&lt;ry :
On Nov. 'rl, 1942, Frenclunen in
Toulon scuttled ten French cruisers,
28 destroyers and 14 submarines to
keep them out of the hands of the
Nazis.
On this date:
In 602, Ri&gt;man Emperor Maurice
and his five sons were beheaded in
Olalcedon 1n· Asia Minor.
· ·"·
In 1910, New York's Pennsylvania
Statim opened. It was, at the time,
the biggest railway terminal
anywhere .
In 1961, the Soviet Unim proposed
an inunediate ban on nuclear testing
without internatimal controls.
In 1971, three people died as
guerrillas in Northern Ireland
launched a new drive against the
British.
In 1976, thousands of people
marched
through
London's
Trafalgar Square demanding peace
in Northern Ireland.
Ten years ago, President and Mrs.
Richard
Nixon
celebrated
Thanksgiving with 232 men and
women from Washington-area
homes l&lt;r the aged.
Five years ago, Arthur Bums, at
the time chainnan of the Federal
Reserve Board, warned the nation to
force down world oil prices or lace a
permanent economic and political
decline.
One year ago, San Francisco
Mayor George Muscone and
Supervisor Harvey Milk were shot to
death in City Hall .
Today's Birthdays : Caroline
Kennedy, daughter of President
John Kennedy, is 22. Broadway
producer David Merrick is 67 .
Thought lor today: There is ... a
limit at which focbearance ceases to
be a virtue .- Edmund Burke (17~
1797 )

Research has Indicated that black
votera, once they are registered,
tend to turn out at a rate almost
equal to whites. But their registration rate regularly Lags 10 to l.'i
percentage points behind that of
whites.
The U.S. C'A!nsus Bureau projects
that 16 million bLacks will be of
vottni age by November l!llkl, a
flgw-e that represents about 10 percent of the electorate nationwide.

FOR TilE BIRDS
Ornithologists searching for
precise nomencLature to identify
birds have devised many colorful
names. Among them are great
racket-tailed drongo, yellow - beWed
waxbW, bLack - spotted bare - eye,
red · whiskered bulbul, turquoise brewed motmol, rufous - browed
pepper shrike and blue . faced
booby .

ballot.
Other measures to reduce sLate In-

come taxes are circulating in
Alaska, Massachusetts, Michigan
and Montana .
Spending limits have been propoeed for the 1980 ballot in Arizona
Florida, Massachusetts and Ohio . '
And property-UJ: reductions have
qualilied for the ballot in Florida
Nevada and South Dakota and hav~
been pi'OpOSed in Massachusetts,
Ohio and Utah.
Theae are just the measures most
likely to qualify lor voters' consideration, in the view of CAPE . AU
told there are more than 40 taxreLated ballot Items being proposed
In 14 sLates.

OPERATION BIG VOTE
A coalition of bLack organizations
has l.aWlched a major drive to Increaae bLack voter registration and
participation in the 1980 elections in
an effort to gain greater political
clout.
Operation Big Vote will seek to lncreaae bLack registration by at leaat
:Jl percent in targeted areas of the
following sLates: ALabama, Callfornl.a, Connecticut, Florida, 111inois,
Indiana, Louisiana, Michigan,
MJvfeefppl, New Jersey, New York,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and

Vlrginl.a.

Berry's World

"/don't think I can take much more of knowing
every little thing Teddy says and does each
day."

DEDUCTE.D §TRAI6HT
FROM YOUR TA'XE§?

llll

/

Capitol Ideas
WASHINGTON (AP) - Never
understimate the power of a person.
especially if it's a woman.
That seems tD be a new political
law among the candidates, all of
them male, for the 1980 Republican
and Democratic presidential
nominations.
It didn't take much consciousnessraising to alert the candidates to the
fact that women outnumber men in
the voting age population Or the
United States.
And It would require no
extraordinary sensitivity to know
that many people bndle at the use of
the word "man" to refer to the
population at large.
When Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's
speechwriters decided to close his
announcement of his presidential
candidacy with a few lines of poetry
by Thomas Wolfe, they ran into a
problem.
Wolfe wrote, "So, then, to every
man his chance."

No candidate lor the 1980s would
dare use such sexist language
. So, Kennedy's speechwriters
Simply rewrote Wolfe, or, if you
prefer, misquoted tum .
"So, then, tD all persons their
chance," said the senator .

Business
•
mirror
NEW YORK ( AP 1 - Those who
foresee in the 1980s a rediscovery of
old economic values, such as the
importance of profits and the
necessity of the work ethic, aren't
getting much encouragement from
events.
There are many such optimists in
business and investment life, and
some are risking reputations that
took years to develop . They reason
that the chaos and uncertainty of the
1970s just cannot continue.
Having tried other methods
Americans will return to whai
••·o rks . They will save, thus
providing capital for expansion;
they will reduce their demands on
th e marketplace , and prices will
tend to stabilize .
Or so it is hoped . Business hates
uncertainty, because it adds to
existing risks, and so the hope is that
with stabUity the entire economic
community will be able to Jay out
plans and work Inward them
This will not result in a boom, they
say; in fact, some look f&lt;rward to a
rather slug ish rate of growth as just
the antidote tD all the ups and downs
of the 1970s. Boom leads to bust; it
cannot be tolerated .
Instead, these seers say, America
will be satisfied with straightening
itself out. We will put our finances in
order . The Federal government will
cease to grow; the budget finally
will be balanced .
That theme, or something akin, is
foWld in a segment of long-range
forecasts now circulated by , among
others, an economic cmsulting firm,
several insurers and one of the
tllftgest Investment advisers.
Wishes , however , do not command
events, and the hoped-lor pattern
isn't emerging from the loom . As the
new decade nears, all the threads
are grey and the pattern is one of
questioo and exclamation marks .
Inflation vies with recession as the
No. 1 ecooomic problem . Personal
income falls . Interest rates are at
ali-time highs . Productivity has
almost ceased tD improve . Oil is
scarce. Profit is a dirty word .
The stability that business and
co nsumers seek is nonex istent
either domestically or on th~
international scene. Geopolitics has
become a study in aberration . And
forecastin g has become nothing but
guesswork .

The Senate is debating the
"windfall profits " tax bill. Which
means the best show in tnwn is
watching the chainnan of the Senate
Finance Committee, Sen . Russell
Long , D-U!. , perform his peculiar
brand of magi c on the Senate floor .
Long is regarded by his colleagues
as one of the ablest and wiliest of
legi sla to rs . Senators who find
themselves on the opposite side of
ISSues view Long as a master of
slipping items through when no one
IS paying close attention .
So, with the Thanksgiving holida y
approaching and Long on th e floor
last week. a few senatnrs began
getting a bit nervous.
.. Am 1 tD understand, just for my
special information. so that the
tension can be removed, that there
will be no further roll call votes this
evening?" asked Sen. Gaylord
Nelson, D-Wis .
Long said he 'd be happy to serKi
for :&gt;felson if there were a vote, but
he wasn't willmg to guarantee there
wouldn't be one .
"My a udience might disappear,"
said th e Louisiana senator .
"The senatnr does not have much
of an audience,"noted Nelson .
" ] would rather have people in
doubt, so that we wtll have a few
people around to hear the debate ,"
said lnn g " But if the senator will
leave word where he is and where he
can be found, I will send for the
senator .''
"Fine," said Nelson. " I will tell
the senator right now, I will be at
hom e. "

Big Ten looking for great season

The terrorist business
By Don Graff
lbere 's a boom underway these
days in one aspect of international
business activity that is causing no
joy in bOardrooms.
Terrori8m directed at business
enterprises and executives is spiraling sharply and steadily upward, according to a study just out from The
Conference Board.
By its tally, terrorist incidents murders, kidnappings, bombings,
personal assaults and the like nearly trippled In a 10111'-year period,
jumping fr&lt;ID 572 in 1975 to 1,511 in
1978. And Indications from the first
three Quarter.! of 1979 are that
another record year is coming up,
The private economic research
organization says Its ligures,
because or different criteria, vary
somewhat from those or such other
interested parties as the State
Department and CIA, but ali are in
agreement on the upward trend.
Focusing oo kidnappings, the
study finds that businessmen are far
and away the prime terrorist
targets. They were involved In 55
percent or abductions or American
personnel in foreign countries bet·
ween 1970 and 1978, with diplomats a
disl.ant second at 28 percent.
There is a selist as well as
economic Wt to kidnappings. Some
90 percent of victims have been
male. Of the lew women abducted,
about half were daughters of elecutives who were the real target. of
extortion incid•nts .
7he increasing incidence of ter·
rorist kidnapplngs has been paced
by rising ransom demands. In 1978
there were 12 demands for $1 million
or more, where early In the decade
there had been none that high. The
norm is now in the ~10 million
range and since 1970, the terrorists'
total take has been an estimated $150
million .
In self -defense, businesses and
businessmen operating abroad are
using a number or strategems such
as assumed names for travel and
hotel reservations, unlisted ad·
dresses and phone nwnber.!, unidentified company vehicles and insurance.
How many !inns are utilizing the
latter IS unknown because publicity
can in some cases be grounds lor
cancellation of coverage. But ran som insurance is known to be a
growing field with - surely to no
one's surprise - Uoyds or London in
the forefront or carrier.!.
While insurance may ) an appropriately businesslike way d.
minimizing financial losses, it does
nothing to resolve the basic pro·
blem. And unfortunately, no resolu tion yet appears in sight.
We are still a long way from fin-

' BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Its difficult to L'Onceive that the
B' T
uld
'bl h
tg en co
posst y ave greater
basketball success this season than
last h M. h'
, w en 1c tgan State captured
the NCAA champ10nsh1p and
Indiana the NIT with Purdue
finish '
d
d Oh ' S
tng secoo an
10
tate
fourth
But .t here are great expectati.ons

ding a way to give the buslneaa to

.

terrorism.

TEHRAN AS VIEWED
FROM STOCIHOLM
If the causes of terrortats are frequently murky, their psychology can
be even more so.
Their often irrational behavior Is a
field of growing interest to
psychologists. And so is that at times
dispLayed by their captives.
An attitude of particular interest
that has been evidenced by the Latter
is the "Stockholm syndrome " and it
is discUS!Ied in a recent New York
Times report.
n.e name comes from a bank
seizure in the Swedish capital six
years ago In which sympathetic
bonds developed between captives
and captors. 1be cooaequences can
be bizarre in some.insl.ancea, with
hosl.ages reacting hostilely to their
eventual rescuers, visiting jailed
terrorists, and setting up flUids for
their defense .
The syndrome can also have a
reverse, with captors beccmlng so
involved with their prisoners that
they find it difficult to impoesible to
carry out death threats.
Sympathetic references to their
student captors by some of the
released American embassy personnel suggest that the Stockholm syndrome may be at work In Tehran,
according to one expert ob!erver,
Dr . Frank Ochberg, Michigan sLate
director of mental health and a
member of a 1975 Justice Department national task force on terrorism.
1be Stockholm syndrome may go
a long way to expLain Tehran and
other puzzling terrorist incidents of
recent years, and In so doing go to a
disturbing extreme to demonstrate a
quirky fact of personaltiy that even
non -psychologists are familiar with
- that opposites attract .
11IE DAJLV 81!M1NEL
(USPil~'

-

~,~- -~ ...

Although
scientists
have
ca talogued 1.5 million kinds of
plants and animals they estimate
that millions more exist. The list
runs .t he gamut from bacteria that
live In water so hot it is nearly
bothng to plants that grow in subzero Antarctic ponds .

Home

Insurance
Let's talk value.
As a local insurance
agency, we can help you
find the best value for
your insurance dollars.
And, we'll show you how
to make 5ure your cov erage stays current with
your home's rising value .

DAVIS-QUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
B iII Quickel
"Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy"
992 · 6677

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

throughout the league which finds
Indiana ranked No .
in the
1
Associated Press preseason poll
followed by No.4 Ohio State and No .
I I Purdue .
In addition, 38 of the 50 starters in
'
the conferenc.., last season will
return , with a few of them finding
themselves relegated to substtl!lte
roles to make room for some
outstanding freshmt!n .
ru·InOIS· an d w·Isconsin a ll
Ind .
fj
ha 1ana,
ve ve starters back while Ohio
State, Purdue and Northwestern
each have four returning .
" We have the best teams, the best
players, the best coaches, the best
arenas an d the biggest crowds,"
said Michigan Coach Johnny Orr,
"so we must have the best league. "
Unfortunately for Orr, his team
does not figure to be in contention
because of the tremendous strength
throughout the league .
Michigan State, which had to
share the conference title with
Purdue and Iowa before going on to
win

the

NCAA,

also

is

a

T 0 rn Twenty
The A P Top Twenty
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams in The
Assoc iated Press college football
poll, w ith first -place votes in paren ·
theses, records and total points
Points based on 20 - 19 18 . 17 . 16 .

15

14 · 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 · 5 · 4 · 3

.2 t·
1 Alabama
2 So _Calif
3. Ohio St
4_ Florida St.
5. Oklahoma
6_ Texas
7. Nebraska
8. Arkansas
9. Brig . Young
10. Houston
11 . Pi ttsburgh
12 . Purdue
13. x -Wash .
14 . Auburn
15. Michigan
16. Tulane
17 . S. carolina
18. Clemson

(J4J (10 ·0·0J 1,193
(12J (10001 J I, 141
11JJ (11-0 ·0J 1.1.41
( 11 O·OJ
997
( 1) (10 !OJ
963
(13JI9 10J 93•
( 10 I OJ 850
(I 31 (lO·I·OJ
11-48
(1J ( 11 OOJ 71/J
( I J J (9-1 OJ 751
(9 I OJ
611
19 1 0) 544
19 2 OJ
454
I B 2 OJ
392
(8 3 OJ
376

19. Penn St .

10. Baylor

(9 2·0)

(8·3 01
(B l-01
(I
(I

301
4-0 I

noncontender, Since . the Spartan s
wtll be Without servtces of F.arvm
( Magic) Johnson ad G
K1
..
.
n
reg e ser.
We have five of our first seven
returning " said M' hi
St t
·
lc gan .. a e
Coach Jud Heathcote ,
bu t,
unfortunately, we have th e wrong
live returning "
Th
.
.
.
e race for th e title will be
between indiana and Ohio State with
d
th . d
d I
Pur ue a c 1ose Ir an
owa a
threat. lllinois and Wisconsin will be
th d kh
. .
e ar &lt;rses . Michigan State,
Michigan and Minnesota are on the
next level and Northwestern hopes
to escape the eellar if the Wildcats
. h lth
remam ea y.
Indiana Coach Bobby Kmght not
only has practically ever yone back
from last year, he also has two
f~eshmen who are so talented tht!y
ftgure to break Into the starting
.
lineup
·
They are guard lsiah Thomas of
~estchBesterh•. lll .f, and 6-8 forward
teve. ouc te 0 Washington, Ind .
They ll team wtth hlgh-scormg Mtke
w·u
d o~
Woodson . o--d
''"'" Y 1 man an •..,y
T0 lbert and force. ;tandout Butch
Carter Ill be the Sixth man .
Could, this _c~use . problems at
lndtana_ . ,_Not •.ccordi. ng to Carter. .
wh0 531d , th ere 5 no Jea 1ousy 0 ~ th IS
team. We ve had that problem tn the
past and solved tt . He IS the greatest
· H d
d 1 b
coac h there Is . e eman sa ot ut
It makes you a better player m the

Purdue, edged by Indiana 53-S2for
the NIT title last spring isn't going
'
to let Indiana and Ohio State make a
runaway C1f the Big Ten although
'
C&lt;lach Lee Rose admits "Ohio state
and Indiana mtght be in a class by
themselves . Theydoo 'tseemtolUive
I
many hoes and the rest of us do ."
The hole Rose must fill · th
I It b
J
s·Ichting
IS
e ooe
e
Y erry
, th e
sharpshooting guard who h ld th
. e
e
tea m together · Top candtdates for
tl1e job are sophomor
K vin
S ll'
I
.
es
e.
~~mgs, .ee Cumnungs and Keith
On onso~ .R
do
'
.
e spo ose esn t wocry about
IS cen ter, which is patrolled by Joe
Barry Carroll. "If there' s a better
center in the country, I'd like to see
him play," said Rose .
Iowa, last season's surprise team,
won 't sneak up on anybody . The
HawkeyeslostWilliamMaylieldand
the duo of Tom Norman and Dick
Peth . Rut back again is allcon ference guard Ronnie Lester and
forward Kevin Boyle who was
'
outstanding as a freshman ·
Coach Lute Olson also plans to
have Steve Krafctsin and Steve
Waite, who alternated at center, in
the same starting lineup.
lllinoJs will have everyone
returning plus guard Reno Gray'
who lettered in 1978. Gray should
help Rob Judson m the backcourt
and this will free Mark Smith to

longrun ."
Oitto State also IS loaded. In
addition to All-Big Ten guard Kelvin
Ransey and 6-10 center Herb
Williams, veterans Carter Scott and
Jim Smith and IHl freshman Clark
Kellogg round out a solid lineup
backed by good bench strength .
"We can go down In our ninth man
on the bench and not. be hurt ," said
Ransey, Otuo States only semor -start•r.

return to his natural position up
front. Coach Lou Henson also is
expecting better things from center
Derek Holcomb.
illinois will not start with a 15-0
record ti1is season but could be a lot
tougher in the late going .
Wisconsin has all its starters back
mcludin g outstanding guard
Matthews. U!st year Wisconsin got
off to a slow start but finished last
with four straight victories. The last

We~

two victims were Ohio State and
M' h'
State
tc Igan
·
" We ' re excited
we have
.
nd
'.
"
'd
expertence a
consistency, S8l
Badger Coach Bill Cofield.
Michigan has Mik MeG
ba k
b t 1 t Ph'l Hebb dee The
u
os
l
u ar .
e
Wolverines will rely oo speed to

" We deflnltel feel we have a
bette
h sty
th'·
r, muc
ronger team
..
year," said Coach Jim Dutcher wbo
I Is fr stun
Rand "'-·-' and
ee
e
en
y "'"""'
Zebedee Howell mlgbt provide some
inunediat help
North :'...
'
pLam...., by
w.... ern wss
injuries last season and loll Jim

make up lor a Jack of height . Their
top freshman ts Joe James a~
'
forward from Youngstown , Ohio .
Minnesota has Kevin McHale
·
·
·
'
their htgh-sconng, 6-11 center·
forward back , plus a bunch of
sophomores who gained experience
last season.

Stack alter two games while Brian
JungandRodRobersonplayedburt
·
Coach Rich Falk will field a veteran
lineup which aJoo includes Mike

National Hockey League
At A Glance
Bv The Associated Press
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L.T.Pts . GFGA
15 1 3 33 86 59
Phila .

~~·~~~gers

1~ ~~ ~ (~ :~ ~~

NY Islanders
Wash ington

6 9 • 16 69 70
4 15 • 12 62 95

Vancouver
Chicago
St Louis

8

Smythe Division

~~':;;~~~~n

Colorado

B 5 23 76
7 6 12 58
7 12 4 IS 66
; :; ~
~~
• 13 J 11 56

9

g

72
57

88

~
7'...

Wales Conference

Boston Adams Division
Buffalo
;35 63 JJ 2393
Minnesota
10 5 S 25
Toronto
9 tO 2 20

t
-

f

t
t

t
t

B1 53
86 61
87 70

,._u

Campbell and Brian Gibson .
Fre:.ren Mike Jenkins and Gaddis
Rathe ' both of Ollcago, figure to
add needed speed when they break
into the lineup
·
Quet&gt;ec

Norrisc:X.\'!r.!.c~ 8

13 6 J 29
Los Ang .
9 8 S 23
Pitts .
8 7 ~ 20
Hartford
7 7 6 20
Detroit
6 10 3 15
Moncloy•s Gomes

Montreal

Nogam;~;C::.~·~'G!mes

76 71

-GOODYEAR---

1

OUR TIEMPO'S (The All
season JiIres) ARE STILL
AT ALOW,
LOW PRICE.

f

...-~ ..- - ...- · . . .-

We Are Now
STUDDING
TIRES

...-~ ...- - ...- - . ...- -

We Offer
Computerized
Balancing

266

122
114

73

~

Pomeroy,O,

f)

CELEBRATING 25 YEARS OF SERVICE
TO MEIGS COUNTY

O r d ~ lf'cK ) ty1f'li!lf' • p llr;nt-' rwx r to !t iP l1vtng roo rn
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Montrea1at Detroit
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Tg;on~~a~ Allan~:• phi a
Quebec at St. Louis
Winnipeg at LosAn~les
Wednesd•y•s
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Rangers
Quebec at Pittsburgh
Toronto at Washlnvton
New York Islanders at Colorado
Chicago at Edmonton
Winnipeg at Vancouver

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. 4-'lbe Dally SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . Tl, 1119

Two rookies share award
NEW YORK (API - Infielders
John Castino of the Minnesota Twms
and Alfredo Grifflll of the Toronto
Blue Jays were surprised after
being named CC&gt;-winners of the
American League Rooltie of the
Year award.
Castino and Griffin each receive&lt;!
seven votes from a 28-member
committee of the Baseball Writers
Association of America. Relief
pitcher Mark Clear of California, the
mly rookie named for the midseason
All .Star Game, was third with five
votes .
Relief pitcher Rlm Davis of the
New York Yankees, first baseman
Pat Putnam of the Texas Rangers
and pitcher Ross Baumgarten of the
Olicago White Sox received three

acquired by the Blue Jays from the
Cleveland organization at baseball's
last winter meetings. After a slow
start he came oo strong, hitting
safely in 24 of his last Tl games and
winning Player of the Month honors
for September .
This is the first time since the
award was instituted in 1949 that two
players have shared AL Rookie
honors. It happened once In the
National League, when pitchers Pat
Zachry and Butch Metzger shared
the award in 1976.
The tie is the secord in BW AA

ATTENTION

voles apiece.
"I never expected it," said
Castlno, 25, a third baseman who
1933-34 SEOAL CHAMPS - Captain of the 193:hl4
3EOAL championship basketball team at Pomerov
High School was Paul Casci . Casc1 will be honored at~
dinner Wednesday night at the Me1gs Inn at 6 :JO p.m .

by the Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce. Pictured 1-r,
are, Ray Farnham, coach, Al Russell, Paul Casci,
Charles Shumaker, Red Jenkins, Dinty Moore and
George Hobstetter, manager.

Philadelphia downs Pacers
PHILADELPHIA 1At' 1 - Two of
the Sixers' " Pine Boys" turned
opportunity 111to arh~t• v ement as
Philadelphia downed the Indiana
Pacers 11~ 1 12 .
The " Pine Boys " is Stevt• Mix' s
euphemisti c descripti o n of the
Philadelphia bench , which he and
Henry Bibby ,., frequently occupy
However, both players got off the
bench Monday mght tD spark a
semnd.!Jalf surge as the Sixers
ca ptured their third straight
National Basketball As soc iation
victory .
The Pacers-76ers nwtdiUp was
the NBA'sonly game Mrnday rught.
Playing m his frrst contest since
dislocating a finger last week. Mix
scored 25 points, with Bibby adding
21.
" I felt good that I was able to
cootribure to a win, but I was Just
me of the oogs m the wheel, " said
Mix, whose 25 points surpassed hiS
previous season's high of 23 .
"We have II different individuals
oo this team - 11 different
per!llnalities - but we aU think
'win,'" he explained
Lare in the third quarter , w1th the
Pacers leading ~79, Mix and Bibby
led the 76erson a romp, scoring 19 of
the next 21 points.
In the meantime , CaldweU Jones
sunk a layup to give the 76ers thetr
first lead, 93-91 , since rrudway
through the second quarter . when
Mix had scored on a goa ltendin ~ call
for a 39-J7 Sixers' edge .
So by the 8:18 mark of the fourth
quarter , the Sixers led ~91. From
then on Philadelphia ne vPr trailed .
although the Pacers ca me to within
me point, I 11 -110, with 57 seconds
remaining .
Mix had replaced Julius Ervm~
with 3:47 left in the thlfd quart er
after Erving had picked up hrs

u1t: UmverSlty of Michigan was
the first univer sity m the natwn tn
establish a course in data process1ng
in 1929.

tourth per.-.mnl and thf" Sixers
seemE-d to be s.l! ppU1g .
Philadelphia
Coa!'h
Billy
L'unnmgham sa 1d he de cided to stay
wrth tlw " Pine Boys· b~c au se they
were dmng so well

·'The l&gt;ench did a great JOb for us, "
Cunningham said . " Indiana played
oulstanrlin g baske tball ..
A.sked why he d1dn t play Erving
more m lht· second hrtlf. the coach

Baseball
faces TV
problems
WA.S I!I l'I. TOt\
league ba.·H~ b.aU

r AI-' I

-

Major

faces a serious

replied, " It was becallS€ the other
group (Mix and Bibby) was doing so
well, we had to stick with them ."
Indiana OJach Bob Leonard held a
somber meeting with his team after
the game, then told reporters, "We
just sat down and went over a lot of
things ."
Leonard added, "Bibby and Mix
did a good job against us . We had to
double-team Mix and we didn't get it·
done. He shot the lights out.
" We've got to be smarter going
down the wire," Leonard continue&lt;!.
"Basically we played a good game,
but we were not mentally tough
enough when it was critical . There
are 244 guys in this league, and there
is always some guy coming out to do ·
a good job."
The Pacers' Mickey Johnson was
the game.!Jigh scorer with 30 points,
while teammate Mike Bantom
added 27.

honors this year. Wlllle Stargell of
Pittsburgh and Keith Hernandez of
St . Louis were co-winners of the
Natlmal League's MOBt Valuable
Player award .
That tie came despite the fact that
10 players were named oo each
ballot and votes were totaled on a
points basis . In the rookie balloting,
two voters In each league city were
required to piclt. ju!l one player
each .
The winner of the Natlmal League
Rookie of the Year award wlll be
:announced Wednesdav

PROUD OF FATHER - Young John Travis Mugrage, left, and
Olarles Tyson Mugrage, right, pose happily with a 180 pound buck six
point deer, killed by their father, Charles Y. Mugrage, Racine, as the
deer season opened in Meigs County Monday. The elder Mugrage is in the

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

became a starter in rnidseason and
fmished with a .2&amp; batting average
and S2 runs batted in .
"I am humbled," added Castino.
"It will probably take a month for
the importance of this to set in .
"I am extremely surprised," said
Griffin. 21 , a shortstop who batted
.2B7 for the Blue Jays, set a team
record with 179 hits and also led the
club with 20 stolen bases.
"All those other guys did a good
job," added Griffin, who is currently
playing winrer ball in his native
Dominican Republic . "I honestly
thought Ron Davis would wic
becallS€ of the publicity he gets in
New York ."
Griffin, a switch hitter. was

RIVERSIDE W4
AMC- JEEP
Pais &amp; SeMce
SAnJRDAY,
DEC. 1, 1979
FOR INVENTORY

Zorn sets passing records in 30-7 win
SEATTLE t APJ - It 's as if Jim
Zorn and the Seattle Seahawks can't
do anything wrong .
They' re streaking right along with
the best of them in the NatiOnal
Football League.
With Zcrn settin~ two more club

MII.AN , Italy

lAP!

-

Peter

fleming downed fellow American
Roocoe Tanner S-4, 6-3 in the opening
match of the $300,000 Masters Tennis
Tournament.
In other matches in the eight-man
event which is split into two sections ,
Vltas Gerulaitis outlasted Italy's
Corrado Barazzuti, S-4, 1-li, 1&gt;-2:
Sweden ' s Bjorn Borg defeated
Adriano Panatta of Italy &amp;-1. 7-li and
John McEnroe routed Argentina 's
Guillermo Vilas &amp;-1, &amp;-2.
MELBOURNE
( AP)
Unheralded
American
Diane
Morrison upset Qlris O'Neil of

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

WILl BE CLOSED

1-614 992-2156

thr ea t from u nre~ulatcd ca ble
t;,ie\OSion opera!Jons , says Baseball
Cornmtssioner Howu.• Kuhn .
Tesufymg :.-londay bef er e a Holl5('
s ubnmmHttL·(·. Kulm said exist ing
law s
&lt;Jn J
r t' gul~tio n s
atioW
" uncontrolled un portation of distant
signal sports telecasts " by cable
relevision systems .
He note d that professiOnal
baseball IS alread y m a struggle with

BOW KilU) - Three of Meigs County's 9IICCeS8ful bow and arrow
huntel'!l are shown above with their prized deer . They are, left to right,
Harry Yarbrough, seven point buck; Glen Crisp, nine point buck and
Terry GeorRe, five oolnt buck .

'truck.

paSSing records m the first-ever
Monday night game in Seattle, the
Seahawks crushed the New York
Jets 3().7 roc their third straight
victory and fifth triwnph in six
weeks.
"I'm really confident now," said

Sports briefs.

CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLEC1

. 21-POINTER- A 21-pointer buck deer wu killed by Lee Wood UI
Middleport, Monday at his father's farm near Harrisonville. With Wooe
and the deer is his sister, Fonda Wood.

• •

Australia, the current Australian
Women'sOpen champion, 3-li, S-2, S4 in the first round or a $100 ,000
rennis classic.
In other first•ound action, Pam
Shriver defeated Janet Newberry S4, 6-0 ; Australian Wendy Turnbull
posted a S-2, 6-0 victory over Czech
Regina Marsikova; Britain 's Sue
Barker eliminated American Diane
Desfor 6-3, 7-li; Hana Mandlikova of
Czechoslovakia ousted American
Roz McCallum ~. 6-3, S-2 ; and
Sweden's Mimi Wikstedt whipped
American Dianne Evers f).{), 6-2.

Zcrn. "I wouldn't say I'm in any
kind of a groove but I feel like when

the receiver makes his move, the
ball is going to be there."
" He's a
pretty
effect! ve
quarterback," said Jets' OJach Walt
Michaels of Zorn.
Caning off a club record 384-yard
passing performance against New
Orleans, Zorn once again was in
command, picking apart the Jets'
COLLEGE
NEW YORK (AP)- Alabama held
mto first place in The Associated
Press college football poll for the
seventh week in a row as Southern
Cal inched past Rose Bowl opponent
Ohio State Into secmd place.
Alabama, which winds up the
regular season against Auburn on
Saturday, received 34 of 62 firstplace votes and 1,193 1,240 points
from a nationwide panel of sports
wrirers and broadcasters.

secondary behind an offensive line
that didn't allow him tD he sacked
orce.
He oompleted 2S of 32 passes Ior
28:i yards and three touchdowns,
including 14 straight completions.
The 25 c001pletions and 14 straight
completions were Seattle club
records.
Because
of
the
strength
throughout of the American Football
Conference , the Seahawks , now 7-li,
will have a hard time making the
playoffs m their fourth NFL season .
They virtually have to win all
three of their remaining regular
season games .
"All we can do is play like we have
a chance," said Seahawks OJach
Jack Patera .
"I've got to give our line and our
receivers credit," said Zorn. "Our
line really has been bloclting well
and our receivers have been running
great routes ."

said . "They take away the long stuff
,., you just throw in front of them."
Richard
Todd,
the
Jets'
quarterback, was 19 of 36 for 226
yards and drove his team In a
touchdown in the third quarrer .
Kevin Long tallied foc New York on
a !-yard run .
Efren Herrera accounted for
Seattle's other points oo field goals
of 49, 4S and 42 yards.
Three Seattle players were
injured. Special teams member Don
Dufek broke a leg, offensive guard
Bob Newton left the game with a
knee injury and guard Tom Lynch
suffered a back injury .

Zcrn's touchdown passes were 14
yards In his favorire target, Steve
Largent, in the secood quarter, 16
yards to running back Sherman
Smith in the third period and II
yards to Sam McCullum in the third
quarter. All came on third-and-10
situations.
The victory gave the Seahawks a
2-{1 Monday night record. They won
at Atlanta 31-28 four weeks ago .
"It's great any time you win, "
said Zcrn , "but it's even more fun
when you win in the mly game of the
day ."
" They I the Jets) play pretty
cooservatively on defense, " Parera

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Mason, W. va

773·5592

r-

broadrastrrs over who owns ilie
copyright tD sports telec.,ts - the
teams m\·oJved or the broadc&amp;ster .
·· Regardless o f how th 1s matter is
reso lved. Lht· prufesswnal sports
dulls will ilc ldt with the ve ry
se nous probl em uf having to contend
wn h 1he exis ting co mpulsory
lJeenslng st:hem t&gt;." Kuhn said.
.. It Is tillS scheme which permits
C'ATV systems. Without u ur coo sent
and nver o':lr obJet"t ions. to saturate
our hom r tc· rritor ics with distant
.'ilj:!na l sports tPiera,&lt;,1s · ·
Kuhn said hi s pomt is illustrated
b} tlll· situauon m Pittsburgh where
Uw Pir&lt;~tr s. "t nn t•r uf th1~ vear ·s
\V u rld .S t·:· lt• s . v.:r r ~ !B t.h 1n
attendan ct· m UH' major leagues in
1978

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BONELESS

SUPERIOR

11

•••

SUPERIOR

LB.

If you get a lucky hunch about a number today,
make sure you play your h unch. It could be The
NUMBER I To nrght's wrnn rng nu mber 1n Oh10 Lottery ·s
Da1ly Number drawrng
Maybe you woke up wrth a hunch about a numbe r
that appeared 1n a dream Or maybe rt was a lucky
" lunch " hunch. Perhaps a hunch wrl l hrt you on your
way home fr om work'
No matter what trme of d ay you get a hunch about
a number, you 've strl l got trme to play The NUMBER.
Bets can be placed up to mrn utes befo re the n1ght ly
draw1ng.

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Don't pass up a lucky h unch today Play The
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GRADE B LARGE

EGGS.................~~~~. 69~

Procuds help make Ohio a better place to live.

•

ALL WffK

DR. PEPPER

A
Shop-A-Roma

Follow your hunch and play The NUMBER at these Sales Agents:

Store

Third &amp; Olive

Gallipolis, Oflio

Here are The NUMBER Sales Agents in your area· ~/~~~oc::rs..:.:)
CHESAP,.AI&lt; E
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200 2nd Avenu•

GALLI POLlS
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~

1- 7he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 'll, 1979

B7 Jalm A. Malaew, Pla.D.

parents should actively teach their
children basic values and manners
in order for them to get along in
soctety
cl. Develop mutual respect respect moves from parent to child
and chlld to parent and usll8lly occurs when basic trust is a part of the
relationship .
7. Really llsten - active listening
means more than bearing : it means
understanding and conununlcatlng .
8. Offer guidance - parents need
to offer their opinions and feelings
but should not present them

Dlreetar o1 Rio Gnade Comm11111ty
Ed.au-J Cou=e!!nc Center
. My wife and I recently cmapleted
Ill eight-week couae on P .E.T.
(Pmnt Effectiveness Training )
8pOIIIOI'ed by Rio Qrando, Olllege
and Community College and taug!S
by Dr. and Mn. Jack and Lydia
Groth. '111e COIIrlle was very val ~~able
to tboee In attendance, making ua
aware that being good parent.s and
raJalng clllldren are not easy tub.
I 118M to belleve that just loving
your kids as enough to help them
become adult.s . Now I realize that it
takes hard work , patience , com·
munication skills, and a large
amount of mutllalre&amp;pect. After our
la.sl meeting , many parenlll commented that talrlng a coune to be
bettar parents should be a require~
ment for aU people before they have

authoritatively as facts .
9. Foster Independence - as one
parent said, "Once your cluldren are
old enough, ldnd of phase yourself
out of the picture. But always be
near when they need you."
10. Be realistic - raising children
involves ''tough times and tender
momenta. " Don' ezpect life to
always go smoothly.
lboee ten principles make a lot of
sense to me, and I hope they can be a
guide for those people who want to
become better parents .

at the recent meeting of Chester
COwtcil 323, Daughters of America,
held at the hall Tuesday night.
Gift.s were at each place of those
having birthdays and a decorated
cake made by Mrs. Margaret Tuttle
waS used on the table. Honored were
Thelma White, Olarlotte Grant,
Daisy Canter, Ada Morrill, Zelda
Weber , Mae Spencer, Alta Ballard,
Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Carolyn
Holley, lnzy Newell , Esther
Ridenour, Eileen Martin, Ada
Neutzlln, Ih1a Fae Kimes, and Helen
Wolfe.
Mrs. Leona Hensley, councilor,
presided at the meeting attended by
33 memben. It was noted that Mrs.

Dorothy Ritchie remains In Mt.
Cannel Ho8pital, Ollwnbus.
Thank you note Willi read from
Faye Hoselton, state associate councilor, Belpre, thanking the members
for her reception held at the lodge
hall recenUy. It was announced at
the Dec. 4 meeting a layette shower
will be held for Enuna and Keith
Aahley .
'l1le first nomination of officers
was given. II was announced that
any member rA the past councllon'
club not planning to attend the
Olrlstmas supper at Crows Slealt
House should notify Enna Cleland at

once.
Others attending the meetinR

Nina Macomber places
first in baking fare

besides thoee named were Goldie
Wolfe , Opal Hollon, Letha Wood, Erma Ueland, Julie RoBe, Mary K.
Holter,
Nina Windle, Elizabeth
Hayea, DorU Grueaer, Tbelmo
McMannla, Betty Roush, LaW'&amp; Mae
Nice, Margaret Amberger , Goldie
Frederick, and Mabel Van Meter.

Nina Macomber received first Ul
the baking contest held at the recent
meeting of Star Grange .
Other entries were by Bernice
Midkiff, Ruby Lambert, and Neva
Nicholaon . Ethel Hatfield and
Olarlotte Erlewtne . Mn . Lambert
and Mrs. Erlewtne were recognized
for having sold tbe largest &amp;mOWlt of
household products for the grange.
Artie Houda.shelt was reinstated as a
member . Carla Rile and Bllly Dyer
were installed by Mrs. Nicholson . It
was noted that toys were presented
to Veterans Memorial Hospital on
Nov. 15 by tbe Grange .

PEARL KNAPP BOSPITAI.IZEJ)
Mn. Pearl Knapp 15 a patient at
the Community Hospital , Building 3,
Ro&lt;m 3428, Iodlanapolla, Ind. She ill
being treated for pneumonia and expeels to be hoapltallzed for ~~everal
moredaya.

~

!919 1'1 J

~t:l'NOlOS

Generation Rap
By Ht•lt· n anrl ~u•· Bnttr l
TEEN·AGERS PU8IIED FOR
VOTE: BUI'NOWDON'TGO

TO POLLS
By Helea aad 8lle 8Gftel

A Thankagiving supper W11J1 held
and those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Midkiff, Mr. and Mn.
Larry Montgomery. Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Midkiff , Danlelle and
Ou-istopher, Ruby Lambert, Anna
Ogdin, Neva Nicbolson, Mr. and
Mrs . Ted Hatfield, Charlotte
Erlewine, Maxine Dyer, Opal and
Billy, Lelia Rwnfleld, Mr. and Mn.
Ben Riffe, Carla and Becky, Jolm
Halliday, Wald Nicholson, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Macomber, Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Macomber and son, Norman Will, Alan and Ann Halliday.

TQ6 A. ((Q C O

cblldren .
'l1le idea is intriguing and would
probably eliminate a lot of the
mlaakes pafellts make . How many
Urnes have you heard a parent say,
"I corrected the mistakes I made on
my first child while raising my last
two or three ." I 've always
wondered, thorugb , whatever happens to that first child? C»uld the
sldlls be learned befor the child is
born?
In an article which appeared in
"Oilldren Tody" titled " Raising
Oilldren by Old-Fashioned Pareit
Sense " (Nov .-Dec . 1978 ), Dr .
Olarles Schaefer offered ten basic
principles about raising children :
I. Love abwtdantly - make the
love unconditional and express it
openly and enthusiastically.
2. Discipline CODBtructively while disciplining. parents should be
consistent , clear, reasons ble,
underatanding, flexible, they should
di.scoW"age continued dependency,
be authoritative, and administer
discipline in private .
3. Spend time together - enCOW"age family lktivities ; and orllen
the ldds are old eno~h , spend time
talking to each other .
4. Tend to personal and marital
needs - a husband and wife are apt
to be successful parents when they
give their maniage the first priority . Parents must be comfortable
with themselves before they can
relate well to their chlldren .
5. Teach rUdrt from wrong

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
NEEDLEPOINT GATHERS DUST
POUY'SPROBLEM
DEAR POU. Y - I put needlepoint
on the seats and back of two antique
chairs and they are now beginning to
look dusty . I hope you or one of the
readers can tell me how to clean
them. -DEE
DEAR DEE - If the needlepoint is
only dusty I would go over it with the
soft upholstery brush attachment to
the vacuum. U it is dirty you might
sponge them with a solution of water
and a cold water detergent for line
wa.shables and woolens. Do not soak
and be very careful to only dampen
the top . Test first unless you are sure
your colon are fast. The needlepoint
shop that advised me of this method
said that, of coune, the ideal way 15
to have a professional upholstery
cleaner do the job. -POlLY
DEAR POLLY - Put a wide rubber band around large bottles or
jars, such as oU or mayo~ cane
in, to keep them from slipping out of
your hands wh n they are dry or wet.
-HOPE
DEAR POU. Y - With Ouistmas
not too far away the following may
prove useful . TiBaue paper can prove

Birthcfays

VIBIT IN INDIANA
VIsiting in Indiana over the
'lbanksglving weekend with T . Sgt.
and Mrs . James 0. Norton,
OJNUna and Paulette were Mr . and

Mr.. Carl H. Norton, Mrs. Pllllllp
King, Carl and Jason. On Nov. 21st
Mrs. James 0 . Norton became a
United State atlzen at South Bend,
Ind. She received congratulations
from President Carter. T. Sgt. Norton will be completing 20 years In the
U. S. Air Force on Aug . 16 of next
year .

HOLIDAY VISITORS
Mr . and Mn. Paul AndreW3 and
Barbara rA Long Bottom had M holiday visitors, Mr . and Mn . Paul J.
Andrews and Olri!lopber, Wester·
ville; Mr. and Mr!l. Larry Mllllroo,
Mark and Jerry' C»lumbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. John Michael Andrews, Colum·
bul . Also vi.slting were Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Milliron and Matthew,
Reedsville; Mn. l1nda Damewood,
Long Bottom, Norman McCain,
Long Bottom, Mr. and Mn. Patrick
Wippel and fanilly, Lancaster, Pa .;
Mn . Mary Wippel, Pomeroy, and

Crystal Hamel!
Crystal Renee Barnett was
honored on her first birthday on
'111anksgiving Day at the home of
her grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Waldnlg, Racine .
Following a tW'key and ham dinner, a pink and blue decorated cake
and ice cream were served. Gifts
were presented to the honored
guests. Attending were Melania
Barnett, Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Wal!kllg, Racine; Mr. and Mrs . Alan
Petzo, Shelly and Kerrie, Gallaway.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Waldnlg , Jr.
Grove Oty , Pic . Joe W. Holman, U
S. Marines , South Carolina. and Pvt
Neal Knight, U.S. Air Force, N. C.

Mary Ellen Andrews, PlttsbW'gh,
Pa .

INDOOR RUMMAGE
SALE SATURDAY
EAST MEIGS - A king..uud yard
and rummage sale - indoors - will
be staged Saturday at tbe Eastern
High School by the Eastern Band
Boollters Association . Parents cl.
band members are to take tbelr sale
Items to the high school building
SatW'day morning with tbe sale
beginning at 9 un. Household items
and clothing will be 8IDOIII! the
numerous sale items planned lor the
event.

TO MEET MONDAY
Letart PTO will meet Monday ,
Dec . 3, at 7::.1 pm. at the school.
Amy Hlll, owner of the Dabble lblp,
will be the guest speaker. Refresh·
menl.!l will be served.

Michelle Capehart
A J)lll1y was beld SUnday honortng
Michelle Capehart on her lOth birthday at the borne of her parents, Mr.
and Mn. Michael Capehart.
Relrelhment.s of cake in the
design of a superstar t-ehirt, lee
c:reun, chip!l and candy were enjoyed. Games were played with
Rhonda Gibbs winning the oo.:.prile.
I
Tboae attending were Janet
Werry, Trina Barker, Rebecca
Bauer, Trisha Heaton, Gina Gibbs,
Kelly Whitlatch, Tammy Capehari,
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Aelker, Penny,
Patsy and Patrick, Mr. and Mrs .
Randall Gibbs , and Rhonda, and
Xelthann Whitlatch.
Mr. and Mn!. &lt;larence Jot·dan
also presented a gift to Michelle .

~

.

.

. - .

WORKSHOP SET
Two activities have been set up by
the Meigs Head Start Parent Corn·
mittee. Tbe first will be an aU day
workAhop on Nov . :.!, from 9 a .m . to
4 pm., and the seconDec . 7. Both
events will be held at the Meigs Cen·
ter.

Warntng The SL,: yeon General Ha s Determined
That C1garet1e Smoktng Is Dang erous 10 Yo ur Health

FREE CL01111NG

KING 16 QI1J . "tar". II mg n•cotme. 100 s 19 mg "tar". 13 mg mconne. av. per c•gar~tte. FTC Report MAY '78 .

.

.

BEAN SUPPER
A bean and cornbread supper will
be held at Eastern High School
cafeteria Friday, Nov . 30, from 4:30
pm. to 6:30p.m. The dinner 15 $1.50
with d - r t extra. sponsored by
Eastern Athletic Boollten.

Country fresh JDenthol.
Mild, s01ooth and refreshing.

'
~

.,

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My big brother campaigned lllte
mad for the 18-year-old vote. Maybe
that's why I registered the minute I
turned !8, and I'm lor sure going to
vote in !!MKl.
I'm trying to talk my friends into
registering but they just aren't interested. Some 118y " Later," but
others don't even know who their
state's ~!en&amp;lon are and don't care.
I read that only about 20 percent of
aU 181-ear-olds voted in the 1978
electlon.s.
How come? -INVOLVED
DEAR INVOLVED :
Because at age 18, natimal illluea
,. aren' nearly 111 Important as the
.: pmonal ha.sslea and joys rA growing .
· up. People uaually begin tblnldng o1 h
Wasblngton as a force In their llves
about the time they start families
and real careen. Pity! -HELEN

.

•

DAY THURSDAY
Fre ctothlng day will be beld at the
Salvati~ Army, Pomeroy, on Thurllday, Nov. 211 from 10 am. unW
noon All area resldenta in need rA
clothing are w~cqme .

INVOLVED:

If a candidate finds an illaue that
will grab teen-418ers, be '11 get their
vote, and a smart candidate should
certainly try. Witness 1972 when
near 50 percent of 181-ear-olds
voted. Vietnam turned them ac·

to be quite expenslve when used in
quantities such as needed when
packing around a small gift. I save
aU the tissue that comes around any
gifts I received and am saved the
cost of buying so much fresh paper.
(Polly's Note : Tbe tissue that ccmes
in dress and suit boxes should also
be saved for this. )
I use an old half sllp as a nlghUe
orllen the weather is warm. Pull the
elastic over your chest and have a
pretty, very cool and comforiable
nightgown.- M.B.B.
DEAR POLLY - A quick and easy
way to skim the grease oH the top of
homemade soup 15 to drop a lettuce
leaf in the pot and leave wtW the
grease is abllorbed. - E .N.
DEAR POLLY - After peellng
onlon.s I remove the odor left on my
hands by using a bit of toothpaste
when I wash them.- JUDY
Polly will send you one of her signed thank1iOU DeWllpBper coupon
cllppera if ahe uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in ber
column.
Write
POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

tivist. -SUE

DEAR RAP :
, If you get married at 16 In Illinois

COMMUNITY

can your parents make you
separate? I'm 18, Ronnie Ia out ci
acbool and working .
Can they put the boy in jail if you
get pregnant? My mom said if I did
ahe would have him arrested for
rape, but It ian 't rape - it was my
Ides as much 111 his.
You see, I'm pregnant and we ·
want to marry, but I'm afraid to teU .
my folks. - OONFUSED AND WOR- •

RIED
DEARCANDW :

Investure
held here

.

Yes, at 16 in Dllnol5, you must
have your parents' consent to
marry, and if you lle about yoW' age,
the marriage can be voided.
While statutory rape laWII are still
on the boob In some states, we
rather doubt a yowtg man would be
jailed for making his teen-age
fiancee pregnant. 'Ibis sounda lllte a
mother's "preventive threat" that
didn't work.
You have several choices here, but
the best ia: make baste to tell your
folks. Tbey may change their views
on an early wedding now that
they're approaching grandpar·

r---

Social Calendar

An investiture ceremony was held
at the recent meeting of tile Meigs
Olwtty Girl Scout service unit held
at home of Mrs.Martha Graves.
Invested by Dee Lawrence, Black
Diamond Girl Scout district advisor,
were Janet Koblentz, Betty Barker,
Janet Simpson, and Kay Frederick ,
with each receiving a girl scout pin.
'l1le group sang "Generosity" and
a movie on girl scouting was shown.
Mn. Graves reported on the Area
rn meeting of the Black Diamond
Council held at Spencer, W. Va .
recenUy. Day camp for ll*l was
dlacussed witb definite dates in July
to be aJII10UIICed by Beclly Mankin,
camp dlrector. It ... decided to
order T.curta which will be sold at
day camp.
Plans were made for the scout. to
pertlclpate in both the Pomeroy and
Middleport Ouistmas parades .
Harold and Rhea Norris shared
craft Ideas with the group. The
meeting closed with a Thanksgiving
tribute .

WEDNESDAY
entbood.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
BesldM, they11 10M find out Uoos Club meeting noon Wednesday
at Meigs Inn.
_ tm1eu you tab tbe abortfoo J'GU&amp;e
SPECIAL MEETING , Middleport . which we 'ruure you cba't want.
1be otber choice, a poor one, 15 to
Lodge 3113, F and FM. 7 pm. Wedaway and IIIIIITY in a nearby
run
nesday for installation of offlcen by
"legal"
state. We woo't make it
invitation; aU Masoos invited and
easier
by
telling you which one, but
guests welcome .
if you're detennlned, look It up at
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
the llbrary.- HELEN AND SUE
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
NOTE FROM SUE: A go-betwee&gt;1
home rA Mn . Richard Owen. Mn .
belps. Do you have an understanding
Roy Cassell will review "Adam
relative. adult friend, school or
Bede ••. For roll call memben are to
church counaelor who could break
name tbeir favorite Confederate
the news first?
State.
(Got a problem 1 Or a subject for
'I'HUIL'IDAY
dlscualion, tw011enerat1on style?
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453 F and
Direct your questions to either Sue
AM open installation of officenJ by
or Helen Bottel -or both, if you want
invitation ThUI'Bday at 7:30pm.
a cunblnation mother-daughter
MONTHLY meeting Soutbem
answer -in care of this neWIIpaper. l
Hllls District of Ohio Nurse11 Assn.,
7:30 pm. ThUI'Bday at Southeast
Ohio branch offices of Ohio Department of Health, Logan. Program by
Bruce Lauer, director of systems
planning of the Area Six Health ..:
TUESDAY
Systems Agency . All regl5tered llllr· i
SPECIAL MEEIING, Middleport ;
aes from Hocking, Gallla, Meigs and - Lodge 363 F and AM, 7 p.m.,Athens C»untlee Invited .
Tueaday; wort in fellowcraft •
FRIDAY
degree.
I
USED TOY sale, Friday, 10 am. ·
HARRISONVILLE Senior Otl2ens
to 3 pro. by the Conununity Wives
Tuesday 1 pro . at town ball. •
Oub of Olester at the Masonic Hall, 1; Refreshments of cookies, coffee and
behind thepollt office in Olester.
tea.
SATIJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
CHRISTMAS Bazaar at Racine
Branch, American Assoctation of
United Methodist Cllurch annex,
University Women, 7:30 Tuesday
Friday, 10 am. to 7 pm . and Saturnight at the Rlverboar Riverboat
day, 10 am. to 3 pm. with wide
Room of tbe Meigs office, Athena
vuiety of handmade items to be sold
Q)unty Savings and Loan Q) . Proas well as candy and baked goods . gram focus will be ''Managing
Lunch will be available·
Resources for TOillOII otr" under the

r

I

SERVICE

Electa Circle, meP~S
Several members of the EJecta
Orcle of the B. H. Sanborn Misslonary Society of the Middleport
First Baptist ChW'Ch recently
visited tbe Pinecrest Nursing Home .
The Baptist women staged a party
for the approximately 00 patients on
the third floor serving cupcakes and
candy, along with punch made by
Yolanda Howard, an employee who
awsted with tbe party. 'l1le women
then viaited VIvian Titus and the
sister.tn-law of Mrs. Pearl Hoffman,
who are both patients there.
At a business meeting beld at the
church plans were made to take
Mezlcan bread and cbeese to the
December Sanborn meeting. Gift.s of
money will be sent to Emily Ballard,
a missiOnary, for her birthday and
also Olristmas, and a Christmas gift
will also be sent to Glynda Rice.
scholarship student.

Social Calendar

't

Dinner guests reported

.,__.,
....._ n.-..hv nil
'nlanksglving guests of Mr. and
.... ~ ..on"" ...... ~ ....... ,..ver.
Mrs. Olarles Ga.sklll, Middleport,
GARDEN CLUB MEETING ..
LADIES AUXILlARYof Veterans
included Dr. and Mrs . RusseU Mcln•
NOTED
Hoepltal Tuesday in east-west dining
lyre, Uaa and Greg , Morristown, N.
Mills Erma &amp;nlth, Meigs County
room at 7:30pm.
J .; Mrs . Walterllayes, Mr.andMn .
contact chalnnan for the AssoclaAMERICAN LEGION AUX·
Ned Gaa1dll, Nathan and Mellasa ,
tion of Garden Oulle, bas called a
ILIARY, Drew Webeter PoBt 38,
Pickerington; Mr. and Mn. Lester
meeting for repo !!nlatives rA
Pnmeroy , 7:30 Tladay at the ball. !i Pittenger, Leslie Ann and Bruce,
garden clulle to be held Sunday
Initiation for aU new members lor :; Beipr'e.
afternoon at 2 pm. at the Olester , , the past three years, bothsenlar and 'f
Dr. and Mrs. Mcintyre, tbeformer
Elementary School.
!" junior members.
~ 01ristine Coats, and children arriv·
MillaSmlthba.salsorequestedthat ~ . OIUO ETA PHI Sor01ity Tuellday ;; edWednesdayandleflMondaymor·
any club memben who may have a
7:30 pm . at C»iumbla Gas office ,; nlng . Since tbey will not be able to
program of former Christmas · Middleport. Denise Wolle in charge .c return for Qu1stmas, that hollday
flower shoWB either contact her or
of culturil program. Hostesses are
Willi observed by the Mclntyres,
take the program to the 01ester
Jill Uzon and Kay Walker.
Mn . Hayes and the G4Jskllls over tbe
school Saturday morning .
Thanksgiving weekend.
PAST MATRONS of Pomeroy
OES Tuesday 7:30pm. at the home
of Mra. J . W. McMW"ray, Mason.
VlliiTS wrm PARENTS
Kevin McLaugblin, who bas just
LADIES Allxlllary Veterans
returned from a IICMiay cruile with Memorial Holpltal Tuesday In eastTO MEEJ' TONlGHl'
the U.S. Navy, spent the hotiday westdlnlngroomat7 :80pm.Afllm
A
meeting
on establishing a teen
weellend bere with hla parent.s, Mr. s1r1p will be shown. All memben
recreation
center
In Rutland will be
and Mn . Kenneth McLaugblln. The • urged to attend.
held at 7:30 pro. tonight (Tuesday)
family received telephone calli from ··
Mr. and MrB . Gary Q)oke, now
SALE
.
at the Rutland American Legion
The Pl'O at Lll!art
aponhall.
residing at Gazebo Apt. 3104, :mo
Univeratty Boulevard, North, . .tli1t a bUer-,ale~1181
, l)e.,. 1,/.~
JacUoovl)le, Jl1a., 32211, apil.tnm . lltl:.lla
~Will •¥diD
Mr. and.
u ..... ~
fd •'.. 'fl)lAt
·or the • cine
.Rome~ .•
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•

PROJECT- The

members ol the Southeastern Cadette Girl Scout Troop
1180 bas taken on as a community service project
beautification of the Jaycee Mini-Park located bet·
ween Nye and Butternut Ave . in Pomeroy. Tbe girlB
will keep tbe tennis courts clean, debris off the
growtds, and the grass cut during the next year. Tbe

• r. •• , _ _,..,
.

. ,. .

work at the park began Friday and here is just a small
p!lrt rA the jwtk which the scouts put into a pile to be
hauled away. Working on tbe project were, left to right,
front, Melinda Mankins, Lori Hudson, Susan Jett,
Shari C»gar, Tamra Clark, Lisa Ashley, Tanuny
Capehart, and Pam Reibel, and back, Carolyn Casto,
Kathy Parker, Patty Capehart, leader, and Brenda
White.

Awards presented by Grange
Several awards were presented at
the recent Meigs C»unty Grange offleers ' meeting held at the Rock Spr ings hall.
Mendal Jordan, deputy master ,
and Elizabeth Jordan, matron ,
presided at the meeting attended by
approximately 40 officers .
Secretarial award&amp; were presented
to Hemlock, Rock Springs, Ohio
Valley, Haclne, Colmnbia and Star.
Mrs. Jordan gave tbe CW A
awarda to Hemlock, Racine, liarrlaonvllle, Ollumbia, Rock Springs ,
Slar,andOhlo Valley. National community awards went to Hemlock and

Rock Springs granges.
Mrs . Jordaft reviewed the
numerous contests to be held during
the coming year . The state
legislative meeting was announced
for Jan. 26in C»lumbus
'l1le cowtty-wide project was
discussed and it was resolved that
tbe granges will extend an effort to
help volunteer fire departments in
thecowtty.
Pauline Atkins reviewed the contests available for the lecturers .
Refreshments of cider and donuts
were served following the meeting.

Thanksgiving dinner held
A 'lbanbgiving dinner was held at
the home of Mn. Evelyn Smith last
Tuesday evening by the Evangeline
Millalonary Society of the Pomeroy
Olurch of Olrlst.
Mrs . Betty Spencer opened the
meeting with Neil Proudfoot the
pastor, reading Psalms 100. Trudy
Andrews had prayer and reports
were given by LaDonna Clark,
secretary and flower fwtd , and Mrs.
Eileen Bowen, mother-daughter
banquet fwtd and treasurer's report .
Pauline Kennedy gave a reading
" My Task" by Maude Louise Ray .
Mrs. Bowers read "Thank God for
Uttle Things " by Helen Stetner

Rice.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Oark who read several scriptures
on Thanksgiving . A report on the
sunshine boxes was given by Naomi
Ohlinger . Janet Venoy reported on
missionaries in Japan , and Mrs.
Bowers thanked those who sent
cards and the Ideal Magazine while
she was hospitalized.
Plans were completed for the
Cl1ristmas party and meeting to be
beld at the home of Betty Spencer.
Tbere will be an exchanged ex·
change of gifts . Others attending
were Gertie Bass and Eva Dessauer .

Now
you
•

can Insure your
home and car

with
I extra-value polic}t
It ·, rl!lled PeP- Personal Cnmprd1ens1ve Protection
It 's the e.lra-volue insurance that provides protection for
your horne and car in one conventent poli cy.
Sq.wat~ poliCJes often mean separate dollar amounts

of proteclion for your car. your home and its conlents.
Wilh PCP you gt'l one amounl of property protection
for your home and II! contents. Plus one amount of liability prol&lt;elion for your car and home. Dwelling losses
paid at replacement cosl with no depreciation. And
there's aulomatic inflation protection as wdl as a 5-year
renewal guarantee. You can even include hospital mdemnity
coverage. disability income and mortgage life insurance.
are

PCP: another !IXJ&lt;l idea from The
Cootinental lnsl6ance Companies.
Come S« u. and we'll hdp you
arrange the plan 1hat 's fUSI righl for

your insurance needs.
f

•

REUTER-8ROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE

· ,214I. MAIN

•. · . ~MEROY,O.

.

-

�9- The Oailv Sentinel , Middleport-Pom eroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Nov . Z1 ' 1979

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . Zl, 1979

Television
Viewing

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
DUXEE
Not ices

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

I

O P E NIN G NOV E MB E R
30, Log Cab in Gift Shop
Located 2 m ile s north of
C he s ter
on
Rt . 7 .

Wordltr Under
Cbars~

Cub

l doy
2d.lyl
3da)'l
ldo)'l

1.00

l.Z

l .~

1.10

1.10

1~

s.oo

s. ~

Mobile Hlme Mit~~ and Yard
M1ea are accepted arUy with
cuh with order. ~ cent cbar1Je
for ada ~ Bot. Nwnber In

Can of The Senlinel.

1bl! Publi...s.tll'!r l"f!3erVes the
rtg.ht to edit or reject any ~
deemed obJectiona l.
The
P\lbliaher trW not be rapooslble
for man: than one incorrect in·

oertloo.
Phone 992-21:iS

" Homemade ITem s sold in
Hom emade
At·
a
mosphere. ''

no

t r espnssi ng on m y propert y
i n Olive Township . F . M.
M yers.

P OO L P LAYE RS. ME E T
WILL IE MO SCONI. Sat ..
Dec . 1st at Harry 's Cycl e
and Bill iards. 1486 Hebron
Rd ., Newark, OH . 522-5235 .
He w i l give J f r ee
exhib i tion shows 12 noon,
3:00, 5:00 p m . Between
shows , he w i ll answer you r
Dec .

1st

at

BAZAAR FOR Rutland
E M S Nov . 30, Dec . 1. Start
9 a .m . Bake Sale on Satur ·

d ay in th e Rutland EMS

P.M

1M day bef ore pu blicatloo

Lost and Found
LOST : RED tick coon dog

Fnday alt.emuoo

in

Letart ,

Apple

G ro ve

area Ca ll 247 ·2629 af te r •
p .m .

card of Thanks
TH E

SYR AC U SE

E mer gene v Squad woul d
l i ke to ex t end si ncer e
th anks to the anonymous
person who donated the $50
to th squad f und lt wa s
g re ~fl y appr eci ated .

Notices
M E I GS
CO UNT Y
HUMANE SOCIETY &lt;m

FO UND IN Rut land area
Fu zzv black and white
mixed br eed puppi es,
b r o wn c ol o r
Huml!ne
Society , 992 ·6260.

GU N S HO O T EV ERY
SUNDA Y 1 PM FACT OR Y
CHOKE ON LY . RAC INE
G UN CLUB .
HUN T IN G,
no
trespassing with no ex
ceptions on my pr oper ty .
NO

J udy McGraw Se ll .
GU N
SHOOT .
Ra ci ne
Volunteer
F i re
D e pt
E very Saturday . 6 :JO p .m .
At the ir buildi ng in Basha n.
F acTor y cnoke guns only .

Pek i nese 7 mo. old .
c olor , with b l ack on
Blac k color . 118
St .. Pomeroy area .
.

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles ma• .
diameter 10" on largest
e nd . .S1 2 p -er ton . Bundled

trespassing day or night on
the Charles 't'osT and Ivan
Well fo"Jrms

GET TODAY ' S MAR KET
VALUE FOR YOUR GO LD
OR SILV ER . CONTACT
ED BURKETT BARBER
S HOP . MIDDLEPORT ,
OH .
HAVE

YOUR

tr o ph y

mounted .
Bir c hf ie ld ' s
Ta xidermy on 12A, e ast ot

NEW

LOCA T IONS

f or

Gene Harri s and Friends at
the Eagl es in Ga llipolis
every Fr iday , Sa turday
and Sunda v .
DEER HE A DS moun ted .
Perry Kennedy , 7,.2-ml .

197A Chevrolet '1:1 ton
Cheyenne truck . 10 1h foot
sel f -contained truck cam ·

nome i n Rac ine area .

5858.

m-

C UTLASS

260 V 8. SJ900 . 992 ·6651 or
367 ·0272 .
197A HONDA Civi c, new
paint, new tires and muf ·
fler . Runs good. 30 mpg
or 7,.2 ·2201 after 5 p .m .

19 7 2

condition . Call m -7706 .

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies . Ru1h Reeves . 61,.-

698 -3290 .

Bordino

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
Care prOducts . western

Sf5 .50 .
Kennel .

Bot!l rdino . Call367 -0292 .

P OODL E GROOMING .
Judy Taylor . 61067 -7220
H ILLCREST

KENNELS .

Station

wagon , 605 W . Ml!li n St ..
Pomeroy , OH .

appearances Those with rflal
depth are the ones wtth wtlo m
you "ll find lasting happmess

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

TAURUS (April 2IHiay 20) YOY
can benefit now through something of a sect""etlve naturfl. Take

Nuuwnba21,1171

2nd . Midd le port , OH
3161

992

ANT IQUE POCKET wa t ·
c h~ .

Wi ll i n g to pay top
dollar . Call 1· 592 ·2973
evening s.

WANTED :

HOMEMADE

gifts tak en on Consignment

fo r gift s hop . Call 985 ·(317,
985 4123. or 985·3951.
BUY I NG US SI LV ER coins
196.A or before .
Pa yin g top pr ice
( .!Ill
Brown 's, W2 5 113

O LD COIN S, poc ket wal
ches, c ii'IS S rings , wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J . A Wam sley,
J.C2 233 1. Tr easure Chest
Coi n Shop , Athens , OH . 592
6462 .

Yoo will lind your Mil lnvotved
this coming year w!th persons
who wm be In your corner au the
way . Several exceUenl friendShips witt be estabUihed beCause
o1 your outgoing atlllude .

8AGIT1 AAIUS (..... :13-0.C. 21)

II

whal you have that
lmpriiSiel others today , ao dorn
try to be anything you 're not lf s
your friendliness and warmtfl
thai draw people to yoo Find out
more ot what lies ahead lor you
in the romance departmenl In
the year !~lowing you r birthday
by sending lOt your copy of
Ast ro-Graph Letter Mall S 1 IOf
each to Astro-Graph , Box -489 ,
Radto City S tation . N .Y 10019
Be sure to sptK:ify binh ctete
isn ' t

CAPRICORN (DK. 22-Jen. 11)
Y oo may not th1nk anyb ody
cares about you . but you 're In lor
a b ig surprise when !IOflleone to
whom you ·ve beer! kind comes
through in a b.g way.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11)
Da y dream1n ~ IS for
child ren
Your hopes . when bal&amp;&lt;l o n real Ity, will m anifest themselves
QUICk ly the minute you set to
w ork on lhftm

PISCES

(feb.

20-Mwetl

201

Ig nore super1 tclal per sona who
place imp o rtan ce o nl y o n

Sports

World
By Will Grimsley
Forty -two years a go they called it
Henry Frnka's " settin' hen " play
llfld it figured in ending a Southern
'football dynasty and deciding th e
team in the 1938 RDse Bowl.
The Nebraska Comhuskers pulled
it out of a musty magician's top hat
'a gainst Oklahoma Saturday . It
didn't win the game but it
hoodwinked
the
Sooners
momentarily , dazzled a Norman,
Okla., crowd of 71,187 and mystified
millions of television viewers ,
including ABC-TV commentator
Frank Broyles, former Arkansas
coach .
Here's what happened :
Trailing 7-17 in the fourth quarter
and drivin g, the Comhuskers bad a
th ird down and 14 yards to go on the
Sooner 15, desperately in need of a
·score. The center gave the ball to
quarterback Jeff Quinn, who faked
1o a running back and then stuck the
ball on the ground beneath his feet.

black and tan coonhounds.
All hunting equipment,
plus dog houses. Reason for
sel li ng , ill hea lth Contact
John Anderson , R.T . J,
Pomeroy . 992 -7096 or 992·

7038 .
1~7..

1600 L oadster 2 ton

ELECTROLUX
1979
sweeper , 3 months old . Ruo
shampooer and all at ·
ta chments . $400. Judy , 9925007 .

As the fak e play swept wide, right
gua rd Randy Schleusner picked up
the unnoti c ed ball and ran
unmol e sted to a touchdown.
The same play had been tried
e arlie r with right guard John
Hllvekost , gaining 11 yards.
" The craziest thing l ever saw ,"
Broy les
s c reamed
into
the
microphme. " II was the old hidden
ball trick. 1 think it's the same one
Henry Fmka used years ago with
1anderbilt to knock Alabama out of
he RDse Bowl. "
' Broyles was almost right.
It was the middle of the season in
1937 when tojH"anked Louisiana
State, in vaded Nashville , TeM ., for
a h eadline g ame against Vanderbilt,
also undefeated. Top sports writer s,
Grantland
Rice
and Henry
McLemore, flew in from the East .
In the second sequence of downs,
hocus pocus. The ball was snapped .
An appare nt handoff, then all the

Sales Rep.

Sunalns

afTer s p .m . weeKen&lt;R
after 12 noon .
11 · 19· 1 m o .

Main 51 .

Phone 949-2118 eveings

IJ

CAPI'AJN EASY

......

Featuring : rnen •s &amp;
women 's styling,
ms.
Call l8r appt. or W81k ln .

- SR:I61TTE 13,4RDOT?!

THAT FRENCH F IWM P ~~ WHO
DOES SHE: TH ifiJ I&lt; 5 HE IS-

TRYING T'VAMP DADDY
WI TH THAT AR TI S T'S
MOOEI. ROUTI NE :

LOOK.,
KID DO! YOU R
FATHER'.? OLD

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
eStorm Doors
e Storm Window:.
• Replacement Win .
dows

TRAILER SALIS
J7llGMonte.me,-,. Rd .
L•I'IIIIIVIIIe. Oflio
614 ·6f• ·•UJ E v ~invs
1 Mol el E• • t of Wiiktt vUie

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

SU PIE~
GOOH
HOC K
TRA I LE R NOW AVA ILAB L E
4 \ I

10191mo.

KN OW WH -

Print answerhere

I

ADD ONS &amp;

REMODELING
Gutter
work, down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
•nd
drieways .

i

CLDS6 lll/ti WIIJDON,
~BODVJ

S1TTIIJ0 OfJ Tfle%-

D''fA.

I

F)Iff~ SO lf1Ei'l

~~---""~'

V. C. YOUNGIll

Hours 9·1 M. , W.. F .
Other Hmes by oppolnt ·
ment.

107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy , 0 .

RACINE, 0 .
949·2741 or
992· 7314
11 · 1 ( Pd .)
Giveaway
PART BLACK Labrador
puppy , 5 mo . Good with
children . 991 ·3618 .
28 MO . OL D pup par t Ir ish
Setter
an d
go lden
retriever . Had shots . 992 ·

FOU~D

S &amp; G Carpet Cleanlno .

WILL HAUL limeslone and

Steam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reaso nabl e
rates . Scotchguard . 992·

gravel. Also, lime haullnQ
and 5.preading . Leo MOrris

Call 949·2686 .

4600

Excellent condition .

Asking $200 . Call 992-6362 .
GLASS FIREPLACE doors
Ask ing $100. Ca ll 992 -7866.
CENTRAL

VIRGO (Aug. :13-hpl. 22) An

7126 .

ts . '1'12 ·2560 or see at 1262
Powell Sl. , Middleport
ON E LOT men 's dre!.s
shOes, $5 pr . No exchanges,

GERMAN

SHEPHERD ,

female . Black l!lnd tan .
Female I rish Setter , red ,
less than year old , wormed ,
shots . Young terrier , blond
and white male . Medium
size collie tvpe. mate,
brown
and
white .
Shepherd , female , black
and tan . Black and white
·mixed breed pup, shots and
wormed . Two orey tiger
cats , 1 white, 1 yellow kit ·
tens. medium orev and
wnite female , black with

yellow. tabby male . 1 black
and white , 1 black tabby
with
white .
Humane

Society . '192 ·6260.

COAL ,

Real Estate for Sale

SMAll GELD ING horse . 51
in . tall 8 yrs . old . Sadd le
and bridle . S200. Kelly
Hawk , Hemlock Grove .
'1'12-7015 •Her 5 p.m .

NEW HAVEN brick home .
304·882·2297 or 61H•9·2682
after 6p .m .
SIX ROOM house and bath .
Corner lot on Mil!lin St . In

Rutland . 95 toot frontage

FOR SALE
1 Used Homelite
Saw $90.00
1 good used 16 cu .
It . Frigidaire
Freezer
On l v 5115

POM EROY
LANDMARK

~

--

Jock W. Carsey
Mgr .
Phone 992-2181

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .,
7 pm . Hartford Community
Center , Hartford, WV , A
miles above Pomeroy ·
Mason Bridge .

Services Offered
WILL CARE for the elder ly
i n our home . H!ve vac an ·
c y . Trained and e x ·
perlenc ed . 997-731-4.
I WILL 00 babysitti ng i n
my
home
Mon . Fri .

(Days ). Phone992-2772 .
Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN Ux6.l 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 w ith ex
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12X60 3 bdr .
1973 Skyl ine 12 x 5S 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanu 12XS2. 2bedr .
B I. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
wv 304-675·.U24.
1973 1o70 VINDALE 7xt4
expandO, 2 bedr ., 134 acre
r url!l water , septic tank ,
central heat and A .C. Car
peted . Pr iced r easonably .
EKcel lent condlfion . 61-4·

742 2182 .
1973 FREEDOM MOBILE
home. $4200. 12xSO. 949-2049
after 5:30.

out of water . Will sell with
furniture or without fur
nifure . Phone 7.-2·2063

TUN ING ,

Lane

Dan iel s. N ew phone nvm ·

ber, 742 ·2951 .
schools

and

~rvl c e

home

to

since

196.1

Real Estate for Sale
F INANCING -VA ·FHA LO ·
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REF I NANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE , ATHENS .
6145923051.

COMMERCIAL BUILDIN
G on 132 It . lot at 1600 Nye
Ave ., Pomeroyd , OH . Will
finan ce il!lt 9 Pet to reliab lt
couple . No r e!!!lfOrs .

m

5786 .

HOUSE FOR SALE behi nd
Jones Boys . SSSOO . Call 304·
273·5019 . Sharon Stark .
NEW HOME . 3 bedroom ,
2112 barns, r ec. room wlttt
firep l ace , large de c k ,
basement and garage 1
acre lo1 . Call 992 -3.tS.4 . If no
answer, call 992 ·S455 .

cond i tiOn ,

basement ,

level
lot .
JUST
SlUOO.OO .
NEW LISTING
Apartment with Iaroe
garage

below,

rented

and In 000&lt;1 condition .
$13 ,500.00. ( Ideal for c ar
repair busi ness) .

NEW LISTING - New
ronch style (brick).
almost 1 ac re , beautiful
living room with brick
walls, equipped kitchen ,
3 bedroom s, 2 baths ,
s 1orag e
garage ,

building ,
c lo se
in .

S37,500.00 .
NEW LISTING - In the
covntry lovely stone 11f2
story home . l lJ2 acr~.

equipped
kitchen ,
washer &amp; dryer , ba&amp;·
ment . 3 B. R . SJO.ooo.oo.
BEWARE OF OVER
PRICED
PROPER ·
TIES , PLEASE ALLOW
OUR
FRIENDLY
FULL TIME STAFF TO
HELP YOU WHEN
BUYING OR SELLING .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.

992-6191
Henry E . Clel•nd, Sr .
"2· 2lS.

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Donlo Turner
742· 2474
Joan Russell 949·2660
OFFICE 992·2259

North

East

Pa.s!&lt;oi

2•

Pass

South
I NT
2•

Pass

Pass

4+

nwe

" Th en I cashed du mmy's
last tw o t ru mps. Eas t ha d to
d1sca rd a dia m o nd on the las t
tr ump to hold t he ace an d
t r icks m and ma de th e las t
three wi th ac e-k ing and deure
of d ia monds.· ·

Openmg lead + 4

A beautiful p lay 10deed He
rould not have made th e hand
1f he ha d Si mpl y di scar d ed on

By Oswald Jac ob y
and Alan Sonta g

service ,

N_e w York r ecen t l y and asked
h1m for a hand H er e It is in
his o wn words .

EX CAVATING ,

''The game was rub ber
bridge and I opene d a fi ftee npoint notrump My par1n er
used Stay man. I s howed m y

loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo·boys
tor hire, will havl fill dirt ,
top soil. limestone and

spa des and he

IN ·
c an
yo ur

' •. J1

; Wes t

FISH

POND

P h yl l iS

attac/1. '

I

\

'------\r()a

.l'l ')

r

~ .... .

/'. ;;\~ '

IN STOCK for i mmediatt
delivery : various sizes of
pool k its . Do It yourself or
let vs Install for you . 0 .
Bumgardner Sales , Inc.
992·5724 ,

WINNIE

from the le)(aco Station In
Syra ucse . 992 · 3 7~ or 99'2·

3752.

• 50 '&gt;OUYE GONE
INID E'lU51NE55
FOR )OU RSELF,
EH , DAD?

DAD. I VE BEEN TAL"\ ''J:3

'YOU M::A'. FOR

10 WEN71. ARE,' H YOBE ING A :.ITJl_E TOO
I?OUG'-l ON HER ?

7A7 :: "\'CCV\ iOU VE

ASKING rlER "TC
- v:: A"T HOME
Ac.J:J '&lt;::EP
ZESPEC-:"Ao c:;

M

rlOL.:'&lt;S

?

55ED SEE "0 .J5

Gr?.OW LP A'- 7;:: -L ..
)U~

A"J AI\I;:U L -0~
HAS NAPPE '!::S
NH IL!:' YOU V'vERE
AWAY.

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters , ir on5 , all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
Next 1o State Highway

_, -l32S
S.~ond

Walt'

Keep 40ur seat,
Ciener aI' I' II ta /I.e
care of mop-up
operations '

992·21(3 .

E L WOOD
R EPA I R

216 E .

Ever4 detail must be
You plan Christmas There are 'M:lrked out 1n advance 1
shoppinq li ke 1t was certa in
Lists, prices, routes of
s' mtlarittes.
a war,

operator ·s I icense ? Phone

A&amp;H Upholstering, across

StrMt

-

Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825 .

Well

stocked on 11 / 3 acres
and 12)(50 mobile home

on St. Rt . Ask ing just
$12,000.
BUS INESS - All stock ,
equipment &amp; building
wi t h J bMiroom apart ·
ment and e)(tr a level lot .

sao.ooo.

t y wat« and carpeting .

$.(5,000.
RT . 124 acre spot
tr~

Beautiful 2
with Iaroe
and picnic area . 7

room family home, nat .
gas
furna c e , rural
water ,
c arpet i ng ,
fireplace, nice kitchen

ana 1 car garage .
s.o.ooo.
NEW LISTING 4A
acr e s
In
Rutland
Township . Located at

the old gun c lub .
BUILDING LOTS - In
many locations . Call
992·332501' 992-3876.

Housmg '
Headquarters

' Eas t ha d hel d ju s t tw o c lubs
so he le d a ihlfd cl u b
11a;,;,.I~J1 1
anerauortll
II Recording
40 Olfactory
material
sensation
12 Laundry
DOWN
worker
I Stir the c oals
13 Plzzeria
2 Safe place
fixture
3 Admit ;
It Highlander's
be lia ble
fa bric
4 Sk in
IS Rosewall
nwsance
of tennis
5 F elt for
16 Boli vian export 6 Oil-ric h
17 Old note
na t10n
18 Main course
7 And not
20 Wayne' s
8 Occur to
"True - "
9 Practical
21 Has tened
person
22 Kennedy

matriarch

:U Golf score

(Do you have a Quesft on tor
the eKp erts? Wnre ··Ask the
Experts. · · care o f lh1s ne wspaper Ind ividual questmns w111
be ans wered 1f accompan1ed
by s tamped . self-addressed
envel opes Th e most ln rerest mg quest1ons will DB used m
this column and will rece1 11e
cop1es of JA COBY MO•Ot'R/1. ,

10 Bedecked
16 On the
links
needs
19 Gone
aloft
20 Somber
Z3 Admired

Z5 Tippler
!6 Lurc h
!9 It tak es
two to
30 Snake
3Z Englis h
35 D rop
m pri ce
36 " 0 Sole

woman
24 Enthusias tic

review

h-::-+- +--+-+--+-

tmpai r ed

II

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

We ll cover new or u sed
mo btle h omes. You can
even get sea.~nal . n:n taJ
or co mm~rdaJ insuranc·r
coverages.
We "rf" h e re when yuu ner(f
U !-1 fur mob ile horne i n

s u mnce. Come to th1· pn 1
fessi onals for the !&gt;lH"cid!
policy to fit yuur spt·nt 1(

needs .

'

DOWNING -CHILD S
Pllone "2·1341

.0

how

to work it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One lette r s imply el and• f or another. In t his sample A la
used f or the three L 's, X for lhe lwo O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the le ngth and formation of the words are all
hints . E ac h day the cod e l ett er s are dift'erent.

mobile h om e Lhat rnf"ets
yu ur specific ru~·t•th . Now
get the in surance t u
matc h.

CRYPTOQUOTES

15 THERE MUCH CALL
FORSMUI76ED CIRCLE S?

D QY

MQLY Z

YUUSUA
DQY

LA

M H JAY

sz

D S

z s J w0

E Y

F U YX J OLM Y A

Q J PH W
L W

F L MG YO

JF
LW
MQLKOQSSO . - OYAMHUDYA
Yest..rday 's Cryptoquote: A SINGLE THOUGHT IN THE
MORNING MAY FILL OUR WHOLE DAY WITH JOY AND
SUNSHINE,
OR
GLOOM
AND
DEPRESSION. PARAMANDANDA
&lt;l) " " K l"9 FeaturH

a.

Shirley 6,13 ; Price I• Rlghl 8,19 .
11: 30- Wheel of Fortune 3 , 15;
Family Feud 6, 13 ; SOS&lt;tme St .
20.33 : 11 5&gt;-News 17.
12 00- New scenter

3:

News

6.8. 10. 13 : Mind readers 15; Love
Amer ican Style 17.

12 30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Search lor
Tomor r ow 8, 10 ; Health Fiel d 15 ;

Movi e " A F ine Madness" 17 :
E lee. Co. 20,33 .
· 00-Da ys of Our Lives 3, 15 ; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8. 10.
:30-As The World Turns 8. 10.
2:00-Doclor s 3, 15 ; One Life to

Syndlule, Inc .

Lighl 8. 10; G;gg lesnort Hotel 17 .
J DO-Gene ral Hosp it al 6, 13; I Love

Lucy 17: Connecti ons 20; About
Thinkabout 33 .
J 3Q--One Dl!ly at a Tim e 8; Joker' s

4

n v er

37 Un-

You ·~spcn t a lol ofl i rn ~
an d mo ney pi c kin'( out

Andy Griff ith 6; 10 :5&gt;-CBS
New s 8; House Call 10.

Yesterday 's Allswer

36 Object to

lo

S20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew! 8,10;

Live 6, 13; 2 · 2S--News 17 .
1 )!}- Anot her World 3, 15 ; Guid ing

1-c=-+-+ -

Insurance.

Movie

11 : QO-H igh Rollers 3,15 ; Laverne

1:-:-+-1-+--

For Mobllr Home

13;

10 30- Holl ywood Squares 3.15 ;

SUi t.

pns one r
24 Bombas t
25 Ve nerable
or Adam
!6 Grotto
27 F'errous
28 Zoroastrian 's
bible
31 Scary
sound
3% - you
kidding ?
the hatter

PLAY BALL SO MEWHARS ELSE
AFORE YE
BUST A ---

old 9 room home l!lnd

lots of good outbuldlngs .
Asking
RIVERFRONT
Modern brick with 2 car
garage, 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths. and &lt; lots . Cl

to

won and d ec 1ded that

Z3 Spandau

Morning Magazine
" Crosscurrent" 17.

but North a nd South h"d fo und
lhe 5- 4 spad e fi t and can ·t be
bl ~ m ed for pl ay ing in t hat

33 Like

JUGHAIO !! YO U YOUNG- UNS

Only $27.500.
22 ACRES - Woods,
brush and wild grapes .
A·FRAME special. Only
59.500.
10 ACRES - In Chester
Township at Flatwoods .
About •;, fenced , good

me

cl ubs . Las t too k his ace of
1 clubs and returned the deuee

5132 .

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been
celled?
Lost

took

ga m e. West le d th e four of

grovel . Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 991-7089,
night phone 9'12 ·3525 or 992

8: 30- Romper Room 17.

9 :00-Bob Braun 3 : Big Valley 6;
Por ky Pig 8; One Day at a Time
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15 ; Lucy
Show 17 .
9 :30-Bob Newhart 8; Lo110 of Life
10: Green Acres 17.
IO:oo--card Sharks 3,15 ; Edge of
Nigh! 6: Beat the Clock 8, 10;

th ree notrump was a wra p up:

Davt d Berah or Ca racas lS
a n o ld fr ie nd . We sa w ht m in

dozer ,

Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
8 : oo--capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St . 33 .

the Jack of c lubs Of course

Author ized Singer Sales
and Servi ce . We ~arpen
Scissors .

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E x cavating ,
S&lt; p II C
systems, dozer , backhoe .
Rt . 1(3 Phone I (614 ) 6911
7331 or 742 ·2593 .

E ve rybody 's Business 33; 7 : ss-

queen of hearts. I had seven

T'J

MA C HINE
all
makes.
992 2284 . The
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Repairs.

Complete Service . Phone
9A9·2-487 or 9,.9 ·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crlt1 Bradford .

LISTING

$40,000.00 .
NEW LISTING - Great
location in Middleport,
nice 2 bedroom In good

II· If·

~------

608 E .
MAIN _
_ .
POME"Q.Y, 0.
Beautiful 2 story home
with river v iew, full
usabl e b2tsemen t . 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
central air cond ., level
lot , many new features .

Wes t

Pass
Pass

bl!lsements , ponds, brush ,
timber, lend clearing .
Charles Bvtcher . 7.t2 ·l940

BRADFORD , Auctioneer ,

NEW

Vulne rable Eas t-Wesl
Dea le r So uth

DOZER , END Loader ,
bru s h hog . Wi 11 do

delivered

iocltlly , SJ9 per ton . 992 ·

or M..ll.l'S A~Y-·

S EWING

PIANO

LARGE LOT on dead end

Midd leport .

• 9 8 6]

+ A 10 8 2

. .1 108
t A K Q2
+ Q9

WH i l.f. IN A CITY

M cClanahan .

st reet with water and
sewaoe . Will financ e to
rel iable couple at 9 Pet .
992·5786 . No realtors .

no refunds . Blli ley 's Store,

LUMP

for Darrell

" A&lt;JH2

SOl iTH
• QJ 7 2

sand ·

blasting . Fril!'f! es1imates .

EAST
-·

ORPHAN ANNIE

6309or 742 2348 .
PROPER INSULAT ION Is

..

• 10 7 4
+ K 7&gt; 4

Truck ing Phone 742 ·1ol.55 .
AND

" I would have le t du m my 's
Jack win, but I ruffed my ow n
t rick I had note d a look of diS· WEDNESDAY,NOV EMBER 21,1979
gust on East" s face wh en th e 5:45-F arm Report 13 ; 5 :5()-PTL
c lu b was led back and decide d
Club 13.
that East was s itt ing with
6 00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club lS;
bo th the ace and quee n or
Health F ield 10; 6: 11}-..Wo.-ld at
hearts I wanted t wo disca rd s
La rge 17.
of hea rts .a nd plann ed to take 6 30-C hrlstopher Closeup 10; News
t hem un du mm y ·s l ong
17; 6:4&gt;-Mornlng Report 3;
trumps
6 .50- Good
Morning
West
" 1 led my que en of s pades
Virginia 13 ; 6:5&gt;-News 13.
a nd let 1t rid e afte r W e~ t 7:00-Today 3, 15 ; Good Morni ng
duc ked. He th en r ove r ed mv
America 6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Jack of trum ps With hi s king
Morning 8; Batman 10; Three
a nd 1 had lo pl "Y a dia mond !o
Stooges · Liltle Rascals 17.
m y queen to ge t back to my 7 : 15- A .M Weather 33 ; 7 : 30hand to fmesse aga mst Wes t's
Fam il y
Altair
10;
It's

lt -27

NO RTit

""~

"11HE ·-·HOW ANNIE
HElPED TO FIHD IT·-

News 15.
17 ;
1 :40- NBA
: 35- News
Basketball 17 ; 2:31}-..News 13;
4:11}-..Movle " Ten Million Dollar
Grab" 17.

Opponent's face cures win

WEST

il-IOUSANDS

6, 13; 12 : 4()--Movie " The Baby

Maker " 8; 1 :oo- Tomorrow 3;

+ K 91J

A~~DA~O~ ~Y,

7:00-3's A Crowd 3; T ic Tac Dough
8; Pulse 6; News 10: N.,..,.lywed
Game 13: Love American Style
15: Sanford &amp; Son 17~ Dick
Ca ve tt 20,33.
: 30- Hollfwood
S qua~ee
3:
Newlywed Game 6; Joker'l Wild
8: Hollywood squares 10; -.a Na
Na 13; TV Honor Society 15; All
•n the Family 17; Mac~eii ­
Le hrer Report 20,33 .
8 00-Mi sadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3,1 5: Happy Days 6, 13; Bugs
Bunny 8, 10 ; Live from lhe Met
10,33 ; Rat Patrol 17 .
,
8 31}-..Angle 6, 13; Fat Albert 8, 10;
NBA Basketball 17.
9 :00-Movle " Beggarman, Thief"
3, 15 : T~ree' s Company 6, 13;
Movie " High Midnight" 8, 10;
9 :31}-..Ta • l 6,13.
10 :00-Hart lo Harl 6.13; 11 :00News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; Last of the
Wild 17.
11 : 15- News 20 ; 11 : 30-Tonlg~t
3, 15 ; Barney Miller 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " Father Goose" 10; Movie
" Road to Rio" 17 .
,2 05- Movle " Adam ' s Woman"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

HI&lt;;

tJIC.He: ...
\4B''7 A

4 JO·tfo..

Call

TEAPOT

R,.w:I.A Nnf"Wnllotl N J 07 6.48 lndud• wnl"

+ A 1086 5
"K 9 7
tJ 5
+J 63

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

PAINTING

FEEBL E

BRIDGE

I'VE:

Roger Hysell
G.age

CALL 992-7544

a sk

TV .

THI ~K.

mile off Rt. 7 by -pa n ; 1
on St . R1 . 11• toward I}
Rutland .
,

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

ENSUE

M 1gh 1 prov1de pro1ect1on a ga~nst an eager
beaver d ove r - A SA F ETY ""BEL T""

Answer

~• •h l•"•'"'•"•,...•
N ov.
27

T uesd ay,

l &lt;i

997 ·3288,

FOR SALE : 19 " RCA color

r:t I :t 1 I I I I 1 ]

I~umb!• ~~No... 13, c on1•1nlng 110puul. ., Ia avlll•ble for $ 1.75poltpald

Roofing, gun..rs, ana
downspouts .
Free
Esttm•tes . All work
guaranteed. 20 years •• perience. C•ll Athens,
cOllect, Gerald Clark
lt7..a57 or Tom Hoskins
797-2745.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . La.ns.

kittens. 6 w ee-k. s old . Ra c ine
area . 949·2668.

miles. S2SO . Coli 992 7603 af
fer 5p .m .

N'ow a rrange the Circled te"ers to
form me surpri se an swer. as sug .
gested by the above ca rtoon

. (Answers tomorrow )

PAPl&gt;RWe:t"'fiT.

FOUR 1400 by 36.5 by 15 "
tires .

F~OM e5ECOMIN~.

-

mo

SHOEING .

Pri x

J

I

C E L. E.5RA'TI NG
MI GHT KEEP A MAN

I I I 1]

ENOWBH TO

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

HORSE

Grand

b

992 -2367
Pomeroy, 0 .
10· 19-1 mo .

TUESOA-Y . NOVEMBER 27.1Y79

WHA"T TOO MUCH
SO WHAT IF l DID I~SULT

HammoncJ Organs
Tyree Blvd . Racine, o.
o'
II
I
o

TO GOOD home : 4 b• by

hel!ltlng and A .C. with due ·

players and officials high-tailed it
wide to the left . The next scene
mowed a Vandy guard , Greer
Ricketson , ambling 60 yards ail
alone to a touchdown .
LSU was stwmed . Vanderbilt won
th e game 7~ . Rice and Mc Lemore
,-ushed into the Vandy locker room .
1 " Give us the dope on !hal rabbil·
out-&lt;&gt;f -the -hat tri c k ? " McLemore
insisted to Vanderbilt Coac h Ray
Morrison .
" Talk to Fmka, it was his baby ,"
said Morrison coyly , pointing to his
assistant coach. Frnka just looked
blank.
Fmka coached high s c hoo l
championship teams at Green ville,
Texas, before joining Morrison at
Vanderbilt.
"We had used !he play at
Greenville - it helped us win the
state title in 1933," Fmka said .
· '()v~r some staff objec tions ,
!Mprrison gave me the green llght to
pjjll it m LSU. "
l.Afterward LSU let out a howl of
lftleSt, saying the ball was dead
since the player's knees bad touched .
the ground. Fmka and friends held
firm to the argument that it was a
fumble and could be advanced .
Later that season, Vanderbilt
tri e d the same play agalnst
Alabama , with a ~ Bowl bid at
stake , and blew it, the Tide winning
9-7 _ " We made the mistake of tryin g
it right in frmt of !he Alabama
bench," Frnka recalled " Coach
Frank Thomas and hi.s players were
yelling, 'Fake ! Fake! Hidden ball !'
It 's a play you should try every 10
years."

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

Druo .

LENNOX

(Nf:WSPAPf:R f.lol lf. AP JUSE ASS hl 1

Mtck's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
Introduces-

.

PETE SIMPSON
For

3018.

over II . You 'll come out tar ahead
In the long run .
CANCER (.kiM 21-July 22) Hold
your tongue When others are
asking everybody to choose up
aides In an luue del')1ng aolutlon . You'll be the one held In
hlgh esteem for wiNty wetting.
LIE:o 4"ulr 23-Aug. 22) Taking a
llhle ftak ancJ turning the other
cheek pays oft In the long run .
You 'll win on the first ballot when
pala atan voting on who they like

occ ur

•
.

REDUCE SAFE and fasl
with GoBese Tablets &amp; E ·

greedy, don 't wute lime trolling

your loyalties 169 Once you get
your emoHons In order . you "II
know which ftag to tty
LIBRA ·(Sept. 23--0ct. 23) Allow
reasoning to overrule hurt leetJngs and you"ll quiCkly discover
there Is no cause tor discomfort
The motive behind the act1on will
JU SIIt) the behavior
&amp;COflPIO (Oct. ....No•. :12)
Instead of blaming o thers tor
financial probloems Ieven It you "re
right). concentrate your efforts
o n w a ys t o add to yo ur
resour ces . Something good can

PIANOS
Great Christm•s Gift
Both New &amp; Used

c heaper than heating oi l.
Take advantage of a good
investme-nt. Call 992·3288
for more i nformation .

and b l ack fi nish p lus
tubular gra1e with blower.

out_.de Influence might at lira!
create a dltemma as to wher e

•

.......

Yeslerday s I Jumbles M ANLY

(FREE ESTIMATE!

care. hOW8YIW , that you don·l
betray a confidence wtth which
you're entruated .
QE- (lllor 21-Juno 20) If
yoo ·re Involved In sometl'11ng
Where another appears to be too

...,

&amp; Famous N•me Brand

SR

vap " water pil ls" . Nel son

Payment upon delivery to
our yard , 7: 30 to 3 : 30 week ·
day s. Bl ane v HardWoods,

NITURE . glass , ch i na ,
anyth ing . See or c al l Ruth
Gosney , antiques , 26 N .

Orchard,

BOSTON TERRIER pups ,
AKC . Shots . Only 2 lett .
$175 . '1'12 ·3905.
bOrder collie types, black
and wh i t e, male an d
female . Humane Society

logs .

FUR

Fitzpatri ck

BOBCAT STYLE loader, 30
h.p . SJ95() . Ditch Witch
trencher , J ·20, 4·wd, w·
trai le r. S-4500 . Call 614ol.57 ·
3139 .

D'.JSTER . New tires, tran s.
and battery . Runs good .

Hammond Oraan•

'

689 .

with 16 fl . van bed. $3800.
992 -6173 . After 5, '192·620&lt;1 .

Othef$.

SAW

APPLE S - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple buller . Call 669 -3785,

Boarding , all breeds . Clean
indoor -outdoor fa c il i ties .
Also
AKC
reg i st er ed
Dobermans . 61A ·.-.U.·779S .

won 't be simply bflcause yoo ·re a
nice guy that you ·n get what you
want today . The main r eason IS
that you make a heck ol a lot or
sen s e . t hflreby con v 1nc mg

WANTED :

7 and 35, Gallipolis, OH .
Phone 446-3670.

GOING OUT of Business · 3
STAR

boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc ., complete
hOU se hOlds . Write M . D .
Mi ller . Rt . ... Pomeroy or

call 992 ·7760

Hearth , Old Time r , Fire
v iew. Suburban
mobile
home wood heaters, U L ap
proved, and Suburban fur ·
na cemasters .
Outdoor
Equipment Sales, J e t . Rts .

Pets for Sale

I CAROK

HOUSE

N Bens, Glassview, Levden

ARIES (-ch 21-April 11) II

FURNITURE ,

3785 .

INSUlATION

;ce

OLD

689
669·

WOOD STOVES by Belter

TO GO TO a happy ho me . 6

MALIBU

State Route
W i lkesvill e,

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

PLYMOUTH

1978

chMd ,
Phone

J&amp;L BLOWN

RISING

OL DS

APPLE S
CIDER
HONEY . Fillpatrl c k Or ·

All types roof work, new
or reprr~ ir gu1ters and
downspouts,
vutter
cleaning and !Niinflng.
All work gu•r•nteed .
Free Estimates
Reason•ble Prices
Call Howar&lt;l
949· 2862
11 ·14· mo.

COAL. lump or
sToker , w i II deliver . 7 A2·
2183.

1978

Salon, 2·door fastback , 2A
m PO w ith .S·sp . overdrive,
std . Trans ., Ral l y suspen ·
sion pac, 2 tone silver with
red
c l oth
i nterior ,
recld inino bucket se21ts ,
A. C., P. B., AM ·FM stereo ,

POWER

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

HOUSE FOR rent . Raci ne
area . Ca ll 992 ·7288 .

per . 985·3839 or 985·3371 .

TociJJy's

host

buy WINPOWER . Call 513
788· 25119.

boots . Chi ldren 's
Adults S29.00.

Pom eroy 992 ·1689 .

da1 ed

Rutland . 614 742 2178 .

992 ·7479 .

1955 PACKARD In running

1969
2 door
Chevelle
Malibu . 1967 LeSabre 4·
door Buick . 1972 LeSabre .

s a le.

EMERGENCY

Me igs Equipment . 992·2176
1976 FORD BRONCO , good
cond ition , JJ,OOO miles,
AM-FM tape, P .S .. P . B.. 4
wheel drive . ~ . After 5
p .m .. 992-2.00or992 -5169 .

FOR

tak i ng order s. W i ll

alternators -own the best ·

INTERNATIONAL

197 5

3891.

Pomeroy . Large lof!. .Cil!lll

heii!IVY duty 'h ton pickup.
35,000 miles. Good cod Ilion .

to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt 2.

ANT I QU E S .

or

1977
THUNDERBIRD ,
P .S., P .B , A.C., radia l
ti res, AM· FM . S3500 . 247 ·
3594.

:~~';":::.;;.-R&gt; _ ,

Excelsior Salt Work s, Inc .,
E . Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 992·

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e
Park, Route 33, north of

s!ab . $10 per ton Delivered

c orn Hollow Gun Clue.
Rutlo"Jnd . Proceeds donated

HUNTING

dows, A.C .• c ruise control.
Ask ing S2500. 742·2008.

food , and all types of salt.

de liver , 742 2056.

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap ts . Phone 992-5434.

I I I

Business Seroices

sa n d , oravel , c a l ci um
ch loride , f er t ilizer , dog

F IREWOOD

991·6260 .

S R 339, Barlow , OH . 678 ·
2980 .

NO

station wagon . Power win ·

For Sale
COAL .
L IMES T ONE ,

Now

For Rent

SJOO . 742 ·2448 .

G UN SHOOT every Sunday
12 :00 . Fac Tory choke only .
to Boy Sc out Troop 249 .

RING NECKED pheasants, roosters and hens . Call
667·3352

new dua l exhaust . 992 ·5896.

$1395 or best otter . 742 ·2211
LOS T :
Cr eam
f ace .
L aurel
992 7®

6260 . Pet s ava ilabl e tor
adoption a nd i nformati on

ser vice .

1976 FORD F ·2SO 4 wd .
Good clean true ~ . Toppers,

53"

10x55 two bedroom mobile

Bu il ding . Homemade craf ts, tov s and Chr istma s
decora t ion s.

s..nday
I P.M.

Auto., P .S., P . B. S6800.
Phone 985-(JJil .

1975 GRAN TOR I NO Ford

H U N TI N G,

Tueoday
thru Frida y
~

topper .

NO

Harry 's Cy cle and Blll i ar ·

Noon oo'"Saturday

PONY . Well broke .
Benn s hown by lillie g ir l.
S400. 949· ~after 5 :30.

fa ctory

1977CUTLASS SUPREME ,
AM -tape deck , cruise con ·
t r o l, tilt wheel . Excellent
cond ition . USOO. 992·5786 .

d s . 1486 He bro n Rd ,
Ne wark , OH . 522 ·5235.

M'l'daY

1979 FORD F -150, 4 wheel
dr i ve ,

NO HUN T IN G da y or n ight
on the f ollow ino f arms :
Ch arl es S. Be ller , Alma
Peterson, Don Stil es, J ay
Stiles. Vi olators w i ll be
prosecuted

Saturday ,

WANT·AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

For Sale

wide tireJ. white whll!'f!I S,

quest ions and sign his
au tograph . Don 't forge t -

NOTICE

Autp Sales

4

Wil d 10; F lints tones 17; Rain ·
bow' s End 33 .
00-Mi ster Cartoon 3: Password
Plu s 15, Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St . 20.33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Real McCoys 13;
Spectreman 17.
30- B e w ltc hed
3;
Petti coat
J unction 8; Tom &amp; Jerry 13;

Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan ' s Is . 17.
5 oo- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8: Mister Rogers' Neighbor ho od 20 ,33; Ma r y Tyler
Moor e 10: My Three Sons 17.
5 3()--Ca r ol Burnett J; News 6;
Gomer Py le 8; E lec . Co . 20;
Mash 10 ; Happy Day s Aga in t3 ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 oo- New s 3,8, 10, 13 , 15; ABC News
6, It 's Everybody' s Business 33:
Carol Burnett 17 ; Zoom 20 .
6 :31}-.. NBC News 3, 15; ABC News13;
Ca rol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17 : Over Ea~20 .
7:00-J's A Crowd 3: Malch Game
PM 6. T ic Tac Dough 8 , News 10;
New l y wed Game 13 ; Love
Ame ri can Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7 3G-Coun1ry Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6; Joker 's Wild 8 : The
J udge 10; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Family
17 , Mac Neil-lehrer Report 20,33.
8 :00-Real People 3,15; Eight Is
E nough 6, 13; Young Maverick
8, 10 ; Great Performances 20,33;
Movi e " Indiscreet " 17.
9 : 00- Diff ' rent Strokes : Heilo,
Larr y 3, 15; Charlie's Angels
6 , 13; Unbroken Circle 8, 10 ;
Gr eat Performances 20,33 .
10 : oo- Best of Saturday Night Live
3.15; Vegas 6. 13; Kenny Rogers
8, 10 ; Upstairs. Downstairs 17;
Ne ws 20; Connections 33.
10 : 30-Best of Groucho 20.
11 · oo-New s 3,6,8 ,10, I 3, 15; Last of
'he Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20 ;
Wodehouse P layhouse 33 .
11 :30-Tonight 3, 15; Love Boat 6. 13;
Blac k Sheep 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Grass Is Greener"
10; Movie " The Bells ot St. ·
Marys" 17 .
12 : 4()--Baretla 6, 13 ; Hawaii F lve-0
8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
2:00-News 17; 2:05-Mov le "Once
Before I Die" 17.
4:0&gt;-Untouchables 17 ; 5:os--Rat
Patrol 17; 5:3&gt;-Love American
Style 17.

�257 perish in air disaster

12 Americans among airliner crash victims

WAHAMA BAND- Even though the Meigs High
School Band could not be in the Middleport Cllristmas
.Jllll'ade, there were several bands taking part. Pic-

lured is the Wahama High School Band moving down
the parade route.

EASTERN BAND-The Eastern High School Band
was the only Meigs County Band on hand for the Mid-

AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP) - An Air New Zealand DC-10 with '/JJ7
persons aboard was miMing on an Antarctic sightseeing flight , and
lliTeckage believed to be that of the missing plane was sighted today on the
slopes of Mount Erebua in Antarctica, airline officials Said.
MO!Tie DaVis, managing director of Air New Zealand, said he received a
message from the U.S. antarctic base at McMurdo Sound, which reported
that a search plane had sighted the wreckage about 2,500 feet up the 12,400foot mountain, which was near the plane's last reported position .
He said U.S. helicopters from McMurdo were on their way to the scene .
The airline said the 237 [l888ell8ers aboard the DC-10 included 4li
foreigners + 12 AmericallB, 24 Japanese, 7 Australians, 2 Britons and a
Canadian. The rest were New Zealanders. They paid f359 for what was supposed to be an II -hour fllghtfrom Auckland to the anlarcti c coast and back .

dleport Olr!stmas Parade Monday night. 'lbe band
a111o took part In Pomeroy's holiday parade on Satur-

day .

Air New Zealand said it understood the jetliner had completed its sightseeing run and was on its way back north to New Zealand when radio conlact
with the plane was lost at 2 p.m. (8 p.m . EST Tuesday J. It was then still over
Antarctica. about 30 or 40 miles from McMurdo .
The loss of radio contact was blamed on sunspot activity and did not cause
immediate concern. But at 8 p.m . the airline announced the plane was an
hour overdue for a refueling stop at Christchurch, on New Zealand 's South
Island .
The airline announced at 10 p.m . (4 a .m . EST) that the plane was lost . It
said its fuel would have been used up half an hour before.
The U.S. Anlarctic base at McMurdo Sound took charge of the search for
the missing plane , and sent up ftve aircraft : two C-l:!ll Hercules, a C-141
Starlifter and two helicopters . An Orion lrom the New Zealand Air force
was searching the ocean south of New Zealand.

The Starlifter was retracing the airliner's route back to New Zealand. It
had been scheduled to fly Sen . Harry F . Byrd Jr . of Virginia over the South
Pole today on a flight commemorating the first flight over the pole on Nov .
28, 1929, by his uncle , the late Adm. Richard E . Byrd. But it could not be learned immediately whether that flight had been made or whether the senator
was aboard the Starlifter for the search .
Air New Zealand said it had never before lost a passenger.
The airline operates the Antarctic sightseeing flights during the Southerh
Hemisphere's swruner, and this was the fourth this season . An official said
the flights had operated for three summers with no mishaps.
Among the crew was a well known New Zealand mountaineer, Peter
Mulgrew, who gave the passengers a commentary on the Antarctic slghta.
He was an associate of Sir Edmund Hillary , one of the first two men to climb
to the top of Mount Everest .

l

!

(USPS 145·960)

VOL XXVIII

NO 159

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28. 1979

Farm Bureau likes Reagan
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

A

group of mostly Republican Ohio
fanners, In a straw vote Tuesday,
Cluistrnas parade Monday night moves along the

KC MARCHING BAND- The Kyger Creek High
School Band , a welcome addition to the Middleport

Rt'laiJ rt'!'t&gt;ipt;; up,
vehi1•Jp rPct&gt;ipts down
Retail sales tax receipts in Meig'
County for October were up, but
sales tax receipts on motor vehicles
were down for the month com.,..red
to last year, according to the report
of State Treasurer Mrs . Gertrude

Donahey.
Retail sales tax receipts for October , 1979, totaled $62,630.24 compared to $59,910.72for October , 1!1ll!.
an increase of 4.33 percent.
Sales tax receipts on motor
vehicles for October. 1!17u9, totaled
$54,453.32 compared to recetpts of
$56,0~-~1 for October, 1978, a
decrease of 2.78 percent .

SERVICESSI..ATED
Pomeroy Olapter 186 OES will
hold Eastern Star service for past
matron Caddie Wickham Thursday
at 7:30p.m . at the Miller's Home for
Fwlerals in Gallipolis .

parade route .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV. 2jj
Claire Burdette , Mrs . Ronald
Campbell and daughter, Jason
j':vans. Artha 'Hornsby, Michael
Miller , Mrs . Dorsey Ohlinger and
daughter , Juanila Saunders, Late
Sinclair. Grady Waugh, Christy
Wiedebac k.
BIRt11S NOV. 2jj
Mr. and Mrs . Danny Missen, son,
Pt . Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Klingensmith , son , Letart; Mr . and
Mrs. Ric hard Hollingshead, son,
Wellston .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Zamorano Bertha,
Shade; Leonard BaM, Syracuse;
Helen Slack, Racine ; Clarence
Spurrier , Pomeroy .
Discharged -Richard DeMoss,
Oara Heines, Roger Brown, Doug
Clelland, Charles Evans, Roy
Boggs.

What you save on bargain shoes is
usually spent on callus removal.

U.S. Compound mined

Area deaths
NINA G. JONES
Nina G. Jones, 88, Letart, died
Monday at Pleasant Valley Nursmg
Care Center.
She was born Jan . 12, 1891 at
Hamlin, W.Va ., a daughter of the
late Rufus Putnam and Elizabeth
florence Curry Jones, and formerly
operated a grocery store at Letart .
Survivors include cousins, Jessie
Bowyer of Charleston, Martha
Curry of Hamlin and Geneva White,
Lesage.
Services will be held Wednesday
at I p.m. at the Asbury United
Methodist Church, of which she was
a longtime member, with the Rev .
William Dawson officiating. Burial
will be in the Evergreen Cemetery .
Friends may call at the Foglesong
funeral Home at Mason from 6 to 9
p.m . today. The body will be taken to
the church one hour prior to services.
MARGARET D. SAYRE
Margaret Darlyne Sayre, 34, 447
Pike St., Kanauga, died Monday in
the Holzer Medical Center.
She was born May 25, 1936, to Otto
and Phyllis Kennedy Mulford, Middleport.
She married Roy Arthur Sayre in
1957. He survives along with the
following children : Jennifer Ellen
Cremellll!, Gallipolis ; Cindy Faye
Sutphin, Cheshire; June Renee
Sayre, at home and a son, Roy Allen,
aLso at home .
She is survived by a brother, Connie Mulford, Pomoroy; and a sister,
Betty Goodall, Middleport.
She was preceded in death by one
brother and sister.
She is aLso survived by one gran -

WE'll
MEND
THE HOLE
IN YOUR
CHRISTMAS
STOCKING

CHRISTMAS PACKAGES- These tiny tots were
done up as Christmas packages to add to the color and

dson.
She was a 1954 graduate of Middleport High School; she was em·
ployed by Gallipolis City Schools as
a bus driver for the past 10 years .
She was a Jehovah '3 Witness and
attended the Kingdom Hall on
Bulaville Rd.
The funeral will be at Warehime
Fwleral Home Thursday at 10 a .m.
The clergy will be Mr . Edger
Harrop. Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cememtery. Cheshire .
Calling hours will be Wednesday
from 2-4 p.m .. and 2-9 p.m . at the
funeral home .
I..ATEST DONORS
Latest contributors to the Racine
Emergency Squad building fund
are: Garrett and Mattie Circle. Opal
Diddle, Marilyn Powell, Carolyn
Adams, U bby Fisher, Adams
Drilling, Harold Roush, Carl Gheen,
Dorothy Greathouse, Albert Hill,
Raymond Furbee, Thomas and
Juanita Sayre, Western Boot C. B.
aub, Warner lnsurance .

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - The
Moalem students holding the U.S.
Embassy and 49 American hostages
warned today they had mined the entire compound, apparently fearing a
U.S. military attack. The Iranian armed forces ~pped up ground, air
and sea activities.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
declared, meanwhile, that the
American hostages must be put on
trial as spies within the eJDba.My
" spy den" itself, and he rejected
beforehand any U.N . Security Council decision on the Iran cri.siB "dictated" by the United States.
The Security Counctl is scheduled
to meet this afternoon and is ex·
peeled to call for release of the
Tehran embassy hostages.
It was unclear from Khomelnl'a
statements, broadcast by state
radio, whether he had definitely
decided to begin a trial of the
hostages, and when it might begin.
Previously he said they would be
tried if the exiled shah i.l not returned to Iran .

SQUAD CAll ED

The Middleport Emergency Unit
TO END MARRIAGE
Debra L. Cundiff, Rt . 4, Pomeroy,
and Timothy R. Cundiff, Syracuse,
filed for dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court .

went to Pearl St. at 12:24 pm. Mon·
day for Uncoln Smith who was ill.
He was taken to the office of Dr,
James Conde and was later Iran·
sported to the Holzer Medical Center
by the squad .

FRIDAY BAZAAR
RuUand EMS will hold a bazaar
Friday, Nov. 30, and Saturday, Dec.
I, beginning at 9a.m. at the Rutland
EMS bullding.
A bake sale will alao be held on
Saturday' There will be homemade
crafts, toys and Christma'
decorations on sale.

SQUAD RUNS

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad

waa called to OoWlty Road 25 at 5:12 .
pm. Monday for Helen Par1low wbo
waa taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 8:10pm., the aquad wu called
to Route 1~ for Clarence Spurrier
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial HO&amp;pital.
BIG BROADCASI'
NEW YORK ( AP) - The first
professional football game ever to
be broadcast nationally was the 1940
championship game between the
Chicago Bears and the Washington
Redskins, which the Bears w111 7~ .
Accocding to the book, "The
Chicago Bears : An Illustrated
History." he game was aMounced
by Red Barber and beamed to 120
radio stations around the country .

SEEK LICENSE
A marriage license waa IBsued to
Silvio Claudio Ronchettl, :Ill, Middleport, and Marianne Wild, 23, Middleport .

ELBERFELD$

picked Ronald Reagan as the GOP
presidential nominee and President
Carter as the Democratic candidate
in 1980,
Reagan defeated former Texas
Gov. Jolm Connally, Sen. Howard
Baker of Tennessee and five other
GOP candidates in the presidenUal
preference balloting conducted at
the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation's
8lst annual meeting.
Carter won a race that pitted him
agaioat California Gov. Jerry Brown
and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy · of
Musachuaetts,
Participants in the straw vote
were asked to indicate their choice
r:J. a presldenUal nominee for both
political parties, regardless of their
own political affiliation.
Of the 482 ballots cast, Reagan led
a field rl eight GOP candidates with
to percent r:J. the vote. Connally had
2U percent and Baker 14.5 percent
The rest of the vote waa shared by
fanner ambassador George Bush,
Sen. Rober1 Dole rl Kansas,
consr-nen Jom Anderaon, Phillip
Crane and Larry Pressler, and
wrUHn1. lire Fum eweau 118ld.
Carter won 39.6 percent of all the
ballots cut for Democrat candidate.. Brown waa II!COild with 1u
pa «t~rt and Kennedy third with I U
percent The rest rl the vote was
acattered among wr!IHna.
It waa the first time 1111ch an exer·
cile wu staged at the group's
meeting, 118ld Dean Simeral, vice
president for public affairs.
The balloting waa designed to
identify the strongest candidates in
each party and not pit potenUal
Democrat
nominees against
Republicans.
"We thought we would get two
s1goala (of) who would be the
strongest candidates from a bipartisan point of view,'· said Simeral.
"(But) I'm not sure we did. It's
difficult to interpret what the figures

mean.''
Most of the fann bureau members
wbo took part Identified themselves
u Republicans. The party affiliation

totala were 70 percent GOP, 2D percent Democrat and 10 percent in·
dependent, Slmeral said.

Deputies

There were no safeguards to
prevent strong party backers from
voting for the opposition candidates
they felt might be weakest in the
November election . But Simeral
said he didn 't believe many persons
approached the voting that way .
All of the participants were farm
Bureau members. Most were farm
owners, operators, managers or employees,
About half the persons eligible to
take part cast ballots.
Most of the fanners who said they
were Democrats favored Carter in
the sampling of opinion. Results
released by the farm Bureau gave
Carter 45.7 percent, Kennedy Zl .l
percent and Brown 11.4 percent.
Farmers who said they were
Republicllll! voted 44.2 percent for
Reagan and 24.5 percent for Connally. Baker was third with !3.5 percent, Bush took 6.1 percent and Dole
~.7 percent The rest of the votes
were scattered among Anderson,
Crane and Pressler.

Meanwhile, delegates today were
expected to continue their consideration of new policies proposed
for the federation. One of thesedeals
with embargoes on grain shipments
to other nations, an outgrowth of the
concern over the hostage situation in
Iran .
The proposal drafted by the
group's policy conunittee says the
federation opposes embargoes on
American farm products because
the benefits generally don't outweigh the damage done to
agriculture . .
But it apparenUy leaves open the
possibility of such action in certain

cases.
"In those rare occasiOIIB when the
government believes the benefits to
the nation of an agricultural product
embargo would more than compensate for the negative impact on
agriculture, the Fann Bureau will
support or oppose such action based
on the case presented to justify the
embargo," the proposal says.

Silence reigns
in strike issue
Silence reigned on the Meigs Local
teachers strike again today.
Neither the Meigs Local teachers,
111 strike for the loth week nor the
Meigs Local Board of Education
issued any statement whatsoever to
the media today on any progress
being made on the settlement of the
!Oweek old problem .
It was reported that the board of
education met in executive session
for the second consecutive niglt
Tuesday .
Last night's session was over two
hours in length . No report tssued
as to the content of the meeting.
Meantime, it was announced thst
a regular meeting of the board will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday . A
group called the "Back to School
Conunittee" today urged parents to
tum out for that meeting tomorrow ,
night.
Three members of the committee
are June Kloes, Donna Jones and

Nola Swisher.
The meeting is
scheduled to be held at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport .
Schools of the district were offically closed on Oct. 16 and the
strike began Sept. 2-4. It has been
reported that students will be
required-when schools finally
are opened----to make up the time
lost from Oct. 16 through the closing ·
day of the strike. To participate in
state funding, the students must
complete the school year by the end
of June .
As of today there are 32 days
which would have to be mad~ up by
students . This would reqwre attending classes throughout
June-----«hools were scheduled to
close the last of May--and there
undoubtedly would have to be Satur·
day school ":"d possibly a reduction
in the Cluistrnas holiday season
vacation.

probe minor
mishaps

Thinking ahead really pays off in our
Christmas Club! Start now .. . get a big check
next year!

INVEST

RECEIVE

$1.00........................... $50.00

$2.00······· •••••••••••••••••••• $100.00
$5.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $250.00
$10.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• $500.00
$20.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••• •. $l,OOO.OC
t

You make 49 prompt payments,
we make the 50th.

·'The Friendly Sank"
'

THE CENfRAL TRUST COMPANY
\liddlqmrt. t ~ .

The Meigs County SheMtf's Department investigated an accident Monday at II ; 1~ p.m. on Eagle Ridge
road when a steer, standing in the
roadway, was injured when it was
struck by a car driven by Richard J .
StetUer, Tuppers Plains .
The steer sustained injuries to the
head and shoulder . There was
moderate damage to Stettler 's car .
The department investigated a
minor accident Sunday at 9:3ll a .m .
at Hawk's Pennsoil in Tuppers
Plains.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Ivan B. Walker, Jr., 24,
Cl!ester pulled into the station and
accidenUy struck and knocked over
a gas pump .
Damages were estimated at approximately tl,800. No charges were
filed .
Deputies are investigating the
reported theft of two Blue Tick coon
hounds there were taken Friday
morning from the Robert Boggs
residence Tuppers Plains.
On is 11knonths and has a black
saddle and the other is a three and
on~ year old female Blue Ticks .
Anyone having any infonnation in
regard to the two dogs are asked to
contact Boggs at the Tuppers Plains
Sohio Stallon or call the Sheriff's office .

.

We have many
other styles
women's robes and
gown and robe
sets. So nice to give
and receive at
Christmas time.
Linterie, 3rd floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PARADE PARTICIPANT - The Pomeroy Olamber of eonunerce made a nke gesture toward Middleport ..erchanta Monday night with this attractive

float in the Middleport CllrUtmas parade. The float
featured a lighted tree with holiday packages and pretty girls ,

NEW LOOK- New vinyl siding has been placed on
the exterior of the Minei'IIVille Methodist Oturch. The
church was built in 1871. The new sl~ has added to

the attractiveness of the church. The work was done by
Jim Barnes of Bidwell. Material and tabor was paid
from donations by members of the church .

Speech, hearing program reviewed
Susie Heines, speech and bearing
therapist, working through Veterans
Memorial Hospltal.met with Meigs
County Conunissioners Tuesday
night to explain the operations of the
program.
Mrs . Heines explained that her
total budget now consists of $8,310
per year which operates to clinics,
providing diagnostic and followo(lp
care, and home Visits for children
with speech and or hearing

youth
has lRJUnes
• • •

D

.r omeroy

A South Point man, William
Steele, 48, was cited on a charge of
DWI Tuesday following a onevehicle accident on SR 141, fourtenths of a mile west of milepost 5.
Called to the scene at 7 p.m., the
Gallia-Meigs P081, Highway Patrol,
reports an east bound auto operated
by Steele failed to negotiate a curve,
crashed through a guardrail into a
creek and came to rest on it'sside .
Steele displayed visible signs of injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center, where he was
treated and released. There was
severe damage to the auto.
One persoo was injured during a
three-vehicle mishap in Meigs County on SR 248, on~th of a mile east
of SR 7, at8 :20 p.m.
The patrol reports an auto
operated by Scott Hill, 17, Pomeroy,
pulled from a private drive into the
path of a w.St bound vehicle driven
by Caroline Whaley, 34, Long Bottom.
following impact the Whaley
vehicle continued and struck a
parked auto owned by Timothy
Hawthorne,l9, Long Bottom.
Whaley claimed injury and was
transported by a friend to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
All three vehicles incurred
moderate damage. Hill was cited on
a charge of failure to yield .

PI..ANTSTRUCK
Some Ill employes of the Imperial
Electric Co .• in Middleport are on
strike .
Marvin
Boxdorfer, plant
manager, reports the contract of the
employes who are members of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers ellj)ired on Nov , Zl
and a proposal by the company for a
new contract was rejected by the
union. AworkstoppageUlen began.

'

problems.
Mrs. Heines requested that the
county provide more local funding
toward this program. The county
presently provides tl,647 of the
operating budget .
Mrs. Heines proposed that the
county provide t4,100 of the budget .
The board agreed to consider this
request when the 1980 appropristions are made .
Don Uoyd , director of SEOEMS
and Bob Bailey, administrator of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services discussed the SEOEMS and
county operations .
It was reported that the SEOEMS
vehicles stationed in Rutland were
m need of repair . Uoyd stated that
he would report the situation and see
that repairs are made.
The latest billing from SEOEMS
was discussed in detail and it was
explained that the total bill was not
paid due to the lack of proper repair
to the vehicles . The remainder of the
payment will be paid when the

$552,000 suit
filed in court
OOLUMBUS (AP I - A West
Virginia couple is suing a Gallia
County aircraft businessman for
more than half a million dollars as
the result of a 1!178 collision in the air
between two small planes .
Danny and Judith Rilfee of Given,
W.Va . filed in federal district court
here Tuesday , asking $552,000 for the
injuries they sustained in the crash
over the Galli a -Meigs Regional Airport.
The Rilfees' complaint says that
on Oct . Zl, 1!178, the couple was
making a fmal landing approach in
their Ercoupe plane at the airport
when a Cessna 172 collided with
them. The Cessna pilot , William C.
Miller of Gallipolis, was ltilled in the
crash.
Miller, general manager of WJEH
AND WYPC had rented his plane
from Edward L. Aikins of Gallipolis,
the complaint says, Both Atkins and
Miller's estate are named as defendants in the suit.
The Riffees charge lh;, • " ller was
negligent in piloting his uu ~ume and
that Adkins should not have rented
the Cessna to him because Miller
was not a "proper pilot,"
No judge has been assigned to the
case and no hearing date has been

set.

•

repairs are made .
The matter of renewing the contract with SEOEMS was aLso
discussed, in as much as it is up for
renewal in January.
Commissioners will meet with the
Miegs County Board of Trustees to
determine whether or not the contract will be renewed or if the county
EMS will render total emergency
medical services for the county.
Regarding the Meigs County communications system Uoyd stated
that he anticipates no problem with
the county installing an antenna on
the SEOEMS tower on Mulberry
Heights .
Jolm Grafton , State Apiary Inspector. for the Ohio Department of
Agriculture met with the board to
discuss the bee inspection in Meigs
County .
Grafton reported that Meigs County Apiary Inspector , Everett
Holmes , had inspected 393 colonies
in 78 apiaries in the coWlly during
the last season .
Grafton commended Holmes for
his services and reconunended that
the board approve additional appropriations in 19110 for the county inspections. The board will consider
the request when the 1980 appropriations are made in January.
The bid of Guernsey Asphalt was
accepted for the purchase of
bituminous materials for the county
highway department for the month
of December.
Wesly Buehl , county engineer,
discussed the highway department
operattons . The next meeting of the
commissioners will be held Dec. 11.
The commissioners will attend a
board convention next week.
Attending were Ric bard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, conunissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter , clerk .

27

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