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                  <text>8-The O.iiy Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~oy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 8, 19711

Winter elements cause 11 naiionwide deaths
By The Associated Press .
The ·winter elements freezing rain, sleet, snow, ice
and bitter cold -were linked
to at least 11 deaUts in three
states and left Utousands
wiUtout electric power as ·

Buckeye

County .Court

(Continued from page I )
streets and are staying off
them/' said a Cincinnati
poliCe dispatcher.
A storm located over the
central
Appalachian
Mountains was forecast to
intensify today as it moves
into the New England states.
The storm's system was
expected
to
produce
northerly winds which the
National Weather Service
sa id would continue to
increase in speed today ,
causing problems with
drifting and blowing snow.
Some snow squalls also were
predicted for today over
northeastern Ohio with
further accumulations
possible in the heavi er
squalls.
. Wirtter storm warnings
were continued today for the
northeastern co unt i es.
Temperatures acmss the
state were not expected to
rise above ·the teens. ·

...DON'T

••WALK .

-'-- 12 degrees.
.
A 5-~ear-old boy in Iron
Air travel was interrupted ·Ridge, Wis., was killed when
in the East and poctions of the motor oil his father was
South due to icy runways alid l"!\fmlng oo a kitchen stove
ice- laden aircraft. Fog · burst into flame. starting a
delayed alrline traffic at fire Utat destroy"ed the family
Philadelphia International home, said Fire Chief
Airport for about 31'.! hours. William Oestreich.
Deputy Coroner · Peter
Travelers were advised to
use extra care - oc simply Westra of Dodge CoWlty said
stay off the roads except in the body of Peter Nennig was
emergencies . ·· from found"· in the · ruins of a
Alabama to New England. A baUtroom, where the boy
A Mason resident, Leroy
flash flood watch was issued evidently was overcome by
Roush, was fined $250 and
smoke.
costs last Wednesday in forInConnecticut.
the West, the precipition
Two children were hospiMeigs county court after wasn't frozen, \lUI still caused talized with burna. The man,
entering a plea of guilty to plenty
of
problems. his wife and an infant
obstruction of justice ac- Authorities in Laguna Beach, escaped injury. Oestreich
cordin,; to Judge Charles Calif., worried that heavy said the father, Frank
Knight.
rain from a Pacific storm Nennig, was trying to beat
The incident stemmed from might prove too much for an the oil to make his auto
an • arrest lor puplic in- erosion-control project in engine easier to start.
toxication and an attempted fashionable Bluebird alley,
Police in Milton, Wis., said
esca pe from confining whete property damage has a man and a woman were
authorities. &amp;lush was also totaled $15 million since · found dead on Sunday in a
fined $5 and costs on the Ocwher.
The project was parked van. They apparently
charge. of intoxication.
completed
on SWtday.
In small claims court
Seven people - including
Thursday
afternoon, six with known heart
Hospital News
judgments were entered conditions - died in Ohio
against Gary Eynon, Reeds' Veterans Memorial Hospital
ville; Frank Weaver, Reeds- when they tried to shovel
Saturday admissions snow.
Dayton
was
blanketed
ville, and Danny E. Bowers, with 11 inches by SUnday Jessie Saunders, Pomeroy;
Rutland.
night,
and Cincinnati Oscar Klein, Middleport;
In other small claims court
May Roach, West Columbia,
reported
six.
a&lt;:.tion a petition filed by H &amp;
W. Va.; George Warner,
was
killed
on
A
teen-ager
R Firestone against Opal
ice-slick Pengsyivania · Pomeroy.
Conger was dismissed as was an
Saturday discharges a petition filed by Nancy . highway. And three cold- James Mohler, Gene Yost,
reiaied
deaths
were
reported
Cornell against Roseberry's
Sylvia Wolfe, Paul Hudson,
in Wisconsin.
Pennzoil. .
Stanley Trussell, Rebecca
smith, Ethel Carson, Welda
Brogan, Martha Searls.
Sunday admissions Harold Massar, Reedsville;
Martin Nesselroad, Long
Bottom; Greta Riffle,
Pomeroy; Pearl Hoffman,
Middleport; Mary Games,
Pomeroy; Leona Hubbard,
Syracuse ; Larry Spencer,
Racine.
Sunday discharges · Laura Clark, Clarence
·
A,dams.
storms ranged over the
nation.
Freezing rain and snow
were reported Sunday from
Oregon to Arkansas, and the
Midwest remained bitterly
cold. Milwaukee recorded its
highest reading since Jan. I

· ALL MERCHANDISE IN STOCK

'

•
INCLUDES LADIES, MEN'S AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING

*IRONSTONE DINNERWARE
*BLANKEtS
*POTJERY
*TOWELS
*SHEEtS
*SEWING NATIONS
*YARD GOODS
10% DISCOUNT TO All SENIOR CITIZENS

..

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Jan. 6 Hester
Brown, Albert Bur~er,
Carolyn Crabtree, Helen row,
Juanita Daugherty, t.eorge
Goheen, Annabel Hagans,
Misty Haye, Roger ·Jenkins,
James Johnson , Susan
Kelley, James Crebs, Nora
Landers, Mildred Lemley,
Patrica Madden, Sandra
Mitch, Laura Morrisette,
Maxine Northup; George Petty , Marcella Phillips, William
Righthouse, Clifton Rowe,
Alfred Thornton, Chad Tilley,
Clarence Walburn, Carrie
Waldron, William Winter, Jr.
Births, Jan. 5
.Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kapp,
son, Point Pleasant. W. Va.
Mr . ·and Mrs. james
McDouga I, daughter,
Pomeroy

Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Spires, daughter, Cheshire .
Births, Jan. 6 Mr. and Mrs.
William Trace, daughter,
Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pierce,

All SALES FINAL - NO LAYAWAYS

::;un, Racin .

Mr. and Mrs. Olin Blain,
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry.
Births, Jan. 7
Mr. and Mrs. James Davis,
son, Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mahone II, son, Gallipolis
Ferry.

.•

Save for the Day
Your Baby becomes .
a Big Wheel on Campus

-

·P atrol•••

Ohio

WRINKLES
SMOOTHED

IW l•l; Fi Q•J bi I(•M t1

Life styles change, costs of living-escalate,
children seem to rush through Infancy
Into adolescence at a.galloping
run. Parents who anticipate rJslhg college costs begin educational savings plans with
Farmers Bank at a11 early
date. Let us help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings account that will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are.

'.

CLOSED MONDAY, JANUARY 15, FOR MARTIN LUTHER KING DAt

Fat•nters ·8ank
.

. '
'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Eacb Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Tehran

Elberfelds January Clearance

I

POMEROY, OHIO

.

temperature early &amp;mday
were overcome by fumes
dipped
· to 56 degrees below
when . they left the engine
zero
10 degrees short of the
running to stay warm ,
all-time
low of 66 set In 1933.
auUtorities said. ·
Heavy thundershowers
were reported from Ute Gulf
Coast states to Virginia and
· (Continued from page 1)
Ute Carolinas.
through Ute streets, !Jut ·no
Mire Utan i,OOO Arkansas
violence was reported._
Power and Ught Co .
Vaughan, S. Third Ave.,
Commerce, disrupted by crewmen were called out to
MARY J. BROWN
Mrs. Mary Josephine Middleport, died Saturday strikes and a nationwide fuel restore power to 60,000 homes
Brown, 84, formerly of morning in a St. I.Aluls, Mo., shortage, was at a standstill after what spokesman.,
Pomeroy and Columbus, died hospital, according to word for the secood straight day. Charles Kelly describe!! as
Hqndreds of protesters de- the worst lee stocm ever in
Saturday at Excelsior received here over the
weekend . .He had been in .manding
tile
shah's souUtem Arkansas.
Springs, Mo.
In all, about 80,000
Mrs. Brown is survived by failing health for several abdication set fires and
and
four sisters, Mrs. Ada months. Local funeral smashed windows SWldaY in Arkansas homes
Foreman, Mrs. Elsie Turner arrangements are being Tehran. Military police businesses were blacked out,
scattered Ute mobs wiUt tear- and about half remained
and Mrs. Flores! Williams;· plaMed, It is reported.
gas and gunflre, and one without power . overnight.
all of Colwnbus, and Mrs.
person was killed. The capital Kelly estipulted damage to
Cora Van Blalr, Excelsior
FLETCHER WELCH
had enjoyed comparative AP&amp;L equipment would exSprings; a brother, John
Fletcher R. Welch, 72, calm for Ute previous four ceed $2 million.
Plants, Gary, Ind., and a
number of nieces and Pomeroy, died this (Monday ) days while Prime Minister
Emergency- generators
nephews. She was a member morning at Holzer Medical Shahpour Bakl}tlar's new were used for electricity at
of the Columbus Baptist Center.
government was installed. hospitals in some towns, and
Arrangements wlll be
Youtlis in Tehran shouted a the mayor of Dermott, Ark.,
Temple.
,.
Funeral services will be announced by the McCoy- new slogan today, "Bakhtiar ordered a dusk-to-dawn
held at 10 a.l!l. Tuesday at the · Moore Funeral Home in strike," apparently a call for curfew after his community
Schoedinger Linden Chapel, Vinton.
a strike to protest the new also lost its water supply.
2741
Cleveland
Ave .,
prime minister's three-dayCommercial flights were
Columbus. Friends may call
ZULA B. FRY
old government.
canceled at Little Rock .
at tile chapel from 2 to 4 and 7
Zula B. Fry, 81. 278 Pearl
The mourning period was Acting Gov. Joe Purcell said
to 9 p.m. Monday. Graveside St. Middleport, formerly called to coriunemocateJt:the he would ask state pollee and
services will be held at 2 p.m . 'of West Columbia, died estiinated 1,500 persons
· National Guard troops to
Tuesday at the Beech Grove Sunday at Pleasant Valley have died in the past Y r of . assist legis)ators en route to a
Cemetery in Pomeroy. The Hospital.
vwlent opp~s1t~on to the meermg· of the state General
Rev . J . Richard Hankins will
She was born May 6, 1897, In shah's auUtor1t~1an ~llie lind Assembly if travel remained
officiate.
Letart, to the late Frank B. his Westermzation ·program hazardous today.
Ueving and Lorena C. Hart which religious leaders
About 15 000 homes were
BILL VAUGHAN
Ueving. She was the wife of charge, undermines. Ute without ' power
in
Bill V~ugha~. son of Mr. the late · Riley Edward Fry, country s Islamic trad!t~ons . . southwestern Pennsylvania,
and Mrs. Richard W. who died in 1963.
The. new prime ~ister and authocities said icy roads
She was a member of the and hiS cabinet of civilians . made it difficult foc repair
Salem
Church,
West was Installed b~ Ute shah crews to reach downed lines.
Columbia.
Saturday, replacmg a twoA storm located over the ,.
Survivors inc!Jlde: two month-old
military central
Appalachian
daughters, Mrs. Evalee government.
Mountains was forecast to
'(Continued from page I)
Wolfe and Roseanna Manley,
The state radio said today intensify today as it moves
bound auto operated by Lewis both of Middleport, 0.; two Bakhtiar's new Cabinet into the New England.
slid off Ute right side of the brothers, Hervin A. Lieving, would be presented ' to
More than !50 fire fighters,
roadway, came back onto the Mason and Lemley B. Parliament on Thursday, two !raving a wind chill factcr of
highway, went left of center Lieving, Petoskey, Mich. ; days behind schedule, .and minus 25, finally eontrolled a
and sideswiped an east bound seven· grandchildren; two sources said the shah was stubborn forest fire · In
vehicle driven by John J. great-grandchildren; and unlikely to begin his planned Washington state ilfter a
·Fulkerson, 28, Gallipolis.
several nieces and nephews. vacation until the par- Utree-day battle. About 529
Services will be held at the liamentary process was com&lt; acres were lost.
There was moderate
damage to the Fqlkerson Foglesong Funeral Home pie~.
The blaze was' dubbed the
vehicle.
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with
The 59-year~ld ruler hopes "Windy .Flre" on Friday beAt I a.m., the patrol in· the Rev. George Hoschar that the return to civilian cause icy blasts of up to 60
vestigated a one-vehicle officiating. Burial will follow government, the transfer of mph whipped up flames In the
mlshaponSR 7, four-tenUts of at the Suncrest Memorial some of his royal powers to it tinder-dry forest abOut 15
a mile south of milepost 28. Park, Point Pleasant.
and the prospect of bis miles south of Kalaina.
Officers report that a south
the · country
Friends may call at the · leaving
bound aulo operated by Unda Foglesong Funeral Home temporarily will bring an end
SERVICES SLATED
M. Harold, 20; Gallipolis, slid after 3 p.m. Tuesday.
to the anti-shal) violence. But
Missionary services wW be
Ayatollah Khomaini, the held at the Independent
off the right side of the
exiled Shiite Moslem reli- Holiness Church, Pearl
roadway into a ditch, struck a
gious leader who is the shah's Street, Middleport, Wedculvert, passed over a
driveway, and struck a
· chief foe, termed the new nesday at 7:30 p.m.
. second culvert. The Harold (Continued from page 1)
government "usurpipg and
Representing Robert
auto incurred moderate statewide officials :_ all illegal" and called on his Nunley from Haiti will be
damage.
Democrats_ ~ were taking followers to "continue your speakers from Point Pleasant
Officers were called to the their oaths in separate · struggle" until the shah was 'l)'aliling School. Pastor Rev.
scene of a one-auto accident ceremonies between 8 a.m. overthrown.
O'Dell Manley extends an
on SR 7, three'tenths of a mile _and 12:30 p.m.
Oil
production . .was Invitation to the public to
north of milepost 35,.at 10i35 ~ttomey General William reported to have risen to attend.
a.m.
J. Brown set up a staff about 260,000 barrels Sunday,'
According to the patrol, a · reception in a downtown hotel ne Y a third of the 900,000
south bound vehicle driven by · to receive his oath foc a Utlrd,
Is Utat is needed daily
Bernard L. George, 19, four-year term.
r the country's domestic
Gallipolis, went out of control · He was followed by Sta.
needs.
in a left curve, slid off the left Treasurer Gertrude w.
The country's oil wo~kers
without surgery
side of the roadway, and Donahey, wiUt ceremonies in have been oo strike foc five
Now there Is anexciting new cosmetic
traveled down an• embank- Ute State Office Tower lobby, weeks In support of Ute dethat can temporarily smooth away
ment into a ditch.
and Auditor ·Thomas E. mands for the shah's abdicawrinkles for up to 8 hours. It 's called
There was moderate Ferguson, who chose to take lion. The strike has caused
·secret Miracle and Its scientific blend
damage to the auto.
of unique beauty ingredients works
his oath in his office.
shortages' of gasoline and
At I :05 p.m., officers were
w1thin minutes to smooth over wrin·
Secretary of State-elect An- kerosene in Tehran and other
called to the scene of a one- thony J. Celebrezze Jr. was to centers and cut off Ute daily
kles, crow's-leet; and under eye
vehicle accident on SR 160, he sworn in at 12:30 p.m. in e~port of 5.5 million barrels
puffiness. New Secret Miracle will
Utree miles north of SR 325. Ute rotunda of the Statehouse. of crude oil that is the
keep. your skin practiCally line ;free
all day or all night. Secret Mir~c le
According to the patrol, a
He picked bis father, Judge fin~cial ' mainstay of the
costs $5 and is sold with a strict
north bound auto driven by Anthony J. Celebreoze Jr ., of shah's
ambitious
de·
money back guarantee by the manuHatley. Crouse, 24, Patriot the U S &lt;'nurt 0 f Ap Is 6th velopment program.
facturer. So before you consider that
·
"""'
pea
'
Some
of
'"e
w~kers
·
are
reStar Route, went out of Circuit, to administer his
Yo
~
$5,000
face liN, consider the $5 altercontrol, slid off the left side of DBY•
... .
turning to Utelr joba in renative ... new Secret Miracfe Temthe roadway; came back o~to
Republicans p1anned a sponse to appeals from Kiloporary Wrinkle Smoother.
tbe pavement and over- round
of
ceremonial ma!ni to resume production
; turned.
activities , to mark the . for docnestic needs. But there
Nelson's Drug Store
Crouse Cljiimed injury, but occasion. They included a 2 is no suggestion of resuming
p;:Jibtroy, ~iO .
was not immediately treated.
• 30 p.m. production for export.
Iun cheon,- a "'
p.m.
Officers inve!;ligated a two- reception and an Inaugural
vehicle collision "on SR 588, at Gala and Ball at 8:30 p,m. the junction of Honey Suckle ali at Ute Neil House hotel,
Rd., at 5:10 p.m.
acrosS from the Statehouse.
The patrol reports that a
Although they billed the
west bound vehicle driven by events as appropriate
Robert
Jenkins,
17, because of the historic nature
Gallipolis, went out of control of the Rbodes-Voinovich
over a hillcrest In a curve, inaugurals, it was obvious the
slid left of center and struck GOP bad in mind the
an east bound auto operated replenishing of · dried up
by Michael Burke, 28, campaign coffers.
Gallipoll.t
The luncheon cost $28 per
Both vehicles incurred person, the reception $50, and
moderate damage.
the ball, $55 per ticket. The
Officers were called to the state party put on the
scene of a one-vehicle mishap luncheon and ball, wbile
on SR 554, one and one-tenths Republican campaign
of a mile east of SR 160.
committees of the Ohio
According to the patrol, an Senate
and HouSe staged the ·
east bound vehicle driven by
reception
.
Robin Rife, 17, Cheshire,
Even
though
went out of control and slid won four of the sili:Democrats
statewide
off the right side of the
offices
In
the
Nov.
7 election,
roadway into a ditch.
There. was moderate their state party leaders
combined
. planned no
damage to the vehicle.
celelration.
. The patrol Investigated a
one-auto mishap on SR 554,
one and five-tenths of a mile
SEEKS SUPPORT
east of SR 160.
In Meigs County common
Sizes 38 to 48 in Regulars and Longs. Solid
Officers report that an east
pleas
court
Alice
R.
Curtis
colors
and patterns.
bound vehicle driven . by
filed
for
support
Wider
the
Gregory Hopkins, 21, Burling
5
5
Heights, · 0., went put of Reciprocal Agreement Act
against
Donald
E.
Roush.
control, slid off the left side of
AlthoUgh the sun shone in . Rangers at Yellowstone
Ute West, It remained bitter Park reported that the
cold as far south as northern ·
Texas.

the roadway. and struck a
fence.
.
The Hopkins vehicle Incurred moderate damage.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
investigated four other
weekend accidents during •
which the vehicles involved
incurred slight damage.

.,

Squad called
· The Syrijcuse E-R squad
was called Saturday at 6 p.m.
ior Brenda .Hess, Fourth
Street. A medical patient, she
was taken to . Veterans
Memorial Hospital.'

49.95 SPORT COATS •••••••••• 29.90
SS9.95 SPORT COAts •••• , ••• ~.535.90
'69.95 SPORT mATS ••••••••• 541.9o

·Eiberfelds In Pomeroy

•

a1 y

Pomeroy-Middlepc)rt, Ohio
Tuesday, Jan .ary 9, 1979 •

Findings
returned

.,

,, " ...~

Heads .state school board
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Martha W. Wise of
El)iria, was elected president of the State Board of
Education Monday. Roy D. McKinley of Coshocton was
elected vice president.
Mrs. Wise, who has served as vice president since
1977, becomes the 13th president of the 2J.member
board. ~e has been a member of the board since 1973
and recently chalred its desegregation committee and
a committee on teacher education redesign, She
currently Is a inember of its"legislative committee. •·

Rebels issue walnings
UNITED NATIONS('~- Victorious Cambodian
rebels told the U. N. Secur y Col!ncil Monday that any
bearing granted _to the - erthrown Phnom Penh
·regime would be " grant intervention" in
Cambodia's int
affairs.
The gover ent of Premier Pol Pot, which fled the
capital of Phnom Penh before It fell Sunday, has
dispatched Prince Norodom Sihanouk to the United
Nations to charge Vietnam with aggression against
Cambodia. Vietnam backed the rebels, reportedly
committing troops, tanks and warplanes in the
offensive.

Removal would endanger boy
PLYMOUTH, Mass. (AP) - A Mex1can aoctor
who uses Laetrile to treat.cancer patients said Monday
that removing 3-year-old Chad Green from
chemotherapy for his leukemia would endanger the
boy's life.
Dr. Ernesto Contreras, who runs a clinic in
Tijuana, was brought here by Chad's parents to testify
· in behalf of thelr effort to win the right to decide how
Utelr son's illness should be treated.

.

··"'""

":"':&gt;:

· Federal funds may be used
WASIDrlGIDN (AP)- Worried that millions of
children may be exposed to cancer - causing asbestos
House . education committee members said Monda~
they w\11 try to use federal funds tq eliminate the
material froni school buildings .
Rep. Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., chalrman · of the
Education and Labor Committee, said at the panel's
bearing on asbestos dangers that many communities
do not have the money to remove asbe~tos insulation
placed In their schools years ago .

. Carter, wife_jogged Monday
GOSIER, Guadeloupe (AP) - President and Mrs.
Carter jogged around an ancient fortress Monday and .
tlien went into seclusion at a seaside villa on thelr postsummit holiday on this French Caribbean Island.
Press Secretary Jolly Powell, in a pooiside chat
with reporters at a nearby hotel, said Carter plaMed
no public activiti~s before his departure Tuesday.
. "He's got some paperwork with him," Powell said.

11th hour effort being made
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The Navy Is 'making 8n
lith-hour effort to change President Carter's mind on
the kind of aircraft carrier )le will recommend to
Congress, administration sources report .
With Carter's liscal '!980 defense budget just about
really for Congress, the Navy effort has reached au the ·
way·to Ute Caribbean Island of Guadelo!~Pf, where the
·president flew last week for meetings with French,
British and German leaders.

•

Due to lack of a quorum no members attending regarofficial business was con- ding salary increases.
dueled Monday night at the
Chief of Police J. J .
regular monthW meeting of Cremea ns expressed hope
Middleport Village Council: council will give employe_s a
Only two coWtcilmen, Allen seven percent raise plus
]S:ing and· William Wahers, overtime for work . over 40
lilong with Mayor Fred hours a week. He commended
Hoffman showed up for what workers for their dedication.
was to have ·been the first He also commented Utat a
meeting
and
the $100 clothing allowance given
organizational session of the police officers is · not
body for the new year.
adequate.
Absent were Carl Horky, ..Coun cilman Allen King
Charles Mullen, Marvin Kelly spoke on the limited funds of
and Dewey Horton, members the village and the necessity
of the council , along with · of expending funds for the
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate. best interests of the town. He
The coucnil did not hold its commended village workers
last meeting' of December . and urged them to attend a
because of Christmas.
later meeting when a quorum
Unable t o conduct any is present.
business at last night's
meeting, council is scheduled
to meet in special session at
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Mayor
Hoffman announced the
special session last night
after a quorum and the clerk
did not appear for the
scheduled meeting. No explanation was offered as to
the high absenteeism at the
meeting.
In the. past, all council
members and the clerk have
BANTRY, Ireland (AP ) been present for practically Gulf OiL investigators probed
all of the meetings.
·
today into the explosions and
Basil and Doris Raynes fire that killed 50 persons on
tanker ·
French
were present for the the
sc heduled
meeting
in Betelgeuse.
reference to renewal of the
Early theories centered on
garbage collection license of fum es in empty and partly
H. and H. Sanitation Co. empty oil comparunents , a
Mayor Hoffman advised cause of several previous
them to stop . by his office tan ker
disasters.
But
today to have their license ev idence on the blackened,
renewed.
half-sunken Betelgeuse was
About six village employes scanty.
spoke ·informally with I'!layor
' 'Everyone
who
was
Hoffman and the two council directly involved is dead, "
Irish Prime Minister .Jack
Lynch told reporters. He said
the cause of the the worst
industrial accident in Irish

Oil firm
probing

explosions

--~ '

•
WON'T BE OUTDONE - Henrietta Booth is not to be
outdone by any man as she shoveled snow Monday from
the Sidewalk m front of her residence on Pomeroy's West

Main Street. Not only did she shovel snow but she put
three boxes of salt on th e walkway so no one would faiL
Very th oughtful of.her to say the least.

.G overnor saving planS
· · Ry ROBERT E. MILLER
Ass.~ciated Press Wrilcr
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( A~ ) Newly reinsta lled Gov .
James A. Rhodes is saving
his " ·c om pre hen si v e
recommendations" for Ohio's
problems until his State of the
State . message to the
Legislature late this month,
he says.
The 69-year-old governor
gave that word Monday in delivering a brief inaugural address that generally called
for bipartisan cooperation,
li sted school funding as his
top priority, and promised
continued good goverrunent
management over the next '
four years.
Rhodes took the oath of
off ice for an unprecedented
fourth , four-year term in
ce remoni es at the Ohio
Theater . His newlyciected
lieutenant governor, George
V. Voinovich, 42, of
Cleveland, began his first
fouryear term .
Th e four oUter statewide

elected officials - all Democrats- chose to be sworn in

during separate ceremonies
at different locations around
the capital city.
Most noteworthy was the
inauguration of Secretary of
· State Anthony J. Ceieti1 e!ie
.Jr ., who captured that office
Nov. 7 from th e veteran Ted
, W. Brown, who had held It for
the GOP since 1950.
Attorney General William
.J. Brown and Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey began
th eir third -terms, while
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
embarked on his second four
years in office .
Democrats held no formal '
c e Ie b r a t io n s , bu t
Republicans whooped it up at
a series of celebrations ,
in cluded
a
lun che on,
recepti on, and inaugural ball
, - which, all told, apparently
grosse d the party about
$90,000 to pay off a few bills
and start a war chest for
fut ure campaigns.
State
Rep u b I i c a n

Chairman Earl T. Barnes · tne ~tate address to a joint
said he was "overwhelmed" legislative session late this
by the responS€ to ail three month. " I wiil propose
events, especially in view of a seve ral compre hensive
weekend snowstorm which he recommendations for th e
feared would put a crimp on Genera l As sem bly's cothe activities. ,

Ali&lt;iut 2,o00 'people showed
up for the inauguration in the
3;-UOO-sea t Ohio Theater after
the fo ul weather forced
officials to scrap plans for a
ceremony on the outside
steps of the Statehouse.
The luncheon drew about
1,-100 at $28 apiece, and the
late aftern oon reception
, attracted about 600 at $50 /
each . Monday night 's threeorchestra ball drew 600-700,
although about 1,.000 tickets
reportedly had been sold for
$55 each.
In hi s speech, Rhodes
school
reiterated that
fi nancing is the main concern
of his new administration, but
said improving the quality of
edu catio n, as well as
increased ·slate funding,
comprise a dual goal.
He said that in fils Stale of

Jones heading commission

Grand jury gets murder case
IDMS RIVER, N. J. (AP) -The state's case
against a teacher charged with the murder of his 15year-old autilitic ward was referred to a grand jury
Monday, authorities said.
After a hearing, SuPerior Court . Judge Mark
Addison ruled there was enough evidence Implicating
Jeffery Clark, 32, In the death of his charge William
"Rusty': Graham to turn the case over to a grand jury
for aat10n, accorl!lng to Ocean County Assistant
ProsecUtor Sabino Carone.
.

Fifteen Cents
No .. -I K5

Vol. 2!1.

No ·. quorum,
no actions

Meigs County Prosecuting to the board of county
Attorney Fred W. Crow III · commissioners. The comrevealed tod~y that the miSsion is now reviewing the
September term of Ute Meigs grand jury report. It is exCounty grand jury bas pected that action on the
completed an extensive in- findings will be forthcoming
vestigation of the Meigs at an early date.
County Welfare Department
Grand jury members
and bas issued findings and requested permission to
recommendations on -the continue their investigation
department.
past the normal expiration
In making the
an- date of Dec. 31, 1978, and the
nouncement, Crow stated : common pleas court granted
''Due to numerous com- · a request continuing their
plaints from Meigs county auUtority until the 15th day of,
citizens, my department February, 1979."
along with other county The prosecutor indicated
agencies and the State that, in his opinion, the grand
Auditor'~ office began apjury will not desire to
proximately three months reconvene should the board of
ago to investigate the overall county commissioners imoperation.of.the Meigs County plement most of the jury's
Welfare Department.·
- recommendations. It was
11
ThiS evidence
was indicated today that the
presented to the September county commissioners will
term of the grand jury, meet this evening to begin
which, in tum, issued a action on the recomnumber of findings .and mendations.
recommendations on Dec. 30,
Members of the grand jury
1978. The. Meigs CoWltY board are Roger E . Weaver,
of commissioners is charged foreman; David R. Riggs, •
with the responsibility of · Patricia L. Craig, Rol&gt;ert E.
administering the welfare Morris, Emerson Poo1er,·
department on the local level. Margaret Gloeckner, Clyde
On Jan. 2, 1979, I presented Kuhn , Jane Walton and
the findings and recom- Donna Vance.
..f
mendations of the gtand jury

Nationwise---

en tine

Richard E. Jone s was president Henry Wells who
appoihted president of the was named vice president.
In other action, the board
Meigs County Commissioners
when the 'board held its an- appointed Mary Hobstetter,
n~al orga!li~aiional meeting clerk of the board of comMonday night. Jones suc- . missioners; James Cornell,
ce~ds
longtime
board courthouse custodian:

Electric chair
will be sought .
CHICAGO (A P) - The
electric chair will be sought
for John Wayne Ga cy,
indicted on charges ·of
murdering seven young men
and boys whose bodies were
buried at his .suburban
Chicago home or thrown into
a nea rby river, authorities
say.
Bernard · Carey, Cook
County states attorney, said.
Monday he would ask for
Gacy's execution. He said

fe sS€d to the killings - the
nation's largest mass murder
in this century - telling
police he had sex with 32 boys
and young men , then killed
them.
·Police believe five bodies
were thrown into the Des
Piaines ' River. The bodies of
two 'young men have been recovered from the ·river and
linked to Gacy , auUtorities
said.
·
Eight of the remains f~Wid
there was "more than one at the Gacy home have been
reason" why prosecutors identified, in addition to the
co'uld ask for the death two bodies recovered from
penalty. ~ut he refused to th e river.
elaborate.
Ca rey said he believes 12
Gacy was indicted Monday unbiased jurors can be ftiWid
by a Cook County grand jury in Coo k Coupty , where Gary's
for the seven murders.
home is located, and that he
Investigators have foWtd will oppose any attempt lo
th e remains of 26 young men · mnve a trial ·elsewhere.
and boys beneath Gacy 's
The :16-year-&lt;lld contractor
hnme in Des PlaineS a has been in custody since late
northwest Chicago suburb. last month and W:is charged
The remains of another body f)4•c: 22 with mw·der ing 1 ~) ­
were found beneath hi s year~ld Robert Plest, whose
garage.
-disappearance earlier in the
Gary reportedly has con- month lerl 'in Gacy 's arrest.
1

l~

'

'

•
Charles Hysell, dog warden
and Everett J. Holmes as
apiary inspector.
The following were appointed to the CommWtity

operation. "

Schools
•

Reaction to the governor's
speech was predictable. with
majority Democrats in the
Legislature being cool but
mostly ki nd. Republicans
hailed it as a positive
address, reflecting Rhodes'
familiar "no new tax es"
theme, which they sa id is
Due to icy road conditions,
tempered w the times.
all thr~e local school districts
Senate Min ority Leader of Meigs County remained
Paul E. Gillmor, R-Port closed for a second conClinton, for instance, said the secutive day Tuesday.
,_
speech was one of substance
Despite conditions,_ th e
but indicative of the voters' COWlty was faring well in
mood. In the Nov. 7 election, L'Oping with the cold weaUter
he said, " I think the people and icy conditions. No power
said they wanted the sarne _outages have been reported
type of approach."
and there have been only a
House Speaker Vernal G. few highway accidents in the
Riffe Jr,, D-New Boston, sa id past several days-caused by ·
he regarded the speech as in- conditions.
viting bipartisan ·harmony.
The ice was responsible for
He said he a lso was glad the hospitalization of onr
Rhodes listed schools as the resident, Timothy Sklorenko,

rema1n

closed

=.~lJ~~~e~~t. ~::?o~~~= ~r;:~r:~~E:!:~~~

Rhodes was accompanied about 8:50p.m. Monday. He
throughoutmostofthedayby was taken ' to Veterans
his wife He len his three Memorial Hospital by the
daughters, their husbands, Middleport emergency squad
and his seven grandchildren. and was admitted for
Voinovich,
his wife treatment of.injur.!es.
mother, four children, and ·
·
'i,

~~~~;~m~nt Jo~~':,'!~~~r~ :~~~i~e!hr~!nk~~zet~e ot,::,~

be known .
Lynch said all 43 persons
aboard the l21,43(){on ship
died in th e blasts Monday at
Gull Oil Co.'s \Vhiddy Island
terminal near picturesque
Bantry Bay. Also killed were
seven Irish dockworkers.
Lync h· told a news conference, held in a waterfront bar
in Bantry, " I believe that
every precaution was taken "
to avoid such an accident.
He sa id a government
mvestigatio~ would begin as
soon as possible.
Oil company hvestigawrs
stresS€d they had little evidence to work on. The wreckage of the tanker, broken
nearly in half by . two
ex plosions. was mos1ly under
water ,

Driver cited
after mishap

The Gallia - Meigs Post,.
Highway Patrol, investigated
a two-vehicle accident
Monday on SR 7 six-tenths of
a mile north ·of Little Kyger
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::)8:::::::::::::::::::::::: Rd., at 3:25 p.m.
Officers report a north
EXTENDED FORECAST '· bound auto operated by Gary
Johnson , 25, Gallipolis, bad
Thursday through! stopped
in traffic on 7. A
Saturday: A chance o
second
north
bound vehicle
snow Thursday. Mostly fair driven by Robert
Bailey, 27,
Friday and Saturday. Pomeroy, was unable to stop
Highs In the 20s to low 30s. and struck the Johnson auto
Lows zero to len above in the rear.
Thursday morning and five
Both vehicles· incurred
to 15 Friday and Saturday. moderate damage.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
Bailey was cited on charges
of failure to maintain an
assured clear distance.

Crow; Bernard Fultz, Vernon · lieutenant governor at most
Weber, Howard Frank and E. of the ceremonies.
F. Robmson.
He called serving in the of·
Upon the recommen da!lon lice "a great challenge," but
of county court judge Charles indicated he wants to be his
Knight, the following in- own man , devoting most of
dividuals were approved for his time to a new state and
taking recognizance bonds, I o c a I g v e r n m'&lt; n t
Dorotha McKenzie, Edith commission he will head.
Sisson, Marjorie Reuter,
Rhodes said . Voinovich, a
Elizabeth Hobst ett er and former state representative
Donna Koehler.
and Cuya hoga County
Appointed to serve one- commissioner, "will make a
year terms on Ute T.B. Board great lieutenant governor."
of Trustees were , Howard
Their tandem ticket in the
Birchfield, Marie Blrchfield, .. November election marked
persons
Thelma Dill , Elizabeth the first time Ohio's governor
Cutl er, James
Roush, and lieutenant governor were
COLUMBUs, Ohio (A P) _
Charles Rlffle, Mrs. Dwight elected as a team in Ohio's About 5,000 persons In nine
Wallace, Mrs. Gruce May, 176-year history. In recent southeastern Ohio counties
Mrs. Mildred Betzing and years they. have run remained without power
Dollie·lJayes.
separately, and th.e winners Monday · night after ice
· BQnds were approved for frequently turned out to be of snapped a number of electric
the following COWIIY officials : opposing political parties.
power tines, a utility spokesJames Proffitt, sheriff;
Oemocratic Lt. Gov . 'Tlan said. .
Larry Spencer, clerk of Richard F . Celeste, who
Buckeye Rural Electric
courts; Wesley Buehl, ~oWlty narrowly
lo st
the Cooperative spokesman Phil
engineer and Dr. Pickens, governorship to Rhodes last Skidmore sald,BO power lines
coroner.
Ia 11 , a tW!nde d Monda Y's were downed after ice formed
Richard E. Jones, M;aMing activities, · but in an on them over the weekend.
Webster and Howard Frank tlnac~ustnmed role.
Some of the line~ had snapped
were appointed to the Public
He served as commentator as early as Sunday morning,
As sistanc e' E11amining fora Columbus television sta- he sa ld .
' .
Skidmore estimated full
Committee .. The board lion (WCMH -TVl which
established each Tuesday at carried l{hode~· inaugurati &lt;&gt;n service would be restored
6:30 p.m. as the weekly
li~~ · Celeste , now a ,Private
sometime today.
meeting time.
.
c1t1zen a~o1~, . hved up to hls
The outages affected
Attending were Henry vow ln remam b1part1san and - 'Lawrence . Gallia Jackson
Wells, Richard Jones and to say ':only n ice things" Meigs, vinton, Pike, R&lt;Jss:
James Rouish.
about the acllv1t1es.
Athens and Scioto counties.

o

Republic history may ·never

Outage affects

5,000

;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

FOUND DEAD
James Lohse, 37; former
radio personality wllb
WMPO, was found dead
Monday in CinciooaU.
Complete details were
lacking at presstlme today.

PRICES UP
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) ~
Burley tobacco volume and
prices were up slightly
Monday at Ohio's only burley
market.
Sales were 506,322-pounds
lor a combined total of
$661,154 .08. The 100-pound
average was $13,058, up 36
cents from Thursday's
closing.

�•
~3 - The Dally Sentinel_. Mld&lt;!(eport-Porneroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1979

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tue8day,Jan. 9,1979

'

...

•

Ill

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

;:,~:

1980 maneuvering--alreAdy
By Mlrdla Aqle ud Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEA) ·However unwelcome, the start of
the new year brings with it a noticeable pickup in the pace of
llfesidenttal political maneuvering.
, JilnniY Carter, whom we can all thank or blame for the early
bird sYndrome, is )li'OCilecllng at a positively leisurely speed
this time In Clllllparison wtth his last campaign. That's one of
the advantages of incumbency.
Chief political aide Hamilton Jordan, author of the famous
11972 memorandum that served as the 1976 campaign blueprint
for the !hen-obscure Georgia governor, is at it•again, drawing
up a battle plan for Carter's rM!Iectlon bid.
But Jordan Is unlikely to have the liBt word this liilie around.
Other political advisers, from Vice President Mondale to
Speclal Trade Representative Robert strauss and Democratic
&lt;llainnan John White, Will also Influence the strategy and
timetable of the 19110 Carter campaign.
Jordan will not serve as campaign manager for this bid,
preferring to stay In the White House. Nor will Strauss take on
the job, although he is expected to , play a key role in the
deveiOPIIIIint of campaign strategy once he leaves government
later this year.
Best bets at this point: White House aide and Jordan
sidekick Tim Kraft; White House aide Anne Wexler; or
Democratic Party Treasurer Evan Dobelle.
John White Is now expected to remain as Democratic Natlonal Committee chalnnan through the campaign, to Insure
that the official party apparatus remains finnly but tactfully
allied with Carter regardless of possible primary challenges
from other Democrats.
The Carter sii"Btegy is expected to emphasiZe the early
primaries, the hope being that the president can squelch any
overt cballengers decisively enough to forestall any lateblooming clamor for Ted Kennedy.

More man~uvering--GOP style
On the Republican side, conservative Rep Phil Crane, R·
m, and moderate George Bush are both, in their own fashion,
emu!Jiing the 1976 early-lllart tactics of Carter
Crane, who became the first announced GOP contender way
back in August 1978, has already raised more than $647,000 for
his campaign, mostly through the direct-mall soliciting of
Richard Viguerie, and has traveled to 37 states.
He IS assiduously courting the national press, in an effort to
establish credibility, and 1s setting up campaign organizations
in the early caucus and primary states, where he hopes to
carve into Ronald Riagan's support.
Bush, seeking to establish himself as the front-running
m'llderate despite hlS .Iack of a current political base, has
reportedly signed on Gerald Ford's 1976 campaign manager,
Jiili Baker, to lead his operation this year.
Other former Ford aides are likely to be joining Bush soon,
and a campaign headquarters may be established in Houston Bush's home base -a Ia Jinuny Carter's decision of 1978 to run
a non-Washington campaign. ·
Senate Minority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr , meanwhile, is
combining Senate and presidenUal politics with a trip this
week to the Soviet Uruon to discuss the status of negotiations
for a strategic Anns Limitation Treaty (SALT fi) ,
A similar Baker trip to Panama was crucial to the final
shape of the Panama Canal treaties, so his journey- with four .
. other GOP senators - is bound to be carefully walched by the
Carter administration, among others

I.et's talk about Cleveland.
Wail. Don 'I swtlc~ to another channel or leave the room, yet.
There are truths to be drawn and possibly lessons to be
learned from the plight of a city, which 1ls !l111yor sees m terms
of a · "natural disasl•r" Cleveland's financial chaos and .
political bankruptcy are cerlamly disastrous. But an objective
observer rrughl be pardoned for seeing years of poor lea&lt;ler·
ship corrung to this result as the most natural aspect of the
- situatiOn.
Possibly the most favorable thing that can be said of the cl·
ty's present leadership IS that 1t inherited most of the makings
of the d!S8sler - although it appears perfectly capable of hav·
mg brought about something of the sort all by itself had it been
g1ven the opportunity
Clevelamj's basic problem, which has been much advertised
and which it shares m varying degrees of disaster with a
number of other cities m 1ts industrial Northeast-Midwest
ne1ghborhood, IS thalli has been for some years a c1ty m pain·
ful transition. The 19th century heavy Industries that made it
wealthy and populous are m decline and have not found
replacements in the service and technological enterpnses that
,could give 11 a new economic base.
Population IS also declining, professionals and skilled
workers having departed for the 'suburbs and exurbs. The ex-

"Then you're of the opinion Mr. President, that you'll, soon find the odushasle!tthec•typropertothesemi-&lt;~k•lledandpoorand
cheese?"
'
the city government with shrinking revenues to meet fixed or

Warm soil
produces

big plants
By Mlcbael B. Lafferty
Asaoctated Press Writer

WOOSTER, Ohio (AP) Warmer soli produces bigger
plants, according to Ohio
agricultural scientists, who
think they have found a way
to use waste ~at from power
plants to warm the good
earth.
The results of the reseafch
at the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development
Center here could be
iiliportant
to
Ohio's
greenhouse mdustry, the nation's largest.
Scientists have increased
yields of greenhouse-srown
lettuce
by
heatmg
greenho~meaoU to 75 F . Waste
heat Is pljled Into the soli
from the greenhouSe power
plant. Warren Roller,
It looks as though only two of the six GOP leadership posi· associate cliairman of the
tions in the Senate Will be hotly contested by, the time agriculture engineering de·
Republican senators caucus at the start of the 96th Congress.
partment, thinks the process
One is the relatively meaningless post of secretary to the could eventually save up to 35
GOP Conference, for which three candidates are scrapping - percent on greenhouse fuel
liberal Sen. John H. Cbafee, R-R 1., moderate Sen. William bills. About 40 percent of the
Roth, R-Del., and conservative Sen. Jake Gam, R-Utah.
cost of production is tied up m
The other, more significant batUe pits conservative Orrin heat, he said.
Hatch of Utah against liberal H John Heinz rn of Penn·
"In just one test we're very
sylvarua for the chairmanship of the GOP Senatorial Cam· happy with the results,"
pa1gn Committee, which controls millions of dollars of cam· Roller sa1d, although he
decllned to provide specific
paign funds.
Neither has a lock on the job at this writing, and it remains data because he said the tests
possible that a third candidate -Ideologically between the two are still prelimmary. Heating
-may enter the race. Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R·Wyo., has been the soli should stimulate the
calling colleagues to test the waters.
growth of most greenhouse
,.--'1------'-'------'-----------.· plants.
Even more money may be
saved if the researchers find
yields aren't reduced by
allowing the a1r to cool while
still heating the soli.
Roller sa1d ~reenhouse
growers normally do not heat
the soil, but he says soU
heating could prove very
ATLANTA (AP) -Corella Scott King 'has renewed her ef. economical when the in·
forts to convince the Georgia Legislature to declare Jan. 15 a creased plant growth is
state holiday m memory of her late husband, Dr. Martin Lu· added ln.
The researchers plan to test
ther King Jr.
growth
at 85 F, 95 F and 105 F
Mrs King, who was at the Capitol on Monday to attend
and
expect
lettuce growth to
sweanng~n ceremonies for her niece, state Rep. Alveda King
increase
at
temperatures up
Beal, spoke with severalleglalatora about the proposed holi·
to
95
F.
day, which would mark the anniversary of King's birth.
Since the process can
Opponents of the measure have said that creating a new
utilize
heat !tom any power
state holiday would be costly becauae of lost work hours.
plant,
Roller
foresees a time
A six-day obeervance of the 50th anniversary of King's birth
when
grpenhouses
and power
begins Thursday.
plants may be found side-byMEXICO CITY (AP) - Security wUl be light when Pope Side "It would be very
naturlil for us to have more
.l!&gt;hn Paul II visits Mexico later thla IIWlllth.
local
power plants and plan a
Mexican officials said Monday that more than 10,000 se·
community
around them
curlty agents will be mo~ to protect the pope, who plana
which
would
Include
to visit four cities and will be aeen by about five million Mex·
greenhouses
for
growing
• leans Nearly all of Melico's 64 mllllon people "~~re Roman
food," he said.
Cath~~'
In other Ohio agriculture
The main purpose of his trip will be to Inaugurate the Third
General Conference of Latin American Blshope In Puebla. He news:
-The check-off on heel
aJao plans to visit Mexico City, Guadalajilra and Oaxaca.
cows sold in Ute slate
'
to 25 cents a head
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland Increased
Jan.
I. Cattlemen approved
has been hoapitallzed for tests of a painful back condition auf·
the increase at an October
fered over the holidays, an aide says.
The aide, Tom Sand, said Bergland checked into the referendum. The money will
, Betheeda Naval llolpltal on Monday and was to remain "at be used by the Ohio Beef
Marketing Committee to proleast overnight" for tellls to determine the nature of the pain mote
beef sales and conand ill treatment.
'
Bergland waa ordered heme for relit by doctora laat week SIIIDption.
-sale of fresh and cured
after compl8lnlng of severe pains in hill lower back.
meats will be featured at the
Ohio Roadside Marketing
SAN FRANCI~ (AP) - Hsrry B. Britt, a 40-year-old
Jan. 14-16 at the
homoaexual and fermer Methodist rninlllter, baa been chosen Conference
COnvention
Center
In Dayton.
to replace the slain Havey Milk on San Francisco's Board of
-Datrymen will be able to
Supervlaora.
'
review their dairying operIn amounclng the appointment Monday, Mayor Dianne
atlll)s With the aid of a
FelnstetnllrelledthatMllt'saeaton the boardwaa "nota gay
at the Tri.State
seat." But IItle added that llbe hlld appointed a homoeexuaJ ClllllpUter
Dairy Management
beca- of !iir cOmmitment that ''violence not ch1111ge the
Workshop In Cincinnati.
collflle of government."
Dairy extension specialists
Milk, one of the nation's few avVwed homoeexual political fl'om the University of Kenflc~n~~ and Sm Francilco's flrlt llonlallaual111pervi1Dr, was
tucky and Ohio State and
gunned down Nov. 'llln City HaD, along with Mayor George Purdue universities Will
Moscone. Former Supenilsor Dan White haa been charged help with the analyses.
with the Shootings.

Caucus contests

·N ames •••

in the news

Donald F. Graff

Problem City, U.S.A.

service

nsmg service costs
This, very bnefiy, IS the Cleveland problem, but it IS not the
full Cleveland story That deals not only With an agmg m'**********************************************~
~
~ dustrlal c1ty but With the expanded metropolitan area of which
1t is the core.
The Cleveland Standard Consolidated Statistical Area, ac·
cording to rankings based on 1975 !1gures, IS the ninth largest
m the nation w1th a populatHlll of some three rrull1on While the
c1ty of Cleveland, which now contains less than a quarter of the
t********************************************~~ metropolitan population, has been in dechne the metropolitan
area has not It may not be one of the nation's explosive growth
areas, but 1t has been holding Its own.
II 1s not an economically depressed area. According to a
survey of the economic health of metropolitan areas in Across
the Board, magazme of the Conference Board, metropolitan
Cleveland is actually one of the brighter spots m the nation in
June I - ~or the second The Burger Chef opened in Common Pleas Court. Final several respects. Its unemployment rate has been below the
day a picket lme protesting Pomeroy.
plans were completed by the natiOnal average and •Is wage rates have been running 10 per·
the late closmg of schools was
June 11 - The 1ooth an· county commissioners for a cent or more above the national average.
There IS also cultural Cleveland to consider- the orchestra,
at Meigs High School.
n1versary of the Mount new Meigs map.
June 2 - Jaye Ord and · Moriah Baptist Church in
art
museum, the cluster of uruvers1tles and other inslltutlons
June 22 - A student health
that
contribute to a quahty of life few other urban complexes
Larry Fisher were named Middleport was observed
team began its work m the
v a I e d i c I or ian and
June 12- Dr. J. J. Davis county. Cecil W. Teaford of can match.
slautatonan, respectively, of was commended before his Minersvllle was injured wherr
Viewed in a metropolitan context, Cleveland IS more favored
than troubled Much the same rrught be said of s1milar prothe Southern High School retirement for his work in the struck by a car.
senior class. At Eastern town by Muldleport Village
June 23 - Cathy Blaettnar blem cities -St. Lows, Boston, San Francisco.
This IS not to say that the problems do not exist, that they are
H1gh, David Brown was Council
was crowned Big Bend
named valedictorlan and
June 14 - An agreement Regatta Queen; the annual not aggravated by inadequate leadership, that they do not re·
•Dorothy Runyon, was reached fo( the county pa~ade was staged from qmre attention Ills to suggest that a good part of the solution
may he closer to hand than the stale cap1tals and Washington:
salutatorian.
highway department to do Middleport to Pomeroy.
In
the going metropolitan areas that surround the nagging
June 3 - Robert S. site preparation work at the
June 24 - Frog jumping,
core
Cities
Nakamoto was named multi-purpose building.
raCing and art highlighted
And 1t is to make the point that In talking ahout the problems
valedictorian of the Meigs
June 16 - The wheels Saturday activities of the
of the Cities, 1t helps to VIew them not m isolation but m the
High School graduaUng class turned faster as plans un· regatta.
with Robin Snowden bemg folded for the annual B1g
June 26 - Middleport larger context in which they exist. A little perspective never
named salutatorian
Bend Regatta Weekend of the Council allocated funds to hurt the solution of any problem.
June 4 - Graduation Pomeroy . Chamber of provide Blue Cross Insurance
exercises were held over the Commerce.
for vtllage employes.
county on Sunday.
June 7f- Judy Riggs
June 2'1 - Clark Lees was
June 5 - Pomeroy Council staged her annual Regatta named new superintendent of
approved $50,000 for street Baton Twirling Contest, a the Eastel'!l Local School
'paving.
week before the actual District. Bob Hill was in·
June 6 - A tax levy in regatta
stalled as president of the
Meigs Local went down 2·1 in
June 19 - The Me1gs Local Pomeroy • Middleport Uons
the primary elections Rod Board of Education con· Club.
lawrence E.lamb, M.D
Karr was elected commander cerned about finances
June 211 - Ground was
of Drew Webster Post requested the state to do a broken for a new nursing
Amer1can Legion.
financial analysis
home
Cold Air Causes Attacks
Just because a person has
June 8 - A cloudburst hit
June 20- The aggravated
June 29 - A free health
By
Lawrence
Lamb,
M.D.
asthma
doesn't mean he can't
Meigs County dumping 3 6 murder trial of Leonard screening clinic was held at
DEAR
DR.
LAMBI
have
be
active.
In the 1972 Olym· ~
mches of rain Flood waters Fitchpatnck, Middleport, got the Senior Citizens Center in
had
asthma
smce
early
p1cs,
five
medal
Winners were
caused extensive damage at underway in the Me1gs Pomeroy, the f1rst of a series.
childhood
WJth
only
a
little
asthmatics.
the Everett McDaniel home.
Improvement over the years.
Exercise can cause
June 9- F1re destroyed the
I
am
16
and
rarely
have
proasthmatic
attacks. This is
home of Mr. and Mrs. Junior
blems
when
exercising
m
particularly
true of prolongHolsmger Fr1day mornmg
warmer months. It seems to ed, strenuous, physical ac·
hem the Winter when I run m 11vlty. If the vigorous exerthe cold a1r that I have the lion 1s over fiVe to eight
By TOM GIUEM
last week to move the lottery
most
problems &amp;metiilies minutes long, it 1s more likely
Associated Press Writer headquarters from Cleveland
I'm
practically
disabled from 1! WID precipitate an attack.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - to Columbus.
Legislation setting aside
wheezmg.
There are lots of athletic
The same measure was
state lottery proceeds for also offered last year, but
I know the solution would events, though, that aren't
education and to move the found little support among be to cut back on outdoor that long, such as what you do
workouts during this tiilie, during a baseball game. Long
Ohio Lottery Commissioo to senators
Columbus
were
among
the
buf when practlcmg basket· distance rwmmg would be an
Schwarzwalder,
however,
James F. Arnold, Ruth B.
first
bills
Introduced
In
the
ball much of the running is example of a poor chOice of a
recent
problems
With
feels
Arnold to Joon Redovian, Jr., ll3th General Assembly
done outside. Is there any sport for a young asthmatic.
the
lottery
management
and
Rosetta T Jedovwn, lots,
And a measure to abolish lottery expenditures will reason the cold air should Many track and field events
Middleport
the lottery also was expected result in more support for the cause this wheezing or Illness that are of relatively short
John M1chael Grueser to
more easily than warmer duration would be quite
Lula Mae Grueser, 15 acres, to be offered soon as bill this term.
lawmakers
attempt
weather?
Participation m satisfactory.
to
desl
The senator said locating
Sutton.
With an agency that has the lotlefY.0in Cleveland was sports IS very iiliporlant to
Also, there ·are some
\ Michael Nicholson, Bonnie
become
somewhat
of
an
me.
I
wuula
appreciate
any
medicmes
that asthmatics
an
attempt
to
spread
the
Nicholson to Randall C Hays, embarrassment durmg its
you
can
give
me.
can
lake
prior
to engaginl! in
advice
functions of state government
Joann Hays, 225 acre, brief history.
DEAR
READER
You've
sports
and
physical
exertion
to
cities
outside
the
capital,
Rutland
"It's a sore spot m every- but he said the experiilient identified the culprit. It is the that can help prevent attacks
Jud1th Ellen Codner to
cold a1r Very good studies One of these is Cromolyn
Robert Wilham Codner, body's mind," said Rep. Ed· has not been successful.
ward
J.
Hughes,
!}.Mentor,
have shown that cold air Will Sodium which IS a fairly new
The
lottery
needs
to
be
lo·
Betty Jane Codner, Life sponsor of the bill to earmark
cause
an asthmatic attack medicine, The medicine Is
caled
closer
to
the
other
Estate, Parcels, Lebanon.
the lottery lunda.
during
exercise even though usually inhaled before the exbranches
of
government
Harold G. .Jennings,
"I feel we have to mllke a charged with monltoril)g Its the same amount of exerCISes ert1on to prevent bronchial
Marlene Jennings to Buckeye
spasms Finally, I want to be
Rural Elec Coop , Inc., R1ght decision one way or another," q&gt;erations and working with m warm weather would not.
he
said
"Either
the
lunda
are
it,
he
said.
Those
agencies
This
IS an Important con- sure you are seeing your
of way, Columbia.
earmarked or the lottery IS mc1ude the attorney general, sideration for J)llrents and physician. Proper managedone away with "
the secretary of state, the teachers With all young ment of your asthms at this
Hughes
and
other. auditor and the treasurer, he
asthrQatics who might want stage can llelp you lead a
Monday's
introduced said.
to dophysical exertion, The more healthy and active life
11awmakers
Sports Transactions
several bills m the 112111
Schwarzwalder also said he
enVIronment 1s iiliportant in the years to come.
By The Assoctaled Press
General
Assembly
to suspects the slate could saw and a good way to help preDEAR DR. LAMB - I am
Baseball
vent asthmatic attacks dur- silffenng from erysipelas on
American League
mandate lottery proceeds for money If the lottery moved to
Boslon Red Sox - Signed education, but the measures Columbus because there
mg exercise Is to do the exer- the right leg round the ankle
Jim Rice, outfielder. to a became bogged down In the would be less long distance lion In warm, comfortable resultmg from a second
seven year contract
legislative process.
telephone calls and out.or. surroundings. Swimming, degree burn experienced nine
Nallon;ll League
which is a good exercise for months ago. 1 understand the
Allanla Braves - Ex·
The
legislation
he town travellinK by officials.
!ended the contracl of Bobby .(introduced last week calls for
many asthmatics, should be cause of this disease Is
Cox. manager, through 1980 !"'tach county to get back a
'niE DAD.. Y'5ENTINm~
done m a pool with the unknown and there is no
DEVl)TEIITO 111E
Monlreat Expos - Signed share of lottery money
temperature between 85 and treatment o~ than rest. Is
INTEREST OF
Elias Sosa, p1tcher, to a hve·
rtl
to Its !ott
90 degrees F
this correct?
MEIGS-MASON AREA
year contract. •
propo ona1e
ery
ROIIF.RT HOEFLICH
Hockey
sales That money would be
I
am
sending
you
The
DEAR READER - No, It's
City FAll...
Nallonal Hockey League
distributed to all school
Health Letter number ~ not. I don't know that you
Published tWily ext'epl Salurduy
Montreal Canadtens - districts in the cotm!y acby The ' Ohio Vllllt-v PublldUnl(
Astluna.lt will give you more have erysipelas - that's the
Recalled Dave Lumley,
\.urnpany-Muhlmedu:t, Jn( , Ill
information about asthrn4. , diagnosis you sent me.
cenler, from Nova Scotia of cording to the number of
Court St , Pumen1y. Ohio 4~789
the Amen can
Hockey students in each.
RliSint'"'-'1 Offltl' P'hont! 992· 2156
and exercise for asthmatics. Erysipelas is an lnfectlon of
F.•dllt•rlal Phont-992 ZIS7
Oth~r readers who want this the skin caused by strepLe~~~e Yor~ Rangers Hugh.: said many Ohioans
&amp;-cunei da.'!S posi.Hl(e paid at
Pornerm Ohltl
lssue can send 50 cents with a tococci bacteria of the same'.
Assigned Mike Kerney, right were
!AI beheve lottery
NHliCinul lldVt•rtbinl( rtpreHn·
wing, to New Haven of lhe proceed&amp; were going to be
long.,;lamped,
self-addressed general group that causes
I.Hhvr
l~ruJun As.sur.:ialt!S, :1101
American Hockey League used for education when a
envelope for it Send your re- strep throat. Usually the In·
F:ut 1111 Avt' , Clt•vt!land, Cltlll)i4JI5
Sull"t npf.1or1 rale11 Ot!llvered by
Footba II
constitutional· amendment
quest to me in care of this fectlon is of the skin over the
Natlona I Foofba II League
was passed to permit the - t.lr! wr l4 hl'fl' avallablt' 75 t•t•nlJI ~r
newspaper, P.O. Box race, although It can occur
wt•t k R\ Motor Route wlk're t arrltr
Cleveland Browns - An
s. r vlt..- nut ar.rllllablt• One month
nounced the resignation of form of legalized gambling.
1551,Radio City Station, New around a surgical incision or
t:l 25 fh mall In Ohio and W VK ,
Buck Buchanan, defens1ve
Meanwhile, Sen. Michael
York, NY 10019.
an Injury. If you are correct
Om Vt'llt roM SIX rnont/L~
f14 59
Thrtt• mtllllha, 11150
11ne coach
·-'
Schwarzwalder~Whether or not a person and you do have erysipelas,
San Franc•sco~rs - Col
'
·
F.L'C(•whNt' m 00 H nr :-;jx rnunlhll
who has asthma can exercise then 11 can and should be
F&lt;red Joe Thomas, general
umbos, Introduced
ill
$17 Hfl
1'hru rn unths sn no
lepends on whafkind of exer· treated with appropriate an·
~ uh~t rlfli.IU/1 pru t mtlmlt•ll StrllllH\
manager, and Fred 0' Con
,
rtmt'!ho~ nlrwl
nor, In erim he~d coach
CJse he might choose to do. iibiotlcs.
..

!. Editorial opinions · :i'

June news summary•••

HEALTH

Ohio Perspective

Meigs
PJ;"operty
Transfers

~

'SP-O RTS ,Mason ·Countian has memorzes
The Daily Sentinel

.

Today's

Sports ...World
By Wlll Grimsley
AP Correspondent
In the Dallas Cowboys' f1rst National Football League playoff game against the Atlanta f alcons, quarterback Roger
Staubach look ~ jarrmg shot from Falcons lmebacker Robert
PemyweU, and the lights went out.
When Roger was slapped on the cheek a few times, he recovered his senses and looked up blankly at the trruners and
teammates hovermg over him.
"Where's Wayne Hardin?" he asked.
"Hardin? Hardin? What do you mean Hardin? " his helpers
mqulred.
"Excuse me," the nuarterback apologized "1 thought I was
still at Navy "
That's the way the story was told afterward, Roger attestmg
to It good-bumor.edly, With a few JUStifiable liberties m the
gridiron colloquy.
Out in San Francisco where he IS attendmg the NCAA con·
vention, Hardin, Staubach's old coach at Navy and now head
man at Temple, couldn't restram a belly laugh when he heard
announcers Pat Summerall and Tom Brookshier refer to the
incident m Suqday's broadcast of the Dallas-Los Angeles
conference champ1onsh1p
"That Roger, he always has had a glass jaw," Hardm recalled. "He was always gettmg knocked out wh1le at Navy Ev·
ery tune I turned around, 1! seemed, I was standing over hun
and trying to revive hiili "
Hardin, who was Army's nemesis m h1s co~chlng tenure at
the Naval Academy from 1959 through 1964, IS deriVIng
personal satisfaction from the resounding pro success h1s for·
mer pupil.
On Jan 21 in M1anu, the scramblmg held general Will be
attempting to lead the Cowboys to an unprecedented third
championship against the tough Pittsburgh Steelers m Super
Bowl XIII
"I am proud of Roger, naturally, he IS a fine quarterback
and a greater person," Hardin sa1d, "but I don't root for
_, teams, I root for the kids. Two other of my former players are
in the Super Bowl ~ tight end Randy. Grossman With the
Steelers andoguard Jim Cooper with the Cowboys, both out of
Temple. I am neutral."
Hardin, who beat Army five straight before losmg h1s fmal
game at AnnapaliS in 1964, said as an under.graduate Staubach
was strictly a take-charge guy, mtelligent and blessed w1th ex.
traordinary Instincts.
"I always S81d that while most of us have f1ve senses, !loger
bas a sixth sense," he S81d. "It IS a sense that makes
everyth~ come out right He has a faculty for feelmg m advance when guys are bearmg down on him from behind Olh·
erwlse, he'd be a basket case by now."
Hardin S81d, except for hiS fragile JBW, Staubach had a remarkable sense of self-preservation.
Hardin remembers Staubach as a horn leader, w1th supreme
confidence.
"When he was a freshman, we took pictures of the plebe
squad," the coach sa1d. "Afterward, Roger came up to me and
said, 'Okay, coach, here's your lineup for next year.' He wasn't
far wrong "

By STRAT DOUTHAT
As,.,dated Preo• Writer
LEON , W.Va . t-AP) Dallas Durst may be commg
home from Colwpbus, Ohio,
th1s week and If he does, he'll
be brmgmg back some fond
memones of fonner football
coach Woody Hayes
·
Durst has been paralyzed
from the neck down since last
March when he was injured
in an on-the-job accident near
Huntington But that d1dn't
stop the 43-year-old Mason
County
resident from

attendmg an Ohio State
Uruvers1ty football game last
fall, as Hayes' personal
guest.
"I was kiddmg my brother
when he viSited me in the hosPital ooe day last summer,"
recalled
Durst,
when
contacted last week at the
Ohio State University
Medical Center m Columbus.
:•1 tnld him Woody Hayes
should come over and Sign
me up for hiS team "
Unbeknownst to Durst, his
brother. Jim, called Hayes

By Russell Schne1der
Cleveland Plain Dealer
CINCINNATI (AP)- H he
1s the most un papular man m
Cmcmnat1 these days, u
doesn 't seem to bother Dtck
Wagner
11

Whatever I have done, m

fa ct, whatever I do IS m the

hest mterests of the organIzation Th ere 's nothmg
personal mvolved," says
Wagner , the square-jawed,
re solute president and
general manager of the
Cmcmnat1 Reds
'
The Reds rec-ently lost Pete
Rose Then Sparky Anderson ,

STANDINGS
Nat1onal Basketball
Assoc•af•on

By The Assoctated Press

Eastern Conference
Atlanf•c Otv1s1on

Washington
Ph1la
New Jersey
New York
Boston

Kansas C liy al Houslon
Washtnglon at Denver

Indiana at Porlland

At A Glance
GB
692
639 1'1•
51 4 7
488 B
351 13

W L Pel

27 12
23 13
19 18
20 21
13 24

Wednesday's Games
Los Angeles at Boston

New

Philadelphia

Houston
At lanta
Cleveland

21 17 553 2
20 21 488 4'12
17 22 436 6'12

New Orleans
Oelro1l

13 28 317 11'12
12 27 308 1l lf2

Kans Ctly
Denver
Gh1cago
. Milw
lndtana

23
20
16
18

IS
20
23
26

605
500 4
410 7' ''
409 B

14 25 359 91f:z

Pac1hc DIVISIOn

Seattle
Phoen1x
Los Ang
Portland
Golden Sl
San D1eg o

24
26
24
19
21
19

14
16
16
17
19
13

632
619
600 1
528 4
525 4
452 7

Monday's Game
M ilwaukee 116. Houston 104

Tuesday's Games

L os Angeles at New York
Delro ll at San Antomo
San Otego at New Orleans
Golden State at ChiCago

al

Orleans

Atlanta at Mtlwaukee

Indiana at Seallle

,.r

At A Glance

By The Associated Press

Natmna I Hockey league

Campbell Conference
PatriCk 01YISI0r)

wltplsgfga

N Y Islanders

26 5 7 59
N Y Rangers
22 13 4 48
Ph1la
21 14 6 48
Allanla
21 16 4 46
Chicago 14 17 B 36
Vancouver 15 24 3 33
Colorado 9 26 6 24
Sl LOUIS
8 28 6 22

182 101
163
135
165
123
130
117
120

130
120
146
144
164
169
193

Wales Conference

Adams Otvlsion

Boston 27 6 7 61
Buffalo 16 13 10 42
Toronto 17 19 6 40
Monn
14 20 4 32

175
130
136
118

123
124
138
135

NorriS OIVISIOn

al 28 B s 61 166 102
Los Ang 17 17 6 40 148
P1tts
15 17 8 38 142
wash
1 23 7 27 125
Delroil
8 22 II 27 121

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Spurts Wru er

COLUMBUS, Oh1o (AP ) Kettermg Alter, Portsmouth
and Mansf1eid St' Peter's me
picking up nght where they
left off m Oh10 h1gh schoo l
basketball

138
141
180
148

the 1978 Ohto boys' st• te
tournament 111Ies an d are the
openmg Assoc iated Pr ess
weekly poll leaders t!Je-upp1
on

Vancouver 5, Toronto 1

Alter led by John Paxson,

Today's Games

Phlladelphta at Washmgton
Sovtel Wtngs at Bos ton,

e•hlblllon

.

Los Angeles at New York
Islanders

Butfalo at Allanta

New York Rang er s at 51
LOUIS

Wednesday's Games

New

York

Is landers

at

Oelr01l

Montreal at Pittsburgh
Mmnesota at Toronto
Los Angeles at Chtcago
New York Rangers at
Colorado

•

Spartans
keep
.
No.1 ranking

.,

Dw-st " Yes str, he's a fme

fellow and I'm JUSt sorry
about what happened at the
Gator Bowl. It was very
unfortunate but as a person
who's

1n

management, I can

contractmg hnn, at the tune
he was InJured
As he remembers the accident, a p1ece of heavy equipment was d1ggmg a ditch for
a dramage line when the
machine d1slodged a portion
of a tree hmb, hurlmg the
m1ssle at Durst, who was
standmg nearby , talking w1th
a member of the crew
" It spht my hard hat down
the middle and left me w1th a

understand how such a thing
could happen when you're
feelmg frustrated "
Durst was managmg a con. broke n neck ," he sa1d " I
struc!lon crew for Vecellio &amp; knew the moment I hit the
Grogan,
a
Beckley ground
that
l
was

v1ctor1es over Dav1dson,
Long Beach state and Thlane
last week
The lbne remammg first·
place vote went to North
Carolina
State, wh1ch
remamed in e1ghth place w1th
601 votes
Two newcomers en)oytng
unbeaten se.asons completed
the Top Ten. lnd1ana State,
11-0, moved up to nmth place
w1th 608 pomts followed
closely by Arkansas, 9-0, w1th
606 pomts
Texas A&amp;M , 1dle last week,
fell one notch to 11th place,
followed by Louisville,
Marquette, Georgetown, D C,
Kansas, Michigan, Kentucky,
Temple, Long Beach State
and Syracuse.
It was the first appearance
on the hst for Temple, wh1ch
1s u.o· and Joins Illmois,
lnd1ana State and Arkansas
as the natiOn's only four
unbeaten maJor college
teams. Syracuse returned to
the chart after a oneweek
absence while MISSISSippi
State and Maryland dropped
off the l"i

Cage Scores
Cmcmnah Taft 68. Cln

Cage standings
'

Ohto College Baskelboll

By The Assoctated Press
Through Jan 6 Games

Btg Ten Conference

Conference All Games

IllinOIS
M1ch 51
Iowa
OhiO 51
MiChigan
lnd1ana

0 2 6 5

o 2 10 4
Q2 s6

Purdue
Minnesota

Northwestern
0 2 47
Mtd-American

Conference
Conference All Games!
WLT WLT
Ball State
3 0 B 3
Toledo
2 0 B 3
C, Mlch1gan
10 7 4
Ohio U
11 6 3
Bowling Green
11 7 4
E M1chlgan
11 4 7
Miami
11 4 B
Kent State
01 5 6
W. Michigan
0 2 3 10
N Illinois
0 3 4 8
Oh1o Conference
Conference All Games

W L W
3 0 10
10 I
Wooster
10 9
Capital
1 0 6
Baldwin Wal lace
10 7
Kenyon
10 5
Oberlin
1 1 5
OhiO Northern
0 1 7
MarieIIa
0 1 6
Oh1oWeslyn
0 1 5

Heidelberg
Willen berg

011erbe1n
Ml Union
Denison

Musklngum

L
3
2
3
3
5
6
8

5

5
6
0 1 5 6
0 1 3B
0 1 0 B•
0 2 45

Hoosier Buckeye
Confert!nce
Conference Overall

Schools
Wllmmgton
Findlay
Anderson

Hanover

Clnclnnall Aiken 51. Cln· Manchester
Bluffton

'

14 0
2 0 10 I
2 0 10 2
20 7 4
I 1 73
15 95

2 0

Wlsconstn

cmnatl Western Htlls 45
Deflan,ce
Clncinnaft Wil hr ow 87 , Taylor
Cmcmna11 Hughes 64
.. Earlham

clnnali Wuodward SO

W L W L

WL WL
40 9 6
30 9 2

2 1

10 4
10 3

3 2

B 3

4 1

1 2 1 7
0 3 3 11
0 4 6 7

0

4

1 10

· Wha1 surpnses me

1s

that

Y• •u guys 1 he medta) seem '"
hmk I sh,•uJd be slmking
:JrulHld 1 11WD, afratd tu be

S&lt;"cn by anybody, wurrymg
abuw my pub he unage. I'm

the Most Valuable Player m
last
sp nn g·s
state

"'Sure, I've heard from
some people who sa1d they
Wished I had been able to resign Rose and that they were
dt.appamted I fired Sparky
But nobod} has g1ven me a
bad tun e I haven't been
treated rudely b) anybody ··
What about the bumper
sllckers that are begmnmg to
appear m Cmcmnat1, the ones
th at say " Boycott Operung
Day . ' and some fans hangmg
Wagner m eff• gy from a Ia m ·
ppost
m
down to" n

But upset' No. not at all
It takes more than that to

Cmcmnat11

He laughed and sa1d " H
th ere 1cally are plans to boy-

Class AAA

2 Cl evela nd 51 Joseph , 11

I

176

3 Canton McKtnl ey , 9 1

126

4 C1n c tn nalt Wtlhro w

70

•

op1n 10n
Wagner

Wl'

d1d ,"

sa1d

I can't tell you what tt
was. but the offe r I made on
~~

veT; good one,

r cce1vm g tt

T hen I m ade

all of us, and Katz

.tsked me to make a couple of
exll cws so he could g 1ve one to

th e guy who had drtven hun
lo the meeting, and another

113
5 Celma , 11 0 79
6 Colu mbus Ea st, 7 1, 76
7 Manell a, 7 1, 51
B Groveport, 9 o, 44
9 Frndlay . 10 I, 42
10 Toledo Scott , 6 0, 40

for the dnver s sun
1
·t couldn 't believe that ei-

or more po 1nls 11 Youngs
town W1l son 35, 12 (t1el

Wagner because he wa1ted
until the season was over to
make that offer He sa1d
·we trted to s1gn Pete m
May , but couldn't So , sure,
my offer m October was
better much Better Wh y
\\OU)dn t It be ?
After all by October Pete
had proved he could sttll play
the game better than most
guys, and he also had that 44
gam e hilling streak and
deserved to be rewarded

Oth er schools rece1v1ng 10

Akron Cent ra l Hower 29 , 15
(t 1e) Boardm a n and Newa r k
27 , 17 Columbus Lmden

Western Reserve and Warren

bailotmg by a statewide panel Hardong 16, 24 Clnc1 nn a1'
La Sa ll e 15 15 (l&lt; el Grove
of sports wnt e rs an d Clly and Shaker He1ghts 10
bt oadcasters
Class A
Alter IS JUSt two paintS
1 Porl smo ulh , 8 o, 144
a hea d of Cle vela nd St poont s
2 Clevela nd Lalln, 8 2, 142
J oseph, ll-1, Wll h 17 8 pomts
3 Youngstown Rayen B o
to Sl Joseph's 176, while 99
Canton McKinley, 9-1, rates ' 4 Uhro chsv li e Claymonl 6
third With 126 pOintS m Class - O S65t eu be n v 1Il e Central
AAA
Ca tholi c, 7 0 62
Portsmouth , 8.Q, outpulled
6
Mtll ers bu rg
We st
Cleveland Latm, 8-2, by a 144· Holmes. 9 0 58
142 margm The Tr oja ns
7 Bucy r us Wynford, B 0, 55
8 Colu m bus M1fflm, 6 3, 5.4
mpped Latm by JUSt one pomt
9 Lor a m Catholic, 10 1 ' 48
m the 1978 Cla ss AA
10 (ttel Wil lard 11 o, and
ga me
Dayton Jefferson, 10 o, 43
c hampi on s hip

COLUMBUS Ol11o (A PI -

st, when they I Rose
and hts agent, Reuven Katz)
sa td we d1dn 't make them a
good. substantial offer. that
bothered me , because m my
~'u

t:O!&gt;Je~ for

·

Portsm outh m Qass AA McKtnley 26 18 Loraon Kong
• Cl
A 1 • 23. 19 Ba rberton 21 20
an d St P eter s m ass aso
Sp ringfi eld North 19 21
are mvolved m close battles Allia nce 17, 21 (lie I Warren

How a pa nel of sports writ er s
and broadcasters ra tes Oh10
h1gh sehoul basket ball teams

ILCS

1 Ketter 1ng Alt er 11 0, 178
p oml s

14

'

the auction of Rose s scrv·

p o tnl for lOth }

wee k (1 0 pom ts for f 1rst to 1

and

ranks third With 99 pomts
lromcally , St Peter's, IU·I ,
IS also mvoived m a ratmgs
duel w1th the team 1t beat m
•
f 1
1ast seasons
state sem1 mas
- 'Gnadenhutten Indian
Valley South
The Rebels 9·1 a 49-45 v1c.
' ,'
tun of St Peters m the 1978
tournament, colle c ted 164
pamts, Just nme behmd the
Mansfield school's total of
173 Tuscarawas Centra I
Cathohc of New Pluladelphia
ranks No 3 With a 9-0 start
and 89 pomts
In Class AAA , C~n cmn all
W1throw ranks fourth , Cehna
fifth, Columbus East SIXth,
Marietta seventh , Groveport
eighth Findlay nmth and To·
'
ledo Scott No 10
In Class AA , Uhnchsv1ile
Claymont ciauns the No 4
spot, Sl eu benvt II e Cen t r a 1
Catholic IS fifth , Mlllersburg
West Holmes, s1xth , Bucyrus 1
Wynford seventh Colwnbus
'
'
M1ffhn , .eighth ; Loram
Catholic, n~t~th , and Dayton
- Jeferso4i'lPnd Willard are Lied
for lOth
In Cl ass A• Old Wash mgton
Buckeye Tr81i stands fourth ,
Botkms, fifth, Sebrmg, Sixth,
Canal Winchester seventh
'
'
Southmglon and Covmgton
are deadlocked for e1ghth,
,anll Zanesville Rosecrans •IS
No 10

g re at emphas is, a1e

so me
sta tem ent s
and
dllegalaons that came out of

I couldn 't heheve 1t, so I
wrote th e offer out stgncd 1t
.md asked Pete and Katz to
llHtlai 11 to acknowledge

for The Assot1a1ed Press t.t11 s

Wes t Tec h

8-0.

What does upset h1m ,
Wagner sa1d. though not w1th

'Ttcllculous

Clevela nd

Youngstown Hayen

upset me '

Oct 2 was

Cleveland Glenvtl le 32

for th e other diVISIOn leads m

iof,km g

.•md Pete md1cated that he
thought so too But "hen
Pete c•lled m the agent. he
!Katz ) sa1d
It
was

names this season and plied
b

higher nnw than thefve ever
been at tlus lime of the year
And when they hanged me m
effigy we ll I was qmte flat·
te1ed 1 mean, the dununy
they made was ve1y good

tourn am e nt, has won a lltls 11
up 178 pomts for a narrow
Class AAA ratmgs lead

wtt us tt sure JS str~ nge , be
cause seC:~ son ue ket sales ::tre

c~ ny

Other schools rece1vmg 10

or more pomt s 12 Col umbu s

Hartley 41 13 Bell vill e Cl ear
Fork 39 14 Wa ver ly 27, 15
Mi nerva 31, 16 Coldwater 26,
17 Brookf teld 13, 18 Tillons
v1 lle Buc keye Sout h 22, 19
Coiumbux Bexley 11, 20 (t 1ei
Ne lsonv tl le York an d
Swanton 20 n (ltel Delphos
Sl John and Manon R1ver
Valley 15 3 Archbold 14, 31
(Itel Well sv ille and Akron
Hoban 13, 33 (lie) Heath
Man on Elgin and Zanesv11ie
Maysv ille 12, 36 O&lt; el Bed
ford Chane! and Warsaw
Rive r v 1ew 11
Class A
1 Mansft eld 51 Peter 's. 10
1, 173 po1n1s
2 Gnadenhutten lndt a n
Valley South. 9 1, 164
3 · New Philadelph 1a
Tu sca rawas Cen t ral
Cathol1c. 9 o, 89
4 Old Wash•nglon Buckeye
Trail . B o, 64
5 Bolk1ns, 13 o, 51
6 Sebnng 7 1 45
7 Canal Wonch este r. 9 o. 44
8 (11e l South1 ngt on, B 1

par• lyzed "
Durst has been undergomg
rehabilitative U1erapy at the
med•cai center smce a couple
of weeks after the mishap and
has heen home only once,
when Vece ll1 o &amp; Grogan
brought hun to Beckley for a
Chnstmas party He spent
Chnstmas wtth ht s two
children and his wife, Beverly, and then went back tn
Ute hosp1ta l for further treatment
"But I'm ahout thro h
here,' he sa1d m a telephon '
mterv1e" last Fnday " I may
be commg home tlus week "
And although_he ·u he confin ed to a wheelchair, Durst
says he hopes tn be able tn resume
wor ktng
as
construction superviSor

I assure y1 1U I did whal I
hnu gh was bes1 fnr lhe Red s
and ha1's a 11 lhere is lu 1t.

1111 ,

Portsmouth ranked
first in AA poll

l'he t hree powers a ll won

Montreal 3, Mmnesota 1

battmg record last year was
the most 1mpress1ve 1n
several decades, said he d1d
not want to become a free
agent, although Pennacchia
had made that threat on
behalf of h1s chen!
The 6-fo ot -2, 205-pound
slugger sa1d he would s1mpiy
mvest h•s money because "a
lot of ballplayers come out
broke
"I don't need a yacht or another fancy car I save."

s ummanl y

d1sm1 ssed Anderson, the
popular manager who had a
year left on h1s contract, and
repla ced h1m w1th Jo hn
McNamara
" If the fans are ma d
at
me ,
I'm
not
a" an
i1," smd Wagner
wht•n v1:w cd recen~l y at h•s
suburban Cmcnma11 humc.

Pro Hockev

Western Conference
Midwest DIVISIOn

who had been hailed as one of
the smartest, most commo·
mcahve managers m all of
baseball, w•s f1red, and Wa~­
ner 1s blamed for the
departure of both
in the case of Rose, Wagner
says he was unwilling to go
"overboard" m ti ymg to Sign
the 38-year••ld star who
played out h1s option and
subsequently s1gned a
conlr act
with
the
Pluladelph1a Ph1lhes that will
pay hun about $800 ,000
annually for four years
W ag n er

Chicago at New Jersey

Central DIVISIOn
San An ton io
24 16 600

Rice newest millionaire
By DICK BRAUDE
AP S(lllrts Wriler
BOSTON
(AP)
Amer1can League MVP Jun
R1ce 1s baseball's newest
instant milbonaire, and the
Boston Red Sox are bracmg
for a new wave of Salary
demands from their other
high-prtced stars
Rice, the 25-year-old outfielder whose sluggmg dominated baseball last season,
agreed to a new seven-year
contract Monday callmg for
more than $5 million .
Rice's annual salary of
more than $700,000 doesn 'I
make him the highest pa1d
player in baseball, but
'
jumped him from the rankand-file- at about $125,.000 a
year - to the stratosphere of
baseball salanes.
" I guess every player
wants to be the richest m pro
By The Associated Press
baseball," sa1d Rice at a
news conference at Fenway
MIChigan State, WhiCh
Park. "I don't worry ahout erased a 13-pomt defiCit and
what other players make. I beat B1g
Ten
nval
just want to be an every day Mmnnesota 69~2 1n 1ts only
game last week, remains on
ball player."
The contract agreement tnp m the latest Assocwted
was unveiled by IU!tl Sox Press college basketball poll
The Spartans, 9-1, received
Gene~al Manager Haywood
Sullivan, accompamed by 36 of 59 first-place votes from
team vice president Buddy the natiOnwide panel of sports
LeRoux.
R1ce
was wnters and broadcasters and
shepherded by his agent, a total of 1,140 pomts for a
Tony Pennacchia, who comfortable lead over
dickered vnth Sullivan for rimnerup Notre Dame, wh1ch
collected eight lust-place
nearly a year.
Rice led the maJor leagues votes and I ,048 pomts
The pail, released Monday,
in home runs w1th 46 and RBI
With 139 wh1le batting .31~ was based on games played
last season He was under through Sunday, Jan, 7
The top four teams were
contract for 1979 and h•s
option season of 1960
unchanged from the previous
Sullivan, thus, effectively week, With Michigan State
41' renegotiated Rice's pact and and Notre Dame followed by
exended it through the 1985 North Carolina and lllmo1s
The Tar Heels got just one
season.
The general manager con- first-place vote but totaled
ceded that he 1s concerned 1,010 pamts, while the Illin1,
with new demands from other unbeaten m 14 games,
IRed Sox players, but added, received f1ve f1rst-place votes
"I'd rather s1gn Rice than and 994 points.
worry about the others.''
Lou1s1ana State, which was
Rice's deal makes him the Wlbeaten befor~ losing to
highest-paid Red Sox player, Vanderbilt Monday night ,
ahead of right-handed pitcher movoo from seventh place to
· Mike Torrez, who signed for fifth with SIX first-place votes
• about $600,000 as a free agent and 968 pomts.
in 1977 and veteran superstar
UCLA retained SIXth place
Carl Yastrzemski who earns With 837 pomts while
less than $300,000 a year.
preseason favorite Duke
The Rice contract has a no· slipped from flfth to seventh
trade provision for several ,w1th 823 points desp1te

Oh1o State coach had won a
hfelong adJmrer
" He's a fme gentleman as
far as l 'm concerned, " sa1d

Wagner: 'Everything I've done so
far is in best interest of organization'

Monday's Games

seasons but does not mclude
mcent1ve clauses that would
provtde bonuses based on
future performance.
SUllivan called R1ce's contract the longest and richest
m Red Sox history, but 1t
apparently IS somewhat shy,
on an annual baslsrof the $3.2·
m1lhon four-year contract
s1gned by free agent Pete
Rose w1th the Pluladelph1a
P.lulbes
from
The
slugger
Anderson, S C , whose

and told him of h1s brother's
plight and told of hiS Joke
about makmg the Buckeye
football team
"Hayes came to see me m
the hospital that very same
day and he brought me a box
of candy," sa1d Durst. "Then,
he came back about a month
later and mvtted me to the
Pem State game at h1s
expense' '
Durst was on the Sidelines
when the two teams met And
although Hayes' Buckeyes
lost to the Nlttany Lions, the

ther, and 11 upset me very
much '

Som ethmg else was the
cnlt c ts m dH ecte d t ow aId

a

'At least I'm gomg to g1ve
tt a by, " he said
I
accordlllgly which I con·
s1dcrcd we were domg
ilut there was no way J
cuuld JUSltfy nlll gomg ovet
boclr d to k eep Pete, much as

we wanted h1m. much as we
apprectated all he did for us
m the past. smd Wagnet
· I'm sorry he didn ~ want to
slcJ) wath u::; but J bear _no

g1 udges I w1sh hun well
Wagn er
g dve
th e
unpr e::;ston tiler e were other
f.~ttm s m vol\.e d m wh~
Hn.se's vo lue to the Heds v..as
not a::; gr cat as It wa s to other
tea m::;,
e:;; p ~Cict ll v
th e

Pluihes He also "as relucta nt to ex pl.:un on the record
v..hy An der son wc~ s fu ed afle1
mne seasons and fo ur divtston

titl es
' It was a ver) d1ff1cul t
dectston . but I fe lt a change
~\a S
neces::;cu ~, '
said

Wagner

I made up mv mmd ·

m Augu st , but l \\aJled to
thmk so me more about tl , to
be sm e I wa s dotng the n ght
thmg m C(J SC I &lt;.: hanged my

mmd But I d1dn I
I'h ere v.. as a comm umedttons p1 oblem that wasn't

evtdc nt to eve11 bod) but It
'"'as tP thuse of us close to the
s1t uauon •· Wag ner sa1 d
You k now a mcmager mtght
be ver y t.'(nnnmmcatlve w1th

lour or ftve pl ayers and out of
touch wtth the other 20 But I
really don't want to go mto tt
;mv mor e lhan that
~ Ander so n

We

Wagner

J

a nd

parted as [nends

Hell we even cmb1aced after
I to ld' hlll&gt; I fe ll we had to
m,lke a change, and I w.sh
htm lhe best. ton JUSt as I do
Pete " Wa gner sa id

W e can show
you ways to

save mo ney
o n yo ur au to

msuran ceWi tho ut
sacnf1cmg
pro tect ton

for pn ce

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

USED CARS
1973 BUICK CENTURY
SEDAN
1
1395
1973 FORD TORINO
SEDAN
1 1395
1973 FORD GRAN
TORINO CPE.
1
1595
1973 CADILLAC CP E.
DEVILLE
1
1595

DAVIS
INSURANCE
AGENCY
8111 Quickel
Jeannte Starch er
" Across from the

Courthouse, Pomeroy , 0 "

992 6677

R("pr escnt1n~

FEDERAL KEMPER

INSURANCE COMPAN Y

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You' ll L1ke Our Quality
Way of Domg Bustness

GMAC FINANCING ·
992 5342
Pomer.oy
Open Evenmgs 't116 00

TiiSpm Sat

and Covmgton , 10 o 43

10 Zanesvil le Rosecrans, 8
o, 36
Olher schools rece1vlng 10
or m ore pomts 11 St Henry
33, 12 Porl smoulh East 31 , 13
(t1e) Skyvue and Mogadore
30, 15 R1chm ond Dale
Southea slern 29, 16 New
Malamoras Fron1 1er 28, 17
Middletown Fenw1ck 27. 18
(lie) Lora1n Ciearv tew and
Newbu ry 25, 20 C•nc1nnat1
Summtl Co untry Oay 24, 21
(tte ) Ada and Berlin Center
Wes tern Rese rve 20. 23
Leetor11 a 18. 24 Mana Sleln
Manon 17, 25 tie Woodsfield
and Columbus Ready IS, 27
Rawson Cory Rawson 14, 28
(l1el Ottawa Hill s " and
Fredertcktown 13, 30 Adena

Buckeye West 12, 31 West
Libert y Salem 11

"'

_

�-

.,

__ __. . . _..,

5~ The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1979

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
._. 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1979

rI

Fun With Food
By Charlene Hoeflich

by Charleue Hoeflich
What with the high cost of
meal and the prediction that
It will be going even higher
(heaven forbid), the time has
come to take a look at meat
extenders - and W'e don1
mean the kind that comes ln a
box from the supermarket.
· While meat is important in
the diet, It's long been a fact
that Americans eat too much
meat and too little fruits and
vegetables. Cutting down on
meat can he one way of cutting down on the grocery bill.
So, if' economy is the word
at your house, then the place
to start may be with
casseroles. j
For instance, today's fried
chicken can he tomorrow's
dinner casserQie. There's a
dOZilll ways to prepare
chicken
casseroles .
Remember though that once
chicken has been cooked, it
should not remain in the
refrigerator more than five
days.
And our suggestions BAK·
ED CHICKEN
CASSEROLE
I can mushroom soup, I can
chicken noodle soup, I large
can evaporated milk, I cup
chow meln noodles, and 2
cups of chopped chicken ..
' Combine undiluted soups
and milk in a sauce pan'. bring to the boiling point, stirring frequently. Stir noodles
and chicken into the soup
mixture. Pour into greased
casseroleA3ake in 350 degree
oven for one hour.
OR YOU MIGHT TRY CHICKEN CASSEROLE
WITH ASPARAGUS
3 cups diced cooRen chicken
breasts, I and 'h cups cream
of chicken soup, I ·medium
· onion, chopped, 'h cup sliced
celery, II• cup margarine,
juice of one lemon, I cup
grated Cheddar cheese, and I
.14-&lt;lunce can of asparagus,
drained.
·
, Combine the chicken and
soup in a mixing bowl ..Saute
the onion and celery in
margarine until limp but not
·brown, then stir into the
chicken mixture. Add season·
ing~, lemon j)iice and cheese.
. Pla.ce asparagus in
casserole, pour chicken mixture over the,top, and bake in
375 degree · oven for 20
minutes. Slivered almonds
·can he sprinkled over the top.
FOR I.EF'TOVER HAM HAM-NOODLE
CASSEROLE ·
I lklunce package noodles,
1 1~ cup chopped cooked ham,
I cup peas, 1 cup grated sharp
cheese, I tablespoon dried
onion fl;lkes, I cup cream of
chicken soup, 'h cup milk,
and 2 tablespoons butter or

·•

Birthdays
celebrated

I
I
I
I

ONCEAUSERALWAYSAUSER!

margarine.
·
Cook the noodl~s according
RIO GRANDE - The Area an activities program for the
to package diredions an~ Agency on Agjng District 7, c 0 0 f u 8 e d r e 81 d en t .
drain. Combine the ham, located on the campus of Rio · Remotivation techniques,
peas, "~• cup cheese, and Grande College and Com· resociaiization,
attitude
onion flakes , and then place munity College, Rio Grande, therapy, milieu therapy, self·
alternate layers of the ham is presenting a two-day image therapy and music
mixture and noodles in a training session entitled therapy will also be
·greased one quart baking "Activity Therapy: Meeting . discussed. Ms. Mllby Will also
dish . Mix the soup, milk, and the Needs of Nursing Home explain the Resident Bill of
Po u r ·
over
t h c Residents."
Rights and methods for its
noodles.Sprinkle with thereMs. Susan Milby will . implementation.
maining cheese and dot with conduct the workshop at the
Ms. Milby fllCelvedher B.S.
butter. Bake, 350 degrees 25 Holiday Inn, Chillico!he, on - degree from Georgetown
to30minutes.
Wednesday, Jan . 31 and College, Georgetowri, Ky., in•
At our house we like the . Thursday, Feb. 1. This work· 1977. She is Director of Ac·
, casserole better without the shop is open tp Activity tivities , Wecare Health
peas, and also we find that if Therapists, Nursing Home Facility, Colwnbus. She is
you don't ·have onion flakes, Administrators, Direc:t.£are member of Resident Activity
onion' dip mix or onion put' Staff, R.N.'s, L.P.N.'s, and Personnel in Ohio and the
through the blender works others working with the American Health Care
just as well. In fact we use elderly in nursing homes.
Association _ Council of
onion dip mix for. just about
Topics discussed at the Activity Coordinators. She
everything -it's great flavor- training session include how has conducted training in the
ing for baked steak and beef 10 recognize the needs of areas of Reality' Orientation,
roasts and it really zips up residents
and
th e Resident BUI of Rights, At·
hamburgers.
programmin·g of activities to titudes in a Nursing Home
And speaking of · ham· meet these needs, sensory · and Activities Programming.
bur ger,
every bu sy deprivation, the causes of
Mr.
Paul
Pinder,
homemaker needs a recipe confusion and how to adapt therapeutic therapist and
for "Supper in a Skillet" on
' consultant in the · Nursing

Home Division of the Ohio
Department of Health, will.
join Ms. Milby to respond to
inquiries regarding state and
federal regulations as they
relate to activity therapy.
Aregistration feeof$14 will
include coffee breaks and
lunch fo r both days.
Registration is limited to
sixty participants.
Participants
completing
the two-&lt;\ay workshop will
receive 1.5 CEU's frbm Rio
Grande College and Com·
munity College . .E·ndorsement for credit hours for
Nursing
Home · Administrators has been
requested from the Ohio
Board of Examiners for
Nursing
Home
Ad·
ministrators.
For further infonnation,
please contact Barbara
Steele, R.N., Area Agency on
Aging District 7, P. 0. Box
426, Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande, 45674 or call (614)
245-5353, ext. 226.

a·

occasion.
Try this one Brown one pound of ground
beef and one small chopped
onion in vegetable oil. Add .a
half of a green pepper, chop·
ped, a cup of elbow macaroni,
. uncooked , a medium size can
of tomatoes, some salt and
pepper, a little basil and
thyme if you have it, a teaspoon· of parsley flakes. Mix
well and then simmer until
the macaroni is tender. Then
simmer another hour .
Sprinkle one cup of grated
sharp cheese on top and sim·
mer until melted. Serve im·
mediately.
HAPPY COOKING-!

,_t

NOTE FROM SUE: !'Getting.over him" won't heimpilssib!e if
' you see Karl as he really is ~ and start seeing yourself as a
worthwhile person.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I worked hard on my .autobiography for English class and
thought it was good. In it I said my Dad "pastored" a Baptist
church which was somewhat "nervous;making" for his
children. (Plus a few other "different" expressions.)
. My teacher marked me down because I "turned nolUIS into
iverbs" (it should have been "was pastor of" ) ; and "misused
the language." Yet I've read the phrase, "riervous-making" in
magazine articles. It's kind of "in,speak" these days, another
description she'd red-pencil: Come to think of it, she'd probably hit "red-pencil" too as it 's "verbi.ng" a , no~ . (Don't I
ever quit?)
Helen, if you were a teacher, would you be so picky?
-FUTURE AUTHOR (I HOPE )
DEARAUTHOR:
.
If I were an English teacher I'd rate themes on content,
bright writing, originality, unique approaches, vitality, in•terest, readability ... and if there were errors in grammar, I'd
"margin-comment," but wouldn't grade down an otherwise
excellent 'piece because of them. Rather, I'd see the potential
in a wiiter who dares experiment with words (even though
"verbing" a noun is a bit much ) and would encourage him or
her in every way. ·
As for ~' pastored," "nervous-making,'' etc., perhaps they
aren't king's English, but such new usages keep the language
alive and growing. I suspect your teacher is the type who
would write, "The dog chased the possum up a tree," rather
than "The dog treed a possum. " Such a waste of space! (I also
suspect her classes are "heavy on dull '' )
.
Good luck in your career, and don't let rejection slips throw
you.- HELEN

J_.

R. Gregory Gibbs, 248 7th
Ave., Middleport, ·local ·
representative for Mutual of
Omaha and United of Omaha,
was recently awarded a
Certificate of Proficiency for ,
successfUl completion of an
lritensive course in life in·
surance underwriting.
PRESENTED TV - Members of the Western Boot CB Club, Racine, during the past
The school, which inChristmas season, presented the residents of the Meigs County Infirmary with a TV set.
corporates the most ad·
Accepting the set w&amp;S Infirmary employe Sybil Dorst. Shown, 1-'r, Donald Smith, vice
vances
methods
of
president of th e club, Mrs. Dorst and Eugene Long, president . Each resident was also
educational training, utlli2es
presented a box of candy from the club.
· •
complete audiovisual
facilities. It was held at the
Companies' Home Office in •
~
Omaha, NE.
Invitations are extended
only to career represen·
KEVIN WILLFORD
Mountain Home AFB, Idaho,
tatives and are based upon
MOUNTAIN HOME, Idaho serves with a unit of the
completion of study courses - Kevin B. Willford, son of Tectical Air Command.
1
and sales achievements.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Will·
Airman Willford Is a 1977
Gibbs .is associated with the ford of Jtacine has been graduate of Southern Local
TUESDAY
Jack Baisden Division Office, promoted to ainnan first High School.
WRESTUNG officials and
general agency for Mutual class in the U. S. Air Force.
coaches Tuesday 7 p.m. at
and United in Chillicothe.
' The airman, an integrated
Meigs High School.
avionics systems specialist at
WILLIAM EVANS
SYRACUSE PTO, 7:30p.m.
AVIANO, Italy - The U. S.
Tuesday
at the school.
Air .Force has promoted
by
first graders.
Program
William R. Evans, son of ..
Babysitting
provided
and
Mrs. Veneita F. Evans of 1211
refreshi11ents.
viand St., Point Pleasant, W. ·
POMEROY CHAPTER 176,
Va., to the . rank of staff
O.E.S.
Tuesday 7:45 p.m. at
sergeant.
Sergeant Evans Is serving the Pomeroy Masonic Temat Avia no AB, Italy, as an air ple. ·
passenger specialist. ·
LAUREL CLIFF FREE
The sergeant is a 1974 . Methodist Church Missionary
graduate of Point Pleasant Society, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
DHP·SEA DELIGHTS
High School~ His w)fe, Joyce, the home of Mrs. Mildred
is
the daughter of Mr. and Jacobs.
FROM THE SEVEN SEAS
Mrs.
Dale F. Graham of 9475
RACINE Lodge 461 F~,
OFTHEWO~LD
Frazeysburg Road, Dresden. Tuesday, 7:30p.m .
His father, Harold E. Evans,
WINDING
TRAIL
also resides in Point
GARDEN
CLUB,
home
of
Pleasant.
Jackie Brickles, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Members to take
KEf'! REYNOLDS
seed
catalog fur roll call.
AGANA, Guam .- Airman
First Class Kenney D. Mrs. Mafjorie Walburn to
Reynolds, son of Mr. and give program on "Color." ArMrs. Ivan J. Reynolds of Rt. rangement topic, "Looking
I, Chesapeake, ' has arrived Forward to a.Bright Future"
for dUty at Anderson AFB, with Mrs. Pat Tho!"&amp; , to be
Guam.
Airman Reynolds , . an
airframe repair specialist
with a unit of the Str~tegic
Air Command, prevlltusly
served at Myrtle Beach AFB,

U.S. Serviceman News

IT'S SHONEY'S
ANNUAL SEAFOOD -

FESTIVAU

s. c.

RsHDiiiER $

I thought Karl loved me last year, but I'm afraid he was us·
ing ~e for s~x because his girlfriend woul~ 't put out.
· Sometunes h~ d. ·~.ow up at my house after he d taken her
home fro!" a real date: (Ileamectlater.)
Well, his g.f. dumped~Now he says he always liked me best, and can he come to see
me often; But he still never offers to take me anywhere and he
hardlytalkstomeatschool. .
. . . ?
Do I have a chance of becommg his rea) g1rl. -CAN'T GET
OVER 'PM ·
CGOH:
. .
.
.
Can achauvlfUst·snob change his spots? Not bkelr,' Ka~!
sounds like ~te t~ who puts w?men m two classes: good,
to display; bad, to use. Don t play his game any longer.
·HELENANDSUE

r

A warded certificate

The airman . is a 1975
graduate of Chesapeake High
SchooL

25

Entertain Christmas

S"CIAL PRICE

Mr. and Mrs. Dave Shain
entertained Christmas Day at
their Route 2, Racine home.
Their dinner guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M.
Hysrll, Pomeroy ; Mr. ahd
Mrs. Charles R. Hysell ,
Racine, and Jason Shain.
Others visiting were Mr. and
Mrs. Barney Shain, Mrs.
Garnet Ervine, Mrs. Mildred
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Lewis and Trent, I.etart, W.
Va. and Mrs. Carol Reed,
S h e~ri Jo and Theresa,
Ror:kbridge.
·

• TWO LARGE GOLDEN FRIED FISH FILLETS
• PLUS - THE 19-mM ALL-YOU-CAN·EAT SALAD BAR
• PI.US - FRENCH FRIES
• PLUS - TOASTED GRECIAN BREAD
• PLUS - TARTAR SAUCE. UMON

..

i\dtl \II yotlr I'IIJiedi[tn of
cull cdivc n11uns : an ailing of
hypni ·h~ ~ndria rs.

'

r .

1

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---I

Social
Calendar.

The birthdays of Lori Ann
Crow, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. · Robert Crow, and
Danielle Crow, daughter of ·
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Crow,
were celebrated recently at
the home of Mrs. Robert W.
Crow. Lori Ann observed her
sixth birthday, Danielle, her.
third.
Each of the children were
presented a cake. Ice cream,
cake and punch were served
to Robyn and Chris Stout,
Chetyl Pape, Chasity and
Candy Jacks, Andrea Theiss,
Jamie Anderson, Jill and
Travis Nease, Robby Craw,
. Matt ,and Heather Finlaw,
Stacy Fry, and Lowery
Adams.
Also attending were Mrs.
l,ynn C&lt;ow, Mrs. Kathy Fry,
Mrs. Debbie Finlaw, Mrs.
Peggy Stout, Mrs, Jean Stout, ,
Mrs. Cheryl Crow, Mrs. Carol
Crow, and the hostess.

the judge.
BIG BEND CITIZENS
BAND RADTQ CLUB, INC.
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Rock Springs Grange halL
WEDNESDAY
.
GIRL SCOUI' LEADER
service unit meeting, 7 p.m .
Wednesday · night at the
Meigs Inn.
MEIGS BOOKMOBILE
unit is out of service for the
entire week due to repairs
being mad~_O!I_the _v~ll.i.~le.
POMEROY Chapter, No. 00
. RAM Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
BOSWORTH CoiDICil No.
46, R&amp;SM, Wedinesday, 8:15

p.m.

MISSIONARY Services at
Middleport
Independent
Holiness Church, Pearl
Street, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
Speakers will be from Point
Pleasant, West Virginia
Training School. Public invited.
REPRESENTATIVE from
Clarence Miller's office at
court house Wednesday .from
10 a .m. until noon.
PAST Councilors Club,
Chester Council 323, Wed· l
nesday 7:30 p.m. at home of .
Marcia Keller.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett ·Post 128, .
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
hall.
JUNIOR AMERICAN
Le gio n
Auxiliary ,
Feeney Bennett Post 128, Mid·
dleport, 7:30 Wednesday :
night at the hall.

PUBLIC NOTICE
A public meeting will be
held on Thursday, Jan. 18,
1979 at 7:30 p.m., doWnstairs
at Village Hall, 237 Race
Street, Middleport, Ohio, for
the purpose of providing
information to citizens and
obtaining public input as
before
the
requir ed
preparation of a preapplication for funds under
the
Small
Cities'
Discretionary Program of the
U. S. Dept. of Housing and
Urban Development. .
Fred Hoffman
Mayor, ViUage of
Middleport
(I)

.

a, .ltc ·

Ltinguage development
.
.course
offered by Health Center

. ·,

.

.

•

r .

'

,

POLLY·s .POINTERS

1 Social 1
1·Calendar 1

Polly Cramer

.

growth is fascinating, Being problem .. Which · causes all
able to catch delays or academic areas to slide
Coat Has Sour Aroma
specific difficulties is just as downhill. These children .are
By Polly Cramer
important. Children from 0-5 often bright, but do not seem
POLLY'S PROBLEM
yearsoldareatan agewhere to "put things together," or
DEAR POLLY - A gestimulating language is are seemingly " lazy" or nuine leather coat that r
easily accomplished. Iden, "don't try.' ' All of these may bought seemed to be perfect
tifying difficulties at this age he true, or It may he that the until we noticed a peculiar
provides opportunity for child is perfectly normal but odor in the closet where it
early intervention.
leanis in a different way from was hanging . We found it
The course Will also in· the other perfectly normal came !,rom the eoat and had
terest those peOple, incl~ding child.
penetrated into all the other
teachers, wanting more in·
The course will be held at clothes and nothing r have
formation about langua ge the Communit y Mental tried has helped do away with
disab.ilitles In the school age Health Center beginning the odor. I cannot wear the
child. School age children Wednesday, January 10 from coat and have hung ii in the
have language disabilities 7-8:30 p.m. ·and continuing garage so hope someone has
which interfere with class- 'every Wednesday for eight some help for me. - J.C.H.
room perfonnance. Some of consecutive ses•lons. For
DEAR J.C.H.- Again 1 say
the language disabilities are . more infonnation call the that when trouble oecurs with
subtle, hard to Identify, and Community Mental H~a.lth a new garment it should he
unintentionally overlooked. Center Speech ~d Hearmg taken back to the store where
Childrlll!· . Who · have · l~nguage ..... Department,... tele.phone · it was purcha sed. All r can
disabilities may present a number 446-5500.
suggest is to put the coat in a
tightly closed box with a couple of opened boxes of baking
soda and leave it for a week
or so. If thaf does not help,
cedar shavings could he. put
The Pearl Parker families nativity scene. 'J',he main Snol10mish. Wash .; and &lt;t in a nylon stocking and left
held their annual Christmas table was covered with a Christmas letter from their closed up with the coat. Some
holiday dinner at the home of table cloth hand-embrojderc'&lt;l daughter, Martha Poole, San unpleasant odors can be
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker by Mrs . .Park,er's aunt, the Antonio, Texas. 'They also &lt;It- removed by applying rubbing
· on Dec. 31.
.
late Bess Erickson. Mrs. tended a Christmas dinner on alcohol with a terry toweL
The house was decorated in Parker had the blessing Dec. 24 at the home of There should be no rings after
keeping with the season and before dinner.
Samuel, Florence, and Louise the alcohol dries but always
·featured a lighte&lt;!_tree and
Attending beside the hosts Michael. After the dinner " test in an inconspicuous spot.
were Mr. and Mrs. Herbert family gift exeh" nge was + POLLY.
Parker, Homer Parker, Mr. held around the lighted tree.
DEAR PO LLY - I spread
and Mrs .' Howard Parker, Others present were ~r. and leftover pancakes with jelly
DINNER GYESTS
April and Aaron, all local; Mrs. Garv Michael, M&lt;ttthew, or jam and roll· them up like
Christmas eve dinner Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker, Kimberlv &lt;tnd Todd. and Mr. jelly rolls . My grandchildren
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Bobby and Kelli, Marietta;, and Mrs'. Roger Leifheit and really like them.
Smith, Jr., Racine, were Gay a nd Teresa Hollon, Dorothy Wilmetta .
Also I roll out · leftover
Bush, Gene and Marsha, Parkersburg, W.Va.
sc raps of pie dough, . spread
'
Westerville, Mr. and Mrs.
During the .holiday season,
VELSIA
ROUSH
with butter and sprinkle with
Kenny Brewer, Kenneth and the Wilber Parkers received
Mrs. Velsia Roush is con- sugar and cinnamon and then
Teresa, Mrs. William Tye, telephone calls from . t heir fined to the Holzer Medical mll them up. There are sliced
Bill and Steve, Columbus, sons, Brie of Arlington, Center, Room 505. She was like cookies and put ·in the
and Lucille Clay, Pomeroy.
Was h . ;.
Edward
of admitted there Friday.
The Speech and Hearing
Department of the CommUnity Mental Health Center
is offering a course in
development of language
skiiJs and. abilities in the
preschool and school age
child. It will he directed
primarily to parents and
other persons interested in
learning more about their
baby. or preschool child's
language skills. Normal
speech
and
language
development Is something we
tak.e.for granted. We assume
children will get what they
need wltbout an extra push.
The majority of children do,
some do not. Learning about
nonnal speeeh and lllilguage
dev,elopment is exciting.
Being abl~ !o watch language

. Parker families hold annual dinner

oven to bake with the pies for
about 15 minutes. The men as
well
the children really
like these. Sometimes I even
let the kids make them.
- JUTJA
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with tho~e people
who do not observe speed
limits around schools.
Fre.e book covers can be
matle from paper grO&lt;.'fry
bags or leftover gift· wrap.·
Fold under the top and bot·
tom ends of the book about 2
inches and inside the edges
about 3 inches, forming a
pt&gt;cket for the book cover to
fit in. They cost nothing and
can be discarded when they
get dirty. - WILMA
· Polly will send you one of
her signe d tha nk -you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses yo ur favor ite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in

as

)
FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
. Chapter,' Daughters of the
American Revolution I :30
p.m. Friday· at Riv~rboat
Room, Meigs Branch, Athens
County Savihgs and Loan, W.
Main St., Pomeroy. Slide
pre$entatlon on Tamassee
DAR School by Miss Lucille 1
Smith; hoste~ses Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs.
Clarence Struble and Mrs
Mark Grueser, Jr.
"... king of Babylon
caused his army to serve a
great service against Tyrus;
every head was made bald,
and every shoulder was
peeled ... " E,k. 29: 16

her colwnn . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

SHOP.

The Alternatives Program
of the Gallia ·Jackson- Me(gs
Community Mental Health
Center is compiling a
directory
of
clubs,
organizations
and
recreatloital facilities in the
· three county area. In order to
enable the directory to be as
complete as possible, it would
DEAN'S LIST
Four Meigs cOuntians have
been nanied to the' dean's Jist
at Ohio State University for
the a.utumn quarter. Making
a grade of at le~ 3.5.out of 4
points to be named were
Mandie Kay Rose, Long
Bottom; Richard Alan Couch,
Laura Ellen Hoov_er, .and
Milisa K. Rizer, all of
Pomeroy.
·

he helpful if the Presidents of
clubs , organizations and
recreational facilities would
send a·· post card to the
Alternatives Program with
the name of the organization,
the person to contact for
infonnation and their ad·
dress or phone nlimber. The
address is the Alternatives
Pro-gram, Gallia · Jackson •
Meigs Community Mental.
Health Center, Inc.,.P.O. Box
292, Gallipolis, 456ai.
The directory is designed
with the intention of helping
people and agencies becom~
aware of the many· different
organizat io ns
and
recreational facilities that
exist in the three County area.
When
completed, . th e
directory will be available to
the public.

JIIVR·II,IOX'RB
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANC£

Why do· rates for insurance flu Ctuate so oft; n? I've
nohced · a change in the rates on nw Hom eowner's

policy?

MASON FURNITURE

Past exper ience, protect ion and location are th e
answers to your question . These are the prim!lry .
sources which actuar ies evaluate in setting the rates .
Statistics compile the past experience fa ctor which
form s a pattern for a particular area that guides
actuaries in sett ing the necessary rates and-or
changes . . Protection take s into considerat ion
equipment, supplies deemed necessary to adequ~tely
protect an area ; fire equipment, su ff icient wa ter
supply. etc: Location deals with unpredi ctable weather
hazards such as hurricanes, excessive hai l. tornadoes
and wind storms .
.
·

FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRi-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. B:JOtil 5:00
. Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until8 P. M.
Herman ·Grate
Mas!ln - W. Va.

.REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
The Insurance Store
:214 E . Main

9'12·5130

Pomeroy, 0 .

It's Not Too Latel
Join The Crowd Boosting•••

T .OR
PE .

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GROUND CHUCK.......... ~·. •14• BUTTERMILK..~~

•

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THURSDAY
ELEANOR CIRCLE
Heath United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday .
at the church. Billy Jo
Krawsczyn, Joyce Blake, and
Jean Fisher, hostesses.

---......--··- -·
I
I Area directory available

..

. l.=~oan

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
"COURT ST. .

LB.

POMEROY,

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
. POMEROY I o. &amp; .
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
AREA
PH. 992-2156

~· ~

SUNSHINE

25

'

0 THE · DAI~l~~NENTINEL.
8 .A M AND 5 PM

$ 89

2

DOG FOOD••~·. _

~:, ·$269
DOG FOOD.•:..
CHAMP

lUNG SIZE

ALPO

DOG

.

BREAD ••.... ~~
HOlSUM

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FOOD.~~~..

10~ ~

23~

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49~

GRADE B LARGE

~ r:79~

PAK 16 OZ.

BOTTlES
Plus Deposit
FRIDAY' ONL Y'l

ZESTA SALTINE

.

CRACKERS
BOX

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39¢

~!f.~ ..
3$}00 BUNS ....•HOTDOG
BARBECUE OR

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CRACKER JACKS lb

.DR. PEPPER

79¢
8

5'9~

~~~
Plus Deposit

HIL'ION

OYSTER STEW

- OPEN DAILY 9·ID 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10 .

10~- OZ. CAN 59~

We Accept Federal
Food Starn' ps - We. ReseJYe The Right To Lim~ Oua1ntitif"'~
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REG. PRICE

99 C

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday •.Jan. 9, 1979

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mn: Herbert Roush
Visiting Mr. and Mrs .
Roger Roush, daughter
Kimberly Christmas day
were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Michael, Becky and Chuck,
I Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pickett
and Tracy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Lunce, Mrs. Dana
Lewis of Clifton, Mrs . Sharon
Hupp of ·Portla_nd, Ctndy
Roush, David Roush and
Tressa Mcliermont of New
, Haven.
Mr. a 0d Mrs. -Ted Wilford
daughters Usa and Kim·
berly ; Mr and Mrs. Wallie
Morris, Lester Rhodes of
Cottageville visited Mr. and
Mrs . Arnold Anderson
Brenda and Lori Christmas
Day.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Roger Roush
daughter Kimberly and Mrs.
Iva Orr were Christmas day
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush. Calling the
day were David Roush,
., Tressa McDennmt of New
Haven, Mrs. Sharon Hupp,
Mrs. Roberta Lewis, Cindy
Roush , Chuck Michal, Mrs.
Gladys Shields of Racine . .

\

~!:~'i:.~~at

CHARGES

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Durst
sons Rick and Roger spent
Christmas and week-end willt
their daughter Mr. and Mrs.
George Morris at Springfield.
Mr and Mrs. Bob Durst and
children of Urbana are
viSiting Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Durst during the holiday.
Christmas Eve guests .and
Christmas day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr.
and Mrs: Eddie Hupp were:
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass,
Kendra and Corinne, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hupp, Tina and
Mickie of Marengo, Mr and
Mrs. Jim Hupp, Jlnuny and
Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Rocky
Hupp, accompanied · by the
Hupps they also visited
Christmas eve at the home of
Mr. and Mrs . Jim Hupp and
family . Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hupp spent Christmas Eve
·and Christmas with her
parents, Mr . and Mrs.
RusSell Roush.
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Bass
da ughters were Sunday
guests of his mother Mrs.
Katie \)ass at Clifton.
Christmas Day visitors of
Ott Boston at Racine were :
Mr. and Mrs. Rqssell Roush,
Mr. an Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr, Mrs Bob Hill,
Mrs. Gladys Shields.
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Smith
Sr. were Christmas Eve and
Christmas day dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Johnson at Racine. Other
guests were: Mrs. Emma
Johnson , Bemaro Lavalley
Jr., Valerie Johnson, Jerry
Michelle, Della,
Jenny,
Martin Cunningham.
Rev. Florence Smith at·
tended funeral services for
. Mrs. Elsie Decker at the
Ewing Funeral Home ,
Pomeroy, ·Wedilesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Pickett
of ~ro wn City were Sunday
gu~ts of Mr. and Mrs. Louie
Pickett and daughter Tracy.
M•: and Mrs. Ronald Lunce
vij,\\1'&lt;1 . the Picketts Wed· •
nesday.
Mr . and Mrs. Louie Pickett
daughter
Tracy
were
Christmas day guests o( Mr.
and Mrs . Max Pickett at
Crown City.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Burri, Billy Wilson, Ronald
Wilson of Bolivar. Dam spent
Christmas and the holidays
wtth Mrs. Kathryn Hunt ; Mr.
and Mrs. Butch Wilson and
daUghters, Mr. and Mrs.
William Wickline, Scott and
Kyle . They also visited Mrs.
Erma Wilson at the Arcadia
I
Nursing Home Coolville."
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Utile
too ~ her parents Mr. and ,
Ml's. Charles M~~&amp;rage to
Columbus to the Kahiki Innfor . their thirtieth wedding
anniversary l)inner in
Deoember.
l!hristmas week-end guests
of ·Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mugrage were : Mr.'Bnd·Mrs.
Rusty Uttle of Pickerington,
Mr. and Mrs . David Beaver,
Matthew and Valerie of New
Matamoras, Tiny Lyfbach
dapghter Becky of Columbus,
Mt. ·, and Mrs. Charles
Mugrage, Tyson ·and Travis.
Calling at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Mugrage
Sut!day 3illt- helping Mrs,
Mugr'age celebrate her birth·
day were: Harold Barnett of
Tuppers Plaines, TommY
Barnhart, Houston, Texas,
Mr. and Mrs. John Hill, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Turley son
Kirk. Mr . and Mrs. John
Papt&gt; and three children Mr,
and Mrs. Charles Mugrage
TyBOn and Travis.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Green of Louisville Ky., spt&gt;nt
1 Christmas week-end with
Mrs. Eileen Buck and Early
Roush, and Mr. and Mrs .
Davis Greene at Albany, Mr.
ancl Mrs. Don Beegle zane
and Tracy, Laurence Beegle
.

I

.

F.or 8 est . R esuIts U se

Mr . and Mrs. Ctiarles
Mugrage and sons. Tyson and
Travis, spent Christmas Day
in the afternoon witH Mr. and
WANT AD
Mrs. Raymond Bowers at
New Matamoras. Mrs. Jean
Mugrage, Micky and Todd,
I~ Words or Und~r
spent Christmas morning
Cash
CharKe
I day
with the Mugrages and
1.00
1.25
2d.ays
lSI
1.90
opt&gt;ned gifts.
3days
1.11)
2.25
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
&amp;days
300
3 .7~
Roush, ·MrS. rva Orr Spt'Dt
Each word over lhe minimum 15
Tuesday evening with Mr.
wonb ill 4 cents per wllf'd per day.
Ads running Gther Lhlln conaecuuve
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr.
days wtn be charged at lhe 1 day,
- and Mrs. Eddie Hupp at Portrate. .
land.
In memory, Card ol Thinks 41.nd
Spt&gt;nding Sbnday with Mr.
Of:lit.uary: 6 L-ents per word, $3.00
and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
nurumwn Gash ln advance
Mike and Mandy, were Mr.
Mobil~ Home sal es and Yard sales
and Mrs . Steve Hagey,
ore ac«pted only with cash wi~
order. 25 rent charge for ads CMIT)I·
Stephanie and Brad, Mr. and
mg Box Nwnber In Cart of 1be SenMrs. Don Russell, Bob
tinel
Russell of Wolf Pen, Mr. and
The Publbher reserves lbe right
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
to edit or reject an)' Hds dftmed obMrs. Daha Lewis, Clifton;
jectional. !fie Publisher will not be
responsible for more than one lncor·
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
reef. imerlioo
Russell Roush, Cindy and Ed,
Phone OOZ.%156
Sharon Hupp, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Johnson, Bashan Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ord of
NOTICE
Letart, W. Va. visited Mrs.
. Eula Wolfe and Aaron Sun·
WANT-AD
day .
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill,
ADVERTISING
Dean and Art, Mr. and Mrs.
DEADUNES
Darrell Norris and Tracy
were New Year' s dinner
Monday
Noon on Saturday
guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Marshall Roush, Joey and
Tu....W.y
lhru Friday
Cortney.
fP.M.
Mrs. Mamie Miller and
the day before pubUcatJon
granddaughter, Mrs. Jean
Sunday
Fisher of Gallipolis visited
4P.M .
Mrs. Margie Hunt Sunday.
Friday afternoon
Mrs. Dolly Wolle visited MrS.
Hunt New Year's Day.
Notices
Visit ing Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. GUN SHOOT . Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunda y 1 prn Fact ory
Eddie Hupp at Portland New
. ~ •
choke _gLtns_o ':' ly .
Year's Eve were Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mike GUN SHOOT Racine Volunteer
ftre Dept EYery Saturda y 6.30
and Mandy , Mr. and Mrs.
pm ot thetr building in Ba shan
Dana Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
Fa.c tor~ ~.ho_k ': g_u n_s~nly
Dorsa Parsons, Rob Waldnig, BAilEY 'S
ST OR E,.
33 1
Cindy Roush, Mr. and Mrs. N 2nd Ave M iddleport Oh to
David Wolfe and two Wrll be closed D ec . 25to Jon 2.
children, Mr. and Mrs. Danny INCOME TAX Service. Federal
Talbott, Danby and Doneta, . and State To )(eS 991 '2272 for
appts or see Wando Eblm
Carol Morris, Mr. and MrS.
41000 Laurel Cli ft Rd.
Kenneth Bass, Kendra and
Corinne, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck CAKE DE( ORATING Closse.§ now
forming . Beginning or In
Mugrage, Tyson and Travis,
termedrote. To regrster , co li
Ed Roush, Mr. and . Mrs.
Carousel Confectionery, Mid
Rocky Hupp.
dleport 992 -63&lt;42 Drawing for
l set of free l essons from oil
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spencer,
applicants
Tracy Mearns were Christ·
. - - . mas Day guests of Mr. and INCOME TAX Service. Federal
o ~ d Stole
Wa llace Russell .
Mrs. Paul Bowers at
Bradbury Coli 992 -7228
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spencer
IN THE
attended a New Year's Eve·
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
party at the home of Mr. and
PROBATE DIVISION
Mrs. Rick Crow at Syracuse.
MEIGS CO U NTY.OH 10
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bowers, IN TH! MATTER OF
OF AC ·
Doug Barnette of Parkers-' SETTLEMENT
COUNTS ,
PROBATE
burg were New Year's Day COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob OHIO
Accounts lJI nd vouchers of
Spence~ and Tracy.
the
following ' . named
fiduciaries have betn filed in
Mr. and Mrs . .Vernon the
Probate
Coutt, Meigs
Donohue visited
their county, Ohio for approval
children, Mr. and Mrs. and se tt lement .
NO . 20781 F lfln
Kearney Donohue, Mr. and , AcCASE
c ount of Pau l E. Kloes 1
Mrs . Butch Donohue at Guardian of the Person and
Estate of
Amy Esther
Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell • Gri!ham
, an In comp e tent
Burton and daughter, Sherri, • Person
CASE NO . 20781 s;xth
at Columbus.
Accoun t of Paul E. Klees,
Mrs. James Lewis and Guardian of the Person and
Amy Esther
daughters, Mrs . . Stanley Estat~ of
an In competent
Burdum
and
son, Graham,
Person
Christopher, Mrs . Ronnie
·CASE NO . 16606 Seven .
Account of
The
. Stein, Wendy and R. F-:, teenth
Huntington National Bank of
visited Mrs. Eula WoHe New Columbus, Trustee of the
Trus.t created under the Last
Year's Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed' tome,
Swrunerville, New Jersey,
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt FerguBOn
of Point Pleasant, Mrs. Pearl
Norris visited Mrs. Ett
Warner recently.
New Year's Day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp,
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp at
Portland were Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Manuel and Tim, Mr. and
Mrs. Sid l\1arfuel, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Bush, Mr. and
Mrs. J\ID Hupp, Billy and
Jlnuny, Mr. and Mrs. John
Manuel · and Johnna, Mrs.
Gloria Manuel, Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Wilford and children,
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Talbott,
Doneta and Danny, Mr. and
Mrs. Rocky Hupp, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Bass, Kendra
and Corinne.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush visited Mr. and Mrs.
Rogpld Russell, Mike and
Mandy, Wednesday evenmg.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Donahew
spent New Year's weekend
.l'!ith Mr . and Mrs. Jeff
Dooohew at Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs . Pete Bearhs
of Virginia , Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Burri, Ronnie Wilson
spent Christmas through New
Year's with Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Wilson, Mrs. Kathryn
Hunt and visited Mrs. Erma
Wilson at the Arcadia Nur·
sing Home at Coolville.
New Year's Day dinner
guests of Mr . and Mrs .
Herbert Roush were Mr. and
Mrs. Roge r Roush and
daughter, Kimberly, Mrs. Iva
Orr, Cindy and Ed Roush,
Becky Michael.
Mr. and Mrs. Dillion and
Nathan and Joshua of Hart·
selle, Ala., visited · Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Shuler and
relatives In Parkersburg
Christmas through New .·
Year's. Their chlidren got
sick and they had to extend
their visit Indefinitely.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Cross Christmas Day

Will and
Thomas A

Testament of
May, Decea sed
CASE
NO
16606
· Eighteenth Account of The
Huntington Nation-al Bank ot
Co lu l')'lbus, Trustee of the
Trust created under th e Last
W il t and
Testament ot
Thomas A . May, Deceased
Unless exceptions ue flied
thereto, said accounts will be
for hearJng before said Court
on the 7th day of February ,
11979, at wh ich time said
accounts will be cons ider-ed
and continued from day to
day until fin a IIY disposed of .
Any person i nterested may
file wr•tten eKceptlons to said
accounts or
to rnatters
pert a lning to the eucu tl on of
the trust. not less than five
days prior to the date set for
hear.ng .
·
Manning Webster

JUDGE
COMMON -PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Il l 9, lie

PEN AWARD
NEW YORK (AP)
· James l.augblln, founder and
for 42 years editor of New
Directions Press, has been
awarded the Third Annual
PEN Publlsh.er Citation.
The PEN award was given
by the American branch of
the International writers'
associatlon In recol!llltlon of
"distinctlve and continuous
service to International
letters, the freedom and
dignity of writers, and the
free transmission of the
printed word across barriers
of repression, poverty,
Ignorance and censorship."

--- - _ ~a_nt_el! t~ ~uy _

Sentinel Classifieds

Cnll 992-7156.

era·

. __

---

-

-

WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
phonograph
reco rds
Co li
992-6370 or Contact Morfin Fur·
nrture

WANTED TO buy · old rewelry
Call qq2 57b1 or write Kay
Cccrl ., 87 S 2nd M•ddle porl .

OH .
Pets for Sale_...____
------------RISING STAR Kennels 8oordi ng
and groomtng
all breeds
Ch eshrre, 367·0292.

AK C BfHNOEN boxer l' 'r years
old,
mole
we ll
br ed .
997 .75 1Gl 3 - -- - -- -

Auto Sale,_,s,____
I 973 FORD PICKUP Ranger l 1 .
~1600
1973 Po nl toc Vent ura,
$1200 1948 Ply mouth Coupe,

5700, 992 6190
ton Ford pickup , b cy l
. 378-0349

'~50

.

l9b9 CHEVROLET NOVA 7·door 6

cy l auto . P.S Studded tires .
Good shape. 304 773·~707

1973 CHEVROLET CAPRICE . 4
door. red b locf.: vinyl top
rod rol t1res, red velve t sects
A -1 cond1tion . Arnold Grote .
flutlond Ooy s 741211 1, Nrghts
7 4"} 1246
1974 PONTIAC HMAN S. Auto
• tran s P S . V -fl New ex haust
good tr res S 1250 949 ?2'2'1.
BLAZER 4 wheel drive
55 000 mdes . S3500 985·3875

1475

.

-

197f) CHEVY SPORT 4-wheel dr ive
Short bed, stepsrde , 350 4 bbl ,
aut o Iron s. 3b,OOO mi Very
good ccw1 drllon lots of ex tra s
Cal! alter 5 pm 992 7786

-

.

- - -

Ou\te a few new and lnf\uentlal

persons will be 'entering your
life thiS coming year. They will
have a strong, las(lng effect
lhat will serve to help you
achieve your goals.

CAPRICORN (Dec. !2-Jen. 19)
Conditions could suddenly
start to, shift today, breaking
clear of tnfluences that

ha~e

kept you bottled up for the past
couple of days . Getting along
with others is one of the sections you ' ll enjoy in your 1979

Astro-Graph l-etter. Get ypurs
by mailing $1 for each and a
long , sell-addressed, stamped
envelope to Astro-Graph, P.O.
Box 489, Radio City Station,
N.Y . 10019. Be sure to specify
btrth sign .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Save yourself a heap of frustra·
tlon today . Avo1d one who
doesn't quite fit into your social
circle . There are so many inter-

esting people for you to spend
your time on .

PISCES (Feb. !0-March !0)
Trying to stay with old ways of
doing lhmgs because they're
comlonable isn 't the answer
for you today. Seek Innovative,

18 Yoors Experience

Will Mike
Service Calls

Middleport. 0.

Swtep.s Gulid
Insured ·

THE SWEEP

19th CenTury ~•rvlce with
20th CeRtury Know-How .
Specllll&amp;lntln
&amp; FlrepiiCI FIUII

Phone: 742-nto·

kim Yfhlte, Proprietor

Responsibili11es: Overall
administration of all
phases: ilfleen sta11ons, 28
ALS Vehicles , .full -time
staff of 70 and ·support .

Board of Trustees.
Salary:
15K · 20K
negotiable
by_
qualifications, benefits
Include Heallh, Life and

ES
700-1H Ply Hwg.
$31.36
700-15-4 Ply Deep Lug

Insurance,

$42.45
Mounted &amp; Ill lanced Free

Retirement.
Qualifications :

years emergency medical
services administrative or
equivalent minimum .
Business.
financial

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood' fiberl
Thermal insulation
save3U pc1.1o50 pet.
on hNiing cost
Experience ond
fully Insured
Free Est. 992.2112

----- - -- -----·
. __ _ _Eo_r_R_en!..
t _ __
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork

"a"

Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots Coll997 7479

-

oet s

11-3·_LmQ.•

Ph one

-

cu1e . 49523 SR 681 , Tu ppers
Plo. ins
b67·3292
.
.

UPSTAIRS APT . 5 rooms and ba th
rn Pomeroy . 992-2105 bef or e S

TORTOISE KITTEN A rno old
Abu se d
rerover rng
fr om
Sl/rgery , hod shots. Humane
Society
. 99'2 7680
.

.

LARGE HOME in Pomeroy Wn te
Box 72q.w c·o the Dot!y Sen
t~n el . Pomeroy Ohio-45769 .

.

'

~

- -

KITTEN , FOUR mo old calico
Found fr eezing 1n dumpster
· Vet trea ted . !)hots Humane
Soc rety , 992 7b80 .

.

11 x 50 trai ler in Syracuse Fu r
n i ~ h e d · Covered patio . 5140 per
- - . - .. month Water pa id. Deposit re
qui red 99? 1897
. .
.
Real Estate for Sale
FURNISHfD APT 4 rooms and ~
ha th 997 5908
HOMESITES tor sole , 1 acre and
up M1ddleport near Rutlan d

HYSEll.
&amp;AWE

St. Rt. f24111w.rd Rutlllnd,
Au-.&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair .
Phone 992-5682

Tyree Blvd., R•clne, Ohio,

Evening

Weekends

~------------------~~~-----------------------LITl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

-

-

.

~

APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchard .
St at e Rt 6E:I9 Phon e Wilk esvi lle

009-3785.

Q UALITY CONDITIONED mr)(ed
· hoy Wrll deliver . 997 -7201
.

3' '1 acr es in Pomeroy . Secl uded
.
wood ed area on top of hill .
THRH BEDROOM !rome home in
Overloo k s n ver . Woter , elec
- M iddleport Coli 992 3.457 .
• lm ova liable 992·3886
- - - · - - - - - - - - FARM FOR sale House 2 barns , HOUSE
IN Minersv rl le .
4
tror ler Lorge pond 10 acres or
bedroom . living room k rtchen .
.B2_ o~ r~s _ 7~2·_15_6 6_
___ _
both ond u!Hity room . N1ce full
srze basem ent . 992-5823 .
~fAL ESTATE LOAN S VA - No
mon e y
down
~e lig i bl e SEClUDED IN town l1 v1ng. All
Veter ens) FHA As low as 3,....elec tric , 3 bedroor'(l , I 1 '1 both,
down (all non Ve terens and
carpeted, family room with
generol publ1 c) To purcha se
Frankli n stove, garage. 1. 1
r eal esta te or relinance 30
acre land . Near M ergs Hrgh
VEARS TERMS IRELAND MOR
School To see . clol991-6287
TGAGE CO. 77 E State St .,
Athen s Ph one6 1.4 592-3051

----------

.PI:A HAULERS CB Soles Equipment now on so le, o il in stock .
Rod ros and occessones through
Cl1 ri stmos Open every day e)( cep t Sunday and Monday .
EVen ings by opporntment
Por tla nd
Ohro
Phone
tl-43 2004 .

-- -. -. - ---.

~;y · A tt; r ·s ~ c~li
frank Br oderi ck 99? 7573

1972 INTERNATIONAL BACK HOE
Phone 9.49-2042
MOBILE HOME door 32 x 6'4"
Regency &lt;4 channel scanner

985-4117.

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

SNOW

tandem truck tra iler, $750. 1000
ft '1rnch p1pe, $200. 742·3093

CANCER (June !!.July 22) Quit
grumbling. Get your work done . TWO LIKE-n~w -G781(-,4- ~t udd~
aarly. There' s a lun person
snow trres on Chevrole1 nms
A dd,e Powell , 843-2665
who'll pop into your day later,
and you'll want to be free to G06o-HAY.-h~r;e - c~;, -s h~;P
enjoy the activities.
Coli qn-7765 after 5pm and on ,
LEO (July !3-Aflll. !!) Much I?
Soturdyo .
.
your distaste, you could be
. ·--- -- - --- --- called upon today to organize 1975 CADillAC ElDORADO full
power ond air'. Asking 5~700
things for others. Once you get
Phone.q97-7.462,
rolling, your pride of accompllshmenl makes you happy. ~REoUiE - s'AFE - ~nd - f~s! -w·;th
VIRGO (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The
GoBese To blefS &amp; E· Vop " water
early pan of the day may be a _p i~ls~'· !'l ~lson_D~ui) · _\- _ • _
bll on the down side, but later BEAR WHITETAIL compound bow
things stan hopping . Events
wrth qurver and sights Phone
could occur to brighten your
9&lt;/2.71bll.
scene.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You could revise your .game plan ,_.....;;;....:_POM
___ERO_,
,_Y.....;_ _,
today and take sudden action
in a situation where you were
having some doubts. The odds
' ~re in rour favor , so ail should
go wei .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) At Headquarters for all your
first you may .not realize it but G, E. T.V.'s &amp; Hotpoln1
you'll quickly dlscove,r you · Appliance~:
.
have all the answers at your
fingert ips.
·SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. '
SALE PRICES
.!1) Opposlilon might be just
JACKW.
what you need to push you.. to
CARSEY
look for unusual ways 10 find
Mgr.
the real bargains.
Phont992-2111
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

IT..

Jumbles: KETCH BRAND FABRIC PREACH

3B25.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser vice ell makes 992-2284 . The
Fabr ic
Shop ,
Pomeroy .
Authonzed Singer Sales and
_s':,r~c.!
s~o_rp_en_ S~i~o~s.:. _
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work : dump trucks
and Ia-boy! for hire will haul
f•ll diri, to sorl , l1mestone and
gravel . Call Bob or ROger Jeffers day phone 992-7089 1 night
phone 992 ~3 525 or 992 - 5232 .
.,
- -

storage building, nice lot .

$28,500.110.
MIOOLEPORT -

N;ce

home, 3 bedrooms, dining,
nice kitchen . 2 mobile
homes,
a II
rented.

$29,500.00.
ONE LOVELY ACRE -

All furnished , small creek
through ,
almost
new
mobile home, . large con crete parking area . Many

other features . $16.5110.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Lovely

home on corner lot. Three
bedrooms, two baths ,

modern kitchen. lots of
remodeling , all very
modern . $27,500.00.
41'12 ACRES - 1978 Holly
Park mobile home, 8' ex;
pando, new add ition 14x36
t~dd · a - room,

large

deck.

Many, many features . All
for just $48,000.110.
MIDDLEPORT - Two
buildings. both with
bustness rooms and apart·

ments, also well establish-

ed tavern and rest aurant
business with good income.

Many other features If
really Interested, please
call for particulars.
IVOU'LL ENO UP BEING
PLEASED WHEN YOU
LIST YOUR PROPERTY
WITH US TO SELL.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
Leona Cleland
Kathy Cletand
992·22S9-992-6191-9f2·2568

&amp;liH
. .• - - , ·

l.'t A-l iQtt ,

electric, "city
water,
natural gas, loading dock,
gasoline tanks, and park -

in!(S40,000.
5 BEDROOMS -

Wood

fram e house with large
rooms,
2
fireplaces,

na1ural

~s

furnace, city

water an'C larQe lot. Reduc-

ed to $21,5110.
FINE NEW HOME - With
family that has a nice
woodburnlng firelace. J
bedrooms, carpeting all

1'1,ru, 2 full baths, 2 car
fihished garage on one
level acre. $69,900.00.
BUSINESS AND HOME Want to try your luck a1 a
small shop and live In with
all utilities for only $12,000.
This is your chance.

WARM -

gas

Large natural

furnace ,

bath ,

3

bedrooms, new carpeting

all the way . Glass sliding
door, nice kitchen. base·
ment and backyard. Only
$16,500. A bargain for you.
Ph ACRES - Well w11h
pump, 10x50 mobile hom·e,
gas furnace In the country
for only $6,000.
LAND - Buy what you
want . Plenty 0111 rewood on
some and Wilter line by
some. 2 mobile home lots.

WE LIVE REAL ESTATE,
SO CALL US AT 992-3325
FOR YOUR ANSWER ON
REAL ESTATE. SELL
THROUGH A REALTOR,
APRO.
G. Bruce TNfoiod
.Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. MurphY
Asoocl.t"

Housing
Headquarters

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Complicate I Rental sign
7 Parched
2 Habitation
11 " Wuthering 3 Not on
Heights"
your life!
star
4 Elderly kin
l:) 12 Buck
5 Ship's diary
10~~
heroine
6 Compass
reading
""'-~"" 13 Aromatic
herb
7 Heliacal
. 14 Afford
8 Component
15 Btbhcai
9 Managed
10 Purpose
IMl''Wo~~~ spot
16 Reservoir 16 Greek letter
17 Coast bird 18 Chattel
19 French
~~------~18Unrufled
marshal
1hen wh4 are 21 Cheer
20 Sheep
we at the
Z3 Unused
cit~
24 Food for
?
babte.;
dump. 27Slum
\?\[)h\Y \\
problem
28 Nautical
chain
[;l!i 29 Writer
L Wolfert
30 Elliptical
{/:f:'o;-~,, 32Show off
Biblical
ornaments
38 ~=:age !.:--+--+-

AUEYOOP

I
I

-.- - -- - - - - - - -

EXCAVATING. dozer . backhoe

and drtcher Charles R Hotfield. · Bock Hoe S.ervl ce,
Rutland , Ohio Phone 7&lt;42-2008 .
WILL do roofing , construction ,
plumbrng and healing. No job
too large or too small . Phone
742-2348.

AND

MARTIN

- - - - - - - - -

Ex-

- - - -

-

69B·733t

ABOUT 6 YEARS OLD - 3
bedrooms, nice kitchen,
dining r6qm, all electric,

•-9

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled , ceramic tile , plum bing carpentry . and general
maintenance 13 years e&gt;~ ·
_P':_ri~n~e- 9_92~ ~8~· - __ __ _

At last we're

off on a trip,
Ph41iis!

It's not a
trip, Walt, until
we qet past the
citij Iimits f

This isn't
the street
to the
freeway!

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Complete
Service. Phone 992-2.. 78.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost your operators
lice nse? Phone992-2143 .
M &amp; M Home Improvement serv·
' tng Gallipolis and area . We
specialize
in . vinyl and
aluminum sid,ing . For free
estimate!. cal l 614 -367-0128,
Gall1polrs .

- - - ---- - -- -- --Coli

SNOW PLOWING service.
992-7201 or 99,2. 3309.

Services Offered
WILL CARE for the elderly in our
home . Phone 992-7314 .

- ------ ----

--·- -

WATER WELL drilling William T.
Grant. 742·2879

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

~17~~~~====~~--~--.--.-.-..__._.

1

_____._...______

PS'ICHIAtR'I

Yesterday's Answer
22 Eat away
3&amp; Incensing
24 Radar sign 37 Skin disease
25 Constel·
40 Piglet's
lation
parent
28 Beau ideal
41 Hayward film
31 Moon-shaped 42 Directed
33 Vigilant
43 Word with
35 Tried again
. dnim or drop

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Wrong decision displayed
1·9-A

• KJ 52
• 109 4 3
t K73

• 10 7
WEST

EAST

•Qt

+AIIII!I
•62
• 52

.75
• QJ 10
+X81513

+ AQ9

SOU1ll
• 3
• AKQJ8
t A9864
• J2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South ·
ll'ea1 Nol1b East

------------DIDYOU5EE
ANYTI-liNc:T
IN 11-4ERE ?

__lady.
, _ - --- --·--- - ---

WA'i7 .. WA5

KEALIVE~

Opening lead : +Q

Mobile Homes for Si!le
70 Amherst 50•12 2 BR

1970Chomp;on 60x122 BR
1965 General60x122 BR

1968PMC52xl2) BR

1955 ProirieSchooner28x818R

1973 Royol Embossy68x14 3 BR
1973 Star 60x 14 2 BR
1968 Star 60xt2 2 BR
1970 Sylva 60x t 2 2 BR

RE

LVPDA

IPXV

liOU'RE

LONEL~f

I STILL THINK '(OU
SHOULD GET OUT MORE,
AND I 'TJ.IINK tiOU SilOliLD
MIX WITH '(OIJR OWN KINO...

WHI( DON'T ~U GET A
FEIIJ 61RL7S OF A FEATHER,
ANL? FLOCK TOGETHER?

~~~·=

- have sbifted to a club, !Mit Iii
• did lead tbe ~ fll clio
mondl. South let It rldllo ltll
ace, drew trulll.-, W Ill
tins oliiJM!clel, nifW&amp;ut'l
ace,&amp;ot back lo dUiiiiii) will
the tins of diamoadl.

cht!Citecl - lGIIInl cbab ....
had stolen tbe pme.

You bokl:
+1650

1+8

~

correet

....... Is tlaa&amp; ....
..,...~~.,

bid Ia Glllt

_____

epade. You can lhow 111ut1t
liter. Tbe maiD tidal ,..
want to do it to let pertalr
lmcnr that )'011 ban at llllil
(
umanyiiJM!delulllutl.

,

PX

SNUFFY!!
I KNOW

:.::=

We keep 1ett1u uUd 1111
CGOI~bldwDMIM

dARNEY

1959 Stor 50x10 2 BR

=d~hurt::

t A2
+5

Tile only trouble with that
play la that Eut wlll.m-t
1 wF c (surely shift to clubs at trick
cwv F H C RE
YDRIPDA
two and the d~ will set
CR RQVHURRY . - IPUUPFG
SFGVX thetrtwoclubtrickartcht
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: FOR IT IS NOT DEATH OR HARJ). a~~Ut had a better Idea
SHIP THAT IS A FEARFUL TIUNG, BUT THE FEAR OF He felt that If West were
~~~~DEATH AND ~mP.-EPICTETUS
'-&lt;;;
(C) 19'19 King Features Syndicate, Inc.
FHC

So South let Wtlt Jllld Cl1ll&amp;
lint trick. Now It .,. IP ..
Welt to mab a (leo I lr Bl
ru1J.y llbou1d baft llltlfCs...
a chill. ~woald ICitllll W

• AKQ54

South Is lookJDI at three
Is
quick loeera In tbe form ol
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is one spade and two clubs and
used fur the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc Sin gle lelters. a sure diamond loHr later.
n.e queen ol spades lead
apostrophes, the length and formalion of the words are all
gives him a chance. He can
hi nts. Each day the code lett ers are different.
cover with the kinll and Bet
CRYPTOQUOTES
~~·~jack for a club

cwv

be mlcbt not llllft ...

~~~I):UH

A'XYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

1-9

t.

allowed lo bold U.&amp; llnlt

NORTil

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

'T'ROLI8LES.

,_
'' .

.........,, Ju. •

_.~-.~~------~.-.-~:tributary

. • . :t JU.ST HAVE

•-

20.

Antenna
HE SAV.S %'M NOT 42 wire
Redolence lrr-+-1--+RacH ENOUGH T'l) . 4544 Corrosive
46 Lack
6-+-+-1HAvE PROI'LE:MS
47 Excavate

J. PREEBLE

HAVE ROOM, board and alundry
in private home Will take
semi -invalid. 992-5422 . Elderly

OWNER MUST SELL- The owner of this
1970 Kirkwood 12x60 JIIR
charming 2 story stone home ,in Middleport 1
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
must sell now so· she is offering this fine
; · PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.
home for a low, low price of $20,000. There
- --~---- --- are 2 bedrooms 11 is .extra la~ge), spacious
1111 A.CRE. 12 X 60 mobile hom•
near De)(ter. 992-5858.
living room W·fireplace, formal dining, eat·
.
- - ··-- = '=--.,...
in kitchen, bath w-shower, garage &amp; a king
1967 TOTAl ElECTRIC mobile
home , furnished, 3 ~r ..
sized yard. (&gt;ood location-on Mill St. Call the
wash~ and dryer. Aif condiWi~eman R~al Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
tione~ . 1 lot, 210ft. frontage .
446-3643.
.
$12,000. Phono742-2B26.
---- - - -------....lo~
.

6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC Nowo13; Citro! Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Eaay 20,33.
7:00--Cross.Wita 3; Newlywed Game 6,13'; She Ne No
8; NewslO; Love, American Style 15; Footlfopa 20;
Big Green Magazine 33.
7:3().-0olly 3; Match Game ftM 6; The JudgeiO; Price
Is Rlgh18; That's HollyMlod 13; Wild Kingdom 151
MacNeil-lehrer Report 20,33.
•
8:110-Gift of Song 3,15; Elgh1 Is Enough 6,13; Jtf·
lersons 8, 10; Great Performances 20; Africans 33.
8:3().-Monte Carlo Circus 8, 10.
9:00--Chorlle's Angels 6, 13; Prisoner 20; National
Geographic 33.
9:3D-Best of Saturday Night Live 3, 15; En1ertalner of
the Year Awards 8,1 0.
10:110-Vegas 6,13; State of the State Addreas 33; News

40 Sapient

YOUNG MAN seeking employ·
ment. Background : 8A Degree ·
Bus . Mgt . Also some construe·
lion experience
Raised In
area . Contact John or leave
_m.!s~~e-~.:.6~ - 5693.
TREE TRIMMING and removal.
7.42.3167 or 7.112·2573.

ft .

Tomorrow 8, 10. ·

· 10:30-Turnabout 20.
' 11 :110-News 3,6,8;, 10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Llllea
· Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee Woman 6, 13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie "CompulsiOn"
10.
12:3().-News 8; 12:•().-SWAT 6,13; I:QO-Tomorrow 3.
I :50-News 13.

ei

STOP FRITTER IN'
'lORE TIME AWAV PITCHIN'
HOSS SHOES !!

1968 Villages 60xl2 2 BR
1964 Windsor 51x102 BR

.'

Rathe r old-fashiOned brothers -

"BRETHREN"

~.wd

"!!'!.

-

c.o6o MtXEO

(Answers tomorrow)
Answer

ca vating . septic systems ,
do-zer . backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone , grovel. blacktop
pavi ng. Rt 1&lt;43. Phone l (61.t)

992·3325 .
216 E . sacond SlrHi
STORAGE• Approx '
36x80 abov~ all floods . Has

JI I )

Sweepers , toasters , irons . all
small appliances LQwn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985-

+

E.

NoW arrange the c1rcled !etters 10
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

Tli' FARTHER. WE. GO"'

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10,1t7t
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; S:SfSunrlse Semester 10.
6:DO-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,1.
~:25-Chrlslopher Closeup 10; 6:u-N\ornlng RtpDrl
J; 6:50-Good Morning, West Vlrglnle 13; 6:SfC~uck While Ropor1s 10; News 13. '
7:DO-Today 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Schoolles 10. ·
.7•15-Weathe. 'JJ; 7:30--Famlly Affair 10; Zoom 33.
8:00--Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; 5asame St. 33.
9:110-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donllhue 13,15; Ma1dl
Game· 10.
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogen' s Heroes 10.
10:00--Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10:30-Ail Star Secrets 3,15; Andy GriHith 6; 120,001
Pyramid 13 .
11 :QO-High Rollers 3,15; Happy Dayo 6,13; L.owwll
Thomas Remembers 20.
1\:30-Whet!l o1 Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love
of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
]1 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :110-Newscenter 3; Jeopardy 15: News 6,10: YOUfll
&amp; the Rs11ess 8: Mldddy Magazine 13.
12:3().-Ryan's Hopa 6,13; Pauword 15; Search for

"'-re

HOW 'TO &amp;E"T A

GOOD APP'E"TT'TE
IN NO "TTME .

Print answer here: (

ELWOOD BOV'/ERS REPAIR ·-

HOWERY

MAIN..,.•
POMEROY, 0.

IYARBEKI

AND TH' WATER'S GETTIN' DIRTIER
AN '. DEEPER " •JUST ~IKE ~!FE,
IT'S 6ET11N' MORE. COMPLICAil:D

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Com·
plete Serv1ce Phone 949·2487
or 9.49-2000 Racine. Ohio. Crttf ,
Bradford.

PIGS FOR sole 949 2857 after 5
FlflST AND second cutting hoy
$ 75 and $.85 bole Tuppers
Plains , Ohi o 61.4 b67 -J368

r"'--"J.I-.....!-1-L...J.__J

(J I

LITTLE
Business Services

Coll614 -949 2246.

J

wlfORMAR}
-~ LL.. . . J!I~(]~

0 111'1 ~~ NEA Inc I 1111 R..., U 5 Pll 011

12-31·1 mo.

HOUSt
FOR safe. - Location
Mown , WV Four bedroom spirt
le vel. built in Mitchen with
oven . range . garbage disposal
and bar Fomdy room, dinmg
room . whole house carpeting
f= ull size basemen t Centra l air
and forced air gas heat . All
drapes plus washer and dryer
Backyard 10 ft high cedar
lenc'e and ced ar deck s: fo r
privacy Heat ed garage. Close
to sc hool . store pork and ten nr s
court Contra ct Gory l Gibbs .

I URROF

10:30-Liko It Is 20; Area Showcase 33.
11 :DO-News 3,8,10, 13,15; Qick Cavett 20; Hollywood
Television Theatre 33.
11 :'3D-Johnny Cer11011 3,15; Movie "~ Carob" 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; Movie "The Noktcl Prey" 10.
12:30-News 8; 1:110-Tomorrow 3; 1:30-Newa 13.

I :110-Hollywood quare$ 3; All My Ch lldren 6, 13; N8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not lor Women Only 15.
1:3().-Daysol Our Lives 3,15; As The World Turnol, 10.
2:00--Qne Life to Live 6,13; 2:30-Doctors 3,15;
Guiding Light 8,10.
, M-Anolher World 3.•. 15: General Hospital 6,1 3;
llllos Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3().-Mash 8; Joker's lid 10; Ovor Eeay 20.
•:110-Miater Cartoon 3;_ Hollywood Squares 15;
Bewitched 6; Sesame S1. 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah
13.
4:3().-Bewllched 3; Afterschool Spectal6; 'GIIIIgan'a .la.
8; Brady Bunch 10; Petticoat Junction 15.
5:110-Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Nelth·
borhood 20,33: Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Afttrochool
Special 13; Brady Bunch 15.
.5:3().-Caroi.Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Senford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler
10; Odd
Couple 15; Doctor Who 33.
·
1:110-News 3,8,10, 13, t5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; Studio
See 33.

t-q

o.

SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

Phone 94f·2111.
1fter 5 P.M .
1fter 12 noon.

·~

'I'• mile oH R1.7 \IY-PIII on

PETE SIMJ'SON

Coll9'12 7481

COAL. LIME STONE , sor~d , grovel ,
calcium ch lon d e fer til 11er dog
food and all types of salt E)(
ce l sror Salt Works , Inc , E Morn
St . Pomeroy . 992-3891 •

- -

byHenriArnol~ andBobLee

•P•¥""'-

·----

be!ore 8 om

.

~~ ~

· I I I J

ROG~

Hammond
&amp;
Lower
Ortlns, Story &amp; Cl1rk
Planas. 51111 &amp; Service .
(New &amp; used) . Service on
C!urrent Slits.

992"5434
. - _ _Gtve_A'!I!ay - -- ·_,R_e_a-cl-=E=-s"'t-a -=te-=fo- r"'s" 'a'"':l:eTWo 8EDR00M . k 1 tche~ fu r~15h SPANI EL BEAGLE ,' ~ery young ,

.

'\!:!)

()()l'&lt;;l1HA1'~ ,.. •oo-oo,'

11-9-1 mo.

lANDMARK

·
.
.
.
was !?earl Whitman of
Alben~, Sunday g~e8ts of the
Crosses were Mr. and Mr~.
, yeag
M
d
Clarence
er, r. an
M~s . Denver Glbbs and
children Stephanie and
Annette of Masm, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jordan of
Letart, W. Va.

BORN LOSER

3 AND 4 RM furn1 shed and un ·
furni shed

2:3().-0octors 3,t5; Guiding Llgh1B.IO.
3:QO-An~ther World 3, 15; General Hospltal6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10; Dick Cavett 20.
4:QO-Misfer Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's ls.·s; Brady Bunch 10;
Petllcoai .Junctlon 15.
S: Q0-1 Dreemo1Jeannle3; Bionic Woman 13; BeveHy
Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogerst Neighborhood 20,33;
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Brady Bunch 15.
5:3().-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
SQn 8; Elee. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Doctor Who 33.
6:QO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13.15; BC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3().-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13"; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easv 20.33.
7:GO-Cross.WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Pop Goes
The Coun1ry 8; News 10; Love, American Style 15;
Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Student Affairs Inquiry 33
1:3().-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go to"The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6; Donna F"argo i3; Gilligan's Ia.
15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:110-Grandpa Goes To Washington 3.15; Happy Days
6,13; Paper Chase 8,10; Soundstage 20; City
Notebook 33.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; When The Boat Comes 1~
flll~ IDft l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one loner to each sQuare. to lorm
lour ordinary words.

MICS.~~\

J&amp;L

·

- - - -

1t

~

220 e. Mlln Slreet,
Pomoroy,O.
' Call 992-7113
Fcir Free Estrmatti-

MOTORS, INC.

fb~t,~'r:k~ 1&amp; ~~~~~)~~~\ ~.

' ,.,. .. t ......., ........ ........ .........

background helpful .
Submi1 resume including
salary
history
to:
Presiden1, SOUTHEAST
OHIO
EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICES,
INC ., P.O. Box 805,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, by

.

&amp;UT HOW CAN .CAPTAit&gt;J

MAt&lt;O EVER HOPE T' TRACK
DOW Ill ONE PAilTICULII/l.
MlfNEATER. 11-1 A~~ THe;
5EVEIJ 5EA5 ~

WIOlT
APPUANCEII

Phone 742-2328

Bachelor's degr~e and live

January 16, 1979.

CAPTAIN EASY.
IMAel"--Er A
SHARI&lt; .SWIMMIIJ'
AROUND WITH A
GOLDE:N ~TATUE:
l'lSIPS In

Your HeldquartiiS For
AnnstJOng Capeling

Services, execution of
seven
annual
county
contracts, etc. Answering
to 22 -member regional

Disability

..

Roofint. tU1ttn; new and
repolr.
Inside Paneling &amp; Calling
lilt
Frtt Es11mafo - oil '!I'OI'k
guaronfotd
21 Yrs. E.,...tenco
·eau: Tom Hoskins
t4t-H60
11-21-c:

Wood stove, 011 Furnace

1·4-1 mo. (Pd . )

fresh ideas.
ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll 19) Self·
TIRE SALE
doubts could sel in when
things first appear to be going
SNOW TIRES
against you. Don 't get discour- .
ON SALE AT
aged . Last-minute help arrives
POMEROY LANDMARK
In the mck of time.
SERVICE STATION
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Flashes of inspiration will take
over today, giving you just what
you need to accomplish your
Pomeroy Landman
alms . That Which you thought
lo be unobtainable will be .
:• • - Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
yours after all.
GEMINI (May ·21-June 20) You IAiil, Phone992-2181
won 'I have to cope with a
malcontent too long today.
Urgent, but exciting, events -471 DeTROIT DIESEL with dutchand Irons. $750. Lbft . flat groin
occur to give you your edt.
bed , S350 .40 ft flat low
You'll quickly forget your frustrations.

·

Call

992-2356

For' Sale
Januory 10, 1919

OHIO VAU£Y
ROOFING &amp; fl)ME
MAINTENANCE
SERVICE·

Don ' t let a ch i mney fire put
a damper on you r life -

seven-county advanced life

.

Bernice Bede Osol

SHOP
651 Beech Street

opt Call
99].2288.

ASTRO•GRAPH

ElECtRIC MOlOR

support service seeks
Executive Diredor.

•iL

• MomberOI
Chlmntv

Private,
non-profit
(publicly controlled)

~ ed .

Wedneod,oy, Jon. 10

REYNOLD'S

20.

ru ESDAY, JANUARY9,1979

'•

33 .

· 9:110-Movle " Airpar1 1975" 3, 15; Three's Compeny
6,13; Movie ~ Rio Lobo" 8, 10; National Geogriphlc

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Business SerVices

- - ·TIMBER POMEROY Forest
!i~lR vya!lt~«! __ .
duels Top prire for 5tonding
sow IJmber Colt qq].5965 or NHO SOMEONE to core lor lody
Kent. Hanby . 1-.4
46·8570.
in her own t-lome l~v£' 1n . f1x
. .
meo l s, drive
C~rs ,
get
OlD FURNITURE" ire bo•es, br~"s
groceries , !iu pervise m edico·
beds rron beds. desk s etc.
tron , etc Ideal woman would
comple te housekolds. Wrrte
bP m1ddle aged . trustworthy
M 0 . Miller . IU .4 , Pomer oy or
onci will rng to make ,er home
coll9q17760
.
.
in Syro ruse, Ohro 992· 70'3.4 or
OLO COINS. pocket watches ,
992·
767 1
doss ring s. · wedding' band s.
diamonds Gold or s1lver Call
Roger Wamsley . 7~h 7331 .
POSITION AVAILABLE

Std

•

.
--------·

997-2biJQ

' '1

7- Tbe Daily Sentinel,MiddleJ!Ort-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1979

DlatTRACY

Yard Sale

(HIP
WOOD
PoiM
rna" IF VOU hove o serv irP to offer ,
cf io rnPIPr 10" on lnrgf'!it encl .
wan t to huy 01 sf&gt; ll !&gt;OffiPthing
512 per ton Bundled !.lob . SIO
OC" lookrng for work .
or
p e r ton O p lrv~rrd tp Ohifl
wha t('vcr .
you 'll get resuh•
fn s tor w1th o Scr1trn el Wor~t Art
. f' Clllet Co . Rt 'J , PomNoy

1967

.

.

IT WAS JUSTA
SUGGESTION ...

.
' '

.

.

�.'
:
-

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1979

.

The Bee Gees r--A~;;n;;atii;-i
nominated for
.
szx grammzes
I

I

Sanjahy ready to lead

sister, Wanda Lee Hunter.
MYRON C. BESS
·
Mr. Unton was a Navy
Myron C. Bess, 83, died
veteran
:World War 11,
Hy orru OOEWNG
"With a superftcial change
unexpectedly Monday at his member of
of DAV at Athens,
-\sSo•&lt;·ia·&lt;'&lt;l Press Writer of cabinet, by using soine
home on Third st:, Syracuse. VFW of Coolville and Rome
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) opportunist characters and
Mr. Bess was born Aug. 5, Grange of Steward. He Karim
Sanjaby.
leader
of
tlie
the most coodemned tactics
18951n Oakland, W. Va., a son _worked as .a carpenter Ute opposition National Front, of
propaganda, the Iranian
of Edward and Callie Massie greater part of his life.
assailed Iran's new civilian regime and its supporters are
for
best
instrumental Bess. He was also preceded in
He 1s survived by his wife, government today as a plot attemptirig in vain to divert
By YARDENA ARAR
deatit.by his first wtfe, Helen Thelma Sayre Linton, two by ~ ·opportunist characters" the struggle of the Iranian
Associated Press Writer composition
Bess, in 1967, four sons, Richard F . Linton, and said he is ready to lead a people in achieving its
Ms. Murray's " You Needed Davis
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
brothers
and two sisters.
Me" . was nominated for
( AP) -The Bee Gees, whose
Surviving
are his wife, Newton Falls, Ohio, Jess s. replacement government if objectives."
Coolville,
one approved by Ute _ country's
Sanjaby said he was asked
contribution to "Saturday record ofthe year, song of the Susie Wood Bess; a daughter, Linton,
Night
Fever"
went year and best female pop Mrs. Jewell Case, Columbus · daughter, Mrs. Michael Moslem leaders.
at the time Ute Bakhtiar
Sanjaby Ibid reporters at a goverrunent was • formed to
(Anita) L. lltUBSell, Coolville;
unacknowl edged at last vocal performance Another tbree step-sons, Lee WQ&lt;!d
1
smgle,
"Walk
Right
Back,"
five
sisters,
Lucille
Martin
news
conferenced he hopes participate in a Regency
year 's Oscar ceremonies,
Rutland, . and David and
was
nominated
for
best
and
Carrie
Beyler,
both
of
Ft.
the
Iranian
army "will Council that would take over
have been nominated for six
Glenn Wood, both of Myers, Fla., Virgme Par· understand the peoples' the shah's powers when the
categories of Grammy co'untry VQCal performance Columbus;
two
step·
, • 'da F rost, movement
awards,
the
National by a female .
sons, Stewart , .,..1
d
.and. ,.act in monarch begins hts longdaughters,
Mrs.
Mary
Ann front,
Other record-of-the-year Ross and Mrs. Erma
OhiO, Ceola Welch, .act?r ance wtlh 11. . But he anticipated lengthy leave of
Academy of Recordiiig Arts
and Sciences announced nominees mcluded "Baker McGaulghain, both of Lakeville · two brothers demed he was urgmg the • absence abroad. But Sanjaby
Street" by Gerry Rafferty
Leonard 'L. Linton, Ft:~my disobey Ute civilian said he had refused to join
Mooday.
Columbus; aliroUter, Robert,
The Bee Gees weren't and "Just the Way You Are" Houston, W. Va., and two. Myers, and Wllliam J. Un- ~ent of Shahpour .such a body "under the
nominated for any of the by Billy Joel OUter aibum-&lt;&gt;f- ststers, Mrs. VIrgie Baer, ton, Lakeville, seven grand- Bakhllar, formed Frtday present situation."
wtth Shah Mohammad Reza
Instead, he said he
Oscar awards the ftlm the-year nominees are "Even Teas Valley, W.Va., and Mrs. children.
Funeral
services
Now"
by
Barry
Manilow,
will
be
,
P~hl~vt
retamed
as
conproposed
a temporary
mdustry gives in mustc
Thelma Ramey, Houston, W. held Thursday at II a.m. at slltutwnal monarch. .
"Grease"
by
John
Travolta
goverrunent,
under what he
categortes .
Va.
and
Olivta
Newton-John
and
the
White
Funeral
Home
in
"The
shah,
who
clauns
to
called
a
"National
Council,"
But the record industry
· Also surviving are 11
group, in announcing the others, "Running on Empty" grandchildren, 18 step· Coolville. The Rev. Roy w. have h~ard the vglce of the that would rule the countrr
-nominees for its 21st anpual by Jackson Browne, and grandchildren and 12 great · Rose will officiate. Burial will revolulton, h~~ no": resort~ wtth Ute blessing of Ayatollah
be in the Centennial to a new plot, SanJaby satd. Khoma.ni. the &lt;h•h'• •vil"'i
Granuny Awards, said the "Some Girls" by the Rolling great • grandchildren.
" Saturday Night Fever" Stones,
Mr. Bess was a veteran of Cemetery at Frost. Fnends
Joel's "Just the Way You
soundtrack was nominated
World
War I and a member of
for top album of the year and Are ,' ' 'Three T1mes A- Metgs Chapter 53, Disabled
the single "Stayin' Alive" Lady ," by lionel Riehle of American Veterans. lie was a nesday a1 th_e fune:al h~me.
from that album was m the the Commodores, and "You retired coal miner.
record-of-the-year and song- Don 't Bring Me Flowers" by
FLETCHER WELCH
Funeral services will be
Neil Diamond, Alan Bergman
of-tbe-year categones.
Fletcher
R. Welch, 72, a
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
In addition, the Bee Gees · and Marilyn Be~gman Ute Rawllngs-()ats Funeral resident of Pomeroy, died in
rounded out the song-Qf ·the •
were listed in nominations for
Home in Middleport with the Holzer Medical Center 0:30
best pop vocal performance year nominees.
a.m. Monday.
Those nominated for best Rev. David Fields of New
by a group, hest arrangement
Haven, W. Va., officiating. . He was born Feb. 5, 1909, at
By DENIS D. GRAY
graphic isolation from China
for voices , and' best producer new artist of the year ending Burial. will be in Riverview Isomhuet Creek In Logan
AsS&lt;tciated
Press
Writer
indicated
that Chinese
Sept. 30, 1978, were The Cars,
of the year.
County, W.Va. son of the late
Cemetery.
Friends
may
call
.
BANGKOK,
Thailand
(AP)
support
for
the ousted
Elvts
Costello,
Chris
Rea
,
A
Pop jazz-band· leader
at the funeral home at any Clark and Belle Zorie - China promised today to goverrunent would be mostly
of
Honey,
and
Toto.
Taste
Chuck Mangione
and
Albright Welch.
the
defeated verbal. There ·was no
Altogether there were 301 time.
Canadtan songstress Anne
The following children support
t:;ambodtan
government,
expectation that Chinese
nominaltons
in
52
categortes.
Murray each were nominated
survive his first marriage to
to
make
a
reported
trying
troops and planes would
DR. HAROLD HORDEN
in
four
categones. The winners will be
Ida King: Ernest ~e Welch,
Dr. Harold Cecil Horden, Michigan; Okey Welch, West stand in the northwestern invade Vietnam on behalf of
Mangiooe's "Feels So Gqod" announced Feb. 15with about
was nominated for record of a dozen Grammies presented 80, 2725 Wellesley Road, Virginia; Mrs. WUson (Edna) part of the country, and their unsuccessful
the year, his album "Chtldren during a hve telecast on CBS. Columbus, died Monday. Dr. Hackney, Martinsville, Ind.; predicted a "protracted war Cambodian clients.
It also appeared unlikely
of Sanchez" was included In Nominations and awards are Hiden was a retired dentisi Opal, and Mrs. Burtham of resistance."
The
Peking
People's
Daily,
that
the ousted government
the best pop instrumental determined by balloting a native of Middleport.
(Arbutus) Dalton, If Louisa,
the
Chinese
Communist
would
be able to command
IS
survived
by
his
wife,
e
category and for belli album among 4,700 members of the
Ky. One son preceded him in
newspaper,
said
China
Party
much
support among the
nabonwide.
Margaret,
one
son,
William
academy
package, and his "Consuela's
death.
would
back
Premier
Pol
Cam
bodlan
people for a
Love nu~me" was nominated
P. Horden, Houston, Texas,
Tl!ree daughters by a
Pot's
fallen
regime guerrilla war because of the
one daughter, Mrs. Anne second marriage survive:
Half, McDonald, Ohio ; two Judy Musser, Rutland; Jean, "resolutely." It said the fall millions of urban dwellers it
sisters, Mrs. Phyllis Skinner, of fnster, Mich., and Peggy of Phnom Penh Sunday to drove into the countryside to
Pomeroy And Miss Gretta Ellis, Middleport, along with Vietnamese invaders and a farm and the million or more
Columbus; II 15 grandchildren, 35 great - rebel Cambodian Communist people it ts reported to have
Horden,
~·ourteen defendants were
costs, no muffler; John F.
fined and nine others for· Schmittauer, Athens, $10 and grandchildren and eight grandchildren and one sister, movement was a "landmark · executed in its three years in
Mrs.
Myrtle . Price, of doo10 " for Hanoi and its power.
felted bonds in Meigs County costs, assured clear distance; great-grandchildren.
Soviet backers because it was
Analysts m Bangkok said
Funeral services . will be Cleveland.
Court Monday.
·
Lorinda E. Seth, Pomeroy,
the
start,
not
Ute
end,
of
Pol
Pot and ·his associates
Fined by Judge Charles H. $15 and costs, speeding; held Thursday at 10 l).m. at
He attended Ute Baptist
fighting
.
wbo
fled from Phnom Penh
Knight were Don L. Walker, David H. Mora, Rt . 3, the Southeast Christian Church at Hysell Run, Rt. 1
The
U.S.
State
Department
before
it fell were trying to
Racine, $10 and costs, failure Pomeroy, $50 and costs, Church, 3330 E. Linvingston Middleport.
Vietnam's
invas10n
of
said
set
up
a line of resistance
Ave., Columbus. Friends
to yield; Randall Hartly, speeding.
Funeral services will be
Cambodia
raised
the
danger
Siem
Reap and An!r,
near
may
call
at
the
Woodyard
Athens, $14 and costs, speed;
held I p.m. Wednesday at the
Forfeiting bonds were
of
wider
war
and
called
for
the
ancient
Combo tan
East
Chapel,
2300
·
E.
McCoy--Moore Funeral
Gary S. Basham, Coolville, Michael P. Norris, Rt. 2,
foreign
,
forces
to
be
capital,
In
Ute
northw
ern
Livingston
Ave.
,
Wednesday
Leonard E. Richards, Albany, $60.50, reckless
Home with Rev. Jolui Jeffrey
part
withdrawn.
It
said
"all
of
Ute
count\-y.
from
2
to
4
and
7
to
9.
officiating. Burial will be In
Parkersburg,
William operation; David Parker,
countries interested in peace,
The • new provisional
Additiooal services will be Vinton Memorial Park.
Gwen
Barnhart, Pomeroy, Jerry A. Loveland,
stability
and
an
md~pendent
government
installed by the
held
Thursday
at
2:30p.m.
at
Friends may call at the
stone, Columbus and Jolui W Longbotham, Gallipolis,
state
system
in
Southeast
Vietnamese
in
Phnom Penh,
Ute
Rawlings
Coats
Funeral
funeral
George
N
Smith,
Parkersborne
today
from
2-4
Anderson, Pomeroy, $15 and
Asia
should.
urge
restraint
on
the
People's
Revolutionary
costs each, speeding; burg, James Copeland, Home in Middleport with and 7-9 p.m.
both parties to the conflict." Council, said it controlled Ute
Kathryn Richards, Pomeroy, Gallipolis and James C. burial to follow in Riverview
However, Cambodia's geo- area, which is about 120 miles
Cemetery.
$10 and costs, assured clear Lambert, Gallipolis, $30.50
northwest of Ute capital. But
distance; John J . Davis, each, speeding; Paul F .
the
Bangkok sources said
·
JAMES
LOHSE
SE.RVICES WEDNESDAY
Albany, $5 and costs, illegal Lambert, Columbus, $35.50,
ft~hting
was continuinR in
Word
was
received
here
Special guests of the
exhaust; Grover K. Klein, Rt. speeding; Daniel J. Dearlate
Tuesday
morning
of
the
Middleport United Pen·
2, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, durff, Columbus, $35.50,
taking illegal deer; James D. speeding; Dennis E. Wilson, death of James Lohse, 37, tecostal Church at 7:30 p.m.
!&gt;arson, Racine, $5 and costs, Parkersburg, $33.50, formerly of Pomeroy in Wednesday will be Ute Rev.
Hospital News
Cincinnati Monday.
and Mrs. Uoyd Moreau and
defective brakes, $5 and speeding.
Mr. Lohse had been with family, missionaries to
VeteraDB Memorial Hospllal
Ute local radio station for Auckland, New Zealand.
Admitted - Robert C. Hill,
CINCINNATI (AP)
sometime before going to
Special musical numbers Police stopped Cincinnati Racine; Lady Dawn Davis,
Columbus where he became will be presented by the officials from giving them a Pomeroy; Virgie Blake,
l{eep passing the buck
well known in the 81Ulouncing Moreau family and Ute Rev. non-negotiated raise, but Middleport; .Benjamin
field. He was serving as Mr. Moreau will speak on their paychecks may be late Davidson, Middleport; Frank
program director for the Taft New Zeland and a 30-mlnute today.
Wolford, Vinton; Timothy
Broadcasting Station m !ibn will be shoMl.
Hamilton County Common Sklorenko, Middleport.
Cincinnati at the time of his
Pastor WilHam Knittel Pleas Judge William S. MatDischarged - Charles
death.
extends an invitation to the thews temporarily lalted the Beegle.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. public to attend Ute service. city on Monday from
Harold Lohse, Pomeroy,
increasing pollee wages by 7
Holzer Medical Center
were- in Florida at the time of
percent while the Fraternal
Discharges, Jan. 7
SEEKS SUPPORT
his death.
Order of Police is still
Paula
Baisden, Mary Mrs.
The Qf!ice of recovery negotiating a contract.
Other survivors are his
Crabtree
and son,,
Joey
. wife, Michelle; a sister, Mrs. services, State of Utah and
Dean Watkins of the ctty Leamon Dalton,
Ronald
Jennifer Sheets of Rutland, Dora Simpson flied for Division of Audit and Review
Fisher,
Hershel
Henry,
Amy
County
support
in
Meigs
two daughters and a brother,
said paychecks for this week Jones, Wendy Musick, Mrs.
Common Pleas Court against which included the salary
Jolm Lohse of Columbus.
Walter Rawlins and
William Burnell Pettit.
boost have already been daughter, Brian Roush,
printed by computers. So Michael Rowland, Shirley
RICHARD B. LINTON
FREE SERVICE
because of the court ruling, Tyree, .Willlam Wray.
COOLVILLE- Richard B.
There will be free curb every check for all 931
Duscharges, Jan, 8
Linton, 60, Rt. 1, Coolville, pick-up of Christmas trees in policemen now will have to be
Donald
Bell, Brian Bevan,
died Monday afternoon Racine on Friday, Jan. 12.
hand-written.
Hulda
Brown, Helen
following and eKtehded
Matthews, ruling in favor Cameron, Mrs. Patrick Canaillness.
of the police union, said the day and daughter, Bessie
Mr. Linton was born in
CANCELLED
City Council violated the Clark, Clement Cooper,
Athens, son of the late
The ll)eeting of the rights of police Saturday by Jeremiah Hill, Elmer Ihle,
Richard E. and Minnie M. Syracuse PTA scheduled for grantjng the wage boost to
Mrs, Ronald Kapp and son,
. Brandeberry. He was also this evening has been can- both police and firemen.
Mrs. Ralpb Kelvington and
preceded in death by one celled.
The Cincmnati Firefighters . daughter, Elsie Lakin, John
Union has already ratified a Longstreth, Belinda Newell,
... for the finest services offered
new contract which includes Steven Nolan, George ·
· by any bank. Visit us today for
a 7 percent pay increase and Palmer, Virginia Prater,
cost-()f~iving clause for this
a
more information about our
Mansell Robinson, Danny
year
and
a
7
percent
wage
Russell, Mrs. Rodney Spires ,
checking and savings account
boost for next year. The city . llll!!..daughter, Betty Stew-drt,
plans. We will be happy to serve
charter requires firemen and Apnl stinson, Lucille Watson.
police to be paid the same
Y,OU .
Births; Jan. 8
salary.
Mr.
and Mrs. David
Whatever your taste in furniture, you can
The
City
Council
approved
Carpenter,
son, Patriot.
"THE FRIENDLY BANK"
choose with confidence from Flexsteel.
the pay ordmance Saturday
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hobart SherWl:lether you select contemporary,
for both fll'emen- and police, r.nan,son, Jackson.
Walk Up Teller and Auto Teller Window
traditional. modern or colonial, you will find
although
the
police
Ooen Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m.
an impeccable elegance in every piece that
negotiators had not agreed to Deputies check ·
will be a proud addition to your home. This
a contract
Cincinnati FOP chapter
distinctive Fiexsteel styli'19 ·is available in
President
Elmer Dunaway minor accident
sofas.
sectionals,
suites,
chairs.
and
a
-'
said police have asked for a
unique sofa -sleeper . Hundreds. and
Meigs County Sheriff
27.7 percent pay Increase, the
hundreds of fabrics, all decorator-selected
James
J. Proffitt reports
same percentage boost City
for beautiful corrediveness, give you a
deputies
inveatlaated an
j
Council members received
choice of solids in a variety of rich weaves,
when thetr wages were accident Monday evening in
J$!;2 5
prints, quilted fabrics, matelasses.
raised . Paul Berninger, chief Ute village of Racine.
brocades. and other lash ionable fabrics.
John West, 18, Racine, w8s
.
city
negotiator, said he had
· ~ ' &lt;! '•
no authority from the City traveling north on Broadway
''
Council In bargain for more St. when his vehicle slid on
~·
tbe snow covered street
than Ute 7 percent.
~rlking a vehicle owned by ·
'fhe
7
percent
boost
would
Deposits Insured To $40,000
raise base police and fir~ Cressa Shain, Racine. There
salaries from $16,000 to was moderate damage. No
Member f.D.I.D. Member F.D.I.C. ·
citation was Issued.
$19.000 over two years.

.

'

23 cases terntinated

Pay hike

stopped

--------on

to

on

· e d for
upport prom lS
defeated government

~~~=~s

1

.

wbo remains commander-Inchief.
Apparently as a result of
Jam's defection, Bakhtlar
delayed presenting his new
Cabinet to Parliament for two
days.
Bakhtlar
had
been
scheduled to ·present his
cabinet today to the lower
hoUS&lt;I of Ute Majlls, the
lranlhn ParHament, and to
Ill~. Senate on Saturday for
votes of confidence. But the
government radio 81Ulounced
that the presentation to Ute
lower house would be made
on Thursday.
A correspondent for the
London Financial Times
reported that the prime
minister told him in an interview Monday that It would
be at least 10 days before Ute
sli'ah leaves the country
Ute foreign vacation which he
reportedly has agreed to take
in an attempt to appease his
foes. Sources said Ute 59·
t
year-old ruler . woUld wait
until both houses had given
Ute government a vote of
confidence.
Bakhtiar
said
Ute
corruption trials . of fanner
goverrunent ministers would
start in the next 10 days or so,
and "for reasons of state,
some executions are likely in
Ute near future," Ute British
some areas around the Tonie correspondent reported.
He added that Bakhtlar
Sap, the big lake between
Phnom Penh and Slem Reap. said he was giving priority to
They
reported
the the restoration of press
Vietnamese were making air freedom and the freeing of all
strikes, moving westward political prisoners as well as
from Phnom Penh and the prosecUtion of fonner ~
mopping up pockets of leaders of the shah's regime.
resistance
In Washington, State
Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Department spokesman
Ute former Cambodian chief Hodding Carter said a U. S.
of state, told reporters in Air Force general Who Is
Peking Monday that the visiting Iran, Gen. Robert
Chinese were in radio contact Huyser, is urging leaders of
with the deposed Cambodian Ute Iranian anned forcell to
leaders and would provide support Bakhtlar.
them with weapops and
Huyser's viBit was believed
financial aid.
~
to be part of Ute Carter ad·
But he said ChineSe Vice ministration's effort to
Premier Teng Hsaio11u\g told bolster the new goverrunent
him the Chinese goverrunent in the hope that it can.end the
would not send !coops to political and economic crisis
Cambodia.
in the country and stW keep
Sihanouk left Peking for Ute shah on Ute throne.
New York to appeal to the
The government radio
U.N. Security Council for announced the departure
help for
the ousted fromthecountryofthe shah's
goverrunent. But Cambodia's two chief milltary advisers In
new proviBional goverrunent recent years. 'I'IIIty were Gen.
told the Security Council tbe .Gholam-Reza Azharl, the
former regime had "ceased· , armed for(\!!S chief of staff
to exist" Sl)d a U.N. meeting since 1971 wJ!o in two months
on the Cambodian problem as head of ii'lnllitary govern·
would be "flagrant inter- ment was unable to quell Ute
vention" in Cambodia's anti-shah movement, and
internal affairs.
Gen. Gholam-Ali Ovelsl, Ute
The message, relayed by former mllltary governor of
the Vielnamese mission to Tehran.
the United Nations, was
The broadcast report said
signed by Heng Samrin, tbe Azhari left for heart surgery
president of Ute provisional in Ute United states and
government and the head of Oveisi resigned and went
Ute United Front for National abroad, probably to the
Salvatipn,
the
rebel United States also.
movement which fronted for
the Vietnamese invasion.
SQUAD CALLED
Heng Samrm was a memQer
The Pomeroy emergency
of Pol Pot,'s government, but squad was called to Peacock
broke with it some mooths Ave., at 2:08 a.m. Tuesday
ago.
for Mrs. Earl Denny who had
The new government fallen. She was taken to
promised
to
restore Holzer Medical Center.
democratic rights and
reinstate
traditional
SQUAD RUN
praciices, including the Bud·
The
Syracuse
ER Squad
dhist religion, and to move
was
called
Monday
at 12:10
Cambodia toward ''peace,
p.m.
for
Myron
Bess
who
was
freedom, non-allgntnent and
dead
on
arrival
of
~e
squad.
socialism.''
chief religious opponent.
Asked how the National
Counctl would be 'formed, be
satd, "Please do not. worry
the
too much about
constitution and the legahty·
of tile whole thing . · The
country is in a process of·
revolution.
For
a
revolutionary situation, you
need revolutionary solutions.
Our country is capable of
finding a solution to its
problems."
Bakhtiar was reported
meetmg today with Gen.
Fereidum Jam, Jl popular
former army chief of staff
who backed out Monday from
serving as defense minister.
Sources said Jam bad
insisted tbat the supreme
commander of the country 's
430,000-man armed forces
report to him in the new government, while Bakhtiar was
insisting that he cootiftue to
report directly to the· shah,

.CITIZENS NATIONAL

BANK

Elberfelds January Clearance

MEN'S SHIRTS

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 187

•

'

SAVE

30% • 35% • 40%
'.J

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1979

Thereon Johnl&gt;on, president of the Meigs Regional
Planning Commission; James M. JeMings, Sr ., whose
ftrm conducted the study ; Jeff Burt of the Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Development Commission, and
Cash Bahr, prestdent of the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce.

School bill

enttne

reappears .

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohto jAP ) Some major btlls that dtdn't
make · it through the
dleport Chamber of Com· Legislature last year have
merce to meet at an early started re-appearing in the
date to form a committee and Ohto House
proceed with the project.
An omnibus · mea sure
Bob Bailey, coordinator of gtving school district.. more
the Emergency Medtca l tools· to handle their fisca l
Services, presented the problems ts back.
agency's budget m the
So ts a measure, by Rep.
amount of $131,821 40 which Thomas P Gtlmartm, !).
was appropriated by th e Youngstown, to unprove the
beard for the 1979 operations
lot of Ohio's laid-off workers.
Donna Davidson, Rt. 4,
Gilmartm's bill doe sn't
Pomeroy, wus appointed as raise bencftts,like one vetned
an alternate on the GaUia- last month by Gov. James A.
Meigs Community Action Rhodes But it does retam a
Agency Board of Trustees. provision to eliminate the
A force account resolutwn oneweek watting period to
for the Meigs County High- qua hfy for unemployment
way Department was ap- comPensatiOn.
proved for 1979 The meeting
The vete ran Mahoning
was_recessed subject to the County lawmaker satd he has
recall of the president.
reason In believe Rhodes
Attending were Richard would stgn a bill cootairung
Jones, Henry Wells, and Jim the elimination feature alone.
Roush, commissioners and He said Sen. Thomas E.
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
Carney, D-Girard, planned to
offer an tdenttcal bill in the
upper chamber.
House Finance Chairman
Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville. remtroduced the
pro posa l that would put
of "various ·offenses" and
Ohto's 616 school distrtcls oo
pardons for other prisoners the same fis cal year as the
were being studied. It was not state - June 30 to July I.
known how many were
There was insuffictent time
to consider 1t last year
political pnsoners.
The U.S. government in a because it was not introduced
policy shift was reported to unlll late m the sesston.
By changmg the fisca l
have advised the shah to
leave the country., tern,. years, school dtstrtcls, which
porarily. American offtcials no\" operate on the calendar
,who asked not to be identifted year, hopefully could av01d
said Ambassador Wtlham 1;!. some of the fiscal crunches
Sulltvan had been instructed Uwt occur in the midd)e of
to tell the ruler there was no school tenns
They come a.bout becauSe
possibility of the violent
demonstrations· against him of statutes that pro hibit
subsiding unless he went
abroad.
The officials sa id the
Carter
administration
changed its position after tl
became apparent that the
mstallation of Prime Mmtster
Shahpour Bakhtiar and his
civilian government did not
ease the crisis sign ificantly.

Welfare director, supervisor, resign posts
The resignations of ~ar­
bara Shuler, Meigs County
Welfare director and Mrs.
Cullums,
ADC
Adele
supervisor at the Meigs
• County Welf~re De~artment
were read and accepted by

'
Department.
The commissioners reported a search
will begin immediately to
find replacements.
The resignations came on
the heels of a report released
Tuesday by Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Fred
W. Crow III revealmg that a
grand jury had issued 1mdings and recommendations
on the department.
Crow said the jury's pfobe
was made due to nwnero\LS
complaints from Meigs
County citizens.
According
to
the
prosecuting attorney, a
number of findmgs and
recommendations were made
on Dec. 30. However, as of
today . no record of the fin·
dings has been filed in Metgs
County Common~ Pleas Court
journals.
County ComMeigs

Meigs County commissioners
Tuesday night.
A length discussion was
held
concerning
the
resignations and other .matters of the Welfarea

.--· Nationwlse~---.
Decision

JQUSt

be reached

WASHINGTON (AP) - District of Columbia
pollee officials are faced with Ute question of wbelher
to allow a policeman who underwent· a sex~hange
O!ieration to return to work as a woman.
BoMie Davenport, formerly Onnus W. Davenport
III, underwent the sex~hange operation last fall after
going on a leave of absence without pay in February.
·- Sllifreturn~ Tuesday to begin a series of examinations
required to gain reinstatement to active duty. High·
rariking pollee f!(flcials refused Tuesday to say what
they would do about the case.

Pilot may not fly again

the sheriff's department. The
btd was from the Pomeroy
Motor Co., tn the amount of
$6,695. Present to discuss the
bid were Sheriff James
Proffitt ~]nd William Grucser.
Grueser reported delivery
could be expected the first
week in February.
Eleanor Robson , Meigs
County Recorder, met with
commissioners to discuss the
1979 appropriations for the
Recorder 's office. Miss
Robson stated she was
dissatisfied with the salary of
her deputy and that she felt
her deputy should be paid a
salary
equivalent to all other
Cloudy tonight with snow
late tomght and possibly deputies.
The board adopted a
c-ontinuing Thursday. LOw
tonight near 15 and high resolution endorsing the
Thursday in the mid to upper Meigs Industrial Site study
20s. The chance of snow Is 80 and urged the C. I. C.,
of
peNent tonight and 50 per- Pomeroy Chamber
Commerce
and
the
Mtd·
cent Thursday.

mtss10ners, Richard Jones,
Henry Wells and Jim Roush
were presented copies of the
findings
and
recom·
mendations, Jan. 2. Grand
jury
members
have
requeste(,l permisston to
continue their investigation
past the normal expiration
date of Dec, 31.
BID ACCEPTED
One bid was received and
accepted for a new cruiser for

Weather

Family holdings transfer~ed

LOVELAND, Colo. (AP) - Malburn McBroom,
pilot of a United Air Lines jetliner thaI crashed near
Portland, Ore., killing 10 persons, says be doesn't know
H he wants to fly again. "All those years, I never
scratched an airplane and never iqi!J.red a passenger,"
said Ute 52-year-()ld pilot of the DC-8 that crashed Dec.
28. "I don't know. I don't know. "
McBroom, interviewed at his home here by the
Loveland Daily Reporter-Herald, is recoyering from
injuries suffered in the crash.

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi has transferred the
royal family's huge holdings
in Iran to the Pahlavt
Foundation, the !raman
government radio reports,
but there has been no mdication when he would carry
out his pledge to transfer
control of the foundation from
himself to a government
agency.
The broadcast report also
said nothing abcut the royal
family's vast holdings m
foreign countries, whicb are
estimated .at more than $1
billton.
The foundallon is a combination charitabl e
organization and famUy trust
established by Ute shah in
1968 and controlled entirely
by him. Its records are kept
secret, but it has huge '

Carter family returns
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter and his
family returned to winter's subfreezmg temperatures
in tbe nation's capital after a five~y Caribbean vistt
that mixed swrunitry with a vacation.
Before tbe Carters flew back late Tuesday from
the island of Guadeloupe, Ute presjdent and his
daughter Amy went sailing for six hours aboard a sleek
60-foot French trunaran racer as a motor launch filled
with Secret Service agents trailed behind.

Hideouts will try again
SALEM, Ore. (AP) - John and Greta Rideout,
wbose unhappy marriage was magnified in a courtroom, are reconciled- barely two weeks after he was
found Innocent of raping ber.
The couple aMounced their reconciliation Tuesday ·
to Ute attorney wbo successfully defended the 21-yearold Rideout, a reconciliation that followed a meeting
Sunday concerning their 2'h-year-old daughter.

•

lioldings m Iran and abroad,
including a 36-story office
building it is building on New
York's Fifth Avenue.
The broadcast said the
transfer of royal properties
would benefit " religious,
educational, social and
welfare organization s
organized by the people and
run by them." The move was
intended to quiet widespread
criticism of the royal family
for its enonnous wealth and
alleged corruption.
One diplomatic source who·
asked not to be identified satd
it was a "half-way step"
toward fulfillm ent of the
ruler's pledge to put the
government in control of the
foundation, but "it probably
will not meet the demands of
the opposition."
"In the context of today's
reality, no one is going to
care," the source said "The
foundation has done a lot of

[.
r•

Studio manager defendant
~

CINCINNATI (AP) - A former Fred Astaire
Dance Studios manager and several associates were
~~ed in a civil suit by .the Ohio Attorney General's
'Office Tuesday, alleging consumer frautt.
Hamlltm County Common Pleas Judge Wllliain S.
Mathews set a hearing Thursday on a request for a
restraining order to stop Ray Packham, Sharonville,
and tthers from any future violations of Ohio's
consumer laws.

'

'

-good things, such as financing scholarships for study
abroad, but ir has a bad
reputation as far as
corruption in the royal family
is concerned."
There was speculallon that
by the time the government
was . given control of the
foundation, most or all of tts
foreign holdings would have
been transferred to the shah
or some of the 64 members of
the royal family who have
gone abroad since political
t~nnoil increased last fall .•
In another move to appease
political opponents st ill
demanding the shah's abdication , the ruler pardoned
266 prisoners convicted by
military courts, the national
Pars news agency reported.
The r eport sa td those
pardoned had been convicted

NEW OWNER- David Chase is Ute new owner of the
River-Front-Diner, Pomeroy. Chase purchased the Diner
from Arthur Eblin in December. Tbe Diher will offer
home coo.kl!d food and in the near future, pizza and
delivery service seven days a week. Tbe 'Diner was
formerly jcnown in tbe community as the Blue and Grey
'

)

bcrrowtng agamst future tax
revenues unless the loan can
be repaid wtthm the same
calendar year .
His bill also repeals the new
state school loan fu nd, estabhshed last year to keep some
troubled dtstricts from
having lo close schools.
However, tt sets up local
cont mge ncy fu nds that
apparently would serve the
same purpose .
As usual, new bills also
have surface d in the
Legislature which convened
Jan 2.
State Rep. Wayne Hays , DBe!rnont·, offered his first
legislative propusalsTuesday
sm ce comn1g out of h1s

controvers ial

retirement

from Congress.
• He mtroduced m the Ohio
House proposals to limit the
use by public uttltttes of the
controversial fuel adjustment
clause. and to abclish tbe
Ohio Board of Regents.
Under his proposal, utilittes
could not pass on to their consumers the cost of purchased
fu el except at the cheapest
rate that was available to the
uttlity at the t1me tt was
needed
Hays s8ld utiitttes have
been under no restraint to
buy the lowest priced fuel,
us ually coal .
He sa td the board of
regents

IS

an unneeded Jayer

or bureaucracy whtch
tmpedes operation of Ohio 's
system of higher educatwn.
The former congressman,

67,
return ed to the
Legislature Jan . 2, about 30
months _after Ius restgnatwn
m a payroll mtstress scandal.
He served 111 the Ohto Senate
in the early 1940s

OSP accepting
applications

'

Elderly Woman
dies in fire

WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviei citizens are getting
more cars, · televiBlons, refrigerators and washing
macbjnes than ever before, according to tbe Central
Intelligence Ageqcy. But their economy is still growing
more slowly than Ute V. S. economy.
Overall, the Soviels are catching up in some ways
and falling behind in others.
Knit Shirts · Van Heusen Dress Shirts .
Sport Shirts · Dre.ss Flannels - Westerns •
Turtle Necks. Excellent selections. S, M, L
and XL.

ATTEND MEETING - More than 70 business and
ctvic leaders of Metgs County attended a meeting at the
Meigs IM Tuesday to hear aspects of an mdustrial site
study. From the left at the meeting are Paul Simon
president ' of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce:
'

e
VOL XXIX

County study even though the
study was a combined venture. for 'both Athens and
Meigs Countie~. commented
that he had excellent
cooperation, locally, - in
conducting the study. llis son,
James
JenQings , Jr.,
presented aspects of the
Hobson area including
specific characteristics such •
as the tax rate, services to the
location, and availability o.f
the land, which the younger
Jennings said, would not be
sold by Conrail but would be
leased.
The senior Jennings
indicated tbat favorable
and unfavorable factors
had been discussed with
Meigs County businesses in
relation to Meigs County.
The factors Include the
(Contmued on page 12)

Soviets increasing luxuries

_liiitens ~alional Ba·nk
.

the 14 industrial sites
(I J To Investigate, evaluate
developed by the study In- and priority rank both' the
clude, in priority order:
existing and . Ute potential
Hobson yards, Barringer sites. The Hobson sites were
Hobson , the only two existing sites.
Ridge
Road,
Rutland, Five Points,
(2) To ~urvey local
Pomeroy Junior High School, manufacturers
so
~s
Old Dam 24, Dorcas, the area
to analyze the presnear Buffington Island, Port·
ent conditions of each o(
land, Long Bottom, Reeds· the 14 major industrial
ville, 'fuppers Plains and developni'ent location factors.
Chester.
(3) To conduct a market
Jennings
stated potential analysis to idenllfy
topography , the flood suitable potential industries
situation, the size, (at least 15 • with some 400 bemg found in
acres ) and the avaUabllily of · the sj;udy which could easily
electricity and services in· locate · on the Meigs County
·eluding sewerage and rail sites.
service were among the
(4) To compile a list of such
characteristics involved in companies whtch, Jennings
nailing down an industrial advised, should be contacted
site.
and informed of the
possibilities in Meigs County.
PURPOSES LISTED
'Four major purposes of the
Jennings, who presented
only aspects of the Meigs
project reported were:

CLEVELAND (AP ) -Cleveland may find itself
back in the middle of a financial crisis if land sales
planned by Mayor Dennis J. Kucinich are blocked by
utility C&lt;lllpany judgment liens.
_ Kucinich rescinded a layoff order affecting 400 city
workers, including 275 policemen, Monday night after
getting City Council approval to sell about $5 million in
city lands. City officials assured councilmen that $3
million in judgment liens held by the Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co. did not affect the properties
that are up for sale.

JANUARY SALE

'

BY BOB HOEFLICH .
More than 70 Meigs County
business and civic leaders
heard about Meigs County's
14 lndustri~l site4 resulting
from a several months study
during a luncheon held at the
Meigs Inil at noon Tuesday.
The Pomeroy and Mid·
"' dleporl Churches of Commerce and the Meigs County
Regional Development
CouncU staged Ute meeting to
preaent industrial site in·
formation compiled by
Jennings Associates,
Columbus, through an Appalachian Regional Development grant secured by Ute
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley-Regional Development Commission.
James Jennings, Sr.,
Pflmar!ly, Jl!eslded over Ute
presentation pointin,g out that

Blocked sales could hurt

FLEXSTEEL

£6

Study shows Meigs
has 14·- industrial sites

'· '

Elizabeth Ewing, 88, Rt. 4,
Oak Hill, died Tuesday
during a fire at her home on
Keels Rd., just off Polk Patch
Rd., in Greenfield Twp.
The Gallia Cour\ty Sheriff's
Department was nottfied of
the fire and fatality at 10:08
a.m. by Ewing's son-in-law,
Marion Payne.
Payne told officers that
upon awakellinl( in a neighboring home he and his wife,
Mildred Payne, noticed the
Ewing home had burned
during the night.
Payne
reported
he
searched the burnt dwelling,
but was unable to find any
sign of his mother-in-law.
In order to notify Ute Gallia
Department, Payne drove to
Oak Hill to the nearest phone.
Arriving , at the scene,
deputies discovered the home
still partially burning,
smouldering and engulfed in
heavy smoke.
Following a searcb of the
demolished dwelling , the
victim's body was discovered
in the bedroom of the frame
structure.
Greenfield Township has no
fire protcctton

U . Ernest Wigglesworth,
Commander of the Gallia ·
Meigs Post, Ohio State HtghSPECIAL MEETING
way Patrol is presently acA special meeting of cepting applications and
Middleport village council testing applicants for 1979
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Academy classes. He asked
Thursday, Jan. II In all men and women incouncil chambers. Purpose terested in pursuing' a career
is to discuss and take ac· as a Trooper to contact their
tion on any business which nearest patrol post for furmi~ht be presented.
ther information.
"The position of Ohio State
Htghway Patrol Trooper
offers applicants Ute chance
of a challenging career," U .
Wiggle s worth
said.
"Troopers are frequently
called upon to take cbarge of
vartous , often emergency
situations. For this reason
ley conditions caused in· they are thoroughly trained
jury to three residents to handle people and
Tuesday.
. ·
situations calmly, efficiently,
The Middleport emergency ana diplomatically "
squad was called to Route 124
at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday for •
Charles Burt who had fallen.
He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 9 :~ p.m.,
EXTENDED FORECAST
the squad went to Chestnut
Friday tbrougb Sunday:
St.; for Karen Bailey, Mid·
Snow ending· Friday. Fair
dleport, who was injured
Saturday and cloudy·
while sletgh riding. She too,
Sunday. Little daily
was taken to Holzer Medical
temperature cbange. Highs
Center.
in the 20s. LOws 0 to 10
At 10:12 p.m., the squad
above early Friday, and 10
went to Grant Sf. for Millard
to 15 Saturday and Sunday.
Spaulding who had fallen. He
' HiS treated ou t~r scene.

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

Three injured
in ice falls

·~

Applicants for the position
of Trooper must meet the
following qualifications : 21-30
years of age; a minimum
height of 5'8" (measured in
stocktng feet ) wtth body
weight proportional to
height ; have a valid driver's
license ; must have graduated·
from high school or be able to
show satisfactory completion
of the G.E.D. or equivalent.
for
Starting
salary
Troopers is $12,043 per year
with maximum potential,
through yearly increases, of
$1 4,456 annu ally . Benefits
include patd llohdays,
vacation, and sick leave; a
comprehensive retirement
and penston plan ; group
medical, surgical, and life
insurance programs; shift
differential and hazardous
duty pay.
"The Ohio State Highway
Patrol needs sincere people
who are interested In
developing a solid, secure
future in law enforcement,"
U. Wigglesworth said. "Men
and women who wish to apply
for the position of Trooper are
asked to call their local patrol
post immediately."
The Gallia · Meigs Post Is
located at 422 Jackson Pike.
·'Call U . Wigglesworth at 4462433 or 992-2397 for further
information.
I

i

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