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8- The Oailv Sentmel, Middl•port-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1979

Sanctions threatened
Ry JIM McKAY
Associated Press Writer
PITTSBURGH (A P ) U S Dtstrtcl Judge LoutS
Rosenberg threatened to
unpose ''awesomeu sanctiOns

agamst
the
Fratern a l
Assoctatton of Steel Haulers
tf a two-montlt strtke IS not
unoondtt10nally ended
Rosenberg , asked Monday
by the steel mdustry to
declare F ASH leaders - m
contempt of court for fatltng
In obey a backtn-work order
tssued last week, cler ly
stated his postttOn
"No 1!s, ands or buts, tt ts to
end now," Rosenberg sa td
"It 's off . The strtke ts over
It 's at an end absolutely and
the s tatus quo must be
restored unmediately "
Rosen berg, who earlter
threa t e ned to Jatl FASH
Chairman Wtlltam J Hill and
Vtce Prestdent Robert Trent .
srud Monday he would not
unpose fmes or Jatl terms
unless hiS order was tgnored
" I don 't beheve m puttmg

ramtl y

men

tn

Jatl ,"

Rosenberg
satd
"My
sympathy is wtth them , but tt
ts also wtth the law."
The JUd ge noted that
reports of VIOlence on the
ht g hwa ys, tncludtn g
and
rock
shootm gs
throwrngs , comctded wtth the
stnke .
"There must be an end to
thts," Rosenberg satd
"I am gomg to gtve you an
opportuntty
to
purge
yourself," ~e told Hill, adding

he would use all his legal
powers tf necessary .
Turnmg to Htll 's attorney,
Rosenberg satd , "And you
know the power of those sanctions can be awesome "
Rosenbe r g
ru le d
Wednesday that Htll and
Trent were tn contempt of a
1971 order m whtch the Judge
ruled th e dr tvers group was a
busmess assot:tallOn,

not a

labor uruon , a nd that tts
strtke wa s m vtolatJOn of
federal anlttrust laws
Htll
swore
before
Rosenberg on Fnday that he
had nottfted FASH area
coordinators that the strtke
was over But later m the
day, he released a statement
saymg he would not tell
FASH members to start
drtvmg agaUJ until those hred
dunng th e strtke were
rehtred
Htll told the court Monday
th at he had tr a nsmttted
Rosenberg 's last order to
strtke coor dmators and told
hts s upporters to comply wtth
I(

"I can't order Utem back to
work " Htll added " I don't
thmk' any steel hauler should
go back to work unttl th ose
who have been fired get thetr
JObs ba ck "
The language of the
message Hill was to send
announcmg th e end of the
strtke was worked out m
Rosenberg 's chambers after
attorneys for both the steel
compames and F ASH fatled
to agree prtvately.

Btll was gtvcn a deadlme of
5 p m today to take an oath of
compliance II F ASH spokes·
man srud after the hearmg
that Htll had scheduled a
membershtp meetmg for 2
pm
The stnke was called Nov
II m an effort to wln
unproved rates, sunplified
htghway regulatiOns and the
nght to bargam on behalf of
about 30,000 steel haulers,
many now working under
contracts negotiated by the
Teamsters umon
F ASH has appealed Rosenberg's order , but Ute 3rd
ll S Ctrcutt Court of Appeals
ts not expected to decide on
the case unttl April

Midwest•••
(Conttnued from page 1)
by ltghtntng , an unusual

occurre nce

m

northern

Gahforma, and more than
17,000 customers lost power
when It struck transformers
m Oakland
Nattonal Guard troops
usmg heltcopters delivered
hay to starVIng cattle In Iowa
and stmtlar r escue attempts
were planned today in
Mtssouri,
where
t e mperatures remained
nearl5 degrees .
Kansas fanners worr•ed
Utat some cattle already were
dead - frozen under drtfts of
10 feet or more. And experts
warned that the htgh pl'lce of
keepUJg anunals ahve would
push up costs
" It takes an awful lot of
feed JUSt to keep cattle
warm, " s&amp;d Scott County
agncultural agent AI Maddux

m western Kansas. " It's

~&amp;8 88
SALE
Complete With
Tools

e"lt Beats. As It Sweeps,
As 1t Cleans"
e lristant Rua Adjustment
Edp Cltaning Suction __..-

e,_,

The best way to care for carpet is a
Hoover Convertable Cleaner.

BAKER FURNITURE
Mtddleport, 0.

gomg to make feed costs go
sky high "
tn Dlmots at least 100 datry
farmers reported thousands
of gallons of fresh mtlk
spoiled over Ute weekend
because they were unable to
get it to market
Elsewhere, about 300
tractor·trailer ngs - some
loaded wttlt pemhables like
peaches and pears - were
• stalled at truck stops along
Interstate 80 m Iowa Fuel
s upplies were low In some
areas
The dtesel engme semis reqmre about two gallons of
fuel every hour just to tdle,
and drivers smd they feared
Utey wouldn't be able to
restart them tf they stalled
Iowa Gov Robert Ray
tssued
an
emergency
proclamation allowtng fuel
tank carrters to haul an extra
1,000 gallon s of fuel oil or
overcome
propane
to
deltvery delays caused by up
to 28 mches of snow cover.

~---Ai_:~~-D~atii;--1

I

Royal family members
flew to Texas Monday

I

WRETIA SAELENS
Mrs Loretta McKevttt
Saelens, 74, 659 Broadway St ,
Middleport, dted Saturday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Saelens was born Aug .
23,-1904,1it Washmgton , Iowa ,
Ute daughter of the late Owen
and Johanna McKevitt . Mrs
Saelens was a member of the
Middleport Busmess and
Professional Women's Club,
Sacred Heart Church and the
Gatltoilc Women's Club,
~urvt vmg Mrs. Saelens are
her husband, Adolph ; a son
and daughter·m-law, Dennis
and Carla Sa ele ns, Mid dleport ; a daughter and sonIn-law, Lucile and Isaac Wllt,
Columbus , four grandsons,
Christopher, Patrtck,
Gregory and Michael Wtlt ,
three sisters, Josephtne
Clossln, La Plata , Mo. ,
Margaret
Pa•yne,
Washington, Ia., and Lucile
Coyle, Moline, Ill.; a brother,
Joseph McKevttt, Molme, Ill ,
and several meces and
nephews.
Mass of Christian burial
was held today at 10 a.m at
the Sacred Heart Church with
the Rev. Fatlter Paul Welton
ofltctatmg Wake services
were held Monday evenmg at
8 at the Ewrng Funeral
Home.

CATHERINE SNODGRASS
Mrs Catherme I Kate)
Snodgrass, 99, former Metgs
County restdent, died Monday at the Pmevtew Nursmg
Home m Harrtsv)lle, W. Va
Mrs. Snodgrass who would
have been 100 on Feb 20 was
born In Lewts County, W Va ,
a daughter of the late Jacob
•anct Jehrusha Bot! Hmzman
She was .11 member of Ute
Orange Christian Church •
near Alfred in Metgs County
Survtving are a number- of
nieces and nephews mcludmg
Mrs Rilla Hatfield, Hams·
vtlle, W Va., wtth whom she
made her home She was
preceded m death by her
husband, C. C Snodgrass In
1931 and by 12 brothers and

ststers
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p m Wednesday at
the "Winte Funeral Home m
Coolvtlle with Mr. Davtd
Carpenter officlatmg . Burtal
will be in the Orange
Christian Church Cemetery.
Friends may call at Ute
funeral home at any tune

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP l Sever al membe rs of the
!raman royal family new In
thts West Texas ctty early
today, )Otmng Iran's crown
prmce as Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi fled hts strtfetorn natwn
An offtcer at Reese Air
Force Base who asked not to
be tdentilied said a plane that
arnved here early today
earned Ute shah's mother-m·
law and three of hiS children
The shah and Empress
Farah left Iran secretly today
after the lower house of
Parltament gave
ftnal
approval to Ute country's new
ctvtltan government
The 59-year-old monarch
and empress were reportedly
· headed for Egypt and Ute
Umted States.
The fl1ght that landed here
apparently was an lmpertal

MEETS THURSDAY
The Democrat party will
meet Thursday at 7.30 p.m
at the Metgs Inn

Nationwise~
State judges given authority
W1\SHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court, tn a
ruling three members predtct may tamt Ute quality of
JUstice some Americans rece~ve, has gtven state
JUdges absolute dlscretton m dectdmg whether nonrestdent lawyers may work m their courts
Lawyers have no right to represent their clients In
a stale where the lawyers are not licensed, the nation's
high&lt;:st court said Monday

Marshals lose inununity bid
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) - Four former Kentucky
ftre marshals lost their b1d for unmuruty from lawsuits
m connection with the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire In
which 165 died.
•
Campbell County Ctrcult Jndge John Dtskln ruled
v-J Monday that the four will remain defendants In the
ctvtl trtal set to open April 17. He said aU held
"mmistertal" postttons when remodeling plans for the
supper club were approved. More Ulan $2.9 billion is
sought In suits brought by the families of those kiUed
and litjured in the May 28, 1977 fire at the Southgate
nightclub

Youth taken
to Colwnbus

On Tuesday, Carl R.
Hysell ,
Meigs
County
JUVenile officer transported a
17-year old Tuppers Plains
youth to Ute Ohto YouUt
Commission.
COUNCIL TO MEET
The youth was committed
Mtddleport Vtllage Counctl
wtll meet tn spectal session to the Ohio Youtlt Com·
Tuesday, .Ja n 16, at 7·30 p m ' mission by Juvenile Judge
Mannmg D Webster for the
tn cuunetl cha mbers to take
adton on appropnattons or- November breaktng and
entering of Eastern Htgh
dmante
School.
An adult involved m the
breaking and entermg has
entered a guilty plea tn adult
court and ts awaltmg a presentence mvestlgaUon according to Hysell

37 KILLED TODAY
NEW DEUII, India (AP)
- At least 37 passengers
were killed and 11 Injured
today -when a bus plunged
mto a 45-foot ravme In Kerala
state lit southern lndta, the
Untted News of India
reported .
The news agency satd 35
persons died mstantly and
two on the way to hospttal In
Idukki district, about 300
miles southwest of Madras,
after the bus toppled off the
road
The driver was among the
dead.

Appropriation
(Contmued from page I)
ordmance which comes up for
the second readmg atthe next
regular meetmg
REQUESTS FUNDS
Meetmg wtth counctl
Monday mg_ht was Don\
Hunnell representmg the
youth baseball league who
requested a donation be given
toward the program for the
purchase of equipment and
uniforms
Counctllnformed Hunnel it
had anticipated the request
and had aj!proprtated $500 lor
the baseball program.
Hunnell wa s also gtven
permtssion to solicit mer·
chants.
Harold Brown , council
prestdent, reported two
meetmgs must be held for
ctttzens mput, regarding a
HUD grant the village Is
maktng apphcatton for
Dijtes of the two meetmgs
wtll be announced later.
The mayor's report for the
month of December showed
receipts of $5,440 The report
was approved
The meeting was opened
with prayer by Lou Osborne.
Attendmg were Mayor
Andrews, Brown, Osborne,
Larry
Powell,
Larry
Wehrung, Betty Baromck,
and Btll Young, council
members, and Chief Jed
Webster

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veteraus Memorial Hospital
Admitted
George
Radekln, Albany, Robert
Manley, Middleport, Jesse
Will, Pomeroy; Mildred
Tubbs , Pom~roy; Emma
Adams , Racine ; Ryan
O'Neil, Pomeroy; J erry
Owens, Syracuse.
Discharged - Lady Dawn
Davis, Mary Games.
Holzer Medical Center
Dlocharges, Jan. 15
Edmund White, Aprtl Stinson , Clara Sargent, Ronald
Plants, Patrica Perkms, Joan
Neal , Deborah Mayse, Lucinda Lambert, Wenda Hunt.
Usa Hager, Tamara Holland,
\ Mrs. Charles Hoffman and
sun, Palrtca Holter, Mrs.
Carlos Gtllenwater and son,
Hetdt Gleason, Arnold Ftfe,
• Geneva Gabltsh, Rtchard
Daley, Verme Blake, Gtts
ll&lt;otlglas, Rnhtn FCJlcy

Blnhs, Jan . 15
Mr. and Mrs Harold
Taylor, son, Bidwell
Mr.and Mrs Curtts J enkins,
daughter, We llston
Mr. and Mrs Harold
Lambert, daughter, Ew·
mgt on

END MARRIAGES
In Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court three marrtages
were dissolved.
Melvin B. Ritchie and Rita
Marie Ritchie; John Thomas
and Bronwyn Ann Thomas;
Brenda Shepherd and Edward ~hepherd.
LUNCHEON SET
The Eptscopal Church
Women will lneet Thursday
at 12 ·30 p m for lunch at the
borne of Mrs. Theodore Reed,
141 Mulberry Ave , Pomer?Y·

Shah•••
(Contmued from page l)
E mpr ess
Farah
left
~~accordmg

to schedule" at

12· 15 p m after gtvmg
reporters the shp wttlt a false
announcement that Utey were
delaymg thetr departure unttl
Wednesday
Meanwhile, Ute lower bouse
of the Majlts, the !raman
Parliament, confirmed the
new government by a vote of
149-43 wtth 13 abstenttons
The Senate gave tt a vote of
conftdence Monday
been
The shah had
scheduled to hold a news
conference at Ute airport
before his departure and was
expected tn say something
about his plans But foreign
reporters were told on thetr
arrtval at Ute atrport that tbe
departure had been delayed
at least until Wednesday and
the news conference was
postponed.
The reporters were sent
back to Ute ctly, and shortly
alter the palace sources
reported the ruler and hls
'wtfe had left the country
The government said the
shah was going abroad for an
extended foreign vacation
and medical treatment after
a year of pohttcal and
economtc turmoil and publtc
VIolence. But many beheve
the vacation wtll turn tnln
permanent exile and Ute end
of Ute dynasty his soldier·
father founded 54 years ago.
The royal couple was In
spe nd Tuesday night at
Aswan, lit soutltern Egypt,
where Ute shah was to meet
wtth Prestdent Anwar Sadat,
and fly on tn Ute United States
on Wednesday.
The shah's destmatton m
the Umted States was not
known , but most of hts
unmedtate famtly ts already
there. Hts oldest son, 17-yearold Crown Prmce Reza, ts
takmg ptlot trammg in
Lubbock, Te~ ; his Utree
younger children and hts
mother-In-law were flown to
Amertca Monday, and hts
mother and a stster are also
there
Headlines in Tehran's
morning newspapers told the
pubhc that the long-awmted
departure of the ruler was
inunment. But m contrast to
Ute outpourmg of Utousands
of marchers Sunday and
Monday, there were only a
few scattered demonstrattons
l)y groups of several hundred
people before Ute royal plane
took off
Desptte the parltamentary
votes endorsing Bakhtiar's
government, the new prune
minister faced an uncertam
future because of milttary
leaders &lt;letermmed to keep
the shah on the throne, other
anlt·shah poliltfians angered
by Bakhttar's acceptance of
Ute monarch's mandate to
form a government, and the
campatgn by Ayatullah
Kbomainl , the leader of the
religious opposttion tn the
shah, to make Iran an
Islamic republtc dommated
by hun and the other Shiite
Moslem leaders.
· During the Senate debate
Monday , Bakhtiar claimed he
was in constant contct wtth
the
religtous
leaders,
mcludtng Khomaml, and
hoped to meet soon wtth
Khomami , an exile In France.
But the religious leader
repeatedly denounced the
new government as illegal
and lllegitimate and sa1d m a
weekend televtsion mternew
he would soon name a new
government for Iran whtch be
would superVI,.e and dtrect.
The shah's departure from
Iran ts his second forced exit
lit his 37-year reign and
follows a year of violent
demonstrations agamst hts
authoritarian rule and
unrelentmg demands for his
abdicatton .

!raman 707 jet that took off
from McGutre Air Force
Base, N .J , Monday night
Witnesses here satd a
convoy of about 20 vehicles
carried the Jet's passenger s
to the crown prince's retreat
m west Lubbock
Crown
Pnnce
Reza
Pahlavi, • 17, ts m ptlot
tratrung at the au- base m thts
ctty of nearly 165,~ people
Local reporters sat d
securtty at the prmce's home
- normally handled by offduty Lubhoek pollee officers,
was being handled by U S.
State Department guards.
After Ute convoy arrived,
the prlitce ' was seen playmg
wtth children In the ltghted
area of his back yard. The
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
repocted tl had conftnned
late Monday that !raman
government officials had

Permit
blocked
PORTLAND, Marne (AP )
- Otl and the bald eagle don't
mix, says the federal government, whtch has blocked a
$700 million oil refinery
planned for the Mame Coast .
The U.S. ' Envfronmental
Protection Agency's regtonal
office tn Boston Monday
denied a pollution penntl
needed for construction of the
250 ,000 barrelper -day
refmery and an oil tanker
termmal m Eastport, th~
nation's easternmost communtty
The EPA said Ute complex
cQuld
damage
the
Northeast's best nesting
ground for the national
symbol
William Adams Jr ., EPA
regional admmistralor, satd
a report from Ute U.S. Ftsh
and Wildltfe SerVIce was the
basis for the rejectton.
" We were adVIsed Utat the
refmery
would
have
stgmlicant adverse unpacts
on the eagles and their
habttat as a result of oil sptlls,
atr pollutton, and Ute Impact
of refmery constructton and
operations," he sa1d.
" These potential unpacts
could not be avoided or mllh
gated by any means short of
de mal of the permit."
Pittston, a New York-based
corporation
pnmar1ly
mvolved m coal productiOn,
could not be reached for
comment
Earlier this
month, A F
Kaulak1s ,
Pittston vtce president for
energy development, said the
proJeCt would be scrapped
unless government obstacles
were removed within the
year

rented rooms at a Lubboclt:
hotel.
An Impertal lrantan 747 jet
landed at McGutre earlier
Monday, reportedly carrying
members of the royal family ,.
who were Uten traJISferred to
a smaller 707 Iranian jet.
Witnesses In Iran identified
Ute royal family members as
the shah's mother-in-law,
Farideh Diba 1 and Princess
Farahnaz, 15, Prmce Alireza ,
12, and Prmcess Layla, 8
The shah's mother , Tadj el
Moulouk, arrived in the
Uruted States last montlt,
JOtmng the shah's sister,
Prtncess Chams, at the
prmcess' estate In Beverly
Hills, Cahf.
The women took refuge at
the
estate of
Walter
Annenberg, former U.S.
Ambassador
to
Great
Brtlam, near Palm Springs,
Calif., after about 2,000
!raman anlt--shah demonstrators besteged the prmcess'
estate. The two women later
moved to an undisclosed
location

•

e
(USPS

14~ ·960)

VOL. 29, NO: 192

at

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1979

Regulations may forCe
cancellation ·Q/ plans
BY KATIE CROW
Bureaucratic regulations
could force the shelvmg of
plans to construct the longproposed sewage system that
would serve the villages of
Syracuse and Racme as well
as parts of Sutton Township,
tt was revealed durmg a
meeting Tuesday afternoon
tn the office of Attorney
Frank W. Porter, Jr
Meetmg with Porter were
four offtctals from Ohio
E.P A , engmeers from
Commonwealth Systems,
lndtana, a representattve of
Ohto Htstortc Preservatton
office, members of counctl
from both viUages , members
of the Syracuse - Ra cme
Sewage Distr ict, Albert Hill
and Ed Neutzlmg, Syracuse
Mayor Eber Pickens and
Robert Wingett, grants ad·
mlitistrator for the village of
Syracuse.
Porter gave a background
of what has been done over
the past several years in
formwg the sewage d1strict
and all the work that has been
done by the distrtct to formulate plans for the sewage
system and what the dtstrtct
is now facmg
,
Porter explamed tt was
decided
aft er
mu ch
deltberatlon that tl would be
more feasible to have on e
system rather than 'lwo
Therefore, the Syracuse
Racme Regional Sewa ge
Dtstrtct was formed.
Named on the sewage
district was a representattve
from each village, and one
from the township Porter
sa1d they had good close
cooperation but didn't have
any money
Porter went on to say the
consulting englneermg ftnn
otCommonwealth System of
Greenwood, Ind., was hired,

Weather
Snow or snow mixed with
rain tomght. Low In upper 2Qs 4to low 30s early tomght.
Wanner . Occastonal raul
Wednesday. High in the
upper 30s to mld 40s. Chance
of pr~ctpttalton 70 percent
tomght, Wednesday
SQUAD CALLED
The emergency untt of Ute
Mtddleport ftre department
was called to 211 North Fifth
Ave. at 9 10 p m . Monday for
Florence Hannay, a medical
patient She wsa taken to
Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal.
SPECIAL SESSION
A special meeting of the
Southern Local School
Distrtcl board of education
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday In Ute high school
cafeteria.
EVENT CANCELLED
A meeting of the Magnolia
Club scheduled for Thursday
evenmg at the home of Edna
Slusher has been cancelled
due to weatlter conditions
PRAYER
MEETING
. A county-wide prayer
meeting will be held at 2 p m
Sunday at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Hollitess Church
wtth Glen Bissell as class
leader
-

EPA and Farmers Home letter for such a study th at
AQmmlstratton money was put a cog m the wheel
av3i!able. He reported phase
Drennen noted that when
one and two were completed
Federal money ts mvolved m
Phase three has not been a proJect tl ts detennmed by
completed.
the National Regtster that a n
SITES CHECKED
archaeologiCal study must be
There were 13 sties checked made.
wtth only two meetmg the
Porter added " We are
crtterta - Bowmans Run and gomg to pay $250.000 to
Yellow Bush Bowmans Run $325,000 so people can hunt
would be too costly, Porter arrow heads " He was usmg
explamed
thts figure to emphastze what
At Yellow Bush, however , a unpact mflatton would have
preltmmary study mdtcates on the proJect tf the study ts
Indtan r elics mtght be found do'h e
at the site, therefore, an mIt was mdicated that Indtan
depth archaeologtcal study rehcs
can
be
found
throughout the area
was mandated
The Ohto EPA's hands are
Porter made the comment
" I ampot in favor of spendmg !ted and the !mal dectston ts
$14 ,000
to
hunt
fo r wtth U S EPA.
" The sewage system ts
arrowheads." He also added
" we are not gomg to build at a needed from a health stand·
pomt s, we are stalemated m
pnce we can 'I afford "
"There ts httle tf any taxmg people mterest ed tn a rttfacts,
abtltty The villages do not and we can't afford to pay or
have any money and we delay," Porter commented
sunply cannot do it "We are 'Wmgett suggested that an
not tnter ested m an ar- appeal be made to govern·
chaeological study, we are ment agenctes
"We want the system built,
interest ed in 1 sewage
system ," Porter noted.
these people are not buckmg
• "When the sewage district the system," Porter stat ed
" We have gone through th e
was formed, it was esttmated
that the monthly cost would complete process, now what
run restdents between $14 · ts EPA gomg to tell the
$15," Porter commented, vtllages• We have gone as fa r
"now tt ts up to $18 to $25 and as we can," Wmgett noted
"The Federal agen cies are
the people cannot stand thts
type of cost "If they want an pttled agamst such other archaeologtcal study let them the Ohto EPA and the U S
go out and dig , we' ve got to EPA," Porter commented
gd the system butlt, " Porter " We are wtlling to butld the
explained " We won't be sewage system and every day
mandated to here," Porter Yw e wait costs us money,"
added
Porter noted
" When evtdence of poss1ble
" It ts gettmg beyond the
litdtan rehcs are found on a pomt of feastbtltty," Porter
site, and fed eral money 1s satd
Every day of de la y wtll cost
uwolved, an archaeologtcal
study has to be made, ac· the dtstrtct $5,000 a day, It
cording to Bret Drennen of was estunated by an EPA
the Ohto H1stonc Preser- offt cta l present at the
vatton office, who directed a meetmg

Stella Parton booked
for Meigs County fair

BAND BOOSTERS MEET
The January meeting of the
Eastern Local Band Boosters
wtll be held at ~:30 p.m .
Wednesday m the high school
-.band room

The Me~gs County Fatr
Board has gotten as close to
Dolly Parton as poSSible .
Faced With llm1ted lunda, the
fatrboard, meeting Monday
mght to book entertainment
and schedule events for the
1979 fair , was unable to sign
"Dolly." However, the board
booked Dolly 's stsler, Stella
Parton, to play the Metgs
County Fall' on Ute evenmg of
Thursday, Aug . 16.
The board scheduled 1ts
derby
for
demoltUon
Tuesday, Aug. 14, the opemng
rught of the fatr , and on
Wednesday mght, youtlt mght
will be th e grandstand
feature wttlt youth bands,
talent and other features
John Rice, extension agent,
agrtculture, heads the
Wednesday mght activity.
On Frtday evening, Johnny
Russell
wtll
be
the
grandstand attractton .
Russell , a country mustc

ELBERFELDS

BEDSPREADS

entertamer, has appeared on
the "Hee Haw Honeys" and
other televtswn shows
A dtstmct chan ge was
made tn the Saturday
programmmg for the 1979
Metgs Fatr. The horse pullmg
whtch
has
contest
traditionally been on Fnday
mght was scheduled for
Saturday, the !mal fatr day ,
begmnmg at 4 p m rather
than as an evening event.
The tractor pulltng contest
will be the evening event and
the pony pulling contest ,
dropped from the schedule
last year, wtll be h~ld on
Saturday mornmg
- The board made plans for
Ute removal of Ut e permanent
stage across from the grandstand and ts makmg plans to
secure a portable stage whtch
will be erected when needed.
Because mflation has hit
Ute fall', 1979 membership
tickets have been mcreased.

Along wtth the mcrease ts
another plan pr ovtding I or a
flat rate to rtde th e
mecham cal ndes on th e
fatrgrounds m August
Pnce of membershtp
ttckets was ratsed from $4 to
$5 Membershtps entttle the
purchaser to admtsstOn to the
grounds, grandstand events
and fre e parking for the ftve
days of the fatr Holders of
membershtp tickets can pay
a fee of $2 each day a nd nde
Ute amusement company's
ndes for that e nt tre day
Those entermg th e fatr on
passes can also pay $2 a day
for the days on whtch they
wtsh to use the rtde s Gate
admission to the fa tr, without
membershtp tickets, is $3 per
person The $3 payment a day
entttles the latrgoer to
admtsston , parktng,
grandstand events and nding
the rtdes for the day on wh1ch
the f ee ts patd , wtthout
addtltonal charge.

It was tndtcated that
restdents cannot afford to pay
the htgh cost of sewage and
the mam ob) ect tve was to
keep the monthly cost as low
as posstble thro ugh a 75
percent federal gr ant At the
rate the proJect ts gotng, tt ts
gomg to be too costly for the
r estdents and tl was mdtcated
at one potnt the por)ect be
dropped, t( was pomted out
ALTERNATIVES
LISTED
Ed Ttnkle of Com·
monw ea lth
gave
the
followmg altern atives (A)
get ar chaeologt cal problem
dropped, contmue tow ard
oonstructton based on present
pl ans a nd spectftcatton s,
cost , $2,000 for tmltal ar·
chaeo'logtcal work, $100,000
for mflal ton, 1B) assume that
extsttn g arcW!eolog tcal
problems
w11l
for ce
relocatton of both the plant
stte and two pumpmg statton s
and some gravtt) sewer (est
2.000 feet) Start tow a rd
tmmedtate pro ject re-destgn,
cost, $2,000 for archaeologtcal
work. $2,000 for new a rchaeologtca l work, $60,000 for
and
sotl s
engtneenng
borm gs, $300,000 fo r m·
II alton,
(C)
perform
prelunmary archaeologtcal
survey as recommended by
the State and archaeologist
Re·destgn project as requtr ed
and then proceed toward
constructton, cost, $2 ,000 fo r
tntltal ar chaeologtcal work,
$15 ,000 for prehrnmary archaeologtcal work, $200 ,000
1mmtmum) for mflatton , !D)
totally stop (ktm the proj ect,
cost, $2,000 for mtltal archaeolog tc al work , $40,000
plus for dtstnct's share of
past engmeer work now due
and paya ble plus mterest and
addtltonal money for permtl
fmes and vtolattons for fo r
mflatton
Tinkle suggested A and D
could be dropped, since they
are not viable solutions to the
problem and alternative B Is
the best approach tf alter·
native C lea ds to any major
or total re·deslgn.
Porter commented tt Js
the most ndiculous s1tuahon
he ha s experienced m 40
years.
Porter suggest ed that
pohttcal pressure be a pplted
" Thts ts a lousy law that ts
provtdmg thts pressure, tt ts
unnecessary

foolishness,''

Porter commented
" Let us hope there are
senstble people in congress to
see the rtdtculous sttuatton to
the government has put us

m," Porter noted
"Ther e Js no question we
want to butld a sewage
system - the problem ts
flntllng the cheapest way
Each day the delay ts costmg
money The stuptd law has to
be changed We are talking a
quarter of a million dollars or
more," Porter observed

Emergency planning effective

,

SAVE 20%
Our entire stock in this sale - Full, King, Queen •nd
Tw1n Bed Style Many have draperies and piJlow
shams to match and these are also less 20 Pel during
the White Sale.
HOME FURNISHINGs-1ST FLOOR

Elberfelds In
. Pomeroy
.

en tine

_,

BySu; anOIIver
Seolor Citizens
Center Staff
The Meigs County Rettred
Senior Volunteer Program
( RSVP )
EmergencY
Assistance Plan has already
proven to be an effective ald
to the elderly of Meigs County
d~rlng the past 30 days.
This emergency plan was
formulated by RSVP and the
Information and referral
staff to provide emergency
assistance to those elderly
individuals who live alone, are isolated and are without
fathlly members or close
neighbors . Emergency
shelter can be provided on a
temporary
basis,
arrangements made for
delivery of (uel, food and
medicine and transportation
to a doctor.
Due to the fact that the
office hours lor the RSVP
office are from 8:30a.m. until
4:30 p.m ., MondaY through
Friday, Ute nwnber to call to

recetve e mer ge n cy
asststance m the evenmgs or
weekends ts 992-5554, the
Meigs County CriSisLtne
number Crisis Line per·
sonnet wlll notify RSVP staff
members who wlll coordinate
Ute assistance given to the
lndtvidual requesting help.
Please keep m rmnd that all
requests for atd will be
checked for authentlctty
because all support wiU be
given by volunteer help
The emergency plan has
received the asststance and
cooperatton of various tn·
div1duals and agencies
throughout the county m·
eluding members of the
Metgs County REACT team
Township trustees have been
requested to comptle a list of
resources and indtvtduals
available for servtce during
an emergency situatton m
their own location This tn·
formation will greatly add to
the effectiveness of this plan
If you are_willmg to asstst

wtth this plan by provtding a
4-wheel drtve vehicle or are
wtlling to gtve your support In
anyway, please call the
RSVP office at 992·7884
Currently,
28
RSVP
volunteers are responsible
for
checking
on
approximately 200 persons by
phone dunng hazardous
weather condtltons If you
know of an tndtvldual m the
county who should be on th1s
check list or you would ltke
your name added, call the
RSVP'' nfftce at 992-7884

HEADS COUNCIL Marvin Kelly, an active
member of Feeney·Bennett
PQst 128, American Legion,
and Chapter 53, Disabled
American Veterans, has
been reelected president of
Middleport VIllage Council
for 1979. Kelly has been
confined to the Holzer
Medical Center followin g
surgery.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday :
Fair Friday and Sunday.
Rain or snow possible
Saturday, Highs In the 30s
and low 40s Friday,
lowering to the mid 20s to
SCHOOLS CLOSED ·
mid 30s by Sunday.
All Metgs County schools
Overnight lows In the teens Jlere closed Wednesday due
to the low 20s.
·Ill icy road condtttons \\htch
occurred ove rntght

15 CENTS

(

GO OVER SEWAGE PROBLEM
Members of the
Syracuse · Racme Sewage Dtstnct Syracuse mayot ,
I Common Wea lth
coun ctl members, representaltv
EngmeerUJg ftrm and representattve of Ohto Htstonc
PreservatiOn off1ce Tuesday afternoon we nt over the
problems fac mg th e sewage dis!rtct due to an
ar chaeo logtca l study caused by lndtan re lt cs betng found
at the plant s1te, Yellow Bush, which opparen tlv wtll eo&lt; t

much mor e tf they go 'ahead wtth the proJeCt Shown,
seated, Frank W Por ter , attorney representtng the
distrtct, standmg, 1-r, Ed Ttnkle of Common Wealth
Albert Hill and Ed Neutzling, membe1 s of the S) racuse Rac1ne Regiona l Sewage D1sh tct, Max1ne Wmgett,
Racme counctl member and Hert Drennen of the Oh10
H1 stor1c Preservatwn off1ee

Powell named to board
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Larry Po,.ell, Pomer oy

busmess man, was appomted
to serve on th e Metgs Lo cal
School Dt st rt ct Board of
Ed ucatton at Tuesday's
regular sesston held at the
)Umor htgh school In Mtd·
dleport Powell was one of
four restdents who ha d ex·
pressed a n mterest m ser vmg
-on the board to ftll a van·
ca ney crea ted by th e
res tgnalton of Wendell
Hoover
The thr ee board members
present last ntght , Pres tdent
Caro l Pterce, Vtrgtl Kmg and
Dr Ketth Rtggs comment ed
that they were pleased wtth
the quahty of all four persons
who had mdiClJ(oo.Jjllerest m
t he vaca ncy The other
ca ndtdates wer e Hobert
Sno wden of Rutland, a for·
mer board mem ber, Don
And erson,
Po m eroy
busmessman, and Pomeroy
Attorney Patrtck O'Brten
Pow ell wdl serve unttl Jan
I, 1980 The remamder of the
term to be Idled wtll be
dectded at the November 1979
elect tOn
Mamtenancc Report
The board heard a lengthy
report from Dwtght Goms,
admmistratton assistant, on

mamtenance probl ems at the
vartous schools All schoo ls
need repair s and ¥. ork wtuch
wtll amount to tho usands of
dollars Goms commented
that perhaps, some thought
should be gtven to bonded
mdebtedness by the dtstmt
smce t her e a r e no fu nds to
handl e many of the maJor
repa1rs and unprovements
Dan Morns, dtrector of
CUrriCUlum tn (he dtstrtlt .
reported that Metgs Local
has been gtven a $6,000 gra nt
for a dta gnosttc prescnpttve
ar tthm et tc progr am The
m axunum amount of the
grant wo uld be $6 ,000
althou gh the exact amount
- has not been stated Some 20
teachers m the element ary
schools would be•mvolved m
th e program whtch ts
destgned to determme areas
tn whtch students are havtng
problems tn ma th emattcs
program
a lso
The
prescnbes steps to be tak en
m helpmg the st udent work
out the problems
Grants Permassion
The board gave permtss1on
for Me tgs Htgh School to be
used for a league wrestling
tournament on Feb 17 and
for a Class II Secttonal boys'
basketball tournament at $50

a mght on Jo' eb 23, 24 and
March 2, 3 Martha L Ktng,
Candace Brothers and Donna
Nease were named su b~t1t ute
a1des for the rest of the school
)ea r
The board a uthortzed
submtsston of an appl1catton
for asststance from the Rural
Abandoned Mme Program to
correct slippage problems at
the Pometoy elementa ry
school Goms satd the mme
should be opened and
dra med A contract fo1
service on the computer at
$1 ,407 60 for the year was
stgned wtth the Burroughs
Corp A letter was read from
the Groveport Madtson
School regardmg a court
aL1JOn for funds on renovcttlOn
of old schools and butldmg
ne" structures Th e board
ea rlter voted m favo r of such
funds, but took no act1on m
)otntng the court battl e
Ella Mae Southern was
named as a substit ute
custodtan for the remamder
of the year and approval was
gtven on the closmg of schools
on J an 8, 9 and 10 because of
mclement \\i eather
Supt Charles Dowler a nd
Gotns reported a problem
mvolvmg a ptece of ground
known as the " Beech Grove

•

Banquet plans formulated
Plans for the a nnua l
Awa r ds Banquet we re
outlmed at Tuesday's lun·
c heon me eting of t he
Chamber
of
Pom er oy
Commerce
Paul Stmon, pres td ent,
a nn ounced that Eleanor
Thomas
be honored as
" Woman of th e Year ' a nd
Btll Qmckel wtll be honored
as 'Ma n of the Year'
Men of dtst tnctton awards
wtll be presented to Judge
Manntng Web ster, Edtson
Hobstetter, pr estdent of the
Pomero) Nattonal Bank, a nd
A. R. Kmght. owner of tne
Pomeroy Motor Company
Certtftcates of apprecta!ton
wtll be presented to Beulah
Ltevmg , F reda Utterabck
and Trtcta Adleta
The banquet wtll ~e held
Feb 17 at Royal Oak Park
The dmner wtll be catered by
Grow's Famtly Restaura nt
Ttcket s are $6 each F red
Crow indtcated that e n
tert a tnment will also be
prov1ded
A guest was Tun Dobler, an
art student at Ohto Umverstty
who dtsplayed a frog that he
had designed
The frog , m a stretched out
JUmptng
posttion , was
destgned to show what could
be done by placmg a frog on a
smoke stack at the Dtck
Seyler property
Dobler explained that the
frog Will be 12 feet long and be

"'II

Weather
Decreasmg cloudmess and
colder tonight. Low m the low
20s Mostl) sunny Thursday
wtth a htgh in the low 30s The
~hance of prcctpitatton ts 20
percent tomght and 10 percent Thursday

made of fiberglass 1t wtll be
filled wtth a foam substance
It was estunated that to make
a frog for the stack would cost
approxunately $6,000
Fred Crow reported he had
wntt en t o Gov Jam es
Rhodes regardmg the pavmg
of SR 7 tn Pom eroy Crow
reported that pa vmg wtll be
done from Nyc Ave , to
Sycamore Street
Tam Bearh s. sccrc t:uy,
su bmttted
a
fman ctal
;tatement on the last dmn er

whtch showed a proftt of
$52 36 and the Chrtstmas
promotton whtch showed a
profit of $560 90

Attendmg were S1m on
Crow, Mr s Bearh s Phil
Kelly, Stan Houdashelt Mr
and Mrs V1rgtl Teaford, Mrs
Paul Sunon John Anderson .
Pat O'Bnen, J ack Kerr
Dobler, Hank Cleland, Ted
Reed Bill Grueser, Wesle)
Buehl Beulah Jones and
Kalte Crow

ley roads force
revised busine

and area, dnver Rose,
Fatrgrounds, Elberfelds,
Fosters, Oak Hill, County
Road 25; driver Satterlteld,
lnd1an Run Are~ and
maJority of route; Wolfe,
H Bahr and Michaels;
driver Cowdery, Mt Olive
and Rllchies ; driver Estep,
Poolers, Wildcat Hollo",
Skinn ers Run; driver
Hannum, Rainbow R1dge,
Long Run.
Lees satd he wtll a nnounce
whtch buses are unable to r un
and tt wtll be announced when
emergency bad weath er
routing must be used. Kmdergarten Will be elunmated
when usmg an emergency
plan Announcements wtll be
Bus driver Bacr, Shade
made on WMPO, WJEH,
Rtver, Wendy Ridge and
WXIL, WATH and WMOV
Ro) a l
Oak;
dri ver
School offtcta ls or bu~
B~nedum , Ltek Skillet,
dnvers
wtll be contacttng
Calaway Rtd ge, driver
those people affected m cases
Fredenck , Sllv el Ridge
of problems Lees asked for
Hill ; Sheets, Che rry Ridge,
driv e r Fie lds, Gutbrt e • the ·ooperation o( students
and parents m copmg wtth
(Whtte Hill), Bucker Road
the problems Those havmg
and Kaylor; driver Pullins,
questions are to contact thetr
Keno Htll (may not run at
bus drtver or a school offtctal
all If bill ts rea l bad) ,
at the supermtendent's offtce
drt&gt;cr 1\eed, ltu shvtll c Htll

Eastern Local School bus
. r outes wtll be curtatled on
som e occasiOns durmg this
pertod of bad weather. Sup!
Clark Lees sa td today
School bus dn vers and
school offtctals wtll attempt
make
spec tal
to
arrangements to reach bus
rtders so that, when posstble,
they can be taken to school
In some tnstances, It has
become almost lmposstble to
reach all school bus stops
because of tCY roads, Lees
stated
The followmg bad weath er
emergency route mformalton
wtll gtve parents a general
tdea of locations affected

-.

School Lot" near the Salem
Center school "htc h th e

board might own Ho \\C Ver,
Ptcrcc sa1d he believes that
\\hen the ground wa s sold rn
'30s tl was probabl) sold tn
tis enttretv He felt t( better tf
attm ne} S fo r the t ~\O fa mJl!es
mt erested Ul the land reach

some deciSIOn or cornpt onw1e
on the matter About OI)C·haJJ
acre of land IS 1.nvoh ed
Sup! Dowler also reported
a mcdm lel:l rnmg cent~r for
DriVCI s Cducauon IS bc mg
sec ured accordmg to a letter
from the County Board of
EducatiOn and the center wtll
be shared bv the three lucal
dtstncts Co&gt;&lt;t of the untl ts
about $14,000
At the request of Jll ntor
htgl.t pnnctpal John Mora a
member of I he counly Rtght
to Read progrant the board
passed resolutions supportmg
.schooLs participating m the
program, and appro vmg a

penod of rcadmg for 15
mmut es, by students and all
staff members, from 9 30 to
9 45 a m on Feb 12 as a part
o! the observance of Rtght to
Read Week The week wtll be
obser ved Feb 11-17
Also pt esent not mentwncd,
earlier \\ ere freasurer Jane
Wagner and h1 gh school
P rtnctpal James Dtehl

Council holds
second reading
Mtddleport Vtllage Counct l
gave the second readmg to
the annu a l a ppropn at 1ons
r esolution at a specJal
meettng held Tuesda) ntght
The reso lution provides for
expenditure s totnl1 ng
$576.380 08 for the ne\1 year
Four co un cil members
present for the sesstOn tn·
eluded Carl Hork). Wilham
Walters, Cha1les Mullen and
Dewey Horton
A bscnt were Allen J ee Kmg
"ho had to a ttend an out of
to"n meetm g and Marvtn
Kelly who had )U&gt;i bc~n
dtsch a rge d from Holzet

Medical

Centc 1

and was

unable to attend
Co unctl wtll meet m spectal
sessiOn th1s evening and Is
expected to g"e the three
approvals t o th e ap•
proprtattons at that tmtc

Tobacco
prices down
RIPLEY , Ohto (AP)
Pr1ces declmed amte fallmg
volwne at Ohw's tobacco
market and market of!tetals
urged growers to brmg m
remammg crops after
Tuesday's volume dipped to
less than half the datly
average
Sales totaled 196,540 pounds
for $248,2H 66 The hundred·
pound average dtpped to
$126 31 down from $128 48 on
Monday
MEET SATURDAY
The Board of Trustees of
Columbta Townshtp will meet
m spectal sesston Saturday,
Jan. 20 at ' 7 p m at the
townshtp bu1ldmg

• l

�3-'fhe Daily Sentmel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Weune"I"Y , Jun . 1 I, J!l,w

2- ~Dally Sentinel, Miidleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 17. 1979

\

Martha Angle and
Robert Walte~s

Names •••
•
lR

'

R. GREGORY NOKF..S in the new budget, whiic still
As:10daled Prl'Ss Wrller finding money for incre"sed
defense outlays.
WASHINGTON lA P) Although the federal
President
Carter
is
holding
to
il··l '
his pledge · to slash deficit budget will be in the red for
.,
,, ,!
WASIDNG:I'ON (NEAl • The. new senators taking ofllcHor spending to below $30 billion the l!lth time in the last 20
years; · the cover will be
the 96th Congress constitute the largest freshman t'iess · in
green,
possibly•reflecting the
more than 30 years -and the most Republican.
· '
presidimt
's optimism that he
The 20 newcomers, 9 Democrats and II Republlans, are pro.
can
balance
the budget in the
bably a shade more conservative than the senators they
replaced but· only a few of them falllnlo any neal ideological
category.
As a grollp, this year's class is remarkably youthful; ' eight
are under"-4!1, and two others justa couple years over. They ari&gt;
also weU.educaled; all have at least some ~ollege training and
three- Sens. David Boren, D.Okla., Biill;lradley, 0-N.J., and'·
Larry Presler, R.S.D. - were Rhodes Scholar9 at Oxford
University in England.
lawrence
By ROBERT E. MILLER
The Senate used to be regarded as the top .of the heap for
Aa110clated Prete Writer
elective politics -short, of course, of the presidency. And InCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) deed, the newcomers include seven former more House Ohio has been without a death
Hair lo!';s
members and three fonner governors. But five of the 2C penalty since last July 3, and
freshmen - Sens. Rudy Boschwilz and David Durenberger some state lawmakers )!!ant ami fatig-ut•
both R-ft1inn. ; Bill Bradley, 0-N.J., Gordon Hwnphrey,
to change tile situation as
N.H., and John Warner, R-Va . -have never held elective of- soon·as possible.
DEAR DR LAMB ,- I am
fice.
·
That's why a newly~n- desperate for any infonnaFew, if any, of the new members are likely to find a penna· trolluce'd bill to restore lion you dm give me. I get
·nent home in the Senate; the casually rate for incumbentS is capital punishment could very tired, so tired that I
just too high these days. Although less than ~ percent of the reach the House floor foc a can 'I seem to stay on my feet.
House members seeking re-election in 1978 were d~eated, 10· vote within the next few Before this started I was do·
of the 23 senators running for another tenn were beaten.
weeks.
ing a lot of walking and shop--But the legislation Is ping. I have been having this
emotionally charged, as trouble for over 'six months
always - and complicated. and it's getting worse.
David Durenberger, the Republlcan elected to Hubert Hum· For those reasons, House
I went to my doctor and he
phrey's old seat, was the first of the new senators to be sworn Judiciary Olairman Harry J. didn 't seem to know what was
Lehman, O.Shaker Heights, tiring me. This irritated me
in but it didn 'I do him much good finan.cially.
Durenberger took the oath of office Nov. 9, just two days has set no definite timetable. so much that Talmost had a
Foc ooe thing, the new law nervous spell. I started losing
after the election, but was told neither he nor hls new staff
could be paid until Minnesota's state canvassing board cer- must anticipate what the U.S. my hair and at present I don't
Supreme Court will allow, in have enough to put up in
tified his election victory over Democrat Robert Short.
The board mel Nov. 21, issued the certificate Noir. 28 and view of the fact it has struck curlers. My laboratory tests
mailed it to the Secretary of the Senat~. But ll.seems Minn. down Ohio's law twice in the included thyroid examina,
lions which were completely
Gov. Rudy Perpich had iled to sign the certificate, so back H past seven years.
The first lime, in 1972, the normal. I am losing my hair
went - while Duren berger and staff missed ,their first twocourt said, in effect, that the rapidly. I hardly have any
week paycheck.
Perpich signed, the certificate s mailed again to the statute gave too much dis- left.
I put some clorox in a hair
Secretary of thi! Senate, and then It s found that the state seal cretion to judges empowered
was missing. Off it went to Minnesota once more, to be duly to Impose the death sentence. spray bottle to gel rid of the
Then, on July 3, in a case , larger boUle and I can 't
sealed and returned on Dec. is as Duren berger and staff miss·
that involved Sandra Lockett remember if I used it by
ed a second two,week paycheck.
.
By this time the new senator had gone home to Minneapolis of Akron, the court ruled that mistake or not:' I'have made
for Chrisl.rilas. Just as a third payday was looming Dec. 20, the drafters of a 1975 an appointment with the derSenate. officials found Durenberger had never signed the replacement statute had gone malologist because of my
)iayroll oath - so the papers were lelecopled to Mlnnesota;- too far the other way, and had .hair problem but I don't
signed and notarized there and returned- by Federal Express not given judges enough understand this being tired
.
all the time.
-just in the nick of lime. If they had waited for the post office leeway.
to deliver, the senator and his aides would probably still be
Such are the problems Qf
DEAR READER- You did
broke.
attorney4awmakers working the right thing by having a
oo the pending bill.
medical examination. There
The Lockett woman are many causes for fatigue. ·
appealed her death sentence In 80 percent of the cases no
Rep . Phil Crane of lllinois, the first declared GOP presiden· after being convicted in a medical cause for the fatigue
tial candidate for 1980, has concluded he will probably have to holdup slaying in which she can be found . But that means
seek federa l matching funds for his campaign despite his drove the get-away car. She one out of five cases of fati gue
philosophic objections to such public fincing.
claimed she did 1!.011\now the is associated with some
Using right-wing direct mall guru Richard Vlguerie, Crane murder had been c001mitted. medical problem .. ·
haslready raised some $750,000 towards his bid but two-thirds
Meanwhile, the July · II 's pretty difficult to treat
to three-quarters of that has gone to overhead. None of that decision automatically . a person's fatigue unless you
money i!l.eUgible tor federal mat~hing, because il•was raised released th,e more than 190'' have a good understanding of
before Jim. I pf ~ Yllll':· But.from now on, small contributions per9011s on deatll row from what is causing it. f.O you real· will count for matching purposes and Crane hopes to qualify the death sentence and ly had low thyroid ' function
within the next three months.
prohibited anyone else from that could cause you to be
State ollhe GOP
being sentenced to die until a tired. Any number of medical
The Republican National Conunittee will meet here Jan. new statute becomes effec- illnesses, including infectious
22-24, hard on the heels of President Carter's budget message live. Those who had been on . diseases such as tuberculosis,
to the Congress and around the time of his State of the Union death row were resentenced can cause fatigue .
address as well, although the exact dale for that speech hadn't to life imprisonment.
Other. hormone. changes
been set as of this writing.
Last year, following the besides · inadequal~ amounts
GOP officials are hoping to round up one or more big name July decision, Rep. Terry of thyroid hormones can also
speakers to respond to Carter and steal a bit of his press Tranter, D-Cincinnati, cause fatigue., A good examthunder, if possible. Fonner President Ford; the most logical offered a substitute bill which pie here is a P.rson who has
choice, will be out of the country at the lime, butfeelers are out underwent· numerous low function of the adrenal
to Henry Kissinger, among others.
hearings.
gland. In its extreme form we
Hy

New kids in town

Death
penalty
•

Slonal leaders Tuesday 11 will
nl·xt ycC:t r or two .
The btnlget for fiscal )980, bl: "a tight, spare budget."
whieh begins next Oct. l , was He has repeatedly said the
going to press at the Govern - budget is small enough to ·
ment Printing Office today help re:;train inflation, but .
and will be presented to large enough to discourage a
Congress, along with an recession.
Mminlstration sources
accol)lpanying presidential
cpnfirmed Tuesday that
message , Monday.
The president told congres- ('arter will propose total
spending of about $532 billion
for•l980, .up about $40 billion
from this year. ~irtually all
of the increase is the result of
inflation , however.
With revenues estimated at
a bout $503 billion, the
administration will project a
E. lamb, M.D.
1980 deficit of $29 billion. That
would be the smallest federal
call this Addison's disease. deficit since 1973, when it was
Weakness, weight loss an d $14.8 billion .
pigmen tation of the skin may
The deficit in the current
occur in this condition .
1979 fiscal year is projected
In th~ 80 percent of people at about $40 billion.
who have no associ~ted
Defense spending would be
medical cause for fatigue , it increased in the new budget.
is often caused by life style But there would be cutbacks
and psycholo~ical factors. in other areas, including
Some people are bored some trimming of jobs,
because they don't have any welfare and education
~oals in life. Otl 1ers aren't en- programs, administration
joying life for a variety of officials have said.
reasons. One way to add a litCarter has decided to ask
lie zest to living is to do Congress to approve an insomething every day that you crease of about 3 percent in .
defense outlays - over and
enjoy.
Other people have a depres- above inflation - to a total of
sion. These occur for a varie- $122.8 billion in 1980, sources
ty ·or reasons , but are most said . Defense spending this
apt to occur in middle life. year · is projected at $112.
Often, depress ion to the point billion.
The increase for defense
that it causes severe fati gue
and inability to be active re- results from the president's
quires professional help.
pledge to the nation's North
. To give you a better idea of Atlantic Treaty Organization
fatigue, what causes it and partners last year to ra1se
what you can do about it 1 am U.S. defense outlays by 3
sendi ng you The Health· Lei· percent in 1980, with other
ter number 9~ . Fatigue : NATO powers promising to
Feeling Tired and Weary. do the same.
Most of ,the increase would
Other readers who want this
iss ue can send 50 cents with a be used for across-the-board
lon g, stamped , self- modernization
of
addressed envelope for it. conventional· forces and
Send your request to me in weaponry·
care of this newspaper, P.O.
But an additional $1 billion
Box 1551 , Radio City Station, in spending, both from the
New York, NY 10019. This budget and a supplemental
Health Letter will also pro- request for 1979, will be
vide you some helpful sugges- ·. propose&lt;! to pay for full-scale
(ions about what you might do development of the new
about vour life slvle to &lt;'urn- mobile rrusslle.
bat your tenden"cy toward . The budget also is likely~
fatigue.
mcl ude about $1.6 b1lhon for
You should see a der- construction of a conmalologisl if your hair is fall- ventionally-powered aircraft
in g out. Thi s can be carrier.
.
associated with nutritional
Carter has already been
problems. If your diet has criticized . by
~roups
changed dr~stically in r~pr~~ent1ng c1t1e_s,
assm.:iatian with your current mmorttJes
and
disepisodes of fatigue , that advantaged peop le for
might be a factor.
planned
cutbacks
m
Nervousness sometimes programs that affect them.
causes a loss of hair and as
The pres1dent defended hiS
yo)J well 'know, conversely, if budget in a t~.le~ision
you Jose a lot of hair that can mterv1ew Monday. It 1s not
cause you to be nervous, too. a. punitive budget;" he said.
A dermatologist can tell you · ' It 1s a good, sound budget
whether you have any baSi c that will sustain a strong
scalp or hair problems or hair economy and set a good
disorders that will respond example for the conlrol of mreadily to treatment.
flation .

HEALTH

lSSUe

R:

.

Go for broke '

•

Carter·holds to plans

IN WASHINGTON.

Crane hQpes to .qualify

.
.•

traparty warfare may break
out
among
big-city
Democrats in 1979 with a
flurnt of off-year mayoral
elections. Contests · in
Philadelphia, Boston and
Cleveland
are
worth
watching closely.
Party officials, both in and
out of the White House, fear
.that mayoral candidates will
bloody one another, thus
weakening big-city party
organizations og the eve of

~~pai!:~o

difficult to win close
presidential races • unless
Republican suburban and
rural strength Is offset with
big-city pluralities.
Textbook examples were
Pennsylvania and ~io in
1976, where President Carter
earned hls victories with
large-city pluralities. In 1980,
both states will have
·Republican governors, and ·
Democrats must look to city
officials for org~nization
strength . .
In Cleveland and Phila· ·
delphia, there may be more

r'

the news .

COVINGTON, Ky, (AP) ·_The great'fll'andson of legendary
football coach Knute Rockne has weighed in at 8 pounds, 4
ounces, and the baby's father says they 'll probably name him
after the Notre Dame star .
" W~ still aren't real sure, but we think we'll name him Knute
Kenneth Rockne IV ," said John Rockne., a high school football
coach. His son was born Tuesday at the St. Elizabeth Medical
Center.
·
.John, 29, Is offensive coordinator for the Campbell County
High School football team and coach of the school's baseball
learn.
" It's our first baby and we're both very excited," said llis 25year-old wife, Sally. "He (John) wanted a boy so bad."
John's famous grandfather was killed in an airplane crash in
Kansas in 1931, a few months after his team, an unranked underdog, beat a powerful Southern California team, 27.(), in the .' •
last game of the 1930 season.
,

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Library

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·Jan. 15, 1979

Shelia Pullins
304 Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'

Dear Sheila :.
Congratulations! Ruth Powers, the Library Assistant in
charge of the Middleport Library told me that the children at
the·last club 456 film showing decided to make a real club out of
the group and that you have been elected President. That's a
real honor and I'm sure you will work hard to make the club
fun to join.
·
Ruth said that you aud Polly Chadwell (the VicePresident) , Dee Henderson (the secretary), and Jim Chadwell
(the treasurer ) have taken home some !ibn catalogs and plan
to request the !Urns the club will see. I think that's a great idea.
All of us on the library staff are hoping that more children and
grownups wil' follow your lead and let us know what tbey want
to read and see and what activities they'd like to have at tbe
libraries.
I also heard that you are planning to charge 10 cents a
week dues and hope to use the money to have a Valentine's
Day party, I think you know thal.,the fihn program must be ·
open to everyone, even those wbakhose not to be official club
membe~s. But we probably calf arrange to have a Club p~rty
afterwards. Let's see how well your treasury does, okay?
· Start thinking, too, about how we can encourage other boys
and girls to come to lbe libraries. I can't promise we'll do
everything you - ~ug&amp;est, but I can promise· we'll try. Sincerely Yours, Ellen Bell, Librarian, Serving all of Meigs
County.

"

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When you take these coupons to your store
you'll instantly save 50C
on Savarin®lnstant
and automatically
save another 50C on
Savarin Automatic
Filter Coffee.
Which is good
news for people who

..

-

, where .
lost in an effort
city charter so
h~mo~f~~ run again,
D
are lining
up for a shot at his job.
Democratic ·-jpcwnbents
ar~ expected ·'iil. win in
Ch1cago, Housfbn, San
Francisco, Baltimore ·and
Denver - cities where party
officials expect orderly
Electloo.Day organizing that
will set a aolld stase for the
Democrats' Wbite Hollll! ef.
forts next year.
Despite · declining
populations
in
big,
"Somehow, It dldn 'I used to seem so COLD
Democratico('un cities, they
beforethey started talking about 'wind-chill
remain a bulwark of support
factors'!"
·
for the party's' national
ticket. DeD:IOCl'llta find It .... \

'

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••

NEW YORK (AP) - Dr. Robert Atkins, who wrote the ;
popular book "Dr. 'Atkins' Diet Revolution," cannot be held •
liable for an elderly woman 's heart disease, a jury has ruled. •
The Manhattan jury ruled Tuesday in a ,2.5 million mal· '
practice suit filed by Dorothy Goldstein, 73. The suit was dis·
missed on a 5-l vote.
··
When she first went to see Atkins in 1972, Mrs. Goldstein
weighed 214 pounds. She then started the high-&lt;Jalt, high-fat, •
high-cholesterol and low-carbohydrate regimen which Atkins '
popularized in his boo~\.
,
:
In the next three months, she was hospitalized four limes for
coronary insufficiency and a pacemaker was implanted ,in her A
chest .
.'
Atkins maintained that Mrs. Goldstein.was."well on her way ~
to a serious heart condition !' before she came to him.
But Dr. Seymour Halpern, a witness for Mrs. Goldstein, said · ;
Atkins' diet was "the worst possible diet he could have given ·
· her ."
·

Berry's World

..
.•

'
't
•
•

blood than unity.
Kucinich is a maverick
Democrat, strongly opposed
by local party leaders. They
are trying to convince former
U. Gov. Richard Celeste to
take on Kucinich in the fall
election.
In Philadelphia, where
Rizzo has held control since
1972, traditional liberalconservative rivalries loom
in the May primary. But this
year, prominent blacks are
running too, creating moce
divisions than usual.

presidential
"The big cities will be
crucial to the Democratic r---....:..---~---------­
ticket in 1980," says Jane
· Hartley, an aide to President
Carter, " It would be
especially nice to have unity ·
0
in places like Philadelphia,
't
0
Cleveland and Boston."
Incumbent mayors Dennis •
Kucinich ·of Cleveland and
Q
Kevin White 'of Boston will
(I
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face tough campaigns If IIley
I'
0
decid~ to seek re-elll(tlon.
;,
Their stiffest challenges
come from \vithlii the

..joe
-----I15

STORE CO UPON
sa.1992

I
I
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I

Mr. Grocer .

.

~ch

coupon entitles your
customer to soe ofl towards the pt.Jr·
chase of Savarfn Coffee. for each coupon ~ou accept as our authorlzed'agent,
we wi ll pay you 50c ' plus 5C 11anallns
charges provided you and your cu~
tamers have complied with the terms ol
this ofler. Any other application c:onstl·
tiltes fraud . ln11oices shOwl'l! your pur·
chase. of suHicient stock to C.O\Ier all
COUJXlf1S must be shown upon request.
Void if prOhibited. ta)(ed or res~rlc.ted
or presented by outside asencies, cou·
• pon brokers or othentwho are not retarl
distributors 6f our merchllndlse. CIISh
value 1/20 of 10. Coupons will be redeemedbymaii.SendtoS.A.SchonOrllnn .
· &amp; Co Inc .. Pa lisades Park, N.J. 07650.

I·

Eagles lose thriller

.

.

Warfare may breakout
By JONATHAN WOLMAN
AP Urban Affairs Writer
WASIDNGTON (AP) - ·In·

'

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prefer richer tasting coffee. Because Savarin
Instant and Savarin AFC .are made from blends of
the world's finest coffee beans. Bearis that are deep
roasted for a·richer, heartier flavor.
. ,
So go ahead and clip out the coupons. They'll
•
leave you with agood
taste in your mouth
and some change
in your pocket.

'
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5

STORE COUPON
51·1992

.

Mr. Grocer: Each COUPOn entitles your

customer Jo SOC oH towards the pur·
ch.ase.ol Sa~tarin Coffee. for each cou·
pon you accept as OtJr authorized !1Qenl
we will pay you 50C plu:; 5C handlln8
cha rses, prO\IIde&lt;l you and your customers have complied with the terms ol
this offer. Any other application coostl ~
lutes fraod. Invoices showlns your pur·
cha3e of sufficient stock to cover all
coupons must be shc7M'1 upon reQuest.
Void I~ proh1biled, texed or restricted
or preSf!nted ~ ootside apndas, coo·
pon brOkers or otl'lers who are not retail
distributors of oor merchndlse Ca~
value 1/20 ol l~. Coupons will be re-

t-..o" 11n or •r,.r r· · ·n,..~ I•P; Iwr ,, 197\'

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Wahama won ~7. Players in this Greg" Bailey action
shot are Wahama's Kreig Sayre (10) and Tim Roush (22)
and Eastern's Don Eynon ( 44) and Greg Wigal ( 42).

CAGE DISCO - It appears members of the Eastern
Eagles and Wahama White Falcons are doing a disco
during action in Tuesday's one-point thriller at Eastern .

Tornadoes lose th.i rd contest
fore~

(

By Greg Bailey
to fout and press, the
The Southern Tornadoes locals allowed Waterford
.altered in the second half some easy buckets as the
last night in losing their third Wildcats outscored Southern
game of the season, this time 8-0 in those waning seconds.
That win upped Waterto the host Waterford
Wildcats, 73-60. Southe~n ford 's record to 6-5 on the
season. The Wildcats were
owns five wins.
The Tornadoes of Coach stronger on the boards,
Carl Wolfe started strong , proven by their . 41-31
and with" nearly three rebounding advantage.
Kelly Lang led aU scorers
minutes left in the first period
zoomed out to an 18-10 lead. with 26 points while Ted Lang
But then they managed just added a stron g 18. Guinther
two points while the hosts and Cunningham each hit
added eight lor a first quarter double figures with 14 and 10,
score of 2().18 in Southern's ' respectively.
The winners hit 33 of 60
favor.
The second quarter wa s a shots from the field for a fine
tight battle. AI intepnission , 55 percent , and connected on
the score was deadlocked at 7 of II free throws. They had
. 32-all. The third quarter saw 20 turnovers and committed
the Meigs County boys come 13 fouls .
Dale
Tim
Brinager,
out flat, and when that buzzer
sounded , Waterford had Teaford, and Dave Foreman
soared out to a 54-46 led the Southern attack with
advantage. Kelly Lang , the 12 points each while junior
Wildcats' scoring leader, Jack Duffy added 10. The
provided most of the punch in team hit a poor 25 of 64 shots
that third period streak that lor 39 percent and canned 8 of
11 free throws . They had 13
saw the hosts net 22.
The Tornadoes wouldn't turnovers and lo fouls.
quit. With just 54 se9onds Foreman led the rebounders
, remaining in th e contest, with 9.
The Southern Reserves got
Southern was down just five,
65-60. However alter being into early foul trouble and

dropped a 58-49 decision to
the hosts . In the foul~nfested
contest, Southern hit 11 of 19
fr ee throws while Waterford
hit 10 of 24. Dewayne led
Southern with 19 points. Jay
Rees came off the bench and
added eight.
Southern travels to Hannan
Trace J&lt;"riday night for an
important SV AC encounter.
.

Transactions
.
Sports Transactions

By the Associated Press
~

BASEBALL

Nationa I LeagUe

MONTREAL EXPOS S1gned Larry Parr ish, third

basema n,

Warre n

Cro -

martie, outfielder, Andre
Dawson , outf ielder , and Ellis
Valentine, outfielder.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS -

S1gned ·Oarold
pitcher , to a

Kn ow les ,

two-year con.

l r act .

BASKETBALL
• National Basketball
Association

BOSTON
Traded

CELT ICS

Billy

Knight,

for ·

ward, to Indiana fo r Ri'clc.
Robey, f9rward .

HOCKEY

National Hockey League

ATLANTA FLAMES Traded Richard Mulhern ,
defensem.;~n , to Los Angeles
for B ob Murdock, defen .

seman.
World Hockey Association

CINCINNATI

STINGERS

- Sent Kelly Davis , defen seman. to Philadelphia of the
Americart

Hockey

FOOTBALL

League

National Football League

CHICAGO

BEARS

Announced the retirement of
Jon Morris. center .

CLEVELAND BROWNS -

Named
David
Adolph
defensive line coach .

DETROIT LIONS -

0·4; Duffy , 4·2-10; Roush, 1·0·
2; Teaford , S-2 12. Totals 26·8·
60.
WATERFORD 031

Cunningham, -4 -2.10 ; Eich miller, 1·0·2; Guinther, 5-4 ·
14 ; Kelly Lang , 13·0-26; Ted

Lang , 9.0.1S and McKut -

cheon, 1-1·3. Totals 33-7·73.

Meigs wrestlers
win third place

Tuesday's

·

SOUTH ERN {60) - Findlay , 2-4·8: Brinager, 6-0-12 ;
Foreman , 6·0· 12 ; O'Brien, 2·

An-

noun ced the resignati on of
Doug Gerhart, assistant
coach and adm i nistrative
assistant . Named Don Dol l
administrative assistant.

LOS ANGELES RAMS :-

Fi red Fosler Anderson, of .
fen slve line coach, Ma x
Coley, off ensi ve backfield
coa c h , and Char lie Waller,
quart erback coach.

Meigs placed third in a
wrestling tournament this
past weekend at Philo. Individual winners were first
place, Dave Davis, unlimited
class; second places were
taken by Charley Stone, 121
pounder and Jotm Eblin, 128
pounder.
Third place winners were
Scott Hartinger, 100 lbs.; Van
Willford, 157 !bs., and Tim
Fry , 134 lbs.
Taking fourth place were
Charley Whittington, 107 lbs. ,
and Bob Seelig, 175lbs .' Eight
schools participated. This
Saturday, Meigs will participate in the Point Pleasant
, Invitational meet.
Billie Matthews running back

coach.

COLLEGE
FRIENDS UNIVERSITY

- Announced that Dennis
Caryl, named head football
coach last weekend, would
not lake the ia b.

OHIO UNIVERSITY -

Named Carl Falivene
fensive line coach .

of .

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

- Announced the resignation
at Bob Boyd, basketba II
coach, effective at the end of
lhe season.

UNIVERSITY
OF
OKLAHOMA - Announced
the r esig na.tion of John Keith ,
sports infor mation director .

t;ury Hkhiuds ' 15· foot comfortable lead. Eastern
jumper from the corner with Jed at the half by a 34-27
just 10 seconds 'lo play gave margin.
The third stanza found the
the visiting Wahama White
Falcons a thrilling come- Meigs Countians, behind
from-behind 68·67 victory Spencer and Don Eynon ,
over the Eastern Eagles, threatened to make the
contest a rout but a late surge
,
Tuesday evening.
The win was the second in a hy the White Falcons kept the
row for the White Falcons game in doubt. Once again It
and upped their season was a balanced Falcon
record to 2-4, while th e scoring alack · that saw
Eagles suffered their second Wahama outscore the Epgles
consecutive setback since 18-4 in one four minute
upsetting the highly touted stretch to pull to within one,
49-48, at the end of the period.
Southern Tornadoes.
Rick Bamitz jumper to
Eastern, though playing
without its secontl leading open the final quarter gave
scorer, Jeff Gobel., ·was up by Wahama their first lead of
as much as 15 points at 45-oO the night , 50-49, but Bissell
midway through the third quickly retaliated for
quarter only to have the Ea•tern. After the score was
charged up White Falcons tied at 54-54, the Eagles
quickly erase that lead to set proceeded to open up a 5·
up Richards' game winning point bulge at 64-59 with just
shot. Gobel was out of l :58 to play.
Wahama kept plucking
uniform with a · badly
sprained ankle and his status away and pulled to within one
is still questionabl e for when Richards sank his game
Easterns' two remaining winning basket with just 10
games scheduled for this seconds to play. A last second
shot by Spencer narrowly
weekend .
Dan Spencer and. Greg missed and Wahama ended
Wigal helped stake the with a 68-a7 triumph .
In the game there were no
Eagles to an early first
quarter lead as the Mason less than seven scorers in
County quintet committed a double figures, four by
rash of early turnovers. When Wahama and three more by ·
the horn sounded to signal the Eastern ..
· DOn Spencer led all scorers
end of the first eight niinutes
of play, Eastern was sporting with 23 tallies on tc:J field goals
and threl! free throws . Don
a whopping 20-10 lead.
A balanced scoring attack Eynon in playing probably
during the second canto the best ·game of his career
enabled the local charges of finished up with 17 points
Coach Homer Preece to trim while Brian Bissell added 13.
Wahama was paced by
the Eagle advantage down to
one at 24-23 but two suc- Rick Bamitz with 18 markers
cessive buckets by Spencer followed by Tim Roush with
and one by Brian Bissell 15 , Gary Richards with 12 and
vaulted tne hosts back into a . Todd Rawlings with IL

By ALEX SACHARE
A P Sports Writer

"It breaks my heart," said
Detroot Coach Dick Vitale.
" I'll shed some tears
tomght. "
Vitale had just watched his
Pistons blow an 18-j)oint,
three-quarter lead~d a
six-point advantage in the
final 1:48 - and lose to the
New York Knicks 111-110
Tuesday night on a steal and
stuff shot by Toby Knight
with two seconds to play.
" A lot of it was
anbcipalion," said Knight of
his winning play, "but a lot of
it was luck, too. The ball
came my way and I just
grabbed it. As I went in I
wanted to be careful not to
carry the ball or turn it ove r.
" But I slammed it in
because I wanted to make
sw-e .''
In the only other National

eva-.
STEAK HOUSE
AWAY FROM HOME.

assists as New York closed
the deficit to 73-71 with 4;25
remaming m the third period.
The Knicks pulled to within
one pomt with 3:12 left, but
Detroit scoreP five in a r ow
for what seemed to be a
commanding lead, 105-99 with
1:48togo . ·
But the Knicks refused to
die. Two baskets apiece by
Bob McAdoo and Joe
Meriweather closed the gap
to 109-107 with 15 seconds to
play, Leon Douglas sank one
of two free throws for Detroit
and then Meriweather playing in place of the Injured
Marvin Webster - made it
11().109 with a follow-up shot
with five seconds to play,
Detroit called a timeout to ·.
move the ball to midcourt and
set up an inbollllds play. The
only ones they fooled were
themselves .
What happened will linger
in Vitale's memory. Three
Detroit players brok e in
different directions and M.L .
Carr tried to hit his
remaining teammate, Bob
Lanier, with the inbounds
pass. But Knight stepped in
front of Lanier, intercepted
the pass and then drove in for
his winning dunk.
Nuggets 104, Jazz 100
David Thompson scored 24
points and backcourtmate
Charlie Scott had 21 as
Denver won its sixth in a row.
The Nuggets led all the way,
although
New
Orleans pulled to within two
points in the fourth quarter
before Spencer Haywood,
who had 19 of his 25 points in
the second half, fouled out

Highlanders top Wildcats
Southwestern moved within
one-half game of first place in
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference standings
Tuesday night with a 7UO
win over Hannan Trace .
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Highlanders jumped into a 2011 lead and were never
headed . SWHS held a 35-23
lead at the half and 57-39
advantage going into the final
stan&gt;;a .
Sophomore Todd Baker led
the attack with 23 points on
nine field goals and five free
throws. Senior forward Greg
Nelson dumped in 16 points
while sophomores Dale
Newberry 11 nd Scott Russell
had 13 points each.
Paul Shaffer continued 1o
be the biggest weapon in
Coach Donnie Saunders '
arsenal with 22 "points on
eight goals and six foul shots,
Other Wildcats hitting double
figures were Mike Webb with.
11 and Ron Pack ·with 10
points .
Southwestern sank 28 of 65
attc11lpts fc1r 4:lperc'f•nt etnrl lfi
of 24 at the foe! line.

Hannan Trace hit 22 of 60
for 37 percent and 16 of 22 at
the foul circles. The .
Highlanders held a 44 -22
rebounding edge,
Hannan Trace captured the
reserve game, 41-39. The win
pushed Southwestern's
season record 1o 5-6 while
Hannan Trace dropped to 0-9.
Friday night, Southwestern
goes to North Gallia while
· Southern plays at Hannan ,
Trace .

Box
Hannan

Score
Trace (60)

Shaffer 8-6-22 ; Campbe ll 1.J.

5; Webb J.s .!l ; Pack S-0-10 ;
Beaver 2·0·4; Hineman 2·0--4;

Hite 0·2-2 and Whitt 1·0-2.
Totals 22·16-60.

Southwestern
(72)
Nel son 5·6· 16 ; Newberry 5-313 ; Baker 9-S-23 ; Russell 6-113 ; Layton 2-1-Sand Jordan J,

•

().1 H I
29-IH 10-17 68

EASTERN (67 )
Spencer
10-25 3-3 23
Eynon
7-13 3-7 17
Bissell
5--17 3-7 13
Wigal
~ 3-3 9
Matthews
1-5 1·3 3
Bowers
().pi 2-2 2
'tot
·&gt;26-£9 15-25 67
Score by Quarters ;
I 2 3 4 Tot
Wah.
" 10 17 21 20 ti8
East.
20 14 as 18 67
Total Fouls-Wah. 23 ·E st. 17.
Officials-David Ridenour
Keith Murdock
;:
Reserve Game ;
Wahama {42)
',
York Ingels 4-3-11; Peanut
Harris 5-j)-10 ; Larry Gibbs 31-7, Mike Buzzard 2-1-5; Scott
Bamitz 2-0-4 ; Todd Kitchen.
1+3; Joey Roush 1.()-2: Tot.
18-M2.
Eastern (29)
Gene Cole 5-j)-10; Leonard
Myers 2·1-li; Paul Sprange 12-4; Tim Dill 2-0-4; Tony
Kennedy 1,2-4; Rick Long 1~2; Ken Chapma ~ ; Totals
12-S.29.Fouls-Wah. 11; East.
14.
Score by quarters:
1234Tot
Wah.
102011142
East.
6 6 7 10 29

The Daily Sentinel

G . ,. .,._,._. . . . . . _. . . _
DF:VOTF.D TO THE
INTF.REST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEn.ICH
City F.ditor
DAVIDBUSKmK

h
Saturd:t Y.., L/

Adnrtisiag Managrr

·

'("'"

Pul.lli!!hed daily except
l.y The Ohio Valley Pub•U•4rshin
•

!.alive, l.~:~nd un

Associates,

1•

3101

Eud1d Ave ., Cleveland , Ohi u 44115 .

SubstTipti on rates · Del1veretl bv
t•arri er where available 7:&gt; &lt;'cnts ~i­
wrek. 8)' Motor Route wh1•re c:&gt; rner
IIVHJI~:~ble , Onto munth,
$3 25. Hy mall in Ohto and W. Vii ,
One Yf:'tlr, J27 SO; Six rnont h.'i,
servke rwt

with three minutes left.
Pete Maravich, who missed
the last four games because
of a sore knee , led the Jazz
with 29 points.
Kings 86, Cavaliers 79
Scott Wedman led a
balanced attack with t4
points as Kansas City posted
its sixth victory in seven
games to remain three games
ahead ol second-place
Denver in the Midwest Division .

$14.50 :

Thrt&gt;c

F.l~where

$1 7 00 :

$.'l2.00

Th ree

month s,
yc&lt;~r

$8 .50 ,

Sil munths

months.

$9 Oil .

Subscription prke indudt•s Sundl:lv

, 1'im~!oi&amp; ntm c l .

·

'

It was Cleveland's third

straight loss and its lowest
point total of the season .
Coach Bill Fitch called It "a
strange game, a lousy, lousy
off ens! ve ballgame on our
part.''

SATURDAY'S GAME

NEW BOSTON {661
Wiley 6-2· 14 ; M iller 4-1-9;·

Barth 3·5-11 ; Clark 6-0·12 ;

Oix

3· 4- 10 ,

Moore

3· 1 7;

Landreth 1·0-2; Ve ley 0-1·1.
TOTALS 26·14-68.
SOUTHWESTERN {52) Greg Nelson 7-4·18; Dole
Newberry

4·3- 11 ;

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
•Ba II Gloves
· Camping
Equipment
• ·Archery
• Indoor Games
• ·We
have Gilt
Certificates
601 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

Scott

V/.5.4'

,Russell 0-2·2; Todd Baker 0-0·
0, ·Gene Leyton 6-0-12 ;
Dwayne Forge-( 2-2·6; Wayne 1

SiZemore 1·0·2. TOTALS 2012 ·52 .

Acros' from Courthouse

PHONE
675-2988

.

Score by quarters:

New Boston ·12 16 21 19--68
Southwestern 6 1.4 14 18-52
Reserves : New Boston .45,
Southwestern 32 .

Open SUnday 1· p .m .-6 p. m .
Monday lhru S.turday
9 .:- .,. •., 8 p.m.

DALE'S

KITCHEN
·'

WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DO?

tT IN A
NEW KITCHEN!

BIG -40%

C~NTER,

INC.

I!11

:s

it

0·2. Tot•ls 28-16-72.

Bv Quarters

Hannan Trace
11 23 ~9 ~0
S Weslern
20 35 57 72
Add Salurday's Q!'me 8 pt.

CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO: JT
YOURSELF.
BRING IN
YOUR.. DIMENSIONS
'
·~·' '"',{ '-'J~Q
OUR '
~'
...
~.~' tXP,£RTS WILL
HELP YOUI

2119 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
UJ-2311
'

r

Fowler "
Tot

Cump&lt;~ n)'·Mulliml:'dill , Int•.,
1
Co11rt St., Pomeroy, Ohto
769.
Business Office Phont· 992· 2156.
Editurild Phtme m-2157.
St-t"ond chtSll postage p;iid ;ot
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Nationt~l udvt:rtising represen·

Pistons blow big
lead, lose, 111-110

UNIVERSITY OF TENN · Basketball Association
SESSEE - Named Lynn · games played TUesday, the
Amedee quarterback coach.
Denver Nuggets defeated the
New Orleans Jazz 104-100 and
SAN FRANCI SCO 49ers th e Kansas City Kings heat
Named AI Vermei l strength
the Cleveland Cavaliers 86-79.
and conditioning coach, and
For one half the Pistons
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Emmell Shutes, with his first made the Knicks look awful,
Professional Bowlers sinking 60 percent of their
Association
championship shots and forcing 15 New
under his belt, is the leading York turnovers. Detroit led
PBA mooey winner with 61-45 at halftime and 69-51
earnings of $21,000 after two after 2: 08of the third quarter.
And then, without a hint of
tournaments this season.
The State College, Pa., warning, the Knicks turned it
veteran of three years on the around .
Woth Ray Williams running
' PBA tour, earned a slot in the
IIJ $i50,-000 Tournament of the attack, ' the Knicks
1
Champions after he defeated climbed back mlo the game
Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
·I veteran
bowlers
Earl with a W-4 burst . Knight
I
Anthony and Paul Moser in scored eight points and
Williams handed out four
Las Vegas last week .

HEARTY HOME
~• ..,. BREAKFASTSt

'
Eastern won the reboun·
ding -contest 39-32 with
Spencer grabbing ,IS and
Bissell 12. Weaver was
tops
for
the
Fal·
cgns with 10 rebounds
to his credit. In .ihe turnover
department, Wahama
committed a total of 25
miscues to 21 for the Eagles.
Shooting percentages show
, the winners hitting on 47
percent, 29 of 61, from the
floor and 58.3 percent, 10 of
17, from the free throw stripe.
Eastern shot 37 percent, 26 of
69, from the field and 60
percent, 15 of 25, from the
charity stripe.
In the preliminary game,
the Uttle Falcons built up a
30-12 halftime lead and then
held on for its fourth win of
the 1978-79 campaign by a 4229 scoret
York Ingels and Peanut
Harris scored 11 and 10 points
respectively for Wahama
while the Baby Eagles were
paced by Gene Cole with 10
markers.
Wahama returns to action
Saturday evening when it
entertain the Kyger Creek
Bobcats. Kyger Creek
defeated- the White Falcons
earlier in the month, 61-55,
which gives the locals an
added incentive of revenge.
Starting times will be 5;45
p.m. for the reserve game
and 7:30p.m. for the varsity
event. ·
WAHAMt\ (68)
lgm-att ftm·att tp
Bamitz
9-16 0-0 18
Roush
6·10 3-5 15
Richards
6-12 0-0 12
Rsw!ings
4-a 3·3 11
Weaver
3-10 1-5 7
Sayre
1-4 2·3 4

•

�•

•

4 _ The Daily Sentine(Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Wednesday , Jan. 17, 19i9

- 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport· P' 1eroy, 0., Wednesday , Jan . l7 1979

Redmen down Cougars for fifth win in rOw
WiU1 three piHycrs scoring
in double fi ~ur'''· led by Dan
Bise 's 24 markers , Coach Art
Lanham ·s Hio Gr ande
Hedmen whipped host MI.
Vernon Nazarene. 8:Hi8, in a
Mid-Ohio Conference basketball game Tuesday night.
It was Rio's fifth straight
victor y. leaving the Redmen
in undisputed first place in .
th e MOC standings with a 4~
mark . Rio upped its season
record to 8-JO.
Bob Martin's
.Coac h
Cougars dropped to 04 in the
conference and 4-14 on the

with

!car

&lt;.:111

lett

tu

pia)' .

Hio jumped off to a qUI ck
(ireg .J ames a nd Dan
14~ .lead and ne,·er looked
Purcell pushed the Rl'&lt;lrnen
back in front lly seven , 68-61 ,
back .
After lea ding 44-~1 during with o::10 showing on the
the halftime intenn1ssion, the doc k.
Hio gradually pulled away
Hedmt&gt;n incr eased their
margin to 18 points mid-way in the final moments' of play.
" .~ lot of goo d things
through the final half.
With two Rio Grande happened for us out there
starters on the bench because tonight." remarked Coach
following the
offoul problems and veteran J.anh~m
J,'Uard Mark Swain on the important road triumph. The
injured list , MI. Vernon , loser Co ug ars wer e unable to
of several close games this control .James and Bise
winter, came storming back underneath' and the home
to cut Rio 's lead to four, 62-58, club spent most o[ the n ight ·

Pirates romp Falcons

OAN BISE

Coach Ted l.A!hew's North
Gallia Pirates shot a sizzling
62 percent · from the floor
Tuesday night in rolling to a
9S-89 non -conference victory
over Miller.
Senior guard Sam Smith
had the best night of his
career with 34 paints on I~
field goals and four free
throws.
Other Pirates hitting
double figures were senior
center Tim McComas with 23
points; Stacey Winston had 16
and Joe Peck dumped in 10.
The Falcons had a good
shooting night too canning 34
of 75 floor attempts for 47
percent.
Five Miller players hit in

double figures . Dave Burgess
led the way with 27 points on
11 field goals and !ive foul
shots; Bill Harvey had 17;
John Fuchs an d Todd
Spencer, 11 each while Drew
Street canped 10.
·
AI the foul circles, North
Gallia sank 14 of 28 for 50
percent while Miller hit 21 of
36 foc o8 percent.
Nocth Gallia also held a
goo d rebounding edge with
McComas leading that
department . The win snapped
a two-game losing spell for
North Gailia and avenged an
earlier loss at Miller . ..
The Pirate reserves won ·

going away , 57-30. Miller had
16 points ·for the Little Bucs.
North Gallia, 3-4 overall,
hosts Southwestern Friday
nig ht.
Miller's record
ctropP,ed to 5~ overaU
Miller (89) - Burgess 11 ·5·
17 ; Fuchs -4 -3-11 ; Spencer 4-311; Street 3-4-10 ; Davis 3-1-7;

Harvey 6·5·17; Blaney 2-0·4
and Cook 1-0-2. Tola!s 34-21 ·
89
North Ga!lia (981 - Smith
15 4-J4 ; Win sto n 9·0-18 ;
Mc Comas 10-J -23 ; Peck 4-210; LittleJ-2-8; Glassburn 1-1·
3 and Barnes 0-2-2. Totals 41 .

By Quarters :
Mil ler
N . Ga llia

Marauder
girls
Todav's
.
defeat
Eastern
Sports World

24 41 6d 89
20 48 74 98

Kentosh each had 16 pointS
lor the Cougars. Jeff Fischer
added ll.
Saturday, the Redmen will
host Urbana in a key Mid·
Ohio Conference game. The
Blue Knights are 6-7 overaU
and 2-1 inside the conference.
In Tuesday's only othe~
conference game, Cedar·,
ville 's Yellow Jackets
cootinued hot oo the heels of
Rio Grande by turning back
Malone 77-76. Cedarville is ~
i in co~ference play and 9-5
on the year.
Here's Tuesday' s Rio-MI.
Vernon box:

uf ~&gt;7 field ~oal attempts for ptn·&lt;·nt. Mt. Vemon had 37
fiLl perc·t·ut. Th e Redmen n•bounds, nine by Art
wer e \:1 of 17 at the foul line i' reeman , 17 assists and 21
fm· 7ti 5 pert-ent.
,turnove r s.
Hin had 411 rebounds, 10
Besides Bise's 24 markers,
each bl· .lames and Bise . 'Hio .lames tossed in 17 for the
had 18 assists and 24 turu- 1\Plhucn . Viucc Phelps, in one
overs .
of his best outings of the
MI. Vernon hit 28 of 74 field season, chipped in with 14.
goal attempts for 37 .8
Glen Naggle and Brad

'

.

Tuesday's ~igh
school results
. Ohio High School
Bask elba!!

Gra ft on

By The Associated Press

Tuesday Night

Akron

Central -Hewer
Canton Timken 56

65,

Akron Hoban 82, Hudson

Academy 57

Akron St. VinCent 91. Akron
East 70
AI ba ny Ale &gt;&lt; ander 74 ,

Belpre 68

Amhe r st

Box :,core

14-98 .

• i1 a:-. u;~, 111 u ,, 'llJt.-1..'LlY guards. Jk..·n ·L·nt. 'llJe Cougcus were 12
llio f ka ndc connected on :15 of Ill at the foul line for 66 .7

73 ,_

L ora in

Brook side 55
" Atwa ter Wa-terl oo 75,
· 51reetsbor o 39
Austinburg Grand River 49,
Warren Howland Christ ian 37
Aust i nt ow n · Fitc h
52 .
Warr en How land 34
Bainbridge Paint Valley 80,
Piket on 63

Be loi t W.

Branch 53.

Youngs town Wilson ~
Bloom dal e Elm wood 78,
North Baltimore 75

Brook, W. Va . 65, Winters·

vil le 60
Broo k field
McKinley 49

58,

Nil es

Carey 60, Findlay Libert y

Benton 57
Carlisle 63, Franklin 58
Ch ill icoth e 52. Washington
.Cour t House 42 . .
.Cinc i nnati Christian 55,
Dayton Mian-ii Valley 49
Ci ncinna ti Deer Park 69,
Little Miami 57
Cincinna ti Greenh ills 59,
Wy omi ng 50 .

RIO GRANDE

M fd view

62 ,

Ridgeville 52
Houston 77, Bradford 30

N:

Swain

(83) Bise 10-4-24 ;

1-0 -2 ;

. Purcell 3-2-8; Phelps 5+ 14;
Royse 3-0-6; Niday 1-0-2;

Hu bbard 76 , Youngstown

Wa shi ng ton 2-0-4; James 8-1-

Mooney 57
lr on1oo Rock Hill 66, Oak
Hill 59
Ketterjng Fai rmont Ea st
65. Daytoii · Wright 57
Lagrange Keyslone 69 ,

17 ; Lones 2-2-6; Dorsey 0-0-0;
McCormick 0-0-0; Davena 0·
0-0; Clark 0-0-0; West 0-0·0.
TOTALS 35-13-83.
MT . VERNON (681 Simpson 2-2-6; Naggle 6·4-16;

Henrietta Firelands 62
Leet onia 64 , Lordstown 58

Freeman J-0-6; Fischer 5-111 ; Kentosh 6-4-16 ; Just ice 4-

Londqn 83.
Franklin 0-8; Thorne 1-0-2; Tackett 1+
Heights 44
3. TOTALS 28-12-68.
Lowellville 81, N. Lima S.
Halftime score - Rio 44,
Range 79
MI. Vernon 31 .
McDermott- Northwest 65 ,

:Free Methodist
, Church
to show
...
gripping new film ·

'MOCcage
sf!jndings
MID-OHIO '
CONFERENCE
. I league Only I
TEAM
W L
Rio Grande
4 0
Cedarvi ll e

3 1

Urbana

2 1
2 1
2 2 .

Walsh
Malone

Tilfln

1 2'

Ohio Dominican

0 3
0 4

Mt. .Vernon·

TOTALS

Shiokarl Pass, 8 new film mountains, and whispering
h-om . the producers of The native music.
.Hiding Place, will be shown
A true story, Shiokari Pass
;at Free Methodist, Laurel is based on the international
~iff , on January 21. The one best seller by Ayako Miura,
:Jl:o ur color release from Nearly. two million readers
W~rld Wide Pictures will be have been touched by this
shown once beginning at 7:30 · story of the abiding love of a
:p.m.
young couple at th e turn of
.,. Shiokari Pass is . among the century.
·World
Wide
Picfures
Credited with creating a
productions. Altho~h it has deeper understanding of the
an Englisll soundtrack, it was Christian faith among the
Driginally produced for Japanese people, the film
, showing
to Japanese tells of the love of Nubuo for
audiences. It was filnied Fujiko, and of his willingness
entirely in Japan with a to be guided by his personlll
Japanese cast and crew , and faith , no matter how great'the ·
depicts the delicate beauty of cost of commitment.
that country. The drama of
From its gentle opening to
the story unfolds against a its gripping , unexpecte d
hackdrop of Japan's spring conclusion, Shlokari Pass is a
blossoms, s now-capped profound demonstration -of
the power oflove in one life.
The Rev . Floyd Shook,
pastor of Laurel Cliff ,
extends an invitation to
eac h member of the
community to attend.
There will be no admission
charge for the film program .
a

14 14

Tuesday's Results :

Rio Grande 83 MI. Vernon .68
Cedarville 77 Malone 76
TEAM
Cedarville
Malone

W L
'9 5

8 8
6 7

Urbana
Rio Grande

8

Walsh

10

5 8

Ohio Domin ican
Mt . Vernon
Tiffin

2 9
414
4 14

Tonighl's game :

Tiff in at 'Mercy
Saturday's games :

""

Urbana at Rlo Grande
Ohio Dominican at Cedarville
Malone at Walsh
MI. Ver non at Tj ffln

Minerva 49. Carrollton 48

Minford
49

72,

Sout h Webster

Mingo Junction 66, Weir -

ton, W. Va .. Madonna 55
Ne lson vill e · York
67,
44

New Paris National Trail
d6, Eaton 42, at

New Philadelphia 70,
Cambr idge 58
New Philadelphia Catholic
75 , Conation Valley 50
Ottovi lle 64 , Columbus
Grove 60 , 2 at
·
Port sm outh
East
67 ,
Frank li n Furnace· Green 48
Ra ve nna Southeast -5·7,

Garrettsville Garfield 53
By Greg· Bailey
player of either team to . hit
Ri"chm ond J~fferson Union
·
The · Meigs High Girls double figures on the night as
Cincinnati Hughes. 73; 78,· Irondale Stanton 58
Cinc inna ti PurCell 60 ·
Rocky River 55, Olmsled
cagers picked up another win she netted ·15.
· Ci nci nna ti St. ·Bernard "84; Falls 53
.
By Will Grimsley
·last night, this time in a
Meigs canned 17 of 67 floor New Richmond 61 Rootstown (1;9, Pen insula
AP Correspondent
come-from-behind 39-3 1 shots for a cool25percent and
Cincio.na ti Walnut Hill s 50, . Wood ridge 63
·
Rossford 54, Genoa 40
victory over visiting Eastern . hit~ of 9 free 'throws. Eastern . · Cinci nnati Woodward so .
The ballot boxes closed this week on baseball's HaD of Fame
Cleve land Benedictine 6:S ,
Sarahsville Shenandoah 48,
Meig~ now has a record of 6-3. was just as cold from the Cleveland
Univ~rsity 49
elec tion and in a few days they'll be polishing off a corner in
Barnesvrtle 44
Meigs trailed 104 after one floor , hitting 14 of 56 shots .for
Cleve la nd Lincoln -West 65 .
Shaker Hts . 69, Parma
Cooperstown, N.Y., for the latest to be immortalized.
quarter
as
Eastern
exhibited
another
25
percent.
They
hit
·Nordonia
52
For-ge 67 ·
Strike·up a plaque for Willie Mays, the "Say Hey Kid " from
Southington 84, Thompson
·w: Tec h 80,
e_.c_Mnge Gn~u~ PHl!4F.II'
the Giants and Mets. He can't miss in this first year of eligi- . some fine outside shooting. At three of five from the charity Cl Cleveland
eve land Rhodes 51
Ledgemon t 33
,
the in!ermission, Eas tern stripe. Sarah Goebel led the
Columbu
s
Cenlennial
56.
bility. Duke Snider,' the magnificent Dodger, is a possibility.
SpringbOr o 68, Waynesville
Other Batte~ies ah Comparative Price
still had the lead, but Meigs losers with nine points.
Columbus Wallerson 54
5J
Maybe another guy or so.
·
to
18-17.
had
trimmed
it
Meigs'
next
ga
me
is
Co
lumbu
s
Eastmoor
81.
Springfield Northwestern
It 's not a guessing game nor a betting event. But odds are 2().
The Meigs defense came on tomorrow night when they Lancasler 60
BJ, Springfield Catholic 69
1that a pair of deserving guys will be pushed farther down the
Strasburg 88 , Apple Creek
mbus Hamilton Twp.
strong in the second half as host unbeaten and league- 79,Colu
Bl oom Carroll 59
list.
Waynedale
62
Co lumbus Miff lin 71, - Struthers SO, Youngstown
They are Roger Maris, the single-season home run king of the offense came alive. By leading Logan.
MEIGS (39) - Chapman,"! - Columbus Cenlral 58
Ursuline 49
the New York · Yankees, and Enos (Country) Slaughter, the the end of the third period ,
0-4; S. Ash , 0·1- 1; T. Ash. 3·0·
Co lumbu s While ha ll 6J,
had
taken
the
lead
for
Springfield Soulh 82 ,
John F. Fultz. Milr.
Meigs
slashing remnant. of St. Louis' "Gas House Gang.''
6 ; Bartrum , 0- 1 ~ 1 ; King , 3-0 Independence 61
Columbus Walnul Ridge 62
good
,
26-22.
Pomeroy,
992-2101
Why this slight? Where did they go wrong? Is it lack of
6 ; Lightfoot, 1-0-2 ; Ri ggs, 1-2Co ntinent al 65, Pand ora
Sylvania- Northvie w 62,
Eastern
was
well
prepared
4andWilson, 7-1-1S. ·To1als 17 · Gilboa 52
credentials or a personality factor? Has this solemn ritual
Toledo Rogers 56
for the contest and played 5-39.
Copl ey 72, Lod i Cl overleaf
Toledo Scoll 70, Toledo 51.
evolved into a popularity contest?
EASTERN (31) - Young, 51
well,
but
the
height
.Francis 66
Maris was one of the "M&amp;M" boys in the high-flying Yankee
2' 0-4;
McC lur e,
2'2-6;
Daylon Belm ont 67, Daylon
Toronto 57, Brldgeporl 55
era that had Mickey Mantle at the other end of the axis. A su- advantage of Meigs proved a Eichinger, 3·0-6; Milhoa n, 2· Chaminade · Julienne 62
fa
ctor
.
The
hosts
gathered
in
04; T. Goebel, 4-1-9 and
Dayton Darroll 71, Dayton
. perb outfielder and a strong hitter, he beat out . Mantle for
I
.
.
slugg ing and Most Valuable Player honors in 1960. In 1961 he 45 rebounds to .Eastern 's 33 , Sorden, 1-0-2. Tolals 14-3-31. Stebbins 59
By Quarters :
Dayt on Meadowdale 59,
and
Meigs'
Terri
Wilson
erased one of the most revered records in the book - Bahe
E.
10 18 22 31 Beave rcreek 52
hauled in 20 caroms of her M.
Ruth 's liO home runs in a single season .
4 17 26 39
Day ton Wayne 52, Fairborn
Baker 50, o f
Maris ' reward was an asterisk, because he played a longer own . Wilson also was th e only
Eas t Can ton 53, Magnol ia
season . and a rain of torment from newsmen and chagrined
Sandy Vall ey 50
£ans. The popular Bambino's record was too sacred to be
Elyria West 64 , S. Amherst
Northfield Park
&lt;16
•
tampered with.
PROVIDES
.ftD
Gahanna
54 , Columbus
· Anti-Maris groups 'surfaced throughout the league . He was
Whets tone 51
THE TRAINING VOU NEED
booed . He became an outfield target for beer bottles. He was opens Thursday
. LEB!\NON RESULTS
Garfield Tri nity 46, Kirt FOR
THE BUSINESS WORLD
fined once for making an obscene gesture to the fans . He was
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) land 44
sued for assault and battery, a charge that didn't stick.
CLEVELAND (AP)
Gl o uster
Trimb l e 62,
· Miss Cornia won the $1 ,000
Months
Maris suffered because of his personality. Unlike the
Northfield Park will open its featured pace mile by a half Mc Arthur Vin ton 51
Gnadenhutten
Indian ·
ebullient, fun-loving Ruth, he was introverted, sullen , jealous
Not
Years
Prep1rt You
1979 racing season Thursday leng th Tu esday night at Val ley South 61, Ca~t o n·
of his privacy.
night - two weeks late after Lebanon .
To Ennl
Central Catholi c 52
He continued with the Yankees through 1966 before being reaching a greement wlth
The winner 's Iinne was 2: 07
traded to the St. Louis Cardinals, where he played two years
mutuel clerks on a new three- for a' return of $9.80, $7.60 and
be fore retirement .
year cxmtract.
$12 .60.
LEGAL NOTICE
"The ·last six years were mental hell," he said. "! was
.For D1y
The track also is expected
Lamar's Me Too placed , · NOTICE . I am going .to .s-!11
to. the highest bidder the
dra ined of all my desire to play baseball."
Or ·eveninQ Cllsses ·
to ha ve a new . top paying $5.60 and $3.40, and
Slaughter 's career spanned 21 years, 13 with the Cardinals management lineup , with . the show horse, Smart
fol_lowing coins :·
·
·•
1_ SSO.OO Bill , 19SO series; ·
before he phased out with Kansas City, the Yankees and Mil- general partner Bill Snyder Shadow, paid $5.20.
CAlla (61_4)
446-4367
Ser. No. H 00875090-A
.
.
. l
.
waukee. He had a career batting average of .300 with 169 hom e and new associates taking
-1
n.oo
Bill,
1907
series,
Ser.
The 2-1 double of Pat Hill
No . .1&lt; 60716.383
.
run s. His true value , however, lay more in intangibles than in over the operation from Carl and Cupid's Quiver paid $123.
NOW ENROLLING
~ 1921 Silver Dollars
cold statistics. He was a fine fielder and baserunner, a fierce Milstein .
The cr owd of 1,473 bet
FOR NEW TERM
J 1922 Silver Dollars
competitor .
Deta il s of the contract $134 ,001.
I
4 192 2 Silver Dollars
Like Maris, Slaughter got a reputation'of being a "redneck." settlement reached Tuesday
' atHI 12 months CarHr Proarams atHI II
11925 Si lver Dollar
.
mOfttfts Associatl DeGrH 1.1 SP11clall1ecl'
1.1900 Silver Dollar
The innage persisted - and cost hinn proper respect - long were not discloSed.
1 1923 Silver Dime
l•tlnen Proarams.
after his career .had ended .
Bob Doyle, president of the
11909 Lincoln Penny
Jr. Accounting
Racing Guild of. Ohio, which
.Business Adminis.trallon
1.1931 Lincoln Per1ny
represents the clerks, said :
11939 Silver Half Dime
•
General Office
Executive Secretary
11888 Indian Head Penny
" We didn 't get exactly what
Ohio College
Stcret1ry
11858 Penny
Bask elba II
we wanted, but I'm satisfi ed.
11854 Quarter of Dollar
By
The
Associated
Press
We came to a point where
11875 German Mark
Tuesday Night
·somebody
had to do
You shall ilave the right" to
Upper
Ar linglon
72.
Conference
ALLIPOLIS
Warr ensville 75, Bedford
inspect these .. coi.ns and
something." .
.
Hoosier ~ Buckeye
Groveport 66
Chane! 50
money at the" office . of
Vandalia Butler 43, Tipp
Defiance 100, Ander son' d3
BUSINESS
Warsaw River View 84,
Racing was to have started
;HON Ec_ __~.z 1,.-----'--t
Crow. Crow &amp; ' Porter,
Mid
-Ohio
Ci ty • J
Phil o 68 .
.Jan.
5,
and
seven
racing
Pomeroy
,
Ohio,
10
:00
A.M
:
.
Vin ton North Gallia 98,
Ceda r ville 77, Malone 76
.
COLLEGE
Wheele r s bu rg 76 , Port s- dates were
postponed
Saturday, January 20, 19'79.
ADDR8Sli--~--~--~
Heml ock M il ler 89
Rio Grande 83, Mt . Vernon
m outh Notr e Dame 42
Theodore A : Downie,
1
Warren Champio n 81.
William sport Westfall 8J. because of the stalled Nazarene 68
E )( · e. ·c . u t o r ·
Other Games
Canfi eld 57
Chillicoth e Hunting ton 68
negotiations with the 275Estate of M_
ii'lnie V. Bengel
Louisville
77
,
Dayton
76
Warren Hardi ng 70, Cor t- ·
Woodslield 62, Skyvue 49 member Wlion .

Power House BATTERY
SAVE '10.00

Wa!i;.'it9f

$5l!~ouwHh

o.

---G BC . .
~(.;~

-#~~

if' .

I

'I
I
I
I G

Cage Scores

~~

~~

' land Lakeview 66

5!1

·LONG HORN CHEESE ......... ~~·.. 1

5th &amp; Pearl
P.HEiie •s STORE
rnu~ay, Jan . 18 through Jan . 20
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stomp•
Monday lhru Friday
9:110tfl7 :00
S..turclay 9:00-9;00
• CLOSED
SUNDAY(

Valley Bell

COTTAGE CHEESE ..... :.~.~~:.. 99~

BANANAS
5 LBS. •100
CABBAGE
LB• .15~
;

.

answer .wets " YPs." 1\nv shot.•
polish J hav e ('VP I' had :o.; meJ Jr.d too awful to he used thc-t1
way. How evl~ r thc1t quPsti on

did pay off for me.
I have a pr~ir uf Vl' I"Y guod

old red shoes mu l all s hoes,
new nr old, nct•d ct protective
en&lt;-Jting. My r ed poli sh wa~

ust•d up long ago so lil&lt;•cirletl
to use up

SOffi t-'

uld red

lipslil'k. Now my red shoes
have their ''skin" well pro- ·
teded wilh lipstick and look
like new . I really think the
lipslick is better !han the shot•
cream I used to buy . I Poll y's
Note -Ae sure t o rub jt in well
or Y\IU ma y get it on other·
l'lothing .l - Rl .ANCHE
Polly will se nd vou one of
he r signed thank -you
newspaper coupon dippers if
she u~ c s your fav orite
Pointer, Pc~vc or Problem in
he r column. Write POLLY'S
POINTER.~ in eare of t his
newspapt•r.

•

cll&lt;li l'lna n, the s pt~it k&lt;· r &lt;IPL:Ii l·

l'd w~w 1 happc n.s to i l person
whl•n he ermfnmls ~~ law nffi cl.'r an1l tlwn .~l pp et~rs ~n
i'nurt. .Judge "Kn ight passl'd
;mumd papers which arL'
given to al l those who appea r
in his eour1 sdting forth lt&gt;ga l

PRINGLE$ •••• ,,•••••••.•••••••••• • 7f
Folger's
10
·INST• COFFEE •••• ~..............
·
oz. '3•. 79

Porkay ·

.

MARGARINE ...~~~~!!~ .......... !~: 59'

~rs

NO LACES

n.·sponsiblity involvt•d with

the plea.

LARG E SE LECTION
OF SIZES A ND W IDTHS

fk talked a bo ut fi nt•s and

S(•nh·nccs tmd the hearings
cmd final dispos ition of c&lt;.tscs
and invited the mt•rn hl1rs tn
visit hi m in court. Miss

RED WING

Davidson presented hi m with
a g1ft from th e Clu b. ·

'"'''"
'"tl (1 \

Try them on at

noted

that

quarter ly

!he

sceo nd

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.

schol arship pay -

men( ha d been mad&lt;• for !he
recipient , Teresa Mci-Jd nws.

l .-etters wer e read from tile

Ohio BPW regard ing two
nwetin gs in Pcbrua ry , till'

9 a'. m .- 5 p .m .

Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a . m .-a p.m . Fri .
Clo sed Su nday

" Middle of Upper Block ,
Pom e roy , 0 ."

VISA"

RSELFERS
The time is now to save, save, save on all your home
improvement needs. So don't dP.lav on getting in shape!

ONLY$

FRENCH CITY JUMBO FRANKS •••••••••• !l49
1 lb. Teen Queen

qua

s lb.

Pink

·MARGARINE.:....... 21s1.19 GRAPEFRUIT.........~~.9.. 9~
8 oz. Kraft
American sliced single

8

3 lb. Rome

APPLES ..... ~ .............. 59~
·

QfEESE .............·.. ~ .....•

bag

TAN BARK
'

HICKORY PANELING

8.oi Old South Tastee Pies •••••••••• 21s1.39
5 oz.

DEL MONTE SPINACH ••••••••••••• ~······· 2/79~
49 .oz.
BOLD LAUNDRY .DETERGENT•••••••• :~:••• s1.49

. .. . .

Lib~v·s

ONLY

69~

CORN BEEF HASH. ....... •••••••••••••••••••••• 83~
Tender
TEA BAGS......................................
s1.2~
.
oz. Instant
'
. ....................s4.59
.N.ESCAFE .CO.FF. EE.........
46 or:' l'li · C

1\ f ti'• W~N (..

Mrs . F r i:l nces Louise Davis
presid ed with Ow reports nf
offir.e r.s being given. It was

Leaf

.

)

No.1

GRAPE DRINK•••·...................... ~ ••••• ~:~. 59*
,4 roll Charmin
·
·WHITE TOI-LET TISSUE ......................s1.09

.&lt;

PRE-CUT

STUDS

jar

• •· •

Wf' I"P

~:ro. COMFORT
s~ock

rights. pleas whi l'h c11 n he
made and the n·sul! of the
plea as well as the fina ndal

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD••••••••••••••• ~~}l.19
FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM •••••••••• ~~.~~~.$1.29

lS. oz. Armour
··-- -

..

At h·nd im r

Mr!\.

2"X4"XB'
ONLY

$}59 .
EACH

Eluisc

D;nd.s. and Mrs . .Jand Korn.
riv1c pa rti d p&lt;--~ 11 on , ·om1 m tlt•t·. C:r&lt;:~et Pratt . chairman
:1nd Linde S toiJw·t. ,. j dw irman . will kH"£' dl,tr!--(t'
(tf.t/w F'dJ. J!ltlll'd l ll ~

4'x8' SHEETS

48-d .

.

d tth

Goett.

Wilson, Mrs. TctTi&lt;· Walk&lt;'r,
Mrs . Cat11erine W&lt;·ish. Mr&gt;.

RUGGED

I

.

~

mt ·cling. Rt•Sl'I'\'Cttions ~1re to
ht• made h.v Ja n. :11 and !h('
t·ns1 is $R pt.·r pt• rsun tti ht: st·i1 t
to Linda Bt.•nstm Het\'t•n :1 t
Nd :..;Oil\' il]tl.
R.t•fn·slunt•nts W4.'f"t.' st.·r~' l'tl
fr11m ;t lc1 blc det' Or&lt;:Jtt•d in tlw
~ old ~ n cl green co!nrs of tlw

'

10

24 oz . '119
. STEW•••••••••••••••••.•..
BEEF
WHEATIES •••
99'
Jo Bo
.
·
Snow Drift
·
p, •. ,,J or ch1&lt;ken 5/'1·11
DOG FOOD •••••..........•.
SHORTENING .........;.. 3 LB•.'1.59
Frisk its s·e ver t1l varieti es
Stor Ki•1
6''' oz. 6ftl
·CAT FOOD ........ .'.1~~~; •• .41'1.00 TUNA .....................••....•.
~·
•••••• • • I

The

.\lwildct Wt·rner , Mrs :VI..Jr·

jorit·

PARTICAL
BOARD

-··-

ECKRICH PRODUCTSI
I. I I •••• '

lips!it•k ,..

wi ll n•preS&lt;•nl 1111' Middll'ptH'I
rJu b at tht · Young Cart•t.•ri sl

and

PUMPKIN. PIE. MIX ••••••••••••••••••••••••••.

2 'lb; 'Sliced

..

polish for

-·

WE NOW HA Vf.

I

lxlors - t he sooner it is used

APPLES~UCE ................................. 2/79*

BoLOGNA ·

BACON ..........~~~~~~ ...... ~~: ..99~

18 01.

YELLOW ONIONS
.
LB.39~

SlAB

Whole or Half

ing but the odor n•mains. Anv
sugg&lt;•sti ons? -SHEHRY ·
DEAR SHERRY .. A· rug
t'lt~r~ning firm s uggests cavering !he odor-infected area
with a layer of !able salt at
least one-half inch thick .
Leave on a day or two and
then vacuum up . Do be s ure
to empty the vat·uum immediately and wipe off the
bottom or any parts that have
come in conta ct with the salt.
The salt can also be put on
damp spots just after an accid&lt;•nt. Sponging with dub soda
wi ll sometimes remove such

fn-:-1 on Fdl. :l ctl till' J-lilt nn
lni1 Ea!-il in ('ol urn bus of tht•
S!:th' n oan l and llw Rt.·tirenwnt I .iving ('nnlm illt•l'. and
t!H• Sl't·om l on Feh. JR for
Yo lllll-'; r~n·cr i sls of ni strid
li. ;1! tlw ll u&lt;"k ing Vrtll L'Y
~1 ntur I .otlge. N t' 1st111 vi liP.
Hhonda Da iley , R. N.. in:-:t·rvit't' t•dul':t ti on din•(·tor at
Vt"tt'l'illl.S Mt.•rno r i;tl Hospital,

"

;30 oz..

SIDE ............~~i.~:~..... -~ ..'~·..99~

HAMS

tri ed severa l commerdH l
deodorizers and steam el ecm -

16, oz .

FRESH
PRODUCE

does not always wait to ·gu

outside so my red rug sriwlls
qu ite strongly of urine. I have

\1~ - ~~~--.: r·n ull ty ('ourl .f ud g e
_, ('!Jiirlt•." K1dgh t was -"Jwakt•r
br:md llCl llH' t:tntl Sl?t •. I flJ S at ;1 nwd in g of tlw Mid
dlcport 11usim•ss ;uu l Profi'S·
saw•s IOL' lot s of ti mt• wht•n
_.. _ j,l/la l WoJUd l 'S f'luh Monel ~!\'
shopping. ·V.M.
DEAR POLLY - I hl';m l night a l tlw r~ ~l wnbitt Ga s n;.
•
tlw fullowin J-{ un (l TV ga mt• off in·.
I.ntrodul'cd hy n onna \
shnw : " Rt!C'a usc nf ltw shortage nf 1'11Smeti i'S in Russi&lt;t n a\'idSOll in the a b St' lli'C of
r.h·nna Crbp, hig ll wt1y sa f4.: ty
do smtw wom en· use shot'

.·

INQUIRE NOW: .

chunl&lt;. $

Carrie
Cathryn

.

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

I

DEAR POLLY .. My •·at

Holiday program
held, by church

Stewart Federal - Hock ing 53
Newcom erst own 69, Guern -

sey Catholic

Cat leaves a smell

Birthdays

Bay Village 45

~.

Polly Cramer

!he betler... POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When
cl eaning windows I usc three
tabl espoons of corn starch in
four quarts of warm water.
Always stir well to mix, wa sh
the wi ndows and dry with a
dry soft cloth. The windows
really shine and the ra in does
not seem (o spot them when
washed thi s way.
When making oul my
grocery li st I put a mar~
before each item !hat I have a
eoupon
·for , as well as the
United Pentecostal Church
of Middleport had a
Christmas program on Dec .
22.
TWO DIVORCING
There were recitations and
STtiCKHOLM, Swed en
a playlet by the youth of the (AP ) _ Two members of th e
church with Bob Hartley, Swedish pop . music · group
Mary Nottingham, Linda Abba have decided to divorce
Acree , and Pam Milhoan in but the group will continue
charge of the program .' David recording, a Swedish news·
Acree was narrator and paper reported today.
·
E;ugene Birchfield and Carl
Two members of the fo ur·
Nottin ghart) were s tage memb er group, Agneta
hands. Prayer by the Rev.. Faltskog, 29, and Bjorn
William Knittel opened the. · Ulvaeus, 33, announced the
·
program which was closed end of their marriage to the
Wood
with singing of "Joy to the Stockholm Expressen.
World " by the congregation.
"This does not, however,
· ": Carrie Anne and Cathryn Trea ts were given to the mean the split-up of Abba,'' ;
Marie, daughters of S. Sb&gt;l. young people following the the paper quoted Mis s
·~nd Mrs. Kenneth Wood of
program.
Faltskog as saying.
•Grand Forks Air Farce Base,
-North 'Dakota, recently
'&lt;oelebrated their birthdays.
JUNE EICHINGER
J;arrie.Ann was three on Dec.
Mrs. June Eichinger is a
;~.and Cathryn Marie was one
surgical patient at the Holzer
European heav yweight
•O!J Dec. 28. They are the M~d i ca l Center. Her room
Alfredo
Evangelista lights
·gtanddaughterS" of · Mr, an'd number is 107 B. She expects
but was born in
out
of
Madrid
:r.f•rs. Norman Wood , to be hospitalized for another
Montevideo,
Uruguay.
pomeroy . .
week. ·

Lucasvi lle Valley 49

Medina

POLLY·s POINTERS

_fudge Knight speaks to Business
and Professional Women's meeting

.99

�6- The Dally Sentmel, 1\'ltOtl.tepon-rllill~ r u), v .. W~llc=buca) , oJdJI . '',

u11 J

•

r-.. . ·----··- ·1· Is government ·'n;tonkeyingaround?
1 Social 1
to verbal commands · and a
pointer . Tlsh will retrieve
.h .... wi.lli'd Prcs.'i Writr.r
nf
emer~ency.
objects
from across a room .
llOSTON 1 i\ PI - Crysiiil
Tht•
othe~
monkey
.·
·nsh
,
Her
next
mission will be
and Tish. a pair of organ
lives
with
a
woman
in
Mystic,
learning
to
pick boxes and
~-:ri n der s·
monkeys, are
01nn.,
who
is
crippled
by
a
cans
off
tlw
shelves of a
t~king lessons in how to
be&lt;'omc .thr arms and legs·of t TIII~d r fli snrrtf'r RP•mOn rti n f~ · - ,
handil'apped people.
l11e gentle, reddish-brown
.
.
lly ili\N I EL lj . HANEY

1 Calendar 1
WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING,
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM ,
Wednesday , 7 p.m . at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple;
work in the Mark Master and
Past Masters Degrees. AU
~companions invited.
EASTERN . 11)CAL Band
Hoosiers January meeting,
7:30 this evening in high
l'(:hool band room .
THURSOAY
ROCK SPRINGS BP.TTP.R
HF.ALTH CLUB, 1:15 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Jackie Zirkle. Mrs. MarY
Shaeffer to have the prugrmn
with Mrs. Phyllis Skinner to
'' '
give the contest.. __
EP I~ COPA L
Chur c h
Women Thursday t2 :30 p.m.
lunch at home of Mrs .
J
Theodore Reed.
Ml DD!.EPORT Child
Conservation League Thurs·
day 7:30 p.m. at Athens
County savings and Loan .
Cary Hysell guest speaker.
.Ja net Duffy will have
1979 OFFICERS for the Meigs County Human Resource Council are seated left, Mary
traveling
pr ize.
Skinner, treasurer; Opal Grueser, R.N., chairperson ; and standing , left to right, Helen
Refreshments
by
Ann
Ba iley, sea rtary : Gene Lyons, vice chairperson; and Marty Geyer\, program chairperson.
,Colburn
and
Thelm a
Osborne.
DEMOCRAT Party Thursday 7:30 p.f!1 . at Meigs In~.
SPECIAl...
MEETING.
Southern Local Board of
Education, 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day in high school cafeteria.
MEETING of Magnolia
Club scheduled for home of
Mrs. Edna Slusher, Thursday
evening,
postponed.
The Meig;; Count y Huma n tiona! program through the representatives.
BRADBURY
PTA regu.lar
Mrs. Mary Skinner,
Resource COuncil , its role as media be ca rried oul.
meeting,
7:30p.m.
Thursday
r~minded
an action&lt;Oriented agency or
Several of those attending tr e asurer ,
at
the
school.
•an information and l"cfcr ral commented on surveys be ing members thai membership
so urce for agency coopera· -ca iTicd out by their respec· fees are payable, $5 per individual and $15 per agency.
tion and coord i n~t tion of ser· live ctgencies in the county,
Attending the meeting were ·
vices, was the discussion a nd the. consensus of opinion
Helen
·Bailey, Mary A, Skin·
topic at the Tuesday luncheon was tha t such information
BAKED CARROTS
ncr,
Bernard
Neilun, Nan
meeting held at the Meigs slwuld be shared with other ·
Stylish way ·to offer any
agencies of the Resource Mykel Bonnie McLain , everyday vegetable.
Inn.
Elizabeth Most, all of Mental
Th~ ca11 for a r~--evi:J l uation
Council.
!-pound bag carrots, pared
of the direction in which the
Dar care, child abuse Health ; Christopher C. I.ayh , and coarsely shredded
Council has moved si nce its t carn s,
foru m s
a nd Meigs County Board of Men·
3 tablespoons butter
inception and for setting workshops. transportati on, tal Retardation ; Carol Jay,
:y, cup blanched almonds,
goa ls fo r 1979 ea rne from and ways of makmg people Gallia County Board of Men· coarsely chopped
Ma rty Geyer, program chair- awar e of t he Human tal Retardation; Gene Lyons,
4 large eggs
man .
Resource Council and its role Opal M. Grueser, R. N.,
I I', cups cmilk
''Where do we go from as (J "collective voice" were Meigs County Health Depart·
I ¥• teaspoons salt
here'" seemed to be the among the many subjects ment ; Sandy Brown, Gallia ·
I teaspoon sugar
Meigs Community Action
question posed by the pro- diseu"ed
I tablespoon finely grated
gram chairman who noted
Opal Grucser of the Meigs Head Start; Robert MeDon· onion (pulp and juice)
that various speakers from County Health Department, nell and Joan S. Culp, Gallia·
Steam the carrots until
agencies represented on the new chairperson for the Meigs Community Action ; very tender ; drain and
Council have presented their Huma n Resource Council , Leafy Chasteen , Alice spread over the bottom of a
services and that further pro- presided a t the m eetin~ Wamsley , Susan Oliver and buttered 2-quart baking dish
grams along that li ne f\\ig ht which opened with the in- Marty Geyer, Senior Citizens. (II'/• by 71h by I'/• inches) . ln
be repetitious.
·
tr odu c li on , of age n cy
a IO· lnch skillet, stirring
To encourage input from
constantly oiler m9derate
liquid as you like is absorbed. heat, brown the almonds in
those attending, Miss Geyer
Serve
very hot. Makes 4 the butter. Beat the eggs,
turned the discussion over to
main-dish servings.
John Brammer 1 chi ef of
milk, sah and sugar to blend;
clinical services at the Meigs
stir in the almonds and the
COME FOR DESSERT
Community Mental Health
onion; pour over the carrots. ·
Yogust Pie
Coffee Place in a roasting pan filled
Center,' and he served as the
YOGURT PIE
group facilitator.
with enough hot water to
It has tangy flavor .
A variety of subjects was
come about as high as the
B-ounce pa ckage cream food in the baking dish. Bake
discussed and finall y it was
By
Cecily
Brownstone
cheese
decided that a committee
in a preheated ·325-degree
Associated Press
2 large eggs
would be formed to bring pro·
oven
until a knife inserted in
Food Editor
~'2 ' CUp sugar
ject ideas and suggestions
the
center
comes out clean THRIFTY SUPPER
1 teaspoon vanilla
back to the Counci l for
30
to
35
niinutes. Cut in
Macraoni Beans
1 tablespoon cornstarch
eva luation. Volunteering to
squares
and
serve hot. Makes
Salad
'• cup milk
serve on the committee were
8 large servings.
Poached Apples
B-ounce container plain
Ellen Be ll , P ome royBeverage
yogurt
Middleport librarian , Miss
MACARONI BEANS
9-inch unbaked graham
Geye r. Sen ior Citi ze ns
Adapted
from
So
uth
cracker crust
Center . and Christopher C.
In the large bowl of an
Layh of the Meigs County American fare and highly
fl
avored
.
electric
mixer at high speed,
Board of Mental Retardation.
I'
2
cups
uncooked
elbow
beat
together
until smooth
Ms. P. !I • ': pressed her con·
macaroni
the
cream
cheese,
eggs,
cern aL ·t:• •ui ldings in Meigs
County" .. , 11 need to be more • Hi-ounce can black beans sugar and vanilla . Stir
toegether the cornstarch and
accessible to the handi capped (frijoles negros)
2 tablespoons butter or milk until · smooth ; stir into
and announced that she plans
cream cheese mixture; fold
a meeting of interested margarine
1 teaspoon ground cwnin in the yogurst; turn into the
citizens for sometime ·in
1 teaspoon tunneric
crust. Bake in a prehellied
April. She also noted that
"• teaspoon garlic powder 35(J..degree oven until center
Susan Oliver of ·the Senior
Salt and pepper to taste.
·is set - 35 to 40 minutes. To11
Citizens Center has already
Cook the macaroni ac· with fruit , if you like. Makes 8
volunteered to work with her.
Others are encouraged to · cording to package directions servings.
contact Ms. Bell a t the and drain . Meanwhile, heat
• and stir the beans with I cup
'sUPPER GAriiERING
Pomeroy library.
Ham Roll
Ways of getti ng out in- water , the butter, cwnin,
Baked Carrots
formation on services of the turmeric a nd garlic powder;
Spinach
C:l g:encies r epresented nn the add the macraoni and salt
Bread Basket
Council were discussed and it and pepper ; mix well. Heat
Frosted Cake
was proposed that an educa· gently until as much of the
Coffee

l

l '"

Meigs Human Resource
Council set 19 79 goals

~o.t · .
Ct

PREVENT
FROZEN PIPES

WRAP.IJN.,

l 'features are learning such

human chores as fetching a
boo k, opening the door ,
flicking on the lights,
answering the phone and
shopping for groceries.
i\s th ey learn new tricks,
these brainy, pint-sized monkeys are becoming the indispensible companions of a
man who was hurt in a motorcycle acc ident and a
woman who has a crippling
disease .
· Two more monkeys are in
training, and the psychologist
who came up wilh the idea
says she hopes her jnnovation
will become as useful to the
handicapped as seeing eye
dogs are to the blind .
"We have jvst begun, but it
is the possibilities that have
us excited," . says Mary J.
Willard, a consultant at Tufts
New England Medical
Center .
Crystal and Tish are capuchin mon~eys, a South
American breed best known
for its antics at the end of
organ grinders' leashes. They
cost approximately $500
each.
·
With a $2,000 grant from the
.medical ce nter, Ms. Williard
bought them about two years
ago from th e Harvard School
of Public Health, wbere they
were experimental recipients
of flu vaccine .
Now Crystal, a five-pound ,
3'h-year-old bundle of
energy, is the best friend of
William Powell , a computer
programmer at Tufts .
Powell, 31, lost the use of his
hands and legs in a
motorcycle crash in 1968, and
can move only his right arm .
At" Powell's command,
Crystal will scamper across
the floor of his downtown
Boston hotel and pick up a
book, a paper or anything
else her master needs, then
bring it ba ck to his
wheelchair.
H he wishes, she will carefully spoon food into his
mouth .
" I want her to make iny life
a little easier," he said. " I
live alone, and if she can go
and get things so I can work,
it would be good."
's latest conquest is
Jpornir&gt;oto unlock the door of

will get lessons in telephoning
the hotel switchboard in case

1

grocery store and stash them
in a shopping bag. '
Ms. Willard said the mon·
keys, which should live for 20
or 30 years, can also learn ·
many other tasks.

NORGE

INGELS F~RNITURE -&amp;
JEWELRY

•
M. U lht6

s st·ew

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. .Ian. 17, 1979

1

~a,nn
U

c·aml•a t me . lf I hctli11·l nm or

·

By HUGH A. MUWGAN
anin1a4;, down in r' lorida
AP Special Correspondent
they have • n,•w sport for
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP)
kicks. Young lx1ys, 12 to 17,
- Kida down in Florida have
drive their cars and bicycles
come up with a gruesome
in parking lots at . shopping
new game that makes you
centers , Burger Kin g,
wonder if there really is · McDonillds, etc. , and delibercivilized life on this planet.
ately try to frighten or kill
I'm going fn let a 73-year- older men and women : senior
old reader, who moved to
citizens.
California because of this
"I was a victim twice once by a speeding car and
killer sport, tell you about it
in her own words :
again by two. bicycle riders.
· "Talk about torturing In each case, they were either
prisoners and harmless lab smiling or laughing as they

JUmped nut ol their way , I
wou ld have been dead.
.. The fir st tirrrr was in front
of U1e West Pa~n !leach
Auditor ium . In a panic to
eseape the speeding ca r. I fe ll
on the sidewalk. hit mv head
and wound up unco~scious
with a fractured skull, broken
nose. hearing gone for three
mon th s, .ditto equilibrium ...
' "I was shocked bv the
wholeterribleexperien~e and
decided to move up to the
town of Stuart. 40 miles north .
It happened again in front of ·
the Stuart Shopping Center . I
heard loud laughing after

pt:1 r k 1n ~ llJ~ r ;.r ,111d a :-. I
he~~~~ wu lk!ng l j l \\ilnl !lw
Sl11rt.' .

.. , t.UJ"fl l'd :H'IJ\I IUJ

&lt;Hifl

~ dW

two bo ys about IIi t'Otn ing at
nw un Lit·) dt ·s Thi!'$ tiwe [

wm; so fri gllt&lt;'lll'&lt;i I c·ouldn 't
mo\'~

and tlll'Y ba rely m i .ss~J

"'" · .\.s I stood still and shook
with fright. they pulled up a
short distance ln front of me,

turned around and laughed at
tllC agony they had pu t me in .
"llelieve me when 1 tell you
mY experiences are not
uncommon . Many people in
condomin iums are fri ghtened
to drive or cross the street on
foot fn get groceries ...

·- !f lht• dl.'n·nt' l'i uzc r1 ~ ol
th h 4 vrurll') wanllu proh:ct
tht?rr l':nnilits frorn th is new
spo rt uf tl•rrorism fur kick s,
U1ey had heth•r start doing .
stlllldfijll j..\

kicks game . I Yo w- opinion s
"rc ,;oil cited . I'll send the best

lll'longing--s into a ·r ental
tra !l t•r &lt;.rrHI moved to

on to the poor lady in
l:.t:di fornia , but remember,
mos t s tate s ban capital
pun ishment these days .

ngbt IIUW ."
Nut knowing quite what to
do, till' I&lt;Hiy loaded all her

Ca lifor11i" : · I felt I was
losi1ig my 1nind (JOd had to get
out of Uw state ." She signed
her name and gave her new

address on the West Coast,
but I'm going to wit hold both
unti l I con figure oLt some
.liOr t of answer to lwr letter .
Maybe in !his ag &gt; of no-

Excl usive Tu rbosweep 202 po sitive
pressure lint filter agitator • porcelain
Wash basket , outer tub , t op and lid . • in stant safetv spin brake • heavv-duty 3/4
horsepower m otor.

lOOl fOI MiltON
TMIOU0140UHMI

STOll fOI
'ANT AITtC IAYINOI
ON IIOGII llANO

FREE*

;n Pomeroy, 0.

tlH' Pr1 rnt·roY M:r.. unil'
Tt•rnpiP.
·
!\1rs. Ndl it• C:asl!J wnrtlw
ill gh prit·sl&lt;•ss pro t~·rn, ~u1~ l
at

The · dJil'f n·a!"un why the&gt;

l 'nnsti tution providt•cl fnr a Thom Hs wab •hmHn of
n·ns us 11f th t• population' slwpiH' rils. prcsidt•d A letll'r
w;1s n·c_ul frum Velma .Jov
t'\' t' I'Y 10 yPars w:1.r.; tn give a
h11sis for apportionm1•nl of Rurnh·. suprl'me worthy h1gh
JTH'IIlhtTs of thL• Hnw.;t•' of rrii'Stl'Ss , COlH"l'frlinl-{ thL'
!kpn '~l· ntat ives nmnng tht• Supn•nw Shr im• Sl'sSion to ill'
:-il.lic S.
hl'ld in Ol(s Moines. I&lt;J., Ma.\
1,

:~ ;uul :~

.

,

•

IWi t~Stl'SS.

I
I
I
I

I
I
1.
I

...__o•N•-~1MlT 2PKCS. WITH COUPON ••o $7.50 .OOITIOUL PURCHASE I
2

A NW IXAMPliS

Automarlc Fabric
So frener Dispenser

.I
I

Pllg.

I'IODUCTS
UITID lllOW All JUST

•

. 1·

(UCLUDINC THIS JUM)

.

AVONDALE CUT

Gr.een Beans

Model LWA2035S -24

1;~27c

required to be reedily evailable lor sale
TOTA L SA TISFACTION
in ·. NCh 'Kiogtf S!Ofe, l liCitpt II
GUARANTEE
..-cifica!!y noltd in th is ad . ll we do
run ou1 of an 1dvertiNd i11m. we will . Evtl)"lhing you buV at KrogtK is
gutranteed lor your total •tidtction
otftr you your choice of a comparable
it..-n , wtlen 1veilable, rtflee1ing the \ regardi... of m~r~u lacturer . If you ar
oot Mtislil!ld. Kroger wi~ rltpiiiC41 your
·Mint Nvinga or • ralnched. which w11!
item wi1h the ume brtnO or • com·
~tille you tc P'' rchaa 1M 1dvertiMd
ptreble br1nd or refund your purchete
item Itt he adveniMd 'price within 30
ice.

'

DEL MONTE

Cano

~~~~~1 09

tricity and fue l

heat water when'""==
.set co ntrols at •h • . \-'-~
Energv Sentry svrnbc&gt;lii:""

Permanent Press
CL!CVI!I VAllEY

20 lb. Dryer
Permanent press cycle • regular cYc le • three heat selections • ex clusive 8 cu. ft. drum • patented po sitive pressure airfl ow system .

Model

L DE2035S ~ 24

ONLY

Grape Jelly ·

::-o69c

s1as

"Two in One Store"

Peaches ·

Middleport, 0 .

106 N. 2nd Ave .

McFANN'S MARKET

Food Savings
STORE HOURS:
7: 30a.m.to8p.m. Mondaythru Saturday
8:00 a.m.•to 6 p.m. Suryjay

c

29-oz.

C.n

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
BEEF CHUCK
.

Center Blade Cut
ch·uck Steak ..........
Serve 'N'
•
Save W1eners
...

Tomato Sauce

B
·oz.J&amp;C
Can

Krogo
Shortening

3

c

(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM)

LIMIT ONE COUPON PU FAMILY

KV

:

lb.

Fresh
Mushrooms

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES.

¥R . PIBB
1-lb .
Pkg .

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

12·0Z. PKG ... 79'

Fresh Picnic
Roast ......

29

a$
.II.
Pak

SAVORY

BACON

Df

12

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

1 lb. Sliced

Gallon

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
-Ill.
I
I
Can
..-- I
OlfE CAN WITH COIPON UD $7.50 ADDITIONU PURCHASE 1

goc

Wilson's

2% MILK

I

TAUS

J

$

·

1

c•,.GtllsttMTJ".t4TJIIUT••v••·zo am

SAVE
HALVES YELLOW·CLING

'•

ILIIIT I CAN WITH COUPOUND $7.50 UDITJONAL PURCHASE:
(UCLUDIMC THIS JT(M)
·

Del Monte
Tomato Juice

en1er Blade Cut
Roast

'~

I
I
I
I
I
I

99

-lb.
Can

.

I
I

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER fAMilY

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEW~LR~

~,~,t9-''~t

SAVE

'

FOR BOTH

3$

'--_,

. GOV'T GRADED CH10tCE.
BEEF CHUCK

I
I

Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

3 16~.109

Green
Beans

Kroger Welcomes
. Yowr Federal
Food Stamps· ..

TO DIALIIS.

FREI~CH

STYLE 01 CUT

cci.

COPYIIIGHJ lt7;- THI KIIOGIII
ITEMS AND PIICES
GOODS!JNDAY JAN . 14 THIU SATUIDAY IAN . 20 , lt1tiN
GALLIPOLIS &amp; POM EROY STORES
WI HSEIVE THE IIIGHJ TO LIMIT OUANTITIES . NONE SOlD

·

I
I

ADVERTI SED ITEM POLICY
bc;:h of Ihue · edver1illk1 1t.ema it

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread ........... .
Del Monte

TOMATO

6

JUICE •••••••••••••••••••~ .~!~
"

69e

.Borden

,~.:::~~~•~•••••••••••~:.o0z~.~~l9
::~:~.~•••••••••• : :~~ :.~~-..~ 119

TOMATO

KROGER

.

Hi Nu 2%
'lk
or
LOWIIROGI.
f at0.5%MLOWFAT
I .... ... Plaotlc Ctn.
Mlli ... GAL.
GaL

SOUP.••••••••••·•••• 510';• oz.$}.00
Campbell's

na:111~

CHICKEN
4'o'~• oz.$1 00
SOUP............. ~ •••

39e
CATSUP. ••••••••••••••• -...... ·
Libby's
·

69

Paper

·

H

oz. bottles

Shortening

s

~2·01 .

19

€an

c

KROGER

Olde Town
• d Baeon .. l·lb.
Sl1ce

Pkg.

Grade A
Large Eggs ....... .

oo• .

HOLLY FARMS , U.S.D .A . INS,PEC:TEol

Mixed ·
r Parts .......
COKE or SPRITE

B-16oz. •1 09

,•'

.

'Oefiuf.e63e.t S~etiof6

','
'

AYAILAIU AJ SJORIS WITH DIU ONLY
HOT FOODS AYAILULl.llAM -7PM
RUSSER

lb.

rown IN' Serve·
Krui, ~r Rolls

Bottles

·~~All

Meat Bologna

$ 59 .

" '

$·
KROGIIILIOW

Nex t to Elberfelds

~hrint' 37, Ordt•r of
tlw
Wlt i ll'
Shrinr·
of
.Tr·ru !-ialt•m. ml'l F'rid:1y 11 1~ht

...r.:l Monte
Catsup,

Plus tax
&amp; deposit

SHOES .·.

tlw M"r~·

Rt•pvrlcd ill were Mrs .
Mary Hugh£•s and Mrs. C'l a r &lt;:~
.\d:rms a nd {'~ u-ds \\-'t• re sent
r~ •t hl'JJ 1from ttw S/wi rw.
fkf n•shnwnts wt.·re served
111 tlw dining room duri ng a
sod:ll huur. Till' dovr prize
was won by Edwards. and the.
birt hd&lt;:~y of RHriWrct r1!Jgrm
w;ts obse rvt•d . Sht• wm;
p re~w nh•d a n•d c·arna tion .
Hoth ih L· phmtt·r door prize
and till' {'~u·natio n wen· gifts
from .J ;.wqu t• r.~1hrits c h
FtiW l l' r ,
worth y
high

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Permanent
Pres~ 20 lb. Washer

·LUNCH MEATS

' MEIGS PLAZA
. . 992-3662

ann ouni·-

6 Cycle

OF STORE SLICED

ACE.rHARDWARE

wa ~

· A ceremonial

l'd rnr Ft•b. 9 at 8 p.nt wtwn

'

FINE ASSORTMENT

.CHAPMAN

Cereinonwlannounced

rai sing them might turn the
gauw around, the just-for-

~

HARDWARE

WIIAflfJN

lauJt kjd-:;, malpn.tdit'e suits
a g .:-tin ~t th e f&gt;rofess ion of

Macaroni

··· 33c

•••• •

FIRST OF THE SE~:sOi
EXTRA SWEET, EXTRA JUICY

Temple
Oranges ...... :.... !:'~

•'

Captain's
Fish Dinner .......
VIIIGINIA
Baked Ham ................... .. lb .
Glazed Donuts ................. Each
OLD PAIHJONID

49

..
I

�~ - The

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . l7, 1979

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Thursday, Jan. 18

WANT AD
CHARGES

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Mt10rm ·

W

mcrwwdJmv

IS wo•1ls: ur Under
Cash
ChMrgt
1day

tOO

125

Card ot'Thanks

2day!i
3 W:ty~

150

t.IKl

1110

!ida)~

300

2.25
3.75

I WOUI 0 ltk€' lo lho11k thC' !otnff o f
Hnlrc• MC'ci i1Cll Ccn tC't
Or
nod( CltHi Dr Kornp oil the
1111 1 " ~"~ m the cord1oc cor e un1t
Al -.n thf' gmv ro d1ggers tho
~• ngc-r s and to oil whn con
11 1bu1C'rl· flowl"f'i money and
lood rionat1on,;
A ~ pe c a1l
lhonKs lo Rf' v O'Dell Mnnlr&gt;y
onrl RP. \1 fu grne Roush onrl to
f w.ng s Funeral Hom£1 ond to
oil who hrlpcri m many WO')'~
dur rng lhl' cieoth oi my h t~ft b om-l
I cw1&lt;: J Smllh
Sorlly rm5!1P.ci by w1 lc Ruth Sm1 th
011d Fntmly

F-&gt;Keh wurd over the minimum 15
wurtls as 4 ce)J\.s ~r ~ord p4:!r day

Ads nmnmg other Ulan (Oruecutive

Janualf 18, 1979
All lhos~ 1H1ngs on wh1ch

dwys w11! 1M! t'hargl!d wl the 1 day
rule

you've labored so hard wtll
slart to pay off thts com tng
year Put your knowledge to
work Great stndes can be
made

• In mt!mory. Coml of Th.v.nk:l and
Obituary 6 (.'tmts J)fr won!. 13.00
nummum Cuh m advanee

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Th at opllmt-Stlc d1sposit1on you

Molnle Homt- S¥1es ~:~ nd YanJ !Siiles
ure accepted only with ea!&gt;h With_
&lt;Jnler ZS t:enl dlitrt:t for adli CllrTy·
illj.! Box Nwnber In Ca.re of The Sen·

display today makes you a
dommatmg force People are

tmel.

drawn I9' YOU. They want to do
your b1dd ing in hopes 1t rubs
off on them . Find out more of
what 11115 ahead for you in 1979

to ~lit or r~]ect any a!h d~med ob-~-

,

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Your analytical facul ti es are
e1(ceptlonally sharp today Su ccess comes easily when you 're
wor~lng on any Investigative or

NOTICE

GUN SHOOT , Roe~ne Vo lu nteer
~1r e Dept Every So tu rcloy 6 30
pm ot the1r bui ldmg m Boshon
~o c t o ry choke guns only

..

-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

INCOME TAX Service Federal
and Sta te To )les qq2 2772 for
oppt s or see Wa ndo Ebhn
d1000 Laurel Ch ff Rd

Monday

INCOMf: TAX Serv1ce Federa l
and State Wa llace Russ el l
Bradbury Coli q92 7228

Noon on Sllturdll)'

lact-lmdlng projects.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Stronger bon ds can be

~~~)

py
u,_
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Once

Fr1dMy afternoon

_;_;:=~.:::.:;:::_

.

-

Tuesday
thruFn day
4 PM
thedlly before publ!calion

cemented today , so get together wtth those Important to
you Effects on the col laboratio ns wil l make everyone hap-

.

CATHIE WOOD IS now employed
by Aline WeDver s Dress and
Beauty Shop , V1ne St , Roc1ne
Perm Special S20 now S15
Blow culs , $6 All old and new
customers welco me
Phone
A Qd9 260b Mondo'/ lhru Sotur

_ _U'I

doy

you set your mmd to some thmg

today, there 's littl e doubt you 'll
get what you go after Determ i-

Lost and Found

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Farmers Home · Ad ·
FOUND WALKER Coon
natio n, co upled with opttmism , ministrat 1on has for sa le,
Chesler area 985 3861
from
f1me
fo
t1me
,
r
es1dentla
l
makes th is po ss ible .
pro per ti es loc ated 1n Athens.
LOST LARGE dark l iger
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your Me1gs, and V1nton Counties
cot onswenng to 'Ttge r
company will be ln demand Any l ice nse d real es t.,te
dleport Reword • Mrs
today because of th e pleasant , brok er inferested in lis ti ng .,
Spencer , 277 Main' St
VIVBC IOLJS man ner tn WhiCH you these properti es shou ld
dleporl 997 2750
assert yourself . It should be a .t:onta ct the Farmers Home
Adm tntstrat10n at 221 West
fun day
Second St ree t, Pomeroy . OH
GEMI~II (May 21-June 20) That 4.5769. Telephone (61.4) 992 -'
Help Wanted

goal you 've been striving so 6644 .
hard to obtai n ca n now become
a reality . Tte up all those loose
' ends that ha ve been Impossi-

ble to knot
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your
ab1l1ty to draw people together
and bnng out the best 1n them
1s w1thout eq ual tOdjiy. Take
the Jnltiat1ve . Use this wonderlu i quality lo the fu llest.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The Industriousness with whtch you

apply yourself pays off 1n double prof1ts today Go out after
something b1g .
YIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be a
takJl·Charge person today. You
are bo th bold a nd clever w1th
your tdeas. Others are just
wailm g to fo llow your lead .

LIBRA

~Sept.

23-0ct. 23) It's

utlportant that you have t he
power to hang in there today .
Some thmg that may not be
· appare nt 1s already '" yo ur

grasp and Will soon strow itself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Se·
lect lively v ts io nary companions today You wo rJ' t enjoy
bemg with deadheads, s tnce
you re burstmg wtth energy ,

both physically and. Intellectually.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You won't haYe to settle for
second-best today Aim high
and dtctate your own terms
You have the en terp ri se and
abthty to get what you want
(N EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

Today in History

By The Associa-ted Press
Today ts Wednesday, Jan.
17, the 17th day of 1979. There
are 348 days left m the year.
Today's
highli ght
in
history : On th1s date m 1945,
in World War II, Soviet troops
and Pohsh patriot forces
liberated Poland's capital,
Wa rsaw 1 more tha n

five

years after the city had fallen
to the NaZis.
On this date:
In 1707, Benjamin Franklin
was born in Boston.
In 1757, the Holy Roman
- Empire declared war on
Pru ssia .
In 1773 , James Cook
became the first explorer to ·
cross the Antarctic Circle.
In 1893, Hawaii was proc,la uned a repubhc . .
In 1917, the United States
bought the American Virgm
Islands from Denmark for $25
m1lhon
In 1977, a co nvicted
murderer , Ga ry Gilmore, got
his wish.a nd was executed by
a fmn g squad at Utah State
Prison.
Ten years ago : The new
ch1ef U.S. negotiator in the
Vtetnarli pea ce talks, Henry
Cabot Lodge, arrived in Paris ·
and said he would be neither
hard nor soft, but realistic, in
negot iations
with
the
Commumsts.
Five years ago : Egypt and
!sra'el' Iagreed to separate
their military forces along
the"Mez 't;:anal and to limit
!he arms each side had in the
area
One year ago: Middle East
peace talks were opened in
Jeru.salern with Ute fol-eign
mmisters of lsrael 1a nd Egypt
and U S. Secretary of Stale
('yrus Vance taking part.
Today's b~rth days . For mer
Attorney General Nicholas
Katzenbach is. 57 years old.
Former · U.S. diplomat
Kenneth Rush IS 69. Retired
admiral John McCain Is 68.
Ca t.cher Darrell Porter of the
Kansas City Royals is 27.
Thought for today : The
firm -basis of government is
justice , not p1ty - President
Woodrow Wilson, 11156-1924.

Ill ('lUI

WATfH WElt dn lhng W1U10m T
Oront 741 21379

( 1J 11 , u , 17, Jtc

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) James R Marsh, who
resigned as assistant to
former Secretary of State
Ted W. Brown in a dispute
over a vote recount for his
boss, was named Monday as
deputy ptrector for legal
affairs in the Ohio Office of
Budget and Management.
William W. Wilkins, OBM
director, said Marsh will be
president of the state
Controlling Board and serve
on the state Emergency
Board.
Marsh was with Brown for
ten years until he left in late
November in a dispute over a
vote recount for Brown, who
lost the 1978 general election
to Anthony Celebrezze Jr .
Marsh , an attorney, was
secretary to the OhiO Real
Estate Commission before
joinmg Brown's office.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Creattve Ohtoans have until
March 15 to apply for project
support grants from the Ohio
· Arts Council.
The
council
~a 1d
·a pplications are being
accepted
for
projects
mvolving architecture and
e nvironmental arts,
community arts, dance, folket hni c-mino rity arts,

INSURANCE SALES Must be cer
renlly hcen5ed 1n life and A &amp;.
H Selecttng a man or woman
now to attend Soles Tro~nmg 1n
slltu te Con ~e Ellperrenced or
new 1n bu siness Appl1conl s
co l i 453 OOQ6 An Equal Op
portun1 ty C_?~P?rry _ . _

SM'ALI BLA CK female poodle type
pup 9Q2 3760
~ l VI:

CHI P WOOD
Pole s mo)(
d1ometer 10" on largest end ,
!12 per ton Bundled slob $10
per lon Deh"ered to Oh1o
Poll et Co
HI 2. Pom eroy

9n 2689
TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro·
ducts Top price for stcnd1ng
saw limber Call q92.5q65 or
~Ken I_H?nby_ 1 · 4.46·6~70

CATS 61.4 ·378·b109

. . .

WH ITt:: ADULT fe male co t dec lo w
ed litter trar ned Needs 1ndoor
home Me1g s Co
Hurnone
SoClety 992 -7597

OH
WA NTE D TO buy Rural property
or acreage (10 to 100 acres. or
more) Me1gs Co noli-.,.e look
mg l or ret•remcnt s1te Prefer
Roc1ne Chester , Porllond area
Pl ease wnte Box 729·R c·o The
Do1ly Sentmel 111 Cour t Sf
Pomeroy. OH 45769
.

.

.

- -.
~

12 GA DOUBLE shotgun Good
cond1t10n No Dama scus or
! W I Sf bbl 985·4227

Auto Sales
1975 DA TSUN PI CKUP good con
d1t1on low m1loge good l~re s
_Ru_n~ g!'o_d ~n s n ~~ ~8~ ~Q~9 _
ASSUME PAYMENT 4)14 .ot .whee l
dir"e 1978 Ford short bed
p1ckup 614 -667 3305
1cin- t -HRvS LER -TOWN a~d c~~n :
try sto l1on wagon New e)l ·
housl PS . PB . good hres o ther
new por1s G ood run n1ng cond1
lion $600 742 307.4

-

-

Cera mic T•le
Counter Tops

AP Pli:::S FITZPATRICK Orchard
Sto le Rl 66Q Phone Wilkesvi lle

i -t2 -1 mo.

REYNOLD'S
ElECTRIC MOTOR
SHOP

4

plumbing $17,500.

4.52 ACRES - in the cou n
tr y . Th1S 3 bedroom home
has been r enova t ed inside,
w tth modern ki t ., gas fur
nace, L C water .and 2 car

651 Beech Street

1nventor y and furn 1sh'"gs
in a r ea l location More
de tai Is at the off ice only

992-2356

Middleport,

.

.

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save lO pel. to SO pel.
on heating cost
Experience and
lully Insured
Frae.s.f. - -

REDUCE SAFE and fa st w1th
GoBese Tableh &amp; t ·Vop 'Water
pill s Nelson Drug •
.

.

-.

.

MIXED CONDITIONED hoy Very
g ood
qu ol ; t y
Oell \le r y
ovoiloble Phone 9q'} 7201 or

997-3309

---------

SNOW
TIRE SALE

Pomeroy Landmark
~~~-Jack W. Carsey , Mar.
·

Phone 992-218 t

ONE DUAL head Freeze Kmg soft
1ce cream moc hme q92.5786
··-

NUBIAN

' 1

~~---

MilK

goat ,

991 7106
ROUND BA LED hoy 8d3-7S24

$30

SIX FOOT long sofo m good condi llon 992 3236
~--

·--·

1500 lb Me1gs Co unty's Authonz ..
ed Ver meer Dea ler
Gory
Aspm De.w ler Phone 7.4'2-2877
RUTLAND -HARDWARE 2- do~rs
down f!om Rut land Post Office
l Iorge Kmg coo l and wood
hea ter. regular priCe $398 .Q5
w1fh blower, SALE PRICE
$329 q5 w11 h free 36 )I 54 hea vy
stove board. 2 Rad1on1 coo l
heaters n:•gulor pri ce $254 95
SALE PRICE SJqq 95 w1th free 36
x 36 heo"y stove board

.

---

A NEW HOME - 1n a new
adl;tition
Beautifu l
3
bedroom. 1112 baths. for mal
dintng, large rec room,
firepla ce, full b asement, 1
acre

211,

ACRES

- New

A

frame , lar ge rec. room , J
bedroom s, l lf2 baths, uttli
carpeting , full base
, heat pu mp, storage

-~~----

15 FOOT TRAVEL t rai ler $Q75
Gas refrigerator . $50 Kmg s1ze
bed , $50 Used sofa . SJO

wooded oreo on top of h1ll
Overlooks o ver Wate r ele c
tm OYal lable 991 3B86

ground, large b a rn , milk
hou se, oth er
bu1ldin gs,
far m pond . new hom e not
com pl eted as ye t . Her e 1S a

buy . $48,000 .00 .
OVER I ACRE - 7 story
frame ,
4 bedrooms ,
re modeled, en closed front
porch, large 2 c ar garage,
Low heat
storage bldg

bills 579,500 00.
BABY FARM -

5 acres,

barn ,
chtcken
house ,
pas ture, ga rden, re mode l
ed home, 3 bedrooms, ba th ,
natu ral gas heat, ni ce k1t
chen , close'" · S16,SOO.OO .

IF YOUR HOME IS ON
THE MARKET, YOU
WANT ACTION
IF
NOTHING SEEMS TO
HAPPEN, CALL US .
WE ' LL HELP YOU FIND
A BUYER PROMPTLY.
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
HENRY E. CLELAND JR .
992-22!9
992-6t91

---------

WH L ESTABLISHED grocery w1th 1
roo m up ~ lo1 rs opl on Solem Sl
1n Rutland O~i o 742 2424 or
74131.41

---;;;;;;;;;;;~;----l

:;\

'

"fii~ GH~~

'

LA?!" VISIT
(.N.}.'e

H()8SjfjjfR

REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.
Broker

are selling.
We have many buyers and
financing available. Gall us
today to see if we can self
your home. WE NEED
LISTINGS!!
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
New Lima Rd.
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
George S. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
Phone 992-5739
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .
949-2589
Our properties

SALE PRICES

SHE NEEDS P
DOC' 6 BUl f1() W ()''{(H I
GET n OOCTOR IN A SPOT

·'"'

UK t.

E• CCV OI InQ , sept1c sys te ms.
doze r·, backhoe dum p truck
limeston e
grovel blacktop
paving Rt 143 Phone I (614 ) 1

~ERE NOW!
"lliAT OUGHTA
DO IT!

Y&amp;RE HAD "THIS PLACE
~.

O~E

FOOZVI "THIS 16
OF "11-ll!: BeST A.._

HeADS I

EVE~

SAW!

YE::ZZI I&lt;'~ FEELS

BETTEI&lt;:'N TH'

OLD ONE I I ...

..,,'
I•; i

.

•

BAT HR OOMS AND K11 chen s
remode led ce ro m1c hie, plum
bmg , carp entry and general
ma mtenonce
13 year s e.:
_per1en~ e- 9_92~ 3~8~ ___ __ _

PUlliNS EXCAVATING Complele
Serv1ce Phone 992·2478
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
ca ncel led? Los I your operolors
license? Phoneq92 21 43

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

mg Oh 1o Valley reg1on S1 x
days o week , 24 hours ser \lice
Emergenc y coils Coli 882 2952
or 862 2305.

-

Colt

Heavyweight
Alfredo
Evangel!sta has perfonned in·
amateur bull fights in Spain.

S'ound as

a dolla''

f reewa 4?

Walt. 40u have
five seconds t o

qet up here and
_...;,..-...._~ qo cal l
the
qaraqe

All carpet installid. willl
padding al no charge.
Expert Installation.

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

•4.aa

·v:.;

.'"..

~74N21 1

RUnAND
F'-IRNITURE

WE OFFEi't ' YOU ...
1. Two full floors of

~If

-·•

2. Nice selections at used
furniture .

3. A large building full of
beautiful carpet,

ii,;.;;.....
See the Grate Family at

Is. 17

PRO NE

-

..

..
.
.,,
.,

·

. Pyle. USMC JO, Brady Bunch 15, Gi ll igan's Is 19
5 30-Carol Burnett &amp; - Fr iends 3, Sanford &amp; Son 4;

News 6, Sanford &amp; Son 8, Elec Co 20. Mary Ty ler
Moor 10; Odd t:;ouple 1S ; Beverly Hillb illies 17;
Doctor Who 33.
6 0!&gt;---News 3,4,6,8, 10, 12, T3, 15; Andy Gr lffith 17 ;Brady
Bunch 19; Hodgepodge Lodge 20 , Rebop 33.
6 3,Q--NBC News 3,4,15; Carol Burnett So Fr~ends 6.
·ASC News 13,4, CBS News U.to, Over Easy 20,33;
My rhree-So~s 17
7.00-C ross-Wils J;"~~m.ily Feud 8, PM Magazine 4,
Muppet Show 6. Newlyw~lt"ame t3, NBC News 7;
News 10, Love, A rver lean Style 15, Carol Burnett &amp;
Fr iends 17 ; Hocking Va lley Bluegrass 20 ; Wild
W1ld World of Animals 33
7 3Q--Holl ywood Squares 3, Oat10g Game 4; Bonkers
6, Please Stand By 8, Jack Benny 9; , $100,000
Name That Tune TO; Wild K1ngdom 12. Nashv1lle
On the Road 13, Dolly 15; Sanford So Son 17,
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33
8 OQ--The Cha ll enge 3.4,15,7 . Mork 8o Mmdy 6,t2,13,
Wallons 8. Nova 20,33. College Basketbal l 10.

1 1 I )"

LAN CER

B;

Three Sons 4, Bton lc Woman 7, Beverly Hillbillies
8. Mister Roger s' Neighborhood 20,33, Gomer

VE LLUM

Wher e so me ho th ead s end up -

IN COOLE RS"

M ission

Imposs ible 17

8 3!&gt;---Delta House 4,6, 13
9 00-Qu l ncy 3,4,7,15; Barney Mt ller 6, 12,1 3; Hawat i

Five 0 8, Palesti ne 9,33 ; College Basketball 17,
Duchess of Duke Sl. 20.
9 3Q--Soap 6,12, 13 , 700 Cl ub 9; 10 0!&gt;---DaVJd Cassi dy
3.A.7.15; Fam1ly 6.12,13. Ba rnaby Jones B.1 0
\ 10 3h5neak Prev 1ews 9 ; Yo u Bet Your L1 fe 20 , Show
, ,
On The Road 33 .
~...~

11 00- News 3,'4;6 , 8, 10 , 12 ,13 , 15 , Di c k Ca vett 20 .
Twl l\ght Zone9 . Hogan" s Her oes 17 , lt l1 as Yoga &amp;

You 33
11 3Q--John ny Carson 3, 4,7, t5, Starsky 8o Hulch
Yesterday's Ans.,er
6, 12, 13, Mash 8, ABC News 33. Movie " Lisa " 10,
18 Token
27 Lose
Movie " A Song is Born" 17, Medtc a l Certfer 19
21 Radames'
one's cool
11 :0s---.columbo 8; 12 .3Q--I ronslde T9; L&lt; ·4C&gt;---Mannix
6, 13.
lover
30 Free-for-a!'
00-Tomorrow 3,4,7 ; 1 SO- News 13; 2· oo- News 17,
22 Del1
31 Hearten
1:2Q----Mo• le " Advent ures of Don Juan " 17 , 4·5Q---32 Texas
goodies
Dragnet 17, 5 2Q--World at Large 17
23 Uny1eldmg
sta tesman
24 Boat
34 Move
ra ce~
35 Sown : her Wednesday, Jan . 17
25 l.ovmg
38 Way to pay _

__:__--=a-=R--=ID_G_E_ _ _
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

--=---+--+--+--~-+-~ One

bidding way to slam
NORTH
• K 10 9

117

• Q

t AQ764
• A984

EAST
• 6 53

WEST

• 42

• J 10 9 7 3
• 98 3
,-+--+-II+ Q 10 5

• K864 2

t KJ 5
• 62

SOUTH
• AQJ8 7
¥ A5

enough
40 Greek

L.usmou.s

EYELA$HE$'. • •

new

.

A~IS Lttcf l-IMPID

PoOL-$, youR SYfiJRoW.f
AAf

TAt.K-TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Goo Smflll

17,

you past ga me.
It d1d get North pasl gam e
and s1x s pades became the
ftnal contract The slam
would be a c mch 1f the
d1amond finess e were to
work, but as you can see th~t
finesse was doomed to fail-

ure
South took his ace of
hearts, ruffed a heart, drew
trumps and lost the diamond
finesse

East returned the deuce of
clubs. The ordinary South
• 10 2
wou ld probably have played
• KJ 73
low on the theory that 1f East
~
mountam s , .,..-+-+-!--+-+r
held eithe r the queen or 10 of
Vulnerable: Both
•• 41 Gawked
clubs
everything would be
J..IICE iOiilNINGo
Dealer : South
:' 42 Wap1t1
But this wasn't eiperfect.
&lt;
I
West North East South
ther an ordinary South or
rJ,.AM~, you~ eYf&amp;..IDS
1+
• DAILY GRYPTOCI UOTE- Here's how to work it:
ordmary East.
Pass 2.
Pass 2 t
ARe L-IICE
Both were top experts and
l
AXYDLBAAXR
Pass 4¥
Pass 3 •
South wondered why East
1• LONGFELLO W
·Pass 6+
Pass 5+
.Siii\DOW.:$, You~
was playmg clubs for him.
:
6
+
Pass Pass
Pass
g
One l etl er s1mpl y st ands for another. In th1s sample A is
Soutb fmally wdrked out
u sed for th e three L 's. X for the t \lJO O's, etc Sing le l ett er s,
why . East d1d not hold e1ther
Pass-')
apostrophes, the l ength nnd f orma tiOn of the words are all
the queen or 10
South needed to keep that
L-----::.::::....=:.:::=:::::.::::~:::;;;::~:::;;;;...:::;;~---..;,...;,.
J!~~~!,;,!,Z,.._ han ts Eacq day th e cod e l ctte1 s arc different
• •
Opemng lead: • J
ace of clubs m dummy as an
CRY PTOQUOTES
entry for diamonds. Then, ,tf
d1amonds broke 3·3 there
By Oswald Jacoby
WINNIE
would be two good diamonds
and
Alan
Sontag
EYHFYYD
AN
J
·
BD
BZNYYOYDH
OR 15 MY M IND PLAYIN6
club discards . So South
When North followed his for
TRfCK5 ON ME BECAUSE
rose with the king of clubs ,
LI YV
DIH two-diamond response with attacked d1amonds, got the
SB H Y
JDLJS JLMBCV
I WANT 50 MUCH FOR
a ratSe to three spades he break and made his sla m .
HIM 1D BE BILL?
hoped South would be able to /NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
AMECJT
CB F .
B
make some s lam try. Had
South just continued to four
C BHJD
CBF
(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
spades, North would have
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: WHEN MEN ARE YOUNG, THEY passed . But South h ad ERN. send $1 to " Wm at
WANT EXPERIENCE AND wHEN THEY HAVE GAlNED enough extra to cue btd the Bnd{Je , '' care o f thrs newspaace ol hearts . After all, a cue per. P 0 Box 489. Red1o Ci ty
EXPERIENCE, THEY WANT ENERGY. - DISRAEU
bid below game does not get StaiiOn , New York , N l' 10019 )
(f:) 1979 Kmg Features Syndicate, Inc

YouP !Ye5

Buy where you can come In
and- what you'ra getting
- Good seiKtiDnr .;;,.. Fully
stocked.

------.

Jumbles NOISE
An swer

Flintstonpc;.

s·oo-1 Dream of J eann te 3.17 . Btonic Woman 13, My

form the surpnse answer as sug·
ges ted by the above car1oon

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Bulk
1 Mandrake 's
5 Meal
forte
II r1lm Cl itiC' 2 Nimble12 Reveal
footed
13 Contr~bute
3 Ntunber for
14 Adv1ser
Snow· White
15 O'Ne11l play 4 Catch on•
16 Saturday
5 Comment
mornmg
6 Incessantly
1V fare
7 IJquld
17 Arbiter
measure
of mores
8 " Dmner
19 Ending
at - 's 11
for Juan
9 Cheap ·
or Carmel
trans20 Exasperate
portation
21 C1ty of
10 Threefold
Manasseh
16 Nucleus
22 Beetle
Bmley
character
25 Igneous
26 Arab land
27 Turf
2H Fall to ·
keep pace
29 Paint
33 Put
together
36 Old note
37 Be of
1m port
38 Sea

J

Floor Covering In Stock

__;: ,

-~

Now arrange l he c1rcleel letters 10

FRANK&amp;ERNI_E=r~~~--------------------~-------------------------food
ii"
39 Soon

91 and 12' Vinyl

ROllAND FURNRURE
furniture.

What about that
up ahead?

brtdqe

SAVE ALOT

1

PLUMBING AND heolmg. oil
lypes , home Improvements and
electncol free es ltmoles . 0 0 &amp;
F Controc l or s
Golh po hs
446-3407 or 256 6652 •

Th1s road
qoes to the

&amp;.

M &amp; M Home Improvement serv·
1ng Gol ilpoh s. and oreo We
spec1a h ze
1n v1ny l a nd
alum1num s1ding For f ree
eshmates. co li 614 -367 0128
Gallipolis
E: C ELECTRICAL Con troc lor serv·

GASOUNE ALLEY

DRIVE ALITTLE

698 7331

~

~
ALLEYOOP

•

I

I

10,

Brady Bunch 10 , Petti coat Junction 15, Gdltgan ' s

Jumble Book No 12, cont amtng 1tOpuzzltts 1s an 1lable tor $1 75 postptld
from Jumble.c/o th1s newsp11par, Box 34 Norwood, N J.07648 lncludevour
name address, zip code and !'fJ.J.I§,a..checks payable to Newspaper~oks

THl0 ?

3 bedr , ~-:'*"
A1 r co ndi . .. ~

SAVE· ON
CARPEtiNG

-AND - MARTIN

SNOW PL OWING serv1ce
992 720 I or 9'11 3309

Yes terda s
y

Joker ' s Wt ld

Batman TO, Dmah 13; Space G1anls 17
' J&lt;&gt;-Bew ltched 3, Superman ; , 'G ill igan 's Is

(Answers tom orrow)

mep-,,_...., HO T

pl umb&gt;ng ond heol&gt;ng No jOb ,..--------..;.;:""----------,

-

•

WOW ' HFI&lt;.

8, ,

Popeyee T9, Dick Cavett 70

11'' 5 NOT RI6Hi TO
E!E AE!ANDOioJED.

I

ORPHAN-ANNIE-AWAY FROM IT ALL

RISING STAR Kennels Boar d1ng ,. :
and groom1ng , oil breeds . 1
Chesh1 re. 367 0292

too Iorge or too small Phone
742 73•8

HOWERY-

~-=

Print answer here : " (

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

0

J · J~Mash

slup•d'

Cartoon 3, Sp1der m an 4, Ho, , ..uood
Squares 15 , Merv G ri ffin 6, Dmah 7;; Porky P1g &amp;
Friends 8, Movie " They Ra n for Their _Ltves" 9;

t
b
I I I

.•

-.

Here

1

4 DO-Mister

I I I

BAL.\'- .

Pets for Sale
- ------''---"-=='---"="---- .' •

Rut land , Oh 1o ~h~n! 2_4~· 2_oo_a
Will do roofmg , consl ru cllon ,

1 3!&gt;---Days of Our Lives 3,4, TS ; As The World Turns
8,10, 1:1)()-{)ne Life to Live 6,11,13; 2 2&gt;----News 17
2 3!&gt;---Doctors 3,4,6,7,1 5; Gu iding Light 8,10, I Love
Lucy 17; 3 00-Another World 3,4,6.7; General
Hosp1tal 6, 13,4, Lilias Yoga So You 9,20 ; Speed
Racer 17, Woody Woodpecker 19; Once Upon a
Classic 33

KLUSK

bd'

•

News 8. Young &amp; the Rest less 10, Not for Womerl
On ly 15 . Mov ie " Track of t he Cat " 19.

byHenr~Arnoldand8o b lee

""

1Q65 Gener.ol , 60 )( 1'1 2 bdr
1968 Elcono , 52x 12. 2 bdr
l969 Buddy 60 x1 2. 4b dr
1970 Syl"o 60 )I 12, 2 bdr
1970Cos tle 60)( 12, 2bdr
1Q73Arlmgl on 60x 12 2bdr
1973 R1dgewood 70 )1 14 3 bdr
1973 K1 rH wood , 50 x 12, 2 bd r
B &amp; S MOBI LE HOME SALES
PT PLEASANT. WV
675·4424

---~~---

B.10; Password 7, T5 , Elec Co 20,33 Movie " My
Sister Eileen" 17
()(}...Hollywood Souares 3,7, All MY. CbiJ.dlia___!&gt;_._g,Jl ,

~
r

1955 Pro1ne Schooner 28 x 8.

and lo boys for h1re w1fl haul
SECLUDED IN TOWN 'living . All
fi ll drr l , to so1l , limes tone and
eleclr1c 3 bedroom 111, boihs
gravel Coli Bob or Roger Jefcarpe ted , fomdy room w dh
fer s do')' phone Q91706Q, mgh t
fronk hn sto"e garage, 1 1
phone 992 3525 or 992· 523 2
acre lond Neor Meigs H1 gh
----School To se~ co ll 992 6287
EXC AVATING do1er ba ckhoe
and d1tche-r Cha rles R. Hot
f1e ld , Ba ck Hoe Serv 1ce .

12 : 3Q--Ryan' s Hope 4,6,12,1 3, Search for T omorrow

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

'..

~~~;. ~ 1p~~~n:i~/;e~~ontoge -·~

Sweepers toosl ers 1rons oil
smal l oppl1on ces lawn mower
n e~&lt;t to Stol e H1ghwoy Garage
on Reule 7 Phone (614) 985-

12 ·00-Newscenter 3; $20,000 Pyram id 4; _Jeo pardy
6,15; News 7,6,10; Young 8. the Restless 8, Mlddoy
Magazme 13, Love Amer~ can Style T7, Medical
Center 19

four ordmary words

:.=:
------------....
I Q67 TOTAL ELE CTRIC mobde '4fli
home , lurn1shed
was her and d ryer

20; Nova 33 . I T 5.5-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
News 17

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one tener 10 each square, 10 torm

1'1 ACRE 12 )I 60 mobile home ~
near OeiC ter 9Q2 5858

-

CHESTER - Good S bedroom house with full
747 30'13
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A 1Q77 CHEVROLET PICK UP auto ,
basement and 2 balhs. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 ocre
shor t bed 992-3240
- ----------two-year-old child died and
land and la rge storage building. Price $21,500.
t
973
TORINO
P
S
P
B
.
A
C
,
three other persons were inTWO ACRES-A beautiM 4 year old, 2 bedroom home
auto
F o~r
condlf 1on
with large eat-In kitchen, 2 bedrooms, all nicely
jured in a house fire Monday
Reason oblo qq2-3914 after 4
carpeted , 2 baths, full basement with TV room . Many
- --- - ·- ------mornmg 10 Dayton.
19n CHEVROLET IMPALA . Ex·
more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
Fire officials say -Dana
ce llent cond1110n 742 2524
furnace
. All th1s and two nice acres of land 1n a good
Taylor was killed in the blaze
location Will go quick for $35,000 .
and her six-month-old sister
ACREAGE - with la rge beef barn near Pomerot"
HEADQUARTERS
For Rent
Bathsheba was seriously
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL - This may be your dream
For all your Appliante
injured.' A third child is listed COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
home. It has a large kitchen wllh lots of cabinets,
Needs .
Route JJ . north of Pome roy
stove,
refrigerator ~nd dlshw.11sher. Beautiful dining
in fair condition .
Lorge lots Col i flq2 7479
room with sliding glass doors. ~arge living room and
----------The house was enguHed in
3 AND 4 RM furn1shed and un ·
family room. and to finish this well-laid out home we
fire " en
flames ' when
furn1 sh ed
opts
PI-lone
have live bedrooms, utility room ond garage. Very low
JACKW.
arrived . Damage in the blaze
997-5 43.&lt;
healing
bill . Reel barn-like storage building Located
CARSEY
- -- - . -kitchen
· ---fu r-was initially set at between TWO BEOROdM
about ten m1nu1es north of Pomeroy lust off Rt . 7.
msh ·
Mgr.
Asking SSS,DOO.
$15 ,000
and
$20,000.
eel opl Coli before 8 am
Phone 992-2181
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 1'12 story house,
Firefighter s say the blaze . 997-2288
- . completely
carpe1ed wllh 4 bedrooms, dining room and
was caused when com- ONE BEDROOM mobile home
lau.ndry ro~m . _A lso almost new 2 car heated garage.
bustible items stored between
_od.u ~ts on_ly . 9'}2_2~96
ThiS home 1s n1cely located In Portland and PRICED
Real Estate for Sale
a water heater a nd a furnace SLEEPING ROOMS reasonable
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500.
THREE BEDROOM fram e home in
..~f!e~ 4_ c~ ll_ 9~_7~9 1__ .. _ _
tgruted.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up-near Pomeroy .
M1ddlepor1 Co ll992 3457 .
One fireman suffered TWO BEDROOM mobd e Mome
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'1' s1ory house with full
- ··-- -- --· ·- - -'
basement. Lorge pond stocked with fish . Priced for
neor Dexter near No 1 Mme
FARM FOR sole House 2 barns
minor burns in the blaze.
quick sale $40,000.
997-5858
tro1ler ' Lorge pond 10 acres or
- ··-- -- ------- - 82 acres 742-75b6
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost new
FIVI::: ROOM colfoge 769 Brownell
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)
REAL
ESTATELOANSVA
'
:
N~
kitchen
cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room, all·
_Ave Mr~d~eporl 9~5 ]9!~
The governors of Kentucky
money down (e t;g;bl e
-Insu lated, natural gas heot, utility building, 2 lots.
and West Virginia were •
Ve l erens) . FHA ·• A s low as ·3..,..
$21,500.00.
scheduled to meet in
down [oil non Veterens and
T•lk to a local real estate agent before trying to sell
genercl public) To purcMose
your home. His experience Clln help you. We need
Washmgton D.C. Monday to
PROBATE COURT OF
real eslo te or refi nance. 30
many types of property, alva us 1 call.
discu.ss Ute decision by Ohio
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
YEARS
TERMS
IRELAND
MORCALL JIMMY DE EM, ASSOCIATE 949·2J88
ESTATE
OF
CARRIE
E.
utilittes to stop buying coal
TG'\GE CO . 77 E Slote Sl .
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE949-2654
SMITH, DECEASED
•
from outside the state.
Cue No. 22:,575
.
~
th~n~
~~~'"~£161~
·
~9~·3~5~
_ .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
NOTICE OF
Kentucky Gov Julian
HOUSE FOR sole. Locot1on
APPOINTM.ENT
Carroll and West Vir~ia
Ma son WV Folir bedroom spl il
OF FIDUCIARY
level built 10 k1lchen with
Gov . Jay Rockefeller wer to
On January 4t h, 1979,1n the
OWNER MV:O r ~ELL- The own er 'ot thi s
fgs Co unty Probate Court,
o;.-en , range garbage dls,posol
meet with U.S. senators fr m Me
charming
2 story , tone home in Middleport
.
Case No. 22.575, Irene La
and bar Fon~uly room , dining
Ute two states.
Mont. 300 Surface Drive,
must
sell
now· so she is offering this 'l ine
room, whole house corpef1ng
Carroll says the dec:isioo by Char!eston , w. va . 25302 was
Full
sire
basement
Cent
ral
air
home
for
a
low, low price of $20,000; There
appotnted Executrix or the
and forced o~r gas heo( All
, Ute Ohio utUiUes could have estate of Carrie E . Sm lth,
~re 2 bedrooms_ (I is extra large), spacious
drapes plus washer ond dry er .
:serious impact on Kentucky, deceased . late of 865 Peart
ltvmg room w -f1replace, formal dining eat81j!ckyard 10 ft high cedar
Street, M tddleport
Ohio
both in the sale of coal and 45760 ,
I
in kitche", bath w-shower, garage &amp;-a' king
fconce and cedar deck!.• fo1 ·
loss of severance tax
J'H I"Ocy Healed goroge Clou
s1zed vard . Good location on Mill St. Call the
Mann ing o. Webster
to school . store pork and tenn1•
revenues. The governor has
W1~eman Real Estate A9ency Gallipolis
Probate Judge
court Cont racl C.ory L Gihbs
indicated Ute possi bllity that
' 446·3643.
'
'
Clerk
Cnl
1614
q49·77
4fl
(t I 10, t7, 24, 3t ~
a suit might be filed .
)

\1\t\11.\.ft fii)\1 W

~ ~ ~~U;l~ ®

Mobi le Homes for Sale

-~-

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

''POS.EIDON":

AS I I~"

3H25
CORNER LOT loca ted at in tersec
l 10n of SR 124 7 and 33 1n SEWING MACHINE Repo1 rs , ser·
Pomeroy Oh1o 992· 2449 or
v1ce all makes 992 2284 The
991 73•2
v-------i-= obr 1c Sho p
Pomero i
. . . .
Aulhonz ed S1nger So l es ~• and
HO USE IN
M1ne rsvtl le
4
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc1ssors
bedroom hvmg room , k 1tchen ,
····---both and utd 1ty room N1ce full
EXCAVATING dozer loader and
me basemen! 992 5823
bacKh oe wo rk dump truc ks

r

Si-IARK WITH
A &amp;ELLVF-UIOF- GOLD !

'"
1

700-15-6 Ply
$37.36
700-15-6 Ply Deep Lug
$42.4S
Mounted &amp; Ba
Phone 742:-ll:ll

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

at

PTL Club T3;5 5&gt;----Sunme Semesler 10
6·00-700 Club 6,8, PTL Club 7,15; 6 1Q----News 17 ;
6. 1&gt;----Perspeclive 19,6 1&gt;----For You. Black Woman
T~
.
6·3Q--Doctors on Cal l 4 , Arlhur Sm1th 6, Romper
Room 17; 6:4&gt;----Morn Jn g Report 3. 6 so--Good

IELFENN

BRADFORD. Au ctioneer Com·
plete Serv1ce Phone Q49 2.467
or 94Q-2(X)() Rocm e, Oh1 o, Cn tt
Brad fo rd

iJ:

THURSDAY , JANUARY 18,1979

I AREETA

Phone : 742-3110

--·---

" Amb us h

5 .4G-World at Large 17; 5· 45- Farm Repor t lJ , 5 50-

CHtfJ CHOPPeR . HE MADE SOME
CRAZ.V REMARK ABOUT

-- AND HE'S St:EN HUNT IIV'
THE- CRITTeR EVER S INCE

Pomeroy, 0.

THE SWEEP

Business Services

---

GREAT WHITE

DO"''T MK Mt: HOW HE EXPECT!&gt;
T'TRACK IT DOWN,,WHEN t A?KED

Don ' t let a c h im ney fire p ut
a dam per on your l1fe
Ca ll .

__Real Estate for Sale

POMEROY,O.

IITTILA, THE

50 THE SHARK GULPS
THE GOLD STATUE ALOI&lt;l6
WITH CAPTAIN MAI(.(JS ARM

Insured

t 1,3-lJ'!l,Q_,

J ', acres 1n Po meroy Secluded

, patiO $37,500.00
ACRES n1ce laymg

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

-

Will

WASH TELLS
eA9V A&amp;OUT

11 ·9· 1 mo.

Kim, White, Proprietor

3 50- Mov ie

Loe of Life 8, 10. News 4. Bewtfched 19, Sesame St

Chtmnev
Sweeps Gullet

'C.II992-2772

T7.

CAPTAIN EASY

-.

Call992·7113
For Free Es11mates-

19th 'century- service wi1h
20th Century Know-How .
Spectallaing In
Wood stove, Oil Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flues

17; Fllntstones T9 .
10:0Q--Card Sharks 3,4,7, 15, Edge of Night 6; All In
The Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie "That
Funny Feeling" 1710 3Q----AI I Star Secrets 3,4,7,15,
Andy Griffith 6; Price Is R1oht 8.1 0. $20,000
Pyramid 13; Inf inity Factor y 9, II OQ-- H i~ h Rollers
3,4,6, 15; Happy Days . 6,12. 13. Rainbow's End 9,
Andy Gri ffith 19
t1 3!&gt;---Whee l o1 Forlun e 3,7,T5, Fam1 ly Feud 6.11,13,

To maha wk Gap" 17

Member of

-JIM KEESEE

Housing
Headquarters

3 30- News

220 E. Main Street,

Ph. !!2·2174

Bkrtvn Insulation

ASSOCiates

-

.

0.

f.~

.
EWOTT
APPUANCE II

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

J&amp;L

Sue P. Murphy

MAIN
-

.....

1-4 t mo. (Pd.)

PROPERTY IS THE BEST
INVESTMENT YOU CAN
MAKE .
CALL
A
REALTOR FOR BEST
RESULTS .

_

9 30--Brady Bunch8; Hogan ' s Heroes 10; Green Acres

DO---News 3.4.6.8 ,10.7,12,t3. T5. Twilight Zone 9;
Rockford Files 8, ABC News 33; Mo(,e " Th e L~st~

YQUr HeadquarteiS For
Armstrong,,Carpeting
.,

...
..............

Psychi c

Men " 10, Mov ie " The Strtpper" 17
12 40-Mannlx 6, 13; Koj ak 8. 1 00-Tomorrow 3 4 7
1 30-Movie " Pony Express" 17; 1· 50-News'

4•st-ttc...

Service
.._

18 Years Experience
Will Make
Service Calls

ga rge $77,500
BUSINESS - All stock at

PIGS FOR sole Q4Q 2857 after 5
.

HAMMOND ORGANS

of

World

Hogan ' s Heroes 17. Lilias, Yoga &amp; YOu JJ .
ll JO-Jo hnny Ca r son 3,4,6.7 .15, Police Woma n 6 13

k '

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
--;l{lso Transmis$ion
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Tyree Blvd., Racine, Ohio, '
- Phon e 941-2111. Evening
after s . P .M : Weekends
•tter 12 noon .
12-31-1 mo.

II

..••

St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland, I
'
0.

Amaz tng

News 20
lO 30-We're No · l 7 ,·T hieves of time 33 , Turnabou t 20

~­

•

" The

Phenomena " 3,4. 10 OQ----Vegas 4,6,13, Kaz 8,10,

Jig

¥. mile off Rt. 7 ]ly-pass on

SUN DINS

9 so-Movie

___;.JJ .••.

~E

sALES REP. FOR

PK&gt;NE 742-2328

3

bed room frilme home wit h
back yard and 2 car
ga rage
11...2 bath s and
nat ural gas heat
Only

PEA HAU LI::RS CB Soles Equ 1p·
ment now on sol e, oil m stock
Rodioft ond occessones lhro ugh
Chmt mos Open every day ex
capt Sunday and Mon day
EVen1ngs by opp om tm enl
Portland , Ohto
Phone

ELEVEN MONTHS old Hom p Boor
450 lb 742 292S

Ceilings

Depend On ....

1&gt;69 3785

H43 7064

.
..
.. ,,

ROGER HYSEll

PETE SIMPSON

Formica
-

(Suspended, Texture! - Tile
. Floors . Panellng &amp; Trim.
Quality Work You Can

G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L . Teaford

COAL UMt:STONE sand grov el
cclc1u m chlonde , f e~ fl l 1z er . dog
food , ond al l types cf salt Ex
ce ls1 or Sal t Works Inc , f: Mo1n
St Pome roy qn.:JB91

- - - -

WANTED TO buy ol d 1ewelry
Coli 9Q2 5262 or wr1te Kay
Cecd, 87 S 2nd, M1ddleport ,

VIRGIL B. SR. 1..1!'!!:111
992-3325
211 E. Second Street
BRICK HOUSE

$T5,000
EDGE OF TOWN -

WtDNESDAY , JANUARY 17, 1979

"

- --·------

r-- -

Hlmmond
&amp;
Low•!!
Org•nt , Story &amp; Cllrk
Pi•not . S•les &amp; Service.
(New &amp; Used) . Serv ice on
Current
S•les.

- Room Additions-C ustom Remodeling-

For Sale

OLD COINS pockel wolches
cl ass rmgs weddmg bond s
d1omonds Gold or silver Call
R og~r Wa~s l ~y- 7~2 - 233! . .
WANT TO buy ol d 45 and 78
phonograph reco rd s
Col i
qq2 6370 or Contac t Mortm Fur

.

KITTEN 7 mo old Wh1te
black and gold spots

wllh
997 7689

OLD FURNITURE . tee boxes . brass
beds ~r on beds . desks etc
comple te households Wr1t e
M D Miller . Rt A Porroeroy or
call q92 71b0

-

MALt: and 2 female pupp1e s

b weeks old fl 14 667 638 1

~fMALE

AL TROMM mNST.

ing $15,000
TOWN LOCATION -

Reports 10; News 13.
. 7 00- Today 3,4,6,7 , 15 ; Good Morning America
6,7, 12, 13, CBS News 8: School les 10; 3 Stooges 17;
Romper Room 19 .
7 3Q--Famlly Affa ir TO, New Zoo Revue T9; Studio See
33 ; 8 oo--Capt Kangaroo 8. tO ; Leave It to Beaver
17 , Fred Flintstone t9, Sesame St 33
8 3Q--Hazel t7; Groovle Goolles 19, Sesame St 9,
9 00-Merv Griffin 3. Phil Donahue 4, T3.15,
Emergency One 6, Hogan ' s Heroes 8, Match game
10, Lucy Show 17, Tom 8. Jerry t9

TELEVISilJN
VIEWING

:·..

Business Services
"

bedroom house on hard
road w ith nat gas, drill ed
we ll , nice
k 1t
with
dtshwasher
and coppe r

Give poway___

wanted to Buy

literature, theater, media,
music , and visual arts.
The council awards grants
based on the
recommendations of panels
or professionals in each
artistic area .
Application deadline is 4
p m ., Ma rc h 15 at the
council's off1ce, 50 W. Broad
St , Sutte 3600, •CollllllbUS,
Ohio 43215.

- --- --- --

IF VOU have a serv1 re lo alter
wont lo buy or sel l somethmg
oe ,oak 1ng for work
or
wholeve r
you II gel res ul ts
lo ~ t e r w1f h o Senhnel Wont Ad
Coll992 215b

M orning , West V i rgin ia .13 , 6 S~huck Whi te

'

r-----------------------~------------------------------~-----------1 ~' ~..

be d room s,
1 ":~
bath s,
n atural gas furn ace, ctty
wa ter in town near shop

Yard Sale

.

"·
•'

'. . . , . . . - - - - - - - - . -------,-_.:.__

HAW ROOM b(lord anrl laundry
111 pri ... ote home W1ll toke
-.r- rrH .nvohd 99'1 547:.1 Elcicrly
lady

dog 1n
stnped
1n M1d·
Ed11h
, M1d

&lt;.. Oil" 1 ntff' 0111
11p M1dd lr&gt;pnt I 11001 Ru !lond
Cedi qq:,~ 74tH

I IQMf~l f f l, 1(11

TRIMMING and I CITiovol
., 11 :1167 or 747 757 3

WH t CAffE for elder(y pN ~on " '
pn vo 10 home Hl Pomr.rn y
hut
f vf'r ythl llQ l u rnl!ohPCi
mrd•cohon $'}50 per month
Coll 997 b072

.

~

T R~f

~

Phone 992-2156

al! new Astro-Graph Letter for

btrth stgn

Will \ ARI IN lh(' &lt;'lcil'il y
h("'tnl" Phonf'llq"l t:l l J

-Notices
-- - - - -

GUN SHOOT Ro n ne Gun C!ub
hC'1 y Sunday I pm Factory
choke guns on ly

red l~rtaun

by se,nd ing for your co py of the
t979 . Ma1l $1 for each and a
long self-addressed , stamped
envelope to Astro-Graph , P.O.
Box 489, Rad1o C1ty Station,
N Y t0019 Be sure to specify

Real Eslale tor Sale

Services Offered

The Publisher reserves lhe Mgtn

jet11onwl The Publisher w1U not be
responsible for more thlln one incor-

Daily S.:~tinel , Middleport-Pomero y. 0, Wednesda) :Jan li. 197!1

DICKTRACY

______

BARNEY

SOME VARMINT STOLE

HE~E 'S

A BOOK
PIRATES, 51 R.

f WONDE~ IF THEI{
I{OU MEAN 6V'r'5
MAKE TREASURE MAPS
Wio-10 STEAL OTHE~
PEOPLE'S RECORDINGS ? TELLIN&amp; WHERE THE
RECORDINGSARE BURIED,..

~OU'RE HOPELESS,

Ril7s_riR.:.:.!_ ___.~J;w;J

A TRAFFIC SIGN OVER
INTWIN FORKS
'IESTIDDV, SNUFFY

WHO QN RIRTH
WOULD DO R
THING LIKE
iHAT?

�10 - The Daily Sentinel , Mid~eport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday . Jan . 17. 1979

ley roads. early today
forces school closings
By The Associaied Press
lc~oated roads in south-

TIME
WITH

-SPEIDEL

~J

All stain les s stee l. water
and shoCk resista nt screw
back case . A smoke rhod ium f inished degrade
dia l w 1th brushed center
panel and mineral glass
c rysta l. St ai nless stee l
Thinline Twis t 0 -Fi ex

wa tch band

11' F

MA IN . POMEROY

the ex treme southeastern
portion of the state. High
temperatures Thursday will
range from the 20s to the .low
30s.

eastt:!rn Ohio spawned a ra sh

of traffic accide nt s this
morning.

The Ohio Highway Patrol
reported a 17-vehicle pile up
on Route 'i near Brilliant. On
another section
oute 7
two steel-haulin g trucks
skidded and nipped on their
sides, blocking the road.
Wintersv ille poli ce said
road conditions were s0 bad
in some areas they could not
get to some of the accidents.
And Interstate 70 east to
Washing ton , Pa.,
was
described by the patrol and
other highway officials as a
sheet of ice.
Many school districts in
sou theastern and central
Ohio were closed because of
th e slick road conditions.
ln Columbus. many people
were injured in falls as they
tried ta walk on ice-eovered
sidewalks in the city. Fenderbender automobile accidents
were numerous.
Colder temperatures and
on ly sma ll amounts of
precipitation are expected
tonight and Thursday over
the state. Snow flurries are
e~pected in northern and east
central Qhio tonight, with
decreasing cloudiness elsewhere in the state.
By Thursday, with a high
pressure wne centered over
the Mississippi Valley, snow
flurries should be restricted
to northeastern Ohio. Mostly
su nny s kies will prevail
elsewhere.
The National Weather
Se rvt ce
for ecasts
low
temperatures in ··the teens
tonight, except in the 20s in

ospital News
H"lzcr M"dical Center
llisrhargcs, Jan.16
Kenneth Adkins, Ruby
Allen , Maudie Anderson,
Judy Brady, Linda Burns,
Judson Clark, J&amp;l;sie Cottrill,
Geneieve F.dmiSton, Cheryl
Fraley, Melan ie Fry, George
Hennema n, David Johnson,
Marvin Kelly, l~ rry Lane,
Jr, J ohn Lik ens, Nirma Long,
Mary McGinnis, Charles
Miller, Michael Miller, Hazel
Norton, Phillip Parsons, Misty Ratliff, MRs. Joseph Russ
and son, CArrie Sa unders,
Robert Sc heffler, Peter
Sewar, ,Minnie Smith, Gladys
Stiffl er, Cha rles Straight,
.David Tulloh , Lawrence
Wea rs, Sandra Wicker.
Births, Jan . 16
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Varian , son, Mason , W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Lester
· Rawlins, daughter, Oak HilL
Mr . and Mrs. Curti s
B a 1s den ,
dau g ht er .
Galhpolts.
Mr. and Mrs. John Newlun,
daughter, Long Bottom .

.

GRADUATE II
MACHINE MODEL 724

--

. 7

'I. . ~

~~-/~.. :.,

J

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions
Wendi
Krautter , Re e dsville ;
Flrence Hannay, Middleport ;
An ge la Dailey, Pomeroy ;
Phil Baldwin, Gallipolis ;
Marie Marcinko, Tuppers
Plains ;
Dora
Smith ,
Pomeroy; Julie Ri'chards,
Pomeroy ;
Freeman
Williams, Minersville.
Discharges - J&lt;;arl Glass;
Kathy Mees, Martin Nesselroad, John Williams, Carol
Hubbard , Pearl Hoffman,
Gretta Riffle, Ellen Rought ,
Dorothy Wright .

II

Falls inj~
two persons

.i

CLOSEOUT
SPECIALS
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Pomeroy, Ohio

Two resi&lt;Wnts were taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital Wednesday morning
by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad as li result of falls one caused by ice.
At 8.:53 a.m. the squad went
to Hysell Run for Mrs.
Thelma Garrett who received
apossible fractured wrist in a
fall on the ice. At 9:44 a .m.
the unit went to Rock Springs
for Della Curtis who received
a possible hip fracture when
she feli in her bedroom.
SQUAD CALLE[)
The Emergency Unit of the
Middleport Fire Department
was called to 760 Laurel St. at
4:21 a.m . Wednesday for
Nancy Pope who was treated
on the scene.

COUNCIL TO MEET
Middleport Village Council
will meet in specia l session
Wednesday, Jan . !7, at 8:00
p.m. in council chambers to
take action on appropriations
ordinance.

ELJITII L. HETZING
Mrs: Edith L. Bet zing, 77,
died unexpectedly at· her
home in Tuppers P lains
Tuesday morning.
Mrs. Betzing was born on
Silver Ridge in Meigs County,
a daughterofthe late William
and Elizabeth YoWlg Christy.
She was a member of tile
South
Bethel
United
Methodist Church and the
Daughters of America having·
served as a pa st stat e
councilor. She was a member
of the Retired Senior
Volunteer program at the
Senior Citizens Center and
had been a resident of Tup·p ers Plains for 21 years.
Surviving are a daught er,
Mrs. Dana (Bernice ) Hoffman , Jr. , Rutland; two
grandsons, Charles Hoffman,
· Columbus, and Steve Hoffman, Masslllon; a greatgranddaughter , Tina Hoffman, and a great-grandson,
Christopher Hoffman.
Also surviving are four
brothers, Garrett Christy,
Grove City; Delphin and
Orville Christy, both of
Columbus , and Howard
Christy of Lexington, Ind.;
four sisters, Ada Swank,
Akron; Mildred Martin ,
Athens; Hazel Barnhill,
Tuppers Plains, and Nellie
Schumacher, Columbus.
Preceding her In death
besides her parents were her
husband, Charles F. Betzing
in 1973 and four brothers.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Friday at the
White Funeral Home in
Co olville with the Rev.
Richard Thomas officiating.
Burial will be in the South
Bethel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after Thursday.
The Daughters of America
will conduct services at the
funeral home at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday.

Jail tenn
suspended
&amp;bert Lee DeMoss, 19!
Pomeroy, was fined $500 and
costs and given a 90 day
suspended jail sentence when
he appeared before Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night on a charge of
discharging of a firearm
while intoxicated.
,
DeMoss allege&lt;!Jy fired a
gun Friday night with the
discharge striking Robbie
Clonch, 9, Pomery, In the left
leg.
- Clonch was treated at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and was later removed to
Holzer Medical Center as a
result of the injury.
DeMoss was placed on
probation for six montbs
when he appeared In mayor's
court Tuesday night on the ·
charge filed by the Pomeroy·
Police Department.
Also fined in the court were
Roy Boggs, Middleport, $50
and costs, for driving while
under suspension, and $500
and costs and 90 days In jail
on a charge of driving while
intoxicated, and Mark
Zielinski, Reedsvllle, $31 and
costs, on a speeding charge.
Forfeiting bonds in the
court were Leonard Wagner,
Piqua, $30, posted on an
improper backing charge;
Charles Hill, Racine, $30, left
of center; William Barnhart,
Pomeroy, $27, Rose Rillle,
Mason, $27, and · April
Hayman, Racine, $27, all
posted on speeding charges.
Alfred Birchfield, Route I,
Middleport, forfeited a $50
bond in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. The bond was
posted on a disturbing the
peace charge.
Fined $50 and costs in the
court on a charge of disorderly manner was George A.
McDaniel, 51, Middleport.

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

WILLIAM MUL!.!NS
William M. Mullins, UJ, Rt .
1. Stout sville, 0., died
Tuesda y in Springfield.
He was preceded in death
by his wife, Marjorie White
Mullins.
He was the son of William
Francis and Mary Mullins of
Hartford, W. Va., born May
10, 1917.
He worked as a farm er.
He is survived by two
children : Floyd Shepard of
New York and Mrs. Harold
!Doris) Horn , Stoutsville.
He is also survived by two
brothers: Roy , of Middleport ,
and WilSon of Springfield,
and one sister , Miss Lillie M.
Mullins, Gallipolis.
Services will be at the
Wellman FW!eral Home, 1455
N. Court, Circlev ille, Thursday , I p.m. Burial will be in
Springlawn Cemetery.
Friends may call Wednesday at 2 p.m. Wltil the
funeral.

from implementing plan

J.Jo:XtN!J'I'ON, Ky. lAP ) .\ suit has been iiled in
federal court to stop the U.S.
Environmental
Protection
Agency'from implementing a
proposed policy tha t would
prevent Ke ntucky coa l
operators from selling coal to
Oh io electric utilities.
McCoy-E lkhorn Coal Corp .
of Pikeville charged in the
suit , filed her.e Tuesday, that
the EPA 's proposed action
was an un co nstitution a l
interference with interstate
commerce .
McC oy-Elkhorn,
a
subsidiary of General Energy
Corp. of Lexington, asked the
court to stop the EPA from
implementing the order and
to declare the section of the
in volved
to
be
law
Wlconstitutional.
The firm said th e proposed
order had already put· its $7
million-a-year contract with
BELLE THEISS
Belle Theiss, 84, Route 3, an Ohio utility in jeopardy
Racine, died Tuesday at the and was interfering with its
right to sell more coal in
Jackson Care Center.
She was a daughter of the Ohio.
The federal Clean Air Act
late Peter D. and Rena Lane
Karr. She was also preceded and amendments added in
in death by her husband, Carl 1977 limit the amount of
H. T)leiss; a son , Herman.K. sulfur dioxide that utilities
Theiss ; a brother, Dennie can release into the air while
Karr, and a sister, Katie burning coal.
To meet the EPA's antiBeegle.
,
Surving are a son, Kenneth pollution requirements, ohio
R. Th eiss, Racine ; two utilities have been switching
daught·er s, Irene Hoba ck, from highsulfur Ohio coal to
Syracuse, and Mildred lower sulfur coal from
Crawford, Columbus; 12 Kentucky and West Virginia.
The utilities would have
grandchildren; 15 greatgrandchildren, and several had to install devices on their
smokestacks to remove the
nieces and nephews.
Mrs, Theiss was a member ~ulfur dioxide if they were 16
of the Bethany United continue burning large
Methodist Church at Darwin. amounts of Ohio coal.
Funeral services will be
But the EPA wants the Ohio
held at l p.m. Friday at the. utjlities to install the devices ,
Ewing Funeral Home with ca lled scrubbers, and to
the Rev. Steve Wilson of- continue burning Ohio coal .
The EPA has justified its
ficiating . Burial will be in
Greenwood
Cemetery. action on a section of the law
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

Residents

could he
eligible
Person s who have installed
insulation to combat high
energy bills may be eligible
for a tax credit according to
Karl Kebler, manager of H &amp;
R Block, 608 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy.
The Energy Tax Act of 1978
allows homeowners or renters who have purchased
energy savings devices to
claim a tax credit based on
th e cost, including installation, of these devices .
These devices include insulation, storm and thermal
windows, clock thermostats,
caulking or weatherstripping
e~erior doors or windows
and electrical or mechanical
furnace ignition systems
which replace gas pilot lights.
The tax credit for these
devices is 15 per cent of the
cost, up to a maximwn of $300
for each residence.
A tax credit is also
available to persons whose
property transmits or uses
solar, wind, or geothermal
energy, or other forms of
renewable energy used .to
heat or cool a - principal
residence, or to provide hot
water for · use in the
residence. The maximum tax
credit for this property, including installation cost, is
$2,200 for each residence.
·
These tax credits are
retroactive to any expenditures made after April
19, 1977, and may be claimed
on the 1978 return.

Cou.rSe offered for secretaries
HUt~TINiiTUN - A sevenweek Executive Secretary
and Certified Professional
Secreta~y (CPS) Review
course wUI be offered by the
Community College at
Marshall University,
Qt!glnning Saturday, Jan . 20,
and Contfnuing on subsequent
Saturdays through March 3. ;
The non-credit, continuing
education course will be
taught by-Phyliss Estep, CPS
and a senior administrative
secretary with Union Carbide
Corporation in Charleston,
from 9 a.m. Wltil noon in
Harris Hall Room 101.
."This is the flrst time
Marshall has offered this
course which not only
provides area secretaries
with a means · of selfimprovement , but also
prepares them for the CPS
exam ination ," saitl Mrs .

Suit filed to stop EPA

Shirley
Overholt,
MU
assistant professor of office
administration, who is
coordinator for the course. ·
Among the topics to be
discussed
are
office
procedures
and
administration, ranging from
traditional to the latest duties
evolving from changes in 1
business data processing.;
secretarial planning; public .
·relations; executive travel
plans; office organization; .
control techniques , and work
simplification.
The course will cost ~~r. ·
plus textbooks. Registration
will be conducted at the first
class session. Additional
information may be obtained
by calling Robert L. J,awson,
CC continuing- edtlcation
director, at 696-3646, or Mrs.
Overholt at 696-ll660.

SERVICES SLATED
Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, will
conduct services at the White
FWleral Home in Coolville
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. for
Edith Betzing. All members
are asked to attend and wear
'White.

NO RUNS THURSDAY
The
Meigs
County
Bookmobile which was
expected
to
resume
scheduleu rWls Thursday will
not be making those runs .
The unit is still undergoing
repair,
Mr s.
Jeanne
Robbana. supervisor said
today .

..
would create a monopoly oo

that allows the burning of
local co al if a switch to other
coals would cause severe
economic disruptions. It took
the action at the request of
Ohio coal operators, locals of
the United Mine Workers
union in Ohio and Ohio
politicians.
Ohio utilities have opposed
the action, as have coal operators in Kentucky and West
Virginia.
The McCoy-Elkhorn suit
said th e proposed order

coal production in Ohio and
"is designed solely to
promote special interests."
It also charged that the
proposed order had nothing to
do with the purpose o£ the
Clean Air Act . Rather, the
suit c harged, the EPA's
action would result In Ohio
utilities polluting the air from
five to 10 years longer than
allowed under the act
because of the time required
to install the scrubbers.

Four youths
arrested
Three Rutland yot~ths and Bargainland in Rutl a nd.
one from Reedsville have They broke out a front door
been arrested in' connection glass, but were unable to get
with a rash of breaking and inside . They reached through
enterings occurring in Meigs a window and took several
and Mason CoWlties.
small items such as fingerAccording to Sheriff James nail clippers, combs and two
J . Proffitt the breaking and lamps.
enterlngs be gan in the
The trio stashed the items
Rutland area . The ·youths in an old building before
reportedly _ went to a bus returning home..
garage and took gas from one
Later that morning one of
of the buses. While the gas the youths had to be taken to
was being taken, some youths the hospital to have his hand
brok~ out windows to enter treated for injuries sustained
the garage. According to the during the spree. The hospital
mechani cs nothing was had been notified to be on the
taken.
lookout for someone with an
The juveniles then went to injury. The hospital informed
Becky's Grocery at the the Sheriff's Department and
Crossroads on SR 124 where in vestigator, Gary Wolfe,
they entered by breaking out started the investigation
a window pane in a door. which led to the arrests. The
They took some potato chips juveniles are now in the
and a cash register. They custody of their parents.
took the register to the boat
Charges are pending.
landing in Mason where it
was opened .and emptied
before they threw it In the
river.
It wa s r eported the
juveniles then went to Gino's Dill reetected
Pizza in Mason where they
Gary Dill was reelected
gained entrance and at- · president at the annual
tempted to tak e a cash organizational meeting of the
register but were unable to do Meigs County Association of
sO. Damage there was listed · Township Trustees and
as ex!ensive. They also foWld Clerks held Saturday evening
a cash box which contained at the Rock Spriqgs Grange
several dollars.
Hail.
The youths then came back
R. G. Pickett was reelected
across the river and went to vice president, and Paul
Royal Oak Park where they Moore was elected secretaryopened the box and took its treasurer, · replacing Gloria
contents before throwing it Hutton
who
declined
over an embankment. They nomination.
later came back to Pomeroy
Any eligible person unable
l\lhere the Reedsville youth to attend Saturday nighes
let the Rutland .youths out. meeting may send dues for
The Rutland youths started 1979 to. the secretaryhit chhikinfr · when they tre~surer, Moore, Route 1,
decided to break into Dan's Box 37, Racine .

AWARDEES NAMED
H. and R. Block Co. in
Pomeroy has announced to
whom prizes were awarded
durlng the celebration of its .
open house recently as well
as the 11th anniversary of the
firm .
Awardees were Le land
Sisson, Pomeroy, $25 gift
ce rtifi ca te; 'Bob Conkle
Cheshire, $10 gift certificat~
and Hiram Slawter, Mason,
$5 gift certificate. No purchlj,se was necessary for
participation. The local office
extends thanks to those who
participated and contributed
to the success of the open
house.

Final approval given ·on-, 1979 appropriations
Meeting in special session Wednesday night, Middleport
Vtllage Cowtcil gave its final approval to $576 380.08
appropriations resolution for 1979. •
·
·
'
Following is a breakdown of expenditures as approved for
the new year:
$8::;:or - personal services, $2,500; other, $6,200; total,
Clerk- treasurer - personal servi ces, $2 500· other 1 $2 000·

total, $4,500,

.Now In Progress

Savings Up To
10%-20%-30%-40%-50%

I

t

'

Solicitor - personal services, $3,000.
Council - fl"rsona l services . $1/IOR

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 193

$12,500; total, $18,1100. Total for leisure activities other, ~JI ,:I.JU; total $9!1,000.
appropriations, $18,000.
Sewer Cons:~uction - capital outlay .. $125,000.
Planning Commission - $.100 .
Sewage - personal servt ces , $21 ,200; debt ser vice, $24,360·
Street lighting - $12,1100. ·
other , $14,900; total, $60,460.
'
Total genera l fund appropriations, all of the above, $175,833.
Police relief and pension fund , $2,035.
Street Mamtenance Fund - personal servi ces, $12,300 ;
General bond retirement fund - payment of principal,
oth er , $58,5GO; total, $70,850.
$5,000; payment of 111terest. $1,350 ; other, $500 ; totE! , $6,850.
Ceme tery Operation and Maintenance - oersonal services.
Meter depostt fund - other expenses. $2,&gt;00.
·
$7,300; other, $5,~80; total, $12,880.
.
Federal revenue sharing fund - Other expenses: $19.&gt;88. 91.
Administration - Wa ter :
,___
Antt-reres~on fund, $1,413.17.
Water - personal services. $25,200; debt service, $36,570 :

•

at y

en tine
THURSDAY, JANUAR Y 18, 1979

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

I

Chicago death toll hits 72
.

CHICAGO I AP l - 1\'ansit
work ers used snow shovels to
fr ee. the city's snow-bound
co mmuter
sys tem
as
Midwest industry struggled
to r es um e producti on so metimes
s uccess.

with · li mi te d

The toll of weather-related
deaths rose to 72.
Mea nwhile, th e National
Wea U1er Ser vice said a storm
brewing in the Southwest
threat ened

NEW&lt; PATROLM EN -Chuck Moody , Springfi eld, lef t, and Mark Atkinson Mansfi eld
began service with the Gallia-Meigs Post, Hi ghway Patrol, Monday. Graduates' of U1e 10411;
Academy Class, Moody and Atkinson completed training at the Sta te Higitway Patl'ol
Academy on January 12. The addttion of th e new officers brings the complement of
patromen at the Gallia-Meigs Post of 13.

Syracuse man fined, jailed
Meigs Count y Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports
Robert Eynon, 24, Syracuse:
arrested on a charge of petty
theft has entered a guilty
pleas in the Meigs County
Gourt .
Judg e Charles Kni ght
sentenced Eynon to 15 days in
the county ja il, assessed
court costs and oredered him
to make restitution for any
damage. ·
According to the report,
Eynon was charged with the
'

Buckeye power

WINTER
CLEARANCE
SALE

I .

Buil dings and Miscellaneous - Othel', $60,135.
Total of the general government services lund listed above
is $77.243.
Serurity of Persons and Property :
Police Department - personal serv ices, $36,200; other,
$21,865; total, $58.065.
Fire Department - personal services, $1 ,190; other, $8,835;
total $10.025.
.
Total of security fund , $68,090.
Leisure lime activities:
P· 1 " " "' ,., ... ~ nJ·wnrnunrls - personal services, $5,500; other.

is disrupted

theft of items from the porch
of Barry McCoy, Syraeuse,
aroWld December 18. Items
taken included a gasolin e
can. splitting mall, IJow saw
and a splitting wedge.
The sheriff's department
inv estigated two accidents
over the pa st 48 hours. The
first occurred Tuesdav at
II :36 a. m. on private
property at Letart Falls.
A pa rked pickup tru ck
owned by Ro ger Hill v;as
parked at ·the restaurant in
Letart Falls when a truck
operated by Jan F . See!,
Albany, and own ed by

&lt;;en era I Telephone Company .
pulled into the parking lot. It
slid on icc and st ruck the Hill
vehi cle. 1ber e was moderate

damage to Hill's vehicle. No
d tation ,._.·as issued.
On Wednesday at 8 a. m. on
County Ho ad 20, Roy
Grueser . !il , Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
was northbound when his
vehicle slid left on •he ice
covered road and struck a
southbound auto driven by
&amp;:ott A. Bcarhs, 18 , Rt. 3,
Pom er oy.
There
was
moderate damage to both
vehicles. No one was injured
and no citations issued.

Commissioners given report ,

Wesley Buehl , county
Clyde Ramsay, manager of engineer, met with County
Buckeye Rural Elect ric , Commissioner s Tu es day
reported today th a t on night to discuss the CE TA
Wednesday an Insulator was pl at map updat e.
shot off the 7200 volt poWer
Buehl expl ained he is
.line west of Mudsoc on the having difficulties in closing
Mudsoc Flag Springs Road, sections. This, he expl ained,
Gallia County , Wal nut was causing problems in
Township, Section 22, at the .det ermining . th e exact
David E. Baker farm .
··amount of acreage in a pie ce
Power was off from 11 :15 a. of property and preventing
m. to I :59 p. m. while repa irs accurage descriptions to be
•were made . Tw enty-six· made.
members were affected.
Even with these problems

exist ing, Buehl sa id he still
recommende d that the
program wo r kers go to
another ~own sh i p and get as
much don e as possible with
the ~·a mou nt of money
available rather than conce ntr ating on just one
township.
Att ending wer e Richard
Jon es, pr esi den t ; He nry
Wells, vice president . and
Jim Housh, and Mary Holr
Stetter. clerk.

winter -wea r y

Midwe st states. A winter
storm wa tch wa s issued for
parts of Nebraska today .
A 92-yea r -old woma n
wear ing onl y a housecoat was
foun d frozen to death on a pile
of snow in Riley , Kan. , after
auth orities used a tracking
dog and a helicopter to locate
her .
A teen-age Chicago girl apparently di ed of ca rb on
monoxide poisoning when she
tried to start the family car,

reported deaths in lllinois, 19
in Wisconsin , 10 in Kansas,
seven in Misso uri, fi ve in
Iowa, three in Michiga n, two
in Oklahoma and one each in
Ohio a nd Nebraska.
Th e Chicago Tr a nsit
Authority bought 2,100 snow
shovels and 600 ice scrapers
to clear commuter tracks

cover ed by more than 20
inches of snow. Trains were

crowded and ran late because
more than half of the
sys~em 's

rail cars were not

avatlable.
"We went around th e city
and bought whatever stores
had on hand, " sa id a CTA
spokesman·. "The only way to
clear ma ny sec ti ons of the 36
miles of track ... is by hand ."
Buffalo, N. Y., sent the city

:m pi eces of snow removal

Freezin g rain a nd snow

equipment and manpower to

ca used at least 40 roofs to col-

run

lapse in Michigan.

th em.

Add itio nal

equipment arrived from .N.ew

York and Massachusetts. A
.Qu ebec firm off ered it s
of fatal hea rt attacks amon g equipment fre e.
A fourth runway wa s
mi ddleag ed
men
who
opened
at
O'Hare
shoveled snow.
In
ternational
Airport.
closed
There have been 24
briefly by blowing snow, and
then r eopened. " I think we' re
finall y sta rting to get ahead
of it here ," said a Federal
Avai tion Admin istration
official.
.
Among the arrivals at the
and there were m ore reports

$34,553.76

collected
last year

Middl eport Mayor Fr ed
Hoffman today announced
that lands collected through
the Mayor's office in 1978
tot aled $34,553.76. This shows
an increase of $8,685 .26 over
the 1977 receipts of $25,868.50.
All funds collected through
the mayor's office go directly
into t he Village General
Fund. 'llte money is used for
the general operation of th e
village at the discretion of
village ocuncil.
Collections from various
sources were : taxi licenses,
$50: wning permits, $91;
building permit s, $t44 .25;
parking permits, $395 ;
merchant police protection,
$1,477 ; fines , $13,767; court
costs, $2,262.20; bonds forfelted, $16 ,018 .81 ; t rash
hauling permits, $50; turnkey
lees, $24 .50; accident reports,
$100 ; other miscellaneou s
permits, $174.

.
pieces of mail daily .
Steel mills in Ga ry , Ind .,
reported cr ews were back to
no rmal. U.S. Steel said 60
percent of its empl oyees
missed work Monday, and the
cold and snow had halted
steel and material shipments.
Inland Steel said mor e than
1,000 employees we re using a
company shuttle bus to ge t to
work, and reported coke and
ire production wa s being restored after dropping nea rly
25 percent.
However, th e Mill er
Br ewing Co. announced pia ns
to layoff 180 of its 3,400
workers in Milwaukee as a
result of disrupted rail and
tru ck shipments through
Chi cago, the nation ·s secondlargest city .

world 's busiesl

,,' ~port

was

Illinois Gov . J ames R.
Thompson, who cut short a
fa mily vacation in Florida .
He left for West Palm Beach
on Mond ay a fter as kin g
Preside nt Carter to provide
disaster relief for 22 counties.
The Chicago post offi ce,
largest in the nation under
one r oo f. wa s closed for"'a
U1ird day due to problems at
O'Ha r e. The post office
normall y handles 8 million

Weather
Clear and cold tonight. Low
nea r
15 .
In crcCjsing
cloudiness Friday with rain
by afternoon . High in the mid
to upper 30s. Chance of

About 7,500 roads remained

closed in Iowa. Don Hinman.
director of the state disaster
office , estim ated snow
remova l costs will reach $7
million, making this the most
cxpensi vc storm in the state's
history.
National Guard helicopters.
atrlifted about 75,000 poun d!!
of hay to cattle stranded in
eastern Iowa , he said. Troops
reported spotting fi ve dead
animals.
Temperatures warmed. It
reached 33 degrees in
Clticago - the fir st tim e it
has .been above frc~zing in
the city this year .
In Kansas, Okla., weather
in the 40s melted ice that has
kept public school students at
home since Dec. 20. Classes

were to resume today.
Meanwhile, rain finall y
stopped in Hawaii after one of
the state's worst storms ever
and heavy snow battered
Portland, Maine.
Th ere we re no dea t hs
reported on the eastern coast
of Hawaii Isla nd , where 56.85
inches of rain fell over a five day period ending Wednesday. The rain equalled the

~~

rainf&lt;.ll1 of

.normal fou r-

month period .
Sugar cane fi elds were
flattened in the storm. and
hi gh winds ripped roofs off
seve ral home s. A s ug a r
company stora ge shed was
nattcncd .
Nine

inch e~

of snow hit

Portland. Maine. and up to
six mor e were expec t ed .

Commercial flight ~ were
cance led, and the citv
decl ared a snow emergencY.

Hundr eds of driv er s,
operating cars without snow
1Continued on page H 1

Portland man
cited for DWI
James M. Hin ckl ey, 66,
Portland . wa s cite d on
charges of DWl Wednesday
follo~ in g a one-vehicle accident in Meigs County on CR

35. two and eight-tenths of a
mile south of SH 1 ~4. at :3:45
p.rn .

The Ga lli a-Mcig3 Post.
Highway Patrol, rep01ts that
a north"bound auto operated
by Hinckley passed off the
left
side of the roadway and
precipita tion nea r ze r o Money actions
struck a fence.
tonight , 60 percent Frida y.
Hinckley dhp1aycd visible
filed W edne!&gt;day
signs of injury and was transported by th e Kaci ne
A suit in the amount of Emergency Squad to Holler
EXTENDED FOHE(;AST
$11 ,435 has been filed in Medica l Center.
Saturday
through
Meigs County Common Pleas
Hinckley wa s treated for
Monday: Rain or snow
Court by th e Athens County contusions of the left knee,
Sa turda y. Snow flurries
Savings and Loan, Pomt!roy , and rel eased.
possible Sunday . Fair
against James L. Sec and
'l11e Hinck ley vehicle inMonday. High in the 30s to
Cora F. See, Middleport.
curred
minor damage .
low 40s Saturday, lowering
A suit for partition of rea l
Gallia-Me1gs Post
The
into the 20s by Monday.
estate wa s filed by Lena investigated ten other acLow in the upper teens to
Ethel Guthr ie, Rt . 2, cidents Wedncsdav caused bv
mid 20s early Saturday and
Coo lville. against Carol the icy co n diti~n of the
dropping to five to 15 by
Oliv e, Fa irf ax, Va ., and roadways during which the
Mond ay.
Gerald Guth ri e. Ht. 2. ve hicles involved incurred
Coolville.
minor damage. ·

'

l

ELBERFELDS
MEN'S $79.95
FUR TRIMMED

PICKED FOR ALL-STATE - Five Wahama High School band members have been chosen for- the All-Stat~ Band.
Pictured left to right (standing) are Kenny Bond, drums; Mark ·Goodnite, French horn ; Todd Tucker, first chair bass :
Charles Yeago , band director; (seated) Karen Brown, flute; and Debby Starr, trumpet. The youngsters will perform at the
West Vi rginia Music Education Association convention in Huntington on March 31 with approximately 100 All-Slate band
members . Ali-Statestudenls are chosen by audition from all over the state.
-

DRESS COATS
SALE

$5200

Kuppenhe,i mer brand -style
as pictured. Sizes 40, 42, 44,
46 . Regulars and longs, water
repellant, limited quantity,

Bob Byer heading area fire group
.
r

tie sure to see all the other men's

enat s and jackets- sale priced now
in I he Men 's· and boys' department ·
··- I sl II nor .

i
J

Open Thursday
9:30 to Sp .• ,•
Friday 9:30to8p.m -

ERFELDS IN -poMERO

HOUSE RAZING - Thi~ dilspidated residence on
Pomeroy's West Main St. is being razed. Unoccupied for
(ii!Veral years, tile aged pro~rt}'WHi ch sets near the edf-e

of the street ha s been considered a fir e ha za rd. Hopefully ,
the eyesore will soon be gone .•

Offi cers wer e elect ed
Tuesday night when the Area
Volunte er
F ir e
and
Emergency Association met
with the Gallipolis Fire
Department as the host unit.
Elected for this year were
Bob Byer, Middleport Fire
Department, presideot; Gary
Ellis, Pomeroy unit , vicepr esident;
ij nd
N len
Ri chards , Vinton Depart . ment , secretary-treasurer.
It was announced the next
meeting will be held Feb. 20
with the New Haven Fire
LJepartmcnt as the host unit:
A film on fire suppression
will be shown. The March
mt·ctin g.. was .set for Tuppers .

Plains with the Orange
Township Fire Department
as th e host group. The
forestry division and fires
will be the program topic.
Frank Eisnaugle, arson '
investigator for South ern
Ohio , was speaker at
Tue sday S session . He
dis cussed ri sin g costs of
insurance caused' by arson
·and instructed members on
w ~ys of preserving evidence.
Eisnaugle pointed out that
arson is a growing crime and
has been pla ct·d in the top
category by the FBI. He
announced Ohio has a
new fire marshal. He is Bill
1

Sander s, who was formerly a

member of the Ironton Fire
Department.
A state arson school was
apnounced for the first week
in August at the Mariott Inn,
Co lumbu s. E isn au gle
reported th ere are three full
time technicians working at
the state arson laboratory
who processed 783 cases last
year.
Ohio, he sa id , has one of the
highest arrest and conviction
rcL~..o:"rls for arson in the
nation with 17 investigators
having brought about 135
convictions for arson last

yea r.

•·

Eisnaugle instructed· those
att ending on qu estioning
persons along arson lines, but
advised them to have a law
enforcement officer present

when such questioning is '
done. He also recommended
that they read the rights to
individuals being questioned.
Fire fighting courses are
being conducted in Columbus
for vo lunt eer fir emen on
Satu rdays and Sunday .
While the Tuesday night
mce tiltg was being held ,
Gallipolii firem en were Kept
busy lighting a lire there. Jim
Northup is ·chief of the host
unit which served refreshments.
I

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