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-------------------------A
.
i Area ·Death_s· l ss1gnments nearing completion
1- The .Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 23,2979

BENJAMIN DAVIDSON
Benjamin
E.
!Ben)
Davidson, 74, South Third
Ave ., Middleport, died
Monday evening at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Davidson was born
Jan. 20, 1905 in GaiDa County,
son of the late Theodore and
Ida Russe"U Davidson. He was
also preceded In death by his
first wile, Eva Gail Edwards
Davidson, and his second
wife, Lizzie M. Kidder
Davidson, and several
brothers and sisters.
Surviving
are
four
daughters, Dianne Davidson
. and Mrs. Carl (Kathryn)
Gardner, both of Middleport;
1)1rs. John (Helen ) Mulford,
Cheshire;
Mrs.
Ron
(C harlotte) Hanning,
Chester; nine sons, Carl,
John, Ben, Jr., and Michael,
all of Middleport; William,
Racine; Arthur, Athens;
Warren , Pikeville, Ky.; ·
AUen, Syracuse, and Danny
of Providence, Rhode Island.
Also surviving are 19
grandchildren, several great
- grandchildren , a sister-inlaw, Mrs. Susie Edwards,
' Middleport, and a mother-inlaw, Helen Kidder, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Thursday at the
Raw.llngs-Coats
Funeral
Home with the Rev. Noel
· HerrmaM officiating. Burial

will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends
may can at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p.m . Wednesday .

ELOISE WILSON
Mrs. Eloise Wilson, 62,
Middleport, died thi~ morning at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs . Wilson was the
daughter ofthe late Lester M.
and .Oleva Price Boice. She
was preceded In death by her
husband, Joseph and attended funeral services for
her brother, the late Dr.
Raymond Boice on Monday .
Mrs. Wilson was an active
member of the Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Club and was
employed In the office of the
late Dr. Boice.
She is survived by two
daughters and two sons, Mrs.
Thomas (Carolyn) Grueser, ·
Pomeroy; Myrta Casto;
Richard Wilson, Parkersburg
and Joseph Robert Wilson,
Middleport ; three grandchildren , Barbara and Jeffrey Grueser and Joseph
Anthony Wilson; one brother,
Robert Roland Boice, M. D.,
Walnut Creek, Calif.
Funeral arrangements win
be announced by Ewing
Funeral Home.

· lly .ROBERT E. MIU..ER
Associatrd Pr&lt;•ss Writer
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Slow-moving state senators
hoped to complete assigning
memberships on standing
committees today so the
three-week-old -1979 General
Assembly sessfon ra n gear up
to start legislating.
Senators have had political
problems
in
makln~

individual "ommit(ee
assignments. However, a
spokesman in the office of
Senate President Oliver Oca·
sek, D-Akron, said Monday
that th ese were being ironed
out and that the assignments

were near completion. _
The House has
its
committees tined up , and
hearings have already
started in that ri,"!T'""" n"

various proposals. More were
on tap today as the two
chambers returned from a
weekend recess.
Ocasek
and
Senate
Minority Leader Paul E. ·
Gilimor, R-Port Clinton, have
disagreed over the number of
Republicans there should be
on each of th e Senate's 11
standing committees.
Gillmnr w:.ntPCf rninnrjf~·

blocs increased from what
they were last session in ,
deference to the gain of three
c;op seats in the Nov. 7
e 1e c t i o n . De m o c r a t s
prevailed 21-12 in the Senate
during the last session, but
the" current edge is 16-15.
Gillmor said he and'Ocasek
had reached a sort of com·
promise
by
giving

Carter's message emphasizes
fighting inflation· urgency
By DAVID ESPO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) President carter' praised by
an
economy·minded
Congress
for
showing
restraint in his budget, is
following through with a
State of the Union message
that emphasizes the urgency
of fighting inflation .
Carter
goes
before
Congress and a nationwide
television audience .to make
his address tonight (at 9 p.m .
EST), a day after unveiling a
"lean and austere " budget
that calls for spending $532
billion with a deficit of $29
billion.
One House member said
after a briefing at the White
House Monday that Inflation
was uppermost in the
president's mind as he
reviewed a succession of
drafts prepared by his
speechwriters.
Those at the session were

Middleport's

told the president will ask
relationship with Taiwan.
It was not clear how deeply
Congress to approve his wage
insurance program, hospital
Carter would go into any proposed legislation . A White
cost containment legislation,
House aide said the president
a scaled-down welfare
revision "bill and loosened is making a "serious
th emati~ speech" and will
government regulation of the
trucking industry - all send Congress his legislative
measures -to cool Inflation. priorities later this week.
One source said carter
But it was learned that the
would explain a proposed president at some point will
$10 .8 billion increase in . request countercyclical relief 1
defense
spending
as for local governments in
necessary to fulfill pledges areas of particularly high
made to NATO allies and to unemployment,
public
assure military strength financing . of congressional
during arms negotiations ca mpaigns new education
and
nat~ral resources
with the Soviet Union.
On foreign affairs, Carter is departments, and a bill . to
expected to discuss the SALT settle the long-running lands
negotiations and touch on the . dispute in Alaska.
Carter, dispatching his
legislation
need
for
implementing the Panama budget to Corigress, predicted
canal treaties approved by that his spending proposals
the Senate last year plus will win broad public support.
unspecified measures to "It is a budget good enough
reflect the new American that I will fight for it," he

Court news

said.
There is plenty of evidence
he )Viii need. to.
Even though carter won
praise for his drive to cut the
deficit from this year's $;17.4
billion, there is disagreement
in Congress over how to
spe nd the money that is
available.
'_'There are differences of
opm10n a_!&gt; to where these
cuts: or whether the~ cut.~
ar~ m the proper posations,
srud ~ou_se Speaker Thomas
P. 0 Neall _after the Wh1te
House bnefmg.
Many Republicans offered
carter grudging praise for
his attempt to reduce the
deficit .
"Considering that it c:une
Iron:&gt; a Democrat admml~­
trat10n , the ne~ budget IS
austere,"
sa1d
House
Republican Whip Robert
Michel of !Uinois.

Utility customers cannot
shop around for .bargains

(Continued from page I )
Save More Station in Mid·
dleport.
percent surcharge onto their
penses, to finance a $115.9
By TOM GIU..EM
Council had failed to apmillion
construction program
basic
electric
bills
beginning
Associated Pre:ss Writer
prove the application because
thi~
year'
and to make debt
March
I
and
give
the
utility
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) of the. proximity of the station
payments,
he said.
service
$63.6
million
in
additional
to a church. William Walters When it comes to buying elec·
The utility , which plans to
tricity
or
natural
gas,
there's
revenues.
and Charles Mullen will
seek a 50 percent permanent
represent council at the no comparison shopping or · Dick Retterer, Columbus &amp;
looking for bargains, says 71· Southern manager, of public rate increase in March, was
Love
hearing .
scheduled to present its
Council authorized Mayor year-old caroline Neuffer. affairs, said the utility, which
case
for
the
"We can't shop around like serves480,000customersin 25 . formal
V
Hoffman to file an application
emergency
increase
when
the
·for a $330,300 Community we do for groceries or southern and central Ohio
utilities commission resumed
clothes,"
·
the
Columbus
counties,
is
in
a
financial
Block Grant which must be
I
its hearing this afternoon.
widow said Monday at a emergency.
filed by Feb. 4.
But William A. Spratley,
Utilities
Commission
Additional
revenue
Public
A discussion was held on
Ohio's
consumers' counsel,
from
the
the · removal of meters from of Ohio hearing on a 25 generated
said
his
agency will argue
Diamond Pendants
In front of the Ingel Furniture percent emergency rate in· emergency rate boost i• against granting the entire
Heart Loekets
Store and Citizens National crea~ request by Columbus needed for maintenance ex· emergency increase.
Bank so that emergency &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Pierced Earrings
Although the Office of the
"We have only one gas
vehicles can clear that comer
Consumers' Counsel believes
. Plereecl Earrings with Diamond
better. Councibnan Mullen comp~ny and one electric 7\.
Columbus &amp; Southern has a
Jade Bracelets
said
Mrs.l~~ 141
volunteered to point up the company,"
financial emergency,
Nothillg Necklaces
exterior of Village Hall at Neuffer, who says she lives
.
SpraUey
said the. rate boost
Charm Bracelets
cost this sununer if workers on a fixed income and caMot
should be $37 million to $43
proposed
increase.
pay
the
cannot be secured to do the
Monogram Pendan~
million, or about 9.5 percent ,
She and several other older
rather than 25 percent.
~~
.
Bulova Watches
Ohioans spoke out against the
The
death
of
former
·
" The real question is did
Speidel Bracelets
Councilman George Meinhart plan, which would add a 25
they
create that fmanrial
was noted and a com·
&amp;.1
crisis," Spratley said.
mendation to the late Dr. R.
"
J .K. Madan, a financial
E. Boice for services ren·
SUIT FILED
By The Associated Press · analyst and engineer with
dered to the area through the
A suit in the amount of
A new winter storm spread Touche Ross &amp; Co., will
years was approved.
$802.38 has been filed in snow from the Rocky MO\lll· present the consumers'
Attending the meeting were Meigs County common pleas tains into the upper Midwest coimsel position at the rate
Mayor Hoffman , Clerk- court by Ohio Casualty In· today · as
a
colder hearings, Spratley said.
Treasurer Gene Grate, and surance Co. , Athens, and . temperatures advanced from
Madan disagrees with
.
Councilmen Dewey Horton , Wesley Wise, Middleport,
eastern Colorado into parts of Columbus &amp; Southern's
~urt St., Pomeroy
Carl Horky, Charles Mullen , against Stephen L. Randolph,
the Mississippi Valley .
revenue
and
expense
William Walters and Allen Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
Hardest
hit
was . projections · for 1979, which
Lee King.
southwestern
Minnesota form the basis of the
The suit is for property
where 6 to 8 inches of snow company's request, .Spratley
damages as a result of an
blanketed the area, closing said.
accident on Jan. 23, 1977 in
more than 50 .schools by
He lee Is some of the
Gallia County on Jessie Creek
Road.
midafternoon Monday. Eight revenue projeciions are too
inches blanketed Canby and low, and some expense
Marshall , Minn. and wind projections are too high,
gusts of up to 30 mph piled causing the company to
FUNDS COLLECTED
drifts of more than 2 feet on request more than it actually
A total of $1,09l.SO has been
some highways . Four Inches needs, Spratley said.
contributed to the Gifts for
sno'w
coated
the
The consumers' counsel
the Yanks Who Gave of
Minneapolis-51. Paul area, has asked PUCO to require a
"p rogram of the American
snarling even~g rush hour management
audit
of
Legion by Feeney-Bennett
traffic.
·
Columbus
&amp;
Southern
to
Post 128, Middleport.
Similiar
conditions determine if the utility is
Albert Roush was chairmanaged ,
prevailed in South Dakota efficiently
man for the fund raised
where 4inches of snow closed ~ratley. said.
through personal donations
some highways.
and other sources.
Travelers advisories were
hoisted for the Colorado
Springs, Colo., area as the
Hospital News
snow storm moved through
VISIT HERE
eastern Colorado. Some 4 to 6 Veteraas Memorial Hospital
Shawn and Bobby l..&lt;&gt;gan
Admitted
Beverly
inches of snow covered the
are here visiting their grandThompson,
Stewart;
Brady
Denver metropolitan area.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Knapp,
New
Haven;
Millie
The Colorado State Patrol
Logan. The children will be
Price,
Middleport;
Donna
stopped all empty traUers
returned to their mother,
and mobile homes from Sellers, Shade ; Patricia
('vlrs . Skip Wireman at
proceeding ea~ on Interstate Hoffman, Pomeroy.
Douglasville, Ga. in
Discharged Robert
70nesr
Limon, Colo., because
FebruarY.
Manley, Virgie Blake, Mary
of winds up to 45 mph.
Blowing snow also caused Damell, Thelma Garrett.
problems in northeastern
New Mexico.
MORE SURVIVORS
Heavy snow warnings also
Holzer Medical Center
Among the survivors of
Discharges, Jan. 22
Leverett L. Roush, Mid· have been posted for today In
Clara Adams, "Clare AUyn,
dleport, not Usted earlier are ·southern Wisconsin and
northwestern Illinois. ·
, John Banks, Carl Cssto, Mrs.
a granddaughter, Ana P.
· Travelers
advisories MichaeiDonleyandson,Mts.
Roush,
El
Paso,
Tex.,
and
11 you ha ...e an Insurance claim, you alreadv
for example. And we
to help
two step-grandchildren, Tom exterided from the mountains Larry , Dunn and son,
ha\le a problem. At The lnaurance Stpre we
you recei ve a fast, equllable settlement or ·
feel that complex claim• procedu reashould , your claim .
and Amy Everett, Tuppers of northern Ne_w Mexico into Kathleen Edmonds, George
not be an added problem tor you. So we
eastern Montana, over the Henry, Edward Kitchen, Jr,
Plains.
give our customers " follow•through service,''
Plains states from South Margaret Marcum, Cynthia
Drop by and get acquainted with our "crew''.
Because we are independent agents we can
We'll aleer you on a straight cou111e In any
Dakota through the Te•as Moore, Jolu) Morgan, ·Amy
and ' do work with many fine insurers . , , '
lntur&amp;r"!CI problem-and help ball you out In
Panhandle ·and most of Ollie Oliver, Mrs. David
ro01gh wnthtr.
•
like The Contlntntallneurance Companlet,
Oklahoma, and across south- Preston and son, Dana
western Iow.a, western and RAyburn, Lori Rutherford;
SPECIAL MEETING
southern Missouri and north- ·Mrs. Lyle Sheets and ,
A special meeting of the
eastern Minnesota.
daUghter, Morri Sheline,
714 E. MAIN ST .
POMEROY,O.
Southern
Local
Band
E a r Iy
m o r n i n ·g HAzel SMith, Gerald Sparks,
Boosters
will
be
beld
at
7:30
"2·5130 or 992-5 139
temperatures oonged from 14 Lois Spencer, Gamet y Arian
p.m. Wednesday at the high
"YOU DON ' T BUY A POLICY,
at
Grand Forks, N.D. to to 65 Ru!ly Werry, Mrs. To.;
sc..ool. All band boosters are
YOU H!_RE AN AGENT
in
Key Wpst, Fla.
Woodward and son,
urged to attend.

BEAUTIFUL·JEWELRY,
That Says
I
You For
aientine' s
Day

Te• ., storm

. d rng
•
snrea
r

Snow *Oday

JEWELRY STOQE
.

Republicans more seats than temporary fisCal problems.
before on some co!IUllittees, . The _- same _proposal, · by
but keeping the same number comnuttee chal1111811 Myrl H.
on others.
Shoemaker, [J.Bournevtlle,
''It is sort of a compromise also mandates certl!ln fiBcal ,
and I'mnot oompletely happy procedures that would
with it. ButneithetisOiiver," increase the flexibility of
the GOP leader said.
districts to borrow against
The House Finance Com· anticipated tax revenues.
mittee resurries hearings "The newly create4 House
today on a bill making it Public Utilities Committee
illegal for schools . to close hopes to increase legislative
because of lack of funds.
expertise on complicated
The measure repeals the ratemaking policies·of Ohio's
newly created state school public utilities a~ a series of
loan fund , but establisbhes briefings.
Committee chairman
local contingency funds to
help districts which run into Ronald H . James 1 D·
Proctorvtlle, said members
and staff of the state ,pyblic
Utilities Commission will be
lead-off witnesses tonight at a
series of briefings that will
Fourteen defen!lants were cover the next three or four
fined and 11 others forfeited weeks.
Rep. Thomas J. carney, Dbonds in Meigs County Court
Youngstown, chairman pi the
Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles House Energy and Environ·
Knight were Gary D. Evans, , ment Comm\ttee, said his
Racine, Ronald 0 . Francis, psnel will hear a discussion
New Mat~moras, Dana W. on 1977 amendments to the
Clean
Air
Act
Murray , Pomeroy, and U.S.
morning.
·
Wednesday
James R.
Rohrbaugh,
The House Judiciary Com·
Rodney, $15 and costs each,
mittee
caned for oppoSition
speeding; Herald N. Hudnell,
testimony
this afternoon on a
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, right
bill
reinstating
Ohio's death
of way ; loretta G. Vankirk,
penalty.
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, stop
Proponents were heard last
sign ; James A. Laudennilt,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs, 20 week on the proposal to
days confinement, DWI, 20 replace Ohio's capital
days confinement, $150 and punishment la_w . It was
costs, no operator's llcens\!._ declared unconstitutional last
Paul D. Mitchell, Langs- July 3 by the U.S. Supreme
ville, five days confine· Court.
Rep. Terry Tranter, [).
ml'!lt. no operator's license,
Cincinnati,
the bill's chief
$150 and costs and five days
It was designed
sponsor,
said
confinement, DWI; Harvey
to overcome the U.S. court's
R. Leamond·, Racine, $25 and objection th_a t the old law
costs, no operator's license; didn't give enough discretion
Robert DeMoss, Pomeroy, 90 to judges imposing the death
days confinement; assessed sentence.
costs, assault; Jack Mays,
Rt. I, Reedsville, $25 and
costs, stream littering; Dealer attended
Wesley L. Wise, Middleport,
$150 and costs, three days tire conference
confinement,
license
John and MarUyn Fultz of
suspended 30 days, DWI;
Meigs
Tire- Center, Inc., '
Richard K. Stephenson,
Pomeroy,
recently attended a
Gallipolis, $150 and costs,
six-day
Marketing Cen·
three days confinement,
ference
in
Hawaii, sponsored
DWI, $150 and costs, driving
by
the
Dayton
Tire &amp; Rubber
under suspension; Raymond
Company.
Over
600 people
Barber, Rt. I, Coolvllle, $25
attended
the
conference,
and costs, false information .
representing Dayton and
Forfeiting bonds were
Road King customers from
Richard Miller, Belpre,
$30.50, speed;
Charles across the nation. Meigs Tire
'Vaughan, Pomeroy, ·$35.50, Center, Inc. has been a
Dayton and Road King
stop sign; Ronald W. McVetz,
customer
for over six years.
Newport, Johnny J. Jackson,
The
conference
program
Belpre, Jessie Boggs; BidIncluded
speakers
of
national
well, and Elizabeth Massie,
who
shared
their
prominence
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $35.50 each,
on
sales
and
profit
expertise
speeding; Ruilsell Bowers, .
Rt. I, Guysville, $3 •. 50, making ideas, seminars
speeding; Martin McAngus, where distributors exPomeroy, and Gerald Dill, changed information on
Rt. I, Minersv!Ue, $360.50 successful marketing and
each, DWI; Rex L. Roy, promotional programmtng,
Racine, $62.55, speeding; plus informal get·togethers
Kemleth Neigler, Rt. 3, . and island tours for
and
their
Racine, $62.55, reckless distributors
spouses.
operation.

ELBERFELD$

,.

. ·.

e

'(~SPS

145-960)

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 197

•

•

at y

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1979

15 CENTS

work
harder
i~:encans
must·
,
..
~to heitt inflation ... . .Carter
\

ByDONALDM. ROTIIBERG
• Associated Press Writer
, WASHINGTON (AP ) President carter is sounding
a keynote of restraint for a
Congress whose leaders
agree with his austerity, but
are already · arguing about
P,roper targets for the budget
cutters.
' " Th~ president charged
liu$iness and labor and the
COngress to work together to
Qeat Inflation ," said House
~aker Thomas P. O'Neill
Ji' ,, . D-Mass. "I will do
Wliatever I can, as speaker,
tO · do what the preside nt
wants."
:Assistant Senate- Majority
1-e~der Alan Cranston was
- nbt so effusive. " I differ with

•

•

the president on the proposal Senate must ratify by a two:
to increase defense spending thirds majority.
by huge sums when we are · With negotiations on the
the strongest nation on treaty In their final stages,
earth," the
California Carter made a strong appeal
·for support of the agreement
Democrat said.
House Majority Leader Jim once it is finalized and sent to
Wright, D-Texas, called car- the Senate, probably early
ter's commitment to fight in· this year.
"I will sign no agreement
nation commendable and
said, " He will have the active which does not enhance our
support of Congress." But na tiona! security," said the
Wright predicted "there may president.
be some disagreements as to ·. Moments later, he added :
where the cuts should come." " I will sign no agreement ·
carter's State of the Union unless our deterrent force
message, delivered to a joint will remain overwhelming."
session of Congr'lSS Tuesday
Addressing congressional
night, dwelt heavily on concern over whether the
Inflation and the strategic United States could rely on
arms limitation treaty with the Soviets to adhere to any
the Soviet Uniori, which the treaty, carter said, "SALT II

will not rely on b·ust. It will
be verifiable."
With its-domestic erpphasis
on austerity, the speech
followed by a day Carter's
budget for 1980, a document

!leview insurance coverage
advised the Bradfords to
filling other vacancies at the
check with local Insurance Meigs County Welfare
agents and get estimates on Department were outline~ in
additional coverage before detaiL
reporting back.
Commissioners decided to
The board agreed to panel contact the Ohio Department
the rear wall in the Common of Administrative Services to
Pleas Courtroom because the establish job openings and to
wan peeled the last few times procted with the necessary
it was painted. It was felt that
testing procedures.
a permanent improvement . Progress of the Multiwas necessary.
Purpose Building project was
Procedures required for discussed. It was reported
hiring a new director and that all the necessary steel
was on the job site and that
.•.
~
erection of the steel would
begin in the near future,
weather permitting.
Bob Bailey, Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
coordinator, revi ewed the
EMS operations as they are
related to the SEOEMS
operations in Meigs Coainty.
Commissioners requested
-..· 'Harofll E. "Hullbiird; preslltent'of the Citizens that
Bailey draw up an
National Bank, Middleport, and Oliver W. aHernate plan that could be
Birckhead, president of the Central put into effect in Meigs
Bancorporation, Inc., today announced plans for County to serve those areas
now being cove. ed by
acquisition of Citizens National Bank by The SEOEMS
should the time
Central Trust Co., N.A., Cincinnati, The Anchor come that the service would
Bank of Central Bancorporation.
cease.
Terms of the proposal, which is subject to
Attending were Richard
Jones,
president, Henry
approval of regulatory authorities and
Wells,
vice
president and J 1m
shareholders of Citizens National Bank, will be
Roush, and Mary Hobstetter,
announced later.
clerk.

, :Insurance coverage on
various buildings at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds
\VaS discussed at Tuesday's
regular meeting of Meigs
Coimty Commissioners.
:: Meeting with the com·
inission were Mr. and Mrs.
Wanace Bradford, president
~n(l secretary of the fair- bOard.
It was decided that several
guildings
were underir{s ured.
Commissioners

Central Trust

buys local bank

In late December, l978, Central Bancorporation
announced plans for Central Trust to acquire the
$25 million First National Bank of Gallipolis. U: S. bond sales
Together, Citizens National Bank and First
N~tioqal Bank of Gallipolis will provide strong near 1978 goal
representation for Central. Bancorj)oration in
December 1978 sales of
Southeastern Ohio.
·
Series
E &amp; H United States
The $1.1 billion Central Trust Co., with 35
Savings Bonds were $37.9
banking locations in the Cincinnati area, is the million . The state attained
second largest· bank in Cincinnati and ,has the 93.3 percent of its 1978 sales
oldest and third largest Trust Department in Ohio. goal December 31, with sales
Central Trust is Central Bancorporation's anchor totaling $48_7.2 million for the
bank and has provided advisory and specialized year.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
services to the holding company's other ban!cs for Meigs
County Volunteer
a- number of years.
Savings Bonds Chairman,
Central Bancorporation is a $2.1 billion bank reported December sales of
holding company headquartered in Cincinnati. Savings Bonds in the county
The corporation has 13 affiliates;.IO Ohio banks, a were $16,778. The county
achieved 69.1 percent of its
IJIOrtgage banking company, a real estate holding amual
sales goal December
· company and a resinurance ·company.
31.

NEW PRESIDENT Fred Crow was elected
presid e nt of the Meigs
County Bar Association
Monday night. Other of·
fleers elected were Judge
John C. Bacon, vice
presidenti Pat O'Brien ,
secreta r y and Uarbara
Knight, treasur er. The
associa tion will ho st a
tcstirnqnial dinner in honor
of Judge Manning Webster,
former president of the
associa~ion, on Saturday,
Feb. 10.

he described as " lean and
austere" and reflecting the
need for ~acr ifi ce "i£ we are
to overcome inflation. ''
Midway through his farst
term in the White House and
following an election in which
inflati on emerged as the
major issue, Carter ca lled on
Congress and the nation to
"change our attitudes as well
as our policies."
"We cannot afford to live
beyond our means. We camot
afford to create programs we
can nelther manage nor
finance, or to waste our
natural resources: and we
can not
tolerate
mismanagement and fraud .
Above all , we must meet the
challenge of inflation as a
united people."
''New Foundation ,' '
emerged as the catch-phrase
(Conti nued on p"ge 14 I

..

...

,.

.~

' '• .

'

(

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SUPERIOR AWARD - Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District received a Superior
award as part of the Distinctive Service-Goodyear Conservation Awards program at the
Annual Meetin~ of,the Ohio Federation of Soil and Water Conservation Districts held in
Columbus January 16, 17, 18, 1979. Receiving the award is Leota Young, presenUy serving as
office secretary to the Soil and Water Conservation District. District supervisors attending
th e meeting were: Rex Shenefield and Mrs. Shenefield, Roy Miller, and Tom Theiss. Arthur
Brandt, president of Ohio Federation of Soil and Water District is shown with Mrs . Leota
Young, Rt. I, Minersville.

Mace named interim director

During a m eeting in r eplace past-Director Ted
McArthur Monday night. the Turner, Gallipolis, who
21-member Southeast Ohio resigned from that position
Emergency Medical Service on Dec. 28.
[SEOEMS) board employed
The board did not vote
an
interim
exec utiv e Monday night on whether to
director, voted to mcrease recognize Local 589 of the
the pay sca le for paramedics Union
of
Operating
by 25 cents per hour, and Engineers, which won the
contracted with a linn to right to represent the I..&lt;&gt;ga n
negoti ate with Hocking Station in Hocking Co unty by
County personnel with a near unanimous vote of the
regards to a proposed union full and part-time medical
contract.
tcchmcians in an election
Randy Mace, Athens. who conducted by the National
has served as public relation&amp; .. Labor Relations Board.
Board approves
director for SEOEMS, was
During the meeting, the
appointed to ser.ve as interim board hired a Columbus firm,
competency test
Executive Darector of the Cle man s.
Nelson
and
The , Sout~ern Local School seven county system for a Associates. Inc . to negotiate
District meeting in regular pea·iod of 90 ·days.
with the Hocking County
session Monday night apMace will temporarily personnel.
proved a competency type
lest for graduating ·seniors. It
will be administered this
spring .
Purpose is to determin e the
effectiveness of the present
NEW HAVEN - Craft o " Pickets a re in evidence at
education program and to
union members, protestil)g both the main plant entrance
assist the board in deterthe contracting of non-union and construction entrance.
mining fu ture · competency
workers at the Philip Sporn
A sign carried by one of the
policy .
Plant here remained off the pickets bears the message,
The board authorized the
job today.
" Diversified Construction
treasurer to scrure an ad500-600 Company has not signed in
Approximately
vance draw of $30,000 on real
employees of various craft compliance with our conestate tax collections · and
unions working at the plant tract."
approved an agreement with
walked off their jobs Monday
"This 1the coal handling
the Gallia·Ja ckson-Meigs
in a contract dispute with job) does not have anything
Mental Health Ce nter to
Diversified Construction
employ the services of a
Com pany . Eugene Gloss,
speech and hea ring therapist.
plant manager, described the
Barbara Beegle" and Robert
work as a coal handling job.
Roush were named to the
Diversified, low bidder for
substitut e tea chers li st.
the project, is a non-union
Approved as calamity days
SHERIDAN , Ohio (AP) contractor.
were Dec . 11. Jan. 8, 9, 12 and
Authorities say ca rbon
17.
monoxid e p oiso ning
Superintendent Bo b Ord
apparently killed thr ee
was named as board agent to
Kentucky residents and a
receive a nd expend federal
Windy and colder with West Virginia woman whose
funds. Performance bonds snow tonight . low in the bodies were discovered In a
were purchased for the board teens. Cold with snow flurries van parked in this Lawrence
president, David Nease, the Thursday . High in the mid County community.
superintendent a nd the
20s .
The
chan ce
of
The dead were identified as
treasurer,' Linda Spencer.
precipitation is 80 percent Thomas Sawyer, 34, of
The next regular meeting tonight and 50 percent '!burs· Frankfort; Harrison Shield,
will be Feb. 20.
day.
36, and Geraldine Rye, 32,

The Hocking County employees are seeking an increase from $3.25 to $3.47 an
hour, but · one SEOEMS
director has said this is not
the major item in the
proposed agreement.
The eight full-time employees at the statioil o a re
seeking to change their work
schedule from 24 hours on
and 24 off duty to 24 hours on
and 48 off.
The board is not expected
to act on the union proposal
until the consulting firm
finishes their report.
The Columbus firm was·
employed at the rate of $5o
per hour. Their consultations
with the Hocking · County
paramedics is expected to

Workers remain off jobs
to do with their contract,"
Gloss said. He noted that the
pi cketing
workers are
engaged In the building of Oyash precipitator• at the plant
while Diversified is engaged
in installing heaters around
coal conveyor bells and other
work .
There is no indication when
work will resume.

4 bodies found in van

Weather

both of Ashland, and Sarah
Linville, 27, of West Virginia .
The van was found psrked
outside a Sheridan night club
Tuesday morning with its engine still running and its
gasoline tank about a quarter
full . Authorities said Ms. Rye
worked in the club.
The sheriff's office ·said
there was no evidence of foul
play.

take between 10 and 25 hours.
Some board members fear
that recognition of organized
labor within SEOEMS could
spell an end to the financially
burdened system.
The board did authorize a
25 cent per hour increase for
all paramedics throughout
the seven county emergency
serv ice system. The raise will
be retroactive to Jan. I.
It was reported that during
the meeting, between ~.000 ·
and $67,000 was received by
SEOEMS from participating

counties.

'

Financial problems began
to surface as auditors
r ecently reported that the
system's expenditures were
exceeding income.
The auditors said that the
financial
problems
of
SEOEMS, which was formed
as a federally fin anced pilot
project to provide emergency
medica l service to rural
areas, stem partly from the
time it takes for the system to
receive payment for services.

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday:
Fair Friday. Snow or rain
mixed with snow Saturday
and Sunday. High in the
30s. Low In the mid teens to
"mid 20s Friday and in the
20s Saturday and Sunday.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport emergency
unit answered two calls
Tuesday.
At 12 :23 p.m ., Marion
Francis, 620 Locust St., was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 5:30 p.m.
Douglas Lewis, 701'.! North
Second Ave., was taken to the
local hospital.

Challenge sparked 4-H drive

NOW ...
You can
Roast
Poultry,

Ham,
Roasts!
BIG 8 QT. SIZE

GJ»Ius •••
BAKE rolls, cakes,
breads. Rack lncllud,edl

HOUSEWARES
DEPARTMENT
1ST FLOOR

.

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

AUTOMATIC COOKER

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ELBERFELI)S IN POMEROY

'CHECK. CAMP DESIGN - Area 4-H personnel are
_shown-with Bob Evans, Bob Evans Farms checking a
drawing of the new improvements proposed at canter's ·
cave 4-H camp In Jackson County. With Evans are left to

__ _

right, Dan .
, county agricultural agent, Highland
County; Roy M. Kottman, Director, Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service, Columbus; and Charles W. Lifer, State
Leader, 4-H, Columbus.

COLUMBUS - A challenge
produced over $500,000 for 4H in southern Ohio. The
challenge , a $250,000 grant
don ated toward the improvement and expansion or
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
educational program and
facilities, In Jackson County,
was extended by Bob Evans,
Bob Evans Farms, GaUia
County.
Provisions of the challenge
grant , made to citizens of
Adams, Gallia, Highland,
Jackson, Lawrence and
Meigs co unties, involved
matching the $250,000 grant
within a 12-month period,
which ended December 31,
1978.
" It was a real challenge, u
said Dan Cowdrey , Highland
County Agricultural Agent
and chairman of the Board of
Directors, Canter's Cove 4-H
Camp, Inc . '' But we made it
the hard working,
dedicated people of these six
counties met the challenge by
mid -Dec~mber, 1978, and they arc continuing to work to
raise additional funds for the
total needs of the c~mp," he '

said.
The Canter's Dave 4-H
Camp , Inc. board is made up
of two Ohio Cooperati ve
Extension Service agents and
two trustees from each of the
sax counties. The board
provided
organiza tion a l
leadership and guidance in
the camp improvement
drive, based on the need as
expressed by the people of the
six counties . Canter 's Cave 4~
H Camp facilities have been
in use 25 years . The need for a
new lodge to replace the old
bam that has served as a
summer
dining'
and
recreational area was the
first priority.
Bob Evans' challenge was
just the spark needed to get
the six-co unty, citizen force
moving to raise $571,000, at
last count. Evans, who feels
4-H is ·one of the greatest
youth organizations in the
nation, has been a continuous
supporter of the 4-H program.
Members of 4-H clubs, 4·H
advisors,
4-H
a lumni ,
business . communities and
others promoted and devised
ca mpaigns for raising the

matching funds. Efforts
included such activities as
bake sales, car washes,
radiothons, news coverage
and various other fund
raising projects throughout
the year.
The Ohio State Uhiversity
Development Fund assisted
with overan fund raising
efforts and many contributions came Into The Ohio
State University Development Fund earmarked for the
Canter's Cave · 4-H Camp
Improvement.
Roy M. Kottman, director,
Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service, worked closely with
Canter's Cave 4·H Camp
Board members and The
Ohio State University,
providing leadership and
organizational guidance
where needed. Because of the
plaMed improvements to the
Canter's Cave 4·H Camp,
Kottman Is convinced that
many more youth will be
encouraged to join 4-H and
ta ke advantage of such
educational programs.
"The youths" of our state
are 9ur g r~atest resource,"

'r

said Kottman, who is also
Dean of the College of·
Agriculture and Home
Economics . "They must
receive
an
adequate
education to develop their
great est potential," he said.
"A key psrt of this education
is an understanding of the
environment and man's
relationship with it. One of
the best ways to teach this is
through organized outdoor
education programs a nd
facilities, which are limited
in southeast Ohio," Kottman
said.
The Canter's Cave area is a
unique site that lends itself to
development of an out·
standing outdoor laboratory.
Already being used by
thousands of youths and
adults annually, the Improved fa cilities and exponded edura,tional activities
will add additional thousands
of youths to tWs number each
year.
Due to its location, six
miles North ol Jackson off
State Route 35, the Canter's
Cave area has 60 acres of
(Continued on page 14)
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IN WASHINGTO.It

Sou.t hern beats Southwestern

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

By~ Angl~ and

Robert Walters
'WASIUNGTON (NEA) - It's bad enough seeing all those
Christmas bills resting reproachfully on the desk without havIng Uncle Sam add insult to injury with his annual Season's
Greetings.
But there it is, nonetheless, the dread Fonn 1040 or some
variation thereof, reminding one and all that the time has
come to render unto Caesar that which the Internal Revenue
Sei-vlces claims is due .for 1978.
Tax J?8ying is no pleasure for anyone, but that doesn' mean
the pain is evenly distributed. Despite periodic attempts by
Congress to eliminate discrimination from the tax code, inequities are forever popping up.
These days, it is the two-income family that suffers the most,
victimized by the so-caUed "marriage penalty" which extracts significantly higher taxes from a husband and wife who
both work than most couples would pay if only one of them
worked or if each were single.
What makes the penalty so onerous is the fact that more than
half the married couples ~iling joint returns each year are now
two-earner families, and that majority is increasing steadily
as more and more women enter the labor market.
This is a social and economic revolution which the government has been agonizingly slow to acknowledge. The basic
itructure of lhe pre5ent income tax laws, which favors oneearner married couples, dates back to 1948 when 80 percent of
all households were comprised of husband-and-wife families.
In an overwhelming majority of families, the husband was the
sole wage-earner.
A lot has changed since those days -soaring divorce rates,
lhe increasing popularity of cohabitation between unmarried
ndulls, the enonnous influx of women into the work force.. but·
not the bias of lhe tax code.
Congreas acted in 1969 to correct tax discrlniinau'on against
single persons, but it has failed to address the marriage penalty problem. The penalty hits nearly aU families where the seconll wage-earner contributes one-fifth or more of lhe total in·
come, but it is steepest for couples with more or less equal in·
comes.
For income earned in 1977, for example, a married person
earning $6,200 with a spouse earning $10,200 (for a total about
equal to the median family income) paid $262 more In taxes
than they would haye filing as singles. Acouple earning $15,000
apiece paid $1,013 more than its members would have singly.
A Falls Church, Va., couple went to court over the issue two
years ago, challenging the constitutionality of a tax code which
forced them to pay $1,220 more in 1976 income tax than they
would have paid singly,
The U.S. Court of Claims, however,last year ruled that the
judiciary was "neither equipped nor inclined to second guess .
lhe legislature In its detennination of appropriate tax policies
, , " and lhe Supreme Courl refused to hear the case, leaving
lhe matter to Congtess to resolve.
Sen. Charles McC. Mathias Jr., R·Md., is leading a drive to
ellmlnate lhe marriage penalty by giving couples a choice be·
tween filing jointly or separately as though single. Althougll
hia bill did not·get far last year, Mathias plans to try againand he believes growing public awareness of the problem will
help focus congressional attention on it.
A reform is clearly overdue, not' only as a matter of equity
but for moral reasons as well. In a society which purports to
honor and encourage marriage, the present tax structure
amounts to what some have called a "sin subaidy,''
Even the Court of Claims judge who declined to secondguess Congress look note of the results. "Certainly," he wrote,
''the tax-minded young man and woman whose relative in·
comes place them In the disfavored group will seriously con·
alder cohabitation without marriage. Thereby they can enjoy
the blessings of love whi minimizing their forced contribution"
to lhe federal treasury.

.... '
'

Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

Faulty self image
DEAR DR. LAMB -1 am 5
feet 5 and weigh approximately 100 pounds. The problem is that I still feel fat. I
eat one meal a day which
usually consists of steak andor eggs, a tossed salad and-or
cottage cheese, a roll with
margarine, Iced to:a and then
I'll splurge and have dessert.
My question is, "Will the
dessert make me fat"? l
mean I've heard so much
about carbohydrates and I'm
afraid that even though my
consumption is about 1,000
·calories a day, I'm afraid the
carbohydrates in the dessert
wiD cause the fat to fonn on
areas of my body where fat
cells exist. I'm so confused
about that.
People have told me I am
slightly anorexic and maybe
lhey're right but I am so
afraid of getting fat I have to
constantly be denying things
to myseH because _if I eat
lhem l am afraid it will tum
to fat and l don't want to look
like a blimp.
.
Also, if l drink a couple of
alcoholic drinks in the evening I compensate for it by
fasting for the next couple of
days. Then I worry about all
of lhe vitamins and nutrients
I'm not getting. If you can
understand this, I'd sure appreciate some advice. It's
beComing harder and harder
to live with .this constant
obsession.
DEAR READER - I'll be
completely candid with you
and tell you you need help. By
help I mean psychiatric or
psychological support. AI
your height, you are as skin~yasarail.

The description of your
dieting habits leads me to
think that you are suffering
from malnutrition. You're
describing yourseH as a person who ha·s anorexia
neurosa, people who think
lhey are fat when they are
not: You have a faulty sel!7&lt;
)-.

image of your body.
The fat cells you have have
been destroyed long ago. The
walls of fat cells can be
digested just like other
ti55ues of the body can if you
are starving yourself.
I am not at all concerned
about those desserts you eat.
I'm concerned about what
you're not eating. You really
must have professional help
to unravel why you have this
faulty image of your body.
Meanwhile,! would suggest
. that you increase your diet
immediately, preferably by
eating three good meals a day
and start developing a
regular exercise program. AI
first you should do some slm·
pie walking. The exercise
might help stimulate your ap.
petite and make you feel better about things in general.
For people with your problem there is no substitute for
professional help. I hate to
alann y9u but individuals
who get started on this track
can end up with very serious
consequences.
Even though an individual
may begin to look like a
fugitive from a concentration
camp, she still has the false
idea that she is fat as you express it. This can progress to
the point of requiring
hospitalization and many
young women have been
known to die from malnutrition before adequate professional help is obtained.
I hate to frighten you but
this is a serious condition and
you must understand that and
get the kind of help_that you
need at once before you do
any further damage to your
body.
l am sending you The
Health Letter number 4-',
Balanced Diet, Recommend·
ed Dally Dietary Allowances
(RDA) which will tell you
what you absolutely must
have each day. Others who
want this Issue can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self.~ddressed envelope for
, it.

Taxes are a topic much receipts, or appromnately
thought about this time of ?MI billion dollars, went to
year. With the coming of individuals for either Income
January . we are repeatedly maintenance programs such
reminded of the tax load we as Social Security, pensions,
as average Americans must medicare, and
unembear. With January comes a ployment :or anti-poverty
resumption .of the Sodal public assistance programs
Security withholding from such as food stamps, housing
paychecks. With January subsidies and welfare.
comes the convening of a n~w • More 'th.an 81.3 million
session of· Congress, and the people, including government
talk of new and higher taxes. employees, now receive tax
With the new year comes the dollars for support compared
annual requirement of filing to the 70.2 rnillion people
our Internal Revenue employed ln the private
returns. And without fail sector who provide most of
these burdens always seem to these revenues. Of course the
hit at a time when one finds 15.2 million people working
__:__
himself
particularly for federal, state, and local
overextended due to the governments also pay income
crush of Christmas giving. taxes , but without the
I'd like to think that this revenues generated by
January will be .different private Industry, government
from Januarys past ;' that this could · not underwrite these
January we will see evidence positions...
right people, not only in Ohio c onfused vocational
from
the new Congress that
When aU is said and done
Shoemaker said vocational
but from all the states," said educators with his reasons
the average taxpayer will no the enonnous expense · of
education
gets
more
local
' Dr. Byrl R. Shoemaker, forthecuts ."Ontheonehand
longer be taken for granted, these
public
service
director · , of vocational he told the committee in support than most federal aid · that lt will no longer be . programs is diverting a great
education in Ohio. "Once It Congress to not put more programs.
"Unlike other programs, assumed by . our lawmakers deal of valuable capital and
became public information money in vocational eduthat there is no bottom to the labor away from the private
that Secretary Califano had cation because it was not an this one is overmatched by American taxpayer's pocket. sector, .mtch to keep our
proposed a $200 million cut, effect'ive
program ," state and local
The average taxpayer now economy sound, must grow
reaction was very strong." Shoemaker said. "Then he governments," he said. works from January I to May faster than government in
He said the figures were to turns around and in a letter " Local governments put 4 each year, more than a order to provide the needed·
be in the president's budget read to us at our national money in things they believe third of his work year, just to tax revenues. How can we
recommendations that went meeting said vocational are worthwhile. Most all pay for the various income, bring ~ tax burden in
to Congress this week.
education was so successful states match vocational Social Security, property and check? How can we more
S)&gt;Oemaker said federal aid that jt doesn 't need any more education money on a six or excise taxes due to govern- :~ 11ff~iyely generate-revenues
seven to one basis.
to vocational education is money.
ment. Taxes have increased while 'minimizing the cost to
about $680 million , making a . "We· don't know where Mr. · "In Ohio it 's nine to one and 40 percent faster than per- individuals? Many feel we
$200 million cut significant. Califano gets his information in - most other federal
sonal income over the past should increase the tax rate
Shoemaker said Califano or why he proposed the cuts programs it's 100 percent ten years.
on corporations and reduce
federal or a iilhiO split." .
Taxes
for
a
family
making
the rate for individuals.
In Ohio, he said, vocational
.
·.
$9,000
per
year
or
inore
have
Where would this get us?
education has a $173 miUion
been
increasing
even
faster
Corporations
would simply
budget to · train teen-agers
than
the
cost
of
living.
If
a
pass
these
individual
costs on
and adults in a variety of jobs
family's
increases
In
Income
to
consumers
through
higher
for agriculture, business,
only
keep
up
with
inflation,
prices.
Thus
any
hope
for
office and industry work.
they
end
up
with
less
pur·
such
a
change
resulting
in
Shoemaker said one
chasing
power
because
more
disposable
income
to·
program trains abo\lt 9,600
would
be
14-and 15-year-old potential progressive income tax rates individuals
take
a
higher
percentage
of
unrealistic.
high school dropouts.
The options seem to narrow
"It's a special prograin to their income each year.-lt's a
vicious
cycle
that
at
present
down
to one of two apconvince them they can make
has
no
end.
To
get
a
better
preaches,
(1) consumption
it, that they are worth -somethe office of chief justice.
6,000.
feel
for
our
tax
structure
and
oriented
tax
cuts such as tax
She admits her proposal is thing; and by putting them in for the demands plac~d on us rebates, or (2) investment
In fact, Holmes was
appointed to the associate not new, and has floundered a work process, they learn taxpayers. . perhaps tt would tax cuts or credits designed to
justice vacancy created when at recent sessions of the they can do something," he do well to ~xplore the broad provide an expanded capital
Frank D. Celebrezze of General Assembly . Last said. "Most of them will stay subject of taxes more fully. base m1the part of the private
Cleveland was elected chief session·: it was offered by in, school after that
In 1977, individual income sector. Of the two, the latter
justice in November. Hr ·former Senate Minority program ."
taxes provided the largest seems to make more sense.
Ohio
·
has
49
Joint
succeeded longtime Chief Leader Michael J. Maloney,
· Vocational SchQOls plus a share of revenue · for the The fonner would be short
Justice C. William O'Neill, a R-Cincinnati.
federal government, 37 lived and inflationary; the
. Republican wtio died in office
"I hope I have better luck," number of vocational percent . This was followed by ·Jatter more lasting and
facilities operated .by city
last August.
she said.
Social Securtty taxes 27 beneficial to the greater
Cele brezze ran against
The
Ohio Municipal · school systems. · The 49 are percent, corporate taxes 14 number.
Associate Justice Thomas M. League , an organization that joint efforts by two or more percent,
government
Let's .hope my colleagues
Herbert. Although he lost his lobbies to protect the smaller school districts.
. borrowings 14 percent, and share this view and will work
Shoemaker
said
in
1978
bid for the top spot, Herbert prerogatives of municipal
· other taxes such as excise, to make 1979 a watershed
retained · his associate governments, has been there were 519,418 Ohioans estate and gift taxes and year for the American taxjudgeship.
opposed to the proposal in the enrolled in vocational custom duties 8 percent. payer.
programs plus another .
Associate Justices Paul W, past. ·
283,917
in career education Nearly 70 percent of 1977 tax
Brown, a Republican, and
William B. Brown, a
Rep. Dennis Eckert, D- programs.
Democrat, were re-elected Euclid, returned to his house
last fall to new, six-year Monday afternoon to discover
Wednesday
terms. They were the only he had had some unwanted
Supreme Court justices visitors.
"Jonathan arrows " are
whose tenns ran out the first
Eckart found the back door still warning signals, referof this year.
to his house had been forced ring to Jonathan's prearopen. A pile of his possessions ranged plan to warn David.
"And I will shoot three
Rep . Helen H. Fix, R-Cin· sat next to the splintered
cinnati,
wants county door, but the only thing he arrows ... But If I say thus
commissioners and township could determine to be unto the young man, Behold,
trustees to have the power to missing was a color television the arrows are beyond thee:
go thy way ... " -- I Sam.
enact their own laws, so long set.
20:20-22
as they do not conflict with
·The
representativ e
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Former Secretary of State Henry
existing state statutes or theorizes that his dog, locked
A. Kissinger says he's In favor of the'president's brother Billy
municipal ordinances.
in the room of the house, had
Choking on food is the Carter becoming "a one-term entertainer." ·
She says counties and barked so loudly that the
Kissinger made his suggestion Tuesday when asked: "What
townships in metropolitan trea sure bunters fled in seventh leading cause of advice have you for Billy Carter as be furthershis diplomatic
death in North America.
areas are trying to solve 20th haste.
career?"
Century problems "with a
The ques\ion drew a burst of laughter from delegates ~the
horse and buggy form of
NBC Radio Affiliates Conference, crowded into a small French
govenunent.''
Quarter theater here.

_______________

:

'.

placed four men in double
figures enobling . the host
~uthcrn Tornadoes to roll to
un 85-&lt; t · SV-Ae.:'\ win over
visiting Southwc:st ern last

night.
Tim Brinager netted 19
points and had three steals
and three assists, and Dwight
Hill, recuperating from a
two-week illness, had one of
his fin est nights, tossing in 14
poi nts. Eight of Hill's points

By JOE McKNIGHT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Protests by vocational educatnrs seem to bave averted a
proposed 30 percent cut in
federal aid to vocational
education.
Joseph Califano, secretary
of the U. S. Department of
Health, Education and
Welfare, may have lost
friends among proponents of
trade
and
industrial
education by proposing the
cut. .
"Wethinkthepresidenthas
gotten \be word from the

_____

...
.
"**********************************************&lt;

i -Editorial opinions .i.
~

t*******************************************•il

Musical chair game ended
.:OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) A~arne of musical chairs was
compl~ed last week on the
Ohio Supreme Court, but it
left-Democrats with the same
4-3 edge they !·.,u bef&lt;re the
November election.
Judge Robert E. Holmes of
Columbus was sworn in
Wednesday as associate
justice, after being appointed
by Gov. James A. Rhodes In a
term ending Dec. 31, 1980.
Holmes, a Republican, had
been judge of the lOth District
state Court of Appeals.
Democrats, in addition to
retaining their 4-3 advantage
amid the shuffilng, picked up

The Daily Sentinel
HJSPS lt5-9fiH

.

-~ ...._......
DF.VOTF~

_

TO niF.

INTEREST OF

in the news f

MEIGs.MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFUCH
City Editor

DAVID BUSKIRK
Adv~rtl1llt&amp; Managn

Pubh3hl..'&lt;l dally elU.'t'PI Saturtluy
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
Cmnpany-Mu lllmOO!a , Tn('.,
111

Cuurt St, Pomeroy , Ohio ~5769.

Ruslncs!&gt; Office Phone 992· Zl[)G.
F..dltorlal Phone 992-2157.
St't·oml cia~ po:ilHKe p&lt;~oid at
Pomeroy, Ohio
National advertisinK reprtstn·
blli\'e, J.andon Assodates, 3101
F.ucli d Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 4-4115.
Subscription r.11tes . Delivered by
t·urriLT where avatl~ble 75 cents ptr
wet'k. By Motor Route where l'a rrler
.wrvil'~ not available, One mo nth,
S:J.25. By Rll:liJ in Ohio !lnd W. Va .,
One Yeur, 127.00: Six month.'!,

Three mon ths.
F:lst!wht're $32.00 yewr; Si"
$11.00; Thret' mnnths,
Subst·riptum pr!ee Includes
, Tim!!'S-Sentlnel.
$lUll;

8err·y·s
I

Names •••

S8 .50 :
months
$9.00.

Sunday

Mrs. Fix said her upcoming
legislation will limit the new
legislative authority to
counties and townships which
have populations of at least

READY TO SHOOT -Southern's Dwight Hill (14)
gets ready to make a field goal attempt inside the foul line
during Tuesday's 85-71 victory over the Southwestern
Highlanders. Closing in are the Highlanders ' Greg Nelson

w0 rId

L ~.,_dt

1

8

ft
A

R
y

....,.,.•.
...,.........

Library

~

Letters

,.------=-----------------,
James Lawrence
Southern Junior High School .
Elm Street
Racine, OH 45771

,.,...

,,......... .....
.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- AvereUHarriman, former gov-

ern..- of New York and veteran U.S. diplomat, bas been named

the 1978 recipient of the Harry S. Truman Public Service
Award. ,
.
Dear Jim :
Harriman, 87, was named Tuesday to receive the bronze
Would !like to display your students' projecis for a week bust of Truman, who appointed him secretary of commerce In
or "'j&gt;re? You bet!
,
1946. In 1948, Harriman became Trwnan's toving ambassador
Our staff, this year a1l'ci 'In past years, has spent many for the European Recovery Program.
hours gathering together books to be used in making those
projects. We certainly would like to see what happens with the
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - StateRep. TheoMltchellsays he's
information we lend out.
"incensed" that South Carolina's senators didn't attend
We also lodk forward to seeing the papers the students speech by Jean Childs Young, wife of U.N. Ambaaaador
have written. What we have in mind (for Mike Gerlach's Andrew Young.
·
classes and Dorothy Oliver's and those of other cooperative
MitcheU, chairman of the 13-member black caucus, said lhe
teachers) is making pho~opies of the bibliographies at the senators slighted Mrs. Young, who addressed House members
OVAL headquarters so that we can try to order more of the Tuesday on behaH the United Nations' International Year of
books the students have actually found useful.
the Child.
-Someday I would like to see our libraries used as gaUeries
State Sen. John D. Long Ill said the senators simply wanted
to display artwork by local artists (such as BiD Mayer and the to conduct business without interruption, and "it's unfortunate
Adletas) and craftspeople, as well as student work. This idea they want to make a racial thing out of it."
has worked very well in other communities and should be
successful here too. 'Ihe displays from your class will be a nice
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says he
beginning .
hasn't made a decision yet about whether he'll run for
I'll have to talk to Bob.Hoeflich and see if he would like to president next year,
take a photo of aome of the !llsplays for the Seatlllel. (His
"I'm not prepared to come to any conclusion," Brown said
camera hasn 't functioned well in the library Iince I arrived, about llis candidacy in a radio interview Tuesday. ''I am rea-.
so he may have given up on us.) And, if you will give me some sonably e&amp;\ltious and giving it a lot of thought, and I'm not preadvance notice of when tn expect the projects, maybe we'D be pared to make any decision today,"
abl~ to have a nice article in the paper;· too - listing the
Brown, 40, who chaUenged Carter for the 1976 Democratic
children's names and which projects are theirs. That way, ~mlnation in five primaries, silld hia position hasn't changed
everyone who stops in wUI have a scorecard!
.In recent months, but he's dropped the word "remote" from
Thanks for the offer. - Very truly yours, Elle~ Bell, references to his future aa a candidate.
Librarian, Serving aU of Meigs County.
.

a

"JOHN BELUSHI!"
-r----~------~----J

~

(32), Scott Russell (20) and Dale Newberry (42). Tim
Brmager who led So uthern 's attack with 19 points is tn th e
background.

Ohio Outdoors
By MICHAEL HOFFMAN
Associated Press Writer
Now in its third year, the FishOhio program of the state
Division of Wildlife is considered a success by those who work
with it .
The program was aimed at boosting-interest in fishi ng in the
Buckeye State. It includes a contest, a pond stocking plan and
a hoped-for increa se in public fishing areas.
•One way In measure the success of a program of this type is
by taking a look at the number of contest entries. There were
200 entries during 1978, 120 in 1977 and 138 the first year .
Figures on the number of farm ponds added to the public
fishing category are not complete, but a spokesman assures
there has been an increase there too . .
There are 29 categories of fish eligible for entry in the
awards program. This year for the first time, prizes wiD be
presented to runnersup in each category ,
Three categories have. no entries this year. There were no
entries of spotted ballS, sucker or brook trout. It's difficult to
understand why nothing turned up in the first two categories:
anglers were kiUing spotted bass in the Ohio River last year,
and you probably can't count the number of suckers that were
taken. Most likely, no brook troutwerecreeled in Ohio.
Three state records were recorded during the contest year .
A 35;lound, 2~. ounce striper was taken at Grand Lake St.
Marys by Donald E. Waymire of Dayton. Lloyd M. Cain of
Columbus took a 34-pound buffalo sucker out of Hoover
Reservoir. And the Sandusky River gave up a 4-pound, B-ounce
sauger to Jim Leibold of Fremont. State records are certified
by the Outdoor Writers of Ohio Inc.
At this time it appears there'sa three way tie in one category
with a triple-beader on IH',-pound coho salmon.
There are a number of reasons to explain the increase in the
program's popularity, said division spokesman Jim Schoby.
"To begin, it takes two or three years for any new ongoing
program to reaUy get moving," he said.
Another reason is the fa ct that in 1978 game protectors in
each of the state's 88 counties were able to make lin'• to spread
the word, to anglers in their areas.
"We weren't aU tied up with Issue 2 (the proposed 1977
amendment to the Ohio Constitution that would have-banned
use of leghold traps) ," he said.
Pond owners are encouraged to get into the act and help expand the state's fishing opportunities by getting their ponds
stocked free by the division. To qualify for the stocking of bluegills, catfish and largemouth bass, owners must agree to
permit some public fishing. That doesn 't mean the pond owner
loses control over his property. It means that you must get
permission from the owner to fish and the owner has the option
of saying no.
"As far as I know, no one has ever not allowed fishing on a
pond" stocked under the agreement program, said Schoby.
''The pond owner can, of course, regulate use on his
property; it is his property," Schoby said.

Jamestown Greeneview 54,
Yellow Springs 51
Ka lida 66, Columbus Grove

47

Little Mi ami
Miami 57

68,

New

L orain
So ut h11 i ew
62,
Elyria Sr . 61
LQwell vi lle 66, Lordstown
64, of
Luca sville Vall ey 48, South

Webster 46

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rock singer Mlck Jagger has been
declared the father of a girl born 8 years ago to actress. singer
L ,.,...,..;'
I
Marsha Hunt.
I
Details of Tuesday 's "amicable" paternity suit settlement
~
II
,,"
were not disclosed.
A
Ms. Hw\t, 31, filed suit in July against Jagger, the 34-yearR
old lead singer of the Rolling Stones. She clainied-he fathered
.
.
y
Karis Hunt Ratlege while she and Jagger lived together in 1970
and 1971, and sought $2,300 a month in child support.
Her attorney said Ms. Hunt was forced to collect welfare
because of the "tnodest" monthly child support Jagger paid
January 22,1979 for four years.
.

came in the fifst period, !crmission the h1i~t~ were on
aiding Southern 's rally from top 47-34 . After three periods,
the score read 67-48 .
a four-point deficit.
Trailing 16-14 wtth 50 Southern's biggest lead was
seconds to go in the period, 21 points on two occasion s.
The defending SVAC
Hill hit a long jumper to knoi
the score. With :151eft. he hit champions hit a good 46
a twisted lay-up , and then percent from the flo or,
quickly stole the bail, wa s nailing 37 of 81 shots, while
fouled, and calmly hit both canning 11 of 17 free throws.
The team outr ebounded the
free throws.
Suddenly , Southern was on l:!ighl a nders 46-28, with
top at the buzzer, 2()-16.
Tornado Da ve Foreman
The Tornado momentum hauling in II .caroms. The·
kept building . By in· ·team had a total of 13 steals.
Captain Dave Findley olso

Pirates trip Bobcats

Protests·- help avert aid cut
..

'

HEALTH

By (;reg Bailey
·· A fine learn effort that

By Clarence
Miller

.The 'sin subsidy'

•

•

2- The Dllllv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 24, 1979

Mau mee

Spr ingfield 52

64,

Hol land

Miamis burg 70, Fairmont

Wes t 68, of

M infor d 68 , Portsmouth

Clay 64
Mogad ore
52 .
73

79, Str eetsbor o '

New Lex ington 78, M org an

With three players in
double figu res Tuesday night,
host North Gallia defeated
Kyger Creek, 63~1 in a
thrilling SVAC contest.
The Pirates of Coach Ted
l ~hew jumped into a 17-10
first period lead that stood
des pit e some
spirited
comeback elforts by Coach
Keith Carter's Bobcats .
NGHS extended its lead to
30-26 at the half but watched
the Bobcats roar back to cut
the co unt to 43-42 at the end of
the third stanza. Th e game

was close the rest of the way
but North Gallia never lost a
one ·point lead.
Tim McComas, 6-2 senior
center, led the Pirates with 22
point s; Sa rn Smith and
Stacey Winston tossed in 18
points apiece.
Senior forwar.d Von Taylor
led the1'Bobcats with 22 points
on nine field goals and four
free throws. Senior center
Jon Thompson scored 15
points and John WestfaU
added 14.
North Gallia hit 28 of GO

. Eagles blast
Hannan Trace
By Greg Bailey
Dan Spencer pwnped in 30
points · and th e Easter~
Eagles had one of its finest
games of the year blasting
VIsitin g Hannan Trace's
Wildcats 82-58Tuesday night.
The Eagles hit a sizzling 59
percent !rorn th e floor,
sinking 36 of 61 shots. They
also never missed a foul -shot
as they sank 10.

Paul Shaffer paced the
Wildcats with 20 points.
Hannan Trace collected 37
rebounds and made good on 6
of 14 fre e throws. The
Wildcats hit 26 of GO floor
attempts lor 44 percent.
Freshman Paul Sprague
netted 9 points and hauled in
12 rebounds to lead the Little
Eagle3 to an easy 48-32 win
over the Wildkittens.
Harman Trace was never
Tim Dill also bad 9 points
reaUy in the ballgame as the for the winners and fr eshman
Eagles' defense held the Johnny Riebel had a fine
visitors to a rnere four points game with 7 points and some
in the first period. Meanwhile excellent defense and board
the off ense was pouring in 20 work.
points. By halft ime, the game
Eastern travels to SouthCOME HERE BOUNCING BALL - Southern's Dave
was on ice with Eastern western Friday night as they
leading 38-16. At the end of continue to lead the SVAC.
Foreman is somewhat bewildered over the high bouncing
three quarters the score read The win pushed Eastern's
ball. Action scene came in Tuesday's Bli-71 SV AC victory
&amp;1-34 Eastern.
league mark to 6-Q.
over Southwestern.
Every Eagle saw action
.EASTER·N-(821- Spencer ,
and hit the scoring column. 12-6-30 ; Myer s, 1-0-2. Eyn on,
However, the only other 3-0 6; Mathews, 1-0-2 ; Wolfe,
2-0-4; Bower s. 4-0-8; Goebel.
Eastern player to hit double 7-0-14:
Boyles. t-0-2; Wigal, J.
figures was Jeff Goebel with 0-2. Bissell, J -2-8 ; Pooler. 0·22; Cote, t-0-2. TOTALS 36-1014 points.
The sharp Eastern club 82.HANNAN TRACE (58) committed JUSt six turnovers Paul . Shaff er . 10-0-20 ;
Joe Fletcher and Jeff Linn home to ho st Waverly while causing Ha-nnan Trace Campbell, 2-2-6; Ron Pack, 2combin ed for 53 points Saturday night in another to tum the ball over 22 times. 1 5, We bb, 4-0 8; Beaver . 2-2·
Hin eman , 2·0-4 ; Hil e, 0-0-0;
Tu esday night in leading the critical league game.
Goebel had five steals and 6;
Whitt,
t-1-3 and Rod Pa ck, 3
Ironton Ti gers ov er the
Box score :
Brian Bissell had a good fttght 0-6. Totals
26-6-25.
Jackson Ironmen 93-67 in an
IRONTON (93) - Ja mes 6- with eight assists. Eastern
By Quarters
SEOAL makeup contest.
0-12; Gordon 4-0-8; Hodges 4- had 34 rebo unds, Spencer HT
.4 12 18 24
20 182618
Playing at Jackson the 0-B; Fitzpatrick 0-1-t ; Fl et - collectin g 10 .
E.
ch er 15·0 -30 ; Linn 9-5-23:
Tigers had to stru ggle Harvey 4-2-10 ; Fairchild 0-1through the first half before t. TOTALS 42-9-93.
JACKSON (671 - Sydow 7erupting for ii5 points in the
Ohio High School
second half to take over 0-14; Martin 4-4-12; Nea t 0-1Cor I I and La keview 63 ,
d
f'
1;
T.
Evans
2-5-9;
Stevens
1-0Basketball
.
.
New ton Falls 51
undtspu1e trst p1ace tn the 4, Barnett 0-2-1; D. Evans 9-5·
By The Associated Press
Cov ington 51. Brad,f or d 22
leag ue standings.
23 ; Gheanng t-0-2. TOTALS
Tuesday Night
Dayton Carr oll 75, Dayton
Amanda Clear'creek 60,
Th e victory upped the ' 25-11-67.
Wayn e 74
Fa1rfi e ld Un 1on .46
New Matamoras Fr onlie r Tigers record to 8-1 in league
Score by quarters '
Day t on M ea dowda le 73,
. .
. .
·
Iront on
22 16 31 24- 93
61, Vince nt Warren 57
Dayton Nor thmont 58
19 16 11 20'--67
Ashtabula 83, Painesville
Dayton N o r t hr~ dge BL
Old Wash ing ton Buckeye compehtton whtle tdle Athens Jackson
Reserv e Score' Ironton 46. River side 77
New ton 67
Tratl68, G uernsey Catholi c 36 holds second with a 7.-1 mark.
Ashtabu la Harbor 53,
Dover 66, Mass ill on 60
Otto\lil!e 88, Linc oln\l iew 50 Waverly dropped to third Jackson 29
Madi son 50
Parkersburg {W
Va . ) with a 7-2 record following a
Dresden Tri -Va ll ey 54,
Balt imore Liberty Union
Catholi c 74, Be lpr e 67
Crooksvi ll e 43
51-41 setback at Gallipolis.
95, Lancaster .Fisher 73
Dub li n
65 ,
Colum bu s
Pickerington 66, Miller sTuesday's
In posting their ninth
Beachwood 48, Cleveland
port 55
Wallerson 63
Sports Tl'ansactions
Luth er an East 47 , 2 ot
E. Cleveland Shaw 56,
Ri chmond His. 56 , Kirtland victory in 12 starts, the Tigers
By
The A ssociated Press
Bellair e St. John 72 , Mingo
49
Ber ea 47
led 22-19 after one quarter, 38Football
67
Fort Jenni ngs 87. Pandora
Rootst own 64, Garrett sv i lle :;:; at halftime and 69-47 after
_N,a tional Football League
Blufft on 75 McComb 62
Garfield 58
Gilboa 57
Houston O il ers - Signed 0 .
Brecksvil le 67, Brooklyn 51
Fort Recovery 78, Ansonia
· Rossford 71. Mil bury L ake thr ee ca ntos.
A. " Bum " Phillips, head
. Ca ldwell 64, Shenandoah 55 70
Fletcher, a 6-3 junior, coach,
48
to a three -year con +
Ca mp be l l -Memo ri al 50 ,
Geneva 76, Ashtabula St.
Sa lineville Sout h ern 58, poured in 30 points, a career
trac
t.
Struth er s 48
John
43 .
Sta nt on 45
L Os Ange l es Rams Carlfield 72, E. Palestine 65
Ger. oa 89, Woodm or: e 76
Sebri ng 78, Spr ingfield 36 high, while Jeff ·Unn scored A nn
oun ced the· r etirement" of
Carli sl e 70, Wes t Carroll Graysville Skyvue sa ,
Seb rin g
M cK inl ey
78, 23, and Dickie James added
Tom
Mack, off ensi ve guard .
ton 68
12.
Meadowbrook 57
Bergholz Sprin gfield 36
Soccer
Carrot! Bl oom -Carroll 47,
Grove City 71, Wester v tlle
Spnngfie ld
Nor th
86,
The Tigers fired in 42 of 81
North Am erican
Berne Union 46
South 48
Fa irbor n Baker 60
attempts for a good ii3 per$occ er League
Ca rr o l I t on 78 , Ma ssi llon
Groveport 89 , Columb us St.
Dallas Tornad o - Signed
cent average, added nine of
Tuslaw 48
Charl .:.!s 67
Ni ego P e~ . for ward, a twoChagr in Fal ls 50, Chardon
Harrison 57, Tayl or 54
13 free throws, and nailed 39 year
contract .
38
Hebron Lakewood BO.
rebounds. Big Tom Gordon
Tulsa
Rou g hnecks
Chillico th e 63 , Wa shington · Granvill e 54
. snagged 10 of the missed Acquired Terr y Darracott , C.H . Miami Trace 39
Hi tl sb or:o
79 ,
M acon
defender , fr.om Evert on ol the
shots.
Cinci nnati Colleratn 66.
Eastern 64
for S30.000.
Cincinnati Turpin 54
Jackson, now 2-10 and 1-11, Eng lish League
College
Cinci nnat i Greenhills 60,
was paced by Dave Evans' 23
Brigham Young - Named
Hamilton Ba din 56
points with Mark Sydow Doug Sc o vi l offens ive
Cincinnati Oak Hill s 80,
getting 14, and Ed Martin 12. c oordina tor .
Forest Pa rk 72
Towson Sta te Named
Cinci nnati Rea d i ng 6 1,
The lrortmen conn ected on ' Billy
Hu nter head baseball
Finneytow n 44
25 of 61 from the field for 41 coach.
Circleville i4, Greenfield
percent, converted 17 of 24
Un i ver sity o f Colrado McClain 45
Frigidaire
free throws, and pulled down Named J1m Webs te r to its
Ciictevffle Logan Elm 88,
18-lb
football coach ing staff .
Cana l Win chester 58
29 rebounds . .
Univer si ty of M lsm i Laundry
Friday night the Tigers Named Kim He lton , Ri ck · Columbus Brookhaven 62,
s Eastmoor 54
• travel to Logan in a crucial Lantz and Arnie Romero to • Columbu
Pair
Columbus Centennial 63,
.'
its
footba
ll
coach
ing
staff.
meeting, and then return
Columbus Whet stone 5&lt;1
Columbu s Central 66,

SALE I

Ironton moves into
undisputed first place

sc To

• New elegance, traditional dependability

• Flolble 18-lb capacity ,
·
• Knill/ Permanent Preu/Regular waah cycles
•Infinite Water.Levelaelector
• Automatlc.'ory and Timed drying cycles
"'Dryer Fabrlca aelector wltn 4 poaltlona
• Gentle Flowing Heat Drying action

55

vALuEs ro 35
1

SOME IMPERFECT .. MOST
A. OK. WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
· AI

THE ALCOVE

BAKER FU.RNITURE
MIDDLEPORT. Q,

42 Court
'I

r e bound s

Winsto n

with

getting 13.
The Pir ates also won the

re serv e tilt , G3-42. Keit h
Payne led the winners with 21
points. David Sands had 11 in
a losing cause.

The win gave the Pirates a
4-5 overall record and 3-2
slate in the SV AC. Kyger
Creek dropped to 2-10 overall
and 0-5 in the SVAC.
Kyger Creek travels to
Southern Friday night whi le
Wahama visits North Gal!ia .
Box Score
Kyger
Creek
(61) ~
Wesll all, 6·2-14; Taylor , 9 ., .
22 , Thomp son. 7-1-15 ; Smith ,
2-4 8; Sp r inger , 1-0·2, Total s
25 - 11 -61 ,

North Gattia (63) - Smith ,

7-4· 18 ;
Wi ns ton ,
8·2· 18 ;
M cComa s. 11 0-22 ; Peck , 1. 1.
3; L1 !tl e, 1-0-2 Totals 28-7-63.
By Quarte r s ·

10 264161
17 30 43 63

KC
NG

Cage Scores

1 :~

point s, and Foreman

added 10. Ten Tornadoes hit
the scoring column .
Gene Layton had a fine
night for the Highlanders
getting 20 markers.
So uthwcstem's Todd Baker
&lt;nd Scott Russell hit for 11
points each wil e Dale
Newberry hit lor 10.
Newberry also led his te.am in .
rebo unding \vit h nine. The

team hit 24 of 44 s.hots from
the field for 54 percent and
made 23 of 40 foul shots.
IIESERV ES TILT
'111e Southern Reserves of
Coach Howie Caldwell picked
up their 29th straight SV AC
win with an easy

65·26 victory
Ken t

over' Sout hw es t ern.

Wolfe and Brya n Wolfe each
tossed m 12 points for the
winners wh1le Mark Wolfe,
had 10.
Southern was ah ead onl y g'_

i

after the fir st period. but by

intermission h~fd streaked out

to a :lO-i2 i c~d . Ten players
scored , and th e.tcam hit 13 of
21 free throws.
S. Lewis led the losers with
eight po ints. The team hit just
4 of 17 foul shots.
Southcm entertains Ky ger

Cree k frida y night . The
Tornadoes' record is now 7-3.

Southwestern fell to 5-6 and
will ent erta ln league-leading
Eastern F riday .

SOU THERN

185) --

Gallipolis
·I

Co lum bus

SOUTHWESTERN

171) -

Greg Nels on . 3-0-6; Dale
Ne wberry , 50 10; To dd
Baker , 3-5 11 ; Sco tt Ru sse ll ,
3 8 11 , Gene Layton, 8 6 22;
Dw ayne For gey , 1 0 2; Ja y
Burl eson ,
0 · 1-l;
Ke1th
Si zem ore.
1 2 4:
Jai me
Jord an, 0 1 1. To1als 24 -23. 71.
By Quarters
sw
16344871

s

20 47 6 7

85

Tuesday's College
Basketball Scores
By Th e Assoc iated Press
East
Bo s I o n
Colleg e
B3 ,
Villan ova 75
Eastern , Pa 78, Conn . Co li.

57

Ma ssa c husett s 61 , New
Hampshire 57
St . J oh n 's N . Y. 80 ,
Man hattan 55
South
Cenl . fl orid a 95, Bi scayne

83
F lorida

Tech 73

St

79,

Georgia

Georgetown. D. C. 74, St .
Francis, Pa. 62
Mary land 82, Na vy 62
Norfo lk St . 88, Va Union 78
N. C. Char lott e 70, N.
Ca rol ina A&amp; T• 61
N. Carolina St . 104, E .
Carolina 88
Midwest
Marquette 75, Ora l Rober ts

60

Nebraska Omaha 77 , N .
Dak ota 70
Far Wes t
Cal
Pol y -Pomo na 102 ,
Loyola , CJiil. 83
Ha waii -Hil a 120, BY U Hawaii 68
M ontana Tec h 78, Rocky
Moun ta in 76
Oreg on Coli. of Ed . 55,
Carr oll , M on t 48
S. Col orad o 68, Regi s 64
UC Sa ntr~ Barbar a 64,
Pepperdi ne 56
Exhibition s
Athle tes In Action 91, St .
Mary's , Calif . 73

• Fishtng Tackle
a nd Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
•Ba ll Glov es
Camping
Equipm e nt
• ·Archery
• Indoor Ga mes
•-we
have Gilt
Certi fi cates
601 Main St .
Pt . Plea sa nt , W. Va .
VI~ '

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Court ho use

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()pen Sunday 1· p .m .-6 p.m .
Morldily Th ru Saturday
9"

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Linden -

M cK inl ey 65, Columbus East

64

Co lu mbus
Mari on
Frank lin 91, Columbus Independence 61

Co lumbu s Miffl in · 67,
Columbus Northland 42

Co lumbus
W es t
60,
Columbus Briggs 45
Colum b us Wes tl and 76.
Reynoldsburg 64
Columbus Whiteha ll 51.
Upper Arli nglon 47
Conneaul 72. Ashtabula
Edgewood 6
Con t inen !al 81 , Leipsic 54

Dave

F tndley, 5-3 13; Dw ight H ill,
6 J 24; T1m Brin agcr , 8 3 19 .
Dave For eman , 5·0· 10 ; Ji m
O'B r 1en , 3 0·6 : Ja ck Duffy , .t
0-B; Ed Roush , 1-0-2: John
Oav1s. 0-2 2, Jonathan Rees,
0 0 0 ; St eve Filch , Q.Q.O; John
Pape , 3 1-7; Dale 'Teaford , 2
0 4. Tota ls 37 -11-85 .

Columbu s Sout h 64
Colu mbus DeSales 75 ,
Cplu mbus Beechcro ft 68
Co l um b us ~ Ham i l to n
Township 67, West Uefferson

5 CENT RED DOT BOOK SALE
NEW HARD BACK BOOK.S

$398

floor attempts for 46 -percent
and seven of Iii at the foul
line. The Bobcats canned II
of 19 at the charity stripe
North Ga ll ia grabbed 42

hit double ligures for Coacli
Ca rl Wolfe's Tornadoes with

AND MOIRE

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

�'

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."

5 ~ The Daily Sentinel: Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 24, 1979

·T:d:~:"'oo'· ""''""'~-·· ' : ·"-·· 'Mays newest Hall of Fame .membe-A Redmen hold on, edge

srnorts w rId
0

RO~ENTHAL

IIERT
II' s rt . Writt•r

II)

. ~ E\V ~~RsK ( AP ) ~" lf" ls

a word that Willie Ma s said
y
h d · d· ·
AP Corrt:s pondt·nl
ellu': ~~!~ pressed . about
what he thought he would be
NEW YORK ( AI' )~ You are a tyke just learning to swing a worth on today's ballooning
man-sized baseball bat and put a little spin on your curve ball , ba seball market if he were 30
and your dreams are some day to be a J oe DiMa ggio or a
•ears old and a free agent ,
Sandy Koufax and land in the Hall of Fame.
·
~e newest member of the
Okay, kids , then listen carefully to Willie Howard "Say Hey" H 11 f Fame said Tuesday
Mays Jr .
.. ~ coould make $8 million .':
" The word is 'love,'" said the 47-year-&lt;Jid onetime center
The usually extroverted ,
field great of the Giants, elected aimost unanimously Tuesday cocky Mays was being somefor a spot at the shrine in Cooperstown, N.Y., and a glisteninghat co servative at least
bronze plaque to hang there beside DiMaggio, Ty Cobb, Honus :ccordin~ to Monte' Irvin , his
Wagner, Walter Johnson and other diamond immortals.
form er teammate in the
" I hope it doesn't sound too corny," Willie continued, fidg- black leagues and with the
eting nervously in his blue plaid Sunday-go-to-meetin' suit and New York Giants.
flaming red tie. "To me love means dedication and sacrifice .
"On today's market, he
You have to love the game.
would be worth $10 million
" It's not true,of course, but my wife once said to me, 'Willie, easily," Irvin said, adding
1 think you love baseball more than you love me."'
that the day of the $1 million
Love, insists Willie, also includes unselfishness.
per season player was "not
" I never thought about making great plays," he said. "I far off ." At present, the
never played for myself. I always wanted to play for tbe highest paid player in the
people. The people who watched me loved me. I played for majors is Pete Rose who
them.''
recently ·signed an $tloo,ooo
Love, he added , did not mean an erosion of confidence.
per year contract with the
" I always knew I would be in the Hall of Fame, " Willie said. Philadelphia Phillies.
"When I was 10 years old, growing up around Birmingham, I
Mays, however , had no
played with 25-yeat-&lt;Jid guys. At 15, I was playing semipro reservations about his
baseball. At IB, I was in organized ball with Trent.on. At 20, I abiliti es, discus sin g them
broke in with the Giants.
" I put a lot of hard work into the game ~ 22 years in the majors. Why should I doubt my ability? Why should I doubt that
some day I would be in the Hall of Fame?"
When reporters sought to get Mays to assess other players
and measure their accomplishments with his -own, they were
sta rtled by his honest bluntness.
uWho is the best ball player you ever saw?" someone ~sked .
"Me." replied Willie , just like that.
"I hope I am not being bashful," he added, using the wrong
word. "When I played baseball, I felt nobody in the world could
do better than me .''
·
Mays, who hit 660 home runs and batted .302 over his 22-year
Wellston 's Golden Rockets,
• career, told of a reluctance both to follow the Giants franchise upset victors over Logan last
to San Francisco in !95B and to return to New York with the Saturday night , traveled to
Rock Hill Tuesday night and
Mets in 1972.
" I didn 't want to go West at first, " Willie said, "To people out were ambushed 66~1 by the
th ere, there was.. only one ball player : Joe DiMaggio. I felt Redmen .
th ere would be a problem. But they said, 'Let's go play,' so I
The non-league encounter
did ."
.
was close all the way as the
Mays returned to !'few York at the insistence of the late Mrs. teams played to a 10-10 standJoan Payson, owner of the Mets.
off in the first period before
•· J was getting old ~ they knew I couldn't play,'' be said. the Redmen managed to gain
"But somebody said, 'Hey, we got to lake care of this kid .' The a 28-24 halftime lead. The
last three years were the worst, the most embarrassing of my host team was clinging to a
life. I wasn't able t.o give the Metswhatlthoughtl should."
45-42 lead after three quarters.
Wellston's Jeff Montgomery drilled in 10 of his 14
points in the fourth period as
Wellston stayed close and
eventually took the lead at 5554 with 3: 17 left.
an easy triwnph over Italian
By The Associated Press
However , the Redmen
Claudia Giordani in winning a surged back to gain the
BASEBALL
NEWYORK ~ Willie Mays women 's World Cup slalom victory and up their season
was named to the Baseball event.
mark to 8-4.
Soelkner, who clocked runs
Hall of Fame with the highest
Scott Zornes poured in 23
percentage of votes since the · of 49.1!6 and 49.98 seconds, points for the winners with
first year of balloting in 1938. had a combined time of Greg Gilmore getting 17, and
Mays, one of the most 1:39.84. Giordani had a Terry Scott 12 for the winenthusiastic players ever to I :41.62 clocking while Anne- ners.
play the game, received 409 Marie Moser - Proell, the
The Rockets saw their
votes from a record 432 cast overall leader in this year's record dip to 4-8 as they
by 10-year members of the World Cup standings, was prepare for the invasion by
Baseball Writers Association third.
the Waverly Tigers Friday
STEINACH, Austria ~
of America . The 94.6
night ..
.
percentage of the vote was Ingemar Stenmark of Sweden
Mark Swonger and Robbie
the biggest since Ty Cobb posted a .97-second victory Norman each canned 16
collected 98.2 when tl)e voting over Switzerland's Peter points for Wellston with
Loescher and captured his
began 43 years ago.
.
fifth
straight World Cup giant Montgomery adding 14.
Babe Ruth and Honus
Statistics show Rock Hlll
Wagner also were elected slalom race .
hitting 28 of 61 fielders, 10 of
Stenmark had runs of I
--that first year with 95.1 each,
22 free throws, and pulling off
putting Mays in fourth place minute , 28.07 seconds and 26 rebounds.
1:31.94 for a combined time of
on the all-time list.
Wellston connected on 30 of
Mays was the only player to 3:00.01.
63
from the field, just one of
Andreas
Wenzel
of
., rece ive t he required , 75
four
charity tosses, and
·percent of the vote from the Lieschtenstein was third in grabbed 36 rebounds.
3:01.38.
BBWAA .
Box score :
T-ENNIS
Duke Snider, also a center
WELLSTON (61 I Mont HOLLYWOOD, Fla . ~
fi elder and contemporary of
gomery
7-0-14 ; Spires 1·0-2;
Greer
Stevens
of
South
Africa
Mays when both played in
Settles 3-0-6; Lockhart 2-0-4;
upset
first
seeded
Chris
New York, finished second in
Massie 1-1-3; Swo nger 8-0-16;
the balloting with 308 vote's ~ Evert 6-2, 6-3 in a $150,000 Norman B-0-1 6. TOTALS 30-161.
16 short of election. Enos tennis tournament.
ROCK HILL 166) · ~ Dalt o n
In
other
matches
fifthSlaughter, in his last year of
3-0-6.
3-3-9; Scott 5-2eligibility
in
BBWAA seeded Dianne Fromholtz of 12; Gi Owens
Imore 8-1-17 ; Zornes 9elections, finished third with · Australia defeated Linda 4-22. TOTALS 28-10-66.
Seigal 6-2, 6-1, fourth-seeded
Score by quarters :
'!!!7.
ellston
10 14 18 19-61
In !8'k seasons with the Wen&lt;jy Turnbull defeated W
Rock
Hill
10 18 17 21-66
New York - San Francisco Kathy Jordan 6-3, 6-3, and
Reserve score : Rock Hill
Giants and an additional Barbara Jordan defeated 53, we·ll ston 39.
season-and-a-half witll the Laurie Rowley 7-5, ~PHILADELPHIA ~ Gene
Ne w York Mets ; Mays
Mayer
defeated
Tim
amassed 660 home runs, good
unseeded Pat DuPre upset
Gtillikson
6-4,
6-3
in
secondfor third on the all-time list,
No . 11 seed Jose Higueras 6-1,
round
play
at
the
$250,000
U.
I,903 runs batted in, and a _3of
3-6, 7~ . Buster Mottram, a
-S.
Pro
Indoor
Tennis
· lifetime batting average. He
British Davis Cup player,
was the National League's championship.
Wojtek Fibak, - .the 15th ' rallied from 3-:i in the second
Most Valuable Player in 1954
seed,
defeated
Brian . set t.o beat Heinz Gunthardt of
and 1965.
Teacher, 6-2, 6-1 in another Switzerland 3-6, 7-5, 6-1, and
SKJING
Stan smith beat Mike Cahill
SC HRUNS, Austria ~ Lea second-&lt;'ound match.
In
first -round
play, 6-1, 6-1.
Soelkner of Austria cruised to
Ry Will Grimsley

Rockets
ambushed

by Redmen

Sports briefs...

h···el) a ft c• \Jcing Ulll_l the
ninth player voted IIllO the
baseball shnne in his fir st
year of eligibilily, excl usive .
of those inducted during the
initial balloting in 1936. .
Th e " Sa y Hey K1d "
received 409 vo te s of. a
possible 432 cast by 10-year
members of the Baseball
Writ ers Associati on of
America . The 94.6 percentage
of the vot•s was the highest
total smce Ty Cobb garnered
9B.2 when the votmg was maugurated 43 years ago.
Babe Ruth and Honlls Wagner , each with 95.1 percent of
the vote, were the only ~thers
lo receiv e a
higher
percenta ge tha n the funloving, happy-go-lucky Mays,
who spent a total of 22 mostly
glorious years With the
Giants ~ both in New York
and San Francisco ~ and the
New York Met.s, for whom he
now coaches.
"I always knew I would be
in the Hall of Fame," Mays
said bluntly and without any
hesitation .
"I thought I was the best
baseball player I ever saw,"
continued the 47-year-old
Mays , now also firmly
entrenched in the business
world . "Nobody in the world
could do what I could do.
"I hope I'm nol saying anything wrong," he continued.
"11 you play ball, you ha ve to
believe you are the best.''
Mays might get some argumen! about being the best,

Meigs gals
top Athens
The Meigs girl cagers
outre bounded host Athens 5423Iast night and raced to a 5842 victory. That raises Meigs'
overall record to 7-3, 5-3 in the
SEOAL.
Meigs was ahead 111-12 at
the end of th~ firSt period, but
in the seCI&gt;nd quarter pivotwoman Terri Wilson and
Dodle Chapman, both were in
foul trouble and had to be
benched. That foul trouble
en a blep Athens to come
within 'one at intermission, 2726.
The Meigs defense held
Athens to only four points in
the third period. Meanwhile,
Chapman
and
Wilson
returned and Meigs began
building its lead.
Meigs hit a warm 22 of 49
shots for 45 percent, and
cashed in on 14 of 31 free
throws. Wilson led all scorers
with 17 points while Beth
Bartrum and Chapman
added 12 and 10, respectivelr.
Sheri Lightfoot played a fine
defensive game as she and
Wilson had 12 rebounds each.
Lydia LaVelle led Athens
with 13 points and Lee had 10.
·The osts hit just 13 of 57 shots
for 23 percent and canned 16
of -28 free throws.
Four free throws was the
difference in , the reserve
contest as Meigs took a 24-20
victory. The winners hit on 4
of 9 foul shots while Athens
hit none of eight. Both teams
had 10 field goals.
Dreyhel and Zerkle led
Meigs with five pomts. Sabo
had eight for Athens. The
Meigs reserves are now 4-4 , 34 in the league. Jackson
comes to town Thursd~y
night.
MEIG~ t58) ~ Chapman, 50-10 ; T. Ash , 1-0-2; Barlrum,
4-4-12 ; King, 4-1-9: Lighllool,
0-1-1; Riggs, 0-5-5: Wilson, 7-

in~

but ' there I S no question
liMl he was one of the besl.
His
Ha ll . of Fame
credentials are unpe~cable ~
601i home run s. tlurd highesl
total in baseball histor y;
fou r-lime Nat10nal League
home run champion; a ..102
lifetime batting average ;. a
tw o-tim e Most . Valuable
Player Award Wl'":'er; Nabona! Le ague Rook•• of the
Year in 1951 ; a _powerful and
acc~rate throwmg arm, a~d
darmg on the bases that
fri ghtened and harrassed the
Ollposition.
. ,
But Mays d1dn t. concern
himseH primartly with
statistics or awards.
He played baseball because
h• loved 11.
,
"I hope 11 doesn t sound too

l,SOO hikers

brave elements
COLUMBUS ~ Braving
rain ; sleet and ice last
Saturday, more than 1,500
hikers participated in the 14th
annual Winter Hike at
Hocking Hills State Park
near Logan.
The traditional six-mile
family hike from Old Man's
Cave to Ash Cave is sponsored by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
(ODNR ). .
"We had a tremendous
turnout despite the weather,"
said Larry Henry of ODN.R's
Dlvlsion of Parks and
Recreation . '' Spirits were
high and hikers were enthusiastic. They were treated
to some of the most spectacular ice formations in the
park's history.''
Hikers
came
from
throughout Ohio and neighboring states for the event.
Thirteen members of a
nature club from Pittsburgh,
Pa ., made the trip for a third
year.
Nearly all 1,500 hikers
completed the full six-mile
trek to Ash Cave. They were
presented with certificates
for their efforts.
ODNR Director Robert W.
Teater presented the Division
of Parks and Recreation's
annual honorary naturalist
awards to a Hamilton outdoor
writer and a Belleville
family·

~

a-

,"he sa id . "To me, love
. "It wo.uldn't be nor_mal
me they all thought I _had
!/lea ns dedicatiOn and YO I\ d((ln l feel dlsappomted ,
good chance, but that II was
s... rifice. Yo u have to love 'added
Snider .
" lt: s go,•,ng to be close .
,
the game.
everybody 's dream to be m . . Just look at my records,
" I loved ever y moment of the Hall of Fame."
S3ld Slaught~r , th~ former St.
it. 1 didn't play for myself. I
This was Snider's 1001 y~ar ~..ouis Card":'als sta~dout .
played for th e people who on U1e ballot. He has five
My credentials are m the
c:ame tu til e gan)es, so they 1110re chances to make 11.
book... I thmk Mays deserves
could go home and say they
For Enos Slaughter, ",&gt;be mducted mto the liall of
had enj oyed themselves."_
however , his chance !0 get ~ arne. But look at the votmg.
Ma ys also sa1d that _durmg elected by the BBWAA _ended . Smder flmshed ahea~ of me
his last three years w•th the m bitte rness after 15 fa1lures. and all he d1d was h1t home
Mets, " I got paiq about
" I ~~e ll deserve to be m the runs. "
$150,000 or $160 ,000, not Hall , Slaughter sa1d from
Gil Hodges finished fourth
knowmg I ~ou,ld play a ~hole h1s Roxbor~, N.C., home after with 24e votes, followed ' by
season . ! d1dn t come here (to fm1shmg th1rd w1th 297 votes. Don Drysdale . (233) , Nelson
New York) to play baseball . I " I really feel bad and a httle Fox (174), Hoyt Wilhehn
was 42 ... or 4l. .. or 40. It was a hurt. I was m St. LouiS not I168 ), Maury Wills (166)., Red
love affair ."
.
.
long ago and spok~ to some Schoendienst (!59 ) and Jim
Asked to s~ma.~•~e h1s ca- baseball wnters.. Th ey told Bunning ( 147) .
reer. Mays sa1d, One word
~ lov e. I had to sacnhce a
bad marnage to play
baseball and a good marnage
Hy rhc Associated Press guard
to play baseball. My w1fe
Coa ch
Players
chosen for the 29th
pushed me to p~~y baseball
annual National Basketball Dick Motta, Wa shin gton
(w1th the Met.s) ._
Mays, called h1s last three Asso Ciation All..Star Game, to Bullets
WESTERN
years "my worst years." ~ be played Feb. 4 at the-Silverdom
e
in
Pontiac
,
Mi
ch.
CONFERENCE
But he added, "I want to
Starters
commend the Mets ... Mrs . Starters were chosen by fan
balloting
and
reserves
in
M.
a rques John son, Mil. ,
Joan Payson and Mr. (M.
votin
g
among
conference
forward
Donald) Grant ~ they sa•d,
Georg e McGinnis', Den. ,
'Hey, we gotta take care of coaches.
EASTERN
forward
this kid.'
Kar ee m Abdul -Jabbar,
" I want to apologize to the CON f"ERENCE
Startt•r s
L. A., center
Mets," continued Mays. "I
.Juliu s Er vin g, Phil .,
David Thomp son, Den. ,
really don't think I r eally
forward
guard
gave them what I should have
Rudy Tomjanovich, Hou..
Paul Westphal , Phoe.,
given them."
forwa
rd
·
guard
His Mets career aside,
Moses
Malone,
Hou.
,
center
Reserves
Mays was an outstanding
George Gervin , S.A. , guard
Walter Davis , Phoe.,
player.
Maravi
ch,
N
.0
.,
Pete
forward
" You could see the way he
Mauri ce Lucas, Port.,
caught the ball, the way he guard
Rt'Sl'fV(.'S
forward
threw it, the way he hit it, he
Bobby Dandridge, Wash .,
.Jack Sikma, Sea :, centerwould be a star," said Irvin,
forward
forward
now a member of the baseball
commissioner's office . and
Elvin Hay es , Wash. ,
Artis Giimore, Chi., center
d
forward
Otis
Birdsong, Hou., guard
Mays' roommate frien on
Larry Kenon , S.A., forward
Denni s Johnson, Sea.,
the Giants. "He was so
f 1 h d th
Campy Russell, Cl eve ., guard
strong , so youth u ' a
at
forward
Coach
beautiful body.
Doug Collins, Phil., guard
Lenny Wilkens , Seattle
" It was easy to recognize
that he had all the natural
Calvin Murphy , Hou. , SuperSonics
mov emim ts of a great
baseball player .' '
Duke Snider , th e exBrooklyn Dodgers ' center
fielder who finished second in
the Hall of Fame balloting,
was not surprised that his
contemporary had been
so~:
elec ted, but he was
Good on Any Size Pina
disappointed that he did not
receive the 324 required for
enshrinement .
"Willie really more or less
deserves to be in by himself,"
Snider said from his
Fallbrook, Calif., home after
collecting J08 votes ~ 16 short
of election.
too M"'in _ _ _ _.;9,;;92;.·9;,;9,;,90;.-_ _ _ _ _P_om_•.•o,;v•••o•.•
'01'11)

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HAMS
LB.

more than five points
Tuesd ay. The point spread
was anywhere from one to
three throughout most of the
contest . Rio led 46-43 at
halftime.
"Turning point ," Lanham
said " came with about 3: 40
left to play. We had 72-71lead.
At that point , we went into a
spread oflense aRd worked it
to perfection ."
The Dragons were held
scoreless for 3:33, finally
breaking the ice with seven
seconds remaining . By then,
Rio had it all locked up.

During the last two
seasons , however,
h'is
performan ·ce has
deteriorated and he finished
last season with a .226
average.
The season ended with
Geronimo in the hospital with
phlebitis and Ken Griffey
as
his
being
tried
replacement.
· Both Shore and new
manager John McNamara
report they have noticed a
change in tb&lt;l· 30-year-old
player since then.
" He has a lot of
enthusiasm, "
said
McNamara , who managed
Geronimo .this winter in the
Dominican Republic. "His
health is good, and he looks

MOC cage standings
TEAM

MID-OHIO
CONFERENCE
I League Only)

Rio Grande
Cedarville
Malone

Wash
Ohio Dominican

Mt . Vernon
Urbana
Tiffin

(All Games]
TEAM
6 0
4 2

Cedarville
Rio Grande
Malone
Ohio Dominican

3 3

Walsh

2 ~
2 4
2 4
1 5

Tiffin
Tuesday's results:

WL
4

2·1 Mt. Vernon

24 24

like the outfielder he was .''
In earlier interviews,
McNamara also expressed
his approval of Geronimo' s
attitude during winter league
action.
"I h-a've been very pleased
with Geronimo ," ·McNamara
said. " He has a tremendous
attitude and really wants io
play . He 's over all his injuries
and he has played very well.' '
In addition to Geronimo,
McNamara had two other
Reds players on his Licey
team : Pedro Borbon and
Arturo DeFreites.
"With Geronimo in center
field, we've got a chance to
have a helluva year, if he
comes back to what he was,''
Shore said. "But he's got to
gear himself, too ~ be a little
more aggressive. He's got
something to prove too. But
he's definitely capable · of
doing a capable job. .And he
only
has to hit .250 or .260 to
W L
10 6 really help us ."
10 10

Dan Pur cell led ltio's
scoring attack with 25 points
-- Purcell scored Rio's first
12markers in the hard-fought
battle.
Dan !lise tallied 12, Greg
James 11 , Steve L.ones and
Vince Phelps each had 10
points.
Mark Swain, vet eran Rio
guaro, hampered the pa•t
two games as a result of a leg
injury in the Ohio Dominican
game on Jan. 13, played
approximately 15 minutes.
Lanham said Swain is 100
percent recovered and ready
to lead Rio down the home
stretch of the 197B-79 campaign .
,
The Redmen hit 34 of 51
fi eld goal attempts for 55 .7
percent. Rio was nine of 16 at
the foul line for 56.3 percent.
The Redmen had 40
rebounds, 16 by Greg James.
The winners had 23 assists, 13
by Vince Phelps, and 12 turnovers.
Mark Blankemeier paced
the Dragons attack with 22
points. He had 10 rebounds.
Don Wright added 18 points,
Dan Anderson 12 and Kev
Miccichi 10. The latter paced
Tiffin on the boards with II.
Tiffin hit 36 of 45 field goal
attempts foi-55.4 percent. The
Dragons were two of three at
the foul line, had 34 rebounds
and 16 turnovers.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE 1771 ~ Bise.

'-'

. ·'

BEEF OR PORK BARBECUE... 1....... }~.?!: '1.19
Vlml HOT DOG SAUCE........ ,.... !!.~~-. 3/11.00
'
HILTONS
OYSTER
STEW
................
!~.~·... 694
Coltooello
TOILET TISSUE-. ...................... ,.4 PAK 89'
Joan of Arc

_

Kr~l

.

KIDNEY BEANS ...._............... ?~~.~~~~.. 31'1.00

.",

.

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNER... :::.~~~ 3/11.00
Aunt Jem1ma
PANCAKE MIX .. ~ ...................... 2 LB. 99'

"
"

·~-

"'

'

79
}

~l

.

TOMATOES

CABBAGE
LB.

15C

COC4COLA '
B pack $129
16 oz.

5/8

PLYWOOD
4'x8' SHEETS

(SMALL BUT
MILL CERT.)

SHEETS

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

6-0-12 ; Jam es, 5-l -11; Lones,

4-2-10 : Phelps, 3-4-10 ; Pu rche ll, 12 -1-25; Roy se, 1-1-3;

Swa i n, 1-0-2; Washing ton 2-04. TOTALS 34-9-77 .
. TIFFIN 1741 ~ Sc h aff e r , 3·
0-6; And er son, 5-2-12; Craft.
3-0-6; Blan ke mei er , 11 -0-22 ;
Wright , 9-0-1 8; Mic cic h i, 5-0-

MATERIALS CO.

MASON, W. VA.

10. TOTALS 36-2-74.
Halftime Score -

Ri o 46,

Tiff i n 43.

9 9
5 10
7
5
4

9

15
13

Cedarville 75 Urbana 73 (o1)
Mt . Vernon 69 !\'\alone 67
Ri o Grande 77 T iffin 74

'.

"
~.

, .~ .

•t•J

- '"
'

..

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,,

"A super effort!"
That's how Gallipolis
basketball coach
Jim
Osborne described Tuesday
night's Sl-41 Blue Devil hard:
wood triumph over league ·
leading Waverly before ,a
packed house in the GAHS
gym.
Coach C. D. Hawbeh's
visiting Tigers, a 39-32 winner
over the Blue Devils at
Waverly on Dec. I, led only
one time in last night's
contest, · 15-14 on two 1 free
throws by 6-8 senior center
Robert Holsinger at the 2:00
mark in the second stanza .
E. V. Clarke's short jumper
(I: 48) in the first half put the
Gallians on top to stay.
The Southeast enn Ohio
League victory left lballipolls
in fourth place in conference
action with a 5-4 mark. In all
games , GAHS upped its
record to 7-5.
Meanwhil e, the Tigers
were tumbled out of a threeway tie for first place with a
7-2 league record. Waverly
dropped to 9-4 on the year.
Defeoslve Battle
Once again it' was a bitter
defensive stru~gle between
the Tigers and Blue ,Devils.
Gallia 's big men underneath, Jelf Cameron, E.
V. Clarke, Jeff Lanham and
Mark Smith, did a job on
Waverly's v~teran ace, Rob
Holsinger, and !Hi senior
forward Joel Gordon. They
limited Waverly's one-two
scoring punch t.o I3 points Holsinger had eight and
Gordon five.
In fact, Onno Steger was
the only Tiger to score in
double figures ~ he tossed in
10 points for the losers. Steger
is a 6-4 junior forward.
Meanwhile, Cameron, il 6-6
junior center, played the best
game of his varsity career.
Cameron scored 12 points and
picked off 10 rebounds for the
winners.
Bill (Big John) Annstrong
paced the Blue Devil~ scoring
attack with 14 points. Clarke,
who was shut out at Ironton
last Saturday, tossed in nine
points for the winners. Mark
Smith came off the bench to
score four· timely points for
the BlUll flevlls.
Thomas Shines
Nate Thomas replaced
veteran senior guard JimmY

Harris with 7 :17 left in the
second stanza (alter Harris
had picked up his third foul)
and played a tremendous
defensive game. Thomas also
handled the ball well and was
credited with one blocked
shot. Harris came back in
late in the second half and
finished the game with eight
points. Senior forward Jeff
Lanham chipped in with four
points and played another
outstanding floor game for
the winners.
.
Waverly hit 16 of 47 field
goal attempts for 34 percent.
The Tigers were nine of 13 at
the foul line for 69 percent.
The Tigers had 21 personals
(Bo Arnett fouled out with
3:25 left to play ). Waverly
grabbed 30 rebounds, 10 by
Gord0n, and had 16 costly
turnovers.
Gallipolis hit 19 of 40 field
goal attempts for 47 percent.
The Blue Devils had an offnight at the foul line , sinking
only 13 of 23 attempts for a
cool 56 percent. GAHS had 16
personals and 23 · rebounds .
The Blue Devils had nine
assists, three by Jeff
Lanham, and nine turnovers.
After a 6~ first period tie ,
GAHS held a slim t8-15
halftime lead.
Big Third Period
In the third stanza, Gallipolis,
-behind Cameron, Clarke,
Annstrong arid Smith, increased Its lead to 33-21.
The Blue Devils upped their ·
margin to 14 points on two
occasions in the final period,
37- 23 ·on a layup by Cameron
with 7:16 left and 39-25 on a
pair of free throws by Jinuny
Harris with S:'l!J showing on
the clock.
.GAHS made Waverly come
out after the ball during the
final five minutes. The Tigers
outscored GAHS 20-18 in the
final stanza, but could get no
closer than seven points, 4639, on a driving layup by
Holsinger
with
:41
remaining.
Athens Next
Friday, the Blue Devils will
hoSt another SEOAL leader,
the Athens Bulldogs. Waverly
will play two games this
weekend. Friday, the Tigers
host Wellston. WHS wlll play
at Ironton on Saturday night .
That game was originally
scheduled Feb. 3.

Coffee doesn't have to be bitter.
SunrisfP instant coffee mellowed with
chicory isn't bitter.
Because Nestle found a way to
blend fine coffee with chicory. Chicory
brings out coffee's better natu-re. And it
leaves the bitter taste behind.
So try Sunrise h) day. The coffee
isn't bitter. And the coupon is sweet

·Beller natured.'

NotbHter.

•••• :

I

•

The 6-3 double of Supreme
Ilona and Camden George
Wood paid $38.80 and the
crowd of 1,393 bet $147,064.

HEAP _B IG SALE

GAHS upsets

RIVERFRONT DINER

lj: [·1 :Xiij N;fill~ 3;I N•1 •f!:W I: [iiji

· - J!HUi.E'S S.TO~E
Thursday, Jan. 25 through Jan . l7
We Gladly Accopl Fed.'Food Slimp•
Monday lhru Friday
,,ootil7:oo
Saturday 9:00-9:00
CLOSED
SUNDAY&lt;

Rlo , now winner 1 of seven
straight games, will face the
always-tough Cedarville
Yellow Jackets in an im-portant conference game .at
Lyne Center Saturday,
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Meanwhile, Coach George
Jansen's tough-luck Dragons
dropped to 1-5 in conference
play and 4-18 on the season .
"They're (Tiffin ) are not
that bad of a ball club,"
remarked Lanham following
Rio's fourth road vict_ory of
the campaign. ·
The Redmen never led

Walsh 69 Ohio . Do_m inican 56

• ' .1

18

Superior

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) ~
The front offi ce of the
Cincinnati Reds predicts that
fans will see a changed Cesar
Geronimo next baseball
season .
Ray Shore, · Cincin~ati ' s
special assignment scout,
believes that Geronimo will
regain the form which made
him one of baseball 's top
c-enter fielders two years ago .
" With the (managerial)
change, Cesar is going to be a
better ballplayer than he was
the last· couple· of years,"
Shore said during a stop at
the Reds ' annual media
caravan.
In 1976, Geronimo batted
.307, 44 points over his
lifetime average.

TOTALS

Gravy

_5th &amp; Pearl

'

.

)

"Another total team effort"
was the way Rio . Grande
College basketball Coach Art
Lanham described the
Redmen 's thrilling 77-74 MidOhio Conference basketball
triumph over Tiffin 's host
Dragons Tuesday night.
Rio Grande placed five
players in dOuble figures apd
got plenty of support from the
bench for the seCI&gt;nd straight
game as the Redmen climbed
to the .500 mark with a 10-10
season record .
Inside the MOC, Rio
Grande improved its first
place record to 6-0.

Cesar's attitude changed

'¥ •

••'

GOODI'iEA

ci aiel I i , 2-1-5. Tota Is 13-16-42.

A.

$UH){) l ca tured pace mtle at
Le bcm o n , pay1ng $70 .30 ,
$21.60 and $4.llll.

Waverly five

22-14-58.
ATHENS (42) ~ Ky le, 2·0·
4; Lydia LaVelle, 3-7-13; Lee,
3-4-10: Baird, 1-2-4; Channell.
1-2-4; Eldridge , 1-0-2; SocM

Irish Sh adow, who wenl off at

Tiffin Dragons, 77 •74

3-17 ; Anderson, 1-0-2. Totals

By Quarters:

I.I·: BANON , OhiO ( API

MISS Scotch Witty paid
$6.40 and $3.80 for second and
1-lonest Marge , the show
horse, returned $3.20.

•"

All-stars chosen

PIZZA
OFF

:10-1 , Tu esday night won the

\1

,

�6 - ThP. DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Wednesdav. Jan. 24. 1979'

' 7- ~Daily Sentinel, Middle,ort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Jan . i 4. l!f;!t.

'

'Sound of Music ' choseti jQr Meigs ' schQolplay
"The Sound of Music" has
beep selected by Mrs. Paige
Wuntt vocal music supervisor
of the Meigs Junior and
Senior High Schools, as the
second Broadway musical
production by her students.
Last year marked the first
time a Broadway musical
was presented when students

performances.
The plot of the presentation
takes place in Austria in 1930,
prior to the Nazi occupation.
Lynetta Whittington has bene
cast in the role of Maria, a
young novitiate at a convent
who becomes a governess to
the seven children of a

widowed , retired naval of·
ficer Captain von Tropp,
played by Eric Scitcs.
The roles ' of the seven
children will be played by
Jayne Hoeflich, Nancy
Wallace, Andrea Batey and
Jean Horton , alternating ;
Kim Fraley and Paula

did " Music Man.'·'

Written by Rodgers and
Hammerstein, "The Soun.d of
·Music" like other Broadway
favorites, was made into a
motion picture and won five
Academy Awards in 1965. The
Broadway show had 1,442 , .

Horton , alternating; Paula
Swisher, Fred Young and
Craig Darst.
The Captain is a strict
disciplinarian and the
children try to take advantage of their young
governess but slowly Maria
wins .their loyalty . by
d1splaymg her aHection for
them and by teaching them
the fun of life l!o!Jd the joys of
music. The well known songs,
"Do-Re-Mi" and
"My

cx•,mplify these scenes. ·
Camille Swindell, dissuades
/\friend of the family , Max Maria from returning to the
Detwiler, played by Kevin religious life and presents the
~ing . suggests the family selection, ''Climb Ev'ry
sang at a festival. The Mountain." On her return to
romantic interest between the von Trapp Villa , . the
the Captain and Marla Captain and Maria are
becomes complicated as maiTied and the family with
Maria returns to the convent. anti·Nazi sentiments escapes
The Captain, angered by her to a new freedom.
departure, announces his
Sherrie Osborn and Robin
plans to marry the Baroness Kitchen will alternate in the
played by Linda Eason.
· role of Sister Berthe; Jo
On the other hand, the McKinney and Vicki !loyles

POLLY•$ POl NTE R$i..F.a.vo•r•it•e-1.'h•i•n;;,gs·"-.;b.;e;;;st~•M•o•th•e•r•A•bb;.e.ss

WE NEED SPACE!
.
WINTER MDSE. MUST SELL

· Pouycramer

problem

helped a few places. But
slilllooks terrible. Please
me how to clean my r1oo•r. •

TO MAKE ROOM FOR SPRING ITEMS ·•••
PRICES
SAVE
IN

.•JOY .

DEAR POlLY- ·I have used a wax product on my vinyl
floor for a· long time and now
there are very.bad stains all
over it. I am afraid it is ruined. I used bleach and baking
soda with water, which

BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Thursday 's sehedule lor the
bookmobile stops has been
announced by Jeanne Robbana, librarian.
They include :
Salisbury, 2:15 to 2:45p.m.
Letart, 3:15 to 3:45p.m.
Racine - Home National
Bank, 4 to 5 p.m.; Wagners
Hardware 5 to 6 p.m.
Syracuse, Swimming Pool,
6:15to8:15p.m.
New Books

The Pomeroy - Middleport
Libraries have the following
books from the New York
Times best sellers lists :
Fiction
Chesapeake, by James
Michener;
War
and
Remembrance, by Herman
Wouk; The Silmarillion, by J.
R. R. Tolkien; · The Far
Pavilllons, by M. M. Kaye;
Evergreen, by Belva Plain ;
Fools Die, by Mario Puzo;
lllusions, by Richard Bach;
Eye of The Needle, by Ken
Follett; Paloverde, by
Jacqueline Briskin; The
Stand, by Stephen King. (The
Praise Singer, by Mary
Renault is available at Book- ,
mobile) .
Non-Fiction
Mommie Dearest, by
Christina Crawford; If Life Is
A Bowl of Cherries, What Am
I Doing In The Pits', by
Erma Bombeck; Jackie Oh!,
by Kitty Kelley; Tiines of My
Life, by Betty Ford.
Ordered:
Second Generation, by
Howard Fast; The Empty
Copper Sea, by John D.
McDonald ; Prelude To
Terror, by Helen Maclmes;
Tutankhamun: The Untold
Story, by Thomas Hoving;
The Buck Stops Here, by Art
Buchwald.
Call 992-5813 or 992-.5713 and
place your reservation NOW.

SUIT FILED
TOLEDO, Ohio (A~)- The
Ohio attorney general's office
has filed a $19,000 suit against
Brush Wellman Inc. of
Clev eland lor allegedly
polluting the Portage River.
The suit filed Tuesday in
Common Pleas Court charges
that Brush Wellman's
Elmore plant southeast of
Toledo dumped excessive
amounts of pollutants. in·
elu ding
fluorides
and
beryllium, in the river 19
times last year.

MILDRED MANKIN
TO UNDERGO SURGERY
Mildred Russell Mankin,
Pomeroy, will undergo major
surgery today at University
Hospital, Col umbus . Her
room number is 790 for those
who wish to send cards.

romantic · interest op)Xlsite
the eldest' o! the von Trapp
daughters. Jack Carder and
Jeff Nash wui alternate in the
role of the butler; Greg
Thomas and Rick Baker in
the role of Baron Elberfeld;
Todd Morrison apd Lee Lewis
in the role of Herr Zeller, and
Dorsel Thomas and Jerf
Daniels in the role oL'\dmltal
Von Schweiber.
Danny Riggs, Mike HarmanandBillColmerwillplay

••.;.po.rt-ra.;,y.cd•b.;y_•in-.,th·e- · r.o.le-•o•f_s.is.ie•r-iiiiiiiii.oiwiiili;.l.lii..,.,.iiiillllliithiiie..,;t;;;h;.
e iiitr,;;ioiii·- - - - -..
·

Wax build-up

PROMOTED ~ IC 3-ss
Robert James Johnson, of
Racine, has been promoted
tu third class In the U. S.
Navy. He Is now on toilr In
the West Pacific on a
nuclear submarine. He Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Junior Johnson,
Racine. His wife, former
Judy Lavender, and
daughter, Michelle will join
him In San Diego, Cal., in
March. Johnson will
complete four years with
the Navy on Sept. 25 this
year.

Margaretta , and Carrie
Bearhsand_TraceyJeffers, in
the role of Sister Sophie.
Stephanie Radford is cast in
the role of the von Trapp
maid; Joan Roberts as the
solo nun; Unreka ·Johnson
ads as the postulant while
Joy Majors and Sheila Horky
will alternate in the role of
Ursula and Debi Hartfield
and Lori Kloes in the role of
Fraulein Schweiger.
In the male . roles, Greg

DEAR JOY - I think
probably need to remove
build-up of wax. The
may be yellowed wax
may come off with the wax.
POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - -If
have moisture in
vegetable drawer in
refrigerator ,
newspapers in the ""''w•r •
put the vegetables on top of
and then more newspapers
top of them . When the papers
get wet, change them and
keep your vegetables fresh . ElSIE.
DEAR ELSIE - I suggest
that you first put paper
towels in your crisper drawer
so there .is no danger of
newsprint rubbing off and
making another cleaning job.
-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- An easy
way to keep your comb clean
is to pass it througjl your hair
strands while the heavy suds
are on the hair during a
shampoo. Also, I have no
more dandruff since I started
using cold water for the final
rinse on my hair. I do this
even in the coldest weather.
Even though I go "Brrrr," it
is worth it to be rid of the dandruff. -LUCILLE .
DEAR READERS -Nothing makes me feel as
wide awake as a cold rinse
after a shampoo. When you
groW accustomed to it, you
will never feel your hair is
really clean without it.
-POLLY.
DEAR POLI~Y- When putting candles on an adult birthdav cake. it .is very tactful
to arrange them in a question
mark.-L.A.W.
DEAR POLLY- I am one
of your male readers and go
through the paper from
beginning to end but used to
end up with my hands black
with printing ink. I solved this
by wearing my wife's rubber
gloves while I read the paper
and find the gloves are easier
to wash than my hands . MRJ.H.K.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank -you
newspaper coupon clippers .if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

UP

TELL

Buy
For Next Year

entire stock on sale. Come see,

$4·QQ

1 2 PRICE

.

ca:di~ans

1

2 PRICE ·,·

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT~"

Prints, Colors'

79

4

PR.

It

., • 0.,"

FITTED -PLASTIC
MATTRESS
COVERS
.F11ll Bed Size

Reg.
'1.39

7li:co
;,

opu ·
Monday fo Sat.
10 To 8 '
SQnday 1 To 5

,
..

PANTYHOSE

eSize 19x33
Multi·Color
Washable

Nude !o wals! or all sheer.
Regular 99c . One size fils all.
Save 49c on each pair.

·Beige
·Coffee
Taupe
Cimmanon

77t

WOMEN$ SHOES
ENTIRE SELECTION
IS DRASTICALLY REDUCED!
WOMEN$

Cannon Irregular

DRESS
BOOTS

PRINTED

Helen Help

BATH TOWELS

us·...

·

0~.

·.·.
·.·.
·.·.
.·.·
.·.·

r
(

By
. Helen Hottel;:
-

\)

CONCERNED GRANDPARENTS UNFAffi!
BUT 00 THEY HAVE A CHOICE?
DEAR HELEN:
My brother and his wife earn ")'ire between them than our
family does. But their children have ratty clothes, few toys and
little care. If it weren't for their grandparents, that is!
Mom and Dad shower gifts on those kids : winter coats,
shoes, bicyCles, you name it. Our 'youngsters, on the other
hand, get toutine birthday and Christmas presents. They're
grl!teful, QUI they can't help feeling left out when their cousins
show off all the expensive things Grandma and Grandpa have .
given them (which the folks can't really afford).
My parents' excuse is that if someone dido 't provide for the
"deptived" kids , they'd be miserable. My feelin g is that it isn't
fair to play favorites. What's your reactio .SHORTED
DEARBHORTED:
Favoritism isn't fair, but concern isn't exactly favoritism,
right? Place the blame where it belongs -on your brother and
his wife who won't provide for their children. But reserve more
than a little for grandpa. ~nts who play right into their hands .
If these freeloaders weren't sure Mom and Dad would buy
whatever they didn't, perhaps they'd be less chintzy. -H.

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

Whole Fryers......~.5

OUT

THEY
GOI
'

SAVE 50% ·.

Mens and
Boys.
.
WINTER
JACKETS

•

Chicken Thighs ..!!-.7
99
HAM SLICES......... ~~-~ }

cENTER BONELEss

SUPERIOR SLICED

BOILED HAM ..........~.~2

29

Your ChoicQ of Three Exquisite Patterns
• Summer Time • Spring Time • Foliage Time

HOMEMADE

Sandwich Spread...L!~

With 15°0 Purchase.

THIS WEEK'S FEATURE:

CUP
Yellow
Onions .............~. I

I

~

DEAR HELEN.
·: My daughter borrowed our car and left the keys in her purse.
She was ~t a neighbor's , I needed the car, so I looked in her
purse.
.
· And found a marijuana cigarette done up in plastic wrap.
She's a good girl and I never thought she'd take drugs. I'm
in shock and don't know how to face her with it, so I haven't
said anything yet. What can I possibly"do? -FRIGHTENED
DEAR FRIGHTENED:
Don't panic!
One joint in a girl's purse doesn 't mean she is a habitual
smoker.
'
Consider your find an opportunity to discuss her views on
marijuana and other drugs- including booze. And be sure it's
not a one-sided lecture. Listen with a fairly open mind and
relate back to your own school days when experimentation
wasn't exactly unknown !though of a different nature ). Then
tell her how you feel.
I doubt that you have a large case for worry , especially if
you avoid the " in shock" approach. -H.

J.$1
5,
BANANAS ........
PARKAY

Yep- We move them out,

at tremendous savings to
you. Not all sizes left, but
great savings!

ZESTA

¢·)ENO'S FROZEN

.

.

CRACKERS......~.-~8;.5 9 PIZZA ..............~3.~.

lf2PRICE

PRICE

COUPON

---

.

CAMP BEllS

TOMATO SOUP

A Time To Buy!
84'0l.

$219

10,5

W/C

..' .

oz:

6/$1

W/C

. Limit 1 per Customer
Good only at Powell's

Limit 1 per Customer
G~od only at Powell's
Offer Ex
Jan. 27, 1979

POINT PLEASANT OR MASONt

'

COUPON

TIDE DETERGENT
It's Inventory time for Us. We have many new
items waiting to go into s~k -So, we sacrifice'
our remaining winter goods and · You Save! .
Think ahead, Buy for next year. Come Browze,
You'll be amazed at these bargain buys.

Breasts.~~

Chicken

DEAR HELEN.
Could you tell me who first said, "The secret of a happy life
is a bad memory and good health"' -QUOTER
DEARQUOTER:
Trouble with popular sayings is that everybody uses them
and few give credit (i.e.: "Originality is forgetting where you
heard it.")
I think Dr. Albert Schweitzer takes honors here, but even he
may have been a "quater." :- H.

·

1st QUALITY! WOMENS

BRAIDED RUGS

'-h

1

PRICE

REVERSIBLE

PLASTIC
DRAPES

.,

months.

gge

Witb Valance

.

PULLOVER OR CARDIGANS

With Pattern

lf2 PRICE

·'lh
I

We've ~ had a wonder.ful sweater season ,
but it's time to clean them up . Former
values to $17.99. Styled and basics
sweaters, that you'll wear for manY more

QUILTING
PIECES

cor -

Hurry on In!

WOMEN$ SWEATERS

2 LB. BAG

~~.~~

'Brushed nylon or
jhermal. Long
gowns and PJs.

33t

··

bags.

•• e

6 Designs

1

Slipover

\ .

Point
Pleasa n!
s!ore only. Flc!lon
and o!her various
types . Ac!ual
values !o · $2.50.

REG. 79'

SLEEP
·wEAR

pipes even in Scotland.
John J . Slattery, a piper
with the Scots Guards, who
had a best selling record with
" Amazing Grace" in Britain
a few years ago, confirmed
the pipe searcity when the
famous pipe band performed
in Washington, D. c. last !all.
"Finding decent pipes is
very difficult ," Slattery
lamented, "Many of the old
master.bagpipe makers have
died . Those who remain are
lew and . far· between." The
canny master pipesmiths;
who always have been
jealous of their craft secrets
and reluctant to hand them on
to apprentices, are probably
aU out in the North Sea oil
fields getting top money for
dealing with a different kind
of pipe while the work lasts .
Besides the lack of master
craftsmen, there is also a
shortage of African blackwood, a very hard wood
which doesn't absorb much
moisture and is the raw
fllaterialfor the five wooden
pipes that are fitted to the
·Jeather bag of what
detractors call the "Scottish
armpit piano."
ActuaUy, the instrwnent is
not native to Scotland at aU.
It was known in ancient
Persia, Turkey and Palestine
at least 2,000 years ago. The
Emperor Nero was a skilled
piper and probably skirled
away rather than fiddled
while Rome burned because
the bow, essential to every
fiddle , hand't been invented
yet.
Oliver Herford,
the
Victorian humorist had
another explanation:
"Perhaps It was because
Nero played the Iiddle, they
· burned Rome ." The bagpipe
might have been greater
provocation.

;:::::::;:: :; :; : :; :::: :; :;:; : :; :;: :; :::: :;:; :; :; : :::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;;::::::::::::::::; :;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:::;:::;:;:; :; :; :; ::;:;:;:::;:\)f! '

I·

PAPER
BACK
BOOKS

KITCHEN
TOWELS
VALUES TO 11.99

'

By Hugh A. Mulllgan
APSpeciaJCorrespondel!t
RIDGEFIELD, CONN.
(AP) - It will be a subdued
Burns Nicht this Jan. 25 for
many Scots around the world
celebrating the birth of
Bobble Bums, the national
bard.
There's a worldwide
shortage of bagpipes.
Now not everyone would
regard this as major
catastrophe; indeed tliere are
some Who think that aft•:r
the:,'get through banning the
bomb at the SALT talks, they
might convene a SALT Ill
and 'ban the bagpipe. But to
highlanders and lowlanders
. at home or anywhere on the
globe, the shortage of the
pipes might mean the haggis,
that "proud chieftain o' the
puddln' race ," as Burns
ca.lled it, might have to be
brought unskirled into the
. banquet for the traditional
Burns Night toast.
Some might say that if the
haggis didn't arrive at all
that might not be a universal
.calamity either, but Scot·
smeil are used to this sort of
attac.k on their national
delicacy. Like the bagpipe,
the haggis is an acquired
taste, even if most of us won't
live tbat long.
The sudden popularity· of
bagpipes with college and
high · school bands, various
marching societies and even
joggers trying to improve
their. wind in inclement
weather has created the
worldwide shortage of
venerable insfrwnent, which
ldi Amin among other heads
of state favors of his guard of
honor. · The . National
Geographic Society reported
recently the demand has so
exceeded the supply that it is
hard to find a decent set of

1:.

TED TERRY

MENS SWEATERS

Mulligan's Stew

j: ~::

you'll buy.

ues To 12.50

Includes

It.
• •• •• •
..' .•'
• .....
•
• • •

2PRICE

Take advantage of this big
price cut! Hooded styles,
fancy trims, solid colors. Our

MENS SHIRTS
SPORTCASUALPRESS-

1

They All Go!
Long Sleeve or Short

duroys, yarn and
c:anvas type style

,

; room for new ' arriving spring
pants.

• BLOUSES
• FASHION TOPS

HANDBAGS

At Bob Evans Steak House ~ we
serve a lot more than steak. We have
hotcakes, fried mush, hot baked
biscui ts, fresh farm eggs, and all the ·
good things that go with Bob Evans
Farms country fresh Sausage.
So stop on in on your way to work.
·And do it right for breakfast.

Denims, polyester, poly gabs.
Nothing held .back, We need

WOMENS, JUNIORS, MISSES

WOMEN$

HEARTY HOME
~..., BREAKFAS I$(
AWAY FROM HOME.

C!,_'"'"" Winter &amp; Holiday Stock!

ALL ADVERTISED PRICES ARE IN EFFECT NOW!!

Entire Stock!!
Values To 18.99

EFFECT. NOW

Womens and Teens
FASHION' PANTS
AND JEANS

YOUR
NEIGHBOR
SHE LIKES
. , . BARGAINS TOO!

Now

ONE GROUP

Easte.-n Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

rJII

to

•

eva-.
STEAK HOUSE

96

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

6fler Ex.pir es Jan . 27 , 1979

"

1

COUPON

COUPON

)

WHITE CLOUD

KRAFT

TOILET TISSUE

MIRACLE WHIP

4 RO.LL
PACK,

69t

Limit 1 per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Ex
Jan. 27, 1979

32

oz.

89¢

Limit 1 per Customer
Good onlv at Powell's
Offer
·
Jan. 27, 1979 .'

�.

'

1 ..

· 8 - The Daily Sentinfl;Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. Jan . 2~. 1979

Birthdays
Hw h:1rd Jl t·don . .Jr. , !'i x-

_\'{'a r uld son of Mr . and Mr~ .
Rit'h~ml Pt•yton nf nt'xkr. ·
was honon•d n.•('t·nlly with a
birthd:1y part y at the Rurger

I .aurel Cliff News Nott-s
Mr . and Mrs. Phil Wise,
Belpre. attended morning
services a\ th e local church
a nd vi.sitcd Mr . Wise 's

Attendance at the Free
Methodist Church Sunday.
.Ja n. 21 . . was 84. Choir
members prcst•nt was 10.

parents, Rev . and Mrs. Cecil
Wise , Chester.
All friends of Mrs. Della
,. Curtis were sorry-to hear of
her accident. She fell at the
home of her daughter , Mrs.
Ruby Frick, last Thursday

breakiljg her hip. She is a
patient at VMH.
Jan. 27, at 7:30p.m. there
willlle a service featuring the
Gospel Tones at the local
church. . Everyone
is,
welcome.

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middle,.Qrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesdav . Jan. 24. 1979

hi s aunt, Patti Van Main •. ,\t-

There' s a community
service you may not know

By The Central Ohio

Heart Chapter

Plans for a sweetheart din·
ner were made when the
Young Adult Class of the

h•nding Wl'l'l' hi s nwthl•r, San-

&lt;lrn Pl'yton, his gnmdmothcr,
Helen .Jeffrrs , Ta ra and Tntltl
Wolft•, Jt•r ry Al&lt;•shirl! , .Jr ..
,J;met .Jeffers, Rhonda and
Robby, and Patty V1111 Maire,
Mikie and Mandi.

~~~~ ';;;!~ ~~;:nt~et~t"'i~!

,

'

· IV(eigs County lnfi1111ary.
,The Rev .. Floyd Shook had
prayer and the Bible study
was taken from I Corio·
thians . Ida Martin and Mrs.

,IJ

tee

tC

.

.

r

Heart Association makes plea
Sweetheart dinner

·rtH•f in Pomt_•rov .
!\ d uwn eakP. ww.; rnacl t• hv

.

Floyd Shook se rv e d
r efreshment s . Atten&lt;lin~
were those named and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Mash Ill
Mr . and Mrs. Ernie Ba ggy :
Darla Hawley, J oan
Weyersmiller, Mr. anrl Mrs.
. Mike Wright, Retty Will.
Leona Martin , a nd Etta Mae
Ellis.

about . It 's called The
American Heart Association.
a voluntary health agency.
just for you. Through your
local hea rt asso.ciation you
can find out all kinds of things
- lik e what high blood
pressure is , who has it and
why it's so dangerous.
You can also find out how to
recognize a heart attack , the
nation's number one killer,
and what to do if you have
one. Your American Heart
Ass ociation can t ell you

where you can lea rn CPR -·
ThP Middll'()(ll1 (; ;mlt•n
Ca rdiopulnionary Hcsuscita- Cluh wi ll hold it:-; lr\unthly
tion - a breathing and chest lllt'l't in ): nn }&lt;\·b. !j at 7::\0 r .m ,
compression technique used ill th L' homl' {l[ Mrs. Mul('lllm
to sustain life in someOne Jl(\IIPr in Middleport Cn·
whose heart has stopped. ho!-;tesst•s will lx• Mr!-i . .J c-~ JTws
Free bookl ets cont a ining i\rn nld :~ 11rl Mr:-&gt; . Etotllil
r eci pe s and informati on
about "' heart healthy., meals
also arc available .
)onge r, healthier, happi er
Why not call your loca l Iiic.
heart assoc iation today '
And,
please
give
Most likely it has a program generously . They' re fighting
that can help you live a for your life.

Mothers ' March
set for Sunday

}

J
Mrs.

The a nnua I Mothers'
March of Dimes will be held
in Pomeroy and Middleport
Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Deb·
bi Buck, fund drive chair·
man, announced today.
Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
will be marching in the two
willages, with Ohio Eta Phi
__.,. members canvassing
Pomeroy, artd Xi.Gamma Mu
members going door-to-door
J in Middleport. All will be
' \ wearing March. of Dimes
•
badges of identification.
For those who are not at
Debbi Buck home, envelopes will be left
so that contributions can be

Today's Topic:

The Playboy Guerilla
WASHINGTON (AP)- In
the waning days of the Lebanese civil war in 1976, tbe
focus of what passed for
peace talks shifted to the
Coral Beach hotel, a down-at·
the-heels seafr.ont resort in
Moslem-controlled West
Beirut.
It was there that the Arab
League's ineffectual peacekeeping force maintained its
headquarters under a patient
but frustrated Egyptian
general. It also was there that
the International Committee
of the Red Cross kept its .
command post and ran a field
hospital in an underground
parking garage.
And it was there that,
almost any night , the
shadowy group of men
conferring in a corner of the
ba r would include the
Palestinian guerrilla leader
known ·as Abu Hassan.
Stockily built and cruelly
handsome, Abu Hassan whose real name was Ali
Hassan Salameh- was chief
_. of security for AI Fatah,
" Yasser
Arafat's most
power ful
terrorist
organization.
He also was said to be No. I
on the lsraeJi .. government 's
hit list as the alleged
mastermi nd of the 1972
massacre of Israeli athletes
at the Munich Olympic
games - a role he never
publicly acknowledged- and
as the architect of numerous
terrorist bombings in Israel
itself.
Thus it was not surprising
tQ those who knew Abu
Hassan that he died violently
on Monday at age 38 - killed
by a JOQ.j)ound bomb ihat
destroyed his car on a Beirut
street. Seven other persons,
.Including lour of his
bodyguards, also died in the
blast, according to the Palestine Liberation Orga nization ,
which blamed the Israelis.
In some ways Abu Hassan
was an unlikely terrorist. The
son of a family that was wellto-do
by
.Palestinian
standards, he was married to
Georgin~ Rizk, a Lebanese
beauty queen who had won
the Miss Universe title in
1972.
Hassan kept his green-eyed
wife out of the guerrilla
movement, and the couple
socialized mostly with
wealthy Lebanese and
Palestinians.
He had a reputation as a
ladies' man and - at one
time - a penchant for
nightlife which earned him
th e sobriquet of Arafat's
"playboy guerriUa."
But he also cultivated an
image as a fearless m!litary
leader. Even during the most
vicious fighting between

Christian and Moslem forces
in Beirut, he could be seen
around the ~ity, inspecting
Palestinian positions and
meeting with military aides.
He carried a revolver on his
belt at all times and his phalanx of two or three Fatah
bodyguards, armed with
AK47 assault rifles, were
never more than a few feet
away. He was helpful and
cooperative with some
Western reporters, but
turned a withering stare on
anyone who suggested that he
be photographed.
At the Coral Beach, where
artillery explosions and
sniper fire were part of the
daily routine, his primary
role became that of
negotiator. Daily, under Arab
League and Red Cross
auspices, he met with leaders
of the Christian rightist
forces who were then laying
siege to Tel Zaatar, the
Palestininan stronghold in
Christian-held East · Beirl!l
where some 30,000 persons
were trapped in underground
fortifications .
Sometimes the Christian
spokesmen came to him. On
other days, he traveled with
escort into the Christian
sector - for him, a risk
almost as great as if he'd
tried to play toiu-ist in Tel
Aviv .
It was

something of a
personal triumph for Abu
Hassan when, after a series
of truces that were broken
repeatedly by the Christians,
. the tunnels of Tel Zaatar
were finally evacuated and
the dead and wounded
carried out in Red Cross
convoys.
According to a book titled
"'The Hit Team," Abu Hassan
was the intended target when
a group of operatives of
Mossad ,
the
Israeli
intelligence service, carried
out an assassination opera tion in Lillehammer, Norway, in July 1973.
The victim , -: · however,
turned out to be a Moroccan
- and the case ·of iliistakert
identity proved a major
embarrassment to Mossad,
five of whose members were
tried and convicted of murder
in a 1-lorwegian court.
While the PLO swiftly
blamed Israel for Abu
Hassan's death, the Israelis,
in keeping with their policy in
such cases, remained silent.
But recent. years have seen
recurring spates of killing
among rival factions of Pale·
stinians, and the possibuility
that Abu Hassan was a victim
of Arab vengeance could not
be ruled out. It was not
simply because of the Israelis.
~ or the Christians - that
Abu Hassan ~~&lt;ent everywhere
armed In his own haunts.

I

mailed.
Other villages of the county
will be solicited later. Mrs.
Buck assisted by Mrs. Linda
King have also placed coin
envelopes in all of the conn·
ty's elementary schools.
While a portion of the
money goes into research on
birth defects, some of the
money is kept locally for
helping children with corrcc·
live shoes and other health
aides. In the paast several
scholarships hav e been
awarded to hi gh school
graduates going into nursing
or other health related fields.

-------,·-·-·
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Social 1
Calendar
I
.
. I

WEDNESDAY
OHIO Valley Commandery
No . 24, Knights Templar
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Full
form opening practice swords
and belts. All sir knights
welcome.
SPE.CIAL MEETING,
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7
p.m. ·to confer entered apprentice degree on two
candidates.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn. Lions urged to attend.
SPECIAL MEETING
Southern
Local
Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m . Wed·
nesday at high school; all
members asked to attend:
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Middleport , 7: 30 p.m.
meeting preceded by 6: 30
potluck dinner.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
1211, Middleport, 7:30 p.m.
meeting at the hall . Potluck
dinner with the legi onnaires
to precede meeting.
THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:45p.m. Thursday
in the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co.
ONE-WON-ONE Class of '
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church will meet at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the church.
TWIN CITY Sbrinettes,
Thursday , 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Gertrude
Mitchell.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245, Thursday, 7 p.m. at ·
the American Legion hall in ·
Middleport. Uniform in·
spection.
REGATTA COMMITTEE
Thursday at noon at Meigs
Inn.
PROCESSED.?
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa t AP) - South Africa
at last is able to make
Emmenthaler cheese.
About five years ago, T. J.
Britz started on the project,
'hut since overseas makers of
the cheese are loath to
divulge their secrets, he
wound up examining about
20,000 proprionic acid
bacteria (essential to making
the cheese ) bel ore he found
suitable ones.

Richard Peyton, Jr.

~
MADE ONLY BY

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

7:00 P.M.

HERE'S WHAT YOU'LL SEE=

David Michael Fetty Il, son
of Mike and .Janice Fetty
reeently observed his second
birthday wi at his Pomeroy

• Trained Amana demonstrators wil l explain the many

benefits of microwave cooking, including how you can
save 500/o to 75'% of the energy normally used in cooking .
• They will explain how you can cook most foods gourmet
perlect in just one fourth the usual time .
• Learn how you can brown ,'sear, grill, fry . bake and saute
with a microwave oven browning skillet.
• There wiU be a question and answer period so you ca n
get the straight facts about microwave cOoking .
• Vo~ will recel~ literature explaining how m icrowaves
· actually cook . It is completely d ifferent from corwenl ional methods.

COPVIIIIGHT 1ttt- THE t&lt;"OGU CO . tTIMS AND PII:ICE5
GOOD SUNDAY JAN . 21 TH.U SATU.DA Y JAN . 27 , lf191N

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

'""$J49

Ut•

In the t•vtmt of inclement
\\'t'il11ll'r . the deeisi on to
•·rmt't•l will. be mrtdt• by the
hostesst•s. Members will be
tclcpllo~t·

rwtificd by

and if

t inw permits &lt;:1 not ire will c-tppcar in thi!; newspaper.

TO

Fryer Parts .:~~: lb.

HOLLY FARMS GlADE A
$1.39 )
(RlGULAI ...

63
55 C

C

$111

ui.

Fryer Breast ;~~:lb.

HOLLY FARMS . GR,O,OE A
(REGULAR ... LB . $1.39 ! FRYER
Salo
Prlco lb .

Drumst •IC ks .

$111

HOLLY FARMS . GRADE A
(REGULAR •.. LB. $1. 19) .

Fryer Thighs:~; lb.

95C

OPEN
24HRS.

ADAY

HOLLY FARMS. GlADE A
{REGULAR ... LI. 99')

Breast Quarters~~~: lb

HOLLY FARMS . GlADE A
(RIGULAR ... LI. $1.29)

P•ICk '0' ch•IX .

.
Solo
Prlco lb.

HOLLY FARMS. GRADE /1.
(REGULAR .•. LB. $1 . 19)

$} 03

Except Closed Slblrd1y Mid•iclrt Til9 Alii Sund1y
hcept Hinton I White S.lphur

Sal•
Prlco

Cut Fryer Legs . lb .
HOLLY FARMS . GRADE A
(REGULAR ..• LB. 99'1

~~

Roas t ers .. .. .. Pdco lb

ICROGER COST CUTTER COUPOH

Kroger
Saltines

79C
sps

r------------------------,

I

1
I

II

Your re$0rvatron

witt~

c;onf&gt;rmed

b~·

-

Atltlre u

- - - - - --· - · -

------- - - • - -

C• tl' ---

·· PMne

_ _ State

--

Z•P Code - ._ _

--

Jar

I
1

Ulle 10 1118f1d your mlcrowne oven
domon11ratlon luncheon.
~

32·01 .

I

phone

1 would

Name

gc

Ingels Furniture
Micicfleport, o.

-

I

Pkgs.

A\IONOAU SLICED OR

"Two in One Store"
N. 2ncf Ave.
Mirtrtleport, 0.

12

COt"'OCOGDSUDil !&amp;• 21 !Mill UJUOH lA• 21 l t l ~
UIJt tT ra mumu SUH &amp;tout am

Can

'

STEM§ I "'"·"'·
GOLDEN CROWN

Mushrooms

Area Merchants Are Up To
Their .Ears in Savings
For You ••.

4·07.

Jar

a
Spotlight
a
$
Bean Coffee ....

47 c

Fab '

Detergen·f ..........

~9·o•.

Jar

LIMIT I JAR WITH COUPON AND $7 .50 ADDiliOMAl PURCMASE
: _ _ _,
(UClUOIMC THIS \TEll! )

8· 10-lB . AVG .

Boneless
Smoked Ham ... ...... lb.

13' OFF LABEL

15' OFF fABEL

Qt.

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMil V
COIPOI CIO~ SIMDU lh 21 IMU' UTmU IU 11 Ult
SIIJlCI 10 tfflJUIU ST&amp;Tf &amp;

I .

FRESH BONE IN

~~~~

Palmolive
L•1qu1•d ._............... 22·o•
Bll . ·

Embassy
co\' :~•"¢' · Salad Dressing

I

- - - HDWtfy F~k S~IJM

29

99

SAVE
$150

Fresh Ocean Perch Fillets ........... .

,. · $219

Fresh Dressed Flounder ... ... .. .... .

"· $199

ON ].US.
OF

12

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Box

AVONDALE CREAM STY IE

Corn

c

KROGER SLICED OR WHOLE

Potatoes
16·01.
Can

26c

KROGER

c

JANUARY 26 AND 27
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat MI•lk.... .Plaatlc Ctn.
Gal.

'Delicofeb&amp;tm S~ecio~

89

AYAILAILI AT STOll$ WITH DILl ONLY
HOT FOODS IVA1LAILI111M-7PIII

Paper ar

KROGER 0.5'/oLOWFAT MILK ... GAL. PLASIIC CTN. $1.59

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES,
DAD'S ROOT BEER .

SAVE

lb.
IHCI.UOU: f.l'llas OF OIICKIN , 1·11. I'OT ATO
SAlAD AND 4 DINNIIIOUS

.

Special Merchandise Savings In Your

soc

lb.

SA¥£

Family Pak Fried Chicken . tl.M
LID
Smithfield Ham ..... ........ . lb.
JAIUIIIG
Swiss Cheese ................. . lb.

See Pomeroy and Middleport Stores

lUClO, lOt

KROGER ELIOW

'

Macaroni

Newspaper On Thursday ••• .

THE DAILY SENTINEL

33c
I

' .

.
I

'

"I

1
1

I

Kroger's
Pro .. ........ .... ... ...... .lb .
Boston Butt
Pork Roast .. ..... .. ... lb.

Crisco
Sh 0 rt en1ng
• ............ Can
-lb.

29·01.

.

LIM IT ONI COUPON PER fAMil Y

: SAVE
I
16c

A BLEND OF BEEF &amp; HYDRA
TEXTURED VEGETABLE PROTEIN

~

HAWES YEllOW CLoNG

·Peaches

(EICLUDIMC THIS ITEIIIJ

OF

1 cDII'0
I :;.;..---,,
I

CHOICE

11-oz.

II
I

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp;:JEWELRY

1

.usoA

I

1

~------------------------· ·

1
LIMIT 3 BOllS WITH COUPON AND S750 ADDITIONAl PURCHAS~

Boxes

""'-'!!!~~

Preserves

SEND THIS COUPON TODAY FOR YOUR RESERVATION

I
I
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I

$
l-Ib.

E.RVAUEY STRAWBERRY

number of homemakers.

spn and son, .John Trotter, ·
Rernie Watson. Mrs Carroll
Wt•u gh cmd son , Nina
Wkkline,
llirths, Jan . 23
Mr . and Mrs. Tim othy Mar·
tin , son. J m~kson .
Mr . .nd Mrs. William
Weston, daughter, Wellston.
Mr . ami Mrs. Lewis Va nce,
~on , Jetekson.
Mr . and Mr s. Lynn
Johnson . daughter , Bidwell.
Mr . and Mrs. Arnold Ref·
!itt. twins. McArthur.
Mr . and Mr~ Daniel
Sublett . son . Middleport.

ALL KROGER STORES

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

I
1
1

1

m:n1l' for display tha t l'Vl'ni ng.

ONJ

F1ll out the co upon. but do •I now. We are hm11Bd to the

M'"'"

1

~~-'

1·111.
A species of bird in
England, called the tit, · often
learns to open milk-bottle
caps and drink the milk .

riu .

WE II:EIIIVE THI.IGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES . NON I SOlD

106 2ND AVE.

David Fetty II

r11quired to be rudilv IVIillble lor' sale
TO TAL SATISFACTION
in NCh IC.r~ Store. •• cept ••
GUARANTEE
tpteific.ally not" in thi1 1d. If w1 do
EvllfVthing vou buy at Kroger 11
run oul of an ldv1t1iMd item , we Will
gu•rant* f~ your total utilfaclion
oHer vou vour choice of • comperable
reg~rdl. . of mtnutecturer _ If yoo !Ire
it.-n, when IVaileble . reflecting lhe
III'M Uvillgl or 1 ratncheck whic h will 1 not satiltled , tl:roger will rept1ce yoor
item with tha ume brand or e com
entitle you to purchaM the adverttsed
perable brand or1efund your Purchlte
Item 11 the adlfertilfld price within 30

Tea
Bags

INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

'

HOLLY FARMS . U.S .I;l. A. INSPECTED
{IIGULAR ... LB. 79•) MIXED

Etch ol thne 1dnr1iMd items 11

PLACE:

TIME:

A ' Donald Duck cake wa s
se rved . with
other
refreshments . Presenting
him gifts and sending cards
were his grandparents, Rob
and Jsabe1le Couch. an aunt,
Jennifer Couch , uncles, Ron
and Jeff Couch, Laura and
Charlie Oliver, Jan and Chris
.Judge, Larry, Linda and Andy Fields, Anna Davidson
Patiy .Jones, Ric Couch , Jun~
Wamsley, Jason, Tonya and
Stacy Davis, and grandparents, Hank and Phyllis
Fetty and another aunt , 1,esa
Petty.

A FEW UAMPlES

MICROWAVE OVEN

Tilurscfay
Jan . 25, 1979

Whole Fryers~~~: lb.

""ooucrs

~
rr'fl'lllllll®

A

HOllY FARMS . GR,O,DE A
(REGUL,O,R .•. LB . 79'1

liS TID IILOW AIt JUST

the

DATE:

hntne.

l001'1 FOITMIS SIGN
TH.OUGtlOU1lHI
HOII ,FOI
FANTASTIC s.-.vtNGS '
ON I(•OGtl lUND

tration

'

will

in Miniatun·· · by
Mr s . F'rc.•d Kt•ss in gc r ,
Mr ml•·rs &lt;1re to take LU sh
g;-tr d~· ns wh1c h tlwy have

r •

If you own a microwave oven, or you're
thinking about buying a microwave oven . .

you're invited.~.
to see a liw
of microv10w
cooking with

prng ram

··r,;!rtlt-nin ~

HOLLY FARMS

Not all microwave ovens are alike! Get the complete facts on microwave cooking .

.
..
RED HOT LOVER- Picllrred above is llarney. Caslunan, played by Herbert Taylor,
practicing his style op Bobbi Nichols, played by Michelle Corbin, in the Gallia Dramatic
Arts Society's presentation of Neil Simon's "Last of the Red Lot Lovers." The play will take
place on Jan. 24, 25, 26, 27 at the Little Theatre, lower level of the Lafayette Mall at 8 p.m.

Hnlzl'f Mt•dir'al Ct•ntcr
Di sehargr•s, Jan . 23
Patrick Aeikl'r, Deborah
Rays, Sherri Blanton, John
Bolles, F.:(l na Bryan, Elwood
F' c-drc hil&lt;l , Ll'l't Lt Cicl
Gatewood , Edna Greene .
Ste ven Jame s
Mary
Kemper, Lucinda Lambert ,
Shl'rnl I J&gt;gan, F.tlna Madden ,
William Mapes , Oian a
Phoenix , Rubert Richards,
Them! a Rollins,Cathy sisson ,
Annie Spencer, Anthony
Stewart, .Joa n Sliles, Mrs.
Daniel Stinson and sun, M&lt;:~ rT
Sttunp. Mrs. Stephen patter-

\ ;Js r..;,•ll.

Tlw

Hospitall\t•ws'

5

�. ... . .

·

-·

·~·

.

·

-.

...

II - The Daily Se ntinel, Mi_ddleiJ(!rt-Pomer oy,p ., Wednesday , .Jan. 24, 1979

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday, .ran. 21. 1!17~

Fann Scene

-

Committee assign,m ents a:rinounced

1

Hunger problem
blamed on grain losses
September 1975 ca lled for a 50
percent reduction in post AP F a rm Writt"r
harvest food losses 'by 1~85 .
WAS HI NGTON (AP )
Huge losses of grain and Bourne said he believed this
ot her commodities after they to be "a reasonable and
are harv ested is a major achievable objective ."
This would have a number
reason for hunger in much o£
the world , says a Cornell or benefits, he said.
"On an individual basis,
Uni ve rsity expert.
Malco lm C.
Bourn e, there will be a saving in
professor of food science and nutrients for people who are
technology at the Ithaca , malnourished , an economic
N.Y., uni ve rsity , told a benefit to people who are
presidential panel Tuesday poor, and an incentive for
to
increa se
that the losses are most acute [ar me rs
in the poor . developing production when they know
countries where the Jack o£ that the increaSed production
can be marketed instead of
lood is most acute.
Citing National Academy of \Otting away," Bourne said.
Nationally, a country will
ScieOce::; £igures Bo urne said
b!lnefit
from reduced food
over all losses in world cereal
by
having a"bealthier,
waste
gr a in
pr oduction
are
population, a
more
energetic
estimated in the range of 10
in
the
quantity of
decrease
per cent to 20 perc ent
imported food - with a
annua lly, for example.
The losses stem primarily favorable effect on overseas
from mol ds, insects and ro- currency reserves - less
dents that destroy or con- strain on the environment
and less need [or expensive
taminate the grain .
Bourn e sa id a projection o£ agricultural inputs such as
the prese nt trends points to [ertilizer and pesticides," he
.
further increases in post- said.
However,
Bourne
said that
harvest losses unless the
more
money
will
have.
to be
system
is
greatly
spent
if
the
goal
of
cutting
str engthened.
"The increased production food waste in half by 1985 is to
of food that most developing be realized.
WASHINGTON (AP) ·countries a re trying to obtain
will be led into a weak and in- Outbreaks o£ cattle scabies, a
adequ a te
po st --harv es t skin disease caused by tiny
system. ca using greater mites, have increased with
losses tha n occur at present," the advent of winter but so fa r
are running below year-ago
he said.
Bourn e's r emarks were levers, says the Agriculture
made at a meeting of a Department.
Officials said Tuesday that
subcommittee
of
the
Presidential Commission on 42 outbreaks were reported in
World Hunger. The commis- 12 state s in December,
sion was es tablished by raising the total since, Oct. 1
Preside nt Carter last year to 67. A year earlier, 83
and told to have a report on outbreaks of scabies had been
U1e situation by this June 30. reported.
The December outbreaks
Th e
Unit ed
Nations
Asse mbly
in occurred in California--; ·Gener al

Colorado, Ida ho, Illin ois,
Iow a, Kansas , Nebraska,
New Mexico, Oklahom a,
Oregon, South Dakota and
Texas , the department 's
Aoimal and Plant Health Inspection Service said.
Infestations of the mites
that cause the disease can be
eliminated by dipping cattle
in solutions of pesticide
approv ed for the purpose.

ll y DON KENDALL

WASHINGTON (AP)
Farm commodity shipments
to eligible foreign countries
under Food for Pea ce
assistance are expected to
remain about the same next
fiscal year, according to
Agriculture Department
budget experts.
Total spending is expected
to be down about $61 .7 million
in the fiscal year that. will
begin Oct. I, but that re£1ects
net cash outlays for the
program , not tile amount of
grain and other commodities
planned for shipment.
According to ·usDA budget
officials, some 5. 1 million
metric tons of [arm products,
mostly grain, are earmarked
·for shipment under Title I of
Food for Peace, the longterm credit part o£ the
program.
Title II. which provides
donations through private
relief agencies to stricken
countries, will account for an
additional 1.6 million metric
tons. A metric ton is 2,205
pounds.
The amounts programmed
for next year are the same as
currently provided under
Food for Peace.
However, there will be a
change in the "mix " of commodities, particularly in Title
I, the larger of the two .

1

·

Judge appoints receiver
By TONY LEDWELL
As so cia ted Press

Writer

SAN· FRANCISCO (AP J A Superior Court judge
Tuesday stayed more ihan a
dozen lawsuits against the
Peoples Temple, dissolved
the sect's corporate 'charter
and agreed to ,appoint a
receiver to handle its
fi nancial affairs.
.Judge Ira Brown Jr . also
ord er ed a coalition of
northern california clergy to
prepa re a plan to return the
bodi es of nearly 600 'sect
members to San Francisco.
Brown told the Emergency
Relief
Committee
composed of the Council of
Churches , th e
Roman
Ca tholi c Archdiocese and
area rabbis - to present the
plan to hlffi within 30 days.
Under Brown's dissolution
order, the temple will remain
a lega l enti ty un til all

remaining ass ets are
distributed and claims
setfled. The judge will
appoint a receiver at a later
date.
The federal goverruneni
£i\ed suit against the temple
Monday , seeking $4.2 million
for the costs to date of
returning the bodies of more
than 900 cult members to the
United States from Guyana .
On the same day, the live
children of Rep. Leo Ryan, IJCalif .. who was slain near the
cult's Jonestown commune
just befor e the tragedy, filed
suit seeking unspecified
damages £rom the temple.
Yeoryios Apallas, deputy
state attorney general, said
reports estimating the
temple' s wealth at as high as
$26 million had been
exaggerated. "Newspaper
reports to the contrary, we
believe the total assets to be

about $12 million," he said.
The temple reportedly has
bank accounts and property
in several foreign countries.
The · survivin g temple
directors, lacing a growing number of lawsuits, sought
the dissolution. More than 9oo
members of the seci,
including its founder , the
Rev. Jim Jones, died in a
murder-suicide ritual Nov . 18
at the Jonestown, Guyana ,
agricultural commune.

Property
Transfers

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AI' ) -

De m oc r a t s : B u tts Walsh. White.
("chairman ), Mah oney, Cox, - ·HOUSE
s1gnmentsfortheSenateand Hob e rt o,
Va liqu e tt e, Agriculture and Natural Resources ·
Democr a is :
House durmg th e 113th Ohio Zimmers.
General Assembly:
Energy and Public Utilities I.o c k e r ( c h a i r m an ) ,
SENATE
_.
- Democrats : Cox (Chair- Branstool .
L.
Br own,
Rules- Democrats: Ocasek man ), Mil.leson, Butts, Co lao- Hartley , H. .James, Malott,
( c ha~rman ), J a ckso n,
brese ,
Ca r ney, Zeh ner . He publi ca n s :
Bbwen , Butts. Calabrese , Schwarzwalder .
McClaskey . Damschroder,
Mesh e l,
Va liqu e tt e . Rep ubli can s: Kasic h
Manahan, Ross .
'
Commerce and Labor Republicans : Gillmor, Gray, Pfeife r, Walsh.
H i g h wa ys
a n d Democrats: Camera (chairVan Mete r.
Finan ce - Democrats : T r a n ,s p ort a t i o n
man) , Skeen. Bar a, Bonanno,
Me sh e l ( c_hairm a n), Democrats: Carney (chair - . S . Brown , Gilm a rt in, T.
Milleson, Bowen, Jackson, man ) ,
Na b a k o ws ki , James, Or lett, L Thompson.
Stano,
V a li que t t e . Calabrese, Milleson, Stano. Repu bli ca ns: Ga lbr ai th ,
Republicans : Aronoff, Speck, Republican s: Collins, Gray, M a i e r . T u r n e r ,
Van Meter .
Mussey, Speck.
Damschroder , May&lt;·r .
Agriculture , Conservation,
Judiciary - Democrats :
Economi c Affa .r s a nd
and Environment - Demo- Valiqu e tt e (c hairman ) , Federal
Re lations
crats: Stano (chairman ), Schwarzwalder , Curr a n , De m o cr at s : O rl e t t
McCormack, Cox, Mahoney, McCormack, Nabakowski , . (chairman I. \Vojta nowski,
Zimmers . Republicans : Ro berto , Zim me r s. Hale, Hays , T . Jam es,
Gaeth, Lukens , Mu ssey, Republicans ' Finan , Malia, Ma d d u x, Wil kow s ki .
White.
Pfeifer, White..
Republicans: Mayer, Betts,
Commerce and Labor Loc al Government and Rose , Tansey. ·
Demo c r a t s : Bow e n Urban Affairs _ Democr ats :
Educa tion - Democrats:
(chairman), Nabakowski , Calabre s e (c hairman ), Bo ggs 1 c h a irm a n ) ,
Carney, Mahoney, Meshel; Curran ,
Bowen , Cox, Christman, Bara, L . Brown,
Schwarzwalder . Re - McCormack. · Republicans: Maddux, Skeen, "Sawy er,
publicans: Fin an , Gaeth, Collins, Finan, Gaeth , Kasich. Zehner . Republicans : Betts,
Kasich.
Reference - · Democrats : Ash, Ma yer , R. Br own ,
Jackson (chairman), Ocasek , Tansey.
Education and Health Democrats: Roberto (chait- Mesh e l. Republi can s :
Elecllons - Democrats:
Maddux (chairman) , Zehner,
man ), Mahoney, ·curr a n, Gillmor , Pfeife r.
McCormack, Milleson, Naba- • Ways and Means - Demo- Camera, Del Bane, Luebbe rs,
kowski. Republicans : Collins, crats : Zimmers (chairman ), Rankin , Rocco . Republicans:
Malia, Mussey.
Sch warzw a lder, Butt s , Fox ,
Oxley,
Gilmor e,
Ele ctions , Financial In - Ca rn ey, Roberto, Sta no. Manahan .
Repu bhcans: Gi Jim or,
Energy and Environment
stitutions , and Insurance Demo crats : Carne y
(chairman) , Wargo , Bar a,
r~~---~~------~~~ Branstool , Bonanno, Hay s, E.
Hugh es .
Republican s:
Karm ol. McClaskey, T.
Johnson, D. Johnson .
~:allowing are committee as-

'

.

accor ding to USD A budget
papers.
Whe at shipments will
remain about the same al
15U million bushels, and so
will ri ce at 11 million •
hundr e dw e ight.
Corn
shipments, however , are in-

dicated at 11.4 million
bushels , down from 21.1
million this year .
Vege table oil shipments
under Title I will be
increased, and there will be a
boost In tobacco shipments to
5.5 million pounds from 5
million pounds this year .

class and Dave Davis first pl ace in the unlimited division .
The Meigs team placed fourth out of 10 teams . Shown, 1-r,
are, Fred llaloy,. assistant wrestling coach at Meigs,
Wilf~rd , Davis and Jim Sheets, head coach.

WINNERS - Two boys on the Meigs Wrestling team
took top honors in tournament play Saturday night at
Point Pleasant. Van Wilford won in the 155 pound weig ht

Inflation ate away money
By ANN BLACKMAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Americans had· a little more
money in their pocketbooks in
1977 than the year before, but .
inflation took away most of it.
A new Census Bureau
report on household income
showed Tuesday that the 6.5
percent rise in pri ces
between 1976 and 1977
·practically wipeil out the 7
percent income gain.
Figures show the median
income of America's 76
million households rose to
$13,570 in 1977, compared to
the 1976 median of $12,57&amp;.
Discounting for inflation,
the bureau reported that
meant an effective increase
in buying power of only $70.
The report also shows the
composition o£ American
households has chan ged ,
largely because more young
people are postponing
marriage and childbearing
and more unmarrieds are
living together.
It noted that these changes
may account [or lack of
growth in median household
income during the 1970s.
Discounting -for inflation, the

Steuben ville 64, 'Brook e (W."

Va .J 55

Stet;~b e n v il le

Cent r a l

1970 median family income
would ha ve bee n worth
$13,630 in 1977 dollars ~
actually a little more than the
actual 1977 figure of $13,570.
In raw figures , the 1970
media n household in come
was $8,730.
Other figures show the
average size o£ the nation's
households shrank from 3.1
persons in 1971 to 2.8 persons
in 1978.
The government defines a
household as on e person
livin g alone or a grOup of
people who sha re the same
housin g
uni t.
Median
household inmme means that
half the hoUseholds made
more t han th e specified
amount and half made less.
Between 1971 and 1978, the
proportion of households with
hu sband-wife
£amili es
declined from 69.4 per cent to
62.3 percent; families with no
spouse present increased
[rom 11.1 percent to 12. 7
percent; and singles or
unrela_ted iDdividuals living
together increased from 19.6
percent to 25.1 percent.
The report shows that the
husband-wife households had
a median ;ncome in 1977 of .
$17,570, a 2 percent increase'
over 1976.
Approxirnately 12 perce nt
of the nation 's households
were headed by a male with

no wife present and about 25
per cent were headed by a
fema le with no husba nd
present.
The median income of the
"wifeless" households was
$10,25 0 a nd the medi a n
ilwomc of the "husbandless"
households was $6,330.
The households in which
neither a wife nor husb;md
wao present in&lt;;luded those
instances in which a single
per so n liv ed alone ; the
spouse was dead, divorce d or
se pa r atedi or unm a rried
people were living together.
The report shows that 2.1
per cent of t he country's
ho LL,e holds made $50,000 or
more in 1977; 16 percent were
betwee n -$25,000 and $50,000 ;
11.5 percent between $20,000
and $20. 000; 15.6 pe rcent
betwee1 $15.000 and $20,000;
17 .~ percent betwee n $10,000
and $15,000; 20.3 pe rcent
be tween $5, 000 a nd $10.000;
and 16.5 per cent below $5,000.
Median household income
in 1977 was $14 ,270 for whites :
$8,420 for blacks and $10,650
fo r
S pani sh -ori g in
households. There wa s no
signifi cant change lor any, of
these gro~ps .
The median income o£
owneroccupied properties in
1977 was $16, 400 compared to
$9,520 for r enter-occupied
properties .

DALE'S
KITCHEN CENTER, INC.

I!!!

WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DO?

:s
it

PUT IN A.
NEW KITCHEN!

BIG 40%

I Mason County News Notes
By
I

-CASH &amp;CARRY

SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.
BRING IN
YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
.EXPERTS WILL

I

l

HELP YOU!
2119 Jackson Ave:

Point Pleasant

67~-2318

Catho lic 72 , Wint e r sville 62,
Stow 80, Akron Springfield

74
Sy l vania Southv ie w 55 ,
Perry sburg 52
.

Tallmadge

54,

Kent

Roosev elt 47

Th ornv i ll e Sh er idan 67 ,
Zanesv ille Wes t M us king um
64

56

Tor onto 65, Lisbo n Beaver

Warsaw Ri ve r View
New Concord Gle nn 53

61 ,

STORE HOURS:
7: 30a. m . loS p.m. Mondaythru Saturday
8 : 00a .m. to 6 p.m. Sunday

Wa te rford 62, Fort Frye 55

Weirt on (W. Va .) 77 , Well sville 75
W. Geauga 81, Twinsbur g

..

56

..

Wes tlak e 79·, Lorain Sr . 62
Wh_iteh ouse Wayn e 63 ,
Bowlmg Gree n 46
Will iamsport Westfall 70,
Te_ays Valley 57
Wi ndham 75 Penin sul a

Uordon B. Stout, Donna L.
Stout to Gary R. Acree,
Roberta A. Acree, Parcel,
Middleport.
· Stanley E. Starcher, Doris Woodridge 65
A. Starcher to Charles D. 75Woodsfield 82, Beall svill e
Frye, Joy&lt;:e E. Frye, .21 acre,
Worthin gton 53. Delaware
Rutland .
51
Yo ungs town Libe rty 71.
Opal Gobl e Thomas,
Mathews 54
Homer B. Thomas to Ronald Vienna
Young s town Moo ne y 51,
Y. Browning, Ronald K. Au stintown-F itch 46, ot
Browning,
Lots 133, 134, 135,
HB
13)-Tansey.
Requires
Youngst oWn North 68,
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) Youngst own Wi lson 64
136,
137,
Middleport.
both
doors
of
a
double
door
In the Legislature Tuesday :
You ngstow n Rayen 85 ,
Janet Grueser, Roger Y.
IN T ROD UCED IN entr imce or exit to be
Youngst own Chaney 46
unlocked durin g business Grueser, Marilyn Newman,
Youngstown Ursuline 62,
SENATE
Edward Newman to Marilyn · Hubbard 61
hours.
SB 13 - Miller son . Creates
~anesville Maysville 85 ,
HB 132
Lehman . Newman , Janet Grueser,
the 12th District Court of ApPhilo
81
Provides lor dealing with Martha Lee, 1.40 acres,
pea ls.
Zoarville Tu sc arawas
Valley 78, Manchester 58
SB 14 - Stano. Clarifies fi scal emergencies of Chester
speed limits within municipal mw1icipal corporations.
HB 1;)3---Lehman . Changes
corporations.
the
formula for the number of
SB 15 - Roberto. Revises
D-!ib
permits allowed in an
experience requirements for
enclosed
shopping center .
•dmission to the technical
HB
134
- McLin . Specifies
exa m . for ar chitec tural
that
criminal
damaging or
registration.
enda
nge
rin
g
applies to
SB 16 - Mahoney. Permits
property
whether
it 1s
ve ndor s to exclude bad debts
in computin g sales t a x Occupied or not.
HB 135 - R. Flughes. Repa yments.
quir
es
Tran s portation
SB 17 - Gaeth . Authorizes
Research
Center
funds to be
county commissioners of two
mainta
ined
separate
from
or mor e adjacent counties to
other
public
funds
in
contra ct lor a multi-county
depositories
selected
by
the
correctional center.
OFFERED IN SENATE Tr ansport a tion Research
SJ R 1 - Kaisch . Proposes Board.
HB 136 - Boggs . Extends
calli ng ~ constitutional conto
July I, 1983, the ban oo
vention to amend th e U.S.
Co nst itutio n to require a removing gas or oil from
balanced federal budget (To Lake Erie.
HB 137 - Hale, Prohibits
Ways and Means).
the
state from denying initial
See our .complete
INTRODUC ED IN HOUSE
employment
or licenses,
HB I2!1 - Vukovich. Consoli selection of pendants
dates the number of separate permitS, or certificates to
and chains in 14K Gold
sets of recordskept by the engage in an occupation to
and
Gold filled, specially
ex-offenders.
county recorder.
HB 138 - camera. Estabpriced for Valentines
HB 12!1 - Tansey . Sets
lishes
a
rehabilitation
.Day.
conditions for entry into a
decedent's safe deposit box. division ·in the Industrial
HB 130 - ~an sey . Permits Commission.
HB 139 - Proposed by incurrent and former elected
itiative
petiti on. Requires
ofiicia ls ·who are PERS
that all soft drink and beer members to purchase
containers .carry a deposit
additional service credit for
E. Main , Pomeroy. 0.
and bans pull-tab metal
pa rt-time elective service
containers.
subsequent to 'Jan . 1, 1935.

SAVORY

BACON

Legislation-at-glance

I

BONELESS

'~

!1

ROAST......·....................... ...

69

. SIRlOIN
.
:b. $ , ••
STEAK.~ ...... .. .......................... .
W11son

·

12

oz.

WIENERS ................................ .

.
,
.
79

..

ROUND
STEAK ..... ....... .............

:~~:.~ 1

89

BEEF STEW

MEAT ...... ........_. ............~~:..~ 159
LONGHORN
CHEESE ....................... }~-.. ~

169

R.C. COlA OR
DIET RITI
8-16oz . • , 09

FINE ASSORTM
OF STORE SLICED
LUNCH MEATS

. Bottles

CLIFTON - In spite of snow and ice, fourteen members
and one guest, Ann Williams, attended the Mason Extension
Homemakers meeti~ on Tuesday, January 16, at the home o£
Mrs. Clara WilliamS with Mrs. Laurene Lewis as co-hostess.
The group enjoyed playing bingo, as well ·as the
educational part of the program.
Mrs. Lester (Laura ) Johnson presented the lesson,
"Ability- not disability." She spoke on the attitudes toward
the handicapped. The homemaker, she said, could be helpful
by providing transportation bJ the grocery store and also
mentioned, was reading to the blind. The difference between
the disability and handicap was brought out - she said, "a
disability is a disease, injury, or birth defect - th ~t can be
diagnosed by a doctor. A handicap is a physical or mental
limitation due to a disability which impairs or restricts one or
more majoc activities of life such as walking, seeing, hearing ,
speaking, working, or learning. A disabled individual may or
may not be handicapped.
Trends in rehabilitation today is the process of restorin g
handicapped individuals t6 jhe fullest p!Jysieal, mental, social,
vocational and economic usefulness of which they are capable .
' The trends include education, deinstitutionalization, moving
handicapped individuals out of institutions and back into the
community so that they may become useful members of
society .
In speaking of the attitudes toward the handicapped:
Individuals who see the disabled as basically the same as the
non~isabled will probably agree with the following statements
that President Kennety made in his 1962 State of the -Union
add••» concerning rehabilitation. We should : provide
services instead of support, provide rehabilitation instead of
relief ; provide training instead of dependency .
She said in West Virginia 131,426 persons are considered to
be disabled. This does not include the 194,474 West Virginians
who are over 65, some of whom may be physically and-&lt;&gt;r
mentally limited due to the aging process or the 13,841 who are
found in in stitutions:
The lesson leader spoke on the causes of disabilities and
the effect&lt;; of disability on the [amity when a member is
disabled.
In closing she called attention to the services that are
available for handicapped individuals such as occupational
therapist (OT) , physical therapist (PT) and ~ounselor and
many others. With the help of rehabilitation center, nursin g
barnes and other institutions they could help members become
useful members of society.
Mrs. John Marshall, president, of the Homemakers
opened the meeting with the group praying the Lord's Prayer .
Mrs . Elmer VanMeter led in the Pledge of Allegiance. The
Club Coliectwas read by Mrs. Lester Zerkle, Mrs. Marshall ,
Mrs . George Carson and Mrs. Fred Spencer .
Mrs. Alburtice (Roberta ) Young presented the devotionals
tising Scripture Matthew 5:I5. She spoke on unity, working
together as a team in the schools, home , church and club. She
mentioned George Washington , Helen Keller and several
others who overcome obstacles. She closed with prayer.
During the business meeting the club voted to give $50
each to the Mason Volunteer Fire Dept. and Mason
· Emergency Squad. The presentation will be given at the next
meeting by Mrs. Landon (Catherine l Snuth, Mrs. Alburtice
(Roberta) Young, Mrs. Marshall and Mrs. Laurene Lewis of
..the Community Project Committee.
Tentative plans were also made to make Christmas
decorations for the tree at the Virgil A. Lewis home for '79.
The group voted to purchase a photo 11" x 14" Honor Roll
of World War II and give it to the Auxiliary of Stewart-Johnson
Post 9926 of Mason. Mrs. Fred Spencer of the Citizenship
Committee will make the presentation .
Committee reports were given by Mrs. Fred Spencer,
Citizenship; Mrs. Lester Johnson, Cultural Arts; Mrs. Landon
Smith, Health; Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Family Ufe; Mrs.
William Zer.kle, International Relations; Mrs. Cecil Smith,
Safety; Mrs. John Marshall, Public Information.
Secretary's report W!IS given by Mrs. George Carson and
treasurer, Mrs. William Zerkle, reported.
Attending were: Aon Williams, guest; Sarah Willis , Mrs .
Cecil Smith, Mrs. William Zerkle, Mrs. John Marshall, Mrs.
Lester Johnson, Mrs. Fred Spencer, Mrs. Alburtice Young,
Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Elnler VanMeter, Mrs. Matilda
Noble, Mrs. Ramopa Sydenstrieker, Mrs. George Carson and
hostesses, Mrs. Clara Williams and Mrs. Laurene Lewis.
Refreshments were served .
CEREMONY SET
MASON - Bernice Coffey; Mason, and James W. Stone,
Pomeroy, will be married on February 17, at Mason United
Meth9dlst Church with the Rev. John E . Wildman performing
the double ring ceremony. Open church will be observed.
Ms . Coffey is the sister of Mrs. Ed Crurn, 3rd St., Ma_son,
and Bertha. Griffin, Middleport.
"

. Plus Ia~
&amp; deposit

Muon I!Dd area personals

.'••.
.I

.

•

.

(

•

Finan ce -

Alma Marshall

Mr. Bllrl (Edward) Crum and children, Jennifer Lynn,
Jackie and Nathan, visited recently with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Crum In Mason .
. Mrs. Alburtlce (Roberta) Young of Clifton is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital where she is undergoing tests.
9\e was admitted ro Saturday.

Democrats:

Shoemaker
(cha irm an) ,
Hintg, Christman, Crossland,
Deering , Nader, Gilmartin ,
Jone s , Sweeney, Pa nehal ,
War go, Stinziano,' Boggs, J .
Johnso n, Mallory, McLin .
Re publi can s: Ros e, Betts ;
Fox, Karmol , Maier, Netzley ,
Taft , T. Johnson , Ball.
Financial . Institutions D e mo c rat s Frie s
( ch a irm a n ),
E ckart ,
Bona nno , Healy, Hinig,

Le o

'l

&lt;.t

ll ,

r

.J u n e s .

Re p ub l ica ns :

MeEw cn.

Saxbe. Halchclder , D.
.Johnson .
Health and Retir ement -'De rn oer a ts : .1 . . Th o mpson
I cha irman ), L. Br own,
Bran stool, R. J ames,
Lue bbe r s,

Mahn ic,

I.

Reference - IJemocruls : Tr a nt e r . Wi lk o ws ki .
Nadel' 1chain na n 1. Malott , Hepub lit'ans : Turn e r . R .
Bowers. Ne tt le, Rocco. Hughes. Fix, 1.. Hug hes .

Mayor's Court

Pro Hock ev
At A Glance
By ~he Ass oc i,ated Pr ess
National Hockey Lea gue
Ca mpbell Confer en ce
Patri ck Di v i sion
w I I pt s. gf ga
N. Y. Islander s
31 6 9 7 1 21d 11 9
N. Y. Ranger s
26 IS 5 57 \92 159
Phil a.
22 15 11 55 15a 145
Atlan ta
25 19 4 54 191 166
Smythe Di vi sion
Chi cag o 16 21
40 135 161
Va ncou ver

· Fourdcfendailt! wer e fincd

Thomp son. Repu bli ca ns: in the murt of Middleport
Norris, Van V)'V en, Taft, Gal- Mayo r Fr ed Hoff man
braith ·
Tuesday night .
Highw ay s an d Hig hway
They incl~d ~d George A.
Safety - Democrats : Bowers ~
(chair ma n). Be ll , f' r ies,
!cDani cl. 51, Middl eport ,
$100 and costs, disorderly
Mahni c, Malott , Panehal. manner charge: Don Lovett ,
Ra nkin . Republica ns : !.. 55, Middlepor t. $1 00 and
Hu g hes, Ha tehado r ia n, co sts. disord erl y ma nner :
Donham, D. .Johnson. Human William D. Lave nder, 21.
Res ource s - Demo crats :
Hale (chai rman ), B e~ala , Middleport , $10 and costs,
Crossland, Locker, Rank in. passing in a no passing zon e,
Hartley • Zehner . Republi- and J . H. Albri ght, 23, West
Columbia. W. Va., $225 and
ca ns : Da mschroder , R.
st
d
d th
Brown, Hoss, Ash.
:;" s an . _!costs an
ree
In surance - Democr ats : . . . . ay s . m JB I , drlvmg whil e
Stinziano (chairtnan ), Nettle,

S Brown , Cook, Mahni c,
Vukovi ch, J . Thomps on.
Republicans :
Netzley,Karmol. B3tchelder .
Van Vyven .
Interstate Cooperation De m oc r ats :
J o n es
(chairman ), Hartley, Del
Bane, Leonard. Republicans:
Ball , L. Hughes, Donham:
Ju diciary - Democrats:
Leh ma n ( c ha i rm an ),
Leo na rd , Boyle, Ec kart ,
Hays, Healy, Orlett, Skeen ,
Tr ante1·. Stinziano, Vukovich,
Woj tano wski , Mall ory .
Republicans: O'Neill , Oxley ,
P ope, S• xbe, Potte nger ,
Batchelder., Hatchadoria n,
Corbin.
Loca l Government
D e m oc ra t s:
Roc c o
(cha irm an !, E . Hughe s,
Begala, Boy le, Deer ing ,
Luebbers, Nettle. Repub licans : Mayer , Hatchadoria n,
R. Brown , Giimore.
Public Utilities - Democrats : R. James (chairman ),
Sawy er, Ca rn ey, Conley,
Bell , Fri es, Wojtanowski.
Rep ubli cans : H. Hu ghes,
Cor bin , O'Neill, T. Johnson .

a

16 15 6 38 145
Color ado 10 31 7 27 134
St. Loui s 10 32 7 27 140
Wales Conference
Adam s Di vision
Boston
30 10 7 67 197
Tor ont o 20 19 8 4B 151
Bu ffa lo
18 16 11 47 151
Minn .
16 23 6 38 147
Norri s Divisi on
M on tr ea l J l 9 ~ 69 193
Pit ts.
19 19
46 163
L os Ang . 19 21 6 44 167
Wash .
14 26 7 35 15d
De troit
Q 25 13 31 140

IntoxiCated .

a

Five defendants forfeited
bonds and three others were
fin ed in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fo rieitin g bond s wer e
Ca role Arn old, Lan caste r,
$200, posted on a petty theit
charge: Gay lyrd You ng,
Albany, $350, driving while
intox icated; Danny Robson ,
Pomeroy, $350, driving whil e

1 ~0

197
219
146
149
146
160
120
159
164
20d
173

Tu es day's Ga rn e
Mont r ea l 6, St. L ou is 3
Today 's Gam ~s
New Y or k Rang e r s a t
Washin g ton
Tor ont o a t Min neso ta
PHtsburgh a t L os Ang eles
Ch1 cago a t Vancouve r
Thur sday's Gam es
New York Islander s a t
Bos ton
New Y ork Rang e r s ~t
Bu ff al o
A tl an ta a t Montr e a l
Pitt sburgh a t ColOrad o
De tr o it a t Lo s Angeles
World
Hocke y Association
w I t pis . gf ga
Qu ebec
24 , 14 4 52 165135
New E ng . 20 14 6 46 163 141
Wi nni peg 20 17 5 45 163 155
Edm ont on
11 17 0 44 158 130
Cin e.
19 22 4 42 1"61 161
16 24 3 35 153 177
Bir m .
Tue sday 's Game s
Quebec 7, Bi r m ing ham 5
Edmon ton 5, New Eng land

intoxicated ; Terry Brewer ,

Long Bottom , $200, petty
theft, and Jimmy Anderson,
Rutland , $300 r esisting
arrest; $50, di sorderl y
manner, a nd $100, intoxication.
Fined were Clarence Frye,Addison , $50 and costs, on a
no driver 's license charge,

and $350 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while
intox ic at ed;
Dr e am a
Hovatter, Middleport, $30 and
costs, ass ured clear distance,

Today 's Ga m e
Win n ipeg at Ci nc inna ti
Thur sday ' s Gam es
No ga mes sc heduled

and George Lemley , Jr .•
Cheshire, $50 and costs, no
operator's li cense, and $350
and costs and three days in
jail, drivin g while in toxicated.
·

Ohio Cotl.eg e Ba sk etball
By Th e Associated Press
Tuesday Night
Conference
Ohio
Wi ttenberg 72. Ken.yon 57
Hoosier · Buckeye
N\a nche ster 77 , Findla y 67
Pr esident s
H iram 87 . Thiel 82
Mid -Ohio
Ced ar v ill e 75, Urba n a 73

Carter-at-a-glance. . •

WASHINGTON (AP) - Here , at a glance, are the main
points of President Carter 's State of the Union addresss given
Tuesday night befor e a joint session of Congress.
NEW FOUNDATION - The pre sident introduced the term
"new foundation " and said : "Tonight I want to examine in a .....
VICtOry
lOTI
broad sense the state of our American union - how we are · ·
. Vernon Nazar en e 69,
building a new foundation for a peaceful and prosperous
Meigs
Junior
High Mt
Ma lon e 67
world. "
basketball team defeate d Rio Grande 77 Ti ffin 7d
¥ MYTHS - Saying th e nation must not "substitute myths for Wahama
Tu es day
at
Other Games
Cu mber land 87 , Wilberfor ce
common sense," carter cited as persistent myths the ideas Wahama, 31 to 24.
th at "we must choose endlessly between inflation and recesWahama
was
held 86
sian" or that the government must choose "between com- scoreless the first half due to
passion and competence."
good delense by Meigs and a
BUDGET - " The 1980 budget provides enough spending re- cold sho oting spree by
strain! to begin unwinding in£1ation, but enough support to Wahama.
keep American workers productive and to encourage inDurir.g the second half,
vestment to provide new jobs," Carter said.
Wahama made a gallant
PROGRAM - Key issues being given top priority include attempt to over take the
l egisl ~tion to hold down hospital costs ; efforts to deregulate
Marauders but fell short by 7.
th e rail , bus and trucking industries ; extension o£ goverrunent Bot h teams committed
reorganization to encompa ss education , economic devel- several turnovers due to
opm~nt and natural resource management ; limited public fiwell called game by the

Defellfoe aids

M•

eigS

•

Hules - Democrats : Riffe Cross lond . He publi can s :
lchairman l, Quilter, Cook, Taft . Ma nahan, Galbraith,
Healy. T.•James, Letuna n, McEw en, Net zle y , F ix ,
Mcl.in, Del Bane, Ma llor y, Corbin .
f, ilmart in . Re publi can s :
Nixon , H. Hug hes. Norris,

Youth found.
not guilty

Pope , Turner, Pottenger .
Srna ll
Bus iness
a nd
(;enc ra l
Bus in ess
' De m o c r a t s :
Co l o n n a
!cha ir m a n }, S . Br ow n,

PAINESVILLE . Ohio I AP I
- Donald White. 17. of
Mentor was found innocent
Tuesda y of
vehic ular
homicide in the death of a
church deacon who was run
over on the Ia wn of Mentor
llapt ist Church.
A Lake County Common
Pleas court jury dehbera ted
nea rly three hours before
fin din g White innocent of the
October 1977 death of Richard
Hartma n, 39.
A witness, James An gel ,
said Ha rtman was run over
by two ca rs whi ch he tried to
stoP from driving acros::; the
church lawn.
Whit e's laWyer , Leo
Talikka, said Wh1te had been
fri ght ened by an object
thrown at his car and by the
sight of Hartman jumping on
the hood of the car. He said
the state was unable to prove
that White's car ever ran
over Ha rtman .

Christman, Hale, Sw eeney,
Wargo, Conley . Republicans:
Va n Vyven. Corbin , Ball, H.
Ur own .

Sta te Govern me nt
De moerats : Del Ba ne
l chairman 1, Carney, Sk~ e n,
Colo nn a, Conley, Coo k,
McLin, (,luilte r , Pa nehal,
Tranter, Sawyer. Republicans : F ix, McE wen, Norr is ,

Tansey. Oxley, Gilmore.
Tra nsportation and Urban
Aff air s - Democra ts: I.
Th o mp s on

( c hai rm~ n) ,

Hankin , Net!Je, Fr ies ,
Loc ker , J . Thompson,
Vu k ov i c h , Sa w yer .
Repu bl ican s · Donh a m ,
McCl askey , Ros s, Saxbe,
Pottenger.
Ways and Means - Democrats : Hinig (chairman), J .
.Johnson . Begala, Bell , Boggs,
ColoRna , · Boyle , Dee rin g,
Sweeney , F: Hughes, Eckart,

U~.-RE_D..;.U..;.CT_IO.;;..;
· N;..;;.;S;;;...
ON WOMEN'S

JOYCE, l:iUSH PUPPIES,
EASY STREET AND
VINER DRESS &amp;
SPORT SHOES
Valu es to $30 .00

NOW1'700

J

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

I
New Spring Shoes
I
Arriving Daily
~~~------~---~---------

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.

9 a .m .-5 p .m .
Mon . th ru ThUr s. &amp; Sat .
9 a .m .-8 p.m . Fri.
Clo sed Sunday

" Mictct le of
Upper Block"
Pom e roy, 0 .

VISA'

.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·

a

nancrn g of congressional ele ctions, and enactment of a na-

r eferees.

tiona! suns~t law " so that when government programs have
outlived their value they will automatically be terminated."
FOREIGN POLICY - He urged support for "the strong
defen se budget I have propo~d" and said: " We have no desire
to be the world's policeman. America does want to he the
world's peacemaker. "
ARMS LIMITATION - Carter said that "if the Soviet Union
continues to negotiate in good faith, a responsible (strategic
arms limitation) agreement will be reached ." He said: "I will
sign no agreement which does not enhance our national
security ... I will sign no agreement which cannot be verified .. .
I will sign no agreement unless our deterrent force will remain
overwh elming."
HUMAN RIGHTS - "As long as I am president, at home and
around the world , America 's example and America 's influence
will be marshalled to advance the cause of human rights,"
Corter said.

Meig s made nine fre e
throws out of 24 wh ile
Wahama made 4 out of 16
attemtps.
Big gun for Meigs was Todd
File with 16 followed by Rick
Chan~ey with eight.
For Wahama Dudding had
tO and Vanm eter 7.
Meigs will play Athen s
Thursday at home at 6 p.m.
Coach [or Meigs is · Dole
Ha rri son and Bill Jewell
coaches Wahama.
By Quarters :
Meigs
8 12 25 31
Wahama
0 0 14 24

I

I

---. _(_,\. o·BC

_,_~&lt;}.~"

,t)-.t.6
"'.t"~.t

·

...&amp;_,.....
l"~

.ftl)

Months

INQUIRE NOW:

t and 12 months Car••r PrOQrlml 1ncl II
months Anociate' O.VrM l.1 Speclallrtd

Bu,iness Protn ms .

Executive Secretary
S.cretary

ALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE
- .· Box
-- --7"-- --· -t P.O.

I Golllpolis, OH. 4MI'

MARGARINE. --~-~~~-~:.~~.69'

1
I

Jr. Accounting
Genera I Office
51. ,.._ 7S-I:t-t4nB

NAME---------------;
PHONE _ _J.ZIP----t

ADDASSS-----~~---f

~
~-~~-~j~ 49'
CABBAGE..............2 Jb 351
.... .... . .. . .

••

New Gree n

._VE_LV_EET_CH_EE_SE_-~_.~~-·-.8_9_'~BA_N_AN_AS_.._..._..._... ·-· _2_lb._49'_.
1~~·, ~~· REEMES NOODLES................. !:a.k•.79'

WHOLE TOMATOES •••••••••••••••. ~ .......... 59~
20
Del Monte
.. CHUNK PINEAPPLE ......................... 65~
10 1'&gt; oz. Campbell's
BEAN 'n BACON SOUP•••••••.•••.•••••••• 2/63'
o~.

32

For' Day
Or Evenino Classes

CALLs (614) 446-4367
'
NOW ENROLLING
FOR NEW TERM

.B usiness Administration

I lb. Parkay

\

Not Years Prepare You '
To E•tnl
..

•

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ...............~.b~.$1.19

8 o z. Krall

PROVIDES
THE TRAINING YOU NEED
FOR THE BUSINESS WORLD

I
I
I
G
I

ECKRICH JUMBO BOLOGNA •.•••.••.••~~}1.49
ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE ......... ~b~. $1.79

oz .

WAGNERS GRAPE DRINK. ............... ~~~~ 49~

ARMOUR' DEVIL TREET. ................... 2/85'
I CHEFS
CHEESE PIZZA........................ 97e
3 oz.

I

I

15 1 '2

10 oz . Folqer's

INSTANT ·cOFFEE::........... ~ ••••••••• ~:~ •.$4.59
200 c 1. White

KLEENEX TISSUE •.•••.• ~ ..• ~ ••..•••.•••• ,:~:•• 65~
6 oz. lclaho

INSTANT POTATOES............................ 65'

�12-The O&amp;Uy_~•mt~l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Jan. 24, 1979

;;.m;·. &amp;;~,H
2

WANT AD
CHARGES
' 1$ words or Under
Cash

I day

tOO

2days
3days
6days

.

Charge

1.50

Bernice Bede Osol

125

""

~.~.,

2.25

! .Ill

375

For Best Results ·use Sentinel Classifieds
- -Ol)'
- --_ -_-_.
____!.ll.M!,!Il

- - - - - - .,.. -- -- __ _ _ _G_i.v_e p. ":!a:t _ _ _

JOHN PROFF ITT died JOnuorv 24,

LONG HAll-lED cot

A place is vacant in our home

,.,.,

January zs, 1979
Mc..re opport un ities than you
can handle will be dumped in
..your lap this coming year.
Mobile Home sales and Yl:l.rd Silk!~
Choose WISely Concentrate on
a~ ac.-cepl.ed only with cash WJth
· a select few that you feel offer
order. 25 cent charge for ads cMrry·
the best possibilities
LntS Bo• Number In Care of The Sen·
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZD-Feb. 191
tine!.
Some hotshot COI.Jid sell you a
bill of goods today t hat. takes
The Publisher reservet the right
you off on a wild goose chase.
to edit or reJect any ads deemed objectional The Publisher will not be
Before teaming · up with any·
responsible for more than one incorone,
Know htS tracK record.
rect insertion.
Find out more of what lies
Phone 992·21fl&amp;
ahead for you in 1979 by send1ng for your copy of the all-new
Astro-Graph Letter . Mail $1 lor
each and a tong , self·
addressed , stamped envelope
lo Astra-Graph . P.O Box 489,
Radio City Station , N.Y . 10019.
Be sure to spec tf y birth sign .
PIS CES (Feb. 20-March 20) Bit·
1ng off more th an you can chew
wi11 get yo u in deeper tro uble
Monday
than you can imagine. Be reatNoon on Saturday
ISflc 1n your undertakings.
4RIES (March 21-Aprll 19) If at
Tuesday
all possible . stay away fro m
thru Friday
&lt;P.M.
crowds or large ~atherings
tht day before publication
today . You're not m the mood
for small talk and might be a bit
Sunday
too impati ent .with others
4PM
TAURUS (April ZO-May 20) Don't
Friday afternoonblame your family tf th1ngs
today are unreachable. It's not
their fault tf your expectat ions
exceed your capabilities
GEMINI (May Z1-June 20) AI·
towing your te mper to get out
e
Of hand Will spo il what otherwise could have been a pleasan t day Look for hum or in
"( ,.l :,situations that frus trate you .
CANCER (June 21-July 2Z) You
could let your e motion s take
charge of your pocketbook today and blow th e whole wad .
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) S top and thi nk belore yo u
Leland Mote whose 14-year- spend .
old daughter was raped and LEO (July 23-Aug. ZZ) A reckmurdered more than 8 year less associate could ins~ire
ago says his miild h3s not you _to behave 1n a s1m1 lar
. .
fashton today. Together , yo u
'
been eased by the mdictment might do something rather loo lof Eugene Gall in oonnection ISh and unp rofitable .
with the case.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. Z2) Feei"There is some question ings co uld ru n high on the JOb
that he's the man,'' the soft_ today Try n.o t to ove rreac t or
k
M t
'd " M
you may fond yourse lf de·
spo en
e sal ·
... Y pressed and frustrated by the
mind has not been eased by end o f the day
his arrest or the indictment. I LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl . 23) Your
am concerned that he is the JUdgment 1s not al its best
right man."
loday . You could wto ngfully
An hmocent plea was en- place your trust tn another who
won't 11ve up to 1t. You 'll be lhe
I er eel thi s week 1or Gall ' who one
who's hur1
has been indicted on charges SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 221
of kidnapping , rape and The re 's a ltre smotde rtn g at
aggravated murder in the home today and u nless you_ ar~
October 1977 slaying of Beth very carelul not lo stoke II , II
Ann Mote.
will reignite . Lei thmgs die
.
down
.
Whi1e poIIce say all of thell' SAGITTIIRIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec.
eviden~ against the 32-year- · 21) Be extra-cautious with any
old GaU is circumstantial, mental pursuits loday . You 're
Montgomery County un usua ll y ca reless and co uld
Prosecutor Lee C. Falke make a senous mtstake . (Thts
.
h
Includes what yo u say 1 )
~.xpres.sed con f Idence t at CAPRICORN (Dec. zZ-Jan . 19)
memory. Card of Tbanks and
Obiluary: fl cent.s per word. 13.00
minimwn. Cash ln 8dval1('e.
In

NOTICE

Wh1ch never con be l1lled .
Sadly missed by hi!. wife . his
brothers. l·us children ond
_gc_on~d:hi!d~e~ .

Notices
:J GUN SHOOT. Roc me Gun Clu b
E.... ery Sun'doy t pm . FactOry
choke guns only

· · · - -- · - -

KAY'S

DEADUNES

not eased

°

we will get

Mr. Gall con-

victed, and it will mean he
will be off the streets for the

,.

You have a tendency today to
coun t your ma teri a l blesstngs
belore they become a realit y. IJ
you ' re .s marl , you' ll wait Jill
lhey're on the bank .
1NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

rest of his We. "
· tb t
Mot e , expressed h 0~
~
·
the indictment and tnal will
bring an end to the matter.
"1 don 'I like seeing her
(Beth Ann's) name and what
" EMOTIONAU.Y
happened as a headline in the
DIVORCED"
newspaper or on television
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -A
every few months," he said. researcher at the University
During the past 15 months of Wisconsin - Madison says
he has tried to move ahead nearly half of the married
with his llfe, Mote said.
men in America are
"It was a sad thing that "emotionally divorced " from
happened, but one has to face their mates.
the reality of such situations
Professor Mary Ann Fitzand try to move on," he said. patrick of the communication
"Right now her death is a r ts
department
says
basically a closed iss ue. It interviews with some 2,000
happened."
persons indicated nearly all
!\tote's fanner wife, the marriages !aU into one of four
Rev. Doris Mote, a priest at categories:
Christ Episcopal Churc h
-Traditional, in which
here, declined comment on people enjoy having . a ·
the indictment.
companion and sharing their
GaU . is under a death time with someone else.
sentence in Kentucky, where
- · Separate, with husband '
he was convicted Sept. 30 of and
wife
emotionally
the killing last April of a divorced,
not
much
suburban Cincinnati girL He togetherness and a sense of
also faces additional ab- coldness.
duction and rape charges fu ·
Independent,
with
Dayton and Beavercreek couples who fight, a good deal
Township in Greene County. of sharing, and both partners

New standards. delayed
to consumer prices.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
National Highway Safety Administration
has
been
delayed another 30 days, un~
April!, in its move to innpote

The standards were developed in 1972 following
Congressional approval in
1966, according to court

consumer

briefs.

information

standards
on t he
tire
industry.
Implementation of federal
Uniform _ Tire
Quality
Gradi ng standards were
ordered delayed Friday by
the 6th U.S. Circuit Cow1 of
Appeals. The case has been in
litigation for ,seven years.
The order was sought by
eight tiremakers. They asked
:the appeals court to stop the
federal
agency
from
imposing revised standards
until the court makes a
decision on the latesl appeal. ,
Thetirematerscontend the
standards would confuse
ratherthanaidthepubllcand l
·increase conswner costs by
$160 million amuaUy.
,
The standards aPI!!r-Jo '.
non·-radial passenger: car '
tires mly.
t'it~
The
federal
agenc f .
em tends the standards would
not add more than $110 million ,

_..

Last fall the 6th circuit
cow1 ordered the federal
agency to
revise
the
standards but upheld the
right of the government to
develop the standards.
The tiremakers, headed by
B.F . Goodrich, sought a full
judicial rev lew of their
appeal after the agency
a nnounced it would impose
the revised standards March

I.
The standards require
manufacturers to stamp the
tires with gradlngs indicating
treadwear, heat resistance
and traction measurement.
The
manufa c turers
contend the agency faUed to
·establish a tire standard on
which the,!' ' coul~. monitor
Pl'odUc!!9Jl Cjll&amp;lily . They also
di.s pute
the
treadwear
slandard
measurement,
.c ontehdmg there are too
"'""Y variables.

- - - -·

GUN SHOOT , Rocme Volunteer
Fr re Dept. Every Saturday 6.30
pm at th@ ir budding in Boshon.
Fo.ct?rY0~k ~ g_u ~s&lt;?n~y :.. _ _ _
INCOMI:: TAX Serv1ce Federal
and State Ta xes. 992 '2272 for
oppts or see Wanda Eblm,
-41000 lour! l ~li!f ~d.: __ _ _
INCOME TAX Serv•ce. Federal
and State Wallace Russell
Br_od_b~r ~ ~o~l ~.: 7?2~ _ _

WANT-AO
ADVERTISING

Father's
d
mm

13-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,. Jun . 24, 1U7!1

I;ICK TRACY

TELEVISilJN
.
.
VIEWING

'

lq7.c .
A precious one form us ~as gone
A vo1ce we loved is 1111

Each word over the minimum 15
words is 4 eenl.o! per word per day.
Ads running other than l"'OS@\."IItive
dMya wiH be dUttHed at the 1 day

..

Whitr ort\ll t
male. Iauer trained . MeiHS Co
Humane Socie ty . 992 25q'J
THREE MONT'i old Bcn1 i type
fp mole pup . Shots . Coli Or . Not
ter , 614 4.jb-40CKI.

Co li

~2 - 7481

THRE
~ aEoRooM ,;ome home
M i d~l~porf c:a l~ 9?2: 3~5 ~

m

AI. TROMM ·OONST. ·

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

~--

--

--

-

-

ROUSH 0
CONSTRUCTI N

--

PII)NE 742·2328

J&amp;l

_

Blown Insulation

Col l _6]4 ·'! 49 .~246

For Rent

169 N. 2nd Street
Middleport, Ohio
992 -2725

"PERM SPECIAL"
1
20.00 for 117.50
Jan . 22 thru Feb. 10

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33, north of Pomeroy
_L a_r~e ..!.?~ ~~ 1 _!93 ·~4 ?_9:_ _ _
3 AND 4 RM . furn1s hed and un furnished
opts
Phon e
992 5434.
TWO BEDROOM , k1fchen furmsh ·
ed. opt Ca ll before 8 om
992 -2288
TWO BEDROOM mobde home
near Delf ter near No 1 M1ne
992-58S8.
FIVE ROOMS and both upstairs
opt 1n Pomeroy 992 ;2105
before 5
- FIVE ROOM upsloars unfurnashed
opt .. fully corp eted Central
heal Also gro und floor oll•ce
or storage spoce wit h parking
fac il ities
locu st St.. Mid·
dleport. Coli 9q2-3471 or
992-337-d

-

Lost and Found
WHITE POMERANIAN missing
5 troyed or '5 tolen Pleose coli
992-3040 . Loshia Miclhell . 633
Bosworth , ne:o::t to swimming
.. yael Midd~e~oct:~ i~ - _ .
LOST· . TIGE R cot , short foil II
seen . coli 949-2679. Carl
Gheen
- -- - --- - -- - -----

-

-

-

-

-

--~-

-

--

--------

-

-

~

-

Service
....
...
-... .....

TIMBER. POMEROY Fores t Pro- J C PEN NEY wood burning stove .
515(] . 742·2131
duds . Top price lor standing
sow t1mber . Coli 992 ~965 or STEREO , JVC receive r BIC turn __K~n~ ~~~ ~ ~~~7_~ _ _ _ _
ta ble . Two 301 Boise speakers
992 -5101 or qq2.3597
OLD FURNllURE , Ice bo)(es , brass
-.-- - beds . 1ron beds desks. etc.,
complete house holds. Wr ite
M 0 M•lter , Rt. 41 . Po me roy or
colt qq2 -77b0
OLD COI NS, pod1et wotc hes.
class rings, wedd1n9 bands ,
daomonds Go ld or silver Colt
_ _R~':r ~~~s l! y~ 7~~~3_:._ ~
HEADQUARTERS
WANT TO buy : ol d 45 and 78
For all your Appliance
phonograph reco rd s . Colt
Needs .
992·6370 or Con ta ct Morfin Fu r·
ni tu i-e
WANTED TO buy : old iewelry .
Coli 992-5'26'2 or wnte Kay ·
JACKW.
Cecil. 87 S. 2nd Middleport .
CARSEY
OH.
Mgr.
-----WA NTE D· USED irrigation pump , '
Phon- 992-2181
a lso some olumin umpi pe, Ber·
nord Wegner. Rl 2. lowell , 0
45744 . Phone 8~6 · 227 1 .
VERME ER 605 Super C Baler. 1500
lb Meigs Cou nt y's Autori zed
Vermeer Deale r . Gory Asp1n .
Auction
Dexter Phone 74'2·2877
BIG AUC TION at Ohio Ri.,..er Auc GRAVELY TRACTOR and mower .
11on . Frt. ' bpm Truck lood of _ _Hoy ~o!~ l= !A~· 23~· _ ____
new furniture , tools, misc . from
ALFALFA
HAY
,
Iorge
round
boles .
Cincinnol• Also som@ used
New 1deo unipicker-shetler .
merc hond1se . 537 Hig h St , Mid__B~·3281_o~~~~· - _ ~ _ _ _
- ~ ~~ P..?~~· o_ _____ _
REDUCE SAFE and fost wtth
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
For Sale or Rent
- ~· ~a.!_e...':_~ ~ -Nel son Drug_ _
BUSINESS BUILDI NG 22' ~o: 31' in HAY . 99L-2877 after 6pm.
Sy racuse .
Oh •o.
Phone GRAIN FED beef. Reedsville
'19_2·_52 49, - - - - -~
614 376-63 11_::,...._-,---

--- - - --

~-

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

SALE PRICES

------~--

FOR SALE AO chonne l mobile ( 8:
Hallicrofters . 992-7020.
CHA IN SAWS on~ demons trator ,
1 used Home lit e. I used McCu.llach. 2 us ed Sthil Pomeroy
Home and Auto. 600 E. Main,
Pomeroy. _ _ _ _

---------

-

SNOW
TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
. POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

phases.'' she says. '•You
probably don't start out as
separates. There has to be a
transition phase which leads
to a change - lil&lt;e the birth of
a chUd."
Her researc h indicated
traditional marriages are the
happiest, according to the
professor.

Pomeroy

1:1

Landma~

Jack W. Carsey ; Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

1

Services Offered
WILL CARE for the e ld&amp;rly 1n our
home. Phon1;1 9Cn·7314 .
---WATER .WEll drilling . Will ia m T
Gran t 742-2879
~ - ---

-

---

--

TREE TRIMMING and removal.
747·3167 or 742'·7573
WILL CARE lor elderly person m
privat e home in Pomeroy
Everything fur nished , but
medicotton . $250 per month
Coli '19Hil22·
GU ITAR AND bonjo lessons
available. Phone 614 ·367-7729
. ~ f !e~ 2p~ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ _

~NOBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CARRIE E.
SMITH, DECEASED
Case No. 22,575
NOTICE OF ·
.1\PPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On January 4th , 1919, in the
Meigs Co unty ProbMe Court,
Case No 22,57!1, " Irene La
Mont. 300 Sur f.!lce ' Drive, .
Charleston, W. Va . 25302 was WATER AND m1sc. hauling. Call
appoin ted ExecutriK of the
992 S858.
estate of Carrie E Smith,
deceased , li!l te of 865 Pearl
Street, Middleport, Ohio
- -- Real Estate for Sale
4S760.
-·-__, _ __

-- - - -------- -- ·

-------

- -

M11nnlng D. Webster
Probate JudgeClerk
10. 17, 24, Jtc

14

-~-

- · ~ - - ----

LOTS ON Peacock Ave.'·
Pomeroy, Ohio. Over 3 acres of
privoc~ 99'1-2342 or 99'1 244q
.
. . .

I

Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulats"on '

Chlmaty
.: : _Swt~,.• !J'ulld
.
Ins ured

.
.. _

~

lHE.SWE

A

ir"'

f

.

1,1'

......

Jl, l•

Your Headquarfels For
Armstrong Carpetin,-

A• 1,,

CP,ILL I&gt;J G ALL SHIPS AT SEAL..
· ABOARD A ' TRAWLER
CALLED THE SHARI&lt;-·
DO YOU READ MET... MY IJAMc
16 G, WA5-HIN 5TOP\J TUBI!&gt;5!
SJ&lt;IPPEF&lt;ED BY A
SAPISTIC ·· UH·O H!
CAP TAIN
EASY AND I ...
BOTH OF McKEE
IIIJDUST'fi:IES ...WER E
SIIANGHAIE D Ar
ME~POF&lt;T AND AF&lt;:E
8EING HELD

~

'o,

'•

'
'
'
'

EWorr

."

cAPTAIN
EASY
I

· ·- ' ,I•

PRISONE~-

."
..
.

APPUANCE II
220 E . ~In st...t,

.,..
'

FOr Fr'ee sthilares

..

''-''l-1174

11 -3-1m

,,

'

Pomeray,O.
. C. II "~-7113

CaiiY92- 171~

-~

£P

19th Cenr1.1ry 5trvlct with
20ttt (:enturT Know-How.
Sptcl• ltln' In
Waoclslovt, 011 urn-.ce
&amp; Flrtptece Flutl
Phone: 742»1110
Kim Whitt, Proprietor

Save 30 pet. to 50 pet .
on heating cost
Experience and
fully insured
Free Est.

~

Don ' t let e Chlmne'y fire put
a damper on your life - '
Coli .

""'"'

'il'lt\i~

ELECTRIC MOtOR
SHOP
POJ\fEROY, 0 ,
t'RICE REDUCED - This
handyma n's special can be
yours for the low price of
$8,000 - I n Pomeroy on 4
lots, 2 stories, bath, kitche n, 3 or 4 bedroom s . This
won't las t tong .
FHA APPROVED - This
beautiful
new
ranch
features a heart h centered
fami ly room, basement,
garage, 1 1/2 baths, 3
bedrooms, 1 acre. Approx·
im ate l y 10% downpay·
ment , mortgage amount
$49,500, 9'12% interes t , 30
year term Approx. $416 23
monthly payment (P&amp; I) . •
10 LOTS - With M rn a nd
fenc ing, in Long Bottom,
good 1 floor plan home,
fruit trees, garden space,
nice kitchen, view of the
beautiful Ohio, basement,
many other fea tures. ON ·
L Y $17,700 DO.
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD In
Mi ddleport. 2 stor y home
tha t looks nice and can look
nicer. Close to schools,
shopping , etc ASKING
$20,000.00.
SECLUDED RANCH Close to town, ~4 acre, 3
bedroo ms. nicebu tl t· in kit·
c hen,
family
ro om ,
carpeting, woodburning
fireplace. A GOOD BUY
AT$20,500.00.
$6,000.00 wi II buy this nice 2
bedroom home in the c ountry near Langsville. VERY
GOOD CONDITION - Bul
th e house must be moved.
15 acres also available.
WE HAVE BUYERS &amp;
FINANCING FOR
ALL
TYPES OF PROPERTY
AND NEED LISTINGS,
CALL TODAY .
REALTORS
HENRY E . CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR .
ASSOCIATES
LEONA CLELAND
KATHY CLELAND
992-22S9
992-6191

PETE SIMPSON

SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

18 Ye•rs Experience
Will Make

Service Calls

651 Beech Street
Middleport,

fyrtt Blvd. , Recine, Ohio,
949 ·2111. Evening
o~fttr 5
P.M.~ Wttktndl
o~fter 12 noon.

0.

Phone

J92-2356
1-4-1 mo. (Pd . I

I

BRADFOR D. Auctioneer . Camplete Service. Phone 949 -2487
or 949 2000. Rocine. Ohio , Critt
Brad ford.
. ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters •ron!!. all
small appliances. lawn mower,
ne)(t to Sta te Highway Goroge
on Route7.
VIRGIL!\. SR . ~!!!!!! SEWI NG MA, CHIN E Repoirs , ser·
.992-3325
v•cc . oil makes . 992-2284 . The
Fobr1c Shop, Pom@roy
216 E. Second Street
Authorized Smger ·Soles ond
LARGE ROOMS
3 __s!!~ce . W
::_ sh~~S~is_:o~s­
bedrooms, a It have closets,
EXCAVATING
. dozer, looder and
11h baths, new nat. gas fur ·
boc~hoe work, du mp trucks
nace with a ll city utili1'ies.
and lo-boys for hire: wi lt ho ul
On ly $25,000.
' fill dirt , to soil, limestone and
MODERN ~ 7 yrs_
. old. Lo1·
gro\/el. Colt Bob or Roger JeflOO x 125, 3 nice bedrooms,
fers,
day phone W2·7089, nig ht
family roo m , in town s ub
. _p~o~~-9!?-352~9_!2.:_~23~ _
divisior with ci ty water·
EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and good repair S29,500.
and d1tcher . Charles R. Hal ·
RENEWED - 3 bedrooms,.
fi e ld, Bo ck Hoe Service
n ew oil furnace , L.C
water, modern kit. a nd
Ru_tl ~~._9hi~~h~ne ~42-200~_:_
la rge lot near town . $23,000 .
Will do roofing . cons truction,
BARGAIN · - 8 roo m older
plumbing and heot .ng . No job
horne with bath, nat. gas
too Iorge or too small Phone
and lot for on ly $12,000.
742·2328.
1 YR . OLD Ni ce 3
HOWERY AND MARTIN E)(·
bedroom ran ch ho me . Kit.
coveting , se pt ic systems,
and dining area with vi ew
dozer , backhoe, dump tr uck,
of nature . G·arage and one
limestone , grovel, blacktop
acre. $35,500.
po.,..1ng , Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614)
INVESTMENT - 5 ren1ta l!;
696-7331.
in production. Four 2
bedrooms
and
one
BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
bu si ness. A ll for on1y
remodeled , ceramic tile , plum·
$66,000.
bmg, carpentry, and general
IF YOU CAN AFFORD
maintenance. 13 yeor.s ex51,000.00 DOWN, WE C'IN
pen.ence 992-3685 .
SELL YOU A PLACE .
PULLIN
S EXCAVAT'C"
I~":G:-.-:C-om""""pl-et:-e
CALL 992· 332S.
Serv1ce. Phone 9q2 -2478.
G. Brucd Teaford
AUTOMOBILE INSU RANC E been
Helen L. Teaford
cancelled? l ost your operators
Sqe P . Murphy
license? Phone 992·2143 .
Associates
E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor serV'·
Housing
1ng Ohio Volley region . S1x
days o.week . 24 hours service.
Headquarters
Emerg@ncy co ils Coli 882·2952
or 882-2305.
MOBILE HOME repo1rs Furnaces ,
electrica l wo rk , pipes sowed,
_p~mbing:._99
= 2.::·5"658
=----

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

I

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

CHESTER - Goocl 5 bedroom house wll.h full
basement and 2 baths. )Ia!. gas heal , approx. 1 acre
land and large slorage building. Price $21,500.
TWO ACRES - A beau11Jul4 year old, 2 bedroom home
wllh large eal-ln kitchen, 2 bedrooms. all nicely
carpeled. 2 ba1hs, full basement with TV room. Many
more extras, tow heat bl11 with nllt. gas forced air
furnace . Alllhls and lwo nice acres of land In a good
locallon. Will go quick for $35,000.
.
AcREAGE - with large beef barn near Pom~roy.
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL - This moy be your dream
home. II has a large kllchen wllh lois of cablnels,
slove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beaullful dining
rooM with sliding glass doors . Large living room and
family room , and to fin ish this well-laid out home we
have five bedrooms, utility room and garage. Very low
heatlrig bill. Red barn-li ke storage bu i lding . Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy just olf Rt. 7.
· Asking S55,DOO.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 1'1• slory house,
_completely carpetect with 4 bedrooms. dining room and
laundry r oo m. Also almost new 2 car heated garage.
This home is nicely lo caled In Porlland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500 .
.
LOTS - 1 h:re and up near Pomeroy .
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good 1'h slory house with full
basement. Lorge pond stocked with f_lsh . Priced for
quick sale. $40,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, a lmost new
kllchen cabinels, all nicely carpeted, laundry room . all
Insulated, nalural gas heal, utlll1y building, 2 lois.
$21,500.00 .
Talk to a local real eslale agent belore trying to sell
your home. His experience can help y~u. We need
many typ" of property, alve us 1 call .
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2388
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIAT~ 949-2654

........ u • ....., • .,._ .

aH Rt. 7 JIY,;,P"II ..,
St. Rl. t:l4 towaril Rutland,

~. milo

0.
Au~&amp;Truck
"Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

,_._..,.

Mobile Homes for Sale . ,

I
0 KJ

Pets for Sale
RISING STAR Kennels . Boardi ng
and grooming, all breeds .
Cheshi re, 367-0292.
COLLIE PUPPIES . Beautiful . 11
weeks old . Soble and white,
full blood&amp;d collie puppies. S20 .
'192-7300.

- -- - -

A CTUA LLY, I t.JEED THE IC E,
TOO"' BUl DON ' T VVORR'r,
CHI LD '" I K NOW WHAT I ' M
DOING NO W ..

1•r, ACRE . 12 x 60 mobile hom~ ··~

·--

(Answers 1omorrow )

I

Jumbles DECRY FIF TY HAMMER SCHOOL
Answer What lh'ere s sure to be so melhtng or at every
wedd1 ng - A HITCH

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Accelerated
5 TV test

... AND FOUR

PAIRS OF
(;EE'S FeET

!:

!

OR Wt&gt;Q "THAT

FQJRT. .N PAIF&lt;:S
OF BEEf'S FEET,

AN' "TWO WIG&lt;S~j;·
WURT LeAvES 7. f

SAVE ON
CARPETING

OH , WELL. .... .

program

Ph41115

2 Heaped

3 Pupil. Fr.
4 Protector
Louisiana
5 Throb
12 Hebrew lctler 6. Ba ntu
13 Click beetle
language
14 Famous
7 Sideways
Boston
8 Burd ensome
family
9 Earthly
16 Be mistaken. 11 Odo ntolo17 Indi cate
g1s1's s tudy
18 Deer
15 "King of .
1hc - "
"""':...;_,.,:; .:::..:;,;...__, 19 Burmese

let's

20 Sylvan deity

Yesterda)"s Answer
26 Two
28 Hoodwink
.some cars

21 Describing

22 The Red
Baron, e.g.
231tem for "a
blue lady"
24 Apocalypse

horsemen,

20 Disney

kmfe

You decide t ' call
th' qaraqe like
Miz'

movie

10 Roofing
matenal

W al t .

I'm qoinq
to ca ll
Skee&lt;ix.

DOWN
I Julie
Andrew s

11 Umv . m

GASO!JNE ALLEY

All carpot 1n1TtiiOCI w1111 : \!
padding at no chargo. :
Export lnstallt-.

r I I I I Xr )

~

992-5(]1 _8~.'-------

..

Now arrange the Circled lene rs to
form lhe surpr1se answer as sug gested by the above canoon

Print answer here
vesterclay 5

1968 TRAILER 12 x 60 os is. S3500 .•
Good condition. Coll742-2806 .. :'Il
19bti NEW MOON 10 • 52 mobihr~t·
home , very clean , 2 bedrpom . '
co mple te ly furn1shed. $4000.

DRIVE AUTILE
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT

PROBLEM WHEN THE
CA R S"TOF'5 .

DILPIM

IJTILE: ORPHAN ANNIE

nea r Dexter 992-5858 .
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile
home, furnish@d , 3 bedr.,
washer ond dryer. A1r candil•oned. 1 lo t, 210 ft . lrontogfi!.
$12,000 . Phone 742-2826.
1955 Prairie Schooner, 28 x B. '1
bdr.
~; .
~965 General , 60 10: 12, 2 bdr .
··'"
1968 Elcono. 52x12 . 2 bdr .
;...~
1969Buddy, 60 )(12 , 4bdr.
~
1970 Sy lva, 60 x 12. 2 bdr.
1970Cos tl e , 60x 12, 'l bdr .
1973 Arlington . 60 x 12, 2 ~r .
1973 Ridgewood, 70 x 14, 3 bdr .
1973 Kirkwood, SO 11: 12, 2 bdr .
·· "
B&amp; S MOBI LE HOME SALES
PT . PLEASANT , WV
675·.. 424

COU\.D SEA

[]

)

film classic

by count

·4~~

1

Wallet

~

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

See 29

sa4?

On percentage protection
i::-+-1--i
• A 32
•AKQ 8i3

9' and 12' Vinyl

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

·. ,, ., c~,-·· - ·~'

Stock,:
OCCUPANC'f
BV MORE THAN
301

Cl!ll74t-221'

RUnAND

EAST
• J 97
., ·•••
., J.97S2
tQ109 3
tJ84
• 876S3
• 92
SOUTH
• Q 10 8 4

:t DON•,. fCNoW
t401N .,.., ,.aLL-

ooo,ooo,ooo

You ,.Ha.S,

DANGEROUS
. . AND
UNlAWFUL

I

r .,

M~.

nometry
fu nct ion
38 Hostelries
39 Tendency

• K6S
.. 10 4
t AK72

40 Famous

film

+AKQIO

cr1llc

0$1oRm:. • •

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

FURNtmRE· ·
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-

Here's how t o work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply sta nds for another. In this sample A ia
used for the three L's, X for the t wo O's. etc. Single le tters,
apostrophes, the length and format ion of t he words are a11
hints Each day th e code letters are different

RE5T. .. l3UT I

RUTlAND FURNITURE

DON'T THINK
IT'LL

170 ANY

GOOD.

'Iff

OFFER YOU ...
1. Two full flOors of all new
fumiture .
2. Nice selections of used
furniture.
3. A large building lull of
beautiful carpet.

HOW CAN ! SLEEP NOl"
KNOWING WHEIJ.IER

THAT IMN IN THE
HOSPITAL 15 MY

/JUT SHEER EXHAUSTION OVERTAKES OUR HEROINE ANOBE FORELON6 ...

MB

J W M

LHZWC,

XWM
BH

vz
SWQQI,

HUSBAND OR

NOT?

!'TO PLAN EVIL IS AS

MMBE '{OUNEED
IO BE SPRALfED !

'WRONG AS DOING IT II

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Arr•n•,t Cl r.tf, •

11

HIIILIIHI, ()

446-3643.
• I

(

'

North East

South
1t

Pass
Pass

1•
6 NT

Pass

2 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead :

L B B U,

BH

%

I

\

+8

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alan Sontag

ZDXZQC
ZRRBHCE

BR SYE
BOM . - R. 0 .
HBVZHCEBM
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EVERY RIGHT ACTION AND
TRUE THOUGHT SETS THE SEAL OF ITS BEAUTY ON THE
PERSclN AND o'f HE FACE .-JOHN RUSKIN
® 1979 King Features Syndicate, Inc.

BAlls o'FJRE!! YONDER

A? '1,')
/ .•
,.

West

South won the club lead
YMOWHU

BARNEY

the Grate Family at · ·

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South

CRVPTOQ UOTES

home 12 tricks. He had to
lose a trick quickly so that
short and ducked the heart
to rectify the coun t .

WEST

~~~----~~------------------------7

Buy-· you can """'' 1n '·
·and-wllltyeu'regettlng :.
- a J wlft-..u - Fully ' I(
sttckecl.
·

Wended or Hertt Gr.te
ar GMt Smltll

..... ,., ... '

He needed a squeeze to bring
he would be just one winner

• 6s
• J 4

37 Tngo-

''

1'Atlf'TO .

1-21

NORTH

,s·q

.

Then he s tarted to think. ·

'

oi'LL TRYID

.I

BRIDGE

sy:;

Fklor Cou11ing In

2~

VIVant

WINNIE

· See

Wednesday, Jan.

interest

COME TH' REVENOOERS !!
OWNER ' fYIUST SEL.L ~- The own e r ot tn1 s
charming '2.story stone home in Middleport
must sell now.
she is offering this fine
.home for a low, low price of 520,000; T~ere
are 2 rbe.drooms (1 is ex.tra large l, spac1ous
living" room w-fir!,!place, formal dining, eat- ih kitchen, b&amp;t~ w -shower; ga~age &amp; a kmg
S\Zed yard . Good location· on M1ll St. C~ll t~e
Wi~eman Real Eslate Agency,
Gallipolis,
.

In
between
30 Tropical
plant
33 Celtic
35 Mrs.
Gump

24 Faithless
25 Fmished

Rubber lladl carpet
AsL-A•

29

,.......,.,.......,.,.....,,......,,_,

21 Show ed

~

'

rn
..... . ... ......

·IIOGER HYSELL
G.'.RAGE ·

Yard Sale
IF VOU ho"e o servic@ to offer,
wont to buy or sell someth mg.
ae l oo~ing for work . . or
whatever ... you'll get results
fosiEtr with o Sentinef Wont Ad
Cell '192.:·2:.;.1.:.
56:.;·-----~

byHennArnoldandBobLee

VANER I

ORPHAN ANNIE-DOCTOR'S DILEMMA
Business Services

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

·Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to fo rm
lour ordmary wt? rds

BORN LOSER

n -ll· l mo.

Real Estate for Sale

fe}'il'

~ ~ ~L!l~ ®

11 -9-1 mo .

H•m mond
&amp;
Low'e'r
Orglns, Story &amp; Cl•rk
Pl•nol . Slltl &amp; Service.
(New &amp; Used) . Service on
current S1les.

REYNOLD'S

-·

~-

6 . 3()-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnell
6; CBS News 8,10, Over Easy 20; My Three Sons 17
7:oo-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13 ; Porter WaQoner 8; News 10; Love Amrlcan
Style 15; Carol Burnell17 : Footsteps 20; Big Green
Magazine 33
7:Jo-Dolly 3; ; Dating Game 4; Match Game 6;
Muppet Show B; The Judge 10; Tnat' s Hollywood .
13; Wild Kingdom I 5; Sanford &amp; Son 17 : MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 :1l0-Movle " Mandrake" 3.~ . 15: Eight Is F.nough 6. 13 ;
Incredible Hulk 8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Edward lhe King 17 .
9:1l0-Charlle's Angels 6,13; One Day At A Time 8, 10;
Movie "The Sun Also R lses" 17: Prisoner 20 ; 9 . 3()Jeffersons 8.10.
10:1l0-Sgf.T.K. Yu" 3,4,15 ;·Vegas 6,13 : Kaz 6, 10; Rizzo
33; News 20.
10 : 3()-Turnaboul 20; 11 :GO--News 3,4,6,8.10,13, 15,
Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 33
ll.J~Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Police Woman 6, 13;
Rockford Files 8, ABC News 33; Movie " The Big
Game" 10; 11 . SO:--College. Baskelball 17.
12·4o-Mannix 6,13, Ko jak 8; J:oo--Tomorrow 3,4,
1. ~News 13,11; 2: l«r-Movie"Chuka " 17 ; 4:1~
Maverick 17, S· lo-Dragnet 17

..

-- - -- - --

~

a.

3 1'1 acres In Pomeroy . Secluded
wooded o reo on top of h1ll
Overlooks. nver Wale r elec
I ric available. 992-3886.
HOUSE
IN Miners . . . i lie . 4
bedroom , li v1 ng room , k1tchen,
both and utd1ty room Ni ce fu ll
me basemen! 992-5823
--- · - · -·

--

_ __,H"e"I"p_,W
= a"'
n"'
le=cd= - - For Sale
WANTED · TRUCK mechanic lor
l•g ht ond medui m duty tr ucks COAL. LIMESTONE . sand . grav@l ,
Must hove own tools. Apply at
calci um chloride, fe rt ilizer , dog
Two Rive rs Ford Service Oepl.
food and all types ol soh h: ·
-- - - - - - - - - - - - celsior Salt Works , Inc., E. Main
WANTED · SOMEONE to live on
small h1 lls1de farm bad~~; of An_st_. ~o~!r~y ~9!2.:_3~!_: _ __ _
t•quity to repo'ir 8 room house. APPLES FIT ZPATRICK Orchard ,
not modern Dolorous Smith, 38
State Rt. 689 Phone Wilkesvlll@
W. Oak la nd Ave., Columbus .
669·3785
Ohio
MIXED CONDITIONED hay . Very
good q ua lity
Delive ry
Wanted to Buy
o"ailob le Phone qcn.7201 or
992-3309
CHIP WOOD
Po les mo )(.
diameter 10" on larges t end. ROUND BALED hoy. 843· 2524.
$12 per ton Bundled slob $10
- - - -I- - -per to'n. De li vered to Oh 1o HAY . LARGE ROUND boles. $20
Square boles , $1. M M Corn
Pollet Co., Rt . 2. Pomeroy.
sheller 985-411 31 . '985·3537
'192-2669 .

having many friendS.
- A combination, in which
the husband is separate and
the wife is traditional. In this
case, the wife's perception of
the marriage Is one with
great deal of sharing and
openness, while the husband
v iews the marriage with
disinterest, according to Miss
Fitzpatrick.
"People
go
through

'.1.. "-'"· .

FARM FOR sal e House 2 barns,
Thinking Of Havin~
frailer Lorge pond. 10 a cres or
A New Home Built?'
82 acre s. 742 -2566
Contact
- Room AddilionsREA L ESTATE LOANS . VA
No
Auto Sales
money
down (e ligib le
-Custom RemodelingVeterens) . FHA As low os 3~
1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 8B full
down
(all
no
n-Veterens
and
power, good tires run5 good
Ceramic Tile - f.Ormlca
For Competitiv~ Prices
general public } To purchase
_SHOO_ ~al_t sp-:n :er~ 9~9:2 1_S~ ~ _
Counter Tops - Ceilings
Home Remodeling
real estate or ref inance. 30
I Suspended. Texlurel -·rue
1975 CADILLAC ELDORADO , full
General Repatrs
YEARS TERMS . IRELAND MOR
. Floors. Paneling &amp; Trim.
power, o•r. clean . l:xcellent
Masonarv Works
, TGAGE CO . 77 E Stole St ,
condil10n . Phofle qq2 . 1462 .
Athens Phone 61 4-592 3051.
Quality Work You Can
196q OELIVERY.. JEEP 2 wheel HOUSE FOR so le Location
Depend On ... ,
drive , $400 13 week ojd pure
Mason wv . Foud&gt;•dcoom spUt
'
bred great dane, $100 Colt
level. built in kitch en w1th
992·7583
742 -2406
oven. range. garbage disposal
10 Years Experience
1972 FORD MAVER ICK, runs good ,
and bar . Fomilr room . dini ng
1-19· 1 mo.
1 · 12-1 mo.
room, whole house carpeting L _ _ _ _ _ _.:,_:.:_:.:.::;::;.;
clean. $900 992-5018
Full srze basemen!. Central air l - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - ; 1 po.--~-------r
and forced o1r gas t1eot. All
Wanted to Rimt
drapes plus washer ond dryer .
6ockyocd 10 h hogh codoc
TWO BEDROOM house trader or
fence and cedor decks lor
oportm~ nt . preferably 1n the
pr1vocy Heated garage Close
Middleport
oreo , w1 t h
to
sc hool , store pork and te nni s
reasonable rent. 992-78 14 .
court Contract Gory l G1 bbs.
--

WEDNESDAY. JANUARY24 . 1979

L _________________....,._______,._______.....,.

JIM KEESE£

BEAUTY SALON

{I J

Business Services

HOMf SITfS for sale 1 oc m ond
up M1ddleport . ncar_ Rutland.

THURSDAY, JANUARY 2S, 1979
5 4()-World al Largell ; 5 ' 4~Farm Report13 ; 5·51)PTL Club 13; 5: 55-S~nriiO Semesler 10.
6 . 00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8: . 6:10-News 17;
6:25-For You ... Black Woman 10
6: 3()-Doclors on Cal l • • Romper Room 17; 6 : ~S,..
Morning Report 3; 6:5()-Good Morning, Wesl
Virginia 13; 6:55-Chuck White Reporl~ 10; News
IJ.
.
7.00-Today 3,.,15 ; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; School les 10: Three St009es-LIIIIe Rascals
17.
7 . 1~Weather 33 ; 7:30-Famlly AJiolr 10.
B:oo--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame 51. 33 ; Leave If lo
Beever 17; 8: 3G-Hazel 17.
9 · 00-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue ~.13 . 15 ;
Emergency One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game
10; Lucy Show 17 .
9 :30---Bradv Bunch 8; Hogan' s Heroe! 10; Green Acres
17.
IO :IlO-Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6; Allin The
Fami ly 8,10; Oallng Game 13 : Movie " Legend ol
lhe Lost" 17.
10 · 3()-AII Star Secre1s 3,4,1S; ; Andy Griffith 6; Price
is Right 8,10: no.ooo Pyromld 13
11 :00-High Rollers 3.~. 15; Happy Days 6, 13; 11 :3D-Wheel of Forfune 3,15; Famllv Feud 6.13; News 4;
Love ol Life 8,10; Sesome St . 20. 11 :55-CBS News
8; House Call 10; News 17.
,
12 :0D--Newscenter 3; Bob Braun 4; Jeopardy 15; News
6,10. Young &amp; the Reslless 8; Midday Magazine 13;
love, American Style 17.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 ;
Password 15; Elec. Co . 20,33 ; Movie " The Lasl
Wagon" 17.
1 :llO-Hqllywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 9; Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women
Only 15.
1· 30---Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
6,10; 2:00-&lt;lne Life to Live 6,13; 2:25-News 17;
2:30-Doctors 3,4,1 5; Guiding Light 8,10; I Love
Lucy 17 .
3:1l0-Another World 3,4,15; General Hosoltal 6. 13:
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17.
3.3()-Mash 8: Joker' s Wild 10 ; Fllntstones 17: Dick
Cavell 20 ..
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Splderman 4; Hollywood
Squa res 15; Merv GriJI In 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Sesame Sl . 20,33 ; Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space
Glanls 17.
·
4:Jo-Bewitched 3; Superman 4; Gilligan 's Is . 8;
Brady Bunch 10. Pelt lcool Juncl lon 1S: Gilligan's
Is. 17.
5:~ 1 Dream of Jeannie 3: Bionic Woman 13, My
Three Sons 4, Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighbor hood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Brady
Bunch 15; 1 Dream of Jeannie 17 .
5:3D--Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; Sanford &amp; Son 4;
News ·6; Sanlord &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co. 20 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Odd Coup le 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17;
Doctor Who 33.
6 :1l0-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Andy Griffith
• 17; Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6:3()-NBC NewsJ,j,J5; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Eosy 20 ; My Three
Sons 17.
&lt;: llO-Cross Wlls 3; PM Magazine 4: Newlywed Game
6, 13; Mar ty Robbins' Spotlight B; News 10; Love
American Style 15; Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 17;
Hocki ng Valley Bluegrass 20; Wild Wild Wor ld of
Animals 33.
7 3()-Hollywood Squares 3; Joshua's Confusion 4 4:
Nighl Flight 6; Malt h Game PM B; ·1100.000 Name
Thaf Tune 10; Nashville On The Road 13; Dolly 15.
NBA Basketball 17; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl 20,33
6:00-Legends of the Superheroes 3,4,15; Mork &amp;~ '
Mindy 6, 13; Walfon s 8; Nova 20.33; College
Basketball 10.
,
8 3()-Whal's Happening 6,13: 9 . ~ulncy 3,4,15;
Hawaii Flve-0 8; Palestine 33 ; Duchess of Duke ·
Slreet 20.
10 .00-Rockford Fl ies 3,4,15: Family 6, 13, Barnaby
Jones B, 10; Co llege Bask':!tball 17; News 20
10 ·3D--John Cage 33; You Bel Your Life 20; 11 :OONews3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; DlckCavet120; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
1J · 3D--Starsky &amp; Hulch 6, 13; Johnny Carson 3,4,15;
Mash 8: ABC News 33; Movie " The VI s it" 10.
12:1l0-Movle " The Reol Glory" 17; 12 :05-Columbo B;
12:4Q--Mannl x 6,13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1:50-News 13.
2:00-News 17; 2:2()- NBA Basketball 17; 4:35Maverlck 17.

with his ace and r ema rked,
" It looks like we didn't bid
enough ."
Then he led his fo ur of
hearts. Wes t s howed out a nd
South was ready with one

more comment. ''I should
keep my mouth shut so I
won't get my foot ca ught in

it ...

IT DOES A FELLER GOOD TO
GIT AWAY FROM HIS WORK
NOWAN'THEN

Ten mtnutes later he was
one down. Then the discussion sta rted . North felt that
South shou ld have won the
first heart and ducked a
diamond . West felt that
South s hould have tried to
develop an e nd play against
East by cashmg the top
c lubs, diamonds and spades
and finall y throwing East in
wit h the jack of hearts.
East explained that would
not work since East would
just r efuse t o win the heart
and South would have· to lose
two diamonds and a spade at
t h e finish .
Actually. South s hould
have abandoned all idea of
maki ng seven He should
wm the c lub in dwnmy and
lead a low heart toward his
10. T his would guard against
the 4 percent chance of a iHl
heart break and guarantee
So uth 1430 points for game
slam and rubber at the loss
of a potential 30 for an
overtrick .
I NEWSPAPF:H ENTERPRfSE o\SSN, )

(Fo ra copy of JACOBY MODEAN. send $1 to . '' Win at

Bridge.·· care of thts ne'wspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Slal10n, New Yo rk, N. Y. 10019.}

�-

- ..

-~.-

--·-'-·

-·

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po_meroy, 0 ., Wednesday , J an . 24 , 1979

COnsumer prices rose nine percent in 1978
By MICHAEL OOAN,
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices rose 9 percent in
1978, the largest increase in four years, but the inflation picture improved in the last two months of the year , the Labor
Department said today.
Prrce increases were held to 0.6 percent in Dece mber be cause of smaller increases in medical costs and the property
tax cuts in California, the department said.
But food prices began spiraling again, rising 0.8 percent for
the month, due mainly to higher meat and milk prices.
•
The purchasing power of the average worker declined 0.1
percent in the month and by 3.4 percent over the course of the
year , U1e department said ,
The year-end consumer price report affects the pay of up to
2.6 million people who have December or fourth-quarter cost of-Irving clauses in th eir labor contracts .
The 9 percent increase for the year is the largest srnce a 12.2
percent rise in 1974.

Food pn ces rose 11.6 per&lt;;ent over the year, while housing
costs went up 9.9 percent, medical care 8.8 percent, trans)l!Jrtation 7.7 percent and entertarnment 5.8 percent.
The 0.6 percent mcrease in December would amount to between 7 percent and 8 percent if it continued for a full year. It
followed a sma'ller rncrease of 0.5 percent in November
The Consumer Price Index ended the year at 202.9, meaning
that the average products that cost $100 in the base penod of
1967 cost $202.90 in December. The 9 percent rncrease was for
both categories the department measures : all urban con-

prrces down.
The brggest contributors to inflation in 1978 were food pri L'eS,
which rose more sharply than expected . Housing prices also
continued to soar.
"Home pnces have far outstripped the overall national rate
of mflation ," said Robert H. McKinney, chairman of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board. "Extending this rate to 1968
would mean a median cost of $125,000 for a new home ."
Meanwhile, a Census Bureau study released Tuesday
showed that most families barely kept up with inflation in 1977.
It showed the median income of the nation 's households rose to
$1 3,570 in 1977, up 7 percent from 1976. However, prices were

Snow, freezing rains
cause power failures

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

Area Deaths !

FAMOUS NAME
BEDDING.!.
JUST RECEIVED A LOAD OF SEALY
BOX SPRINGS AND MATIRESSES.
105 PIECES. (FACTORY SECONDSRETAIL REJECTS)

lWIN, FULL, QUEEN
AND KING SIZE

t.!;:C1:~~:...Jt2.J.:.~::....i~~~~ STA:;ING

$58

BUY NOW A_ND SAVE •30 to '100 ON EACH P:I:~.~E,j

EXAMPLES:

.

'~~~-·"

I"

SEALY- POSTUREPEDIC
PRESTIAGE

MAnRESSES
REG. '229.95 EACH

NOW
ONLY i

$9995
. _

"LESS THAN 1/z PRICE"
1

Dollar Days Sale Friday, Saturday

point and should subside -by spring," Ratajczak said.
Price increases of gasoline and other fuels also appear lD be
abating, he said.
·
- The Commerce Department reported that durable goods
orders declined In December for the second month in a row.
The 0.1 percent drop In December followed a OA P!lfcent
decrease in November. Durable goods orders indicate the
demand factories are receiving .lor. such products as
automobiles, ships, airplanes and tractors. Those orders are
considered indicat«rs of the prospects for economic growth
and jobs.

e
: (USPS 145·960)

By The Associated Press power was cut for several
Storm-weary residents of hours and 27 persons were
more than a dozen states mJured, none seriously .
Gov. Edwin Edwards
were walloped again as snow,
high winds and freezing rain planned to declare the town ~
caused power failures, school drsaster area tO(Iay and
closings and the deaths of Natrona! Guarctmen were
swners and urban wage earners and clerical workers.
str a nded
livesto c k. called in ill clear debris .
The monthly ligures are adjusted to account for seasonal Tornadoes wrecked homes in
In Nebraska, ranchers isovar iatwns .
lated
by snow and high winds
LoUlsrana and Florida.
Despite the 9 percent increase for the year, the Carter
have
been
unable ill feed liveA half dozen tornadoes
administration rs counting on a tighter budget and its wage- were reported today in the stock, and reported their
pl'ice standards to siQW inflation in 1979.
.
, ,
F1oridl! GuU Coast town of herds were dying in large
The hig her prices far exceeded the admnustrahon s Bradenton, where roofs and numbers.
prediction a year ago that inflation for the year would be 6.1 porches were ripped from
High winds and snow whip~ r cent.
.
.
ped Alabama Tuesday,
about 50 trailer homes.
The administration is predicting a 7.4 percent mflallon rate
And a tornado caused an !mocking out a half-dozen
for 1979. President Carter said 10 his budget message Monday estimated $1 million damage electrical substations serving
he 1s reducrng the budget deficit from $37.4 billron to $29 b1lhon Tuesda y rn the small 1,500 Huntsville hOmes.
m 1980 ill fight Inflation .
.
Georgia forecasters issued
Mississippi Rrver town of
He also said his wage and price standards w1ll help brmg Lutcher, La.
a travelers advisory for the
Mayor Elmore Trosclair, northeast part of the state
who
made the damage early today , as sleet, freezing
.
I
estimate, said at least 50 ram and snow glazed streets
buildings in the town of 3,900 and highways.
Illinois res idents were
were damaged or destroyed ,
denied a respite from 10 days
today.
Up to 4 inches. of new snow of severe winter weather
dau ghters, Mr s . Thomas
ELOISE B. WIJ..'iON
when a riew storm brought up
Gru es er, was reported in southern to 3 inches of snow.
F unera l services for Mrs. 1 Ca ro l yn )
Kansas and Missouri. St .
Elo ise Boice Wilson, ~2. 338 S. Pom eroy ; Mr s . Dwayne Lours police said the snow
In Chicago, where public
Fifth Ave .. Middleport, who (Myrta) Casto, Robertsburg,
transportation was just
died Tuesda) morning at W. Va., tM sons, Joseph
beginning to return to normal
Ho lzer Medical Center will be Robert , Middle port , and Veterans Memorial Hospital
after a blizzard dropped 20
held at I, p.m. Thursday at the Richard Raymond, ParkersAdmitted - Joan Landers, mches of snow a week and a
burg; three grandchildren , Pom ero y; Deni se Tillis, half ago, snow fell early
lcwmg Funeral Home.
:'v1rs WLlson was a member Jeffrey and Barbara Grueser Rutland ; Ma rion Francis, today. Forecasters said 6
of the Middleport Fir st and Anthony Wilson ; a Midd l eport;
Ri chard inches could accumulate.
Baptist Church, Evangeline brother, Dr. Robert Rolland DeMo ss, Pomeroy ; Marcelli
Oklahoma, Nebraska, InChaoter 172. Order of Eastern Borce, Walnut Creek, Calif , Ailin g, Pomeroy ; Bernice diana , Iowa,
Kansas,
Sta r. White Rose Lodge and and sev eral nieces and McDonald , Carson, Calif.; Missouri, Wisconsin and
the Middleport Business and nephews.
Telitha Casto , Long Bot- Michigan all were hit by
Offic1atmg at the services tom ; Henry Cunningham , storms carrying snow and
Professional Women's Club .
Mrs Wilson was precetfed wrll be the Rev. Mark Mc- Pom eroy ; Nelson Lewis, high winds as a cold front
in death by her parents , Clung. Burtal wlll be m Pomeroy; Helen .Lochary , pushed eastward toward the
Lt•ster M. and Oleva Price Ri ve r v iew Ce metery
Pomeroy; Terry Hobson , Great Lakes region early
Burce; her husband, Joseph Friends may ca ll at the Middleport.
created the worst traffic
b:. Wilson and a brotheo, Dr. funeral home 1-·•m 7 to 9 p m .
Discharged - Cora Loftis, snarl of the winter and
Wednesday
Haymond Bmcc.
/
John Blankenship.
prompted hWJdreds of traffic
two
Surv1v1ng
are
accidents.

l

n smg 6.5 percent over the same period,
In other economic news Tuesday :
- A private economist indicated that 1979 is not getting off to a
good start . Donald Ratajczak, economist for Georgia State
Urtiversity, said prices received by farmers will probably
:acrease by 3 percent for the second month in a row in
January.Most of the gains are in meat prices as they were last
year, he said.
Some of the increases may be reported as smaller, however,
as the government adjusts the figures for seasonal variations,
he said.
"The meat price inflation appears to be at its most mtense

QUEEN SIZE

BOX SPRINGS
&amp; MAnRESSES
REG. PRICES 1359 to 1529 SET

SALE $150 TO $200

PRICE

MA nRESSES REG. '100 to '150 ••••••••••••••••••••••

.

SET

0NLY-

..t:L--------~---------·

The Missouri Highway
Patrol attributed two fatal
accidents in the Kansas City
area to snow and rce-packed
roads.
And a man froze to death in
the storm Tuesday as he tried
to walk home from his snowbound truck in Lewellen,
Neb , police said.
In Oklahoma City, freezing
rain and snow were blamed
for more than 100 traffic
accidents injuring three
dozen persons.
Possible trage4Y was
avoided in Oklahoma City
when a school bus driver
hurried her 65 passengers off
the vehicle after it stalled in
the path of an oncoming
train. The children huddled
along the wall of a warehouse
as the train rammed the bus
and knocked it from tbe
tracks , said the driver,
Janice Renbarger.
In Iowa, snow and high
winds drifted roads shut and
forced dozens of schools to
cloSe. State police repoct"!l
roads throughout the state
were covered with snow and
ice, and ditches were littered
with cars. _

Challenge
Contmueu trom page I)
1

uruque rock formatiOns with
complex plant and animal
communities made possible
by diverse micro-climati~
conditions . Outstanding.
scenic beauty is enhanced by
the rugged terrain. Also, its
location in ·the· unglaciated
part of Ohio gives it a variety
of undev eloped resources
for
outdoor
suitabl e
education programs.
According to Charles W.
Lifer , state leader, 4-H, plans
are currently underway for
letting bids for the new lodge,
with a target date for completion early in 1980. The new
facility will provide dining
and
recreational
ac·
commodations for 225 campers. It will be winterized
to accommodate 70 persons
for lodging with meeting
rooms and conference
facilities,
Lifer
said.
Dedication of the new lodge
and many of the improvements is expected in the
spring of 1980, he said.
Permanent improvements,
in addition to the new lodge
include:
Construction of a new cabin
for girls and a recreation
court, both completed in 19n ;
construction of a miniature
golf course (nine holes) and
drain and tile open field arey
both completed in 1978.
Other improv_ements to be
completed durmg the ~~xt
few years mclude : Addrt10n
of more land to the c_amp;
development of a wildhfe
demonstrational fo~d and
cover area; con•tru~:llon o_f a
tliree acre lake, rncludmg
stocking for fishing and for
educational studies; construction of an outpost
campil\g facility; development of a canoeing and
fishing program; construction of a hall-acre pond
at outpost camp site;
development of an obstacle
training course; development
of a softball diamond and
backstop; construction of a
rifle range and archery
range ; development of a
permanent

vesper

site;

construction of two winterized
cabins;
and
development of all-weather
hiking trails.
The long range audience
objectives include efforts to
reach more 4-H youths
through permanent Improvements of total cump
faciliti es . Plans include
expanding and developing a
significant outdoor education
program
for
schools
throughout Ohio; expanding
camp usage from three to
nine months of the year for
outside groups as well as 4-H;
employment of a fulltime
management i and win·
terization of cabins to accommodate more than 100
campers during winter
outdoor education programs.

Nationwise

Must work

Ohioan sought by police

• (Continued from page I J
of the Carter address .
"We are building a new
foundation for a peaceful and
prosperous world," he said.in
the opening lines. "We build
the foundation for a strong
economy ....
"We build the foundation
for a government that

POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP)- Pollee here were
searching today for an 18-year-old Duchess CoWJty
man who escaped from a.police car ~hUe being taken
to the Duchess County jajl. ·
Police said Joel Palmien of Bangall had just
arrived here from Cambridge, Ohio, Tuesday night
when he got away . They said the man was being held
on an armed robbery char~e.

works ....

"We must continue lD build
a new and finn foundation for
a stable world
community --··"
And the president closed
his address by saying:
"Tonight, I ask you to join me
in building that new
foundation - a better
foundation - for our country

Oil refinery baule scene •
BANGKOK Thailand (AP ) -Vietnamese troops
and units of th~ Cambodian army of ousted Premier
Pol Pot were reported battling today for an oil refinery
and a radar station near the port of Kompong Som.
Small-&lt;~ea le fighting was also reported near the Phnom
Penh airport.
.
Thai military sources said ·the Vietnamese were
holding the refinery and radar statioo near
Cambodia's only deep-water port, but were being
forced to resupply their troops by air since Highway 4
linking the seaport area to Phnom Peru. was unsafe for
traffic.

and our world ."

Rep . John Anderson of Illinois, thir&lt;kanking in the
House Republican
leadership, said the Carter
speech was " an obvious
attempt to inspire the
people ....Despite the cmstant
reiteration of the phrase 'new
foundations,' we did not see a
new structure emerge from
the president's speech."
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
said ,
"The
president
promised a 'new foundation.'
Upon examination, I think
what this speech gave us was
a good deal of rhetoric and
precious little substance - a
shaky foWJdation at best."
On domestic issues, Carter
pledged to renew his fight to
gain passage of legislation to
put a lid on the rising cost of
hospital care.
"There will be ho clearer
test of the commitment of this
Congress to the anti4nflation
fight than the legislation I
will submit again this year to
hold down inflation In

Licking COunty gets trial
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A Franklin CoWlty
judge signed an order Tuesday transferring Thaddeus
Lewingdon to U.cking County for trial on three counts
of aggravated murder. Lewingdon, 41, of Glenford, will
be taken Monday to Newark where his trial is expected
ill begin later the same day.
Lewington and his brother, Gary, 38, of Kierkersville, have been indicted in Licking and Franklin
coWlties in connection with the series of SO&lt;alled ".~
caliber murders." Both brothers are scheduled to go on
trial here Feb. 26 and Gary Lewingdon is set for trial in
Newark oo Feb. 28.

Sophia's husbanrJ threatened
- ROME (AP) - Sophia Loren's husband, flbn
producer Carlo Ponti, is threatened with seizure of $24
million of his Italian property for transferring $11
million out of the country illegally. ·
Ponti, 66, was convicted in absentia Tuesday by a
Rome court fined $24 million and ordered to serve a
two-year prlson term. The court acq11itted Miss Loren
of charges that she was an accomplice in the currency
violations and tried to smuggle $3.5 million worth of art
works abroad.

Aging program plan available
The sixth area plan;·lor'·
programs on aging is now
available for public review at
the Meigs County Council on
Aging Inc., East Main St.,
Pomeroy.
The Meigs CoWJty Comprehensive Senior Citizens
program is located at the
same location.
The area plan for programs
on aging is the annual
document which outlines
activities to be carried out
under the Older Americans
Act.
Funding is provided for the
program from JWJe 1, 1979
through May 31, 1980.
, The plan includes at least
one program to be funded in
each county . Counties
)
SEEK DIVORCES
_ Two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
common pleas court.
Filing for divorce were
Donn~
Jean
Williams
Grueser, Pomeroy, against
James Robert Grueser, Sr.,
Pomeroy; Vona Kay Taylor,
Pomeroy, against Herman A.
Taylor Pomeroy
'
·

comprising the Planning and
Servrce area are Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washing!Dn.
Public bearings for review
and comment have been set
for Feb. 5 in Athens at the
City-County Health Building
and at the Noble County
Fairgrounds at Caldwell.

hospital care," he said.

He also called on Congress
lD examine the inflationary
impact of government
• regulation.
"America has the greatest
economic system in the
world," he said. "Let's
reduce
government
interference and give it a

chance to work."
The most sustained
applause during the speech
csme when Carter voiced his
support for the proposed
Equal Rights Amendment.
Another proposal that drew
loud applause was his call for
extending public financing to
congressional elections. But
in that case, most of the
$12,500 RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E. clapping was confined to the
Ferguson reported the Democratic side of the aisle.
Generally{ Cart~r drew exJanuary distribution of
$6,388,702.95 in local govern- pressions o ""\lll?'t but few
ment fund money lD Ohio's 88 ' raves.
counties and 399 cities and
villages levying local income
taxes.
-1
Portraits
Meigs County's portion was \
We&lt;lctt'ngs
$12,500.
I
*Special Occasions
*Passports

**

FREE CLOTHING DAY
Free clothing day will be
held at Salvation Army,
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
from 10 a.m. WJtU noon
Thursday. All area residents
in need of clothing are
welcome.

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich I
109 High St.

Pomeroy

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
HOUSEWARES DEPT.

NEED EXTRA HEAT?
PORTABLE ELECTRIC HEATERS
*FAN FORCED INSTANT HEAT
*THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROUED
*SAFETY SWITCH
*ASSORTED STYLES AND WATIAGES
FROM

'249S

··Elberfeld$ ·l·n Po~eroy

VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 198

•

•

enttne

at

MIDDLEPORlPOMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1979

.

'

Most Meigs

Snow grips
paralyzed
Windy City

\

roads slick
According to spokesmen
for the Meigs State Highway
·Garage and county highway
. department, most secondary
·routes in Meigs CoWJty were
·snow covered and slippery in
spots Thursday morning.
Crews from both departments have been working
hard since snow started
falling early Wednesday
a(ternoon.
Two major traffic arteries
US 33 and SR 7 were clear at
10:30 a. m. today .
Crews employed by the
county highway department
had cindered 70 percent of
Meigs' secondary roads this
morning. Most roads were
described as in fair condition
but slippery.
Classes were not held today
at either Eastern or Southern
Local School Districts

because of the one inch
snowfall.
Meigs Local was open with
approximately 65 percent of
its students attending. One
bus in the Harrisonville area
did not run at all and three
others were only able to mak~
partial pickups.
Meanwhile, efforts In snow
removal were hampered in
Pomeroy Village Wednesday
night when an axle snapped
on the plow truck.
Work was WJderway this
morning to replace the
broken axle. In the meantime, Pomeroy's cinder truck
was working as usual.
Because of the weather
conditions, tonight 's Twin
Ctty Shrinettes meeting
slated at the home of Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell has been
cancelled.

Nationwis~----.
Firefighter returns to job
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - Firefighter Linda
Eaton returned to the firehouse Wednesday, breast-fed
her 3\l..-nonth old son again , and was suspended for
another day . She said the fire chief told her she'll be
fired if she does it again.
A babysitter brought Miss Eaton's son Ian Into the
• firehouse at noon. After nursin_g the baby, Miss Ea!Dn
was called into a meeting with Fire Chief Robert
Keating and Assistant City Manager Dale Helling.

'

First eight members named
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The first eight
members to Ohio's new State and Local Government
Commission were named Wednesday by Gov. James
A. Rhodes and Senate President Oliver Ocasek.
The commission, established by the same law that
directed the first tandem election of the governor and
lieutenant governor last year, will have a total of 13
members.
Lt. Gov. George V. Voinovich, who wiU chair the
commission, will name two members next week, an
aide said.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
will also appoint two House members.

Hunger strike continued
CINCINNATI (AP) - Continuing· his hunger
strike, the Rev . Morris McCrackin wiU remain in jail
for a\ least another week until attorneys argue motions
for his release .
After efforts to reach a conpromi e for
McCrackin's release failed, HamillDn County Common
Pleas Judge Rupert Doan set a hearing for Wednesday
on contempt charges.
- McCrackin, a prison reform advocate, refused to
·:testify before a grand jury against three Lucasville
penitentiary escapees. He was jailed Jan . 19 as a
' material witness.

Exhausted job seeker found
SHARONVIlLE, Ohio (AP) -A cold, exhausted
youth, who spent all day walking in ,search of work,
collapsert in the snow beside a highway and was
rescued by a salt truck driver Wednesday night .
"He's got to be a dedicated job hunter to be walking
in weather like this. I've never seen anybody quite like
:this. He couldn't move his joints," said Patrolman
. -Greg Homer.

By The Associated Press
emergency declaratron for 24
Snow gripped the &gt;1orm northern ILlinois counties
wea r y Midwest in a whrch were des ig nated
st ranglehol d today, ~hrle dJsaster ar eas ~fter the Ja n
heavy rams soa ked a wide 13 bhzzard .
An all-linle record high of
area of th e North east,
already soggy from a major 32 mches or snow \\ as on the
r a tns tor m ea rlie r

t he

ground m Mi l waukee , a.s the

majur

city "strengthened 1ts snow
rem oval effort .
· ·We' re on a full- sc ale

Ill

week .
The

seco nd

snowstorm m less than two
weeks left 7 mches of new
.snow Wednesday on Clucagu,

slrll trymg to recover from
the 20 mches that fell the1e 12
days ago.
"It 's bad news," moa ned

BLIZZARD UKE CONDITIONS - The snow in
Pomeroy Wednesday at 2:30p.m. came roaring down as

•
this shot taken from the top floor of the Meigs CoWJty
Courthouse shows.

Nab suspect after wild chase
By Katie Crow
Following an anned robbery and a 50 mrle chase by
officers of V.inton and Mergs
Counties Robert R. Sizemore,
Jr .. 20, Nrtro, W. Va., was
taken rnto custody Wednesday ni ght. 1\ second
suspect was still at large
Thursday morning.
Meig s County Sherrff
James J . Proffitt reported
the Wtlkesville Carryout was
robbed at 8:50 p. m. by a
person wearmg a s~ - 1 mask
and armed wtth a handgun .
Taken m the robber y was
$281
Dave Prerce, Wilkesville
police officer, put out a radio
alert that the carryout had
bee n robbed . Pier ce had
traced the suspect's vehrcle
rn the snow. It was headed
toward Meigs County
Sheriff Proffitt and Deputy
Lou Osl)orne responded as
did Deputy Robert Beegle,
Investigator Gary Wolfe and
Wrldlife Offrcer Jim Splete
Vinton County Sheriff Ron

Da vrs and deputies also
responded.
Pierce was strll pursumg
- the suspect when he met hun
coming back on County Road
One. The suspect's vehicle
str uck the \Vilkesvrll e
cruiser.
CHASE CONTINU ES
The chase contmued on
snow covered roads and went
into Athens Cowrty . At that
time various units from area
department s were converging on the location attempting to seal off the area.
Back-tracking, the suspect
managed to drive back mto
Meigs County.
When· the suspect wa s
believed traveling south on U.
S. 33 Syracuse Pohce Chief

Milton Varian , who had been roadway, ending the chase
standing by at the Beacon JUSt south of Tuppers Plains
Service Statwn , went to Rock on SR 7 at 10 .33 p.m.
Springs to set up a roadblock
If the suspect had not
with State Troopers Tom skidded off the hrghway, he
Danner and Chuck Moody. would have run into the
Pom eroy police also headed Coolville police whrch had set
for the Beacon area.
up a roadblock at Tuppers
The suspect's vehicle was Plains.
spotted south on U. S. 33 when
Enroute South on SH 7 to
Chi ef Varian and the two assist were Belpre Police and
state troopers began their Washmgton County Sherrff' s
chase
Deputies, and Athens County
A driver of a large truck deputies Ohro State Patrol
havrng heanl what was gomg umts were headed east on SR
on o'er his CB, spotted the 50.
suspect's vehi cle and the
VInton County Sherrff Ron
pur suing crui se rs and Davi s and Wrlk esvllle
preceded to block the hrgh- Policem an Dave Pierce
way . As Sizemore's vehicle part1C1pated
in
the
attempted to pass, he lost questronrng of the suspect.
control and skidded off the Sizemore was returned to
Vrnton County to fa ce
charges there.
In other att ivrty, the Me1gs
County Sheriff's department
is investigating a hit-skrp that
occ urr ed early Tuesday
mornin g· when a southbound
vchrdc ran off the road and
struck a mailbox owned by
Randall CMpentcr, Minersville.
was cited on charges of
The department also infarlure to yield followrng a
vestrgated
an accident that
two·auto mishap on Mam St .
at 8:20
occurred
Wednesday
in Racrne, at 4· 35 p.m.
a
m
on
the
parking
lot at
Officers report that an auto
Eastern
High
School.
operated by Spencer backed
Vrda Weber, 18, Tuppers
from a private drrve into the
PlainS
was parking her
path of a west boun d vehicle
when
it slid mto the
vehicle
drrven by William Cross, 44 ,
right
rea
r
of
a parked auto
Racine.
owned
by
David
A. Hedrick,
There was heavy damage
18,
Ht.
3,
Pomero
y The lot
to the Cross auto, minor
was
covered
"'1
th
1ce.
damage to the Spence r
The department is also
vehicle.
investigating
vandalism of a
The Gallia-M eigs Post ,
fe
nce
owned
by
F. A. Enoch,
Highway Patrol, investig!lted
four other accidents Wrd- Syracuse.
nesday durrng whi ch the
veh1cJes tmrolved incurred
slight damage

Patrol checks
seven mishaps

The Gallra-Mergs Post ,
Highway Patrol, investigated
seven accidents Wedn esday
An auto operated by Phillip
Strausbaugh,
20, Wellston,
The Eastern Local Board of
incurred heav) da ma ge
Education meetmg scheduled
for Wednesday evening and during a one-vehrcle acc1dent
on Georges Creek Rd , onecancelled due to ~d weather
ten th of a mile east of
has been re-scheduled for
Saturday, Jan 27 at 9:30 a. Bulaville-Porter Rd., at 10 ·45
p.m.
m. at the high school.
Officers report
tha t
The reg ular. meeting rs
Strausbaugh's west bound
preceded .lrV~ 30 mmute
review of materials meeting vehrcle went off the rrght side
which is also open to the of the snow covered roadway
and struck a utility pole.
public.
There were no mjuries. No
The next regular meeting is
citation
was rssued.
scheduled for Feb. 27 at 7:30
David
Thom as,
46 ,
pm
Gallipolis, claimed mjury,
but was not immediately
treated following a truckdeer collision on SR 7, onetenth of a mile south of the
Gallia County line.
The patrol reports that a
north bound vehicle driven by
Thomas struck and killed a
deer. There was moderate
damage to the truck.
Larry Spencer, 32, Racine.

Board session
slated Saturday

I

John Burke, a spokesman for
the lllrnors Department of
Transportatron, who called
travel rn the northern half of
the &gt;ta te "impossrble".
The storin closed many
roads, schools a nd fa ctones
.m llhno1s ' and W1sconsm.
Chrca~o

pubhc school offrcrals sa1d today's closmgs
wo uld permrt rnspectron of
snow-laden roofs on school
burldings.
O' Har e l nter na tton al
Arrport , the nation 's busrest,
•1ruggled to rema in open as
wm d gusts up to 40 mph
pushed snow onto runways
Umted Air L10es, the nation's
largest , Wednes day ca ncelled 80 percent of its 500
flight s out of O'Hare
The storm prompted Gov.
J ames R. Thompson to ask
Presrdcnt Carter to extend an

plowing operati on

nght

now, " Rtch ard CaJeSkl , H
s upervisor
with
the
Mil wauk ee
Burea u
of

Sarutatton, sa1d. "We have
about 215 pieces of equipment
on the ro ad now. Wf.' re using
our own inanpower, plus men
from other departments and
emergency peopl e hrred to
shovel snow. "
Gov. Cha rles Thone of
srgned
an
Nebrask a
emergency proclama tion
dispatching National Guard
helicopters and trucks to
eva cuate ~trande d fa nm~rs

and open roads to get food to
cattle dying of starvation m
snow-blocked past ures.
Heavy r ains drenched a
wide area of the East Coast
from Virginia through New
England, as flood warnings
were LSSU~d for lhe second
tunc since Sunday.
Winds up to 56 mph and 2
inches of rain llatter ed New

York City Wednesday nrght,
sna rhng tra ffr c, delaying
(Continued on Page Ill

Disbrow named
AEP president
R1chard F. Drshbrow has
been el ected presrdent of the
American Elec tric Power
Co.. the seventh rn its 72·year
history.
American Electric Power
is the parent company of the
Ohio Power Co.
W S. White. Jr., AEP
chairman and chtef executive
oHicer, said m announc10g
the election , that Drsbrow
also would be nom10ated fo r
election on Jan . 25 as
presrd ent and chi ef admmistrative officer of the
subsrdiary AEP Serv ice
Corp., the management and
technology arm of the AE P
system.
Both pres rdencres have
been va ca nt s mce t he
retirement of George V
Patterson in mid-1977.
Dlsbrow has been a vice
chairma n of th e service
corporatiOn since 1975 and.

for the past year, responsible
for administrati on. He is also
director of both the parent
company and the service
organization and a vice
president and drrcctor of
each of the AEP's seven
operating sub sidrari es, including Ohio Power.
He JOined AE P rn 19:&gt;4 ~s an
engineer, was named controller In 1971 and was elected
a vice president in 1971. He
was named senior vi ce
president in 1973, executrve
vice president in 1974 and
vice chairman in 1975.
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport emergency
unit was called to 14 S. Second
Ave., at 12:09 p. m. Wednesday for Eleanor Welch
Zeiher. a medical patient,
who was taken to Hob er
Medical Center.

Gasification
decision off

CASES TERMINATED
Two defendants were fined
COLUMBUS, Ohro (AP) anti two oth ers forfeite d Decision on ConstrUction of a
bond s in Rutl and Ma yor $300 millron coal gasification
Eugen e Thompson's co urt plant in Noble County has
Tuesday night.
been postponed until 1980 by
Fined were Anna Hatfield, the U. S. Department of
llutland, and Ronnie John- , Energy, an Ohio legislator
son. Racine , speeding, $15
says.
and costs each.
Sen . Sam Speck, R·New
Forfeiting $:l0 bonds each Concord, sard he has been
on charges of speeding were told the federal government
]ayce_e banquet
Jerry Runyan , Glouster and rs deliberating over whether
Roger Johnson, Wellston.
to put the plant in an area
A warrant was issued by east of Sarahsville or in
slated Saturday
Ra lph Leesburg, Vinton , on
A charter night banquet charges of failur e to appear. Illinois.
The Ohio project would be ,
wrll be held at the Meigs Inn
sponsor
ed by Conoco, a
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in
of the Continental
subsidiary
observance of the 27th anOil
Co.
The
Illinois sponsor
niversary of the founding of
would be the Illinois Coal
the Meigs Jaycees.
Gasification Group.
BART HOLL DIES
The dinner is open to
Since 1976, the government
LOGAN
Barton
A.
Holl,
Jaycees and their wives ,
has
been considering whether
president
general
manager
charter members and their
to
choose
one of the states or
of
the
Logan
Clay
Products
guests and former Jaycees
build two plants testing
and
one
of
the
Hocking
Co.
and their wives. Reservations
should be made , if possible, Valley 's greatest leaders in different processes.
Under the Conoco proposal,
by contacting Ralph Werry at industrial development that
Logan
state
and
national
3,800
tons of hi~ sulfur coal
won
·PRESENT GIFT .:.. The residents of the Meigs County Infirmary Wednesday were - the Meigs Inn or David recognitron in 1955-65, died per dayr would be converted
Jenkins at the Southern Ohro
' presented a police scanner. The scanner was purchased by the Meigs County Jaycees and
Insurance Services ofhce in very unexpectedly Tuesda y rnto 58 million cubic feet of
; Sheriff James J. Proffitt and was presented to Mildred Jacobs, superintendent. Shown, 1-r,
ev emng . He was 86.
pipeline quality gas.
P b~&gt;ero y .
: are, Chuck Mullen, representing the Jaycees, Mf!l. Jacoh1 and Sheriff Proffitt.

,.

15 CENTS

\

PERFORMED - Betty Wills, a resident of the Meigs
County Infirmary, although blind, entertaint;&lt;I visilDrs ar
the home Wednesday by singing and playmg th_e auto
harp. Betty has been a resident of the County Infrramry
for 18 years.

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50298">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50297">
              <text>January 24, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4023">
      <name>boice</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
