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- ..

-~.-

--·-'-·

-·

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.

�..

~

... .....

.

•
'
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middle~"rt-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday , Jan 25, 1!!79

Sentuwl, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0. Thm &gt;dH) . ·'"" 25. 1979

IN

WH~I?E It-! 0X~f+ r~

Donald F. Graff

A question .of standards

•

'

E ~Lamb.M.D.

patten\ who has heart
dtsease.
The left stde of your
heart has probably been
overworked from htgh
blood pressure. Some of the
other medicmes you •re
taktng control your
pressure level The chest
pam tpat you develop when
you overdo ts related to msufftctent blood flow to
your left heart muscle
In alltt sounds hke your
doctor ts takmg a vtgorous
and mtereo1ed approach to
your problem for which you
should be thankful.
Your doctor probably
dido 't think you would be
doing a lot of physical activity in view of the dtfflculties you have experienced Under the present circumstances, it
would probably be unwtse
to overdo physical aetlvity.
If you read my column
11lten, you know I'm an advocate of good, sensible exerctse. !like to put the emphasis on sensible. When
indtvtduals have heart
dtsease severe enough to
have pain with exertion or
shortness of breath that
hmtts his ability, that's not
the time to be pushing
phystcal activity
You would be wtsc to
hmtt the salt in your dtet, If
you are not already doing
so You mtght wantto know
more about salt and your
body so I am sending you
The H~Hith I.ettet number
10-l~ ,. S:llt . Your Vtlal

DEAR DR. LAMB Recently my doctor gave
me Lanoxm to take daily
and Nitrostat to carry
when my chest aches I had
a heart tracmg before he
prescrtbed these drugs I
was havmg an ache m my
chest and 1\ was very hard
to breathe after shght exertion I sltll have thts problem when J overdo I also
take Enduron for high
blood pressure which is
under control
My question ts, how
sertous ts my condttton •
My doctor didn't tell me
much and dtdn 't restnct
my acllvtltes so I feel that I
am not as til as my farmly
keeps telhng me. I am a 54year-&lt;&gt;ld woman. I am 5
feet 2 and wetgh 125 ·
pounds
DEAR READER - Any
tune a persorl has sufficient
heart trouble to require
medicine, he has an Important medtcal problem I
would not like to say exadly how severe your case ts
since J don't know all the
facts.
You are taking l.anoxm
because your dodor thinks
you had heart failure The
difficulty you . have in
breathing ts undoubtL'IIIy
all!loctated with the accumulatton of fluid m your
lungs secondary to fatlure
of the left stde of the heart.
That
ts
what
breathitll5snes. often 1~ m a St&amp;tm 41nd

Pnt~~~.!'iiUm

ances, Eastern M1 ch1gan

rrust wtsh tt could schedule
Ball State more often tn
basketball
" Thn 'd be nattonal
champs tf they played us
every week, " Ball State
Coach Steve Yoder satd after
the Hurons surpnsed the
Cardinals 87-82 Wednesday
mght, droppmg Ball State
from a secood-place he 10 the
Mtd-Amertcan Conference.
The vtdory was Eastern
Mtchigan's third in a row
over the Cardmals and only
the Hurons' third m se-ven
conference match-ups Gary
Green scored 19 potnts and
pulled down 12 rebounds for
Eastern Mtchtgan, 6-10
overall, whde Pat Mtller
turned m an outstandmg performance 10 a backup role,
hitting on six of eight shots
and scorrng 14 points

The departure tlf the shah ratses quesltons as to the
sec ur)ly of every olher ruler 10 the Mideast, conservative
munareh cmd ftre-t'ttling revoluttonary ahke
The ye,tr-lon~ 1 t•volutwn tn Iran has already severely

'*********"'***********************************~
II'

i Editorial opinions i
*

*

t***********+********************************•~

Miss IJIHan
doesn't stand
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) When Prestdent Carter
~ enters a room, everyone
stands as a mark of respect
for his offtce There ts ooe
exception, however.
When Carter strode into
a hotel banquet room here
for last week's National
Prayer Breakfast, a whttehatred lady m the crowd of
3,000 remamed resolutely
tn her seat as others
JUmped U&gt; thetr feet .
It was "Mtss Lillian," the
president's mother.
While m oown for a
pertodic VISit U&gt; the White
House, the elder Mrs.
Carter appeared as guest
of honor and speaker at an
affair sponsored by the
Washington Press Club.
Durtng the question-andanswer periOd, a woman
editor took her oo task for
posing m a warmup sutt,
and hefting barbells, foe
the cover of the January
issue of Washtngtoman
magazme
The editor dtd not object
so much to the posing as to
the fact that, as she told it,
the president's mother had
ignored three letters she
had written seeking Mrs
Carter's cooperation w1th a

magazme proJect aimed at
semor cttizens •
Mrs Carter replied, wtth
a sweetness that belied her
message, that she responds
only to " tnterestmg
letters "
The Washmgooman cover
was photographed at the
rural "Pood House" where
Mrs Carter retreats from

HEALTH
Ht•art trouhh·

By filii PUET
Assoctated Press Writer
Based on recent perform-

As the Shah goes?

Ry Martha Anglt• and Rul!l'rt Walt&lt;l'l'
WASHINGTON INF.A l - Wtth the advt•nt of the 19110
Olymptc Games, the presttgwus seal of approval carrymg
the legend, Selt•cted for Use by the U.S Olymptc Comnuttee," wtll soon appear on dozens of items m supermarkets and department stores
NotWithstanding that decepttve endorsement, this counll)'s Olyi'liptc athletes do not necessanly use any of the
food , totletrtes, clothmg, sporl' equtpment or other merchandise that carrtes that sponsor's symbol.
The Federal Trade Commisston iFTCl has discovered
that marketers of vartous produds purchase the right to
use, the offtctal seal by .makmg a "substanltal contribulton" -typtcally rangmg from $50,000 to $500,000 - to the
U S Olymp"' Comrru ttee
That revela!ton ts contamed m a masstve FTC staff
report on the !title-known but htghly mfluenttal orgamzaltons that develop quality, fety and perfonnanee standards for products or certtfy that the produds meet those
standards.
Although tl engages m a quesltonable certtfteatton aettvtty to ratse nullwns of dollars, the U S Olympte Committee tsn 't truly a eerttftcalton group because tis prmeipal mterests be elsewhere.
A typical certiftcation orgamzalton -probably the best
known to relatl consumers - is Underwnters
Laboratortes, whose "m:· symbol of safely and quality
appears on hundreds of electrtcal appliances rangmg
from kttehen blenders to otl furnaces
In the 1960s, UL certlfted aluminum as a safe replacement for copper in home wiring Although there now ts
constderable evtdence that alununurn nught pose a
sertous ftre hazard, "at no tune did the ULstandards state
or reqwre dtsclosure of the hazards," says the recently
released FTC report
Approxunately '2Q,OOO standards, affecting the destgn
and perfonnance of everythmg from light bulbs to turbme
generators, have been promulgated by more than 400 professtonal socteltes, trade assoctattonsnd other standardseting orgamzaltons
Dominating the fteld are two orgamzattons The
American Naltonal Standards Institute (ANSI), responsible for almost 6,500 standards, and the Amen can Soctety
for Testmg and Matertals (ASTM), which accounts for
more than 6,200 standards.
Consumer representation m the standard-seting process
usually is etlher nonunal or nonexistent, with orgamzationalleadershtp mvariably drawn from the same major
corporattons that produce many of the products bemg
evaluated
The new FTC report says that 60 percent of ANSI's offtcers .and directors are employed by producers
(mcludmg such corporate giants as Exxon, General
Motors, AT&amp;T, IBM and Du Pont ) while 40 percent of
ASTM's directors are afftllated wtlh marketers
One sinking example m the report mvolves the nlwrunatmg Engmeermg Soctety OES ), which establishes
standards for lighting levels in schools, stores, factories
and other public factlibes .
Approxtmately two-thirds of the IES board of dtrectors
ts composed of representatives of lamp and ftxture
manufacturers or public uttliltes, accordmg to the FTC
staff.
Increased llghtmg levels obviously produce higher consumption of the products sold by those two lndustnes
-ftxlures and electnct!y To nobody's surpnse, the FTC
report cttes evidence that IES lighting requirements often.
exceed levels necessary for adequate vtston
Finally, the dominance of old-hne, established corporalions tends to perpetuate existing technology' to llie detriment of new, small, mnovative manufacturers whose advanced products could threaten the market dominance of
the bigger firms
''In extreme cases, the standards forum has become little more than a playground for special interests," says the
FTC staff m proposmg needed new regulations that would
open standard-s
g proceedmgs to consumers, small
businesses a
others who long have been underrepresented
'
Heanng on the proposal are to be held this sp11ng m
San Fran sco and Washmgtbn. The FTC has recently
become · acttVISI agency, aggresstvely pursumg a vanety of c sumer mterests - but none ts more unportant
\han IS ISSUe.

Lawrence

Unbeaten Toledo downs OU SPORTS

COMMENTARY

DID T~A.T 1!)jJff~fJX.
lREE COME ~M f

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Congress mood tight·
COLUMBUS';"Ohto (AP)
- Sen .John H. Glenn, DOhlo, says the mood thts
year m the newly convened
Congress
ts
" ttght,
everyone 1s co ncerned
about mlla!ton "
On a vtsll to Columbus
thts week, Ohto's semor
senator sa1d he shares such
coocerns, and a number of
others But he satd "gettmg
control of the federal
budget IS extremely cnltcal "
Glenn told reporters he
recently recetved a copy of
the Carter
Adnumstratton's 1979-1960
budget proposal, whtch
calls for holdmg the federal
deftctt to $29 bilhoo about half of the last
deftctt
He satd 11 may be roo
lean, but that he wanted to
study 1t further. He added
as an afterthought that the
mood m Congress is such
that "it could be made even
more austere."
Glenn ct!ed figures
showmg what would

happen 1f a chtld born tn
1979 hved to be an average
of 73 or 74 years old, and
inflatton continued at a
rate of only 4 percent
" We'd be happy rtght now
to settle at a rate of lwtce
that (8 percent )," he satd
For one thmg, he satd the
cht ld would become a
m1lhonmre, earnmg more
than $600,-000 a year by the
time he retired, assurmng
he would have saved at
least part of hts salary
On the other hand, Glenn
satd today 's average
$50,000 house would be
worth $3 2 rmlhon Also, a
loaf of bread would cost $39
and a phone call about
$9 60
11
0bvmusly, Uus cannot
continue ," Glenn satd.
Is Carter's budget
adequately funded?
Agam, the senator satd
he had not had time to
dec1de
But he dtd note that
Carter's revenue estimates
"are predicated upon the
business cycle, "
assumpttons that certatn
thmgs wtll happen or
cootinue U&gt; be true m the

•hakeu the slabtltty of the regton where that commodtty
was 10 short supply to start wtth And the shocks may not
be over
If the ctvtllan government the shah left behmd, or a successor, plus the at my cannot reach an accommodalton
wtth the dtvme maslernund of-the upheaval, a revolutton
·by demonstration could turn mto genome ctvtl war. A
dtstmcl posstbihty , smee the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenn from his French pulpit already has excommuntcated the government and urged Iramans not to
cooperate wtlh tt
The antt-foretgn "Islanuc republic"- whtch with a suggested hand-amputatmg code of puntshment sounds hke
shah-style represston only more so- the Ayatollah has in
rrund spectflcally for Iran may not be so sigmficant m
lhelong ron as what he represents m the regwn And' that
ts the tenactous survtval of tradt!tonal Islam, a fatth that
· has been tdeologtcally monbund for centurtes but remams a potent cultural force .
Otl may have replaced camels mtlk and dates- as the
eeonomtc staple and mud-walled towns may have been
transfonned mlo htgh-nse ctltes, but the bulk of the
Islamtc world's populatton remams more at home m the
14th century than the 20th
The sh~h once touched on the problem m JUSltfymg the
harshness of hts well-publlctzt-d modermzation program:
" Believe me , when three~uarters of a natton doesn't
know how to read or wi'tte, you can provtde reforms only
by the strtclest authorttai-tamsm - otherwtse you get

whtch Carter recenUy reestablished diplomatic
relations
with
the
Communist nation
The senator satd he was
concerned about there not
bemg enough securtty
guarantees lor the 17
mtlllon Chmese Nationalists on the tsland of
Tatwan, and that he feels
the Umted States has "a
moral comm1tment" to
defend Ta1wan.
Glenn, chatrman of the
Senate Foretgn Relations
Subcommittee on Astan .
Affatrs, satd he thinks the
US w1ll have some time to
constder the potenttal
problem of armed confltct
He called tt "a fact" that
Red Chma ts not prepared
nuhtartly at the present
time to attack Tatwan, and
that he cannot ,see any
likelihood at present that
Tatwan would launch an
attack
agamst
the
mamland.

nation's l!&lt;:onomy

the tumult of her other
home at nearby Plams, Ga.
She expressed some mlsgtvmgs about admtllmg the
delegalton from
the
magazme, explammg that
she "mtsses Uungs" after a
televtst on ftlm crew or
group of Cabmel off1cers
have been tn the house
"They don't mean to
steal," she added "They
JUst want souvemrs "

He isn 't sure, Glenn sa1d ,
that "whatever he (Carter)
ts relymg on wtll come to

LAFF- A- DAY

pass''

Glenn called the news
conference to announce a
semmar hts off1ce and Ohto
State Umverstty are cosponsormg Feb 15-16 to
promote trade between
Ohto busmessmen and Red
Chma
Whtle advocatmg the
development of such trade,
Glenn satd he was not " I've come to the conclusion
happy about the way (after that housework 1sn't so bad
se cret neg ohatwns ) m after all'"

The ]lrestdent's mother
has been known to gamble
occastonaUy. For example,
Balance Others who want the appom bnent wtth the
lhts tssue can send 50 cent~ Washmgtoman folks was
wtlh a long , stamp_ed, self- delayed 24 hours because,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A deal child, mstttutionalized
addressed envelope for tt ll)ey were told by the White
because
he was wr ongly diagnosed as mentally retarded,
House,
thetr
star
model
Send your req~est to me m
had
to
keep
a
prevtously
comes
home
to hts parents after nearly 31/z years. Hts
care of lhts newspaper,
scheduled
luncheon
family
ts
wann
and receptive It wants to make up for lost
P 0 Box 1551, Radto Ctly
engagement
time.
Statton, New York , NY
But for little Jonah Corell!, home means tonnent Ilts a
She later conftded thts
10019. It wtll gtve you some
place
where lovmg words aod reassurmg gestures seem
was
a
ruse
and
that
she
had
gutdehnes on what foods
been
at
a
regular
poker
like
devthsh
Jeers and taunts Home is a lJiace for the
are htgh m sodturn.
hearmg
game
wtth
frtends
I notice that you wetgh
Another example the
"And Your Name ts Jonah," Sunday on CBS, is a fine
125 pounds and for your
prestdent
lost
a
$5
bet
wtth
telling
of the anger, hurt and confuston endured by
hetght tll'dt suggests to me
ordtnary
people trymg U&gt; cope with extraordmary
his
mother
on
professtonal
that you might beneftt from
losing some wetghl Thts football's Super Bowl game ctrcumstances And these are good folks, these ftctional
Corellis, proud workin~ class Americans who suffer bewould help your heart pro- thts week .
Carter
bel
on
the
losmg
cause they can't understand.
blem m two ways.
Dallas
Cowboys,
but
he
And because they can't quite cope
First, it's important to
really
had
no
chotce.
Hts
Sally
Struthers and James Woods are Jenny and Danny
lose all the excess body fat
mother
announced
to
him
Carelli,
a blue-&lt;:ollar New York couple who try to
that you mtght have
that
her
money
would
be
on
reintroduce
thetr deaf son Jonah iniAl the mainstream of
because it will help to
the
favored
Ptttsburgh
their
life
For
Jonah, who ts 7 when he returns hgme, it IS
decrease your htgh blood
Steelers
like
a
prtson
he can't commurucate and his family can't
pressure That, m turn , wtll
,-~-----..
;·
get
through
U&gt;
htm
decrease the work the
Slowly, Jooah's presence becomes a stram It begms
heart has to do
The Daily Sentinel wtth chtldish Jealoustes oo the part of Jonah's little
.Second, tf you wetgh less,
brother, Todd, a hearmg chtld who resents the special
Il l S~ ltS..!160 1
your phystcal actiVIty such
treatment enjoyed by the new family celebnty.
as ordmary walkmg wtll be
e~~~·~
Then Jooah's father begins to bend under the pressure.
easier for you to do . To put
OF.VOTF.n
TO
11fF.
He
wants a normal Jonah, not the Jonah he's got. He, roo,
it plamly, there would be
INTF.RF.STOF
begin,s
U&gt; resent the disruption caused by Jonah's
fewer pounds to move
MF.tr.S·MASON AREA
presence
When Jenny suggests a birthday party for
ROHERT
HOEFI
ICH
around. That also wdl case
CJty F.dlttJr
Jonah,
Danny
Corelh snaps, "What are you gonna do,
the workload on your heart
DA VIO BUSKIRK
invtte
a
bunch
ofktds
U&gt; a freak show?"
Advt&gt;rlfsJnJS
Managt
r
In addition, I suspect there
Pui.Jh~hL'tl lhlll} i!ICC'l'P1 Saturtl.t\
Danny
leaves
home,
and here "Jooah" becomes the
are changes that ocC'ur in by The Ohm Valle\ Publl shtN(
soory
of
a
mother
and
her
afflicted child Miss Struthers,
the drculation and posstbly f'r unp&lt;my Mull lrnt dlt1 Tnt
Ill
St Pmm1 uy Ohio 4571111
late of "AU m the Famtly,"' ts believable as a guiltsome Improvement tn Cuurl
Rmdn~ s~ Ofhl~ Plu tnt' 992- 2156
strtcken mother who trtes to deny reality with love and
opening of the artertes that F:d!tun,\1 Phone 992 2157
wtshful thtnking
i\c c(lfl d d;~ ~s pust,tJ:l' paid Il l
can be achieved in people
Prr1m•ruy. Ohw
Jonah Is portrayed by 9-yearold Jeffrey Bravin, a deaf
u·hn really make a total efNHtlonul arht·rh!ung represcu
child
whose performance IS remarkable not just because
fort to eliminate ex&lt;'ess ' tlrtt\•t , l.&lt;tnrlon Nr sonnh·~ :not
F.Ut lid i\Yt' Clew lmnl , 0hlrt4'4tiS
he
's
handicapped.
Thts bOy ts something to see.
body fat Token effort~
Sub~t tlftlllln rntr ~ OcliYl rt-tl h\
All
down
the
lme,
the characters m thts movte behave as
don 't do so much
t .u rll'r where UYatlublt 7S t l'nts rw'r
real
people
would,
for
better or worse That ts tis strength,
wt
t&gt;k
By
Mntor
Rtlllti!
wtwre
t .trrlt&gt;t
Meanwhile, I would ~UV H~ not tii'IIIIHble, 0nt&gt; month
Its
weakness
1
s
that
1t
takes stdes tn what has become a
rec(lnunend that ,·nu fnllvw $.1 !..r R~ 111111lir1 Ohin &lt;tnd W V,1,
con\toversy
among
the
hearmg unpatred, the questton of
Out
y,
.tr
S2i
5n
Stx
month
~
}our doctor's advHc Vt&gt;ry
fH r(J Tlirrt m n nlh ~ sn fill
whethe1
the
deaf
should
communicate
by stgn language or
t•arefully bt•('fHISt• \'o n have r::lst'\1 ht'l l' 132 00 \I .u S1x mo n t h~
hp readmg.
a serlou:-; medJc,tl pH•hl~m fl 7 no Thu.' r• r n1 1 nth ~ $9 on
su o~ rlptiU/1 prlr l' lllf 1mlr·~ Snnd.ll
The polermcs clutter the story, but this movte wtll get to
that dem"'/ds •·a•l'ful ,11 . Tun•·
~,~ uh111 I
vo
11 an¥wav.
'"
... ........ . .
h'nttoll
l

TV ... in Review

. .-

•

coaches m Toledo's vtctory

Rocket Coach Bob Ntchols
satd Selgo, who led Toledo
wt\h 16 potnts desptte feeling
tll before the contest, "seems
U&gt; be gettmg better every
e,ame." Ohto menoor Dale
Bandy noted that "Selgo ts an
excellent outstde shooter and
we knew 1t"
The victory "as ttte
Rockets' etghth stratght and
gave them a conference mark
of 7~ and a 13-3 overall
record Tim Joyce 's 19 potnts
led the Bobcats, 34 m the
uEach man went out and MAC and 8-7 overall
Coa ch Otck Parfitt of
did hts job, " Eastern
Central
Mtchigan called the
Mtchigan Coach Ray Scott
Chtppewas'
tnumph "a waltsatd, adding , "The guys
around,
try-to-take-the-ball·
played wtth real great
intenstty tn the first half " to-the basket kmd of game."
Parfitt satd, "The free
The victors took a 43-32
halftone lead, saw Ball State throws made the difference,"
move to wtthin a pomt at 65- referrmg to ftve chanty shots
64, then pulled away agam. made by hts team 10 the !mal

nowhere''

The descrtplton Ills not on ly Iran but vtrtually every
Islamtc country from Central Asta to Morocco's Allanite
coast In all there very likely are Ayatollah counterparts
ca pable, under the nght combmatton of local ctrcurnstances, of rallymg the fatthful to throw out the
blasphemous secular oppressors, thetr foretgn supporters
and the present
The Arabtah penmsula's Saudi rulers are themselves
devoutly lradtltonal Moslems ; Libya's Qaddaft ts both a
rehgwus and a revolultonary fanatic; Iraq and Syria are
ruled by antagonistic branehes of a party that styles tlself
soctallst , Algeria ts the preserve of a once-radical junta;
Morocco and Jordan are led by caultously astute kings AB
dtfferent m political styles as these regtmes are, they
have one thmg m common - a goal of coaxmg or forcmg
thetr peoples mto the modern world
In domg so, all run the nsk of at some pomt pressmg too
far or too fast or both, arousmg Islam's latent reststance
to change Iran, slnctest authonlanamsm ended up
nowhere, demonstrates what a potent opponent that can
be
Elsewhere in the Mideast
Iran's turmml has overshadowed of late the Mtdeast's
longest-runmng crists. What aclton there has been on the
Arab, Israeli confltcl has been largely talk and that has
been largely in Washmgton wtth efforts to get the Egypltans and lsraelts back to the negottatmg table
Bnt Jordan 's Ktng Hussem recently contrtbuted a few
words to the subject, expressmg himself m a brtef mterVleW m The New York Times as more doubtful than ever
that d)reel Egypttan-Israell contacts could produce a settlement Recalled upon Egypt to return to the "fanuly" so
that all Arabs, mcludmg Palesttmans, could negottate
wtth Israel from a postbon of solldanty.
It may be recalled that Arab sohdanty had produced
stalemate and a n smg threat of renewed war before
Egypt's Prest dent Sadat broke ranks wtlh his nusston to
Jerusalem. The results of that mtbattve may be dtsappomtmg to date , but at least Sadat's courage m makmg tl
and Israeli Pnme Mtmster Begm's m takmg him up got
thmgs mov mg.
llts quesltonable that a return to Arab solidarity would
mean anythmg but a return to the status quo ante. King
Hussem is an outstandmg reahst among Arab leaders It
ts dtfflcult to see what advantage he or anyone else would
see m such a development - other than Palestiman extremtsts who, tf they can't get everything, wtll take
vtolent stalemate

l:lsewhere m the MAC,
conf ere nce leade r Toledo
remained unbeaten w1th a 7967 trtumph over Oh10
Umvers1ty, Central M1chtgan
moved mto sole possesston of
second place by edgmg
Bowling Green 81-76, Kent
State ntpped Mtaml 62~9 and
Northern llilnms got by Western Michigan 76-60
Th e play of reserve Tun
Selgo drew pratse from both

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12/6 SUN.
•

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP'S
MID-WINTER SALE
'79 Jeep Cherokee "S"
- ..2-Door

'79 Jeep Pickup

NEW YORK (AP) - Tony Randall will be "roasted"
at a $125-a-plate dinner-dance and fihn preview at Radio
Ctty Music Hall Feb. 19.
Orgaruzers said the event will be sponsored by the
Myasthenia Gravis Foundation, which seeks a cure for the
neuro-muscular disease. Greek shipping magnate
Aristotle Onassis was among vtctims of lhe disease.
After cocktails in the music hall's grand foyer, 400
guests wtll move to the stage for a dinner, and at 8 p.m ,
the pubhc can pay $10 to lfatch a celebrity roast of
Randall. Jack Klugman, Randall's "Odd Couple" co-star,
will serve as host.
·
·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Nancy Kauebawn, RKan , says House and Senate members' lcrlns should be
hm1ted U&gt; a total of 12 years,
,
HCI proposal, made m her flrsl Senate speech
Wednesday, would limtl senators lo two six-year terms
and House members to SIX two-year terms.
Mrs. Kassebaum satd such limits would result ln a
Congress responstve to the needa of conatltuents and
~mdf\U of the overall welfare of the nation.
..

~

~"'

-,,

'79 Jeep Wagoneer

SPECIAL PRICES ON ALL MODELS
COMPLETE SELEOION OF ALL MODELS
Ltmtted Ttme Only- 5 :00 P.M. 1-25-79 Thru 5:00 PM. 1-27-79.

SUCH SPECIAL DEALS AS:
1979 JEEP CJ-5 RENEGADE
Full

Stock No 9SB9

and clock, extra duty suspensron ,

Blue, po~ e r steertng , radio. carpet, tach ometer
blu e denim top

Sale Price '6995

sr~eker Pme sm8 oo

1979 JEEP 10/4 .SHORTBED TRUCK

Brown, Stock No 9594 360 V-8 automat1c Quadra tra c 10 4 Pa ckage p s , AM FM 40
shocks. P B

channel CB rad10, heavy duty

Sale Price '7875

Full st1cker Pme s94l9 9&gt;

1'9 79 JEEP 4 DOOR CHEROKEE ,•s•
Red Stock No 9584 360 v B.

automatiC

Quadra trac.

dealt

the

s· package

A c . 1•1 f

CfU ISe.

The D;•ily Sentinel

k, !. II lhmgs close
\11 k
J)() !Jil~

Detm els stor ed 28
for Xav1er , s..6 'lh~

Tltcl!ls , led by Tc1ry lluerod s
21 pumls are 14 -4

Clllf mnat1 had the last
lau gh on former Bearcot

Coach Gale Catl ett as the
ll ea rcats down ed We st
Vtrgmta 7~ oo the road
Catlett had moved to his West
V1rgmta alma mater th1 s season after stx years at the
helm of the Bearcats
Pat Cummmgs scored 20
pomts and Dav1d Duarte 18 as
Cmcmnatt lifted 1ts mark to 78 Reserve Dana Perno 's 22
paced the Mountameers, 10~
Baldwm-Walla
retamed
a shar e of th
Ohto
Conference le d w1th · 57~4
v1ctory over Ca tal, wh le m
other games, It as
aster
82 ,
HCJdelberg
6o,
Muskmgum 63, Moont Umon
61; Otterbetn 72 , Ohw
Northern 55, Oberlm 93 ,
Dentson 68 , Allegheny 78,
John Carroll 63 , Washmgton
and Jeffer son 81 , Case
Reserve 75, and Defiance 91.
W1hnmgton 77
The scheduled Goshen at
llluffton game was postponed
be cause
of
weath er
condthon s

Three SVAC contests
slated Friday night
Weathe1 pernuttmg, three
SVAC contests arc scheduled

Johr. Boston s Eagles put
lh ~1r

v-0 league rcconl on the
Fndoy mghl and one make- hne c.tga mst Coach Wayne
up ga me ha s be en se t Bergdoll' s fli ghl anders

Saturday mght
F' nda y's actwn f1nd •
leag ue lcad mg Ea st ern at
Southw estern . Kyge r C1cck
\IStlmg Southern and North
Galha pla ymg at Wahama
Saturda) evcnmg , North
Call1a
host South Web-

SWHS prtorto Tuesda) s 14
pomt loss at Southern, \\as

Eastern hcts been led b) the
hot-shoot mg of sem o1s Dan
Spencer Bnan l3Jsscll uld
.J cff Goebel Sem or ~ ~ rl eg
!\elson , Gene I .ayton d!ld

"'II

ster

DAYTON, Ohto (AP ) Cmcm na\t Reds Manager
John McNamara adm1\s he's
been domg hts homework m
preparalton for the start of
sprmg tratmng nex t month
"I took a sketch book back
w1th me when I went back to
wmt er ball m Santo
Domm go," he told reporters

on th e background of ea ch
mdtvtdual and th etr stats
'I want to be able to know
all about them when I stt
dow n a nd talk to them
mdlVI dua lly at spnng
trammg
McNamara believes that
by showmg mte1 est m the
pla yers. the players will look
on hun as someone who has
concern

Sports briefs...
thts year, averaged 228 pms a
By The Associated Press
game to grab th e lead after
TENNIS
the ftrst round m a $100,000
HOLLYWOOD , Fla
Bntam's Sue Barker upset pro bowlmg event
Moore of Indtanapolt s
third-seeded Trac; Austm 26, 2-6, 6-3 as the nwnber of never dtpped under 200 as he
seeded players tn the $1&gt;0,000 shot games of 202. :!.'i8, 219,
women's tenms tournament 222, 2~5 and 2.15 for a I ,371 pm
total
contmued to dwtndle
Mtke Durbm of Chagrm
After two rounds of play,
F'alls,
Ohw was seven-pms
ftve of the etght seeded
belund
Moore m the
play ers m the event have
Prof
ess
tonal
Bowlers
been upset , tncludmg topAssoc1
ahon
tournament
Jtm
seeded Chns Evert
Plessmg
er
of
State
College,
In other surprtses, South
Afrtcan Manse Kru ge r Pa , was th1rd, while Randy
bested fourth-seeded Wendy Neal of El Segundo, Calif ,
Turnbull of Austraha 6-4, 6-7, and Jay Anna of Bmse, Idaho
6-3 and Ca rne Meyer were fourth and ftfth
whtpped etghth-seeded Kathy
May 3-6, 6 3, 6-3.
In other matche., second- U.S. team to
seeded Vtrgtnta Wade of
Brttatn defeated Mtma box in Norway
Jausovec of Yugoslavta ll-3 , 63, No 5 D1ane Fromholtz
INDIANAPOLIS (AP )- A
defeated Barbara Jordan 6-3,
Umted
States' team of Ia
6-3 , Terry Holl aday beat
boxers
wtll compete m
Kate Latham 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 and
Norwa~, Sweden and DenJanet Newberry whtpped
mark Jan 29-Feb 6, the
Nancy Yeargan 7-5, 6-4
PHILAuELPHIA - Top- Amateur Athlettc Unt on
•eeded Jtmmy Connors announced Wednesda;
The Amertcans, coa ched by
blasted Enk van Dtllenll-1 GSam
Hickm an
of
1 and Argentma' s Guillermo
Philadelphta,
are
Vtlas ousted Buster Mottram
Ray Loathman, Knoxvtlle
of Brttatn 6-4, 6-3 to advance
Tenn
, lt9 pounds , Henry
to the thtrd round of the
Contreras,
Tucson , Anz, and
$250,000 U S Pro Indoor
John
Russell,
Molme, Ill , I~
Tenms Champtonshtps
pounds,
Darrell
Chambers,
John McEnroe, the recent
Detroit,
and
Pat
Jefferson.
winner of the $100,000 Grand
Spearftsh,
S
D.,
132
pounds.
Prix Masters, also advanced ,
Mtll
McCroy,
Detrott,
139
besting Stan Smtih 7-a, 6-1
pounds
,
Albert
Mtll
s,
while Vitas Gerulattts
Platnfteld,
N
J
,
and
Jeff
defeated Yugoslavta's Zeljko
LeMatr, Stoux Falls, S D ,
Franulovtc 6-'1, 6-1
147
pounds
In other matches, Ha10ld
Also,
Lonme Horn, Molin e,
Solomon whtpped Andrew
Ill
,
I
&gt;6
pounds, Monte
Pattison of South Afrtea, 6~.
Oswald,
Grand
Raptds ,
6-3; Pat DuPre outlasted
Mtch.,
and
Mtke
Grogan,
Australian Cohn Dtbley 3-6, 76, 7~; George Hardie upset Atlanta, Ga , 165 pounds,
12th-seeded Ihe Nastase of Russell Spears, Nashvtlle,
Romania 7-5, 4-6, 6-4 , Geoff Tenn.. and Ron Hutchms,
Masters of Australia sur- New York, 178 pounds, and
prised eighth-seeded Corrado James Smtih, Phtladelphta,
Barazzut\1 of Italy 5-7, ll-3 , 6-3 and Bruce Blatr, Sea Isle, N
and No. !().seeded Arthur ·J , heavywetghts
Ashe edged Marty Riessen 6- Tht s wtll be the thtrd
straight year that an
t, H. 6-4
America n team has made a
BOWLING
Scandmavtan
tour In 1977,
GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas
the
lJ
S
squad
comptled a 40'
- Loute Moore, who has
8
record,
and
last year the
earned money only once in
Amen
cans
went
38-13
three prev10us tournaments

a ga me post pon e d

earlier thts season bccCJusc ,of
had v. cathcr
At So uth"e stern Codch sophomores Scott Bussell

KC girls beat Southern teJlm
The Ky ge r Cree k g&gt;rl s
basket ball t ea m \\On ti s
fourth g(;tme m seven bt arts
Wedne sda; mght, 40 1.1 over
Southern
J udy Dorst led the ~mners

w1lh 18 pomts wh1le Gloria
Amos had ntne 1 Smith
pa ced Sout hern "tth I I
pomts
Weather pcrm1ttmg, KC
tru vels to
ev emng

" 1'h1s IS the way I operate, ·
he sa1d "I've got to know the

H &lt;.~nnan Tr &lt;~cc

Sale Price '9675

Due to th$ nature of this sale, all prices will be_In
effect for a _limited time onl")#•
5 PM Thursday, 1/25/79 thru Saturday 1/27/79

RIVE~SIDE-

AMC-JEEP

UPPER ROUTE 7
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

446-9800

., _

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES
Tue5day Tnplicate

Ba ker

Hnd

v. cst crn 's offense

K}'gc r l r~Jck Will ti y to
snJp a fo ur game l ostng
~1. 1 eak ag,nnst CoJ ch Catl
Wolfe s To rn e~ doe ~ The
Bob c c~t s

hd\IC bcLn pla vmg m

bad luck

thvir ]al)t two
\\ ere a one
pomt dJsu ppomtcr to East ern
m &lt;tn O\ crtlmc and JU!:.1.
'I ucsda \ mght a t\·\ o-pomt
le&lt;~g uc

UJ

lossc1i

lo ss at North Ca lha

Von I a) lor scmor for
\\,ml lOnt1 mu·s to be one of
thl' INrg uc ~ t op potnt producers He had 22 pomts
&lt;~ gd Lnst the l'lrcites
Nort h (Jalli &lt;~ o \Cr) un P' ed 1ctable club thi S fall
goes to Wahoma The Ptratcs
o~n 1-5 O\ t.:ra ll and ~ 2 Ln the
SVAl
Nt. IIS has been led b1 the

'I Ul.SA , Ok la I AP I - fh e

SV AC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
W L P OP

Tulsa inks
midfielder

1 ulsd Roughnecks of the Tea m
North Amcn c an Sor cc r So uq1ern

mdivtdual as much as pos-

Eos l ern

7
7

3 728 592
4 653 662

Southwestern

5 7 746 7.'ll

North Gall til
Kyg er Creek
Hannan Tr flcc

2 10 682 771

Sible "
It tsn't only th e pla; ers he
wants to know He'll be
wa lkm g out to home plate for

League Wednesday Signed a
2l·)ear-old m1dhelder from
the Enghsh fir st diVISion to a

U1e first ::;wmg arow1d the
ledgue on ce the reg ul ar
ba seball season gets under

SVAC ONLY
Steve Po" ell , 5-foot-9. 154
W l
P OP
pounds, has played over 150 Team
Eas!ern
6 0 -113 345

wa;
That wa y I II ge t

1979 loan contract

first dtv1s1on games fOJ

Count; 's duiJ sa1d
w know DerlJ)
Pete S1mon Rough necks
he satd

th e new umpires,
He adm1ts to havmg had a

publlctst
As n loan player Powe ll

few run-ms w1th umpu es durmg

)H s

'v\

days as manager at

Oakland and later at San
Di ego
tale stgn of fury IS his fa ce
McNamara pomts out that

th e fourth Engh sh fu st
dtv1 s1on pl&lt;l} er

he will have a so lid nucleus to

Southern
5 1 152
South,.\estcr n
J 3 J63
Nnr th Ga ll1 ~'i
3 2 344
Kyger Creek
0 5 278
Hannan Tra ce
0 6 307
SVAC RESERVES

Tea m

W L P OP

North Gn ll 1a

Eastern
Kyger Cr ee k
H.=~nnan Trace
Southwestern

6

0 358 228

5 0 301 164
J 2 274 26'1
I 4 188 '160

1 5 235 287
0 6 170 325

stgned by

Sparky

Anderson
" Mter all, we have seven of

WRESTLING SCHEDULE
MCJgs Marauder wrestling

th e B1g Etghl starters back,
and 1t's not too shabby to
start oul w1th men like
.Johnn; Bench, Joe Morgan,

schedule ts as follows

Jan 25, I 30 at Tr~mbl e,
J an 30, 1tentat1ve 1 at Pomt
Pleasant, 7 30 p m , Feb 3,

Dan
Drtessen,
Dave
ConcePcmn, George Foster ,

10 a m

nament , Feb

Geron un o, ts tt'1" ' he sa1d

tournament at Metgs all da y,
fmals at 7 30 p m

One questwn mark w111 be
at lhtrd base, where the Reds

LOWEREU
THE COST OF
CARPET CLEANING

NOW RENT

at Ironton, tour-

Ken Gnffey and Cesa r

17, league

are loo king for someon e who

can replace Pete Rose, who
ha s gone to Phtladelphta The

LOWER
RATES

team also will need someone 1

who can approach Rose' s !

success as a lead-&lt;&gt;ff htller
' I'm looking for someone
who ca n get oo base a lot, by
h1Utng or walkmg , someone
who w11I be pattent at bat /'

sa1d McNamara, bst mg Griffey, Morgan and Con cepe ton
as In s best prospects to lead
off the Reds lmeup.
As fm 11ho w11ltake over at
Umd. McNamara admttled
U1at Hay Kru gh\ 1s the lop
mnd1date
Kmght IS the No I man r-:~====
n ghl now, no doubt about 1t,
and he's got the JOb unless
somebodv beats him out ,"
WMPO
1

Casey Kasem

MeNa mat a Sdld .

SATURDAYS
til Noon
,L....__ o _
---

Do-d your .. t~lf
and get professron al

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ACCESSORIES

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MOREl

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Located on W Va s.tde of
Pomeroy Ma son
Bndge
(3041 773 5777

Standtngs

Roya l Oak Park

32
24
20

12

Robert Rob1e Cons f .
8
Doug's Man ne Sales
0
Htgh lnd Game - Oebb1e
Hawley 197, Sharon Hensley
193

H1gh Se r1 es -

Debbie

Hawl e y 5\30 Bel ly Sm&lt;lh 498
Team ftlgh GAme ' Reuter Brogan Ins 536
Team Hrgh Ser1es
Fnendly Ta vern 1.167
I'

335
419
313
326
508

'l ulsa this season

help him m his fir st yea r as
to

5 642 628

0 ll 5811 899

wh1ch • Southern

Terms of the agreement
were not disclosed Pow ell 1s

He says h1s personal tell-

s uccessor

111 arrtve about a month mto

th e NASI season
llcgms m Aprtl

4

'\

Team
Reuter Brogan Ins
Fnendly Taver n
Royal Crown Cola "

Da le

pro\ tdc Sout h·

oubide shootm g of Si:t m
Smith scwor guard c.111d the
msaiL' cffot1 s of b 2 senior
u:nlcr Tnn Md omas a nd
for \\&lt;ird Std CC} Wm:-;ton

MOREl

Jan. 16, 1979

I odd

NC \\bern

tht s

power ta1lqate wmdow. " Loaded"

Full Slicker Pme sto,914 95

10

second place m the SVA C'
standmgs l11 c ~hghl and ers
dropped to thi rd behi nd
Southern

McNamara doing homework

week " I've been readmg up

or

MEIGS PLAZA

Wi::IS

dunn g
a
speakm g
engagement 1n Dayton thts

BLACK
WHITE

ACE HARDWARE

\)ay t on

b1ggest surpn sc m ot her

play and Jl~ overall , made games mvolvmg Ohto teil ms,
on!; four other trtes from the . falling 78-72 at home to a
Western Kent u&lt; ky team
hne all rught
Val Bracey's three-pomt whi ch h1! a school record 78
play w1th 41 seconds left percent of 1ts shots and an
made the score 77-74 and was arnaztn g 87 percenl m the
:he key for the Chippewas second hall
''They JUS! played a perfect
Leadmg scorers wer e Dave
Grauzer of Centra l Mtchtgan game," Dayoon Coach Doo
Wl\h ~ pomts and Marcus Donoher sa1d after watchm g
Newbern With 20 for Bowling his team fall U&gt; 13-'1 H1s
Green, 4-3 m the MAC and !(). counterpart, Gene Keady of
Western Kentucky, sa1d the
6 on the season
vtctory
,"was one of those
Burrell McGhee 's free
games
we
weren't supposed
throw wtth SIX seconds left
to
wtn
and
we really needed
gave Kent State tis second
tr1urnph m s1x MAC games 1t." addmg that a loss "wtll
and a 7-9 overall log The help Dayton wake up "
Greg Jackson scored 19
~1a sh es won desp1\e blowmg
a 14-pom\lead, whtch caused pomts for the Hlllloppers, 9-6,
Ken\ State Coach Ed Douma who played a stall offense tn
to say, "We haven 't learned the second half, httlmg only
how to play w1lh a lead the open man after takmg a
because we haven 'I had one 45-34 halft1me lead . J tm
Paxson's 20 pmn ts, mcluding
hke that yet "
McGhee's 32 points led all 18 m the f1rst half, oopped
scorers M1am1 ts 3-4 m Dayton
While Dayton was bemg
league play and 6-11 overall
Paul Dawkins scored 24 upset, Xavter was surprtsmg
pomts as Northern !lltnots Detroit. snappmg a s1x-game
broke a ftve.game losmg T1tan wmmng str eak w1th a
de ctslon
The
streak, advanced tis overall i4-70
record to 5-11 and won tis ftrst Musketeers dommated the
conference game m seven board s, holding a 52-2o
tr1es Western M1ch1gan has reboundmg edge, but th ey
an tdentical MAC mark and ts a\so lerl 1R-!i 1n tnrnnvPrS to
4-15 overall

• Ma rntenance free

·i n the news

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - The Statler Brothers, the
Country Music Association's chotce for top vocal group
from 1972 to 1977, have a few words for Pittsburgh
Steelers' quarterback Terry Bradshaw.
They wrote this poem after Bradshaw was named
most valuable player in Sunday's Super Bowl:
"In the annals of the 100-yard goal
"There was a quarterback wtth perfect control
"He was the ftrst to wm three
"In football history
"And now it's called
"The Bradshaw Bowl."

Mu·ht~an,

Central
5-l m conference

BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME
Why paint or repair shutters

Names •••
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Susan Perktns will marry
a Gillette Co executive she met durmg her retgn as Miss
Amenca 1978.
Mtss Perkins satd she Wtll wed Gtllette executive Alan
Botsford tn the Harvard Universtty chapel in Cambridge,
Mass., May 26.
She met Botsford last year while tourmg the
headqunrters of the Boston-based razor company, a
sponsor of the Miss American Pageant.
A Middletown, Ohio native, the 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld Miss
Perkins was a legtslative assistant U&gt; Ohio Senate
Republicans before being named Miss America m
September 1977.

mmute of play

CHECK OUR PRICES
BEFORE YOU
BUY I
•

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TIRE SALES
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

�,.

a-The Daily Sentinel, Middi•·:Mlrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, .Jan. 25, 1!1'19
4 ~ The

Daily Sentinel, Middlepm1-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan . 25. W7!1

'· '

1

\tlll'-. d·" ~ ~

W oo~y trib·u te Reds seeking leadoff hitter

II llh.wlli,I II S

.
One Man's Opinion of Woody
• 'l)lere's football and there 's Woody,
Now that man ... knew the game;
A long time ago he moved to Columbus,
And brought them football fame .

MONTHEA L EXPOSSignl'd Stephen Roeder,
infit•lllt&gt; r, to a minor league

COLUMBUS I AP I - John '
i\t1('Nalllara, n4,.:w mamtgeJ. of
Uh.: l'me innati H N is , \\'CIS
ash·d if he Will rni s~ hm'ing
I \!h.' HoSt' on his bast'ball
ti 'Gilll .

·· 1 nt&gt;ver had Hose on my
team. so whctt you don't have,
you don't miss," McNamara
answered wit.h a slight grin .
Hose enlered the free agent
(lraft and signed with. the
Philadelph ia Phillies about
thC'
li1p e
t h~t
T nl~n

The crowd would cheer fit each good play ,
You should have heard that noise;
The fans meant a lot The cheers would give them poise.
He lost a few, but then again
He won a whole lot more·
They say he has a temper,
But then,. to me he'snwnber one, for sure .

bi:l!5Cnl ttn .

" I'm look,ing for someone
who can ge t on base a lot , by

-~-

cart··Miller
lly I;E()KGE STRODE
i\ P Spurts Writer

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP J And there's Archie you know,
Coach Eldon· Miller carries
Two times he was the .king;
no ad ded worries just
Without Woody's chosen line,
because his surprising Ohio
He. wouldn't have been that king.
'state basketba ll learn has
leap-frogged into th e Big Ten
Now I wrote this down just to show,
Conference lead and No. 10
How I feel and to let ·everyone know;
natiol') a l ranking.
He's gone for a while though sooner or later.
"Somebody has to worry
In the pros-he'll win again, maybe even with the Raiders.
about where you are," said
Richard Friley Miller of the Buckeyes' IHl
P.O. Box 335 league start, their best sin ce
Pomeroy, Ohio 992-5596 the glory years of 1962. That
year Jerry Lu cas a nd
Company won lh eir first . J2
conference games.
Miller does noI subscribe to
the th eory there is an extra
burden once you attain the
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
Big Ten lead . The Buckeyes
LEAGUE BOYS' BASKETBALL STATISTICS
have a two-game cushion on
I Includes g•mesof Jan. 20)
the
other
co nferen ce
TEAM STATISTICS
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
contenders going into a game
FGM· FGA PCT. with Norlhwestern tonight.
TEAM
.533
217 -407
Waverly
" Not if you 're approaching
.471
202-429
Logan
.470 things properly. You just do
225-579
Wel lston
.457
226-495
Athens
the best you can do every
.439 game . And this team .has
237·540
Ironton
. 421
192-456
Gallipol is
.386 been doing that," said Mill er,
109-43a
Meigs
189-495
.382 who has the · Buckeyes on
Jackson
FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
their longesl winning streak
FTM-FTA PCT . in eight years. The 1971 team
TEAM
.697
101-145
Logan
.637 won 11 games in a row _
79-124
Waver ly
Will it be a problem ge tting
.630
87-138
Gallipolis
.622 aroused for the visil!ng WildMeig s
I~~ ;~:
. 596
Athe ns
.594 rats, whose ~ and 4·11
79·133
Ironton
.579 records are just the reverse
62-107
Wellston
of the Buckeyes'!
.555
106·l9l
Jackson
REBOUNDS
"The onl y thing we ha ve to
NO. G AVG . be concerned with is getting
TEAM
a
39.a
318
Ironton
36.4 better,'· answered Miller .
a
291
Waverl y
290 a
36.J " Som e peopl e m Rv ht=&gt;
Gal lipolis
.. , 2a3
8
35.4
At hens
a
34.0
272
Wellston
245
a
30.6
Logan
B
.,Q ,9
239
Jackson
192
8
..:4.0
Meigs
PERSONAL FOULS
NO. G AVG.
TEAM
121 a
15.9
Jackson
Waverl y
12a
a
16.0
Meigs
128
8
16.0
Athens
138
a
17.3
143 .. ,8
Gallipolis
17.9
Wellston
144
8
18.0
Logan
145
8
18.1
19.3
Ironton
154
a
INDIVLOUAL LEADERS
,
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
NAME , TE'AM
FGM-FG/1 PCT.

SEO cage statistics

Gor don, Waverly
Ste g er , Wa11erly
C lark , ~~

.45· 73
28- 49
-~

.616
.57 1

42- 74

.571
.568

Ja mes, Ironton

60-109

.550

Holsinger, Waverl y

FREE THROW PERCENTAGE
NAME , TEAM
FTM.FTA PCT.
34-37
.919
Lehman, Logan
Becker , Me igs
30-38
.789

Bruning , Athens
Gordon , Waverly

18-24
22·32

.750
.688

D. Evans, Jackson

38-57

.661

G

AVG.

NAME , TEAM

to rcplt~ l ~ · Spetrkv Anc!P r.'&gt;un
a.'i ltHtnagt_-•r of th e HedS .
1-:ven if Ml·N atnar~:~ llt'Ve r
had B os~ on his tea m, he
knows what the former team
l'aptain meant t.Q the Reds ,
Hi s departure has launched
a hunt for a new lead-&lt;lff
hitter and a new third

Do best you

You may not think like me 'Cause I think he 's the best,
For to play his team, no matter who ,
Was surely a great big test.

REBOUNDS

Gordon , Waverly

NO.
88

8

11.0

Cla rk, Gallipolis

83

a

10.4

Gordon . Ironton
Swonger , Wellston

77

7
8

9.6
9.0

7'2

Clark, Logan
69
a
a.6
To be included among individual leaders . a player must

ha.ve made an average of three field goals per game played by
hi s team and-or attempted an average of three free throws per
game~f!layed by his .t.~-~m .

Campbell named Cup

1\.\ SEII,\1.1.

deceived by Nort hwestern 's
record . We better not. Th ey
c·a n play."
Ohio State has been near l~
in vin c ible at home thi s
se&lt;:.~son ,
los in g on ly to
Washing ton Sta t e i n six
a ppea ran ces in St . John
Arena . Meanwhil e, Northwe~te rn is 3-6 on the r oad .
The Wildcats' last away
game resulted in· a 74-55
drubbing from Indiana, the
Bu cke yes ' guest Sa lurday
night.
Kelvin Hansey, a 6-fool -1
junior guard, has r eplaced
Iowa's Ron Lester as the Big
Ten sroring leader with 137
poinls, two mor e than the
Hawkeyes' standout .
Hans ey 's · 46- g ame
co nsecutive double fi gure
slreak is the fifth longest in
sc hool
history.
Dave
Sorenson holds th e record of
61 games in ·a row: Ransey
ca rri es a team-leading 23.1
poirlt average.
Hoo ki e Northwestern
Coach Rich Falk thought hi s
team could fini sh in the Big
Ten' s fi rst di visio n this
se ason . But injuries and
grade woe~ have eliminat,ed
those lofty ambilions.
Falk has lost 6-7 freshman
.Jim Stack with a torn knee
ligament. Brian Jung , a 7-foot
transfer from Arizona , is still
hobbled with a back injury .
Bob Grady, a 6-7 fr eshman, is
academically ineligible.

w1ll1 men like .I ohnny He11 ch,

l,,c Mor·ga n. Dan Dries.'ie n,

Concepc ion, George
l··os ll'r. Ktt n Griffey a nd
Ct · s~1 r
(i e ron i rn o,''

·

ST. LO UIS CAH DI NA I.S-

lla v~.·

Na mcd Fred Mc1\lis t er
specia l assignment scout.

~

I ' OLI .EC.~;

HOCHESTF.R

INST ITUDE

OF TECH-NOLOGY - Named

Hay mond .Rostan . head
lacrosse coach.

THIS YEAR
GET INTO A
NEW HOMEI ·

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Pomeroy, 0 .

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AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER
WITH AUTO·MAGIC®
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~

.:1411

1:1

17

34

.:IJJ

H

161
185
197
219
146
lSI

146
162
120
185
163
205

173

Midwest Dlvhduu
28 .J9
Kansas City
.5!Hi
Denver
26 24
.52U . 3' ,
Milwaukee
22 28
.HO
• Chicago
18 29
.38:1
Indiana
17 30
.362
i'acifle DMslo9
Seattle
2!J l :;
.6:i9
Los Angel es
30 16
.625
I
Phoenix
29 19
.604
2
Golden State
:&gt;.'l 25
.479
8
San Diego
22 26
.458
9
Portland
20 24
.45$
9
Wednesday's Games
Washington 128, Boslon 106
Cleveland 123, New J~rsey 114
San Antonio 124, Kansas City 95
Houston 117, Denver 116
Phoenix 101, Philadelphia 94
San Diego 122, Portland 121
Golden state 126, New York 123
Thursday's Games
Seattle at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Detroit
Golden State at Portland
Friday's Games
New Orleans vs. New Jersey at Princeton, N.J.
Boston at Indiana
Seattle at San Antonio
San Diego at Chicago
Washington at Kansas City
Los Angeles at Denver
New York at Phoenix
Philadelphia at Golden State
- -World Hockey Association
.. W L T Pis GF GA
Quebec
24 14 4 52 165 135
New England
20 14 6 46 163 141
Winnipeg
20 17 6 46 168 160
Edmonton
22 17 o 44 158 "130
CinciMati.
19 22 ~ 43 IGG 185
Blnningham
16 24 3 35 1~3 177
Wedaesday's Game
WiMipeg 5, Cincinnati 5, tie, OT
Tbunday's Games
No games scheduled
Friday's Games
New England at Birmingham
Cincinnati at Edmonton

Ry Will f.rimsh•y
A JI

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panel s p i L~ quality sound ! 35 watts pe r chan nel . minill"um RMS at Bohm s from 20-20.000

..,.,
.,·,

SEO,.\L Standings
Ports mouth

12
9
9
Pt. Pleasant
7
Waverly
9
Washing. CH 9
Gallipolis
7

dis tortion . Auto -Magi c locks in FM for lowest
di stort ion . Gl1de ·Pa1 h® volume / ba lance controls . EO s witch for recording Dolby' FM . A
s uper bu y now only a t Th e Shack ®! UL L1s te d.
"TM o f D ol l)y L.tbl. Inc
31 -2061

DAYTON, Ohio tAP) Sparky Anderson says he was
joking
about
someone
erecting a monument to him
at Riverfront Stadium in
Cincinnati.
He was serious, he said,
aliout wanting the record of
having the longest 'tenure of
any manager in Cincinnati
Reds history.
Anderson tied for the
record, but never got a
chance to break it because he

Wednesday's College
Basketball Scores

"·
·'·

,,
"
•'/V

·-

• Two Realistic Opr ifm1s • - 7 d Floo r / Shelf

Spenkets in Walnut Veneet Cabinets

•. Re~fl~ tic LAB -65 "treJr'·Dtive Changer with
Base . Dust CDver afld $29 ,95-Value

By The Associated Press
EAST
American 94, Drexel 76
Boston St. 76, Brandeis 75
Cheyney St. 93, Millersville

tlan 43
Texas Tech 70, Houst on 68
WEST
Cent. Washington 6L Seattle
Pacllic 58

St . 61

Colorado 82, Missouri 69

,

Rider 82, Delaware 81

Rochester Tech 71, Alfred 68

St. Bonaventure 93, Canisius

CHARGE IT
!MOST STORES!

·

St. Lawrence 111, Clarkson 84
St. Peter 's 82, Niagara 70
Scranton 94, Delaware Vly 88
Syracuse 78, Temple 76, OT

Wagner 103, Siena 86
SOUTH
Campbell 89, N. Carolina
Central 77
Clemson 64, Furman 58
Davidson 87 , The Citadel 72
Duke 84, Virginia 66

,~·, .d ~ .~ Aljiftl;s-t\t'~{t( RECORD/PLAY .SY~TEM

Georgia 59, Mississippi 53
Old Dominion 75, James
Madison 65

by Realistic

Logan

4 686 627
5 680 624
• 6 603 581
4 8 729

889

Ravenswood

2 S

443

Wellston

Meigs
Jackson

''••

.'•'

..

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Ch 9 or Hig hway lnformal ion ' Ch 19 . Drive with less
worry! 2'1 '•1531

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RADIO SHACK 'S RfiWSTIC AVCliO Wv£ W&lt;'S fSTAIIt.JSHtD IN IJ64 . CB IN 196'0

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-1~~--~--------------~------------~~--,

'
,..,.
,. ,
' I&lt;\

ne1ghborhood
'.

!( A DIVIS ION OF lANDY CORPORATION.

Denver 85, Colorado Col. 55

Fresno St. 66, Pacific 56

San Francisc r 75

Clara 74-

Santa

will last nine years anymore ,
Anderson said.
.
" It's just a different era,"
Anderson said. "If YQU don't
win one year, you have to be
concerned about your job . I
felt that t in Cincinnati) as
long as I continued to ·work
and as long as I was honest, I
never .had to worry.
"Well, I found out that we
won 92 ball games wilh a club
that was totally riddled t with
injuries), we were sixth in
hitting at the end of the year
and ninth in pitching and we
still ended up 2'1z games
behind the (Los Angeles)
Dodgers. I thought it was our
greatest how-.
"I remember teUing the
coaches and I remember
telling 1Reds broadcaster 1
Marty Brennaman at the end
of the year.
,
"I said, 'Marty, nobodywill
realize this because in
Cincinnati, they expect you to
win, but this is the finest job
the coaching staff and myself
have done since we've been
here .' And with that, I was
fired ."

2 9 652 844
2 10 740 945

Non-league results :

10% OFF .

Ironton
Athens

71 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

''!•l!Uil•jj't\ \2 t J,!,l!fll•iSti \]. . _t.;J~

,wrrnr7nf.~·~·.~
· ~_';

Waverly
Gallipolis
Logan
Wellst on
Jackson
Meigs
TOTALS

1

646

451

432

7 2 554
5 4 522
J 5 505
3 5 492
. , 8 551
0 8 440
34 34 4252

410
470
482
616
750
641
4252

I

as far nowadays,
George!

..--· ' ..
."

-and we're doing
something about itthat's why nobody
can affqrd to mis·s

INGELS

P OP

7 1 542

ALL PURCHASES
OF
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Thi s a ppli es lo Cas h &amp; Carry Only

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Off er Good Jan . 24 and 27 , 1979

t Tuesday!

Wl

PH. 992-264 4

DOLLAR PAYS SPECIAL

Port smouth 85 Russell 55
Pt . Pleasant 4_8 VInton County

SEOAL

,

CROSS HARDWARE

Tuesday' s results :
Gallipolis 51 Waverl y 41
Ironton 93 JacKson 67

SEOAL RESERVES
Toam
W L P OP
Ironton

7 2 372

Alhens
Gallipolis
Logan

6 2 406 310
6 3 331 297
5 l 351 300

Waverly

Jackson
Wellston
Meigs
TOTALS

s

4 ..t03

J 6 397
2 6 290
0 8 249
!4 34 2799

Tuesday's results :

333

lor any 3/ 3 size

headboard (wood only)

359

1.

maple, walnul, wMe.

425
359
416
2799

With iJUrthase of

any sleep set.

Gallipol is 37 Waverly_ 30
Ironton .46 Jackson 29

Friday's games :

for any Zenith
AM clock
radio with
any Zenith TV.

Athens at Ga llipolis
Ironton at Logan
Jackson at Me igs

Wellston at Waverly

Portsm out h at Ru ssell
Washing ton CH at Teays

Valley
Saturdily'5 games :
Mariella at Athens
Nels -York at Logan
Gilmer County at Raven·
swood
Waverly at Ironton

for any fashion
lamp up to •40
with purchased
any three
accent tables

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RIGHT FROM THE FARM.

for any lamp
tabl$ up to t79
with purchase
of any pair
of accent chairs

Richmond 90, VMI 78
S. Ca rollna 87 , Georgia So. 81
Vanderblll 57, Florida 56
Virginia Commonwealth 67,
William &amp; Mary ~

W. Carolina 56. E . Tennessee

Sl . 54
. .
W; VIrginia St. BL Concord 80
Wheeling 71, Falrmonl St. 69
MIDWEST
Buller 83, Loyola , Ill . 75
Cameron 63, NW Oklahoma
¥1

Cent . Michigan 81, Bowling
Green ·16 .
.
E. Cent. Oklahom a 47, SE
Oklahoma 41
E. Illinois al St . Joseph's ,
Ind .. pix!., snow
E. Michigan 87, Ball St . 82
Illinois Sl. 88, Valparaiso 67
Kalamazoo

82.

WE DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DON'T DO

~.· · "-

I

Kansas Sl . 77 , Oklahoma St .
73, OT
Louisville 80, St . Louis 65
Miami, 011io 62, Kent St. 59
Nebraska 74, Oklahoma 56
No. Illinois 76, w. Michigan 60
Noire Dame 85, Fordham 53
Oberlin 93, Den Ison 68
SW Oklahoma 68 , NE '

Toledo 79, Ohio U. 67
Ktnlucky. 78, Dayton 72
Xavier. 0111o 74, Detro it 70
SOUTHWEST
,
Arkansas 79, Soulhern
. Methodist 67
Arkansn-Little Roc.k . 73,

w.

'

for any accent ·
chair up to •50
with purchase of
any liv!!19 room
1u1te or sectional

IT~"

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Arkansas St .
Mlsolsslppl 60

for any coclktail
table up to '79
with pun:hase of
sofa, loves eat
or sleeper-sola

Indiana ·

Purdue 71

Grambling~

'79

Bring your family to the Bob
Evans Farms Sausage Shop. Here
you'll find homey atmosphere, warm
friendly smiles and all the whole·
some goodness and hearty eating
you'll need to get you through the
chill of winter. Come see us soon
and often.

Kansas 80, ·towa St. 71

1·:y

' '.

415

IIi

Louisiana St . 77, Tennessee 75

56

,_

447

4 77 1 593

FLORIST

71

Loyola, Nd. 57, Catholic 55
MI . St. Mary's 65 , Baltimore

"•

2 522

623
3 815 615

.
!!

St. Francis, N. Y. 87, Adelphi

• Realistic STA -~5 AM I FM Ret: e:·vel

ACCESSORIES

648

Wi::lrd

77

·~
; ...

Modulette® ~808

Texas 77, Baylor 76
TeKas A&amp;J 57, Te)llas Chris-

La Salle 100, Verm,ont 88
.. !jawaii-Hilo 106. BYU -Hawail
64 ,
Layfayelle 79 , Leh1gh 63
Messiah 100, Johns Hopkins Oregon Tech 71, Portland St.
84
69
Penn St. 54, Duquesne 49
Re&lt;llands 90, LaVerne 61

.

'

was fired during the
offseason and replaced by
.John McNamara.
"If I had.spent one day in
1979, I would have been the
longest in the history of
Cincinnati up to that point one
day over
(Bill)
McKechnie. And believe me,
nobody's ever gonna top
McKechnie an&lt;l my record of
nine . We're tied. "
There probably won't be
any managers anywhere who

Cage Scores

Reg . Separate llems Price 759ao
,-, .

"

0 853
2 737

1101 '1\1: \'
\trh ·ni-au Hm •kt '_\ l..t·agut•
M :ll' H.\VI·:l" 1\: IC:HT·
II I \I'KS Traded .lim Trov
ri~ht wtng , to 'Philade lphi~
t \Jil. 1 fur Hon 1'11druff. 'for-

~our dollar doesn't go

ALL GAMES
W L P OP

Athens
Ironton

I hit1411t nplc s, 41:i doubles, 169 hom e runs . I batted .300 and
knol'kt·d in 1_:!0 ~ runs I picked them up when they counted .
" I think my record is better than that of Ralph Kiner, Hoy
Ca111panclla. l·:ddi&lt;' Mathews and some of the others. 'fake
l\i11cr . li e played ouly 10 y&lt;·ars . He had just 39 tr iples and 216
rluuhlcs. Hr hit369 homers. but batted only .279. The woods are
'full of people like him .
"I think on&lt;' reason I didn' t ma ke 1t is thatl never played on
the West Coast . The writers out there don't know me. I played
before expans ion ."
Slaughter , who joined the Ca rdinals io 19:!8, and finished
with the Milwaukee Braves in 1959 with three years in mililary
servil-e, said he considered the 1942 Cardinals the greatest
team he ever saw, even sup erior to the Yankees of th al period .
He said he doesn't regret having played before the current era
of million dollar sa laries.

ppnd

Monument talk not serious

H z W i i~l r:o more than 0 .3% total harmonic

$549. C~J0/o
'

rnrl't '"i1ll 1JIIIt•l\l

HUXI!URO, N.C. !API - Enos "Country" Slaughter , still
leather-tough and actiVe at age 62, hauls himsef in fr om a hard
day' s work on his 2110-acre tobacco farm, settles in a soft chair
and thumbs through tho baseball record book .
"Why?", he asks himself over and over agin. " Why '! Why'?
Why?."
.
Then he 'II turn to his wife or another member of hi s family
and read off some figw-es. ·
"Look, " he'll say. "My record is better than an.l' of these.
What have they got against me? I wish I knew · ·
The Slaughter's modest household was fun~real when word
came out of New York Tueaday that Willie Mays alone had
been elected to baseball's Hall of Fame and the name of Enos
Slaughter - as had been the case year after year in recent
ballotmg - had agam fallen short of election.
·
Now the rugged, strong-bitting oufielder of the St. Louis
Cardinals in the period before and after World War 11 has
passed !~milepost of eligibility by the baseball writers a~ he
must wait five years foc special consideration by the Veterans
Committee.
Slaughter feels he has been done an injustice- and he ha s.
He deserved a better fate .
"I think I may still get in someday, but it's not the same " he
said bitterly. "It takes the cream off the co!lee not t~ be
picked by the writers. Ne-w maybe I will be dead when 1 am
picked. That's not much 'consolation for my family ."
In a vote of 432 members of the Baseball Writers Association
of America, Slaughter failed to gain the 75 percent required for
election, missing by only '!I votes. Last year, he missed by 24 .
. "I gave my lifeblood for baseball - 19 years of it. My record
1s betler than a lot of the guys who got in. Nobody played the
game harder than I did. Few had a better allaround record .

Team

l&gt;t•ltt · . · ~:d tht llall uf Fumt· as dominated by

1!lww;r Uwn 1111 ohility.
" Tiw1 1-' :-. murt to play in~-: bHseball tha n hitting horne runs,"
he :-.aid . · ·\sk anybody Who r emembers. I could riin and throw .

Western C..:uofert..•u(·t•
GA
.11!1
164
140
166

llt~

i11lht' J·:a:-it. wh•• put marl' r mpl1asts on hoine runs and

Rock Hill 66 Wellston 61

BUY AN STA-85 SYSTEM
NOW AND SAVE 210 80

PHONE 173-9128 ·

HARDWARE

2:1

~~111 er s

Washington 60 M -Pia ins 52
Ravenswood -Tyler
County,

lana 97, Fairfield 89

.,•.....,. 9 A.M.-5 P .M .

EBERSBACH

.5:11
12ti

16

2i
Jl

Sl:u,_
c,!;f"l . . :tid

~

43

Cincinnati 79 , W. Virginia 65

2nd - BROWN ST.
MASON, W. Va .
OPEN TUES.
• THURS. &amp; Sat.

•SPLiniNG
WeDGES

2!1
20

'

-..
..

..

•

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'"

Appointment Available But Not NecesSary

Atlanta
l'lcveland
Detroit
New Orleans

National Basketball Association
AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
Easlero Confereuee
AllanUc Division
.. W L
Pet. GB
Washington
32 14
.696
Philadelphia
'!I 16
.628
3%
New-Jersey
21 21
.500
9
New York
22 'l:t
.449 II%
Boston
16 30
.348 16
Central Division
.617
29 18
San Antonio
Houston
27 19
.587

LOGGER'S

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio. (AP) Snow storms cut the
attendance to 856 Wednesday ·
nighl at Lebanon, but the
handle totaled $68,625.
Kay Krell won the $1,100
claiming pace in the eighth
race, paying $13.60, $8.20 and
$7.60.
Besta Money was second,
returning $2.60 and $2.20, and
Honorable Miss, third, paid
$2.80.
Adios Win combined 2-1
with Yankee W.W. · in the
double for $25.40. 1

Pro Hockry at a Glanr•·
Nallonal Hockey League
By The AssOt·laled Press
Campbell Conference•
Patrick Division
.. W L T Pia GF
N.Y . Islanders ~ 6 9 71 214
N.Y. Rangers
211 16 5 ,57 193
Phila~elphla
22 IS 11 5:; 108
Atlanta
25 I9 4 54 191
Smythe Division
Chicago
17 21 8 42 140
Vancouver
16 26 6 31 145
Colorado
10 jJ 7 '!I 134
st. Louis
10 32 7 '!/ 140
Wales Conlereuce
Adams Dlvislou
Boston
30 10 7 67 197
Toronto
20 19 9 49 153
Buffalo
18 16 11 47 151
Minnesota
16 23 7 39 144
Norris Division
Montreal
31 9 7 69 193
Los Angeles
20 21 6 46 171
Pittsburgh
19 20 8 46 164
Washington
15 26 7 37 159
Detroit
9 25 13 31 140
Wednesday's Games
Washington 5, New York Rangers 1
Toronto 2, Minnesota 2, tie
Los Angeles 4, Pittsburgh 1
Chicago 5, Vancouver 0
Thursday'• GameR
New York Islanders at Boston
New York Rangers at Buffalo
Atlanta at Montreal
Pittsburgh at Colorado
Detroit at Los Angeles
Friday's Games
Toronto at Atlanta
st. Louis at Vancouver

'

"'·
'),·

•MAULs ·

STANDINGS

1

t·oal' h.

'I'0( I.. , .

Team

M agnetic Cartridge

league ass umed exclusive
NEW YORK ( AP ) Former National Hockey control of the Cup in 1946.
League president Clate'ilce
Campbell was appointed cotrustee of the stanley Cup by_
Cup trustee Mervyn "Red"
Dutton, the league announce&lt;j ,;
Wednesday.
, .;;
Campbell, who succeeds· •·
the late J . Cooper Smeaton as
a Cup co·Trustee, served as
league president from 1946 to.
1977.
The Stanley Cup, symbolic
of ·the NHL championship,.
was originally • donated by .
Frederick Arthur, Lord
Stanley of Preston, in 1893 for
the purpose of " developing
hockey in Canada." It has
been competed for only by
NHL teams since 1926. The

con lJ'fJCt.

~

:
•

n
...

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

PHONE 992 -3795

l.t·a~ ut•

\J;tlinn a l t~potball Lc agur

TM1PA Bi\Y BUCCANEEHS- Named '&gt; org e
l 'haump o!lensive i,cklield

REALISTIC ". HI-FI -AND
CB BARGAINS
.
NOW AT SIZZLING 27% TO 37% SAVINGS ! ,

H&amp;R BLOCK
618 E. MAIN ST .
POMEROY, O.
Open 9 A.M. to
6 P.M. Weekdays.

r.,u sll itbby to SUirt out

11 "1

fur ti ll' leadoff spot.
A."l for who will tc.~kc uver
M('Narnare~ said.
fr om
H ose
at
thi rd,
The Heds 11ew manager has
McNamara said that Hay i&gt;cco dmng a lot of homework
Knight is the front ~ru nne r . in preparation for the ope nin g
·· Knil!,ht is the No . 1 man of spring traini n ~ next
.. righLnow . no doubt abo ut il. 111unth .
and he's got that · job unless
" I took a sketch boo k ba ck
somebody beats him out ," wiU1 me when l went back to
McNamara said.
winter ba ll in Sa nto
He's got an open mind on Domingo," McNamara said.
who will succeed Rose as "I've been reading up on the
team captain. lle didn't ha ve backgro un d
of
each
one during earlier Jnanagjng 'i ndividual and their stats . l
&gt;tint. at Oakland or San want to ·be able to know all
Diego and he's still not SUI'e if about them when I sit do wn
he wants one in Cincinnati. &lt;;tnq ttllk to them individually
'Til have to talk tO my at Spring training .''
coaches, and then mak e a
McNamara believes that
decision one way or the other by showing interest in the
in Florida," he sap:t., ,
'
!'layers they will look upon
. [)espate
the
loss
of.
Rose,
him as someon e Who1 • is
I
'•
J
'
McNamara talks abg~\ what, ,. concerned.
.., ,,; &gt; '
,the team has going for it this . "Th a i "iS " t H~ -'· ' way · ' 1
season .
operate," he said. "I've got to
"We have seven of the Bi g know ,the individual as much
l•:igh t starters back
and. it's
as possible ."
.
'

We ask the right questions. Wedig for every
l:lonest deduction and credit. We take the
time needed because we want to be sure
you pay the smallest legitimate tax . That's
another reason why H&amp;R Block stibuld do
your taxes .. .whichever form you .u~. short
or long.

9-S Saturday

.~o·trustee

hi tJ ; ,,~ ur walking. SUIIIL'U IIC
wl l•t 1\ dl lw patient at Uat. " ht.•
Si1id . listing Ken (~r iffcy , .)Ot'
Davt!
Mfll'gan
and
CurwrrK:ion as top candidates

M&lt; Ntuu ar;t wa, l&gt;eang nanlL'f.l

rill' .\ ... sn !'i~tlt·d Prt''i:-.

;'\l.tliuna l

'

Knowin' he'd like to win And so do you and I,
He's press his boys and p.1sh them,
He'd get them flying high.
-

~

:~)

·-

• .L.
&gt;OHflMI

S p ur t s

'j'j,,. hurt L" d• 'I'P .

•

I

,,,

�-

-

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Jan. 25, 1979

"

Questionnaire indicates day care needed here
ha~ t&lt;-~k•·n

an llll t'!t ~sl ~ pa r- thl' fnrmt·r· Meigs County
licularly as the prograin ('fin- £'hil•1rl'n'!-i humc Hrc und er
eerns day I'Hrl' -and N;mey r·on~idc rHtl on .
The hope nf llll' !'ommiltl'l'

KoJreiser ha s been meeting

with the gruup to pmvide in - is tu sccun• fedl·ral
put a nd l:lome dircctit•n .
assistl:tn&lt;'l' tuwanl sceuring

....

~

1

!

......

NURSERY SCHOOL AND DAY CARE questionnaires distributed through Meigs Coun ty's elementa ry schools were reviewed by Mrs. Bernadette Anderson and Mrs. Debbie
Buck, right right , Wednesday morning. The survey revealed a need for both programs and
the committee will now move toward funding and a suitable building.
By Charlene Hoeflich
whether or not there is a need necessary funding, a building
"I want to look for work, in Meigs County for a nursery and the staff.
Funding is where the probut need a good place for my sc hool and-or day care
blem
begins ..... and has
da u ~hter to be while I'm at center.
work."
The response has o~er- stayed for the past yea r .
It was nearly a yea r ago at
"My child needs something whelmingly shown that Meigs
to bridge the gap from in- County fa.milies do feel that a meeting of the Meigs Counfa ncy to kindergarten."
. such programs -· both ty Human Resource Council
"There are times I need a nursery school and day care that it was reported "federal money is available
sitter and just no one is -would be beneficial.
for
day care centers and
available."
It would mean competent
nursery
schools.''
These are examples of the care for children of mothers
Soon
after
that at a luncomments made on the who work, some educational
cheon
hosted
by
Mrs. Debbie
nursery school and day care activities, and preparation of
.Buck
for
Mrs.
Martha
questionna ires distributed three and four year olds for
Graves,
new
to
the
communithro ugh Meigs County kindergarten.
elementary schools earlier
The survey fulfills · the ty, a nursery school for Meigs
this month.
critelia of need for the ser- County became the topic of
conversation. Mrs. Gret.ves
Purpose of the question - vice.
na ire . was to detennine
The next step .is to secure had been an assistant in a
nursery school before coming
to Meigs County with her hus·
' band , the pastor of Grace
'
Episcopal Church.
A committee composed of
Bernadette Anderson, Karen
Goins, Karen Stanley, Mary
O'Brien, Becky Anderson,
Donna Nease, and Sandy
IN THE
Sllrgent contacted the Meigs
County Commissioners; who,
according to the committee
let the deadline for Title XX
funds pass by before submit·
-ling the application. That was
last spring.
OPEN:
· Last fall efforts were
Mon. , Tues ., Wed.&amp; S..t. 8:30til5:00
renewed
by the committee 9f
Thursday Til 12. Noon
concerned moth~ rs . Interest
Friday Until&amp; P. M•.
is high and meetings are beHerman Grate
ing held regularly. The ComMason - W. Va .
77~ - 5591
munity Mental Health Genter

While most of the rnut hers building and equipment and
working on the committee · the initial operating ex-.
were origina lly m'Ore in- ·penses. They do not view the
terested- in nursery school nursery school or the \Jay
than day care, the survey care center as a "free " dropseems to indicate that a com- pi ng off place for children,
binationof the two would best but as a program which in ·a
meet the need ofth e county.
few years will become self
The nursery school would supporting through the paybe a pre-school program men\ for services provided.
which would operate a . few
The next step planned by
hours per week Co help the conunittee is to pursue
children prepare for entranc-e fund ing. The Appalachian
into the public school pro- Regional Council and Gary
gram; while the day care I jttle of Buckeye Hills, as
center would be an extended well as local individuals who
day ti me prog r am for have been successful in comchildren of work ing _parents pleting grant applications,
and would include some will be called upon for
educational activities·.
assistance.
Requirements as to space
To the Buckeye Hills
for operation as set by the representative, the commitstate are 35 square feet per tee pl ans ·to present the
child of open space indoors statistical material compiled
rthis means area without fur · from the survey forms and
niture) , a n~ 60 square feet of seek his advice and help in
outside space per child , plus making the proper applicakitchen facilities for a day !ion for funding.
ca re center .
Meanwhile, the committee
The conunittee is thinking will continue to investigate
a maximwn of 24 children places where a nursery
with · a director having a school and &lt;lay ca re center
minimum of two years col - can be located.
lege, one or two paid aides, , Active in the group are
and parent volunteers for the Mrs. Debbie Buck, Mrs, Bernursery school prog ram .
nadette Anderson, Mrs. MarCurrently the committee is lha Graves, Mrs, Barbara
investigating buildings which Knight , Mrs. Becky Anderfulfill the state requirements. son, Mrs. Sandy Sargent ,
A church or two and rooms in Mrs. Janet Downie, Mrs.

Kan•n Stanl&lt;•y , r.aro l .Jay,
.Juli.a Anderson. Mrs. Mary
Mii&lt;'hell, Mrs, Linda King.
Mrs . Mary O'Brien. "'"I Mrs.
Karen Goins.

CAROL BENNETI
Ca rol L. Bennett of Mason
Co unty was named to the
dean's list for the· fir st
semester at Fairmont Slate
College, according to Dr .
William A. Boram, vice
president of academic . affairs .

By Karr n Blak••r, Ph. n .
DEAR DR. Bl.AKF:R -How can l be a good par&lt;•nt to
my teen-ager when she does
so many things wron ~?
The weekends are cspc&lt;"ially bad betaust• 'Sht• is

COME IN, LOOK OVER
OUR SALE TABLE
OF BARGAINS

VJS4• i

THE SHOE· BOX

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

POLLY·s-·POINTERS

FOR THE BEST DEALS
TRI..STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

PLATFORM

ROCKERS

$64~

SPEED QUEEN

$588

WASHER
.&amp; DRYER

SOFA BEDS

PR.

Po~ly ,Cramer

Ring problem
solved
DEAR POLLY -· My
beautiful hardwood dining
table has several white rings
on the top that were evidently ·
caused by hot dishes. I have
tried everything including
furniture polishes and
toothpaste but nothing helps.
What can l do' -CLARA.
DEAR CLARA - A paste·
made of cold cigarette ashes
and butter and lots of elbow
greas~ always solves this probien forme. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - My maple
table had ugly white water
spots on it and a refinisher
wanted $75 to refinish it so I
tried various "cures" for two
years. Nothing worked until I
read a reconumindation from
an antique dealer that worked like a miracle. Rub
toothpaste on such spots with
a soft cloth. If spots remain
add a little baking soda to
make it a bit more abrasive
and rub some more. This does
not remove the finish but just
the spots. Polish afterwards
with lemon oil or a good
paste wax but do not spray
with furniture polish. It really
works. - ROSELLEN.
DEAR POLLY - I think the

furniture cleaner Mary G. is
looking for is made with
equal parts of boiled linseed
oil, turpentine and vinegar. I
use about two ounces of each
and apply with a soft cloth. VERA.
DEAR POLLY - To save
money l buy bacon and beef
strips in bulk. After each
package has cooled a bit in
the refrigerator, I separate
all the slices and lay them 'on
a long strip of plastic wrap.
This is rolled up so each strip
is separate and the roll put in
a heavy plastic bag that goes
into the freezer. When need· .
ed, any amount can be taken
from the roll, which is then
put back' into the freezer.
-WALT.
DEAR POLLY - Some of
my house plants are hanging
and others are on tables but
whenever l watered them l
splashed water on the tables
or floor . I found an old meat
baster and now use it for
watering my plants as the
water goes where I want it to
with no mess. -lllLDA.
Polly will send you one of
her s igned th a nk-y ou
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

.STARTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 26TH
Prool

CABINET
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Box of 7

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mon. thru Sa t .

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If limiting your tel'IHtgl•r's

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SLIGHT IRR~ULARS

OPEN TIL 8 ON FRIDAY, All DAY

wlwri it come:-; lo handling
teen-agers : 'fhl'V need to lx•
told t.•very day -·in some way

•

MANY
25" COLOR CONSOLE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

dL•met nding anrl frustra ting .
Remem ber a rlother rult•

LIVING BIBLE

'100 OFF

BAKER FURNITURE

Ours

bobly begin to S&lt;&gt;&lt;'lll "'"

doesn't.
h· h~v i sion-w Hle h ing · has
We tell eac h oth er ~coml' a sourl'l' of stre~ in in
everything. She knows all your family, write for nr .
that she has ever done wrong Blaker's hotlinc 1 "T~ ming
and just how I feel about it.
the TV Beast. " Send 5{) eents
· P : s. S he t e ll s me and a oel f-a ddre"c d,
everything she hates about stamped envelope to Or.
me, too. So, you can see our Blaker in care of this
openness,is not one-s ided.
newspaper, P.O. Box 475,
DEAR READER - On the Radio City St~ tion , New
contrary, your relationshi p York, N.Y. 10019.
&gt;Yith your daughter sounds · Write to n r. Blaker in care
very one-sided: heavy on of this newspaper, P.O. Box
criticism and light on expres· 475, Radio City Station, New
sions of love.
York , N.Y. 1001 9. Vqltun•· of
The following letter from a mail prohibits persona l
Jl!lrenl, which first appeared repli es, but questions of
in the Rhode Island Chur- general interest will be
chman , indicates how prone discussed in fut ure ~o l umns.
parents are. to be overly ·
critical of .their teen-agers.
The letter is titled "Saturday
with a Teen-age Daughter" :
" Are you goirig to sleep all
POET DELAYED
day ? ... Who saill you. could
Mrs.
Helen Fisher Rice,
use my hair spray? .. . Clear
Jackson
poet who was
the dishes off the table ....
scheduled
to
be at the MidTurn down that radio ....
"Have you made your bed? dleport Book Store Monda y in
.:. That skirt is too short . .. . conjunction with her book of
Your closet is a mess. ... poems, will be at the store
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4
Stand up st raight.
Somebody has to go to the p.m. Mrs. Rice was unable to
make the Monday schedule
stoi-e ....
"Quit chewing yeu" gum due tb icy roads.
like that. ... Your hair is too
l!ushy.
I don 't care if
everybody else does have
REVIVAL
one .... Turn down that radio.
A week-long revival will be
"Have you done your held at the House of Prayer
homework' ... Don't slouch. and Praise, Liberty Ave.,
... You didn't make your bed. Pomeroy, beginning Sunday .
... Quit banging on the piano. Services will be held at 7: 30
... Why don't you iron it each evening during the wee k
with special speakers and
yourself? ...
~~vour fi ngernails· are too special music. Gene Anslung. .. . Look it up in the dic- bach, pastor , invites th e
tionary .... Sit up straight. ... public. The church is now
Get off that phone . ... Why did located in the fo rm er
Coalport schoo).
you ever buy that record' .
"Take the dog out. ... You
forgot to dust that table ....
DEAN'S LIST
):ou 've been in the bathroom
Patricia A. Keefer, l.etart ,
long enough. ... Turn off that
W.,Va., Louise ]1. Kent, New
rhdio and go to sleep. "
Next Saturday, take notes: Haven and Sandra Diane
of your conversations with Pyles, Gallipolis Ferry, have
been named to the dean' s list
your daughter .
of
Glenville State College for
Do you sound ove rly
the
first semester of the 1978critical like the parent who
79
school
year.
wrote the letter? If you do,

99~ - 3748

$118

SALE FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY .

communi cation.

I

00

MANY MORE DOLLAR DAY VALUES
NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE$$$

of

Phone
or 992 -5020
Convenient
Free Parking

L' Oil -

stantly underfoot. I work all
week and nel'&lt;l rest on my
days,off.
·Please don't ask if I have.
tol~ her my complaints. I
know some molher-&lt;laughter
relationships suffer from lark

SUPF:R GOOD LOOKS ARF: OETRIMF.NT
F:SPF:CIAJ.J.Y IF YOU'RF. Al SO SIIY

Jn&lt;tkP just om· mort• n •!"nlutinn for lht• llt'W n•e~r : S;n·
thrl't' nic't.· things. to vou.r
dmtghh•r fnr t'at'h criiin-t l
n•rm1rk.
Jf you ~t riVL' for that :l-1
ra tind'our dau~hh• r wi ll prn-

Reg
. Sd9
."
.
-,7

.. • .

WE •7"'
DISH
CLOTHS
Reg . 29c

SALE

1

SALE · ·.$100

8l''X96"
90''Xl08"

Reg . c,~4.8 9

SALE
•

Reg. ~ 5 . 89

SALE

Converse

BLANKETS
Reg .. $4.99

SALE $388

All Star

TENNIS
SHOES

•8"

MEN'S &amp;
BOYS'

sa\e

$']00

.

10%

OFF

2/$1

dcf••tls. is " safe. hi ~ hl y
rdi :1blc _ and cxtrcml!l y :JL'-

f

r·-·- ---·-··--,

I
I!

Lived, died as one

BUILDING OR' REMODELING?
SEE US . FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES . QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.
CASY&amp; CARRY
PRICES

th l' nu nliJt•r of "-"O!llcn whu

that WL'fl'

lil'\ t·d tu !Jt· lkft·di vt:. In i..tll
bUt 51.:\t:ll C&lt;J~C~. the WU fl H;JI

sil O\\ th e lwbr will bl'
ddt't't ivc.
·
t\rn n io rl' n lesi s
&lt;.~ l s o

h&lt;H.J Spont&lt;:Lll!.!QliS aiJo J1 IOII :::.

optl'd for CJ!Jortion.:o..
'lbL' C&lt;.~liforni&lt;.~ doctors scud
that in the :I.O!HI cases th ey
:ot. udics. 14 errors were made
in an~:~l~zing a nd reporting
the findin~s of the tests. In
t wo ('USes . these mi~ta kcs
n.•.sulted in women aborting
norm;..~l fct"u:-;cs because they
thought lhcy wen· Ucfcetivc .
The doctors said am ni.occnt csi s m ight hti'Je
eauscd a slight in cr ~ase in

'!lw ll ;.,~tings report was
fin;..nct:d IJ\ the NationCil
FoundatiOn-Ma rch of D~es
It included a ·li st · of t8
suggest ed gu id elin es for
·dodors and clinics which
provide aDUliocentcsh ami
other prenatal tests.
The report recommends
that the government pay for
these test s for poor women
and that doctors be careful
not to coerce women to hav e .
abortions when the exams

di&gt;closes the sex of the fetus.
A co-author of the Hastings
report , Tabitha M. Powledge.
sa id the panel of expert&gt; that
drew up the guid elines was
worri ed that women might
have abortions if they were
not happy with the baby's
sex.
Howeve r ,

th e

pan e l

recommended that no legal
restrictions be imposed to
limit this usc of th e test s.

BRUIT
3.2 oz
LOTION ................ _. _.. _.. ~ 50

TIMEX
WATCHES

- J ovan

4

Sex Appea l

AFTER SHAVE
COLOGNE ..._._. ~~?.-..s:7•·.~~. ~ 50

'

Complete
Stoc k

4

15%
OFF
ALL

APPLIANCES

"THE HANDLE"

30%

Social !
Calendar
I
.

CAMERA
REG. 127.95

NOW

'--

.·

SELECTED GROUP

SUN GLASSES

SHOP OUR

CLEARANCE
TABLE

ONLY

$2

PRICES
START AS LOW.
AS

1

$

TANKARDS
Reg . $2.60
MUGS ,_, ___ .. ,... _........ --.-....

25~
HURRY -

Pair

"'"

.

FIRST COME -

GIFT

FIRST SOLD •• ,
FRIDAY, JANUARY 26th

VILLAGE

up toY2

OFF

PHARMACY
271 N . 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS WANTED
FOR

WE
DELIVER

SYRACUSE, 0._&amp;
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
(Between Hudson Street and

SELECTED

·

~

BOOKS t.l~u~t'il·

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;

Boys
Reg . $2.99-$6.95

'.NOW 12 • '4
Reg . S3.99 to $6.95

sz-. '4•

OPEN ..FRID·AY Tt,L 8:00P.M.

m•wcntt·sis. u prcnat:li ttst
whit ·h tli'ted s som e 1Ji1th

l ollflll 11 :.: lt'Ll lt-il'.'-1
!1t

"

·~

KNIT ·- ·
SHIRTS

PRICE

.\s!-nd ;•h· lll'rl'~ ~ Wrill'l'
~ ;o~: ' t' ON u \ P r
,\rn ·

l really rcla tL· to ''l..att• Blooming F'ormer .Ugly Oucklin ~·· t·uratt·," thC' l l.l r~t:st -st udy
who she&lt;_l pounds and turned into a terrific blondt!, but was lou ever conduc..1ed of the gCnd k
shy tn hand It• men. Hnwever. s h~ 's luekicr than I: who clnesn 't t est t·ondudcs .
get the chance. Ft&gt;llas stare at me but don't c·onw dose and
The procedure has sparked
1'm not one to make first moves.
.
c.: ont ro\' crsy beca use a
My frie nds tell me me n are sca red of .super bea uty Itheir
woman ::;ometimc !: i see ks
words, not mine) beca use they figure they don't have a alJortion after learning her
chance. They say girls who look like I do have to work twice as unborn child Cl.lrrics a 15t!nctic
ha•·d showing guys they '•·e really human. I've read that many defect.
gorgeous models (J want to be nne 1 lead very lonely li ves fnr
The survey of :~ .000 women
this reason. It 's really awful when you're so well-packaged no who
underwent
am one realizes you're - QUIVERING ON THE INS!DF:
nioecntcsis, in which doctors
QOI :
analyze amniotic fluid drawn
So cat~ h one of the "starers' " eyes and smile.
fro m t he womb with a needle,
· Perhaps to hide your shyness, you've taken on the cool. was conducted · at the
haughty " model look," and. that, more than beauty, scares University of California in
men away. (It also makes gi rls jealous, which doesn't help . San Francisco. The results
your cause.)
were published in today 's
Lea rn to laugh easily and speak before you 're spoken to, issue of the Ne w England
even though you qmver. It gets much less fri ghtening after the Journa l of Medicine.
fi rst time. - HELEN
.
A separate report in the
same issue, prepared by the
QU!V :
Ha stings Center, a think tank
Maybe you work too hard at "packaging." l.i rls who want to m Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.,
be models are extra.,onscious of their looks so they try for recommended amniocentesis
:• perf~ct " rather than hum~n : If you're one of these, forge t be made ava ilable to all
1ust-r1 ght makeup an~ studied style and "ge.,_,t down" to women who risk bearing
group level. - SUE
defective babies.
Pregnant women over 35
RAP :
are usually tested. since th ey
My father makes lots of money. But he and Morn fight arc most likely to have
because she. says he's ruining my brother who's 26. See, he children w ith Down 's syn·
keeps setting Lane up in business or getti ng him jobs through dromc , the mo st common
fr&lt;ends. Then when Lane "laz1es out" Dad temporari ly fli ps - eause of seve re me ntal
but ha nd~ h&lt;m another set-up r1ght away when he hea rs the old retardation . Also tested arc
hard luck story.
women who are believed to be
Well, I agree with Mom and I &lt;I~' t plan to be like Lane. 'so carriers of other genetic
why IS she so tough on me' While D~d spends all his ti me get- defects, such as hemophilia.
l&lt;ng my brother out of scrapes, Mom works overtime "not to sickle-ce ll anemi a. Tay·
spoil andruin another one."
Sachs disease cmd Duchen· Would it hurt to have just a little of the easy life Lane has ne's muscular dystrophy.
always had ' - CHUCK, THF: STRAIGHT-A, AI .I, WORK AND
The Ca lifor nia sur vey
NO FUN KID
DEAR CHUCK:
It· .isn't fair , but in too many fam ilies "the sins of the
firstborn are visited on the second.' ' You're like the teen who
is restricted out of her mind beC'J use her older sister got pregnant atl5.
A family conference (with a little strong talk from you) mav
help your mother ease off.- HELEN
·
I
THURSDAY
CHUCK:
PRF:C'F:PTOH RP.TII lk ta
Let's hope it also ma kes your Dad a less easy mark.· I'd Chapter. R&lt;'IH Sigma Phi
guess fights over Lane have cut down on communication bet- Sorority, 7:45 p.m. Thursda\"
ween your parents. If you insist that they talk, perhaps your in the Rlvt•rho;-J! Ru/nn flf tt1i•
mother may realize she's using you to prove her husband ;\t hen:-; C!11111ty Sa ~·i nj.!s &lt;rnc l
wrong. IAnd if she admits mistakes, maybe he will too .) -SUE I .oa n ro .
ONE-WON -ONE Class of
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
11mrsday at the church.
TW IN CITY Shr incttes,
11JUrsday . 7: 30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Ge rtrude
MONTCLAIR, N. J . lAP ) visited regularly.
" Until a few years ago, I'd Mitchell:
- Together in 65 years of
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
marr iage, Jose ph and pass the house every day and Pack 245, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
Josephine Stazzone died as often saw them working on the American Legion hall in
their lawn or in their gar·
· they lived - as one.
Midd lep ort . Unifo rm in" It looks like he died and den," said Police Sgt.' Robert
spection.
then she just passed away Cununings.
St azzonc was a confrom grief." said their parish
REGATTA COMM ITTEE
st
r uction worker unti l Thursday at noon at Meigs
priest, the Rev. Emmanuel
retirement at age 14. A · Inn.
Capozelli.
· The Stazzones - Joseph. newphew, Dominick Testa,
described him as a "tough ,
96, and Josephine, 87, ALBERT KEETON
began their life together in hard-working man."
Al bert Keeton. Liuerty
And Mrs. Stazzonc was Ave., Pomeroy, i!:i in the
the town of Cerani in their
Sicily,
shortl y active in the church in earlier ihtensive Care unit at Holzer
native
thereafter joining the strea m years, teaching church school Med ical Center.
of immigrants to the United and often inviting children to
Mr. and Mrs. Keeton obth eir home for reli gio us served their 16t h wedding
States.
They came to Essex plays, cookies and sweeto;,
armiver sary on Sunday, Jan.
But recently. their health
County, and quickly became
21.
pa rt of the parish of Our Lady probl ems mount ed . Mrs .
of Mount Carmel Church, Stazzone was arthritic, and
establishing ties that would her husband had always done
"We talked abo ut them
all the shopping. lben he going to a nursing home. but
last a lifetime.
Alth ough they had no suffered a stroke, and Mrs. they wouldn't hear of it," said
children, nieces, neph ews Sta zzone overcame her pain Jenny Testa, wife of another
and · fe llow parishoners to nurse him alone.
nephew.
·
"She spent all her time with
her husband," sai~ Father
Capezelli of Mrs. Stazzone.
Mr . and Mrs. Stazzone's
bodies were foun d in their
bedroom Sunday after An·
thony . Testa, a newphew,
became concern ed because
he was unable to contact
them. Dr. John Myers said
th ey died from natura l
causes .
They were buried together
Wednesday.

ALL
RECORDS
&amp; TAPES

.

SLEEVE

Men's Reg. 111.95
Boys' .Reg. 17.49

1h

JACKETS
Reg . $10.95-$24.95

LONG

CREW .NECK
PULLOVER
SWEATERS
...-~·

JEWELRY

QUILT BA,n S

RAP:

and
building materials

·

U) 11.\'i !EI. lj. 11.\Nt-:\'

By Helen and Sue Hottel

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

111• House of Prayer and

Praise which has been
located in Middleport has
moved to Liberty Ave.,
Pomeroy, · in
newly
remodeled and redecorated
quarters.
The church will be located
in the former Coalport School
which was unused for a
number of years. It once wa·s
part of the Pomeroy
Exempted Village Schools.
The building was sold several
years ago by the Meigs Local
Board of Education at public
auction. Extensive work has
been und erway at the
structure over the past few
months converting it into the
church structure.
Services will he held at the
new location at 7:30 p.m. on
Tuesday, Friday and Sunday
evenings. Sunday School will
be at 10 a.m. and morning
worship will be at II a.m. ·
each Sunday. Gene Ansbach
is pastor of the church.

.·.

":&gt;

CHOICES

House oj Prayer
and Praise relocates-

Generation Rap Test for birtb defects deemed safe

~~

923

SUPPLY
CORPORATION
s.

3rd Ave .
Middleport: O.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open : 7 :00to5 : 00 Mon . thru Fri.
··
7; 00to3 : 00Saturday

Pom~-Mason

Bridge)

AREA

PH. 992-2156

·, JHE
DAILY
SENTINEL
f'J ., ,. ·.
BETWEEN

8 AM AND 5 PM

�,

.·

•
6-:-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Jan. 25, I~7~

Sweetheart dance planned -in February

Today's Topic:

The President: _- Personnel problems
Ry RORERT P ARRY

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - In
the strange case of Jay Solomoo, President carter has
discovered once again the
pitfa lls in moving a
presidential appointee out of
a job.
Last Friday "'"' on ly a week
after the abrupt firing of
Bella Abzug as chairma n of a
preside nti al adviso r y
commission em women Carter ran into a new
personnel problem with the
head of the General Services
Administration , whic h
manages the government 's
buildings and is the central
purchasing
house for
government supplies.
The problem surface d
publicly last weekend when a
reporter asked Solomon, a
Carter appointee who helped
launch
the
current
investigation into allegations
of GSA corruption, about
reporls that top White House
aides were see king his
replacement.
Caught off -guard, Solomon
said he had no intention of
leaving his post and lhat he
had rlot kn own that a
successor was being sought.
Despite a flurry of state-

mentsabout Solomon's status
durin'g the next several days ,
doubt remained at midweek
as to whether Solomon was or was not - leaving . And the
White House was facing
potential public relations
difficulties.
The Solomon affair fueled
r enewed crit icism of the

Carter
adminis tration's
handling of personnel
matters and even prompted
speculation that the 'White
House might be trying to gain
more direct control of the
GSA
cor ru p t ion
investiga lion.
Although . conceding they
have no firm evidence, some
officials · close to the GSA
investigati on speculated that
the corruption probe may
have touched a politically
sensit ive area that has
worried some peo ple in
power.
Othe rs sugges ted that
administration offi cials were
concerned about how GSA
genera l coun sel l rw in
Borowski would act if he were
named inspector general and
given subpoena power under
a new la w enacted la st
October - as Solomon wants.
One source said Borowski
had talked of issuing dozens

of sub!JUC!Ii::IS af he became

inspector general .
Burow~ki is Solomon 's first

('hoicc to become inspector

1

lh e decision ·to seek a new

GSA head .
Instead, the White House
has depicted the replacement
of Solomon as an innocent
attempt to meet the GSA
chief 's expressed wish to
leave his post early th is year.
P res ide nt ial press
sccretm·y Jody Powell said
the search resulted from
Solomon telling the president
last fall U1 at he wanled to
leave the G~ll job early in the
new year .
The
confusion

over

Solomon 's
job
status
prompt ed a 45-mi nute
meeting between the GSA

•

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, JANUARY 26 AND 27 ONLY

Men's

LONG SLEEVE
'DRESS SHIRTS

•

MEN'S TIES

'

Valu~s

VAWES TO 16.50.

to $13.50

Men's

Odd Lot

MEN'S

LONG SLEEVE
KNIT SHIRTS

WINTER JACKETS
Reg. $70 to S140

Values to $ 15.00

%PRICE

ing m1d lht· SC:illl&lt;J Chtus
vi·s its, It was an nnuncecl Uy

Kal hy Cununings that the
s:une band which played for

administrator and President Ohi o J·: t11 Phi Ch:~ptPr of Tll'tll
ntrll'r on Monday . However, ~i g nw Phi Snrnrily has het.•n
that meeting, apparently de~ · · pJ.rt!lllt'd for F't'IJI"Uc-try.

signed tQ clear the alr, led to
general and some sources say " a series of conflicting

th e G~ll ehi ef's insistent'!'
that the form er Securities
and Exchange Commission
lawyer be appointed led to his
own job difficulties.
Borowski wa s reportedly
considered "too aggressive'
by 59me elements of the
administration, and the
position of inspector general
has not yet been filled.
The administration denies
that concern about the GSA
investigation was a factor in

A swt•etheart dctnl'l' honnr~
ing Mrs. Jam·l lt• lbpton!-ilnl! ,
til&lt;' "Vah•nti11" Girl " of ill&lt;'

thi s yea r 's Christmas party
ha:-; bl'l'rl retained for tht.• 1979
party.

AI Tun;day night's mt.•cting
of tile rhapter, tht• dant·c w;ts
plmu!l'd with lh&lt;• ehargc to b&lt;•

March uf di me~ pi::lckets
were distributed with the
Mothers' March to take pl.tl,c
Sunday if the weather permils. Otherwise members of
the chapter will go door-todoor in their respective areas
MJmctime during the following two weeks. A.ll workers
wi ll be wea ring badges of

statements
that
left
Solomon's job plans in even $fi fol' eoupil's and $3.50 for
greater aoubt.
singks.
Nter the meeting, Powell
A thank you note from
told reporters that the presi- . Kathy Doidge for a rose
dent
had
expressed prcsenled to her at the birth
confidence in Solomon's of lwrda ughler, Karen Melinhandling of the GSA da, w"s read. Members
investigation, but added that discus:;cd proceeds from the
Solomon still planned to leave

SCt I"

nf .iun ior

mi~s

Hdver1 i!'-

identification .

:~J~~~:!~;~~::;;:;; ,r-·Gir1-s~~~-~-_r)i;;y--1,

he intended to "see through"
the investigation which will
clearly not be completed in
the next few mon ths .
Solomon's statement was
later revised to say that the
GSA head would stay until the
probe is on a "firm footing"
and thlll he would leave in a
few months.
The confusion was compounded even more Tuesday
when GSA offi cials. who
asked not to be named, said
Solomon did not plan to
resign and intended to stay on
as long as he had the
president's support.
Meanlvliile, officia ls at
GSA and members of
Congress have expressed
concern about the innpact of
the Sclomon job controversy
on .the investiga tion of
widespread corruption. That
investiga tion has already
resulted in more -than 40
ind ictments
of
GSA
employees and contractors.
In an interview, Borowski
said the apparent decision to
replace Solomon would make
11 more ·difficult to gain
cooperation from GSA
employees who have long
suspected that the anticorruption drive would be
short-lived.
GSA officials also have
wondered privately about the
poss ibl e role of House
Spea ker Thomas P. O'Neill
Jr. in the Solomon situation .
O'Neill was furious last
. summer when Solomon , with
White House approval, fired
·Robert T. Griffin in another
co nt rov e r sia l Ca rt e r
admini stration perso nnel
decision . Griffin, a longtime
top GSA official and an
O'Neill political ally, was

',

Two cultural reports were
given with Carol Crow
presenting Bob Bailey who
showed a movie on cardiat'

r ulmonary resusitation. Jane

C3dette Troop ll80meeting Wednesday night at the home of
Patty Woodgerd discussed a skating party at theS kale-&lt;1-Way
Rink on Route 7.
The party would be held with the Chester junior troop of Mrs.
Becky Mankin, with the two Chester Brownie troops to .be
invited to join the skating party.
Pam Re ibel, patrol leader , opened the meeting with the
pledge to the flag and the girl seoul promise. It was reported
that !here is a total of $.78.41 in the treasw-y.
.
The cookie sale was discussed. Refreshments were served.
SAUSBURY GIRL SCOUT TROOP 1100 .
.
Awards which can be won at the Meigs County Fair were
discussed during last week's meeting of the Salisbury juniors.
Among the awards which will be offered according to plans
of the Meigs Service Team include a blue ribbon to the
outstanding girl in each troop, a trophy for the outstanding girl
on each age level, and a larger trophy for the county's
outstanding girl. Pa rticipation in activities, badges and
challenges completed, and general troop contributions will be
considered in making the awards. In addition to individual
awards at the fair there will be an outstanding exhibit banner
awarded.
Mrs. Margaret Parker, leader, asked the girls to take some
article which can be stamped for a craft project to the next
meeting.
Mrs. Barbara Fry mel with the girls to discuss ·the cookie
·sale which is in progress now.. For the craft period the scouts
mad~ yarn people. Refreshments were served by Sally
Radford.

Group - Reg . $29 .50 to $180

PRE-WASHED
JEANS

25% .OFF

MEN'S
OUTERWEAR

CONNIE &amp; FOOTWORK$
CHILDREN'S STRIDERITE
or $7 .00 Pr .

'2

%OFF
Corduroy ,

Twills .
Nylons &amp; Leathers

Cottons,

-~

',\

,,

SWEATER
SHIRTS
20% OFF

New
~.
.126 E. MAIN ST.

Yo~k . Clothing

House

"KERM'S KORNER ''

Mr.

and

Mr s.

nanny

••••-lliiiiii.iiii.••Iil••illl•••••••••a~•.l...l-.ll~i.l Si lV4'f~ . c!H(lg-hlf'r , Ol•xter , 0.

By ROBERT H. REID
Associate d P ress Writer

Mohammad Ht:&gt;:a Pahlavi,
cetablish an Islamic republic
and replace the Bakhtiar

1 Group Ladies

DRESS &amp; SPORT
By Connie
SHOES
.
Footworks
SALE PRICED
1 GrouP Ladies

GRASSHOPPER

BOOTS

40%

OFF

mission to leave.

The airports were closed
after Dr. Ibrahim Yazdi,
Khomeini 's spokesman in
Tehran, declared ; " If we
cannot land in Tehran, we
will go to another airport in
Iran, and if we don't find one,
we will come back here."
Early Wed n esday,
Khomeini supporters went to
Tehran's airport to gjve an
Iran Air Boei ng 747 .
" revolutionary fl ight " a
sendoff to Paris to pick up
and return Khomeini. But
troops closed the fa cility and
sent demonstrators home .
Later the airport was
reopened briefly, but the
"revolutionary flight" stayed
on the ground .
The shah remained in'
Marrakech, Morocco Wednesday and posed with his
wife briefly. for photographers in side the walls
of a res ide nce provided
by King Ha ssan · I I. No
questions were pe rmitt ed,
and both had strained smiles.

TEHRAN, Iran iAP) Ayato ll a h
Ru h o ll a h government with one conKhomeini delayed his return trolled by him.
Millions of Khomeini
to Iran today until Sunday
after the military closed the support ers were expected to
country's a irports until then. greet him on arrival. One
The leadq:, of the fight to gover nment so ur ce , ~ ex. I
overthrow Sfi'ah Mohammad plaining Bakhtiar's request
i
Reza Pahlavi announced that he delay, said: "The
postponement of his return crowd alone wo uld have too
from ex il e, previously da ngerous and too dil!ic ult to
scheduled for Friday, after handle.''
Air France sa id it would not ' Anot her government
supply a plane to take hinn source, who asked not to be
home from Paris.until it was identified, said Bakhtiar in
assured the fli ght could run his letter to Khomeini warned
he could not take responnormally.
sibility
for his safety. The
Prime Minister Shahpo ur
Bakhtiar sent a letter to the prime minister also warned
Shiite Moslem patriarch that the army would not stand
asking him to delay his retu rn by and watch Khomeini atfer three weeks beca use he tempt to sweep aside the
co uld not guarant ee his government appointed by the
safety. One high government shah and establish an Islamic
through
unsource said Khomeini agreed, rep ublic
while three others said he const it utional mea ns, the
. apparentl y · agreed. But source sa id.
"Therefore, I request you
Kh omein i's chief a id e in
to
delay your return to Iran at
Paris, Dr . Ibrahim Yazdi,
least
three weeks in order to
told a news conference he
refused to receive the letter. give me a chance to take
Info rm ed sources · sa id some steps to· guarantee the
Bakhtiar asked the military sa fety of the Master
to close the. airports to give (Khomeini and to take acKNOW YOUR
R9, son Mr.
. Kh omeini a face-sav in g tions without violating the
and Mrs. Don Nelson, Bradbury, is a new carrier for the
constitution and, at the sa me
excuse for the delay.
Iinne, to please and calm
Irania n so urces in Pa ris
Daily Sentinel. Jeff attends fourth grade at Middleport
Middl e port
a lso sa id Dr. Se ifedin down the army," Bakhtiar
Elementary . He is a Cub Scout, likes all sports, and
Navaby, president of the reportedly said.
participates in basketball and baseball.
Thousands of persons of all
Iran ian Ca rdio logists'
ages and occupations rallied
Associatio n, met
with
in Tehran today in support of
Khomeini, who is 78, a nd
the. Iranian constituti on and
recommended he rest for at
least a week before returning the Bakhtiar gove rn ment,
and some attacked stores and
to Iran.
cars
bearing portraits of
They said Navaby fo und
Khome
ini. Som e Ira nian ·
Khomein i in excellent
report ers estimated · the
general health but tired and
crowd at perhaps 100,000, but
said he should rest before
'
.
approved
by
the
General
sever al Western r eporters
changes
in
state
law.
fa'cing
the
st.renuous
events
By TOM GilLEM
placed the figure at no rri&lt;il'le
Or lett said he expects a re- that would foll ow his return
Associated Press Writer Assembly in 1975 and aga in in
than about 20,000.
COLUMBUS, Ohi" (AP) - 1977. Both , however, were sponse from Rhodes early for on-the-spot leadership of
Gen. Mehd i Ra himi ,
next month.
the fight to overthrow Shah
Democrats ha ve ou t lined vetoed by Rhodes.
Open 9-S Man·., Tues., Sat.
The
limited
right
to
strike
Tehran's
military governor,
Frrday ni ght t ill B p.m .
their hopes for compromise
said Iran's airports would be
on a public employee which the measures would
shut down fo r three days
collective bargainin g _ bill ha ve given police and
was
the
governor
's
from midnight Wedn esday
firemen
with aides to Gov. James· A.
prinnary
obj
ection.
fo r safety reasons. But it was
Rhodes.
also
felt
the
bills'
assumed
the closing of the
.Rhodes
But Robert F . Howarth Jr., 0
airports
binding
arbitration
features
was
" n effort by the
the governor 's lop aide, said
would
have
resulted
in
wage
milita
ry,
which
supports the
Wednesday he doubts there is
shah.
and
benefi
t
contracts
that
to
block
the
return of
much room to compromise.
bankr upt
local
Khomeini.
Howarth. sa id he will could
Rahimi said security forces
discuss with Rhodes ways to governments.
will ma intai n "extreme
Th e need for a comovercome the governor's past
vigilance" and ''crush any
objections to public employee prehensive law to enable
He
ights,
rounaer
anu
rsion ca lculated to
subve
workers
to
ba
rga
in
public
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) co ll ec t ive bar ga i nin g
pres
id
ent
of
the
Ohio
undermine
their·
employers
has
public order."
with
The 30th annu al Ohio
legislation suggested by Rep .
Baseball
Hall
of
Fame
in
Thousa
nds
of con fu sed
been
ac
kn
owledged
by
Governor:s . Awards will be
Edward J. Or lett, D-Dayton ,
Newcomer
sto
wn.
asse
n
ge
r
s
j a m me d
p
and
ot
her
ReRhodes
presented to 14 honorees Feb.
and Rep. Cliff Skeen, DJ
ami
e
Farr
of
Toledo
,
Me
hr
abad
Int
ernational
publicans.
B during the Ohio Newspaper
Akron .
However, any proposal that Association 's annual banquet entertainer and co-star of
Airport in Tehran as the
"I just want to stress we
closur e · went into eff ect
have' not chan ged. The san ctioned strikes by police, at the Columbus - Sheraton television 's " MASH."
Dorothy Fuldheinn, com·
today, bringing chaos to the
administration policy has not fi re and other safety forces Hotel.
terminal. A sign at the Pan
changed," Howarth said has drawn virtual united
Recipients of the awards, mentator and news analyst
Am chec k ~ in counter an·
following his meeting with opposition from Republicans. the state's highest token of for WEWS-TV. Cleveland.
Wh
en
th
ey
me.t
with
nounced,
" All fli ghts canVince
nt
G.
Marott
a
of
the·. two legislators.
.
a ppr ec iation, wer e anHowarth
and
another
Rhodes
Cleve
land
,
developer
and
celled."
Oriett:: who was more optinounced Wednesday.
A Swissair flight that was
mistic tban Howarth , said the aide Wednesday afternoon.
The awards are a joint manufacturer of Mr Coffee
Orlett
and
Skee
n
used
the
products.
enroute
to Tehran aft er the
administration official promvent ure of t he Ohio
collective
barga
inin
g
bill
Gordon
S
.
Mackli
n
of
order
was
issued Was a llowed
ised to report back after talkNewspaper Association and
Rhodes
vetoed
two
years
ago
Cleveland,
president
of
the
to
land
but
as of midday had
ing with the governor.
th e Ohio Depa rtm ent of
and
his
veto
message
to
Natjon
al
Associati
on
of
not
been
given
permission to
" What it all boils down to, I
Economic and Community
discuss
"poss
ible
cha
nges
Securities
Dealers.
take
off
on
the
return trip to
think, is that the Legislature
Development.
Betty
Scuthard
Murphy
of
Damascus
and
Geneva. Two
and aaministration will be that couid be made ... to meet
Honorees include:
Colum
bus,
member
and
Poli
sh
airli
ner
s, whi ch
working ·together to draft a the governor's objections,"
Paul E. Brown of Cinarrived Wednesday to take
public employee ,collective the Dayton Democrat said . cinnati, general manager of form er cha irman of the
Among the topics discussed
Nation al La bor Relations
out depend ents of Poli sh
bargainin g bill that will be of
the Cincinnati Bengals.
were
the
employees'
desire
technicians and diplomats,
Board.
benefit to both the public
Crum
,
sports
Jimmy
for
an
agency
shop,
their
Donald
E.
Noble
of
also had not gotten peremployees and the people of
director of WCMH-TV ,
right
to
strike
and
their
Wooster;
.chairman
of
the
Ohio," Orlett said.
Columbu s. for community
board of Rubbermaid , Inc.
Co ll ecti ve bar ga ining desire to have ' collective a nd civic contribution s.
William J . · Oert el of
meas ur~s
which Orl ett bargaining agreement lhat
lbomas C. Eakin of Shaker
Columbus, executive director
sponsored in the House were cannot be altered by later
and secretary of the Ohio
Newspaper Association.
Ohio University at Athens,
in honor of the 175lh anniversary of its founding.
Ara Parseghian, an Akron
native, former head football
coach at Notre Dame, Northwestern and
Miami
universities.
John A. Ruthven of
Georgetown, wildlife artist
and conservationist.
Paul H. Smucker of Orrville, chairman and president
of the J . M. Smucker Co. ·
Also to be honored as a
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
special guest is 92-year-old J .
A. Meckstroth, former editor
JANUARY 26 &amp; 27
of the old Ohio State J ournal
newspaper of Colwnbus.
Group
Spring Fool

iALEFRIDAY&amp;SATURDAY

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45" &amp; 60" FABRIC
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$8.95

'10.00 OFF
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NECK

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Governor ·awards

FRI. &amp; SAT.

ROUCH

of the monarch 's children and
his mother-in-Jaw were flying
from the United States to
meet him in Morocco over the
weekend.

FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY
FABRIC ·SALES

·*JEANS

Compromise bill outlined

'Next to E lberfelds in Pomeroy, 0."

The monarch was reported
to have postponed a trip to the
United States because of
President Carter's apparent
backing for Khomeini. Four

NYLON
Rl

*WESTERN
BOOTS

scheduled Feb. 8

Dennis and Ca rol Ault,
Pomeroy are announci ng the
bi rth of a son, Matthew Blair,
~&gt;Vn on Dec. 28 at the Holzer
Medical Center. He weighed
nine pounds, two ounces and
was 21 inches long.
Mrs. Mary Sheets of Springfielf Springfield is the
maternal grandmother, and
Mr. and Mrs. William Ault,
Middleport, are the paternal
grandparents. Mrs. Alma
Sindle of Springfi eld is the
paternal great-grandmother.

son ,

'1200

DAY

Announce birth

Ru!-ise ll Browning,
Jackson.

POMEROY, 0.

FOR

removed because, Solomon

Holzer Medical C~nler
'Discharges, Jan. 24
Leslie Adkins, Corena Barnitz, Mahlon Christian
An gela Da vi s, Di an~
Dehainaut, Janes Duffy, Alan
Durst, Mrs. Kenneth ' Edmiston and son, Timolhy
Eldricge, Frances Hersman
Qlenna HOrton , Carl .Jenn:
ings, Augusta Lamb Chris
Lambert', Matthew ' Long
Eva McCoy, Julie McDougal'
William Menhouse, Mrs:
Phillip Miller and son , HatU e
Norris, Lena Plesence, John
·Rag la nd, Clara Ril ey
~arul y n Rous h, Ll oyd
Sergent, Walter Shane Billy
Singer; Tony Slone ' Cecil
Smith, Pearl Smith; F:llen
Spohn. Alvin Walton, Mrs.
David Watson and daughter,
Dewey White , Deborah
Woltz.
Births, Jan. 24 Mr. and Mrs.

Jeff Nelson_-

DOLLAR

said , he. was an inn pediment
to reorganizing th e scandalplagued agency.
Nter- O'Neill objected to
the
administration 's
"shabby " treatment of his
friend, Carter relented and
appointed Griffin as assistant
to U.S. trade negot iator
Robert ·Strauss.
Despite published reports
that Carter's congressional
lia iso n
Frank
Moore
informed O'Neill one month
ago that Solomon would be
leaving in May , spokesmen
for both the speaker and the
White House say O'Ne ill
wants no input in selecti!lg
Solomon 's successor. · 1,·:::·r· ':

Hos pit~l News

,

Group Ladies

REG. '29.95

MEN'S

Khomeini delays Iran return

. " -- ---:-l •

1

$35 .00 to $70.00

.

Know Your Carrier

I

By Charlene Hoeflich

Wagner introduced Keith
Ashley who talked about
genealogy.
.
Sus"n Well and Connie Dodson served refreslunents.

.

90'

ONLY .

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Leonard Scarbrough, Jo
Ann Sca rbrough to Herman
0. Redman, Eleanora L.
Redman, Parcels, Sutton.
Ora Sinclair to Charles E.
Sinclair, Margaret A. Sinclair, 4 A., Orange.
Michael Barr, Margie
Barr,• Dia ne Barr, Virginia
-Barr, Larry Barr, Shilron
Barr, Kay Barr Cadwallader,
Blair Cadwallader , Imogene
Barr Messer, Chester Messer
to Elvira Barr. Int. In 15.2 A.,
Rutland .
Eilee n Wid ger , John
Wi dger, Harold Phillips,
Mary Phillips, Reva Smith ,
Ernie Smith to Elvira Barr,
Int., in 15.2 A., Rutland.

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2 $5
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ONLY

75~

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Reg . $4-$7

40~

. Price

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/z PRICE

1

Women 's &amp; Girls

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BOOTS

lj3 OFF
Reg . Price

MEN'S
DRESS &amp;CASUAL

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liz PRICE
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WINTER .
SNOW BOOTS

1/3 OFF_Price
Dolla r Day Specials
Final Clea ranc e ·
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MERCHANDISE
DOORS OPEN

OF SHOES ·
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OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

'•

Middleport , 0 .

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�·'

'
1?:-The Daily Sentinel, Middleoori-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Jan. 25, 1979
11- The Daily Sentinel ,Middl~;&gt;ort:Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, Jan . 25, 1979

Farm scene

.Workers protest fund integration

U.S. farmers made stunning recovery in 1978
By DON KENDALL
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) Although many fanners will
disagree: new government
fi gures show that as a
national group they made a
stuMing financial recovery
last year.
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland said Wed nesday
that net farm income soared
40 percent in 1978 to $28.1
billion from $20.1 billion in
1977.
Prices of commodities at
the farm , led by cattle, rose
sharply in 1978 and averaged
22 percent higher at the end of
the year .
Bergland included the
income figures and some
other statistics in testimony
for the Senate Agriculture
Committee.

The · Agriculture Depari· gains last year. There are sharply higher livestock agriculture as of Jan. I and
· ment. until then, had been always those who are hard- pri ces, for which the for the year ahead.
saying fanners' net income pressed even in the best of government can take no · Some of the changes from a
last year would be about $26 times, and those who prosper credit, he said,. but the rest year ago, included:
ca me ''because of new
- Total physical assets of
billion , up 29.3 percent from in the worst.
,
programs
established
under
farmers
were value!lat $752.3
as
a
measure
of
But
1977.
leglslailon
proposed
by
the
billion,
Including $588.9
agricultural
finan
ces,
the
The revised estimate puts
administration
and
passed
by
billion
In
real
estate. A year
farm income at the second indicators - income, assets,
ago,
those
totaled
Congress"
the
last
two
years.
$672.I
highest level on record, debts for instance - do serve
Sen.
Jesse
A.
Helms,
R·
billion,
including
real
estate
behind the $29.9 billion far- in comparing changes from
$525.8
billion.
·
at
N.C.,
said,
"Farmers
don't
mers realized in 1973 when it one year to another.
agree
with
your
statistics
on
Including
other
holilings
" In virtually every respect,
. jumped from $17.8 billion the
1978 was a good year for the how well they're doing ... Are such as bank deposits and
previous yea r.
· Bergland also sa1d total U. American farmer and 1979 you pla ying around with investments, the grand total
of farmers' assets on Jan. I
.
S. farm assets - the book looks like it will be 'another," statistics?"
was $790.1 billion, up n.s·
are
misleading.
We
"They
Bergland
said.
value of land and other
In addition , farmers earned have to deal with averages/' percent from $708.3 billion a
holdings - rose ' more last
year earlier.
year than had been indicated $.14.4 billion from off.fann Bergland said.
- Fann debt on Jan.! rose
Carson
D.
Evans
of
the
a few months ago, largely jobs, a 10 percent increase.
further
to $135.9 billion, up
Economics,
department's
Many farmers still have
becauSe of land prices going
14.3
percent
from $118 .9
Statistics
and
Cooperatives
up faster than had be~n . financial problems, Bergland
billion
at
the
start
of 1978.
Service,
at
·the
request
of
a
said, but most farmers in
anticipated.
The
equity
farmers
reporter
,
provided
some
The improved jncome most regions "shared in the
owned
outright
in
their
land
further
information
on
the
improved
prosperity."
figures do not mean that all
and
other
holdings,
computed
"
balance
sheet
"
of
Most
of
tnat
was
due
to
farmers shared equally in the

Tax break hearings beginning soon
By ROBERT E. MILLER
AsMciated Press Writer

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Senate hearings are expected
to begin soon on a major bill
that grants lax breaks to
inner city industry in return
for th e creation of jobs.
Senate Commer ce a nd
Labor Chairman William F.
Bowen, D-Gncinnati, had six
Democrats
a nd
four
Republicans as co-sponsors
when he introduced the bill
Wednesday.
It also is expected to be
supported by GOP Gov .
James A. Rhodes, aJongtime
advocate uf the theory that
tax breaks to create jobs will
produce more tax revenues
over the long haul.
House members, in other
action, approved Wednesday
their first bill of the 31k-weekold session.

They sent the Senate 87-6 a wnile 18 proposals boosted
measu re requmn g the the number introduced in the
energy department to set House to 157,
Bowen's bill is identical to a
lighting efficiency standards
01easure approved last year
for public buildings.
Most of the lawmakers by the Senate only to die for
headed home for a legislative lack of support in the 99recess until ~·eb . 6 when the Ulember House . Many
governor will present his majority Democrats and
"State of the State" address, some Republicans are still
and probably his two-year reluctant to buy the concept
budget proposals, to a joint of tax breaks for industry.
session .
•
However , Ocasek and
Leaders said the two cham- House Speaker Vernal r.
.hers, hav ing completed Riffe Jr ., D-New Bostoo,
organizational work for the cooperated with Rhodes last
new session, are taking the session in the passage of
time off to allow the printing so01e tax abatement laws
of bills and the preparation of that assertedly helped attract
bill analyses .
industry to Ohio.
4
'There's little more we can
Bowen reiterated claiqls
do right no\1'," ·said Senate that his bill offers hope for the
President Oliver Ocasek, D- unemployed and welfare poor
Akron.
in Ohio's inner cities.
The Senate received nine
"The debiliiated areas of
new measures Wednesday, the inner cities are not
generating tax base as it is,"
he said.
He gave assurances he is
concerned about the possible
impact of his bill on school
revenues, due to proposed
abatements of property
taxes.
Under his measure, school
districts would receive $100
for each new job created; No
industry would get tax breaks
auto01atically. The amount of
the abatements would be lied
directly to the number of jobs
created, and a certain per-

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centage would have to be
filled from the ranks of the
unemployed.
Bowen, as Rhodes has oo
01any occasions, said the
legislation would rejuvenate
the eqmomies of cities, since
new workers would be paying
income, sales, and even
property tax~' he e~ H •e so01e

By Tbe Assocjafed Press
would represent a step back·
Ohio public workers don't ward and a denial of some
want their retirement funds benefits for which they had
integrated into the Social · worked so hard, and for
Security system, an Ohio which they had planned in
Civil Service Employees their retirement years."
Association leader h~s told a
Sorohan, testifying Wedrungresstonal commtllee.
nesday at a public hearing of
The association's executive the
Universal
Society
director, Patrick R. Sorohan, Security Coverage Study
said Ohio's 500,000 public Committee in Washington
.workers " feel that a ny said a 1977 stud~ indicated
01andatory inclusion of their Ohio workers could .expect to
retirement system into the contribute an additionell tn 2
Social Security progralJ1

by delhlcting debts from
The agency wants to needed in the rules, officials
assets, rose to a record of liberalize · aut hority for said.
The regulations would let
$654.2 billion from $589.4 federally insured savings and
billion· on Jan. I, 1978.
loan associatolns to invest in savings institutions invest in
the loans wltboul the USUBl
Ev~ns sa\d that " very guaranteed loans by the
tentative" proj ections point · Farmers
Home · Ad· requirement of private
to further gains by next Jan. ministration. The board is mortgage insurance and with
I, when total farm assets are trying to make more home ter01s of more than 30 .years.
"We've been doing so much
expected to have a value of lending money a vailable to
$867.6 billion, a further in· rural savings and loan · for cities and not as much for
rural areas," said Robert H.
·
crease of ahnost 10 percent. ·a'ssociatlons.
Farm debt also ·will rise
An estimated 20,000 middle- McKinney, chairman of the
•
further to around $153 .3 income rural families would bank board.
"A
significant
number of
billion by next Jan. I, a be able to buy houses because
projected increase of 12.8 of the proposal, officials said rural people have not been
able to get 01ortgage credit
percent.
Wednesday.
But farmers' equity in what
The program is aimed at equal to people in urban
said
Gordon
they have also is expected to residents of rural areas and areas,"
ad·
gain, to a projected $714.3 communities with less than Cavanuagh , GHA
billion by next year, up 9.2 ' 20 ,000 population . It is ministrator.
He estimated the proposals
percent, Evans said.
designed
to
permit
guaranteed loans for families make millions of people
whose incomes range from eligible to apply . for new ·
WASHINGTON (AP) housing and that enough
The Federal Home Loan $15,600 to $20,000.
Congress provided $500 money is avilable for about
Bank Board has P~.oposed
regulations which It ·sajd million for the program in the 22 ,ooo loans.
" will make home ownership a fiscal ' 1979 budget, but the The board · will · consider
tittle easier for rural families' program has been stalled comments for 30 days before
because changes were acting on the proposal.
in this country.''

'

CINCINNATI (AP ) ~ U . S.
District Judge Carl B. Rubin
has signed a final pretrial
order clearing the way for the
first phase of Beverly Hills
Supper Club lire civil
litigation.
More than $2.9 billion in
damages is peing sought in
the aftermath of the May 28,
1977 fire at the posh nigh spot
just across the Ohio River in
Southgate, Ky., in which Hili .
died.
' Rubin met privately for
more than two hours Wednesday with attorneys for
both sides, then predicted the
trial would take about three
months.
The class action lawsuits
seek compensatory and
for
punitive damages
wrongful deaths and personal
injuries . Because of the
number of plaintiffs, not all
are represented in this initial
trial. A similar action is
pending in state court.
Defendants in the first trial
are The Union Light, Heal &amp;

would be buying homes .
The governor publicly endorsed Bowen's bill last year,
and said his administration
will propose additional tax
break bills. At least one will
be designed · to boost the
warehouse business in Ohio,
Rhodes said.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, JANUARY 26 AND 27

CANCER ..

Peking. We just offered it to
them.

· Ohio College Basketball

WOMEN'S
SHOES

By The Associated Press

Reg . $3.00

Wednesday Night
(Mid-American)
C. Mlch.lgan 81. Bowling
Greeri 76
Kent St .' 62, Miami 59

Toledo

LADIES'
DRESS
'SHOES

$6

Conference

LADIES'
FASHION
BOOTS

20%0FF

Pair

Ohi o U . 67
!Ohio)
Ba ldw in.Wallace 57, Capital
54

WEST PORTSMOUTH,
Ohio (AP) - Scioto County
Sheriff John Knauff has
asked the state Bureau of
Criminal Identification and
Investigation to assist in a
prohe of the slayings of two
young women.
The bodies of the women beaten, shot and burned were found Wednesday in a
mobile home they shared in
West Portsmouth.

.

Muskingum 63, .Mount Union
61
Ohio Wesleyan 65, ' Marietta
63
Oberlin 93, Denison 48
Otterbein 72, Ohio No rthern
55
Wooster 82, Heidelberg 65
(Hoosier-Buckeye)
Def iance 91, Wilmingt on 77

( President~)
.
Allegheny 78, Jojm Carroll 63

Wash &amp; Jeff 81. Case Reserve

OT
(Other Games l
Ci ncinnati 79, West Virgin ia
75,

All Ladies

PURSES

20%OFF
Reg. Price

LADIES'
DRESS
SHOES

MEN'S
WEYENBERG
sttQES

$8~air

Bra ken Sizes

65

78,

· Miss America

Dayton 72

Xavier 74, Detroit 70

Today's ·birthday: Broad- ,
caster Edwin Newman is 60 '
Amerlc: C
years old.
--...--•
...
"
__
lnC_er_Soc
__
'-'Y..;.._..;.._____
Thought for today: There
..
' are four ways of examining
l'egutar
teature, long-term survival is ll)en - by their conversation, '
A
prepared by the American . excellent more often than npt. disposition , family and
Cancer Society, to help save
A .fishing boat captain conduct - a Hindu proverb.
your life from cancer.
asks.: "What are the 01ost
common types of skin cancer
A dentist
: "Verythat
few
· people
arenotesaware
and what do they look like?"
cigarette smoking increases
ANSWERiine: More than
the risk of developing oral 90percent of skin cancers fall
cancer. Can you give them under two cell type
the fa cts?"
classifications : basal cell
ANSWERiin e:
The carcinoma and sqilamow cell
relationship between tobacco carcinoma. These two
use and mouth cancer has common types can appear on
been suspected since tbe aimost any area of the skin,
early 18th century when lip but usually develop on
cancer was noted among exposed parts of the body ·
tobacco users. In 1964 lbe such as the face, nee~ .
association between tobacco forearms and backs of• ~anii's.·
and the development of Because your work exposes
mouth cancer was firmly you to the sun, you should be
established in the Surgeon especially alert to sun-caused
General's Report on Smoking skin changes and have them
and Health. Today, tbe death checked by a doctor. Be alert
rate from mouth cancer is for skin changes including
estimated to be a bout four pale, waxlike bumps that
time_s higher for cigarette eventually open and crust.
smokers
than
for Also, watch lor red, scaly and ,
nonsmokers. Additionally, it sharply outlined patches ,
has been learned that if a Skin cancer is highly curable
heavy dgarette smoker also if detected early. For more
is a heavy drinker, 'he risk of information, ask your local
orai cancer is till higher. American Cancer Society
Cigar and pipe enthusiasts Unit for ·a free folder entitled
also risk lip cancer. And tbe "Facts on Skin Cancer."
cancer risk is higher for
A psychologist asks : "Do
people who chew tobacco people really have physical
than for those who do not.
checkups? At least half of the
An elementary school people I know do not."
teach.er asks : "What are a
ANSWERiine : In a 1978
child's chances of surviving study co01missioned by the
. cancer ?"
American Cancer Society, It
ANSWERiine : Tre - was revealed that Americans
mendous progress has been are indeed going tD their
made in recent years in doctors for health checkups
the fight against childhood w(th greater regularity than
cancer. Speaking in general, they did in 1966, the last time
children with cancer have a such a study. was done. About
better chance of living a 36 percent of the public now
loriger life than .ever before. has . regular checkups.
More than 75 percent of Regular checkups are one
children w~o have cancer in way of protecting one 's
the tJ. S. today are bebig bealth. This .is true because
effectiv e ly treaied, regular health surveillance
compared with less than 25 can help detect cancer in il.!i
percent in 1971. For an early stages when the chance
individual child, depending of cure is best. Your
on the kind of cancer and tlie physician can suggest a
stage at which it is diagnosed sc~edule based on your age
and treated, the potential for and cancer risk profile.

"""ting married

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Susan Perkins, Miss America
1978, will marry Gillette Co. ·
executive Alan Botsford on
May 26 in the Harvard
University chapel.
Miss Perkins, 24, said the
couple met last year while
she was touring the
headquarters of the Bostonbased razor company, which
is one of the Miss America
Pageant's sponsors.
Miss Perkins is a ·
Middletown native and was a
legisl a tiv e assistant to
Republicans in the Ohio
Senate before being named
Miss America in September
19n at Atlantic City, N.J .

BETIY OHLINGER
POMEROY,

102 E. MAIN ST.

0.

Ceremony slated
COLUMBUS;-Ohio (AP) A groundbreaking cere01on)'
at the site of the proposed
lodge In Deer Creek State
Park is scheduled for 1 p.m.
Friday.
Gov . James A: Rhodes and
other federal, state and local
officials are expected at the
event. The park is located off
Ohio 207 in Pickawa:y and Fayette counties, about 35 miles
southwest of Columbus.
Construction of the $13 million lndge is expected to take
about two years. The 110room lodge will be second hi
size only to the 148-room Salt
Fork State Park lodge near
Cambridge.

Valentine's Day Cards
r--7'fn!A~ ffl~~

SALES INCREASED
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)
Tite Reynolds and Reynolds
Co. reported a 25.7" percent
gain in sales and a 21.5
percent incr'e ase In net
profits for the 1979 fiscal first
quarter ended Dec. 31.
1be business forms .and
computer systems producer
had net earnings of $3.2 •
million or 68 cents per share,
a record for the first quarter ,
on sales of $40.4 million in the
quarter.
During .the same period last
year, II had net income of $2.6
million, or 68 cents per share
on sales of $32.1 million.

...~c~r!e~a.~ti1v~e=-~~:~~a~n~A~merican traditio,.•".·~

SWISHER .... LOH~~
"

Pharmacy

-------~ ~tnnelh McCullough,
R. Pll. , Chlrln RIHit; R. Pit.
.
.Ron•ld Hanning, R. Ph
•,
· ~&gt;~on . lhruS.t.a:ooa.m.totp: m .
Sund•y tO : JO to 12:30 ond 5 to 9 p.m.

, PRESCRIPTIONS

.

Friendly. serlnce
,E. Mlin

Power Co., the 4-R Corp. that
operated the supper club, and
its owner's, Richard J .
Schilling and his sons,
Richard J . Schilling Jr .,
Ronald
Schilling
and
Raymond Scott Schilling .
The order set out the Issues
to be determined in the trial
at U. S. District Court in
Covington, Ky., Feb. 13.
The suits contend that the
utility was neglig ent in
supplying electricity to a
building which it knew or
should have known had
defective wiring.
There had been a major
fire at the supper club June
21 , 1970, and electrical ser·
vice was restarted without a
thorough inspection of the
building, the plaintiffs said.·
They charge that the
operators of the supper club
failed to instruct employees
in emergency procedures and
did not provide enough exits
from the building.
The suits allege negligence
in design and construction

BCI joining·
murder probe

79,

-~~~~~-l'!"'~_,..,...,.---,--- ~---- W. Kentucky

Answer line

1 Group

1 Group

program.
So r ohan .. .whose· gro up
represents 30,000 state employees, pointed out that

plagued . ~oc t a l ~c cu rity
system wo uld be furth e r
strained as the post-World
War II " baby boo m ''
Ohio' s rive pubi c worker g en e r a tio n
rea c h es
pension fuilds arc ba,; ed on retirement age.
contributions by workers to
lly the yea r 2030. Sorohan
t he ir own retirement ac- said, " there will be 50
counts, while under the Social bene£iciarics drawing Social
Sec urity syst em, " tuday 's Sec urity fo r ev er y 100
wage earner s are directly wo rk er s pay ing · into the
paying for the benefits of system, compared with a ~0yesterday's wage earners. ·• to-100 ratio today."
He said the financwlly
·He said that unlike the
So cial Sec urity system,
Ohio' s
public ' worker
retirement programs would
be able to handle the extra
stra in because of their "pay·
as - you-go" fin a n ci n g
::;t ructurc.
Soroh
an
also
said
ther
e
demand for an undisclosed
would
be.
a
major
impact
on
settlement .
" The va riou s copper-to· ca pit al formation if universal
aluminum connections which Social Sec urity coverage is
were made in the club be· mandated. He explained that
tween ·1970 and 1977 included private pension funds invest
the usc of connecting devices about $15 billion of working
which the utility company ca pital each year in governand
corporate
knew . were unstable a nd ment
sec
urities,
a
nd
said
th a t·
. which wou ld eve ntually·
money would be lost if the
·produce hazardous con·
ditions," the plaintiffs said. private funds went out of
" Th e . en ti re electri ca l ex istence.
system was work ing at ;.;.;.;:;.;-:-:-:::::-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::;.;-::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
maximum output" the night
EXTENDED FORECAST
of the fire . "The electrical
Sat urda y
thr ou g h
system failed and resulted in
Monday
:
Cold
with
snow or
arci ng, spa rking
and
snow
flurries
possible
each
overheating of lines, with
day.
Highs
in
the
30s
ens uin g det er ioration of
Sa
turd
ay
a
nd
the
20s
romex wire coverings and
Sunda
y
and
Monday.
Lows
emission of poisonous gases
ncar 20 early Sunday and in
... and the production of heat,
th e teens early Monday.
smoke and fire ."

similar pe riod last year. th e
compr.1ny reported n~t earnings nf $21i0 . U2~. 000. or $:1.ili
per share.
ror the
October
December period, th e second
Qlwrtrr of thr compony's

F!H. 'th-29S5

r&gt;omel'oy., 0 .

,O pen Nllll!ls !lilt

"I

and in allowing too many
people into the Ca rabet
Room. the main show room.
The Beverly Hills owners
deny liability, contending
they ·relied on independent
contractors when the club
was renovated , and they
complied with all safety
requirements with whi ch
they were made aware.
The power company said
there was no evidence that it
knew of alleged defective or
improper wiring in the club.
The trial order also noted
that plaintiffs, the 4-R Corp.
and the Schillings were
continuing
effort s
to
negotiate a settlement before
the matter comes to triaL
Howeve r, Union Light ,
Heal &amp; Power Co. had not
responded ' to pla intiffs

Weather

reported today

Moytly cloudy tonight with
the low in the teens. Partly
cloudy Friday. Highs in the
low 30s . The chance of
precipitation is 20 percent
tonight and 10 perce nt
Friday. '

CLEVELAND (AP)- The
Standa rd Oil of Ohio reported
recor d-hig h 1978 ea rnings
today. crediting its first full
year of Alaskan crude oil
operatons for the 149 percent
net i11come increa.se over
1977.
Sohio Chairman Alton IV.
Whitehouse said net income
was $450. 2 million , or $4 per
share. Net income for the
corresponding period in 1977
was $181.1 million, or $2.19
per share.
Sa les a nd opera ting
reveoues for 1976 totaled $5.2
bi llion , compared to $3.5
billion for 1977.
Whitehouse sa id Sohio's
sha r e of Alaskan oil
product ion averaged 506,800
barrels per day in 1978,
compared to 143,600 barrels
daily in 1977'
He said initial net returns
on the Alaska-related in·
vestment_ resulted in a cor·

Veterans Memorial Hospital

ADMITTED - Jose ph
St ewart , Bidwell; Nancv
Pope, Middleport.
·
DISCHARGED
Phil
· The sheriff's office iden·
tilled the victims as Debbie Baldwin , Maggie Arnold,
Coleman, 22, of Route 5, Bernice Lavalley, ~· rede rick
Portsmouth , and Donna Stoba rt .
Kennard, 20, of South Shore,
Ky.
CEREMONY SET
The women were beaten
Thirt ee n former Meigs
and 'tortured for several High School athletes will be
hours before they were shot inducted into th e high
in the backs of their heads, school's athletic Hall of Fame
the . coroner's office said.
bet wee n games tomorrow
An autopsy of the women night when the Metgs teams
was planned.
'
·
meet Jackson in the Larry
Knauff said the victims Morrison Auditorium .
apparently died ea rly
Wednesday morning and that
their trailer appeared to have
been ransacked. He also said
VOLU_ME DECLINES
there were signs of a struggle
RIPLEY, Ohio 1AP )
in the trailer.
Volume continued to decline
Neighbors said the two Wednesday at Ohio's burley
women returned home from tobacco market which will
downtown Port smouth at close for the season after
about 2:30 a.m. Wednesday . sales Feb. 6.
Their bodies were discovered
~a les totaled lo0,556 pounds
by Miss Coleman's mother for $193,044.34 for a hunabout nine hours later.
dred we ight average of
$128.22, up from $121.81 on
Tuesday .

porate ret urn on borrowed

and invested capital of 9.9
percent, up from 4.9 percent
in 1977.
Fourth-quarter sales and
revenue for 1976 totaled $1.li
billion for a net income of
$164.0 million, or $1.37 per
sha re. Fi g ures fo r th e
corresponding 1977 quarter
were sa les of $1 billion for net
income of $70.2 million , or 74
cents per share.

FIRDA Y &amp; SATURDAY
ENTIRE STOCK

JACKETS &amp; SNOW SUITS
WERE REG. '12.99 to '31.50

TO

NOW

"LESS THAN Y:z PRICE"

Snow...

ALL

BIG SELECTION

SLEEPWEAR

BOYS
SHIRTS -

14 PRICE

1h PRICE

All GIRLS

SELECTION OF

SWEATERS

GIRLS
DRESSES

9z PRICE

1h PRICE

PULLOVER

/Continued from pctge l i
fli ghts at the area's three
major airports and knocking
down at lea;1 100 trees.
In New Jersey, more than
16,000 electric customers in
two counties ncar New YOrk
City were without power late
Wednesday. Newark
recei vcd more than 2 inches
of rain by midnight.
Rivers in Massachusetts,
Hhode Island and southern
Conn ecticut remain high
fro m Sunday's heavy rains
and
official s
warned
residents of flooding as t he
ra in moves through New
Engla nd.
, Flash flood warnings wer e
issuc'&lt;i for the Berkshires in
western Massachusetts and
city officials in Revere antl
Scituate bega n making
prepa rati ons lor possi bl e
evacuations.
Heavy sno\\o' warnings were
posted for pa rt s of Vermont,
New Hampshire and Maine,
wher e up to 6 inches \\'BS
b p~cted by tonight.

GIRLS

CORDUROY SLACKS
SIZES S-6x

Hours :
to 5 ;00

9 ;30

Mon . thru Sa1 .

VIS&gt;! '

Near Stiffler s
In Pomeroy

2nd Street
Pomeroy , 0 .
992 -2586

9;JO ioB :OO
Friday

KIDDIE SHOPPE

211 wells
completed
last month
NEW/RK, Ohio (AP) There were 211 oil wells
completed in Ohio during
December, according to the
Ohio
Oil
and
Gas
Association's scout report.
This total compares with 176
in November and 319 in
December 1977.
The association said 184 of
the wells were completed as
producers and 17 were dry
holes with 10 corrections.
Completions reported for 1978
tofaled 2,537.
The association also
during
r eported
that
December, the Ohio Division
of Oil and Gas issued 461
permits for new wells. That
brought the total of permits
issued last year to 4,533.
The association 's latesl
check Indicates there are
currently 59 wells drilling.

January school
funds received
· Meigs County's three local
school districts received a
total payment o( $244,317.71
following deductions lor
retirement as their share of
the ·State School Foundation
subsidy payments for
January.
•
Meigs · Local District
received $128,126.60 ; ·Eastern
Local, $53,343.03, and Southern Local, $62,848.03.' In
addition the county board of
education received a direct
allbtmenl of $16,565.70.

EARlY. SHOPPERS SPECIAL
1

ODD GROUP TABLE

1.00 ITEM

POLYESTER PULLON SLACKS 17.00 Pair
or 2 for $12 .00

POLYESTER DRESSES

Values to

16.00 ea.

130.00

sz.oo

BUTION FRONT SWEATERS
V-NECK SWEATERS ~~~:~h
WRAP FRONT SWEATERS
HAT AND SCARF
SETS

Reg. 15.98

or

Reg.

110

2for ~aoo
Now ~00

NOW 12.00

/z PRICE

COATS

1

ONE GROUP DRESSES

30% OFF

LONG FLUFFY ROBES.

Reg . 140.00 1

27.50

ONE SMALL GROUP OF JEANS

TWO'S COMPANY
118 E. MAIN

t

'.

Record earnings

fi,sca l ) Lar . net earnings were
$127,1 U2,UOO. or $1.54 per
sh;,r(l. In n similar period last
yPa r .
e arnin g~
wt t•c
$1 10 ,!112.000 , or $l.J l per
sha re.

We -Blast -Prices·!

First suit obstacle cleared

Clark planning trip to Otina
NASHVILLE , Tenn. (AP)
- Roy Clark, the jovial
hillbilly of "Hee Haw" who
took his hootin' and hollerin',
pickin ' and grinnin ' to
standing-room.,nly crowds in
the Soviet Union, is setting
his sights on a China tour .
A guitarist, fiddler and
banjo picker, Clark was the
first country music singer to
take a show to the Soviet
Union. The 1973 Country
Music
Association
entertainer of the year played
to sold out concerts In
Moscow, Riga and Leningrad
in 1976.
.
"We 're trying to be the first
to tour the People's Republic
of China," Clark, 45, said
Tuesday hi' a telephone
interview from Monte Carlo,
Monaco.
"We've sent a telegram to
Huang
Chen,
China's
minister of culture , in

percent of their pay for
retirement purposes if their
pension funds became part of
the Social Security system.
The study by Ohio Auditor
Thomas Ferguson's offi ce
also said contributions by
public employers into the
fund would have to increase
by 14 percent, Sorohan added.
He also said integ ration of
the two systems could cause
Ohio workers to lose benefits
they have under the existing

EAIIN INGS Ul'
CIN CINN ATI i i\P J l'rot1er &amp; Camille Co. has
announced its net t· arnings
for the first six months of its
fisca l year were $294.009,000 ,
or $3.56 per share. In "

........ . .

.,,.

POMEROY, 0.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, JANUARY 26 AND 27

PLASTIC

PLASTIC

WASTE BASKETS
,. &amp; BUCKETS

.,

EACH

VINYL ·
UTILITY MATS

3

FOR

SELF

KITCHEN WARE

2

FOR

..,

SELECTION OF

GLASSWARE

2

FOR

.,

DECORATIVE
PLASTIC

'1

ROLL

GIFT ITEMS

'1

EACH

POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P omeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Ja n. 25, 1979

For Best Results Use Seniinel Classifieds

Bollen

FUNNY sustNEss

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Ads rUnning other Hwn coJL!IeCutlve
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HHP WANTED 1n f md1ng Real
Holmess Chu rc h A r ts II 17th
thr u 18t h 991 •3.4 56

Moblle Horne !U:Iie!J and Yard sales
are acct'pted only ·with cash with

URG f NTL Y NHOt:O to b01 row
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order 25 cent ctwrge for ads carrymg Box Nwnber In Care ol The Sentinel.

The Publisher r~rves the right
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~

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thruFnday
t P.M.

the day before pu bli ct~ ti on
Sunday
t P.M.
Friday arternoon . .

,-.---~-.-...-----

DEAR DR. BLAKER - All
m y f ri e nds are s ure
somethi.ilg is wron3 with me
b ec au s e
I
am
so
super stitious.
Not only do I avo1a walking
under ladders a nd get upset
when a black cat crosses my
path. I also believe I must
never talk in glowing terms
about anything I really want
· because it wiD only be taken
a way. That make~ me always
, soWld very negative .
And I never violate the sayings ! learned as a child.
For example, my boyfriend
.is leaving town this week to
spend a few months with his
ailing mother. Even though
he says he will write and miss
me, ·I was taught, " Out of
. sight, out of mind." l know he
will forget about me .
As a result, I have completely turned him off. Why
should I s tay involved when I
wiD only get hurt? My friends
think I am crazy to throw
away such a good relationship for such a stupid reason.
I was shocked when they
s uggest ed I write to you for
advice. For yea rs they have
been laughing at m y silly
behavior . I was sure m y
superstitious wa ys were quite
entertaining. Now I a m insecure and mixed up .
DEAR READER - Your
friends might have ~&gt;\len initially entertained by your
superstitions or they might
have been laughing because
your behavior made them uncomfortable .
Whatever the reason, they
now have made themselves
clear. They seem to fe el it is
self-&lt;lestructive for you to live
by s uperstitions a nd meaningless sayings.
I a_gr ee . Sayings are hardly
definitive enough to serve a s
a basis for life. There is one
for every side of an issue.
Why, .tor .-ample, did' you .

heart grows fonder ."
If you choose the saying to
fit each sit uation, we might
conclude that you make a

choi ce -

in

this case,

withdrawing from your
boyfriend -and then blame it
on a sayil!g instead of taking
responsibility for your action.
You are making choices but
not acknowledging them to
yourself.
Superstitions serve the
sam e purpose. They give you
something - other than
yourself - to blame or thank
when you have a strea k of
bad or good " luck."
I am glad your friends were
able to eonvlnce you that your
behavior is no laughing matter . Now you no longer have
to keep up the routine for
them. You are free to cha nge.
If, as your letter leads me
to believe, you have beer\ using this behavior for a
number of years, you will
probably need professional
counseling to break with the ,
past.
But you will have to make
the first move because, as the
old saying goes, " You ca n
lead a horse to water but you

....

I. The Poet's I
l

·corner

To Our Se cond Granddaughter, Kasey Jo - Jan.

chosen, "Absence makes the

8, 1979.
Our second little girl has
finally arrived on the scene

Can hardly wait to
I

see

her,

you grandparents know
what we mean

"There were hopes she'd

. t b · ht
her~ earIter,
0 r1g en our
Christmas day

But our wee one had other
plans, we don't always have

our way

She made her debut on a cold
Monday mom, with the help
of the doctor's hand
From that wonderful place
that I call New Born BlibY.
Land .
We know that she's a living ·
angel, with a halo of baby ' '
brown hair
· ·:
She isn 'I as big as sister
Shannon, but I know she is
just as fair
Just couldn't wait to go
shopping for that first dress
so small
Then after looking them over,
wanted to buy them all
Finally settled for a tiny red
velvet, all trimmed with
lac.e so fine
For your very first Valentine
can 't make him drink."
Day, sweet little grandLearn the faclll behind the
daughter of mine
m yths about sexuality and Also started sewing on a
aging. Write for Dr. Blaker's
quilt, to keep you aU cozy
hotline, "Sex : How Old I s Too
and warm
Old'" Send 50 cents plus a Because it gets mighty cold
s e lf-addres sed
s t a mped ,
and windy, out on that ·
'envelope t o Dr. Blaker in
Wisconsin farm
care of this newspaper, P .O. We can hardly walt for that
Box 475, Radio City Station ,
first visit, to hold you in our
New York, N.Y. 10019. Be
arms
sure to request the newsletter So until that lime we'll have a
by name.
picture, of all your baby '
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
charms
of this newspa per, P.O. Box Almost forgot to mention, her
475, Ratlio City Station , New
name i§ Kasey J o
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of ' Just had to write this little
m a il prohibits personal
ditty, so all our friends
·eplies, but questions of
would know.
(ene ra l inter est will be
By Evelyn Gilmore ·
Uscussed in fut ure columns.

.

--

--

WANT ED TO buy old 1ew elry
Call 992 5262 or w n te Kay
Cecil B7 S 2nd . Middl eport .

OH.
Yard Sale
IF YO U have a se rvicfl' to offer.
won t to bu y or sell somethi ng ,
or
oe look ing ' for w ork
you' ll get r esu lt s
wha tever
l aster wrt h a Sent1ne l Wont A d.
Ca ll 9q2 2156 .

Local Bowling
Wednesday Earlybirds
Jan . 10, 1979
Standings
Team
W. L.
Riebel 's Used Cars

8 0

Jack 's Club

6 2

Royal Cr own

4

New York Clot hing
King Builders

2 6
0 8

Sw isher: Lohse

High ind game -

4

0 8
Drema

Roa ch 214; Debbie Hawley
189 ; Bec ky Kloes 179.
High

game

te am

Ri ebel 's Used Cars 73a ; New
York Cloth ing 727 ; Royal
~

Cro wn 713.

High ind . series -

Debbie

Hawley 505 ; Drema Roach
481 ; Betty Whitlatch 471.
team
Ri ebel's Used

series
Cars 2127 ,'

High

King Builders 2039 ;· Royal
Crown 2019 .
Friday Late Mixed
Jan. 5, 1979
Standings

Team
Young's Carpeting

W. L.
6 2

Coleman's

4

Capehart's

4 4

Young's Gulf Station

4 4

4

4 4
Roush-Wi lson
2 6
Ind . high game
Men ,
Terry Seldenabel 176 ; Mike
Capehart 176; Butch Roush
169 ; Women , Ma r lene Wilson

177, 170, 156
Ind . high series -

Nten,

Mike Capeha r t 456 ; Harry

Carpeting 335; Rous h, Wilson
331; Coleman's 285.

Monday Nile Late
End of First Half
Jan. 15, 1979

Team
w. L.
Roach's Gun Shop
106 38
Powell's Mkl .
94 SO
Salem St. Mkt.
92 52
Frye's Pennzall
72 72
Heiners Bakery
3a 106
Meigs Co . Ad Taker
30 114
Team high series ·- Meigs
Co. Ad Taker 2198 ; Sa lem St .
Mkt . 2131 ; Powell's Mkt. 2117.
. · Men 's high series Raymond Roach 548; Dan
Bowers 544; Bill Smith 514.
Me n's high game
Raymond Roach 203; Dan
Bowers 197-196.
:Team high game - Meigs
Co. Ad Taker 798 ; Salem St.
Mkt. 748 ; Powell's Mkt . 737.
Women 's high

Sl!ri e~

-

Laura Carpenter 471 ; Betty
435 ; Naomi Floyd

Wh i tla \c~
429.
r

Wom en's

.

high

game

lau ra Car penter I~ ; : Lucy
t'lendr;cks ISH ; Laurt Ca rpenler 155.

1

-1-12-1 mo.

I

: Radiator~

JQ7o DODG f VAN f xcP II E.&gt; nl r on
ri lt10n low mdeog(&gt; S350Q. !11
g&lt;' l ~ f u r nitu r~ ~ t o r e .. ~q 1 ._10 3~

-- .. . .

·s.rvlce
l111111
.... tiM ....... ,,.., ...........

!&lt;1 7b CHRYS LEH CORDOBA . full

220 E. Molin

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

1Q78 FORO BRONCO Custom
un d e r
10 . 000
m tl es .
] 04 -773 -91 J'} aft er Opm .

-

-

'

'i

I

II

--

---~~ -

r'·

992-2356

Tyree Blvd., R•clne. Ohio,

Phone

lffer

5

949-2111.
P . M.~

After 12 noon .

Evening

weekends

____ U -31-1

small op plr onces Lawn mower
neK t to Stol e H1 ghway Gar age
on Route 7.

f i VE ROOM up stairs un f u rnished
apt , tu ll y carpeted Centrol
heat Al So . ground floor off ice
or stora ge Space w 1th pork 1ng
l ac il1 tie s. Locu st St.. Mtd
d lepor t
Call 991·3.4 71 o r
Q9'1 -3374

SEWING MACHINE Rcpot rs ser vice a!l makes . 9&lt;/2-121:14 The
fo b rr c
Sh o p .
Pom e r Oy
Aut hor i1ed Sin ger Soles and
Serv!ce We s ~o_rp~n S: iss or s

COA l. LIME STONE . sand . grave l
calc tum ch loode fertrl rzer . dog
l oad . and al l types o f salt. b: ·
cel sior Salt Work s. Inc . E Main
St . Pom eroy 9Q2 389 1
.
.
. . - .
A PPLES FITZPA TR ICK Orchard .
Sta te Rt 6H9 Phone W1lke sv ille
b69 -3785

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
cav o lr ng
sc pt1r sy stem s.
do1er ba ck hoe. dump truck .
grove l , blac kt op
limes ton e
pov rng , Rt 143 Phone 1 (b1.4 )
698 7331 .

MIXED CONDITI OmD hoy . Very
goo d · quality
De li ve ry
avo tlob le Phone Qq2 7201 or

991 330'1

BAT HROOMS
A ND Ki tch ens
1emodeled. cera mic t ile, plum·
b1ng , ca rpen try, and gener al
main tenance . 13 years e~
pen ence. 992 -3685 .

RO UND BA lED hoy 1:143-25?.4
.
.
..... .
HAY . LARGE ROU ND boles. S20."
Square boles . $1 M M Corn
she ll er 9B5 -4131 985 3537

-

..

PULLINS ~ XCA V A TIN G Comp le te
Servrce Ph one 992-2.478
.
- - AUTOMOBI LE INSURANCE been
cance lled ? Los t your op era tors
l1 cc nse? Phon e 997 2143

VEH M H R bOS Super C Bale'r . 1500
lb M ergs County's A utom ed
Vermeer Deal er Gory Aspin.
De x ter Phone 7.4 2 2877
GRA VE LY TRACTOR an d mower
Ho y !0~ s? l ~ . ~.49- ~3~ B

E C El ~CTR I CA l Contractor serv·
ing O h io Valley regi on . Si )(
day s o w eek 24 hours serv1ce.
Emergency call s. Call 8 8 2 - ~ 5 :2
or 882 -2305

.

---------

SNOW
TIRE SALE

I

···-~---.-~-

No
Rf A l ESTA TE LO AN S VA
mo ney
dow n
(e l 1gibl e
Veter ens) FHA · A s low a s 3,.....
down (all non-Vete rans and
general publi c) To purcha se
real es tat e or re fin a nce 30

~-

-

A ND

bon1o

~f !e~ 1p ~ .

lessons

____ _ ____ _

WATER_ AND m1sc. hauling . Ca ll

992·S658.

f=OR SAL E: .40 chan ne l mobi le C8 .
Hal licrofl ers 9q2 7020.
.
.
- .
CHAIN' SA WS one demonstrat or ,
I used Home li te. 1 used Mc Cu lloch , 2 used Slhil. Pomeroy
Home and Auto bOO E. Main .
_fl~m_e r ?y
. . _ . .
HU TLANO HA ROWAR E: . tw o d oor s
f rom t he .Rutland Pos t Olftce .
7.4 2-2255 10 shl'e ts golvoni xed
underp rnnm g 11:1'" )( 5'. S5 25
each. I wood burn ing firep lace
w ith gra te. sole price, SSO l
KING cool hea ter, 6 roam size.
$199.95 with free stove board .
Tr 1pl e wall Ul app r oved ot ove
ptp rng One only lavorato ry
si nk wi th marbl e lop , sol e
pr ices o t $.38
..
~

\ Give Away,
LONG HAIRED cot White adult
mol e l11ter tr ain ed. M e1gs Co.
Humane Society , 9q2 2592

-typ;

THR EE. MONTH ~I d 8 ~nji
female pup Shots Cal l Dr. No tter . ~ 1 .4 - d -46 - -4 090 .

rWO ~O~i-H-S ~1d kitie~s ~ T~bbY
mdle . all bloclc; petite lemol e
fy\eig s
Hu1'41one
Societ y

. .

. .

-

--

.-

- TMobile Homes for Sale

p ' 1 ACRE. 12 x 60 mobi le
I near Oelllte r m -5858.

..1967--TOTAL

- --

~~

·--- - ~-

home

-- -·

ELECTRIC mobHe

home , furni shed, 3 bedr .. .
, wa sher and dry er · A ir condi· .
tion od . I lot , 210 ff frontoge.
$12.000 Phone 7.4 2-2826.
1 1955. P~o-iri~ Scha~n-;,r~ 2s-~-8~
bdr
1 .J965Generol , 60 x 12, 2bdr .

1

1

I

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
For Comoetitlve Prices

r

SALE PRICES
JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phanem-2111

1 1970 Cos tle . 60 •. 12. 2 bdr .

.J

1973 Arl ing ton . 60 x 12. 2 bdr .
1973 Ridgewood . 70 x 14, 3 bd r
1473 I&lt; irk w ood , 50 x 12, 7 bdr.

8 8 S·MORILE HOM£ SALE S
. PT . ~ L~A SANT, wv
675·4-4 24

· -·-

IT.

~.AGHE'D...

'"' "' ""._ ........ ~

· · "-9-....... -

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

N'. ,.

Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; M y Three Son s 11; Ove r

,.'

Easy 20,33.

.·

7 .oo-Cros s-Wits 3; PM Ml!lgazl ne -4 ; New i YV~ed Ga me

6,13; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; Love, American Styl e

Home RemOdeling
General Repairs
MasDnarv Works

lfTl

1 f'F9 A/ I
1

WHERE
BABY
15 CONC::ERt.JED,

I [

Now arrange the c1rd ed letters lo
lorm the surprtse answer. as suggesled by the above cartoon

ORPHAN ANNm...;.EMPTY HANDED

Print answer here:
d

'I Vester ay s

I Jumbles

KIN DLY

An swer

ALI..EYOOP

9q2 6267

PRICE REDUCED - Th is

'er down to the
road'

be the fir st br idqe

handyman's special can be
yours for the low price of

we've crossed

In Pomeroy on 4

Walt!

family room, basement,
10%

downpay ·

$49,500, 911:1% lnleresl, 30
year term. Apprax . $416.23
monthly payment 1P&amp; IJ.
ID LOTS - With barn and
.fencing, In Long Bottom, ·
good 1 floor plan home,
.992-3325
21t t.. Mcana StrHt
,LARGE ROOMS

many other features . ON ·

E X C E L L E N T

~ace with all city utilities.

Only $25,000 .
MOOERN - 7 yrs. old . L.o1·

100x12S, 3 nice bedrooms,
family room, In town sub·
division with "City wi!!lter·

and good repair . $29,500.
RENEWEO - 3 bedr.ooms .•

furnace,

L.C .

water, modern kll. · and
large lot near !own. S23,000 .
BARGAIN - 8 room older
ba~h.

nat. gas

and lot for only tl 2,000.
Nice 3
1 YR. OLD bedroom ranch home. Kll.
and din ing area with view
of nature . Garage and one
acre. $35,.500.
'

INVESTMENT - 5 rentals
In

production .

Four

2

bedrooms and
one
business. All for only
$68,000.
.
IF YOU CAN AFFORD
$1,000.00 DOWN, WE CAN
SELL YOU A PLACE.:
CALL 992·3325.
G. Bruc~ Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

Ho11sing ·
Hear/quill tvrs

LY $17,700.00.

NEIGHBORHOOD In
Middleport, 2 story home
that looks nice and can look
nicer . Close

shopping, etc . ASKING '
$20,000.00.
SECLUDED RANCH Close to town, 3~ acre, 3
bedrooms, nice bulll·ln kll·
chen . family room ,
carpeting,

~

woodburnlng

'fireplace . A GOOO BUY
AT $20,SOO.po.
$6,000.00 will buy lhls nice 2.
,bedroom home In the coun·.

try near Langsville . VERY
GOOO CONDITION .- But
the house must be mi&gt;ved ..

~:c_r~~·~~ ·~·J~~~:·s

,.

.
'

~ 1 N~~trURe

0

ASI-tOffS A

vAGUUM, 'tbu ~Col\~0\N.

••
..

-.

•,

A TELEGRAM
FROM '&gt;OUR

MOTl-lER !

'•
'•

•,

MOM'&amp; FOUNO THE t;1ECWSE!
HE LOOKS LIKE DAD, BUT
'THEY Ai&lt;:E AWAIT/ N0
P0:71TIVE IDENTI·
F ICATION
WABHIN0 TDN!

WOif/tMAGINE IF IT-' REALLY
'N!N!/ I'LL FI N.~ L LY GET TO
MEET A FATH ER L

HAI&lt;:DLY REMEM~ER !

t

'·'
•'

.,......,.,........,,....,r:;-.:::-

- +-+-1

LON G FELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES
RS C0

S VHIFO A Y B

MYLTV

AC

OWFO

TARN LOOSE ,TATER!!
IT 'S

~OUR

DINNER IN FROM
Tf.IAT DiRECTION, R16HT ?

TONIGHT I'M
BRINGING IT IN

FROM THI 5
DIRECTION!

Ope ning lead : • 4
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

dummy's !O.
East t ook his k ing and le d
A 8 back a h ea rt • W h ereupon the

RD repeated the club finesse
and e ventually wound up
with 11 tricks.
T
A
J
F
QSO
OY
COL HQQTABQ
"Could we ha ve held yo u
to less ?" asked the student
ABQ
MSBVSTT
G WATTAGC who sat E a st ." Also, why did
Yeoterd~y's Cryptoquote: NO MAN CAN BE GOOD, OR you play the ten and not the
GREAT. OR HAPPY, EXCEPT THROUGH INWARD EF· queen of clubs? ' '
" If y ou had ducked the
FORTS OF HIS OWN.-F .W.ROBERTSON
fi rst club, I could lay down

ow s

BARNF.Y

NORMAW( I BRING

It:

Professor rose with the ace ,

(iJ 1979 King Features Syndacate, Inc.

LO_._

OWNER MUST SELL- The owner of this
\ charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell . now so she .is offering , this fine
.home for a low, low price of S20,CICI« There
are 2 bedrooms (I is extra large!, spacious
living roon; w -firJ!place, formal dining, eatin ~itchi!JI, b&amp;nt·fN-shower, garage &amp; a king'
sized yard. Good location on Mill St. Call the
Wi~eman Real Estate Agency, G'alllpolis,
446-3643.

37~~!::nera Using the double finesse

One leit er s tm ply stands £or another . In ~thi s _sample A ia
The Professor let t he
used for t he three L's, X for th e two 0 \ . etc Sm gle l e tter s.
apostro phes, the l ength and form at i ~ n nf th e words are all spade c om e a r ound to his
ace Then he led a club and
hints. E ac h day Lh c code l eltcrs are d1fferenl.
d o~bl e fin esse d wi t h

ow s

A · [g·

,16.

•

17;

BRIDGE

33 Objective
35 Bard's
adver b

Is

.

Vampi r e"

Yesterday's Answer
Thursday , Jan . 25
19 "Wa it Till
30 Germa n
nver
You See - "
23 E:ar mflam· 31 Unearthly
32 Mountain
rnatwn
- - OSwald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
nymph
24 Iron Curtam
34 Bunker
country
1
25 Fall behmd
26 Poem
28 Most r ecent
lettet
. . - - - - - - - - - --, dwnmy' s a t:e a nd p1ck up
the whole club s uit. But I
was not looking a t all the
1·2S
NORTH
cards. I wo uld undo ubtedly
+ KQ 5
have com e back t o my ha nd
.. 7 4
with a h ig h hea rt'to repeal
• K6
the double club finesse . You
+A QI096J
would take your king, knock
out m y othe r hi gh heart and
EAST
WEST
hold m e t o t en tricks since I
• 10 3
• J974
would not ha ve had trme to
..
Q
J
532
• 10 a
knoc k out yo ur ace of
• A 732
• J 8 54
diamonds."
+K7
• J 82
We a r e going t o ans wer
SOUTH
the stude nt' s second ques+ A8 6 2
tion.
" A K 96
The P r ofessor played the
• Q 10 9
10 or clubs becaus e it was the
+ 54
correct play . With s plit honors, he would have· cost
I Vulnera ble : Bot h
himself a · t rick if East held
1 Deale r : North
the s ing le ton jac k and
1
West North Ea st Soulh gamed on e if E a s t held the
=+-~1-+-l
1+
Pass 1•
singleton king .
.
Pass 2NT
Pass 2+
With both h onors m one
Pass J NT Pass Pass
ha nd he would ptck up the
Pass
whole s uit if West held k ingjack-sm a ll, whic h was his

genus
nAIL Y C RYPT OQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

..,,

ai

FINji\N(:ING FOR ALL
TYPES OF PROPERTY·
AND NEED LISTINGS,
1
CALL TODAY.
REALTORS
I
HENRY E. CLELANO SR . :
HENRY E. CLELAND JR .
ASSOCIATES
LEONA CLELAND
KATHY CLELAND
992-2259
'992-6191

gy

A MeTeoR $90N!:R
: Olt L~. f:RNlf::

to schools,·

a

3:1Q--News 17; 3:4Q--Movle " Loss of Innocence" 17;
5,00-Movle " The Adding Ma chine" 3

36 Should 1t

-

L ove

2' 31&gt;--News 3; 3:1»--Mov le " Angel In My Pocket"

;;::::::::~----------------------------------------------------~-------------- 37 Whig's
happe n.
rival
Prolonged
38
• You WeRe: BOuND ,.o
atta cks
...
~, GeT HIT ON "''"HE HEAD
39 Bowfm

nice kitchen, view of the
beautiful Ohio, basement,
,

oil

FRANK &amp;E RNIE

fruit trees, garden space,

pedrooms, all have closets,
:1 112 baths, new na1 . gas fur ·

new

'-:;,'Vf:.;+v2J

" To

3.

Osca r
wmner
27 Child's toy
28lAJck or
Bountiful
29 " - Utile
Teapot"
JO Gambled

FHA APPROVED - Th is
beautifu l
new ranch
features a hearth centered

Movie

1:3G-Movle ' 'Elephant Gun ' ' 17; 1: .40--News 13;

Women"

t.oqether.

tots, 2 stories, bath, kit chen ~ 3 or 4 bedroom s . Thi ~
won't last long .

Stri kes Again" 6, 13; Dukes of Hazzard a,10; Capitol

12:DO-Gang Show 8; Monty Python 33 ; 12,31&gt;--Juke·
Box a.
12·4Q- Ironslde 13; 1:00-Midnlght Spec ial 3,4,15;
News 8; Mov ie " faces of Fire" 10.

18 Golf term

Joel. let's slide

It won't

9 .oo- Tur nabout 3,4, 15; M ovie "The Pin k Panther ·

Bar etta 13; Movie
" Dingaka" 6; Bonkers 8; Movie " W itc he s Mount ain " 10; Movie " Blood on Satan ' s Cla w " 17.

one vote
GASOUNE ALLEY

Review 20,33; Night Ga lle ry 17.
8 31&gt;--Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,4,15; Wa ll Street Week
20,33; Night Gallery 17.

11 :» -Johnny Carson 3,.4, 15 ;

'·

'·

6, 13; W onder Womlln 8, 10; Wa shington W eek In

Congressional Outlook 20.
9' 31&gt;--Hello, Lar ry 3, 4,15; Tur nabout 20, They' ll Cut
Off Your Proj ect 33 .
10,QO-Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dallas a,1 0, News 20 .
10 31&gt;--Monly Python 20; ll :DO-News 3,4.6 ,a,1 0,l 3, 15
Dick Cavet120; Hogan 's Heroes 17; Soundstage 33.

~

by THGMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Watchful
41 Not new
1 Wear ing
DOWN
apparel
1 Junto
5 Downwa rd
Z Wo rs h i ~
spiral
10 J ewrsh month 3 An essential port1on
11 Suave
4
Before
Latin a ctor
5 Classified
13 Dullard
6 Ina morata
14 l'unicello's
7 Moslem
priest
8 Stork~

K now 33

8:DO-DIIf' renl Strokes 3,4 , 15; All -Star Fam ily Feud

Beat 33;

RAVE N BILGE
LIM PID
Co uld b e a problem when the ca r s lops-

PARK ING

14 LO TS ON Peacock A ve .
Pomeroy. Ohio . O ver 3 ac r es of
pr!v oc~ '!9~ · ~3~2 ?r ~-34~9 ~ _
f AIR VIEW HEIGHTS 6 yeo r old al l
eJectrr c home. 3 bedroom . 1 ' ''
both lovely fam ily roo m w1 th
wood
burnin g stove. fu ll
carpe ted, goroge . l acre Near
Meig s Hg 1h Sc ho ol. To see , call

imalely

AKXIXIIj
(Answers tomorrow )

3' ' ac r es 1n Pomeroy Seclud ed
wooded oreo on top o f hdl.
Ove r looks nve r . Wat er . elec·
t rtc a v or lab le. 99:2 3886 .

$8,000 -

Burnett 17. Consumer Sur vival Kit 20 ;
Big Blue Marble 33 .
7:3Q--Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 4; S1.98 Beauty
Show 6; Fam ily Feud 8,10; Pop Goes The Count ry
15; S1 oo,ooo Name Thai T une 13, Sanford &amp; Son 17;
Mac Ne il Lehrer Report 20; So The Peop le May
15; Carol

Tl-il5 1;\li&amp;HT C:OME
"TO M IND!

I

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

I

1-

HEADQUARTERS
·
·
1 1%6 Eicono , 52&lt; 12, 2bd&lt; .
Far all 'vour Ap,pllan•:e.l l 1 969~uddv . oo, 12. 4 bd• .
Needs.
· 1970 Syl vo, 00 ' 12, 2bd&lt; .

BO\'C.\\~0

men1, mortgage amount

home with

9q7 .2592 .

itlo'L.L. w ~~!

'ri?U'~

T\1 1 ~~ '(OIJ

garage , 1112 baths , 3
bedroom 5, 1 acre . Approx ·

-

ova ~l obl e . Phone 61.4 367-7729

Reedsv dle

Br ad y Bunch 10 ; Pett icoat Junction 15

··----

HOUSE FOR sole
locof 1on:
Mason , WV Fou r be(,iroo m sp lit
level, bui li in kit ch en wi th
oven. ran ge, g arbage dispos al
and bar . Family room . din tn g
room whole house corpe l1ng
Fu ll s1ze ba sement . Cen tral air
and forced ai r ga s heal. All
drapes plu s w asher and dryer.
Backyard 10 ft . hi gh ceda r
fence and cedar deck s for
p n vocy . Heat ed ga rage . Close
to scho ol . store park and tenn1 s
courl Contract Go ry l G1 bbs.
Call 614 -q-4 9-21.4 6

Coi i 'IVHIJ22 .
GUll ~ R

I

IJDRI.li\J0

Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky P ig a; Sesame
St 20,33, Botm an 10. Dlnoh 13; Space Giants 17.
4 3Q-- Be wllched 3; Superman 4; Gi lligan's Is. 8;
5:1»--1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sl• Million Dollar Man 13,
My Three So n ~ 4; Beverl y Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers ' 70,33; Br ad y Bunch 15; I Dr ea m of J eannie
17 .
5:3o-&lt;:arol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp; Son 4,8; E lee. Co. 20;
Mo,,ry Ty ler Moore 10; News 6; Odd Couple 15;
Bever ly Hillbill ies 17; Doctor Who "
6 !»--News 3,4,8, 10,13, I5; At&gt; &lt;.:
o; ~tudlo See 33;
And y Gri ffith 17 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6 3Q--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

YEARS TERMS IREL AND MOR···

by Henri Arnold and Bob l ee

'•

TG AGE CO . 77 E Stol e St.,
A then s. Phone 614 -592 -30 51.

Wi l l CARE f or eld erl y per son 1n
pri vat e home tn Pome roy.
~ ve r y t h ing
fu r nt shed . but
medic ation . $250 per month

H~ Y. 992_- 2~77 ~ft~r 6p_m

J..OOJ(I~ .

\~ 111~

HO USE
IN
M in e r svi ll e .
.4
bedroom. l1v1ng room , k itchen .
both and utility r oom . Ntce f ull
· size basemen t 9q2.5923

FARM FOR sol e House. 2 barns,
tra iler. l ar ge pond . 10 acres or
87 o cres. 742-2566.

TRH TR IMMING and remova l .
747 3167 or 742 257 3

RE DU CE SAfE an d fast with
Go Bese Tablet s and ~ - Va p
~ · w a!er pill s'" _Ne ls o ~ Dr ug '

Fm,&amp;.~~~ ~\1\(.~

?lUPID

... BUT

~J:;A\1 , 'f,J~J..I..

Real Estate for Sale

·---··-·····

Easy 20.
.t DO-M ister Car toon 3; Splder man 4 ; H o ll ywooc

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter to each sq uare , to form
four ordinary words

' lGJ()9J -50MrnlliJ0,

992-7583

THRH BEDR OOM fra me home 1n
M iddlepo rt. Ca ll 992 3457

WA TER WH L dnll1 ng . Wtl liom T
·
Grant . 7.4 2 2879.

Phane992-218I ·

•
'

J :31r-M ash B, Joker' s Wil d 10 ; F llntst on es 17; Over

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~(.!1 ®

10 Years Experience

HOMESITt:S for sale , I a cre an d
up. Midd lepor t, near Rutla nd.
Call992 -748l .

WILL CARE fo r th e elderly in our
home Ph one997-73 1.4

·.ock W. Carsey, Mgr.

\l' fl'ii1.\Jll fe}\l'

ROUSH
·CONSTRUCTION

Real Estate for Sale

UQ--Days ot our Lives 3;4, 15; As the Wor ld Turns
&amp; 10; 2' QO-{lne Ll le to Live 6,1 3; 1 ,3Q--Doclors
34,15; Guiding Light 8,10; I Love Lucy II ; 3 00A nol~er World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13 ; Lil ias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17.

News 8 ; Schoo lies lO ; Three Stooges-Little Ra scals

BORNI.OSER

Contact

Services Offered

Pomeroy Landmark

GRA IN FED beef .
61 4-378 -631 1.

HYSEll

MOBILE HOM E repai rs . Furn aces ,
electr ical w ork . p1pes so wed ,
plumb1ng . 9q2·5BSH.
·

6:00- PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8; 6' 11&gt;--News 17; 6 . 2S....
Societies in Transition 10. ·
6' 31&gt;--Columbus Today 4; Romper Roo m 17; 6 :4S....
VIrginia 13; 6; 5S....Chuc k White Reports 10; News
13.
7,00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morni ng Ame rica 6, 13; CBS

o.

A New Home Built?

- - - - Au..c-t"i'-o n
_ _ _ _

EXCA VA TING . do1er loader and
back hoe w ork dump trucks
ond lo -bo ys f01 hire, w1 ll ha ul
fill diri , to s01 l l1me.s tone and
grove l Cal l Bob or Roger Jef fers day ph one 992 7089 nrgh t
phone 997 3525 or 992 5231
.
.
EXCAVA TING
dater , backhoe
and d1tchc r Charl es R Hoth el d
Hock
Hoe Ser v1ce .
Rutla nd Oht o Ph one 7.42 2008

For Sale

PTL Club 13; 5·55-Sunr fse Semester 10.

THI7 ~HIP THE

1·19·1 mo .

fi VE ROOMS or•d bo th upstai rs
apt
in Pomeroy . 992 -2205
be f or e 5.

FRIDAY , JANUARY 26, 1979
5' 35--World at Large 17, 5 ' 45-- Far m Report 13; 5 ,5Q--

PUNISHMENT
FOil. MUTINY
IS f)EATH !

Thinking Of Having

fHMDFORD . A uct1 oneer, Com · HIG AU CTI ON a t O hio R1ver Auc·
ple te Serv ice . Phone 9.49 2.487
li on, Fri. 6pm Tr uckloa d of
or 949 -7000 Ra cine . Ohio Crill
new furn iture, tools, m isc . from
Bradfor d
Cm ctnn o ti . A lso some used
merchond 1se 537 High St . MtdflWOOD BOWERS REP AIR
dl ~p o r;'~ Oh io .
Sw eep er s, toast ers. iron s. oi l

near DeK ter nea r N o I Mrn e
992 5658

Mavf'r ick 17

MARRY ME

I•
••

.

mo.

- Business
- -- - -Service
- - - -s - -

-

ONE WAY
HIM!

M orn ing R eport 3; 6 ·5Q-Good Morning, West

H-1 mo. (Pd. ) '

Auto&amp; T~uck
Repair
.-Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

EM Y.. SUT THeRE 'S
YO U CMJ ~AVE

EL£CTRIC MOlOR;

Middleport.

"'' mile off Rt. 7 bY,·PII•• an
St. Rt. i24 toworil Rutland,
0.

SALES REP. FOR

GH HEAVE-D TO T HE S HAR I(B. ,

-AN D ABOARD

' I

651 Beech Street

.:GARAGE

PElE SIMPSON

--

~-

=

11 -3·1 mo:

11 Years Experl•nc•
Will Milko'
Service Calls

-- -

~ER

I

REYNOLD'S

Basketba ll 10.
3D-Wh at' s Hap pening 6.13; 9:&lt;M&gt;-Quincy 3,4, 15;
Hawaii"F l ve -0 8; Palestine 33 ; D u c hess of D uke
Street 20.

12 : ..0--Mannix 6, 13 ; l ·QO-Tomorrow 3, .. ; ! · SONews 13.
2:00- News 17 . 2 ~ N BA Basketba ll 17; 4,3s-

TAKe OFF THAT SILLYL0 0KIN 6 APRON AND

LITTLE PAL'!&gt; A I! OUT TO

.: 5R0ADCASTIN6 LII05 Af!OUT
:: Me OVt;R THe RAD IO, HU H ~ ...
, NOW THAn; WHAT I CAI.I.
MilT/NY IN THe Fl~T DESRee !

I

·c.nm-zm

11 -9·1 mo.

H•mmond
&amp;
Lowery'
Organs, Story &amp; Cl•rk
Pl•nos . S•les &amp; Service.
( Ne¥t &amp; Used). Service on
Current S•ln .

,.,,
: CAPTAIN EASY

Sove 30 pet. to 50
., hHflngcos
ExPtt"ltnce •nd
lvlly l,.ur..t
Fl'!l Est

II .
10 ' oo--Card Sharks 3,4, 15, Edge ot Night 6; All In The
Fam ily a. IO; Dating Game 13; Movie " 40 Pounds of
Trouble " 17
I0 ·3Q--Ai l Star Secrets 3,4,15; Andy Griffith 6 ; Pr ice Is
Right 8, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :OD-High Rollers 3,4,15 ; Ha pp;· Days 13; Elec . Co.
20, 1L2S....Sesa me St. 33.
11 '3Q--Wheel of Fortu ne 3, 15; F a mll y Feud 6, 13; News
4, Love of Life 8.1 0; Sesame 51. 20; 11 · 55--C BS
~ Ne ws 8 ; House Call 10; News 17.
12.oo- Newscenter 3;
Bob Brau n 4; J eopa'L ~ Y 15;
News 6, 10; Young &amp; the Restless a; Midday
Magazine 13; Love, Amer ican Styl e 17; 12·2S....
Elec Co. 33.
12,3Q--Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; P assword 15; Search tor
Tomorrow 8.10 ; Movie " You' r e a Bi g Bo y Now" 17.
1 :•!»--Hollywood Squa res 3; All My Chil dren 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Res tless 10; Midday
Magazine 13, love American Style 17,
Co. 33.

Jones 8,10; College Basketball 17; News 20.
10,31&gt;--Jahn Cag ~ 33; You Bet Your Life 10; n ·oo-News 3,4,6,a, 10, 13, 15; Di ck Cavett 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
II ·Jo-S tarsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; Johnny Carson 3,4,15;
Mas h 8; ABC News 33; Movie " The Visit" 10
12'!)0- Movle " The Real Glory" 17; 12 ,0S....Colu mbo a;

SHOP . :

0.

9 . 3G-Brady Bunc h 8 ; Hogan ' s Heroes 10; Green Acres

10:00--: Rockford Flies 3,.4 . 15, F amily 6.13; Barni!!lby

Thermal insulation

For Sale or R e nt

BU SINE SS BUILDING 22' K JJ' rn
Sy ra cuse .
Oh ro
Ph on e
942 5249.

I

'

-'
Cellulosic (wood' fiber).

·'

Call992-7113
For Free Estlm•f•s

!'a H2·Zl74

i

I

Slrt~t,

Pom1roy,

,,

..

JIM KEESEE

1:

EWOTT ·
APPUANCE li

c...

powe r AM FM ste reo tope ,
crui se control rear w indow
defo gger . l air cond it ion. $3100
ycr; 6 124

In

Wooclstovt, 011 urn•ct
&amp; Flrtpl•c• Flues
Phone: 742· 1110
Kim White, Proprietor

Your Headquarters For
Armsbong Carpeting

EXPERIENQD _

I

19th

20th century Know-How.
Specl1tlzin~

PlllNE 742·2328

1Y7S CADi llAC ElDORADO l ull
powe r , air dean. f xcellenl
rendit ion Phone 991 -746 2

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

High team game - young 's

Local Bowling

lltE
SWEEP
c i ntury Service with

Call .. .

Emergency One 6; Hogan ' s He' roes 8; Match Game

10; Lucy Show 17.

THURSDA Y, JANUAR Y 2l , 1979

Blown Insulation

'

- Floors - Paneling &amp; Trim .

Depend On ....

19b9 DE LIV ER Y JH P 7-whee l
drive, $400 13 wee k old p,u re
t. red grea t done , 5100 .' Ca ll
747-1406

VIEWING
8·()()- Legends of the Superheroes 3,-4 , 15. Mork &amp;
Mind y 6.13; Waltons 8; No va 20,33: College

J&amp;L

''

Don't let a chlmnev fire put
a damper on your lire -

Quality Work You Can

JQ 73 OLD SMOBil E Dl:lTA 88 !uti
pClwe r goorl tirps ru ns good
$800 Colt Spencer 949 -7150.

Chimney
Swttps Guild
Insured

Tile - Formica
Counter Tops - Ceilings
t Suspended, Texture) - Tile

-

TO buy old &lt;5 ond 76 TWO BEDROOM mob i le h_ame

p hono gr aph re co rd s. Co li
991 6370 or Contor t Marl1n Fur nitu re

.
'

'

Ceramic

--- - --

Cla rk 401 ; Terry Seldenabel
395; Women, Marlene Wilson
In
1785,
Jea n-Pierre· 503 ; Kelly Wilson 40a; Cindy
Blanchard macte the fll'st Brothers 375.
High team seri es balloon crossing of tht Young's
Carpe ting 898 ;
E nglish Channel.
Roush ,
Wilson
865 ;
Coleman 's 763.

Monday Nile Late
Jan. 22 , In9

TERRIFR puppi es
10
week~ o ld
Call a ft er 5pm ,
Q9') Stlb7

-~------

tie - ·WA NT

Compar e cereals by unit
price rather than package
price. Larger packages are
r SIDE G LANCES
by Gill . Fox generaUy a better buy than
\---.,...-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . : _ _ _ :_ __, smaUer ones.

:::1

J OA 773 5%1 . Cli h M.
HOS TO N

~ -

·

- Room Additions- Custo~ Remodeliii!J-

CHIP
WOO D
Po l es
ma K
- - ·- d1om et er 10' on la rgest end
$ 12 per to n Hundled sl ab $1 0 . __W_il!i t_l!d_!~Re_!!t __
per ton Del1vered Ia O hio TWO BEDR OOM house t ra der or
Pol le t Co . Rt 2, Po meroy
apartment prefera bly rn l he
qq') . 268q
Midd l e p o r I
ar ea
w1 th
reason able rent 992 -7B14
TIMBER POMEROY Fores t Pro·
duct s Top price for standi ng
----·
sow ti mber Ca ll 9q'} 5q65 or For
Rent
Kent Hanby . .1 .4 .4 6-8570
---·
. . .
. .
COUNTRY
M091lf
Home
Pork .
OLD FURNITURE . i&lt;" e bo xes . br ass
Rou te 33, north of Pomeroy
bed s iron beds . desk s e tc .
l ofge lo ts Call199'} 7.H 9
comp le te hou seho lds
Wri te
M 0 Mrller Rt 4, Pome ro y or 3 A ND A RM l~ um he d an d uncoli 991 7760
l ur nt sh ed
ap h
Pho n e
992 543.4
OlD COINS. p or i-l e t wa t c h ~~
rlo !:.s ri ngs w eddmg bond s. TWO HEDROOM . lu tchen fu rnished. op t Call be fo re 8 om
d1om ond s Gold o ~ ~~! ~er Ca ll
Ro ger Wam sley . 7.42 - 23:1~
992 1266

Clark's

---

~ h epmd pupp1('s 7 wet&gt;k!o Cl lrl

•

~r-·

AL TROMM CONST.

AU WHi ff l ull hloodPd G('rrnon

Auto Sales

•

B

_ _ -.ya_11teC! t!' ~U.Y __ _

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

matter

lJ pnut i f,J I. 11
old SnhiP o nrl whi t(',
lici t t-.t('lo rll"'ci &lt; Clll i&lt;:&gt; rurp1n" S/'0
CJY'l T:mo
w•~('lo. &lt;.

------ -

'fELE' J1SllJN

..

Business ·Services

P UP Pt f'~

(Ot l lf

_

WANHD SOMf ONE to live on
smal l h ill srd e fo~ m bock o f An
11qU1Iy to repmr 8 room hou se
not modern Dolorous Sm 1th. 38
W. Oak land A ve Columbus
Oh ro

Tuesday

l

-.

-

WANH:D TRU CK mec har11r for
ligh t and meduim duly lruc lo. !o
Must hov e own too ls App ly a t
T"'.:'o Ri ve rs _fo rd S ~ r vice ~ e pt

Noon on Saturda y

your' actions with your
boyfriend on the saying, "Out
of sight, out of mind"' You
could just as easily have

-·-

_ .:..J:I~I~ \'tant.!l_C!_

Mondsy

~e

- ------

FOUND
8eau t1ful b lo ck lon g
ho1 red mol £' co t w1th ld tl e
wh tte or; fe et and stomach
~ um one Sot:;i e ty Qq'} 7680
.
.
.

NOTICE

No laughing

Lost and Found

LOS T TIGER co t. short totl If
• seen
colt 949 -7679 . Car l
Ghee n

red inaert10n.

CHOICES

RI \ IN(:. SlA W Kf'll''r l!. 8onr d 1ng
(liHi groon1111ft, oil hr('(l rl ~ .
ChC"o,h tt(&gt;, 361 01'11? .

INCOME TA X Sennc(' fede ra l
and St ate Wo ll arr Ru sse ll
B ro d b ~ry Col i 997 -7?')!1

In memory, C11rd of Thanks and·

~

GUN SHOOI. llanll(' G1o11 Cl 11h.
~ V C'I y Suncfny 1 ) 1111
r {l ( j ( \1 y
r hn k1 • g u n'&gt; only

INCOMf TAX Sen• ice f=(&gt;de ra l
onrl Sl o t(' To Ke~ 9Q'). 'l'J71 for
opp b or see Wo nrlo Eblrn .
41000 la u1el Clift Ref

E~d'

d1:1ys will be
rate

P e t s for Sa le

GUN SHOOT . Hor uu· Vnlun tl"f"l
~~~f' Dept fvcry Sohurloy b :~o
rm Ol !h('tf hUilrlmg Ill Hn!&gt;han .
f'or tory rhqke gum. on ly

Charge

I day
2 days

N o t ices

17 , 7: I S....Weather 33.
7. 3Q-- Family . Affalr • 10; 8:00-C apl Kangaroo a. IO ;
Leave it to Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33; a .30-Hazel
17
9 ,00- Mer v Gr iffin 3; P hi l Donahue 13, 4, 15;

TO GO INSIDE AN'
TAKE

"'ORE NAP

QY O

extra percenta ge.

An Or egon r e ader wants to
know what a " res ult" player
is.A playe r w ho c riticizes
a ny bid or play that fails
even t hough the bid or play
ma de had been the best
percentage one.
iN ~WSPAPE H E NTERPR ISE ASSN . I

!Do you have a ques 11on for
rne e&lt;pefls? Write " Ask the
Expe rts," care o f thi S ,newspa·
per. Individual questrons wrll
be answered 1f accompa nied
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes. The most Interestmg quesrions will be used . m
• this column ·and Will rece1ve
· copies of JACOBY MODERN./

�11

f'nu tt•n •.• . 11

. l lt!i l'd.c~

. .l;11c

..

- -- -- - -· ---

i' '

-

- - - -...,--·------- -

•

DOLLAR DAYS

Elberfelds In Pomeroy ·

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT

s3 SOUP POTS

$159
OUTING FLANNEL

8 QUART SIZE. WHITE ENAMEL

36 inches wide. 100 per cent cotton, solid
colors and prints.

DOLLAR DAYS
40

.,oo

•s••

MEN'S
NECK SCARFS

Size 38 to 48, solid colors and pallerns .

Solid co lors, limited quantity .

TWO DAYS ONLY!

s49.95 SPORT COATS ............... s25.00
s59,95 SPORT COATS.............. s30.00
'69~95 SPORT COATS .............. 135.00

CHILDREN'S

WINTER COAT
CLEARANCE

BOYS'
FLANNEL PAJAMAS
Size 8 to 18, co lorful pallerns. limited
quan tit y.

8.95 SKI STYLE.. ..................... s5.00
·111.95 COAT STYLE .................. '6.50
1

DOLLAR DAYS

All winter coats for littl e boys and girls at
terr ific prices .
Snowsuits, Jacket s·, Long Coats

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

2

BOXES

•300

DOLLAR DAYS

MEN'S DRESS
FLANNEl ·SHIRTS

$27 SUNBEAM
POPCORN POPPERS

4 quart , se lf buttering, Great Amerfcan

Popcorn Machin e.

WOMEN'S
WINTER .ROBES
~

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR
Save 50 per cent on our remaining stock of
winter pre-teen s lacks, vests, sweaters and
blouses.

c learance.

1h PRICE

YARD

· DOLLAR DAY$

DOLLAR DAYS

SALE SCARFS

and s2
MILK PITCHERS
1450

89

Po tt e ry .pi tche rs . decorative,
qua ntity .

SELECT GROUP OF SQUARES AND

l imited

OBLONGS, ASSORTED COLORS .

\
DOLL.AR DAY$

s2"' OOUBLEKN IT
POLYESTER YARD MATERIAL

112 PRICE
DOLLAR DAYS

HANES. $325 SLIM
FIT
.

60 in ches wide , 100 per cent polyester, solid

colors. mac hine washable , tumble dry .

BOXER SHORTS
100 per ceo ! cotton broadCloth, solid co lor s
and patterns , •t upered legs. side vents .

DOLLAR DAYS

Men's Hanes $4 A GARMENT
Thermal Underwear
69

50 per cent cotton, so per cent polyester.
Drawers. in sizes S.M. L. and XL. Shirl in
s izes M, L, a.nd S L.

'1 00 OFF AGARMENT
'

Our entire stock on sale. big selection of
patterns and so lids. clip -ons and four -inhand .
'

MEN'S '6,50 TIEL .................. .'4.50
MEN'S i7.50 TIES ......................15.50

2
•

FOR

h PRICE

Earthquake hits Mexico City
MEXICO CITY (AP)- An earthquake hit Mexico
City today 9'&gt;' holD'S before Pope Jolm Paul II was
scheduled to arrive, but downtown buildings appeared
undamaged and there were no immediate reports of
casualties.
The tremor rolled through the city of 13 million
people about 4:10a.m. (5:10 a. m. EST), shaking
·,. .
buildings for more than a minute.
The local seismological station said it could 'not
give the Richter-scale reading on the intensity of the
quake yet, and Red Cross and fire department officials
said they had no reports of any casualties.

DOLLAR DAYS

GIRLS'
SPORTSWEAR
Sweaters, lops, blouses. vests, iackets.
pants and skirts. Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.

·y2 PRICE

Sohio' s cutbacks temporary
CLEVELAND ( AP ) - Temporary gasoline
cutbacks for more than 1,000 service stations in Ohio,
iMichigan, Kentucky and western Pennsylv· .&gt;ia may
'be necessary, says Standard Oil Co. of Ohio.
Jolm Hernandis, a Sohio spokesman, said
Thursday decisions on cutbacks are expected soon.
"We are talking about customers being able to get all
the gas they want and need , but they may not be able to
get it at the time or plHce they want it," he said .

DOLLAR DA.YS

Men's T.V. s1 25
Bulky Knit Orion Socks
One size fils all sizes 10 to 13 . Solid colors
and .heather tones .

·various protests planned
WASHINGTON (AP)- Groups ranging from anticommunists to radical Maoists plan a bArrage of
protests when Chinese leader Teng Hsiao-ping arrives
this weekend.
But federal officials say· Teng's entourage and the
demonstrators probably will never get within a block
of one another as authorities plan to tightly control the

PAIR

JEWELRY
SPECIAL

DOLLAR DAYS

STICKPINS, EARRINGS, BRACELETS

SPECIAL

.--Nationwise·-

1

DOLLAR DAYS

LITTLE GIRLS'
'DRESSES

protestors' mOvements.

•

Our entire slo_c k of winter dresses for little
girls

VALUES TO '5.00

HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT

•

REG. '6.00 ........................ SALE s4.79
REG. 18.00 ........................ SALE '6.39
REG. 111.00....................... SALE s3.79
REG. su.oo .................... ~ SALE 110.39
REG. 116.00...................... SALE s12.79

MEN'S
WEMBLEY TIES

REG. 11.00 ....................... SALE 8.79
REG. s15~00 ..~ ................... SALE!.l1.99
"""" .
1
REG. 19.00...................... SALE s15.19
REG. S25.00 ...................... SALE $19.99
REG. s33.00 ............. :........ SALE s26.39

45 INCH WIDTH
$349 TERRY CLOTH

$200

REG. S12.00oo .........................SALESAI.E z.2999
. , OOPAIR
REG. $14. .......... '.............
.,, t-~~---------·--·-------·--·-'1
REG. s1s.oo ...................... SALE SUJ9
. DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Reduction of a proposed
$122.8million Ohio Power Co. rate increase by as much
as two-thirds has been recommended by staff analysis
at the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
The PUCO's utilities division concluded that the
company should he allowed no more than $40.4 million
to '$50.1 million in new revenues, depending on the
allowed rate of return .
The staff analysis disputes Ohio Power's contention
that its $78.1 million investment in deactivated units ~t
its Woodcock, Philo and Tid&lt;! P.Ower plants should be
credited· for rate-making purposes.
Overall, th e staff credits Ohio Power with an
investment for rate-making purposes of $1.72 billion,
which is $278 million less than claimed by the
company.
The PUCO will consider the staff findings and
arguments by the utility and other parties before
making a final ruling on the request.

Boys sizes 7 to 14, Men's 9 to 15. Spring foot.
full cushion tube socks. white with color
tops .

Winter gowns, pajamas and robes for little
boys and girls, broken sizes.

DOi.LAR DAY$

Lim ite d quant ity for quick
Patterns an d solid colors .

REG. '6.00 .......................... SALE '3.99
REG. $1.00 ........... :.............. SALE s4.69

MEN'SLAND BoYS~
$125 TUBE SOCKS

Pajamas, wa lt z length gowns and long
gowns.

1

95

WINTER STYLES IN LEATHER,
VINYL AND CANVAS

Reduction asked

.

4 different models including styles with
radio .

Sh,prl and long lengths. S, M, L,XL.SSL.

DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

REG. 126.95 ..................... SALE 121.59
REG. s39,95 ...................... SALE 131.99
REG. 159.95...................... SALE 147.99
REG. 179.95 .................... SALE '63.99

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Roof collapses on store

DOLLAR DAYS

ROUND LAKE BEACH, lll. (AP) - Part of the
snow-laden roof of a K-mart store collapsed Thursday
night in this OJicago suburb, and two women and three
children_ were rescued from inside. No injuries were
reported.
.
.
Authorities said all people known to have been m
the store were accounted for, but rescue workers kept
searching.
R01md Lake Beach patroiman Dan Veil said, "As
of 9: 12(.CST) all employees had been accounted for . As
of 9:30 we have received no report of injuries and ha':e
no reason, 1 repeat, no reason, to believe anyone 1s
trapped inside the building." .

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•425

Berlinguer'ssupport gone

DOLLAR DAYS

ROME (AP) - Italian communist leader Enrico
Berlinguer declared today his party finds it impossible
to continue supporting the government - an attack
that virtually ensures the fall of Premier Giulio
Andreotti's cabinet.
Berlinguer gave· his party's position at a crisis
meeting of the five-party alliance which has supported
Andreotti's Christian Democrat minority government .
for 11 months.
• The communists, stung by a new refusal of the
OJrlstian Democrats to give tj!em cabinet posts, have
been unleashing attacks against Andreotti capped by
today's blast .
·

MEN'S 55'j TO s1495
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1
•.

WS ANGELES (AP)- Lee Marvin, starring in a
reaWfe courtroom drama, has testified he called
Michelle Triola Marvin his "sweetheart," took her to
bed and vowect he loved her- but his profession of love
was a lie.
·
The white-haired, craggy-faced Marvin, who was
to continue testifying today, averted his eyes from his
former lover, who sat frozen in her seat as he spokes
Thursday.
"Did you love her?" asked Miss Marvin's
attorney, Marvin Mitchelson .
"No," Marvin said bluntly.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ,The director of the
Columbus Zoo says an Akron man ought to abide by
the old maxim "once bitten, twice shy."
Zoo director Jack Hanna says 24-year-old Paul
Beaver's plan to ·keep the cobra wjtich bit him Sunday
in hopes of selling its venom is "ridiculous. It's like
giving a 3-year-old.a loaded gun.
"No one in this country has ever made a dollar off
of selling venom," Hanna said.

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REG. '23.00 ............ ,........ SALE '13.80
REG. 132.00 ...................... SALE '19.20

Courthouse. To his left is Pat Gallagher, director of Public
Information for the Department of Highways. Ga llagher
presented the details of the project to the public at the
hearing which lasted approximately two hours.

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122.00 ........................... SALE 113.19
126.00 ........................... SALE 115.59
132.00 ........................... SALE 119.19
146.00 ........................... SALE 127.59
154.00 ........................... SALE 132.39
1

1

PRESENTS VIEWPOINT - Del. Jimmy Joe
Wedge (R·Mason) expressed his views on the proposed
renovation of the Shadle Bridge during a public hearing
'11uu-sday evening on the subject in the Mason County

.
.
'2.50
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.................
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' ·
.L
18.95 SCARFS ............................ '5.50

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26th &amp;· SATURDAY, JANUARY 27th

DOLLAR DAYS

•

POINT PLEASANT contract to renovate the
deteriorating Shadle Bridge
may be awa rded today by the
West Virginia Department of
Highways, according to Gary
Chernenko: who was one of
several lJOH officials at a
public hearing Thursday
evening at the Mason County
Courthouse discussing the
bridge renovation .
Over 100 people, including
all four m·embers of the loth
Delegate District, a state
senator and nwnerous local
office holders, turned out lor
the hearing at which time the
DOH again reiterated its
feeling that the Shadle
Bndge,
spanning
the
t1

YARD

MEN'S
SPORT COATS

Frenc h and fro sted
weight 8 oz.

Repairs . planned

DOLLAR DAYS

DOLLAR DAYS

'

----·--·-------

I,.

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

Kanawha Hiver here, is a Gallagh er . ·the DOH has However. at a later point in
sa fe structure to travel over. estimated the projc'&lt;1 to cost the hearing he sald there
Pat Gallagher, director of approximately $900.000 and always exists the possibility
Community Affairs for the sa id a possibility exists that that something unforseen
lJOII . wa s the main the lJOH could reject this bid co uld happen which may
spokesm an and he said work as .well as three others and cause the span to he closed.
on the bridge " Will begin as rebid the project.
· In trying to reassure the
soon as the weather break s. "
He told the people at the mmmunity that the bridge is
He predicted it should take . hearing, that if this should sa fe despite the !act that a
six months to do the job with happen there is nothing to be sheriff's deputy fell through a
an expected completion date ala rm ed over since th e hole in it a couple of weeks
of Oct. 1'. However, he pointed pro ject would be read- ago, he said : " We· 1meaning
out that this was dependent vertised, bidded .and con· the DOll ) do not view the
on the weat her a nd tr acts pos sibily a warded Shadle Bridge as an unsafe
availability of supplies.
within the next 30 days
structure, but it does have its
Earlier this week , the DOH
"The bridge will not be problems. 'l)lese problems
received lour bids on the closed ... there ·Will not be a will be improved."
project, with the apparent ' time when the bridge will be
Karl Kahle, engineer with
low bid ol 11.194,681 from closed," Ga llagher stated in the department , said the
H1ggms Erector and Haulers. reference to the period when renova tion will inc! ude the
However, accordmg to construction takes pla ce .
(Continued on paKe 10)

•

at

VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 199

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1979

15 CENTS

Heavy snowstorm hits Cleveland
By The Associated Press
The other .shoe fin a lly
dro pped and Cleveland,
.which previously had lucked
out, is shoveling out from
under its first major storm of
the winter.
After two of the worst
winters in the city 's recorded
history, this season kept
residents of th e. Greater
Cleveland area· waiti~g
nearly eight weeks longer
than usua 1 for the expected
blizzard-like weather.
About five windswept in·
·ches of snow dropped on the
city and up to 10 inches fell in
the eastern snowbelt _along

Lake Erie Thursday , tying up today and tonight in the mid·
traffic, ca using innwnerable Mississippi valley. It -will
accidents and leading to the move northeast and spread
deaths of three elderly men snow atross Ohio Saturday,
while shoveling snow.
according to the National
Ohi o continued under the Weather Service
influence of an east coast
Only five of the Clevela nd's
storm today . The storm was '200 pieces of snow removal
centered southeast of Cape equipment were out of serCod. It was to drift east vice Thursday, according toll
tonight allowing winds to city repairman, but there was
slacken and flurries to end. immediate criticism of the
The respite from snow, snow-clearing job.
.
lrowever, will be short-lived.
"This was their first big
' A trough of low pressure from
test and they flunked it," said
Minnesota to Texas was to Clevela nd Counc ilm an
move east today.
Robert E. Getz , chairman of
A iow pressure .center was the city's service committee.
expected to develop late • He sa id the Cleveland crews

let the snowstorm get the
Mary Brister, supervisor
jump on th em.
of "Operation Snowbird" , " When you have this kind th e ina yor 's operation al
of storm, with heavy snow name for the snow-clearing
and freez ing conditions and operation ~ deni ed the
high winds, it's suicidal not to charges by Getz. She said
get an early jwllp," Getz salting and plowing wa s
said. " You can give them under way late Wedne sday
1,000 trucks, but unless they night before a steady drizzle
have a plan, they are inc!· turned·to sleet, then snow.
fective. ''
"There is no way to
Getz charged that th e prepare for anything t hat is
ad ministr at ion of Mayor continuou sly fallin g. Most
Dennis J. Kucinich diu not ,peopl e think the snow should
put its crews on the street disappear as soon as it's
until rush hour, well after the down ," she explained . "The
storm started, so t hey would roads look good, considering
ha ve a higher visibili ty the drifting."
among motorists.
Buses were up to 40
minut es lat e durinK the

Chase ends in tragedy
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio 1 AP)
- A 6-year-old girl is dead
and her father is in the Clark
County-jail today after a high
speed chase and shooting
incident along Interstate 70
Thursday night.
Ohio Highway Patrol of·
ficials identified the girl as
Joy LyiUl Nagy, who was
reportedly shot as her father
Joseph D. Nagy, 28, and an
Ohio Highway Patrol trooper
wrestled over a gun after a
chase th;&gt;t at times led to
speeds exceeding 100 miles
an hour .
Lt. Paul Mclntxre of the
Highway Patrol post here
said Trooper A. W. Burke had
responded at about! :15 p.m.
to a citizens band report of a
car traveling we~tbound at a
high rate of speed on 1-70 near
Springfield.
Mcintyre said Burke
caught up with the car and
pursued it for three or four
miles at speeds of more than
100 miles an hour. The patrol
sa id the car attempted to ram

the patrolman's cruiser
several times .
Burke said the car fina lly
stopped near the 1-70 in·
terchange and the patroiman
approached it with hi s
revolver drawn. When the car ·
door wsa opened, Burke said
the d riv er atta cked him
causing the revolver to fire.
· The girl was taken by a
Bethel Township re sc ue
squad to Mercy Hospital
where she died a few minutes
after her arrival.
There was no immediate
word on • what wounds she
received .
Nagy was booked into the
Clark Co unty Jail at 11 :30
p.m. on charges of speeding,
reckless driving, fleeing an
officer, resisting a rr est ,
assault and felonious assa ult.
Patrol officials said a
thorough investigation of the
incideot would be conducted.
A nei~h'bor where the girl
was living in Habitat, a
L'Ondominium development
south of Dayton. said Nagy

had been working as a train·
man from railyards in
Willard, and commuted back
here on his days off.
Another neighbor said the
incident was due ''to a per·

Hostages
held by
gunpoint

TOKYO (AP ) - Blasting
away with a shotgun and
demanding a quarter of
a million -dollars, a masked
bandit charged inti&gt; a bank in
Osaka today and seized as
many as 40 hostages, officials
said. The siege was still going
on eight holD's later and
police said they believed the
bandit had killed folD' people .
Officers said they were
negotiating with the gunman
and that two of the four
persons believed dead inside
the bank were policemen.
The bank, in a popular
shopping area of Osaka, was
surrounded by fire trucks,
ambulances and about 500
policemen. Mobile police
units with officers clad in
bullet-resistant ves ts and
helmets
, fanned out arotind
PORTSMOUTH - The of the river and directly the bank.
Automobile Club of Southern . opposite the other side .
Osaka is 'a major Japanese
Ohio has issued a call for (Present distance is 8,000 feet 'industrial city about 250 miles
immediate action to improve but it could and should be southwest of Tokyo.
auto ferry service across the under 3,000 feet ).
3. These recommendations
Ohio River at Portsmouth,
be
in full progress within 30
citing constant behind the
days
resulting in an increase
scenes involvement since
of
three
times the number of
July and a review of
recommendations made by cars moving across the Ohio
NEW DELHI, India (API
the club at that time. River in a 24 hour period
Recommendations included: (maximum now is 1500, - II passenger train packed
with men, women and
That docking site locations . minimum should be 4500 ).
John Irwin , President of children ran off the tracks in ·
must be directly opposite one
another
and
that the Auto Club of Southern western Bangladesh today
specifications
lor .the Ohio and Vice President of and as many as 500 persons
operation of ferry boat ser-' · Transportation for the were feared dead, the United
vice must be carefully Portsmouth Area Chamber of News of India reported. It
developed by experienced Commerce. said that if co uld be one of the worst train
solutions are not immediately wrecks in history.
Ohio River authorities.
forthcoming
these
UNI,
quoting
the
Club officials decried the
organizations
will
request
a
eastern
News
Bangladesh
many months of ·inadequate
service and talks without meeting of all interested Agency , said the locomotive
solutions. The present ferry parties to determine why. and four passenger cars
boat operation has developed "The people are grateful for jumped the tracks and landed
animosities because of the the funds supplied," he said, in a ditch.
It said the accident ocroute, equipment, pers&lt;innel, " but consider a lot of it is
and all views have polarized, wasted until proper changes
thus progress towarli a are effected."
" Mistakes arc generally
solution is nil.
made
when emergency ac·
Proposals have been sent
lion
is
required,_
but mistakes
by the Auto Club to local,
call
for
corrective
action
state and national govern·
which
has
not
.
been
taken,
ment officials requesting
thus forcing us to become
that:
1. The auto ferry equipment publicly involved . We cer·
be upgraded to standards set tainly hope that it will result
by qualified authoritifs and in obtaining the one imd only
the substitution of another realistic solution which is to . ~
operator if this becomes matcrialiy in crease the
.Weekly Lottery: Blue number .of vehicles being
necessary.
068
; While - 46; .Gold - 7.
mo
ve
d
"cro&amp;s
the
Ohio
2. A new site be selected
Win·a-thon
: 45070.
Hiv
er"
Irwin
concluded.
and activated on either side

AAA club seeks
•
prompt actions

sonal tragedy that happened
to the family in the last two
days.
11
1t was marriage. marital
problems that led to one
disaster after another, and
now this," the woman said.
Officials at the child 's
school. where she was in the
first grade. said the child's
·m other was taken to a
hospital Wednesday even ing.
A neighbor described th e
girl as "a nice, quiet, loving
and sweet little girl ... very
pretty ."
FIVE KILLED
TEHRAN , Iran lAP )
Troops in Tehran and the
western city of Sanandaj
open ed fire today on
thousands of supporters of
Ayatullah
Ruholl a h
Khomeini angered by the
government's delaying his
return to Iran, and there were
reports of at least' 10 dead and
32 wounded.
Hospital sources said at
least five persons were killed ·
and

seven

wounded

in

Tehran.

•

EVENTS SATURDAY
The 4-H and FFA steers
will be weighed Saturday,
Jan . 27, at Royal Oak Fann.
Time of the weigh-in has been
changed from 10 :30 a. m. to 1'
p.m.

500 may have perished

.

·-

' .

•

BUS CHAHTERED
The Supporters Club of
United Mine Workers have
chartered a bus to travel to
Columbus Tuesday, Jan. 30
to attend Environment31
Protection Agency
hearings at the NeJI. House.
Anyone wishing to go are
to contact Patsy Oiler at
992-6163 or Hallie Eblin at
992-7366. Those who plan to
attend the hearings are to
be on the Pomeroy parking
lot by 7 a.m.

curred ' in Chuadanga, about
95 miles west of Da cca in
Kustbia district near the
border with India.
Offi cials in Chuadanga
were unable to give the exact
number of casualties. The
injured were being rushed by
truck to Chuadanga hospital
because no ambulances were
available, UNr' reported.
There was no indication of
what caused the accident.
The world 's worst train
wreck, which occurred near
Modane , France, on Dec. 12,
1917, killed 543 persons.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday:. Cold throughout
the period with snow or
snow flurries Sunday and
Monday and
ending
Tuesday. High In the mid
20s to mid 30s. Low in the
20s early Sunday and in the
teens early Monday and
again early Tuesday.
·:::;::::::::::::::::::::: :;:;:;:;:::::::: ::::~::::: : :::::::: : :: :;:::::::::::

HEADS
SYRACUSE
VILLAGE COUNC IL Herman London, Syracuse, ·
Is president of Syracuse
Village Council for 1979.
London has served the
\'illage of Syracuse for a
period of 28 years. He
served on council from 1950 ·
to 1960 and was mayor of
the village from 1960 to
May 1978. He assisted in
securing the water system
and annexation of three
quarter miles and extended
the water system to Rustic
Hills. The swimming pool
built in the village was
named after London .
London also ass!sted with
'federal grants obtained to
build the pool and the
tennis courts. Dedication of
London Pool was held July
4, 1976.

Weather
Variable cloudi ness
tonight , low near ~0 . Cloudy ,
with snow Saturday. High in
the mid to low 30s. Chance of
precipitation 20 percent
tonight , 80 percent Saturday.

morning rush hour a nd 20
min utes late during the af·
t crnoo"n
ru sh
hour .
Greyhound bu ses were
rurming 45 minut es to one
hour late, while Trailways
sa id its buses were between
one and two hours late into .
Cleve land.
Amtrak trains wer e running mie-to two hours behind
schedul e into northeast Ohio.
Several flights out of
Cleveland Hopkin s In te rnati ona l Airport were
canceled and United Airlines
redirected fo ur flights,· to
Detroit while runways were
bcin~ cleaned.
Elsewhere in Ohio. snow
acc urnlation s Thursday
ra nged from two to four in·
ches. 'Ine weather service
sa id more sno w or rain is
likely in southw"'tern Ohio
by Saturday night from a new
storm developing in west
Texas.

Meinhart
resolution
presented
Rep . Ron James annoWlced
Thursday afternoon he will
introduced into th e Ohio
House of Representatives a
resolution honoring the late
George A. Meinha rt who
served seven terms in the
legislature. The resolution is
expected to be acted upon on
Feb. 6.
It .reads : ·•Whereas the
mern bers of the House of
Representatives of the 113th
General Assembly of Ohio
have learned, with deepest
reg rets. of the passing of
George A. Meinhart . an
outstanding publi c servant
from Middleport, and wish to
pay tribute to his memory ;
and whereas recognized by
hi s many friends and
associates for his outstanding
service to the citizens of Ohio
as well a s hi s man y
praiseworthy persona l
qualities, George A. Meinhart
will long be remembered as
an individua l who contributed
so much to his community
and to olir society.
His paramount concern for
the welfare of his fellow man
was clearly demonstrated by
his seven terms in the Ohio
General Assembly during
which he served as a member
of the House of Representatives from Meigs County:
and
wherea~
this
distin guished individual's
personal sacrifices of time
and energy to family, family
and community will live
beyond him.
" Though the void his
death has created can never
be fill ed, the legacy of
dedicated service which he
established will remain in· spiring to all others who may
look towards his life as an
exe mplar~
model
ol
Christian devotion ; and
whereas the warmth and
understanding George A.
Meinhart always extended to
others will stand as a
monument to his personal
character and his memory
will remain forever in the
hearts of everyone who knew
and loved him .
·"Therefore be it resolved
that we, the members of the
House ·of Representatives of
the 113th General Assembly,
adopt this resolution in salute
to the memory of a truly
honorable and magnanimous

SUIT FILED ' ..
TIIllrsday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court a suit
was filed by the Pomeroy
National Bank in the ~unt
of $1,690 agpinst . Joe Me·
Conahey.
man." ·

I~

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