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                  <text>•
8-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo'!·P~meroy , 0 , Tuesday, Jan 30, 1979

Hostages overpower gunman, one dies today

Stronger ties heads agenda
pollc) toward Tatwan The
By ROBERT B. CULLEN
admmistratwn hoped h1s
Associated Press Writer
responses would help blunt
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter and Vtce the cntictsm 11 has drawn
Premier Teng Hsiao-pmg of over the dectsion to nor·
Chma , pulling astde the malize relations wtlh Pekihg
Details of Monday's talks
vexmg problem of dealing
with the Sovtel Uh10n, shtfted at the White House were
thei r attenllon today to spa rse
It was clear, however, that
strengthenmg ties between
th
e Sov1et Union was
tbetr two diverse coWltnes
A smllmg Teng amved at discussed And sources m·
the White !louse promptly at dicated the administratiOn
9 a m for hiS third meetmg was relieved the emphasis of
With Carter Within 24 hours the talks was sh1ftmg to
After previous discussions of btlateral matters
Teng S81d he and Carter
global
and
regiOnal
problems, the talks were reached "an understanding "
scheduled to shift to the about Soviet matters at a
future of Sino-American morning meetmg, but did not
trade and actentific, technical say whether Carter agreed
w1\h hts hardline vtews
and cultural exchanges.
The first frutt of the talks
Carter, as he posed wtth
Teng lor photographers at the was an exchange of tn ·
White House, adopted the vttattons Carter was ulVIted
Chinese leader's e~~~gmalic to Pekmg and Chmese Pr·
response when asked what mier Hua ' Kuofeng was invtted to Washington. Both
they would talk about
"Many 11\ings, from the accepted, although no dates
earth to the heavens," he said were set.
On the other hand, the two
wtlh a smlle, repeatmg what
Teng told reporters alter
their first talks Monday
morning.
Teng later faced a senes of
meetmgs on Captlol Hill and
(Contmued from page 1)
questiOns about China's
Ja ycees of the month
awards -went to Bill Young,
June, frog JWDp ; Charles
Wayland, July, frog ttcket
sales; Mike Kelly, August,
dilly dunker, Bob Haggy,
September, grass cuttmg,
Greg Gatrell, October, punt,
pass and kick, Dav1d Fox and
John Kaull, November,
haunted house , Bill Young,
December, food baskets Bill
Young was named the Jaycee
of the first quarter and Greg
Gattrell lor the second
quarter
Young received Jaycee
International Senatorial
Award, the highest given
by the Jaycees, with Herb
Schul, district director,
making the presentation
~
Springboard awards for
Now we can cover your
activation durmg the ftrst 60
msurance temtory better
days of membership "ent to
than ever, because now we
Carl
Gheen, Jeff Russell,
can prov1de you w•th fme
John
Davts,
Richard Knapp,
products from 1he Kemper
Joe
Anthony,
George
Insurance Compames We'll
Francts,
James
Schmoll,
Bob
fond the roght auto,
Schmoll
and
Mike
Kelly
homeowners , bus1ness and
Speak-up
awara s- for
other Insurance coverages
presentmg a one minute 1ce
to meet your needs.
breakmg about sell and a
Rtl!&lt;esmting·
three minute speech on
FEDERAL
KEMPER
another toptc went to Bob
INSURANCE
Schmoll,
Mtke Kelly, Bob
COMPANY
Arms, Ken Searles, John
Kauff, Carl Gheen and Dave
Jenkins
Spark plug awards lor
acttvatton and partictpat10n
for Jaycees of at least one
year membership went to Blll
Young, Dave Jenkins, Mike
Mullen, Dav1d Fox and J. R.
Hunnell
Spoke awards went to Bob
8111 Quick ie
Schmoll,
M1ke Kelly, Dav1d
Joanne Sta"cher
" Across from the cour
J enkms, John K;l~ff and Ken
thouse 1n Pomero y
Searls
UO'I

Awards

THE CAVALRY
IS RIDING
WITH US
NOW.

--

DAVIS

INSURANCE
AGENCY
~o1o11

We aim to please
when it comes to
auto loans. You 'II
drive away in that
..,..,_.....:::IQI'-n~·~ car in no time,
,then pay back at
low bank rates.
Come see!

FRIENDLY BANK "
Walk -Up Teller Wmdow

Open Friday Evenmgs, S to 1 p.m .

lilitens ,alional Ba·nk ':
IIIISLEfliiRr
01110

jq@{J

5

/

l1

~6
•
I

Member F. O.l."C.
Deposits ln.surance to $40,000.

stdes decided not to tssue a
)Otnt
commumque, or
statement of shared vtews,
after Teng leaves Washmgi&lt;Jn
Thursday for Atlanta ..
Houston and Seattle.
The differences between
Teng and Carter over policy
toward the Snvtets were only
thinly vetled m their public
statements Monday, as
car~er welcomed Teng With
an honor guard, a state
dinner and an entertamment
gala at the Kennedy Center
In his toast at the state
dinner, Teng satd, "We v1ew
our bilateral relatwns m the
contest of the overa ll m·
ternatlonal sttuat1on ''
And he remmded Carter
that the Umted States and
Chma had only recently
pledged themselves to ftght
agamst any effort to establish
" heg emony"
tn
As1a
" Hegemony" IS the word the
Chtnse use to describe Sovtel
aspirations
Teng's vtews were not at all
veiled man mtervte" he gave
to T•'lle magazme and
published Monday
He called the Snvtet Umon
"the true hotbed of war " In a
broad reference to Europe,
Japan, Chma and the Umted
Statos he sa1d, "If we really
want to curb the polar bear,
the only realistiCthmg for us
IS to urute ''
The Amertcan sources, who
asked not to be Idenllfied,

said Teng was not proposmg
any formal alliance m hts
pnvate eonversattons w1th
Carter And they made no
secret of the fact they would
have preferred hun to tone
down hiS ant1-Sovtet rhetoric
The officials favor locusmg
the talks on other issues
"We've had one day of talks
A wouldn't say there 's
anythmg we ought to ptck out
and comment on," Secretar)
of State Cyrus Vance satd
Monday rught,
Carter, m hts toast to Teng,
indtcated the admm1stratton
IS st1ckmg to liS poliCY of
even-handedness m dealmg
w1th Moscow and Pekmg
He dtd not use the word
" hegemony " Instea d, h1 s
speech focu sed on the
Arnertcan " lo ng · t e rm
commitment to a world of
diverse and independent
nat10ns,"
the
ad·
mmtstratwn 's descnpllon of
Its policy.
And
he
em pha sized
Amertcan willingness to help
m Teng 's program of
modermzmg Chma through
trade, credit and SCientifiC
and academic exchanges
The admm1strat10n has
satd 11 will not sell Chma
arms or allow weapons
manufactured m Europe wtlh
Amer~can components to be
sold to the Chmese. But the
admimstratwn says 11 IS up to
the NATO alltes to decide
whether to sell their own

weapons to China, as France
and Great Bntam are con·
s1denng
lbc Soviets have reacted
warily to the U S · Chma
norm allza tron
State
Depa rtment offtc1als have
satd they thmk that warmess
might have contnbuted to the .
delay m a SALT II treaty
Some offictals think the
Sovtet · endorsed mvat1on of
Cambodia, Chma's ally, by
Vtetnam was meant to show
that the Soviets would not be
mturudated by the t1es between the Umted States and
Chma
,
The admmtstration has
decided tts best course IS to
try to improve relations wtth
both countrtes and that
openly "playmg the China
card" against the sov1ets will
BILL SMITH, who retires We&lt;lnesday after 31 years m the Ohto extension service, is
only provoke them mto
at Sunday's party in the Rio Grande College dinmg hall More than 200 friends
pictured
dangerous reactwns
applauded
him and heard tributes from many associates With hun are his wife, Dorothy,
To the Chmese, however,
and, at the left, Manon Caldwell, who ser.ved as master of ceremomes
the Snv1et threat 1s extremely
dangerous The Soviets, wtth
43 dtvtstons along the Chmese
border, have spoken In the
past of launcmg a pre·
emptlve strtke agamst the
Clunese
was spreading partly cloudy
and western New York.
By The Associated Press
The history of enmity and
sktes
through California and
Skies
in
the
Southeast
were
A West Texas frontal
mistrust between the two system today spread freezmg clear early today, but ram the Pacific Northwest, with
natwns 1s hundreds of years drizzle across North Texas showers were forecast lor an some ram along the coast of
old In recent years, Chma's and Oklahoma and snow from area from the Florida Oregon and light snow m the
claun to hundreds of square Colorado
to
Western Panhandle and Georgia to the Cascades
miles of Snvtet terntory has MISSOuri.
Bitler cold persisted m the
·Central Gulf Coast states,
wtdened the schism, as has
The heaviest snowfall was and Alabama restdents ex· Northern Plams, where
their riva lry lor leadership of reported in Kansas and peeled up to 3 mches of new heavy snow accumulations
and sub-zero temperatures
the
world's
Marxist Mtssoun, With some areas snow
movement
'
reportmg up to 9 mches of ' The mid-Atlantic Coast have choked roads and
new snow Monday. Another states reported clear sktes stranded ranchers and
four Inches were expected with t emperatures above livestock for weekS.
Temperatures around the
today before the storm moves freezmg , and New England
was partly cloudy, also wtlh nation at 2 a m EST ranged
eastward tomght
Authorities m North Texas temperatures above freezmg from ·25 at Bozeman and
absolve her from guilt lor and Oklahoma reported IceA Pacthc Coast cold front Butte, Mont., to 60 at Key
partlctpatmg wtth three SLA glazed highways and power
West, Fla
members m the Aprill5, 1974, lmes Forecasters sa1d sktes
armed robbery of a San ov er the Southwest were
JUDGE APPOINTS
Francisco bank It sunply clearmg , but light snow
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (API cuts short her sentence, lmgered earlv today m the
The Metgs County Sheriff's
Two
JUdges
were
appomled m
although she would have been northeastern Mountams of.
Department
mvesttgated a
the
Dayton
area
Monday
by
eligible for parole m July •
New Mex1co.
car-truck accident Sunday at
Gov James A Rhodes
MISs Hearst and her
Light snow was also
Judge W Erwin Kilpatrick, 3 35 p m. in Chester Town·
captors, William and Emily reported throughout the
Harris, eluded authorities for lower Great Lakes Reg1on who has been a Dayton ship, Fairview Addition
more than 19 months before and the Ohto Valley wtlh Muruc1pal Court JUdge smce Road No personal injuries
they were arrested on Sept. more expected, and freezmg 1971, was named to the Mont· were reported.
According to the report
gomery County Common
18, 1975 m San Francisco
drtzzle was falling m Ohio Pleas Court, effective Feb 9, vehicles driVen by Rodney E
She said at her bank robFrecker, 22, Middleport and
to replace Stanley S Phillips
bery tnal she was forced by
Leonard
C. Lyons, 30,
Phillips was elected to the
threats of death to jom the
Pomeroy,
collided on the
2nd
District
Court
of
Appeals
SLA and participate m the
snow
covered
road m a blind
last
November
robbery. She was 19 when she
curve
Alice
0
McCllum,
an
atE1ght defendants were
was kidnapped
There was moderate
Attorney George Martmez, fmed and four others for· torney and instructor at the
damage
to the Frecker
Dayton
University
Law
felled
bonds
m
Meigs
County
who represents Miss Hearst,
School, was appomted by the vehicle and severe damage to
sa1d Monday she would leave Court Monday
to
replace the Lyons car No citations
Fined by Judge Charles governor
Pleasanton shortly alter 7 30
were tssued
a m ( PS'I') Thursday He Knight were Paul D. Welton, Ktlpatnck.
said she would hold a news Pomeroy , Nola Swtsher,
conf erenc e at the prison Middleport, James Laven·
der, Mason and John
before leavmg
McArthur, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs each, speed, Larry E
Spencer, Racme, $10 and
Judgment given 'costs, failure to yield from BODY LANGUAGE SPOKEN
private drive , Wtllie Causey,
In small claims court on Coolville, $10 and costs, left of
Thursday, Jan 18, Smith center, Teddy Osborne, Rt 1,
Nelson
Motors,
Inc. l Reedsville, $150 and costs,
Pomeroy was awarded fi ve days confmement,
defautl judgments according license
suspend ed stx
to Judge Charles Kmght
months, DWI, fiv e days
Judgments were awarded confmement, dr1vm2 under
agamst the followmg, Harold suspensiOn; Loutse DeLong,
Davis, Minersville; Irwm Rilcme, $25 and costs, 30 days
Cremeans, Coolville, Ada confinement suspended,
Harper, Pomeroy, Mtke InsuffiCient funds
Gnfhth, Pomeroy' Ran·
Forfeiting bonds were
dy Mills, Syracuse; Roy Elizabeth Most, Rt. 1, Shade
Newell, Middleport and and John E Smith, NaJarre,
Gerald
Shoults,
New 1 Ohio, $35.50 each, speeding,
Lexmgton
Brice Jarvis, Wellston ,
Judgments were awarded $35 50, msecure load , James
agamst Phillip Follrod, D. Hardwick, Grove C1ty,
Pomeroy ; Malcolm Gum· $100, permtltmg mmor to
ther, Syracuse; Franklm operate vehtcle
Hendnx, Syracuse; Reva
Patterson, Rutland , and
Mam Devietro, Syracuse.
On Thursday, Jan. 25,
Olympic Gifts
Pomeroy Nallonal Bank was
As late as 1912, at
awarded a default judgment
agamst Michael Pooler, Stockholm, Sweden, vtctors
Reedsvtlle; We lker' s of the modern Olympic
Ashland, Pomeroy, was Games were crowned with
awarded a default judgment wreaths fashioned · from
agamst Richard and Nancy leaves m addition to receiV·
Jeffers, Pomeroy; and Metgs mg trophieS and medallions
Tire Center was awarded Olymptc chammons m Berlin,
default judgments against Germany,m 1936were awardHerald White, Middleport, ed oak-tree saplings, smtably
Paul D. Mttchell, Langsville potted for replantmg m the
and Harry Ptckens, Jr., victor's homelands
Racine
·
•

-

By JOHN W. REID
Associated Press Writer
PINEVILLE, W. Va (AP) - State police stormed a
restaurant early this mormng alter hostages apparently overpowered a gunman who had held them for more than e1ght
h?urs, authonlies satd.
One of the hostages d1ed at an area hospital shortly after
he was freed, accordmg to Trooper B L. Baker Police sa1d he
had been shQ! about an nour before the 4 a m. stormmg of the
restaurant They did not tdenhfy hun.
Two other umdenllfled hostages were wounded when they
overpowered their captor, pollee sa1d Th'ey were taken to

Just before m1drught 1\lesday, Church had released a fifth
nearby hospitals, but their condillons were not unme&lt;hately
ho;tage , Wayne Beam of Summersville Beam was the
available
"The hostages got a chance there and jumped the !ella," employer of the other four hostages, authorities sa1d The f•ve
Jiad been staymg at the Mountam Motel and Restaurant near
Said pollee Capt B. H Cassell
MOle than three dozen law officers had been pOised to rush th1s town of 1,200 m southwestern West V1rgm1a The s1ege took
the restaurantm a tear-gas attack, Cassell sa1d, but the acllon place at the restaurant
R1ghard G Rundle, Wyommg County prosecutor, sa1d he
on the part of the hostages came before that plan was put mto
was
grazed m the hip by a stray bullet early th1s mormng He
effect
Taken mto custody were Freddie Church, 36, and h1s 18- sa1d the gunman was firmg from the restaurant
year-old wtfe Nancy, of nearby Keyrock Authontles descnbed md1scrumnately
Church had threatened to kill the five hostages at 9 p.m
Church as a former mental pat1ent who was angry at the state
Tuesday and gave authorttles a ftve-hnur rlP;\d hnP ~n .,P rnu1rt
Welfare Department

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 202

Army

Among those expected to
accompany M1 ss Hearst
when she IS released IS her
ftance , Bernard Shaw, 30, a
San Franctsco pollee offtcer
who once was her bodyguard
The couple had planned a
Valentme's Day weddmg, but
Shaw sa1d Monday they were
postponmg the weddmg unbl
they could be marned m a
church
The Rev Ted Dumke, who
led the campa1gn for her
clemency, sa1d Monday the
couple were now constdermg
marrymg on St Patrick's
Day
Meanwhile, prison offictals
satd Mtss Hearst was transferred Monday to an tsolated
room, away from the 300
other women at the pnson
Duty
officer
Darell
Hainlme satd she was moved
"to be on the safe stde,"
because of threats agamst
her by other prisoners
In granting the com·
mutation, Carter agreed w1th
a Jushce Department
recommendatiOn that she has

"been
pumshed
sub·
stanllally," as a ktdnap
vtctun and durmg 22 months
m prison It sa1d she needed
no more rehabilitatiOn for her
pumshment
"She will be a law-abtdmg
cit1zen," the department
predicted
''I'm really grateful that he
was so courageous," M1ss
Hearst satd of Carter's
decision "It would have been
so simple for hun to JUst leave
everything the way 11 was
I thought I'd be spendmg
another Feb 4 m pnson "
Mtss Hearst, whowill tum
2!i m three weeks, satd she
was "grateful for all the
support from so many people
I'll never know and never
meet, " referrtng to the
dozens of pollttctans, mov1e
stars and newspaper edttortal
wrtters who called for her
early release
The commutatiOn does not

Frontal system spreading drizzle

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
Ruth
Buffmgton, Pomeroy; Mona
Neal , Middleport , Dav1d
Sorrell, Dayton , Mark Clme,
Pomeroy, Rodney Bailey,
Middleport; OtiS Casto, Long
Bottom , Belva Groce, Long
Bottom
DISCHARGED - Cindy
Carpenter, Wilma\ Anderson,
Beverly Thomp ~on , Lee
Cadle, Monte Wolfe, Marcille
Ailmg

"If the IRS
calls you i
we11 go
with you.
No extra charge~'
When we prepare your return, we stand
behtnd our work So tf the IRS should call
you In, H&amp;R Block will go along With you at
no charge. Not as your legal representative,
but to answer any questions about how your
taxes were prepared That s another rea·
son why we should do your taxes . which·
ever form you use, short or long.

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

I
61a E MAIN ST
POMEROV,O
Open9A M to
6 P M Weekdays.
9·5 Saturday
PHONE 1'92 3795

2nd-BROWN ST
MASON, W VA
OPEN TUJ'S

Mishap probed

BOY DIES
DALLAS (AP) - An 11·
Y.ear-old boy who was stabbed
through the eye with a
screwdriVer two weeks ago
has died In a hospttal,
aQthor~ties say Hts mother
has been charged in the case
Pollee mvesttgators satd
they learned Clifford Cecil
Gradi died Monday, moments
before doctors at Baylor
Medtcal Center began
emergency surgery on his 8·
year-old sister Aimee Gene
Gray, who was wounded in
the same attack Jan 12 She
was listed in critical con·
dit10n

THURS &amp; SAT .

9A M -5 PM.

PHONE 773-9128

What 1lid you do w1th the
hour lost last sprmg that you
~ot b:tck a few days ago, rx"'Pl to~l k ab&lt;ll' ilt ?

ACTIONS FILED
Unda L Ray filed for
support m Metgs County
Common Pleas Court agamst
Harry G. Davtdson
Debbie Carl, Middleport
and Rodney Carl, RD ,
Pomeroy, filed for dissolullon
of marriage
BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Tueoday
Long Bottom, 3-3.30 p.m.;
Reedsville, Reed's Store, 4-5;
Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh
HoQsing, 5 30·6; Chester,
Methodist Church, 6.45·7 1~ ,
Baum Addition, 8-3 30
Thursday
Head Start, Racme, 2·2 30
p m., Portland, Post Office,
3-3·30;
Racme,
Home
National Bank, 4-5; Wagner's
Hardware, 5·6; Syracuse,
Swimming Ppol, 6:15-11 :15

.

Shirnng surrounds you m lastmg beauty on Verona's
after '5 dmner dress Rosewood's elegant 01ana .

fa bnc 15 perfect for an easy mooded lovely ElastiC
warst 1s so comfortable, You 'll"never even know
you are weanng rt, except for the compliments you

will get
Be1ge, Ins, Nectar 6·16,412- Pptote
Many New Styles Dresse$ - Coats ·SPOrtswear Arrlv·

JngDa!IY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,,

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1979

15 CENTS

Stmon commented that he
would like three chamber
members volunteer to work
on the mdustnal sttes m·
formatiOn compi led by
Jenni n gs Ass ociates,
Columbus, through an Appalachian Regional Develop
ment grant secured by the
Buc keye Htll s- Hoc km g
Valley . Regional Develop·
ment CommiSSIOn
Fred Crow said sites could
not be developed unttl a new
highway is built connectmg
Me1gs County wtth the new
brtdge at Ravenswood
Crow also indicated that
Tuppers Plams Site could not
be developed until a sewage
system 1s avatiable He m·
dicaled there was opposlllon
agamst all of the 14 sties
proposed exce pt at F1ve

Points
" It will take a lot of work by
people w1llmg to devote tune
to the project," Crow state'&lt;!
He also added that tnps to
Columbus and West Vtrguua
Will be necessary
GUEST SPE,\KER
Gues t speake r Tuesda)
was Boyd Ruth of the Soli
Conservation Service, who
show ed slides on the
reclamation of gro~nd at
Pageville that began last
May, 1977
The I'agev1lle proJect was
the first such pro ject m the
State of Oh10 Ruth com
ll!ented
Ruth explained that 60
acres 10 the Pagev1lle area
had been reclaaned The area
has been seeded Wllh grass
and oats He added that 99

percent of the erosiOn m the
area has been stopped
The Pagcv11le project was
done b) the State Division of
Natural Resources and was
called "land reborn ..
Bo) d fu rth er explamed a
new program sponsored b)
the Sn1l ConservatiOn Service
called Rural Abandon ed Mm e
Program RAMP
'!11e new RAMP program
can help reSidents protect
r homes threatened
by landslides or floods caused by
past coal mmmg
The Surface Mmmg Control
and ReclamatiOn Act of 1977
authoriZed the Secretary of
Agn culture to establish the
Rural Abandon ed Mme
Program The Soi l Con·
servauon Serv1ce SCS ad·

Meigs' record budget broken down

County Court

byVI~A

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

BY ~TIE CROW
Ttckets for th e annual
awards banquet sponsored by
the Pomeroy Chaml&gt;er of
Commerce are on sale at
Stmon's Ptck-a-Pau , New
York Clothmg House and the
chamber office accordmg to
Paul S1mon, cham ber
president
The event will be held at
Royal Oak Park Feb 17
begmnmg at 6 30 p m
Tickets are $6 each.
Meeting Tuesday at Metgs
Inn, Sunon told chamber
directors that honorees will
be Eleanor Thomas, B1ll
Qutckel, Ju dge Manmng
Webster, Edtson Hobstetter,
A R Kmght , Beulah Ltevmg,
Freda Utterback and Tn cta
Adlela
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

ij

ELBERFELD$

en tine

at

Banquet tickets available

President commutes ternl
SAN AGER
Associated Press Writer
Sl\N FRANCISCO (AP ) Patrtcla Hearst wtll be free
for her weddmg, blessed by a
prestdenllal decree cuttmg
short her 7-year priSOn term
" I haven't made any plans
right now It came as such a
surprise that 11 Will take some
time to adJust to 1t," the
elated newspaper hetres s
smd Monday after President
Carter commuted her bank
robbery conv1ct10n.
She IS scheduled to leave
the Federal Correctional
Inst•tutton at Pleasanton on
Thursday, four days before
the f1fth anmversary of her
ktdnappmg by members of
the Symb1onese Liberatwn

•

talk w Brenda Mayhew, a welfare case worker, officials sa1d
Rundle sa•d the welfare worker had accused Church of
child abuse Church also complamed about food stamp policies
and lack of money to pay medical b1lls, Cassell sa1d
Church's mother sa1d her son hadn't been himself since the
1972 Buffalo Creek flood m Logan Counthy that killed 12!i
persons
Freddie was m the Buffalo C1eek flood He helped pull
children out of the water and the poeple that lived near hun It
did somethmgto him He JUSt hasn 't been hmJSelf smce," she
sa1d

NO METERS UP - The early bird not only gets the worm, but m Pomeroy he also gets
free parking On the lower parkmg lot m Pomeroy there are some SIX parking spac es along
the parkmg lot wall which have no meters Consequently, early mormng motorists - ftrst
come, first served- can park at the spots and ha•'C free parkmg Meter Patrolman Kenny
Hoffman says that some meters were vandalized and recently when the meter heads were
returned to the poles after havmg been removed due to a flood scare, the gap of poles
wtthout meters evolved It's all gomg to come loa screanung half, however New meters for
the poles have been ordered Motonsts lucky enough to get the spots every day probably will
agree that 1t was great whtle 11 lasted

51 vehicles damaged

A trail of broken car
wmdows was slashed through
Pomt Pleasant Monday mghl
by umdentthed mdivtduals
believed to be ndmg m a pick·
up truck
The wmdow-breakmg spree
has resulted m damage to ~1
vehicles at last count , and
that number may m e as
phone calls contmue to come
m, accordmg to Poml
Pleasant Pollee
Ctly Police have received
reports of broken car WID·
dows from 41 mdivtduals
while the Ma so n County
Sheriff's Department was
not1fed of broken wmdo~ s by
10 other car owners.
The mctdents apparently
occurred between the hours
of 8 15 p m and midnight,
according to the tun es of the
reports . The route followed
by the vandals extends from
Meadowbrook AdditiOn on
Sand Htll Road through town
to North Mam Street and
First Streets
Several Witnesses reported
seemg a red and white pickup
truck, bearmg t em porary
Ohio tags, m the areas where
the vandalism occurred It 1s
also reported that police
pursued a truck matchmg
lhts de scription wht ch
crossed the Shadle Bridge
apparently enroute back to
Ohio.
The list of persons repor·
ling broken wmdows last
night and this morning in·
eludes several county and
City Officials
Vehtcles wtth brok en
wmdows and where they
were parked are
L W Getty, Mt. Vernon
Avenue; Ruth L Cromley,
Monroe Avenue; Lawrence
and Betty Fowler, Lincoln
Avenue , Letha L. Wamsley,
Lmcoln Avenue; Michelle
Morrison, Lmcoln Avenue;
Golden Herdman, Lincoln
Avenue; Barry M Hamm,
Lmcoln Avenue , Maxine
Williams, Uncoin Avenue;
Oden C. Austm Sr., Lincoin
Avenue, Clara Proffitt,
Lincoln Avenue.
Harold Stewart, First
Street ; Kenneth Adkms,
~

Jefferson . Kathenne Pullms,
Mam Street, Patty Weaver ,
Heck's parkmg lot , Beverly
Rickard, Jefferson Blvd ,
Helen Sayre, VIand Street ,
Donna Staats, F' trst Street ,
Archie Whtll, Poplar Street,
Wtlh am Robbms, F~rst
Street
Gary Rickard, J efferson,
Harry K~pp , North Mam ,
Betty Van Natter , North
Mam , Michael O'F'iory ,
North Mam, !rna McDamel,
North Mam , Jun Sturgeon.
First Street, Martha Clark,
22nd Street, Denstl Osborne,
F'1rst Street; Jun Roach, 22nd
Street , Dean FraZier, Mt
Vernon Avenue
Ray Whttman, Park Dnve,
Raymond Bates , Mam
St reet , Melvin Johnson.

The Me1gs County Com·
mtsswners have approved a
record budget of $2,226,767 for
1979
wht ch
mcludes
$982,108 95 m general fund
expendit ures, $700,286 m
highway department funds
and health and welfare ap-

Flurries
•
•
contznuzng
By The Associated Press
Scatte red llurnes are
expected to contmue tomght
and Thursday over porlwns
of southern Ohio, With very
l i ttle
add il tona l
accumulalion The rest of the
state Will be mostly cloudy
Colder temperatures are
forecast for tomght and
Thursday, wtth the lows
across the state tomght m
smgle dtg1ts and the highs on
TI1ursday m the 20s
Accordmg to the Natwnal
Weather Service , the next
stg mf1 ca nt snowfall wtll
move mlo Oh10 Saturday or
Sunday'.

Walnut Stredet , Mark
Kearn s , Maple Avenue,
Lester Errett , Meadowbrook
Dnv e, David Simpson,
Maple Avenue , Charl es
Pickens, Kanawha Street,
Charl es Mu sg rave, Oak
Street , Jack Fowler, Mt
Vernon Avenue
F' S Furbee, Mt Vernon
A;cnue, Janet Hall, Lmcoln
Avenue, Carl Walden, 28th
Street , W Va and Ohw
YMCA, 28th Street , Btll
Peck , Birch Avenue; c E
Cook, Birch Avenue , Bertha
Thomas, Lmcoln Avenue, . :::::::::::::::::::::::::::':'::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Tommy Holland, Mt Vernon
SCHOOL OUT
Avenu e, Denstl Reynolds,
Schools of the Me1gs and
Mad ison Avenue, Thelma
Eastern Local School
Elliott, Madtson Avenue, and
DistriCts were open lor
Evelyn Hartley, Madison
classes today and Southern
Avenue
Local Schools were closed.
Snow fell overnight and
was eontlnuing Wednesday
morning . Afternoon
kindergarten classes in the
Meigs Local School Distrtct
were cancelled.

AnnuaI rep ort
••

ssued to da'y

•

pnsoner s

Deputies served 868 papers
from the co urts and m·
vest1gated 1,076 compiamtsoffenses Compla mts m·
eluded one homi cide, two
anned robberies, 23 assaults,
75 breakmg and entermgs,
248 larceny, 13 motor vehicle
thefts, 131 acts of vandalism,
~0 acts of mailbox vandalism,
19 death calls , -mn e
spotllghtmg calls, 17 trash
dumpmg calls, 39 anunal
complamts, 58 domesllc
calls, 24 acts ot trespassmg;
stx acts of forgery and 361
miscellaneous complamts.
The department has SIX
field deputies, four deputy •
dispatcher • Jailers, one m·
vest1gator, one deputy •
secretary, one cook, and one
custodian
One field deputy, an m·
veshgator , two dispatchers
and a custodian are paid
through CETA funds ':'he
department IS asSisted by
(Contmued on page 8)

Sa lary, $20,000, sala n es,
employes, $16,600 , supplies,
$500 , equipment, $200 , travel,
$300, allo\\ances, $10,000
Total, $4 7,600
County Plannin g Com
mtsston - sa lanes, em
ployes , $1,250 , contracts,
repairS, $1 ,250, expense of
commiSSIOn members, $150
Total, $2,650
Common Pleas Court salar), $3,563 83, sa lanes,
employes, $8,244 45 , suppli es,
$250, equipment , $1, 000
attorney fees $10,000, JUrors'
fees, $1,500 , witness fe es
$1 ,500 transcnpts, $1 500,
t ravel. $300 , ex penses,
fore1gn JUdge $600, other
expenses, $300, jury com·
mission employes, $1600,
suppli es, $300 eqUipment,
$200, advert lsmg- and prm·
tmg, $100, other expenses,
$1,000 bureau of support,

$9,572 travel , $4 000, othe1
expenses $1,600 Total ,
124,646 77
Probate Court - sala1y
offiCial $3,563 82, salalJCS.
employes, $6,876 27, supplies,
$3,000, Jurors' fees, $300
witness fe es, $300 , tran·
scn pts, $200 , ex pen ses,
foreign JUdge, $150, other
expenses
$500
Tota l,
$14,890 09
Clerk of Courts - salary,
offlCIBI. $12 ,000 . sa lan cs,
employes. $26,216 40 sup·
pli es, $3,500 eqUipme nt ,
$500 contracts, repair, $500 ,
travel , $250, advert1smg and
prmt, $65 , other expenses,
$200 Total, $43,231 40
Coroner - sa lary, offlcwl.
$6,000 salancs, employes.
$500 , supplies, $50 contracts,
services $1500, other ex·
pcnscs. $650 Total, $8,700
County co urt - salary,
salanes, employees, $7,000, official. $10,500, salanes,
supplies, $300 eqUipm ent emp loyes, $19,332 36 , sup·
$500, tr avel, $300 other pli es. $2,500, cont racts,
expenses, $200
Total repa1rs, $400, Witness fees,
$200, other fees (deputy
$40,258 28
J uvemle Court - employe bo nds!, $1,200, other ex·
salanes, $7,324 77 JUror fees, penses , 1counse l ), $3,000
$500, wtln ess fees, $500 1 otal, $37,132 36
Board of Elect iOns ex penses, foreign JUd ge
$150, other expenses, $1,000, sa lary, offiCia ls, $7,200 ,
Juvemle probation depart salan es, employes, $29,870 ,
ment , salari es, emplo yes. supplies, $3,600 , equipment ,
$37,700 contract servtces,
$1 610 , travel, $362; other
Total
expen ses, $1, 100
$87,442
Blllidmgs and Grounds mamtemmce and operatmn,
con tracts, repairs, $1,000 ,
contracts services, $35,000
rotai, $36,000
ProtectiOn to Property and
Persons - Shenff salary,
operated by Harold Erwm offi Cial , $13, 000 sa laries,
60, CrQwn Ctty, backed from emplo)es, $71,050, overtune,
a prtvate dnve and struck a $1,950 , supplie s, $20 ,000,
parked vehicle owned b) eqUipment $4,500, contracts,
Warren Berry , Gallipolis repairS, $3 ,500, con\racts,
Both vehicle s mcurred se rvtces $1 ,700, tra1mn g
school, $1 ,000 fee s, $200,
moderate damage
ailowa nces, $6.500, travel
$200, adverttsmg and prm·
lin g $300. other expenses,
$1 000 Total, $124,800
Recorder - salar), of·
hc1al, $11,500 , salanes
1Contmued on page 8 I

Patrol reports

three accidents

Th e Galha-Me tgs Post,
Highway Patrol, mvestigated
a on e-vehicle accident th1s
mornmg at I a m on Story's
Run Hd , two m1les west of
SR 7
Officers report that an east
bound auto dnven by Michael
Harnson 21, Middleport ,
went out of control, passed off
the left Side of the roadway
, and struck an embanltinent
There was moderate damage
to the vehicle
POINT PLEASANT, W.
The Ga lha· Meig s Post
Va (AP) - The Department mvesttgated two accidents
of Highways may ask for a 'iuesday
new set of btds on repatrs for
The patrol mvesttgated a
the Shadle Bndge over the one-vehicle mishap on Little
Flucr1es tomght w1th a low
Kanawha River here.
Paregon Rd , one and three·
around 15 Partly, cloudy
The lowest· btd was $1 19 tenths of a mtle south of SR
Thursday w1th a high m
mtlllon and the state had 790, at 3 30 p m
An armed robber took $198 upper 20s Chance of snow 50
estunated the cost "ould be
Officers report that a west Tuesday mght from Les' percent tonight , 10 percent
$900,000, according to Ga_ry bound auto operated by Janet Carryout on the outsktrt• of Thursday
Chernenko, a spokesman for Caldwell, 18, Crown Ctly, had Mason
the Htghways Department
The robber, who entered
stopped on a hillcrest
Area residents have con·
the
establishment around 10
The vch1cle slid off the left
JURY SEATED
tended that the bridge ts &gt;~de of the roadway ond p.m , was described as bemg
Jurors were bemg seated
unsafe and a Mason County struck a tree There "as a tall, whtle male, wearmg an
shenff's deputy sa1d he fell mod erate damage to the army Jacket and blue jeans thts mornmg m the case of the
through a hole m the bndge auto
He reportedly bud long hair State of Ohio versus Donald
s~ can ngen, 21, Rt
1
up to his shoulders wh1le
The patrol was called to the and wore a baseball cap.
Rutland
Swearin
gen
dtrectmg traffic.
State Police Trooper F A
scene of a two-auto accident
The department plans to on Kerr-Bethel Rd , one and Backus 1s mv est1gatmg He allegedly broke mto a cabm
dec1de this week whether to tM·tcnths of a m1le east of was not · availab le thts owned by Jack Earl Warner
accept the bid, Che1nenko SH 160
mornmg lor any addll!Onal located on Lambert Hollow
Road
smd
Offlccr&amp;report that an auto mfornMtlon

New bridge
Accordmg to a report
released by Mason County
Shenfl James J Proffitt, the
shenff' s dep artm ent pa id
$12,399 35 mto the county's
general fund m 1978
Fees were receiVed from
the fo llowing courts for
shen ff's fees for servtces
rendered, $9,224 35 , from the
vtllages of Pomeroy, Mid·
dleport, Racine, Syracuse
and Rutland for housing
prisoners under contract Y(llh
the county commtsslOners,
$3,045 ; collected for copies of
accidents reports and offense
reports, $130
The department, durmg
1978, mvesttgated 282 traffic
accidents compared to 229 m
1977. It mvesttgated one fatal
accident, 55 deer or other
ammal related accidents, 28
injury acctdents and 198 non·
injury accidents
Deputies booked 750 per·
sons mto county Jail com·
pared to 683 m 1977 and
se rved 9,218 mea ls to

propnat10ns totaling $449,319,
makmg up the maJor outlay
'Followmg 1s a breakdown
of the appropnallons
GENERAL FUND,
Board of Co unty Com·
mlsstone rs - salartes, of·
ftctaJs, $30,200 , salanes,
employ es, $14,057 88 , suppli es , $1,800 , eqmpm ent,
$5,000, con tracts, repair ,
$500, travel and expenses of
COffiffi iSS IOners, $1,000, ad
vcrt1smg and prmtmg, $200,
other ex penses, $6,000,
microfllmmg s uppli es,
$3,000, eq uipment, $600
Total, $62,357 84
Co unty Auditor - Salary,
$18,000, salanes, employes,
$40,000, supplies, $7,000 02,
eqUipment, $500, contracts,
repa1rs, $500, travel, $400 ,
advert1s1ng and prmtmg,
$.100 other expenses, $500,
assesSing personal property,
sa lan es, $1,520, appratsmg
real property , $2,000 Total,
$70,720
Co unty Treasurer
salar) , $12,000, employes
sa ianes. $19,876.51, supplies,
$5,000 equipment, $500,
contracts, services, $300,
travel $500, advert1smg and
pnn\lng, $700, other ex·
penses, $500 Total, $39,376 51
Prose cutmg Attorney -

bids may

be sought

Carryout

robbery
nets $198r

Weather

•

mmtsters U1r prog1am and

w1ll help partic!p.mts deve lop
plans fo r thelt
land and offer th em long
t&lt;rm cost sha1 mg to put the

1 eclarnatwn

pla ns to work
People " ho O\~n or co ntrol

non fede1 ai land that has
been mmed for coa l rna) be
ellg1b ie for cost shanng To
qua hl ), areas must have

been abandoned before Aug
3 1~ 77, and left unreclauned
01 in adequately recl,auned
Mme operators and their
permittees \\ho are legally
responsible for recla m1mg
abandoned mmed lands are

not ellg1ble The program
also excludes most of the
mmed la nds for whtch the
reclamation bond "as for·
fe1ted to the state
'Ibe gove rnment's sh are o£

rcclamatwn costs w1ll range
f!om 25 to 100 percent ,
depending on the acreage to
be reclauned, the proposed
usc, and whether the benefits
are mostly onsite ipnvate l or
offstte !public )
The greate r the offs1Le
bcncf1t s the mor e th e
gov ern me nt will pay To
ensure program funds are
Widely diotnbuted. the law
dictates that no smgie land·
owner can rt!cetve fman cmg

for reclaunmg more than 320
acr es
Because funds ar e hmtted

RAMP "'" concentrate on
the more severe problems
fir st The local conservatiOn
dt st n ct or rec]amatwn
committee wtJl re\ 1ew each
applica tiOn for cost sharmg
and suggest a fundin g
pnoritv SCS will ass1gn a
pn ont y and mform the a ~
phca nt m wntmg
Pe r son s mtcrested ln
s1gmng for asststance may do
so lx'gmmng March I
Mlcn d1ng we re S1mon,
Crow Huth Ph 1l Kelly , Dave
Jcnkms. B1ll Mayer, Billy Joe
Spencer Mr and Mrs Virgil
Teaford Leo Vaughan, Stan
Houdashcll Wesley Buehl, N
W Compton, Hank Cleland
and 1 am Bearhs. secretary

Big crowd
commended
Popuianly ol ICasternSo uthern athletic contests
was agam pomted up
Tuesday mght when cage
teams of the two schools met
man unportant SV AC contest
at Eastern
Between 2!iO and 300 fans
hned up at the Eastern ticket
office as early as 4 30 p m
Tuesday to buy their tickets
An estimated 1,100 fans were
on hand for the contest
Eastern Supt Clark Lees
reports a crowd control plan
was put mi&lt;J effect
Three pollee officers were
employed for the evemng
Admmistrators as well as
fa culty members were
stationed at varwus pomts m
the aud1tonum
Lees reported there was
one mc1dent durmg the game
and one afterwards Both
were ,brought under control
unmed!alely by the pollee
offtcers.
"We had a darn good crowd
control
plan ,"
Lees
commented He commended
students of both schools and
players of both teams on tbetr
conduct
"It was a htghly emotional
evemng,
but students
controlled themselves well",
Lees stated
There was, perhaps, a
handful of people who
became too emollonal, but all
m all, 11 was a wonderful
eve nmg of entertamment ,
Lee concluded
'

....

I

-~

�•
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomei'Oy.'0 .. W"'lnesday. ,fril L :n. 1~i~

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wc&lt;lnesclay. Jan. 31 . 1979

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

So-uthern tQps Eastern, regains first place

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

IN WASHINGTON
, ... AND WATCH THOSE HANPS.

dd
tt
ciples a resses ma ers
on which specific agreement
tween Ule U.S. an~he Soviet has not been reached, but
Union have bee formally which may bear on
WJderway since I
In May . compliance with SALT. It
1972 Ule negotiations esulted also addresses objectives for
in the {irst SALT agreements future SALT negotiations.
- the Treaty on the
The Administration in
Limitation of Anti-Ballistic advancing the _SALT. II ·
Missile Systems ( ABM's) and agreement wants itj~dged on
the l.nterim Agreement on the its own merits, and not in the
Limitation of Strategic context of present world
Offensive · Arms. Since then politics. That is to say, they
our negoti~tors have arrived want it looked at strictly as a
at the broad outlines of a new national security prollQsal ;
agreement, SALT II which is as an agreement that will
expected to be submitted for belpusneutralizetheSoviets'
Senate ratification this year. nuclear buildup and maintain
Though members of the the
nuclear
strategic
House will not have the weapons balance that ·now
opportunity to directly vote exists. To link it to . other
on this matter, in thaI the world events involving the
responsibility
for
the Soviet Union is, in the
est a b 1ish men t and Administration's judgment,
abrogation of treaties rest!\ emotional and unwise . The
solely with the Senate, 'I did . opposition on the other hand
want to share my views with contends that the issue should
you on this most. critical. not be considered In a
subject.
vacuum; tbat recent Soviet
The proposed SALT II actions in Vietnam, in the
agreement is in three parts : a Persian Gulf and in Africa
Treaty, with' an eight year are indicative of the global
lile; a Protocol, with a three
f he
year life; and a Statement of dominating intentions o I
Principles regarding the Russians and should prompt
us to question the true
behavior of tbe parties during motives of our cold war
· the course of the agreement. adversaries:
,
The Treaty limits the parties
The Soviets are very eager
to between 2,150 and. 2,250 to sign tlfe SALT n
strategic delivery vehicles, agreement , Why? Is it
including
land
based because Uley plan to play by a
intercontinental ballistic differ.ent set of rules than we .
missiles (ICBM's), long- · •'ormerSecretary~fDefense
range ballistic missiles Melvin Laird in a recent
launched from submarines article for the Reader's
· (SLI!M 's ), and heavy Digest indicates that we have
bombers and
aircraft incontrovertible evidence
carrying long-range cruise Ulat the Soviet Union has
missiles.
'
The Treaty limits each side ·repeatedly violated the SALT
I treaty to which we have
to the deployment of not more adhered.
than 800-850 land-based
A recent House Armed
IC!lM's capable of carrying Services · Committee panel
m u 1tip I e w a rhea d s headed by representatives of
.(MIRY's), and sets a th Pr ld t'
rt
maximum combined total of
e
es en s own pa y'
severely
scored
ihe
1,200 for land and sea based Administration for its failure
multiple warhead missiles. to adequately share with the
No more than 120 heavy American public the ~ic
bomber aircraft carrying facts concerning the SALT
cruise missiles may be agreement. . After
an
deployed. Limitations on the extensive evaluation of the
size of land based silos proposed pact the panel
established in the accords of called lor its rejection,
1972 are also carried over in labeling it a cosmetic
SALT II .
domestic political symbol
The Protocol prohibits the which neither limits strate'gic
deployment of land and sea arms : enhances security,
based cruise missiles with a . deters war nor maintains the
range of over 600 kilometers strategic ,balance.
(347 -miles ) o• air launched
Unless the President can
cruise inissilt. with a range more convincingly allay
over 2,500 ·kilometers (1,550 concerns · regarding the
miles). No formal limitation enforceability of , this
is est a b!ished ,on Soviet agreement, and until the
deployment of, their new Soviets start behaving more
bomber' the Backfire, but responsibly around the world,
production is not to exceed its Ule Senate should give notice
present
rate
of apthat they will oppose this ,
proK!mately 4 per month.
measure.
. The !!ta~.ement of Pri!l- .

By Greg Bailey
Southern Tornadoes took
an important step toward
another SV AC crown last
night as they avenged an
carher season one-point loss
to down the host and rival
Eastern Eagles, 59-16. There
was a standing room only
crowd of nearly 1,000 people,
most of whom had come at
5:30 or sooner. No fan left
early. They saw some good
solid basketball.
'
Soutlierii drew first blood
· wben junior forward Ja ck
Duffy hit a jumper from the
corner at the 7:40 mark.
Eastern's Don Eynon
knotted the ga me just
seconds la ter, but th e
Tornadoes went up two more
o~ a long. jumper by Dave
Fmdley. The Tornadoes soon
found out that it was going to
be no easy task when Eynon

The Strategic Arms
I.iillitation Talks (SALT ) be-

Energy priority shifts
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Buried in the massive new federal
budget proposed by President Carter is unmistakable
evidence of a profound shift in the search for energy resources
i.o meet the nation 's insatiable power r.equirements.
.
Nudear fission, widely promoted lor more than a quarter
century as the most promising energy sou.rce lor the future,
now faces the prospect of dwindling federal financing at the
same time it is falling into disfavor among utility companies.
Solar energy , which only a few years ago had virtually no
support in either govenunentor private industry, is rapidly
emerging as a leading candidate to provide a sizeable portion
of the country's power iri the 21st century. .
Perhaps the most dramatic evidence of those fast-changing
priorities came from Energy Secretary James R. Schlesinger,
long one of this city's staunchest proponents of nuclear power,
when he recently unveiled his department's 1980 budget to
repm-ters and industry officials .
•
·'As demands lor (uranium ) enrichment services have been
reduced, we have been able to free up some $600 million, and
that has enabled us to provide additional funding for other
energy sources such as solar," said Schlesinger.
Enriched uraniwn, the prinicpal fuel for commercial
nudear reactors, is produced by the federal government at
lhree gaseous diffusion facilities (in Oak Ridge, Tenn.; Portsmouth, Ohio; and Pa'ducah, Ky.) for sale to public utility
finus.
But during the past five ye~rs, those utilities have placed
new orders lor only 37 comrnerci~.l rea ctors while cancelling
orders for 39 nuclear generating units .
The industry's stagnation was even more obvious last year.
Only two.new reactors were ordered throughout 1978, while 10
carliet· orders were cancelled and construction of another 40
rcitc!Ors was delayed - for as long as two or three years in .

some cases.

News Item: Peking wall posters demand sexual freedom

tn

China.

-:••***"'"'****~,*******************************"'1

!• Editorial. opini~ns
.
.
:
.
*
't*********************************·***********··~

Humphrey- Rock~feller
missed elusive goals

Schlesinger is reliably reported to have originally requested
$!0.4 billion for his department in 1980. But the White House cut
his budget to $3.4 billion, with nucleat-related spending sharply reduced.
.
As a result, the Department of Energy budget lor nonmilitary work in nuclear fissi on has been cut from $1.17 billion
this year to $1.08 billion nexi year. Moreover, $211 million of
that total is earmarked not for development of new generating
his own.
technology but for waste management and storage of spent !
ByWALTERR.MEARS
The early reckoning of the
fuel rods.
AP Special Correspondent
1960
Republican presidential
Compared with that reduction of almost 12 percent, the
WASHINGTON (AP ) campaign
ranked him a
department's solar budget will increase airpost 25 percent, Hubert H. Humphrey called
potential,
and
formidable
from $559 million this year to $646 million next year.
his the polities of joy. Nelson
challenger
to
. then-Vice
Expenditures by other gove~nment departments will bring A. Rockefeller didn't give It a .
President
Richard
M. Nixon.
the total!980 federal solar cominitment up to $319 million -a name, but he campaigned
He
had
just
won
the
first of
figure that is far more than double t~e amount Carter propos- with the same verve, for the
his
lour
elections
as
governor
ed to spend on solar research and development only one year sarite elusive goal.
ago.
'
They spanned the same of New York. He was a fresh
(The solar budget proposed by the White House was increas- political generation, and they face, a winner, and an option
ed by Congress, and on "Sun Day" last year Carter disclosed died a year apart They both for Republicans who didn't
that he had instructed Schlesinger to shift another $100 million wanted to be presidents. They care for Nixon .
Some of them set about
fro m nuclear to solar activities.)
both got to be vice presidents.·
organizing
for Rockefeller,
The recent developments clearly reflect the president's perA rival once scorned
quietly
because
the GOP
sonal priorities. In his State of tbe Union speech, for example, Rockefeller's campaign style
establishment
was
Nixon's.
he singled out solar energy as a potential source of power to as that of a back-slapping,
011 a liinb, and
That
put
them
which he was especially committed.
baby-kissing, blintz-eating
In the same address, Carter reiterated his concern about un- politician. Rockefeller was Rockefeller cut it off by
announcing late in 1959 that
checked global proliferation of nuclear materials, a fear that ~- all · of that.
· ·
led him to ban the reprocessing of spent fuel - a step the inFor nearly 20 years, he wouldn't run. One of those
dustry insists is crucial to the economical development of Republican Rockefeller and ·groups was meeting in
nuclear power.
Democrat Hwnphrey were Woodstock, Vt., to plan a
Nuclear fission is neither being abandoned by the federal fixtures of their party's campaign lor Rockefeller
government nor be1~g wholly supplanted by solar energ~ . ."We presidential campaigns, when word came that he had
must conttnue development of a vartety of long-term optwns so either running or considering announced publicly he
wouldn't be a candidate.
we have a choice among these energy sources," says Elliot R. it.
Two campaigns later, thenCutler, a member of Carter 's budget stall.
.But with a difference.
Maryland
Gov . Spiro T.
But the trend is unmistakable: There is growing disenchantHwnphrey's problem was
Agnew
set
up
a committee to
ment with nuclear power and surprising enthusiasm for solar that,
much as most ·
draft
the
New
York governor
ener~y .
Democrats liked him, they
usually liked someone else
better. He was everybody 's
second choice, except in 1968,
The Daily Sentinel
when he gained nomination
IllS ~ 145-9&amp;0 \
as the candidate of a sharply
divided party.
Q~~--"'·Q!
But Rockefeller was, from
OF:VOTEDTOntE
Lawrence E. Lamb, rill. D.
his political beginning 20
JNTERF.ST OF
MEIGS.MASON AREA
years ago, the symbol of
ROBERT HOEFUCH
City Editor
Trying to Hccome pregnant
It would be good 11 tne two liberalism in a party
OAVID BUSKIRK
By Luwrcn(:e Lamb, M.D.
of you could go to a fertility dominated by conservatives
Advertising Managt•r
Published daily ext·ept &amp;tturday
clinic. That way, more in- at presidential nominating
by The Oh\o Valley Publishing
DP.AR DR. LAMB - I am formation could be obtained time.
Ctfmpany-Multimedt ~ . Inc.,
111
Never
mind
his
crackdown
trying to become pregnant on you.
Court Sl., Pomeru)l , Ohio •5789.
Bmdness Offi ct' Pho~ 992- 2100.
and ll1ere scorns to be a proDaily temperature curves on welfare abuse, his lawEdito rilll Phone 992-21~7.
and-order
stance,
his
blem. My husband and I are might point out whether you
Sl•cond l"l:~ss postage paid wt ;
Pornl:!roy, Ohio.
both 31. .We have one are ovulating regularly or essentially conservative
National a d ve rti si n ~~: represen·
daughter 7 years old and I not. II you are not, then your foreign policy. To the
tatlve, Landon Assodatl'S ... 3101
conservatives
who
often
Ins( a baby at birth five years doctor mi ght wish to
Eul'lid Ave., Cleveland,Ohlo~ll5.
Subscriplhm rates : Delivered by
agu, so I know I can get preg- prescribe a fert ility pill. They bestow, and always can deny . Qarrier
where &lt;~vai lable 75cent..!l per
a Republican presidential
ne~ nt. We 've been trying for are not used to regulate
week. By Motor Route where currier
service not ava ll~:~ble, One month,
over three years and I am .go- menstrual cycles but rather nomination , he was the
$3.25. By tl'lil il in Ohio aHd V(. Va .,
big-government
ing through many days of to stimulate the ovaries to liberal,
One YeHr, $27.50; Six months ,
governor
of
New
York.
114 .50; Thrt.&gt;e months , 18.50 ;
depressi~m
and ha ving release ova.
Elsewhere $32.00 year ; Six months
That was obstacle enough.
arguments wi th my husba nd
When the stimulation has
$17 .00 ; Three months, $9 .00 .
But
Rockefeller
added
some
been too successful and
nver whose fault it is.
Subscription priee indudes Sunday
He did go to a urologist r.eleased a lot of ova political miscalculations of 1 Tirnes.SCnt!nel.
three years ago and his ex- simultaneously, a nwnber of
amination showed he had a women have had multiple birsperm count of 44 million , ths. Regulating the dosage
which I understand is OK but and the medicine used helps
is on ly one-third of the nor- to minimize that possibility.
mal.
Your husband might be
He refuses to be re- greatly surprised to learn
examined, saying it is embar· that in some men with low
rC~ssing and there isn't any sperm counts the fertility pill
need for it. That's why we are that is used to cause ovaries
arguing . I feel he is not doing to release ova can also
everything he should,
sti mulate the man to produce
I have RH negative blood more ~perm, thereby increasand had a Cesarean section ' ing his fertility . II the man 's
with my last pregnancy. Does fertility can be improved in
this have any bearing on a these situations, there isn't
conception? When does the any reason why it shouldn't
doctor prescribe ferlllity pills be done.
·
to women' Is thi s to regulate
A number of causes can
their menstrual cycles or contribute to infertility in
does it help them to get preg- both the male and the female.
lt is true that in some innant?
I feel I've given nature stances a woman may
every chance to take its develop an inunune or sort of
cou"e and I want a family allergic reaction to the husbefor!!'' I gel much older and band 's sperm cells. When this
proves to be the case, then
it's too late.
DEAR READER- Science methods can be LO\ &lt;sed to
is making very rapid strides minimize the reaction and
but it still takes two to pro, help- promote the probability
duce a baby, even if it's a of pregnan cy ~ '
test-tube baby. That means
It won't help to fi ght with
.that when a couple has a pro- y0ur husband and it is really
blem in fertility, both part- not a question of whose fault
ners need to be examined.
it is. Th~ ·important point is
A lot can happen in three what will work best for the
yE'ars, and since it 's during two of you to enable you to
"What .a GREAT party' Virtually everyone
this period of time that you have another pregnancy if
. have been trying to get preg- that is what you want. It
was in to tax relief, budget cutting and
nant, there would be nothing takes two to tango and two to
deregulation."
wrorfj[' "wi th your husband produce a baby. Either one is
havin/_anolher ex~i~a ti on . more fun thu n fj g~tin g.

HEALTH

Berry's World

0

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for presidential nomination .
Then Agnew watched in
embarrassment . as
Rockefeller announced that
he wasn't going to run.
In 1973, after 15 years as
· governor,
Rockefeller
resigned. The move was
widely read as a step toward
another
presidential
campaign in 1976.
I never happened, but
Rockefeller did become vice
president by appointment. He
yielded his position on the
·1976 ticket, a move Gerald R.
Ford's strategists thought
would help them gain
conservative support.
He
didn't
complain
publicly, but he told Ford's
political advisers that his
departure would not satisfy
the conservatives, not with
R(ll'lald Reagan available tp
challenge the president.

ROBERT A. MOTIER
PROMOTED The
American Electric Power
Service Corporation's Fuel
Su~ply Department has
announced the promotion
of Robert A. Motter to the
position of Manager,
Contract Administration
Fuel Procurement - Transportation In the company's
Lancaster, Ohio office.
Gerald Blackmore, AEP
senlor vice president - fuel
supply, In announcing the
appointment of Molter, ·
said the move "reflects the
Importance AEP has
continued to attach to the
administration of contracts
lnvolvtng purchases of
coal" lor AEP generating
facilities.

Health Review
By Dr. Lamar Miller
OU . College of Osteopathic Medicine

Southern

sco red

tPn

unanswered points in the last
Three limes during the
four minutes of th e half.
fourth period, Eastern came
In that first half, Eastern 's within eight, but the fir ed-up
Goebel netted nine while · Tornadoes each time would
Duffy" led the Tornadoes of race back out to a 12 point
Coach Carl Wolfe with 12 lead.
markers . .
•· Southern's. biggest lead of
Tite Eagles of Coach John th~ ni ght was the fina l
Boston managed to knot the margin or the game, 13
score at 19-all with five points, but the Tornadoes
minutes left on a jumper by seemed to have control of the
Dan Spencer , but then they final period.
turned cold.
PLAYS PERCENT AGE
Both teams sta rted the
Southern's offense. second
second half slowlv. · In the in the area in scorin_g
first fi ve minutes oi the third average, played lor the
period, Southern managed percentage shot and hit a
just six points while Eastern sizzling 55.5 percent, canning
could can only four. But then a fine 25 of 45 attempts.
things took o(f.
Junior
center
Dave
Twice before the end of the Foreman hit 8 of Hi field goal
quarter Southern held a attempts and two free throws
twelve point advantage, but for 16 points, but Duffy took
by the buzzer the fighting scoring honors for the night,
Eagles had narrowed the hitting 9 of 13 tries and two
margin to eit!ht, 3~-31.

•

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'
•

BLOCKS SHOT - Southern's Dave Foreman ( 41)
appears to have blocked a shot by Eastern's Jeff Goebel in
this action photo tak en during Tuesday 's 59-16 Tornado

Sarahsvi He Shenandoa h 49

Guernsey Catholic 47
Sebring
M cK inley
71
Columbiana Crestv iew 57

Solon 69 Aur ora 45
Springfield Gr eeQon 79
Springfield North 75
Strasburg 82 Con o f ton

Valley 60

Thornville
Phi lo 51

Sherida n

59

Til tonsv il-le Buckeye South
99 RIChm ond Jeff er son Union

50
T ol edo St. Fr a n cis 57
Toled o Bowsher 53
T ol edo Scot t 81 To l edo
Roge r s 62
T ol edo Star t 7A Toled o
Libbey 69
Uhr ichsv ill e Claymont 69
Canal Fulton North west 47

win. The Tornadoes' Dwight Hill (15 ) gets into position to
grab the ball. Other Southern players gettin g rea dy are
Jack Duffy (13 ). Dave Findley, (11 1 and Tim Brinager
( 31),
Vien na Mathews 57 Newton
Fall s 43
Warren Wes tern Reserve
68 Akro n Sf Vincen t 62
War saw R i ver View 71
Crook sv i lle 49
Wellstvil le 81 Steuben vil l e
Cent. Cath . 76

We.st

Jef fe rson

77

War .

thingt on Christian 73
Whee lersburg 46 Lucasvill e

Val ley 33
William sport We s tf a ll 73
Piketon 39
Windham 64 Ga rrettsvi l le
Gar f ie l d 6 2
Worthingt on 62 Colu mbu s
Whet ston e 61
Xenia ~3 , Day ton Carroll 62
Yo un gst own Rayen 95
Brookfie ld 79

OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBA LL
By The ASsociated Press
Tuesday Night
Confere nce

Ohio
Mar iett a 71 Oen tson 55
Woos ter 91 Keny on 67
Hoosier -Buckeye
1 aylor 89 W i l mington 86

Mid -Ohio
T iffin 54, Ohi o Dominican 50

Urb ana

99

MI .

Vernon

Na;rarcnc 85

in an impressive 16 caroms.

The winners hit 9 of 15 fr ee
throws and had 13 fouls ca lled
on them . They committed 23
turnovers .

Spencer led the Eagle
scoring with 17 points, and
Goebel added 15. Spencer
also led his team in
rebounding with 11 errant
shots, and Eynon hauled in
nine. The team hit on ly 2 of 11
free throws, but their cold
hands from the . !loor
was th ~ ir demise. The
ho sts hit on just 22
of 72 field goal tries for a
cool 31 percent. They had 16
fouls assessed on them and
committed 20 turnovers.
Eastern is now one game
back of Southern in the SVAC
race,: having lo st twice in the
league while Southern's lon e

,,.
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,.-.

in the news

••

61)..59, at the hands of the
Eagles.
Southern travels to North
Gallia Friday while Eastern
entertains Kyger Creek
Saturday in a make-up game.
RESERVE GAME
Coach Howie Ca ldw ell's
Little Tornadoes picked up
th eir 31st strai ght SVAC
victory as they were 63-47
victor s. Dewayne Curfman
led the charge with a big 23
points while Richard Wolfe
added 9.
The score was knotted 12-12
after one period, and at
in termission the l.tltle
Eagles of Coach De11nis
Eichin ge r had a 29-28
advcynta ge.
But Southern exploded for
21 points in the third period .
while the defense held
Eastern to just fout· to put the
game out of reach, 49-33. The
Eagles fou ght back va liantly
to within ten. but damage had
been done .
Three Eagles hit double
fig ures with Tim Dill's 16
lea din g the way. Pau l
Sprague added 12 and Rick
Long had 10. the host hit 7 of
11 free throws while South ern
ca!Uied 15 of 20.
SOUTHERN (59) - Da ve
Finrll ey 2-0 4; Dwigh t Hi.ll2 ·2·
6; Tim Brinager 1-3-5: Dave

For e m an 8-2 18 ; Jim O'B r ien
3 0 6 and Jack D uf (y 9.2 20.
Totals 25 -9-5.
EASTERN (461 Dan
Spencer 8-1-17 ; Don Eynon 2
0-J. Bret Mathews 1-0-2; Joe
Bower s 0-0 -0. Jeff Goebel 7-1
15 : Greg Wig al 2-0-4; Br ian
Bissell 2-0 4; Gene Cole 0-0-0.

Totals 22-2-116.

..

,..

free throws for 20 points. his
best eff ort uf the year.
No other Tornado hit
double figures, but the team
effort is what spelled success
for the defending SV AC
champs . Teammate Tim
Brinager had four assists on
the night and Dwight Hill had
four steals .
Bot h team s had 37
rebounds, but Foreman
controlled the boards, pulling

IDCKED ARMS - Southern 's Tim Brinager (31) and
Eastern 's Oa n Spencer (32 ) seem to have locked arms in
this battle for a loose ball in Tuesday 's SV AC thriller at
Eastern. Southern won 59-46 to reca pture first place ,in the

SVAC standings.

Joss came earlier this year,

Names
•••
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'

again hit for two tying the
game.
Mainly, behind the shooting
of Duffy, the Tornadoes got
out to a 12~ lead with just two
minutes to go in the first
period. But the Eagles came
storming back on some fine
team play, and by the buzzer
th e score read just 12-10.
Duffy netted eight points in
th at quarter.
ASSAULT CONTINUES
Easte rn continued its
assault by scoring the first
four points ope ni ng the
second quarter. With 6:55 to
go the Eagles took their only
lead of the night, 14-12, n a
drive by guard Jeff Goebel.
Southern then outscored
Ule hosts 17-7, and weht into
the locker room with some
breathi ng room, 29-21.

•
"
"
"'

HEART BYPASS SURGERY-PART II
QUESTION: Last week you discussed tlie mortality rate of '
patients having heart by-pass surgery. What factors influence
Ulis rate?
·
LONG BEACH; Calif. (AP) - Sen. Hennan Talmadge,
ANSWER: The most imPOrtant Influencing factor· is the hospitalized for treatment of exbaustion and alcohol abWJe,
. present condition of the heart muscle. This condition depends could be out of the hospital in less than the four or five weeks
· on both the munber of scars on the heari muscle (rom previous ' originally pla!Uied by doctors, a spokesmim says. ,
.. heart attacks (myocardial Infarctions) and the muscle's
"His attitude is excellent and he's doing just great," Usa
ability to act as an elfecllve pump. Another important factor is Gill, a Talmadge preSIJ aide, said Tuesday.
·
The 65-year-old Georgia Democrat entered Bethesda
the general condition of the other blood vessels in the body. In
1 other words, how extensive is the hardening of tbe arteries or
Naval Hospital in Maryland·on Jan. 22 and transferred to the
atherosclerosis? Also, what is the condition of tbe other vital Long Beach Naval Regional Medical Center last Wednesday
. organs in the body, such as the brain, kidneys and liver? The on the advice of his physician.
presence of other diseases such as diabetes, chronic lung
disease, hypertension, or infection elsewhere in the body is
NEW YORK (AP) - The clouds have lilted for
, also a strong influencing factor. Less important, but. also weatherman Bob Harris- he's been hired as a forecaster for
considered, are the age, weight and smoking history.
radio station WNEW.
QUESTION: How long do these new transplanted blood
Harris, known locally as "Dr. Bob," was off the air for
almost
two weeks because It was discovered he had lied when
vessels last?
ANSWER: Only as long as they don't become involved in he said he had a doetorate in .geophysics.
·
an atherosclerotic process. From this answer, then, you may
When he was exposed by an a.rionymous tina+er,
Harris
,.
have guessed that life adjustments are still necessary.in order was fired by WCBS and The New York Times.
to prevent problems. In other words, if the person is
"We think he's the best in New York regardless of whether
overweight, he or she must lose weight. U the individual he got a degree/' WNEW vice president Mel Karmazin said.
, Smokes, he or she most quit or cut down significantly. Most "We are hiring him for his ability, not for where he got that
important of all, the stresses which preceded the heart attack ability."
or surgery must be eliminated or reduced. Between two and
three percent of byil818 patients die each year of coronary •
MONTGOMERY, Ala . (AP) - Fonner· Gov. George· C.
occlusion even if the surgery is successful. A slightly larger Wallace's career as a newspaper colwnnist'may be one of the
percentage of these patients - one in ten - suffer non,fatal shortest on record one colwsm
. surgery. F urthermore, over the 1ong
-'--- rd H. s..
•-heart a tta cks fo11owmg
Euwa
,,., edItor and .publisher of Editor's Copy
term, about one In five of the transplanted vessels eventually syndicate of Orangeburg·, S.c. said Tuesday hla firm would be
become blocked off.
distributing a weekly commentary, written by Wallace, to
QUESTION: Have comparison studies been done on more than 300 newspapers.
people ·w)lo decide to lake medication Instead of resorting to
A sample colwnn was printed this week, Sima said.
surgery?
·
.
But, according to Wallace's agent, Robert Bray of Nashville
ANSWER: This Is where the debate begins! Since about "The governor decided yesterday be didn't want to do~ .
one person in ten will be dead in live years following surgery, column right now so we're going to place It on tbe back burner
why . not just take medicine? Thofie heart specialists · for a while."
.
(cardiologisl8) who favor medication argue \bat having
surgery encourages the patient to Ullnk the problem has been
NORWALK, CoM. (AP)- Actress Unda Blair's troubles
pennanently eliminated. Therefore, the patient has a tendency
not to control eating, smoking and proper blood pressure levels with authorities In Coonectlcut may be coming to an end.
A drug charge against the 19--year-old Mlas Blair will be
even though such carefulness continues to be necessary. Als'o,
these cardiologists cite statistics which show that the long- dropped If she can prove authorities in Calgary, Alberta, have
·
dismissed a marijuana charge against her, a judge says.
tenn mortality rate Is the same regardless of which therapy Mis,s Blair's lawyer, Martin Garbis, told &amp;lperlor Court
· surgery or drugs - Is used.
·
. &amp;Jrgeons have long argued that the quality of lile II as Judge Scott Melville on Tuesday that the Calgary City Court
important as the actual mortality. They say It Is preferable to had dismissed the marijuana cbarge. Melville continued the
be able to return to full activity and be without any chest pains hearing until Feb. 13 to give Garbus time to docwnent thlB
!han to take medication and have to accept some pain or statement.
The star of "The Exorcist'' was arrested in Calgary in
significant moderation of activity. Since 80 to 85 percent&gt;of the
surgical patients receive complete, or at least 'substilntial, August. At that Ume, sbe was on a program here which
relief of pain this argument has a point In Its favor. On the provided charges of possession of amphetamines would be
other hand, even surgeons would agree that a person should dro~ped If she stayed out of trouble.
When Miss Blair was arrested In December 1977 on a
not "live \1 up" after the surgery.
There is, moreoever, one other non-medical factor which Florida fugitive warrant, CoMecticut police said they found
needs to be considered.- the financial upects. If you dOn't amphetamines In her pune. Extradition proce.ecUnas are
have the $10,000 to $15,000 Ule Qperatlon costa, you rna~ have no pending against her on Florida cbarges of corlllpiracy to buy or
sell cocaine.
choice but to use 11,1edlcation.

'·

'

By quarters:
Soutllern
12 17 10 20- 59
Ea slern
tO ll tO 1 5 - 4~

SPORTS
The Duily Sentinel

Fairland
tops SWHS
I'HOCTORVIL LE
Timmy Nichols scored 32
points last night as the
Fairlan d Dr.agons scorched

Southwestern 112-5:!.
Shooting 29 far 70 from the
fi eld ,- Fa irl and also had
do uble - figure contri ])Uti ons

from Joey Stuart with 13
points and 'Steve Harnlin with

12. Allen Burns had 10
r ebounds

and

Ji mmy

LOOK
Southwestern was led bv
FOR OUR
Gene r.,ayton. \'r'ho scored t4
po ints. Greg Nelson added tO MID-WINTER
more.
SALE
In other games invo lving
SV AC schools, Eastem of
CIRCULAR
P1ke bombed North Galli a,
IN THIS
ftl-04 .
Box
.
WEEK'S
Southwestern t53 i
Nel son " 10.
2,
MAIL
John son nine for the Dragons,
who arc now 7-5.

Scort~

~' orgcy

Newberry 9, Sizemore 4.
Baker 4, Bussell 8, Jordan 2.
Layton 14.
Fairland t82 1 - Nichols 32,
Stuart 13, Hamlin 12, Daniels
6, Johnson II. Wise l, Uurns 5,
Dcga m1o 1. Morris 2, Conzett
l, Ellis 3.
By tluarters:
S. Western
12 10 17 14 ~5:!

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8~~~&lt;~~;:;,S~o;,u~thern senior, goes
into the air for a jump shot against the Eagles' Joe
Bowens (40). Eastern lost its second straight game to drop
into second place in the SV AC standings.

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�•

4- The Daily Sentmcl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednt•sO•y. Jan . :ll. JVi ii

Today 's

Sports ·World
Ry Will Grimsley
AP Curn•spondt•nt

NEW YORK (AP) - It was a day that President carter
threw open the White House. doors to China's deputy prime
minister , violence continued una bated in Iran , political
terrorism plagued the governmenfin Italy and Pope John Paul
11 walked among the oppressed peons of Mexico.
In New York, the United Nations, the anointed instrument
of interna tional understanding paused to gawk and delight at
the antics of one Muhammad Ali - onetime fighter, poet, cornpone philosopher , Moslem prea cher and now renowned
painter.
The act is old but it never fades.
" Ladies and gentlemen, Muhammad Ali '" the doorman
be llowed as the moon-faced, unschooled ring champion was
ushered into a room normally set aside for pontiffs, presidents,
statesmen. and shahs.
•
.
"Just like the President of the United States," Ali
murmured half under his breath as he strode throug h the
~rowd w a seat festooned with microphones and bathed in
tele vision kleig lights . His frozen, serious demeanor managed
a pleased grin.
He wore a black pin-stripe suit, white shirt and polka dot
tie. His face was mostly somber, his mood mellow. No chestthumping. No bombast. Ali, one of the world's great quickchange artists , adopted his cloak of propriety .
· "Imagine me, a black man with no education, here among
the world 's (.'!'eat thinkers being interviewed on U1e big issues
of the day," he said. " I am the onliest man in the world this
could happen to."
Twelve years ago Muhammad Ali was stripped of his title ,
labeled a "slacker;' because of his refusal to enter military
•
ser vice and subjected w public Scorn.
He could never bounce back, critics said. But he did ,.
regaining his world heavyweight title, losing and winning it a
record third time and t hen eme rging as one of the most
admir ed persona lities - sports and oth erwise - of our age .
Ali began his whirlwind New York visit by receiving his
third key to the city from Mayor Edward Koch, rushing to the
UN \o present orie of his paintings to Secretary General Kurt
Waldheim and then on to Roseland , the famous dance pal&gt;ice,
for a public exhibition of his 24 "masterpieces," drawn in the
last four months.
"They aren't Van Gogh," said Leroy Nieman, the famous
sports artist and Ali tutor . '·If Ali can write poetry he should be
able to draw."
·
The world 's UN reportorial staff was obviously enraptured
by the presence of such a distinguished guest, and they sought
to challenge the fighter on a broad spectrum of world political
subjects.
Ali showed a lot of deft footwork :
Who might replace the late President Houari
Bomne.dierrune in Algeria? "Never heard the name before ,"
Ali said.
What did he think of politics, such as South Africa 's
a partheid policy, invading the realm Of sports? " Politics in in
the eye of the beholder," he replied. ''I don 't get involved in
politics ."
Is Ali Republ!can or Democrat? " Names prejudice people
- Democrat, Republican, Christian, Hindu. All people are
God 's people. You may look different outside - inside
everybody's heart is the same color . n
Would Ali try w settle Israeli-Arab impasse? " I'm not
as dumb as I look ." (Laughter.) "But President carter
shouldn't be criticized . He's done the best he can."
Then Ali volunteered an explanation of the problem .
' 'God laid down laws for man to follow, " he said . " There
are God's laws, natural laws and man's laws. The Jaw of
gravity - what goes up must come down . A meteorite burns up
when it leaves outer space .
" II you walk in your sleep on a train going 90 miles an hour
you ma y thing you 're home. But if you fall off, you'll die.
Trouble is, over there people are disobeying Allah's Jaw."
On his retirement plans :
" 1 won't fight again ~ not for $50 million, " · Ali replied.
" But I woo 'I retire. ! will be champion forever. I am so loved
arot!"d the world that, if r came back , people in Malaysia,
Philippines, Algeria - why , thousands would die of a heart
atta ck."

Meigs girls win
eighth contest
Dody Chapman also had a
Ry Greg Bailey
good
night for Meigs as she
The Meigs girl cagers
to
ssed
in 11 points and
picked up their eighth win of
collected
13 caroms. Sonia
the season last night. a
Ash
a
lso
hit
do uble figures for
convincing 51-29 vil1ory ovei·
the
winners
with 10 markers.
host Alexander. The locaL
Meigs
hit
7
of 11 free throws
gals played a fine defense.
a Uowing only 23 shots the and canned 22 of 45 shots,
entire ga me and no field good for 49 percent, the best
effort of the year.' They had 21
goals in the fin•l quarter :
turno
vers.
Alexan der was in the
Lightfritz
led the losers
contest for the first half,
with
10
points.
The Spartans
t railing ju't 12-13 after one
sank
just
10
of
23
shots for 44
quarter a nd 23-17 at the half.
percent
and
sank
9 of 19 foul
But in the second half, Meigs
shots.
st a rt ed roliln g and a lso
The Alexander Reserves
getting tight er .
held
on for a 24 -21 victory.
Meigs controlled the boards
The
Meigs
Reserves led 3-2
with a whopping 56 rebo unds
after
one
period·
. but had
while limiting the hosts to
fallen
behind
10-5
at
the . ha lf.
just 24.
Terri Wilson Jed the scoring Alexander was still in front
with i7 points for the vidors 14-13 after three quarters.
Sheri Drehel led the losers
while s he haul ed in 14
with
eight points . Hawk ·led
rebol,Jnds.

·. ·_ ma t ch
B rown .no
for Notre Dame

By Herschel Nlssenson
Maryland loss was shown in
dead last.
AP Sports Writer
our defen se. We were hitting
Earl Evans scor ed 24 points
a nd pulled down 12 r ebounds
Digger Phelps says his the perimeter shots, showing
to spa rk Nevada - Las Veg•s
Notre Dame baskc~ball team a lot of consistency and
past lana 86.-79. The Re bels.
should not be ranked No, 1 in penetration .''
the nation, or even In the
Twelfth-ranked Marquette
16-5, took the lead for good
witlj a minute left in th e first
·State of Indiana. but don 't tell was the only other member of
half on a 12-foot jump shot by
that to the Brown Bruins.
The Asso ciated. Press ·Top
'' Obviously
with - th e Twenty in adion Tuesday - Tony Smith. They Jed by as
much· as 12 points early in the
number of first-place votes night and th,e Warriors held
secorid half with lona star
they got , they should have off Creighton 79-11 as Berbccn No. 1," Phelps said of nard Toone led a secon d-hal!
Jeff Hulanct sitting down with
und efea ted but second- comeback . Toone scored 18 of
three personals. lona , 14-5.
ranked :Indiana State, which his 26 points after the Inclosed to B0-79 with 22 seconds
left but UNLV scored the last
received 32 first-phice ballots termission as · Marquette
to 15 for Notre Dame.
erased a 42-38 deficit. John C.
six points.
Elsewhere :
Neverth eless, the twice- Johnson had 25 for the losers.
be.aten Irish, coming off a
"The thing is not to let
- North IJ Carolin a
last-second one-point road Creighton get ahead or you
Charlotte, led by Chad
loss to Maryland, did nothing can have a lot of trouble,"
Kincl)'s 16 points, built a 14to tarnish their holdover No . 1 sa id Marquette Coach Hank
point lead and withstood a
Tu es day
night, Raymonds , who.se club had a
r a ting
late rally for a 59-54 Sun Belt
smashing Brown 80-53 thanks lot of troubk!. " It' s always
Confer en ce victory .o ver
Jacksonvilie.
to 66 per cent shooting in the ' been that way.". .
first half that provided a 46-27
In an Atlanllc Coast
- Jonathan Moo.re scored
lead at the intermission ·conference game, North
20 of his 32 points in the first
half as Furman trimmed
which quickly ba llooned to 56- Ca rolina Sta te's Hawkey e
27.
Whitney set a record for
Western Carolina 78-68 in a
Southern Confer ence game .
Ri ch .Branning l ed th e Clem son 's
Little John
- Andrew Toney pourea In
balanced Notre Dame attack Coliseum by scoring 43 points
with 16 point s, Orlando but it wasn 't enough as the
36 points as Southwestern
Wool rid ge added 12 a nd Tigers toppled the Wolfpack
Louisiana shaded Portland
Tracy J ackson 10.
110-72. Whitney was the only
State 84-81 and Dick Miller hit
" l knew Notre Vam e was N. C. State player in double
11 of 15 shots for 22 points to
lead Toledo to a 101 -71 romp
big. stron g, qui ck an d figu res whtle Clemson had
over Butler.
aggressive, but J never knew fo ur with 13 points or more,
- Tom Kavanaugh scored
they co uld hit the outside shot led by Larry Nance's 19. ·
20 of his 27 points in the
fro m ever ywhere," said
" Boy, it was a good win fo r
second half as Fordham, led
Brown Co ach Joe Mullaney. us," said Ciem.son Coach Bill
"'l1lere is no team around Foster. ''Whitney is sure a by Tom Penders, Columbia's
coach the last four seasons,
that has the depth Notre' heck of a player . We didn't
Dame has. "
try to let him score all those
nipped none other than
Columbia, 1.6-75, coached by
· " Hey, obviously we're one points, but we were able to
Buddy Mahar , Penders'
of the powers," said Phelps. stop the others. and that's
former No. 1 aide .
"Now is the time to get it good.
going as a team, to get the
So. •pparently, is Clemson.
momentum going into the . ·"People are going to start
tournament , to get the right to wonder about us now
chem ist r y go ing . It ha s because we have already won
nothing to do with wins or more ball ga mes than people
thought we would ," said
losses .
" We were really hopped up Foster, whose Tigers are 13-5
tonight . Some of the overall and 3-4 in ACC play
fru stration
from
th e after being pick ed to finish

STANDINGS
Nat10naf
Ba sketball Association
AI A Glance
By The Associated Press

32 a 9 73 224 133
· N. Y. Rang ers
"
29 16 5 63 110 173
Atla nta 27 20 4 58 202 176

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB

Wa shington

3-4 15 .694

Phila .
New Jersey
New York
New York

28 17 .621 '

Bos ton

.. •
Central
Sa n Ant.
Houst on
Atlanta

Cleveland
Octroit
New Or leans

23 22 .511 9
23 22 .511 9
22 30 .423 131 ';1
17 31 .354 161;1

Division
31 20 .608
27 21 .563
27 25 .519

22 17 11 55 .162. 155

Phi la .

Eastern Conference

Smythe Division
Chicago 17 23 8 •2 143 172
Vancou ver
17 27 7 •1 154 193
St . Louis 12 33 7 31 155 226

T-oront o 20 20 10 50 157 157
Bulfato 19 18 11 4~ 162 157
Minn .
19 23 I 45 155 168
Norris Division
Montreal 34 9 7 75 20'/ 124
LosAn g . 21 23 . 7 '9 1~ 186
Pitts .
20 21 8 48 172 171
Wash .
16 27 8 40 169 215
Oetroit 10 27 1' :!4 158 196
Tuesday's Games
Detroit 7, Washington~
Minnesota

S, New

c oach , a nd I erry Cri sp.
a ssistant c;oac h. Named Pa t

Baseball

Pillsburgh Pe nguin s -Go rdi e Lax ton,
goa lte nd er, fr om Grand
Rapid s of the Internationa l

New Jer sey Nets - Were
awarded Denver 's 1980
second rou nd draft pick by
th e NBA for compensa tion ot
signing center Kim H ughes.
Football
Nationa I Footba II League
New Orleans Sain ts Sig ned
Tony
Sam ue l.
linebacker .
San Fra ncisco 49ers
Howard White, director of
scouting , resigned . ·
Hockey

.

Islanders 4
St. Lou is 7, Los Angeles 1
New York Rangers 5;
Co lorado 11 31 8 30 141 202 Vancouver 3
Wales Conference
Today's Games
Adams Division
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Boston
30 13 7 67 203 158 . Los Angeles at WashinQton

qJa~:'t~: ~~ieFinf

a te n. point lead during Vh&gt; first
.
e a cons 1ailed to hold on and as a result
dropped ~11' seventh game of the season while winnln•• &lt;m
! our occastons. ·
o

."

2
-4

1 1
1 1

20 29 .• oa 10
18 31 .367 12

Midwest Oivislon
Kan. Cily
30 19 .61 2
Denver
28 25 .528 4
Milw .
Indiana
Chi cago

22 30 .-423 9 f';l
20 30 .400 101 2
18 32 . . 360 1211
Pacific Division

"'

31 16 .660

LosAng .
Phoen ix
Portland
Sa n Diego
Golden Sl.

"'

3220.6 15 11 ;1
3020 .600 21 2
23 24 .489 8
25 27 .481 8' 1
24 28 .462 91 1

'

Tu esday's Games
Washingt on 109, Atlanta 105
•Indiana 112. Ho uston 106
San Antoni o 11 2, Chicago
108. ot
San Diego 117, Milwaukee
11 3
LOs An_geles 127, New
Jersey toe·
Portland 82. Denver 76
Today 's Games

'"

$51!~'" """

SAVE 110.00

Golden
\St a te
at
Philadelphia
New York at Detroit
Mil waukee at Phoenix
New Jersey at San Diego
Por tland at Seatt le
Thursday's Games
Detroit at Cleve land
Washing ton at San Antonio

was;..~

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

Seattl~

Pro Hockey
AI A Glance
Bv The Associated Press
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference
Patnck Dtvision
w I t pis gf ga
N. Y. Isla nder s

992-2 iiJ I

.

John F. Fultz, Mgr,
Pomeroy.

o.

.

'·-'
...-.

lor

;

minutes when Buff11lo went on
a 9-2 spree to ice the victory .
Paul J k
d K
ac son. an
enny

TEAM
Portsmouth
Iront On
Athens
Pt. Pleas .
Wash . CH
Waverly

·~·

..,,..•

..

Gall ipolis

Logan

W L P
1' 0 1006
11 3 958
10 3 866
8 . 2 591
11 • 847
10 5 899
. a 5 1'2

~:'1

.,.
-~

ington CH 82 Greenfield

.....

·-. ...

Friday's games :
at Athens
~~'"""' at Logan
Waverly
Vjelll sl&lt;m at Gallipolis
Portsmouth at Ashland
Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
Washingt on
CH
at

t·......

•

i

TWO-PO)NTER - Tim Roush (22) attempts to get off
a shot for the Wahama White Falcon cage team Tuesday
while being closely guarded by a Buffalo defensive
Pl!•yer. Roush's shot !)it its mark.

World
Hockey Association

Edmonton Oiler s - Signed
Ron Chipperfield, center, to a
t'hree .year contract .
New England Whalers - .

5/8" PARTICAL

Brad Sel wood, defen sem an,
retired .

Soccer
North American
Soccer League

...••..
..

BOARD

Cllicago S't in g - Released
Dave Flaschen, goa lie.

..•
...
. ..

~

:
- ..
,... .
~

I

n

'•

•

.:.

..
:•
-LB.·$129
•
'
.....•

CHUCK
SKIN

KNOCKWORST BIG

••

•••
•

FRANKS LB.$119 ~.

.
..,.....
.....•..
a
a.
....=
...
· :::
4

·SLAB
BACON
Chunk

FRANKIES
10 Large
Wieners per pak

••

...

$ 19

lb.

89'
gge

-

i ..

53

Colum bus

Cast Livcro oo l

In

Oak

51

Ham il ton
Garfield 73
Oxford Talawanda 57
Hilltard 100. Co lumbu s

Fr anklin Heig hts 69
Independence 78 Roo t stown

65

Kent Roo sevelt 62 Mapl e
Ht s. 40
Lathar:n Western 60 North
Adnms 44
Lorain _47 Lor ai n King 45
Mngn ol1a Sa ndy Va ll ey 68
M1nerva 62
Mansfield St. Peter' !:. ~7
Co ' r···bus Ready 64
t ..'lr_,
o~~ oo d 77 Lords town 42
M cC. v!-(o b. 64 Vanlue 50
M cDon,11d 73 Lowellvill e 61
M ed1n i'l 67 Fairview 5o
M r ndr.n J ni on 78 Ohio City

New Phi ladelp fiTa 61
Steubenv ille 60
New Philadelphia Central
Cath .
72 .
Zoa r vil l e
Tuscarawas Va lley 51
North Bend Ta ylor

85

Cincinnati Landmark 61
North Olms ted 66 Rocky

River 50
North Royal ton 65 Brook lyn

59
Olmsted Falls 77 Westl ake
61
Oregon Stri tch 82 Toledo
Wood ward 50
Petersburg Spring fie ld 58
Ja ckson Milton 42
Po rt smouth
71
Bar .
boursvi le, Ky . 33
Portsrnou t h
Clay
Peebles 60
Ra cine
Soufhern

Reeds ville Easte rn

.7&lt;1
59

46

STEAK HOUSE
Eastern Avenue • Gallipaiis , Ohio

HEARTY HOME
BREAKFASTS~'

c·on,erence
.f.

56

Girard SA Niles M c K inel y

&amp;YaMS,

Mr"d-Q'Lw·
R
·

DOORS OPEN 9 A.M.
1 GROUP

AWAY FROM ·HOME.
. At Bob Evans Steak House, we
serve a lot more than steak. We have
hotcakes ; fried mu sh, hot baked
biscuits , fresh farm eggs .·and all the
good things that go wi th Bob Evan s
Farm s co untry fresh Sau sage.
So stop on in on;your way to work.
And do it right for breakfast.

. ; . .,

....
' .
., " ., e •

' .
.......
'

.

., • e

•

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT:"
- -----v---

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

--

~

"Where only the best food is good enough "

'

\

•

LADIES
SHOES

BARGAIN GROUP

LADIES
&amp;
CHILDREN'S
SHOES ,.

•6PAIR

$

.I Group

Sale Priced! Here!
BONELESS

ROAST

BEEF

LADIES
•
SHOES

Lb .

Lb'l

64

$}29

•a••

Children's

LADIES
PURSES

DINGO
BOOTS

Y2 PRICE

' '12''
PA.IR

CUBE

Lb.

$}69

STEAK· •• • • ••••• •• ••• •-'

SAVORY
Lb.
79~
BACON•••••••••Pkg.
Dozen

SMAll EGGS··········

59~

BEEF

FRANKS
16 oz .
Reg . $1.79

~129

BE:EA~·········~:·.... $}59
ROUND

Lb .

STEAK················

lADIES-LEATHER

FASHION BOOTS

30%

OFF REG •

FINE ASSORTMENT
OF STORE SLICED .

PRICE

LUNCH MEATS

MEN'S WEYENBURG
DRESS SHOES
' ·I

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
MAIN

2 LITER

BOmES

I Group

'1 0 99 PAIR

Coke, Sprite or Tab

BETTY OHLINGER

POMEROY, 0.

99~

. EACH

'

.,

• •• •

&gt;?r""'-

GROUND

1 GROUP

M

Superior

TP
18
· 14
10
8
6
0

FEB. 1
FEB. 4

•

..•

61

Town sh i p

Broo kville 70 , National
Trail 58
·
Burton
Berkshire
50
Mtddlef ;eld Cardtan l '6
,
Cadiz 77 Brilliant Buckeye
North 62
. Carey 55. Arl ington 53
Car rollton 71 , Un1 ontown
Lak e 61
Cincinnati Princeton 73 ,
Cincinnati Moeller 61
Cinc innati St . Bernard 68
Cincin~ati Wyoming '7
Cincinnati Tur pin 56.
Cincinnati McNichola s 55
Circlevi lle 67 Hill sbo ro 73
Cleveland
Adams
89
Cleveland E. Tech 81
Cleveland Glenville 61
Cleveland Collinwood 5'
Cleveland fqnattus 62
Cleveland Lincoln ·Wesl 57
Cleveland Kennedy 73
Cleveland East 70

.

M

60,

42

'I' .
~

•
•

Joh n

PeA~~vf~e ~eays

\.tol •

i.

Campbell's

St.

A sh tab ula
0

Ha mi l t o n

M en tor
Catholic
72
W1ckl iffe 5 1
Mi ngo Junction 63 Weirton.
W. Va ., Madonna 41
M ou nt
Vernon
Westervill e South 44
Newcomers t ow n 53 Old
Washi ngton Buckeye. Trail 47

GOOD

.... .
••..
...

••.

6R

Co lumbu s

50

PRICES

-~ ­

.•.
,·: I

Clevel and Haye s 65

Manc hes ter 68

o·t ~

..••..

Sliced
2 lb.

Pt .

....
..:J:

:•

BOLOGNA

at

Betty
Ohlinger
- · ·-----,•-' .

;:

Del Monte

Gilmer

"

EACH

~QQC S~ICI~-~S

Buffal o Wayn e
Pl easant

at

... ....

~99

• Fishing' Tackle
and Rods
·
and Reels
• G~ns and
Reloadjng
• ·Ball Gloves
Camping

·

,... . ..

O'NLY

Shop

.

Mike Herdman had 11
rebounds.
Wahama will now entertain
.
.
thetr Mason County neighbors
- the Point Pleasant - Big
Blacks - in their next outing
'd
. ht Th UP!'
on F ri ay mg ·
e
· s
17th rated Big Blacks
currently show an 8-2 record
·h h ·
·
·
Wit t elr la~est showmg ?emg
a 69-60 Win over Ripley
Tuesday night.
Coach Lewis Hall's Little

•

4'x8' SHEETS

Tri-County
Sport

Ravenswood
County

Akron .Kenm ore 102, Akron

Richmond Hts 60

'' ''

Wilmington

Saturday's games :
Logan at Athens
Gallipolis at Jackson
Meigs at Wellston

By the Associated Press
Akr on
Buchtel
64
Y
. oungs town South 63

MJD OHIO CONFERENCE
(All Games)
Totals
22-57 12-14 56 TEAM
W L
·Cedarville"
11. 7
BUFFAL0(65)
Rio Grande
11 10
FG FT TP Malone
Player
10 9
J . Eich · '
8-21 2-2 lB Urbana
a 11
P. Jackson
6-20 4-7 16 Walsh
7 11
7 IS
C. Bayless
5-11 1-1 11 Mt . Vernon
Ohio Dominican
5 12
K. Cremeans
5-8 1-3 11 Tiffin
5 19
B. Reed
2-4 0-&lt;1 4
(League Only I
1-5 1-2 3
B. Boggess
TEAM
W L
1-2 0-0 2 Rio Grande
C. Gatens
7 0
Cedarville
5 3
Totals
25-11 9-15 " 65 Mal one
' 3
Wal sh
Urba na
Score ·by quarters :
MI . Vernon
3 5
2 6
1 2 3 4 TP Ohio Dominica n
Tiffin
2 ~
Buffalo
8 23 16 18 65 Totals
31 31
Wahama
18 12 16 10 56
Tuesday's resu Its :
Total Fouls
Wahama 15 Cedarvi lle 72 Walsh 66
Tiffin ·54 Ohio Dominican 50
Buffalo 18.
Urbana 99 Mt . Vernon 85
Officials - J . Aucremanne
Friday's Game:
Rio Grande at Malone
and T. Conners.
Saturday's games :
Zanesville Maysville 77
New Concord John Glenn 58 Rio Grande at Wal sh
Zanesville
Wesf Ceda r vi lle at MI. Vernon
Urbana at Tiffin
Muskingum 67 Morgan 62

' 9 785
3 10

i ·~
~
.....
':. 4"
•..l-"''
.,.

SCHOOL BASKETBALL

Valley 89 det~~e~~~Cs wattec son 67
margm.
Londo~ Maqison Plain s 6'
Colu m bus Bee chcrofl 53
Larry Gibbs and York
Av on '9 Lorai n Clear view · Columbus Wehrl e 71 Suqa r
Ingels led the Little Falcons ·•7 B
Gr ove Berne Uni on ~'
scoring with 19 and 13 points 62 ay Village 74, Avon Lake
Columb us
We st
70
Colu mbus Northl and 59
respectively as the locals ran -· Beachwood 56, Newbury 54
Dey ion
Belm ont
109
their season record to 9-2 on
Bea llsvi lle 71 •Barn esv ille Mi amisburg 65
th
1 d'
b
d
59
Oayl on Cha min a de
e year •. ea mg re oun ers
Bedford Chanel 741 Akron Ju lienn e 64 Dayton Stivers
for Wahama were Gibbs with Hoban·69
Pa tterson 62 , , OT
9 Jeff Fowler with 7 and Joey
Bellbrook 91 Cedarville a•
Dayton Je ff erson 77 Dayt on
Roush with 6.
Berlin Hiland 70 Lakel and Fairview 51
58
Dayt on Mea dowdal c 56
Bill Lanham and .Todd
Beverly Fort Frye '6 St. Dayton Wayne 54
Martin scored 15 and 10 points Marys .. W. Va . 43
Dresden Tr i Valley 61 New
resp~tively for Buffalo while
Botkins 62 New Knox ville Lex ingt on 50

WAHAMA (56)
Player
FG Fr
R. Barnitz
5-12 8-8
T. Roush
7-11 0-1
T. Rawlings
4-5 · 2-2
G.Richards
4-12 0-1
V. Weaver
2-11 2-2
K. Sayre
0-6 IHl

5 B 727
3 6 55'

._.,_ ,

Foulrt 's

Valley Bell

as both schools added 16 points'
to their totals. Buffalo still
held a narrow one point edge
at 47-46 as the final stanza
began.
Wahama never di'd
.
regam
the lead during the fourth
period but did manage to stay
close until ·the fin.at · two

standings

...f...._, .

Hoc key L eague .

Easy

points seventh in a row by downing
during the third eight minutes the Baby Buffaloes by a 57 -'~ 1

Cage

,..,• _,
'

'

teams

Falcons
and
Larry
Markham 's Little Blacks
square off in the ·5·45 p m
Jackson and Bayless were the·
. .
·
· ·
leading rebounders with 12 prehmmary game followed
by the Varsity Match ups at
7:30p.m.

,• •'
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"'
......

Maine

10 lb.

respective

... ~ f

8 oz. assorted

Bunch

a'

·~

Qlher Batteries at a Comparative Price

Phi !adelphia at Chicago

w

Roush to enable the White
Falcons to · eme•ge with
surprising 18~ lead after one Cremeans scored nine of
Buffalo's 18 points . in the
quarter of actjon.
t
h 1
However, the seemingly quar erto e ptheBisonsgain
comfortable Falcon ad- a hard fought 65-56 triumph.
Scoring leaders in the game
vantage quickly dwindled for Wahama were Ric k
away during the. second canto Barnitz with 18, Tim Roush
as Chip Bayliss dropped in
withd 14 and Todd Rawlings
nine points to bring Buffalo with 10. Rawlings and Roush
from 10 points down and Into
also led the team. 1·n· rebounds
the lead as the first half came
with 10 and 1 respectively.
to a close. The Bisons outBuffalo's .top point getters
scored the localcagers 23-12 in
J h E . h 'th 18' p au 1
the quarter and held a slim 31- were o n IC WI
Jackson with 16 and Chip
Iiayless and Kenny Cremeans
with 11 markers each.

Re called

ARMOUR TREET. ••••••• :~.~~~ ~1 ig
l'"iF~~--1 KETCHUP. ••••••••••• ~!.o.z~.~~1 ~ 3/$100
5th &amp; Pearl
CELERY
COOKIES •••••• .-•••••••••••••• 3/~1 w
TOMATO SOUP. ••••~~~.~-~::. 5/$1 00
POTATOES.
THINOn SPAGHETTI.. •••••••1:.~'.·.39~
SPRAY STARCH •••••••••• ::.o:: 694
GRAPEFRUIT
4
ASSORTED JELLY••••••·•• ~!.".~.594
CHOC. DRINK ••••:••••• ~::~~ 59 .. 6
PHEB~ ' S STORE
Thursday , Feb. 1lhrough Feb. 3
We Gladly Aceept Fed . Food Stamp•
Monday thru Friday
9: 001if7:00
Saturday 9:00-9:00
CLOSED
SUNDAn

Buff~lo didn't fare any
better with their shooting by
hitting on just 39 percent (28 of
11) of their field goal attempts
and 60 percent ( 9 of 15) from
the charity line. The real story
of the game lies in the number
of field goal tries .b~ .. the
Bisons in which they attempted 14 more shots due
mainly to their 36-29 edge in
the team rebound statistics.
As ·in the Meigs game
· Wahama jumped out into a
quick lead behind the shooting
of Rick !3arnitz · and Tim

30 lead at intennission .
and 11 rebounds respectively.
ha •
The Little Falcons kept
8
~
rna~ •TodJ hRawlings
E
'
h
rolling
along in the J'unior
d
B
ff
I
an
ll 80S
0 n
IC
scored the most of their varsity tilt by winning their

uch~nge Grou~;~ PHl&lt;F.I 1 ·

:~~........................................ -~~

3 lb . bag

h t ~or the first time this season the bend area team was red
o rom the free throw line, 12 of 14 for 85 percent but
coul~'t quite match their accuracy from the floor by ' connecting on Just 22 of 57 field goal attempts for ·a 38 percent
mark.

Power House BATTERY ...
~
,.

St .

NIPS
59'

•'

.,

Houston at Boston
Kans as City at Atlanta

New Jersey at

....".
•" '

the hosts with ten .
Meigs entertains Waverly
Thursday , but the contest will ·
Eq~ipment
begin at ,5:30. Waverly does
• ·Archery
not have a reserve squad.
• Indoor Games
Meigs is now B-4, 5-4 in the
•we
have Gill'
SEOAL.
Certificates
By quarters :
Alexander
8 11 25 29
601 Maio
Meigs
12 23 35 51
Pt.
Pleasant,
W, Va.
MEIGS 151) ·- Chapman 5Hl; Anderson 0·1Hl; S. Ash 62-14; T. Ash 1-&lt;1-2; Bartrum 00-&lt;1 : King 1-0-2; Lightfoot 0-2- 2; Riggs 1-1-3; Wilson 8-1-11 .
Across from Courthouse
To(als 2Z-7-51.
PHONE
ALEXANDER ( 29)
.
675-2988
Clark 2-5-9: Dea n 2-0-4;
'open Sunday 1· p.m .-• p.m.
Lightfritz 5-3-13; Llewlyn 1-&lt;lMonday thru Saturday
2; Wallace 0-1-l. Totals 10-99;a,...... •.-,&amp;p.m .
29.

PRODUCE

'"

17 35 .327 l-4'. ?
Wes tern Conference

Sea tt le

,·

BYGARVCLARK
.The up and down Wahama White Falcons were down
~~m Tuesday evening when for the second time this year the
a O Bison~ defeated them by a nine point, 65-56 margin.
Buffalo turned back the locals in the Fakons' ••as-1 n
opener by a 77-68 score.

1

~

Cl cvf;' land Ma rsha H 5&lt;1
Clevela nd South &gt;J 01
Cleve land W. Tech 73

Gl l'n . W_ Vil . 51
Elyr ia 60 Sandusky 52
Elyr 1a Christian 5d Bath
Old Trail 43
El yria Lak e Ridg e 77
Massillon Christian 57
Fayett evil le 102 Xenia
Wil son 62
Franklin 73 West Carrollton

Buffalo
~du,.mps White Falcons Tu~~=y's r~~~a~~~'hcrane•s, 68
.

Quinn , head coach .

National Ho~kev League

Detroit Red Wings Recal led Terry Harper ,
defens ema n, and J. P .
from
LeBiahc . center,
Kansas City of the Central
Hock ey League .
Philadelphia Flyers . . . . _
Fired Bob McCammon, head

!l

li-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0., Wednesday , .Jan. 31. 1979

~

Tuesday's
Sports T~ansactions
By The Associated Press

Golden State Warrio r s Cut Wesley Co,.; , forward .

·~

York

Transactions
American League
Balt imore Orioles - Signed
AI Bumbry , outfie lder . to a
three-year contract .
Basketball
National
Basketball Association
Boston Cellics - traded Jo
J o Whi te, guard , to th e
Golden State Warriors for a
No. l draft pick in 1979 .

......
,

'

�•
-. .

' ::

... ...

. ;'::: :=··

. HelenHelp
Us ..
A SILLY SEASON FOR GIFTS
DEAR HELEN:
I
Christmas is past, ·but I still simmer over the total stupidity
of people who buy "status"· gifl'l , or brag about receiving
same.
One of my friends got a $700 home computer which I'll bet
' she uses as much as the expe,n sive intercom system she received last Year. (You're supposed to press the buttpn and talk to
someone in the next room when shouting does just as well and is more easil~ heard.)
I have other fdends who brag about getting gifl'llisted in the
MRS . .FLORENCE Michael with her son, Samuel, on
Neiman-Marcus catalog. My husband gave me a lovely leather
her 93rd birthday .
purse from Sears, and while it cost about one-fourth as much,
my uneducated eye couldn 'I tell it from those Gucci items.
(Unless !looked at tbe label. )
Maybe there's a need for what I thought the height of the
Christmas silly season : a "Spendaholics ' Seminar" : For '$411,
it offered a several-pour course which was supposed to teach
you how not to spend your money foolishly . -WELL, REALLY!
DEARW.R. :
A sort of " pay to save" session, no doubt.
As for status, or whatever : some, people like Porsches,
an~ friends who live far
The 93rd birthday of Mrs.
others go with Pintos. II posh~ollectors can .afford it , well,
away .
Florence Michael was
they keep the economy - and also inflation - churning . -H.
Mrs. Michael was .bom on
.observed at the home of her
P.S. My candidate for height of the silly season : the doll who
Jan. 20, 1886 in Wy(lming Ter- develops diaper rash . Really'
son, Samuel Michael , near
ritory and lived during· her
Chester on Sunday, Jan . 21.
childhood in Wyoming, DEAR HELEN :.
The birthday cake
Misso~ri , California, and - Our town recently .had another beauty pageant, and one of
decorated with pink roses
Washmg~on STaete; She the prizes for the winner was a full-length mink coat.
was made by Mrs. Wilmetta
The contestants? "Wee Misses" around 6 years old ! Isn't
taught ftve years tn the
Leifheit. It was served with
Washington State schools and this ridiculous?- U.G.H.
homemade ice cream and
strawberries to Mrs . married Gurney L. Michael, DEAR U:
~ teacher from West Virginia
Not to parents who hope their childr~n will earn big bucks as
· Mic~Jael , Louise and Samuel
m 1908. In 1913 they came to
models or actresses. It's organized stage mothering that's all.
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Wilber
'
Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Roger West Virginia, and in 1920 to _H.
Ohio to the present home of
, Leifheit and Dorothy, Mr.
DEAR HELEN.
and Mrs. Gary Michael, Mat- the family.
Until August, 1978, Mrs.
I'm breast-feeding my baby. When.friends stop by to see our
thew, Kimberly and Todd.
Mrs . Michael received Michael lived in her own new son, and stay on during his hungry time, must I excuse
ntimerous cards from local home. Since then she has myself and go into another room, let him cry, or do what
friends, and from relatives been in frail health and lives comes naturally: nurse him (well-covered) in front of them?
in her son's home.
My mother thinks women should be very private about this so
as not to embarrass guests. -MICHELLE
DEAR MICHELLE :
I think people foolish enough to be embarrassed about a love-.
ly and natural function should excuse themselves and go
home . -H.
(P.S. So argue 'with me, Michelle's Motherl)

Florence Michael
observes birthday ·

thermomet er rea ches 170
deg rees. Remove pork to a
hot platter and keep hot in a
warm oven. Pour off fat in
roasting pan ; drain juice .
from pineappl e into the
drippings in the pan; place
~C£ci'i:;'~ovVNimoot over low heat and stir with a
,:~:i!:;~ Food Editor wooden spoon to get up
drippings; strain into a small
By Ceclly Brownstone
s aueepan; add nutmeg and
Associated Press
cel ery salt. Arra 0 ge the
Food Editor
pineapple slices in · the ·
COMPANY DINNER
roasting pan and place in the
oven to warm . Boil pineapple
Pineapple Pork
Potatoes
juice mixture to reduce and
Hot Sauerkraut
thicken slightly_- about 5
Rye Bread
minutes . Spoon ov er . the
Coconut Pie
pineapple; serve wil)t the
Beverage
pork.
PINEAPPLE PORK
Boneless pOrk loin roast
BUFFET SUPPER
(about 3 pounds rolled and
Sliced Meat
tied )
Potato Salad
I teaspoon seasoned salt
Recycled Pickles
Rolls
!-pound and 4-ounce can Fruit Compote
Beverage
unsweetened sliced pineapple
RECYCLED PICKLES
\4 teaspoon nutmeg
I pint dill gherkins
3/4 cup sugar
\; teaspoon celery salt
Rub pork with salt. Roast I stick cinnamon
on a flat rack in a small 6 whole allspice
shallow pan in a preheated
Turn gherkins into a
351klegree oven until meat strainer set, over a small

••

,-------,
1 .Social 1
-

·i

1 Calendar\
WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM Comm unity Association Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. l!.esidents
urged to attend.
. MIDDLEPORT Lit&lt;:rary
Club , 2 p.m . Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Emerson
Jones. Mrs . Richard Owen to
review " The Thorn Birds" ,
and Mrs. Ben Philson to
discuss James Michener. For
roll call members are to give
either a comment on the pro_gram or a modem novelist.
SPECIAL meeting Ohio
Valley Commandery No. 24
Knigh!s Templar. Order of
the Temple will be conferred.
THURSDAY
EV ANGE L.INE CHAPTER
172 · Order of the Eastern
·sta'r, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
reg ular meeting.
CATHO!cl C WOMEN'S
CI .UB , 8 p.m . Thursday at the
church. Meeting will be
preceded by Mass at 7:30
p. m .
SATURDAV
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and
Game Saturday, 7 p .m ., at
cl ub hpuse on Shade River
Road.
MONDAY
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
Order of the Eastern Star,
reg ular meeting, Monday,
FEb. 5, at the Masoni c Temple. 7:30 p.m . Obligation
night will be observed .

TICKETS AVAILABLil
Tickets to the Kitty We!is
show to be held at Rio Grande
Lyne Center Saturday may
. be purchased at the Pomeroy
and Mi ddleport
Police
Departments. The event is
sponsored by GaUia County
Sheriff's Department.

CANCELLATION
The February meeting of
the Chester United Methodist
Women has been cancelled.

this Pulitzer Prize winner,
who pounces on a neologism
- the introduction of a new
word or usage into the
language - the way Vladimir
Nabokov used to flit after
rare butterflies in Alpine
meadows.
Safire has been known to
whip out a 3-by 5-lile card in a
crowded cocktail party upon
hearing a U. S. senator
complain that he is being
" Rafshooned."
" Rafshooned," explained
the eminent lexicographer of
mots politique at lWich the
other day, "means being
pressured by a publicity blitz,
a high p.r . gloss, after the
marmer of Gerald Rafshoon,
the presidential image
maker. It is one of the new
expressions of the Carter
administration, like born
again, lust in my heart, zerobase budgeting and the threemartini lunch. "
Safire can and does
chronicle the history of the
Republic in the ringing
rhetoric of her politicians.
Catalogued in "Salire' s
Political Dictionary," now in
its third, enlarged and Ui&gt;'
dated edition , ani some
450,000 words that have
governed people .and the
words that politicians have
had to eat down through the
·
decades.
For 12 years now, Safire
confesses, he has been a
closet scholar studying where
our political expressions
came from and how they got
into the language .
AI
Smith 's
" Happy
Warrior" is from the poet
William Word s worth .
Shakespeare coined " strange
bedfellows." Herbert Hoover,
regretting a Republican
slogan used against him, .
denied ever promising "a
chicken in every pot, " but
King Henry IV of F:rance did
back in the 16th century. For
this he was known as " Le Roi
de Ia poule au pot": king of
the chicken in the pot . Lyndon
Johnson may have staked out
the New Frontier but he
didn 't originate the expression ;
All . Landon
borrowed ii from Henry
Wallace . The " lunatic
fringe" goes back to Teddy
Roosevelt, who warned
against "parlor pacifists"
long before Joe McCarthy
discovered "parlor pinks. "
" You can't beat somebody
with nobody" goes aU the way
back to Abe Lincoln . AI Smith

m·-w•" club members weigh in at the
beginning of each group session, and whether they have
lost or gained is recorded. It is all a part of developing
motivation and giving incentive to stay with the diet for
better health and appearance.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

dangerous, ugly fat.
What to do? Go on a diet.
You can try the grapefruit di et , the liquid protein d iet, the
all-fruit diet, a starvation diet. You can tak e di et pills, go into
strenuous exercise, or join a diet club.
Joining a diet club is much like joining Alcoholics
An onymous. You realize that you 're overweight, yo u've tried
to solve your eating problems on your own , you've failed, and
you've accepted the fact that you are a " foodaholic. "
• grow.
·
In the " lose with us" diet clubs, and there are ma ny
: · And it is the _same with food . If you eat more cal ories than ,-S!inderclla, Conway , Weight Watchers, and TOPS (take off
· you use, they are deposited , not as dollars and cents , but as pounds sensibly) - the emphasi s is on weekly therapy s~ss ions .

~Jweler.s

Today's Topic_:

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.
(Um~ 16 Words-Sizes lllusbated Below)

~~C.·G

..

5.
9.
13.

before Harry Truman .
Harold Ickes is credited with
" government by crony" but
the phrase was a gift from
columnist Arthur Krock.
Safire, who won a Pulitzer
Prize for his relentless
skewering of Bert Lance, now
finds as much satisfaction in
chasing words as coining
them. " Maybe 1110 y ars from
now somebody will pick my
dictionary off a dusty shelf
hunting for an expression and
that will be as close· as I can
set to immortality. It's a
comforting thought."

To Mom and Dad ...
We couldn't have picked
a niter Prill~~ of parents in
the world I Have a
Happy Valentine's Day!
Mike and Sue

•

3.

2.
6.
10.
14..

7.
11.
15.
PHONE

4.
t
1l
16.

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

BARGAIN SALE

.'il

change."

·'

992-~156

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'

..
'

• J

••
['

'

843-3311

STIVERSVILLE, 0.

pract icing his favorit e a ~
proach - moving both left
and right. se~ kin g support
from li berals a nd con ·
servatives.
He oppo sed Proposition !3's
property tax cuts until its
landslide adoption by voters.
Then, during his s ucccs::;ful
re··clection campa ign ·for a
second term , he embraced it
as the will of the people ·and
declared himself "a bot11again tax-cutter."

Brown• hope s to sell J he
balanced bud get id ea to
liberals . If Pres ident Johnson
had been forced to balance
his budget , he says, Vietnam
would have been avoid ed.
And today's budget defi cits
finan ce foreign aid that props
up repres sive gove rnments.

VALLEY
BEU '

DOG FOOD

2% MILK

SO LB •

IRISH

POTATOES
~~LB.

•a·· ·

99~

GALLON

$159

We Now Carry Eckrich Meats ••••
Smoked Sausage, Polish Sausage, New English Sausage

ECKRICH- GARLIC or REGULAR

BOLOGNA .... _........................... ~.~: .... ~
{
'-~----------------~=~
~, ~~~

1

79

FARM FRESH

HEINERS

BREAD

OR

3 LOAVES

EPSI

EGGS
DOZEN

Bottles

$}39
GOOD SELECTION
CANDY

PIus Deposit

SNOW SHOVELS

FABRIC
SHOP

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BEUM AND BRING IT.
OR MAIL IT WllH s1.00 BY FEBRUMY 12TH 10 lHE
DAILY SENnNEL, P•.0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 ODS '1.00-CASH WllH ORDER ..
1.

Brown and the Presidency ,

By DOUG WILLIS
Carter and Kenn edy. That is was an usual idea , or even
.Associated Press Writer
the proposal he embraced in a radical proposal. But given
SACRAMENTO,
Calif . a January speech for a th ~ reaction in Washington, it
Jerry Brown, constitutional convention to was as though I'd proposed a
(AP) carrying an increasingly draft
an
amendment different form of governconservative banner, no requiring a balanced fed eral ment. Perhaps I had," Brown
says.
longer uses the word · budget.
Reaction in California_ to
''remote' ' when talking about
Federal deficit s, -Brown
a run for the presidency in says, are a root cause of Brown 's ma neuv ering is
Some
liberal
1980.
inflation. Although Carter's l]lixed.
Instead, the California 1980 budget proposal trims Dem ocrats are enraged by
governor says he's giving a the deficit to $29 .billion, hi s adopti on of a cau se
lot of thought to challenging Brown says it is still in- ·champion ed mostly by
conservatives and by the
President Carter ln the flationary and unacceptable.
primaries but an anstate budget he unveiled
tight
Brown is a late supporter of
nouncement
would
be this convention, which has in January .
' 'premature.''
" This man thinks he can
been endorsed by 24 states
Some of his actions, though, ~nd needs 10 more states to become president of the
Unit ed States by having
seem beyond the "thinking" be convened.' But Brown is in
stage:
the battle just as the proposal Herbert Hoover capture the
Demo cratic Party ," sa id
- ~ecently he won nation- is gaining momentum .
wide attention with his enThis campaign also allows David Roberti , Democratic
dorr.ement of a convention to Brown to use the sam e tactic floor leader of the state
require a balan&lt;J!'d federal both he and Cart er have used Senate.
An d stat e Sen. Barry
budget.
successfully in the pa st - to
- He is strongly criticizing align hilnself with frustrated Keene , a Democrat allied
Carter on inflation.
voters against goverl)ment. with Brown in the past, adds ,
- He has asked a national
"The fis cal excess by the that he cannot support a
labOr leader what his chances federal government
is can didate " who rides into th e
of an AFl.rCIO endorse..:ent recognized by 75 percent of White House on a conwould be.
the American people .. :, " he stitution al crisis ... he has
At the same time, the 4Q- says. " So the only people who perpetrated."
Som e news papers also
year-old Brown has stopped can't recognize this seem_ to
talkinl; of an "era of limits" be a rather limited gro"P o: have had critical editorials .
- his phrase for the need to experts that dwell s in Th e · Los Angeles Times
term ed Bro"n' s call for a
save the environment and Washington. "
resources. And gone, too, are
Carter call ed a con- constitution al convention "a
references to Zen and other stitutional convention on the clumsy grab for nation al
counter-culture trappings budget
a attention." The Washington ·
propo sal
that made the nation notice . " dangerous" idea that might Post said it " dispelled any
this odd Democrat.
open the door to other lingering suspi cions ... he
It is time, he says, for amendments r e•tricting civil might be fit for nations I
America to get back to liberties. Brown says this is a leader sip."
Brown, mea nwhile, doesn't
balanced budgets, ' less "scare tactic ."
act
as if he is bOther ed by the
. government, less meddling in
"I had never thought that
. the affairs of distant nations, u::==~the fedetal budget criticism . He go es alon g
and more belief in the
countfy's fundamental
soundness and future .
"America right now is not
building for the future. It is
stealing from it," says
Brown, who defeated Carter
in three 1976 primaries and
continues
· challenged him in two others.
to brirtg you
"What we're seeing today is .
decline
abroad
and
decadence at home."
And Brown comments: " I
see ·a lack of faith in the
•60" URALINE ............... ~ ........... 'i'3 OFF
future on the part of people
Group
·about to retir~
.
see
frustration at
super•60" COrrON &amp; POLY KNIJS, __ ., ...... OFF
market. And ob · usly it's
time for some kind of

'

WalterZ.

"FOR ALL YOUR ONE STOP SHOPPING"

.

212 E. Mlln, Pomeroy

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?u Our tiappy Valentine Ads will be
published on February' 14, and offer you a truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
wishes.

years of marriage. I'm
still head-over-heels In
love with you! _

CURTIS GROCERY
SUNSHINE·

By Charlene Hoeflich
Count , count, count those calories!
. T[lat'S the name of the game when in the mirror you see, a
ftgUre that's not enttrely pleasing to thee.
Those calories do add up- and so do the pounds.
And what's the basic secret for losing weight?
Eat fewer calories than you use.
You might think of this as a checking account. If you put
more money mthe account than you take out, the bala nce will

~c.

TELEPHONE 446-~367
REGISTRATION NUMBER 75-02-04728

each of the weekly meetings of
Slinderella a blue ribbon is given to the member losing the
most weight, and a red ribbon to the runner-up. The
reward system provides incentive to stay on the 1,000
calorie diet, ·according to Mrs. Jo Ann Newsome,
Slinderella director, who here displays ribbons to be won.

·count, count those calories I

jeweler's Name

Spring Valley Plaza. Gallipolis, Ohio

saw "red herrings" long

L

/

Hearts and Roses go toge ther in 14Kt.
Gold Overlay by Krementz. A special
gift for a special lady ... Come in today
and see our complete selection.

rcasohable and most of the club. members look forward to the
' group sr ss iDns.

Information about foods and nutri tion is an Important part of
each
meeting . There ~re always bOxes oflow calorie recipes to
nutriti on. ·
The p:;yehologY is ttwt evcryt,rll: w€tnts to be on the winning be shared. ti ps on new pr oduct,, and suggestions on ways to
s iflc and to lose is to win. The scales a re a thl'eHt fo r "they . overcome waves .of hunger.
·Reading the labels befqre buying, not only to check the
ncver leti a lie " and this thought through the week is a drierrent tu " breaking over' ' ant.! having something that's a ·•no no'' calone contest, but the nutrients is urged. Members are encouraged to constantly be aware of their diets, not to dwell on
on the diet s iweL
Talk to women who an· ~ n roll ed in diet classl's a nd they will foods which they can't have, and to take time to prepa re low
·
convince you that t here's nu other w1::1y tu.losc weight. Befor e calorie foods for themseives.
1\.s an example of the lecture m'at~ riai used at the diet club
joining a club, must of them have tri ed dieti ng on their own but
have found that without the incentives of the d ub program, rnecttngs, J o Ann Newsome of Slinderella this week covered
altitudes towa rd food, developing a powerful self-image;
they lose ver y littl e weight.
. Getting on t he sca les week aft er week , having others around positive att itudes toward yourself and your body, and non'lood
you know whether you have lost or gained weight , listening to rewards, such as a trip to the beauty parlor or some jewelry,
lectures on nutrition and gelling tips on food preparation , are as em incentive to lose.
a ll a part nf thP Jl f 'H'r:un . Tht-&gt;11 l hPr~ ~rP r,...w ~~~·l!~.; , vary ing
The infl uence of eati ng habits learned in ehiidhood -" clean
from one club to another. In Slinderella the ribbon and cer- up your plate" or " be good and Mother wi ll give you a eookie ''
tifica te system is used. The top loser of the week gets a blu e - were also discussed by the director . Fresh fruit and
vegetabl es are good not only for food re wa rds, Mrs. Newsome
ri bbon , the r unner-up a red ribbon.
said,
but they are also excellent for times when anger and tenLose 20 pounds and you get a ct•r!tficate ....... and pra ise.
In most clubs a daily diet clw t is kept. Reviewing that chart sion need to be worked out.
But the one importa nt secret to successful dieti ng for weight
re vc~ls to the director just why a dub member is either l osin ~;
los._o; is consistency. You ca nnot expect lo lose lcuge amounts of
or gaining weight.
,
Members a re chi ded for ''c heat ing" on t heir diets. ctml some fat deposits, accum ula ted over a pe riod of years, 1n a few
weeks.
readily admit that they develop qui te a guilt cot)lp iex.
J ust as it usijaliy takes a long time to put on fat, it takes a
Sever a l admitted t hat t~ei r weight' becamean embar rassment to th eir husbands and chi idt·en and arter so much trying long time to take it off .
The key -count , count, count those calories.
to lose on their own, they ~ave up and joined a club . The fee is

''

forming classes for the Spring
Quarter
This School is a fully Accredited
Business College and approved for
Veterans Training.
If you want to "make the road to
success shorter" ca II, write or visit:

To My Wife, Ann ...
After 14 wonderful

during 1ht• pwil Wt't'k . They dJ,...;t·us-; their t..•otin~ prublems, e~nd
someoru~ gives a lccturt• on devl' lopi ng good ea t ing habits and

•

LOOK
TO
THE
FUTURE!
Gallipolis Business College is now

DEAR HELEN
These women who settle .for living or sleeping together in-

Mc r niH~rH ·· w~ I Ch -m " tu st'l' hu\\ J!lllth tlwy 'n· g.a!n~tl or lost

stirring uilhl the sugar •
dissolves; simmer 'Until the
spice gives ~ff some of Its
flavor - 5 to 10 minutes; our
over the pickles. Cover
tightly and chill at least 24
hours before serving. Makes
a bOut 2 cupS drained pickles.

stead of marriage, then howl !Jecause five years later he still
won 't make it legal: Don't they realize that a man won't buy
the whole cake when he can get a piece any time he wants it,
free ? -PATRICK

I

By Hugh A. Mulligan
AP Special CorresJHiodent
WASHINGTON ( AP) '' With words we govern
men, " wrote Benjamin
Disraeli, British novelist,
prime minister and governor
of men by words.
It is the favorite quote of
William Safire,
pundit ,
columnist, lancer of Bert
Lance, former television
producer , reformed press
agent, ex-speech writer for
Richard Nixon and the only
working lexicographer in the
Washington press corps.
Words, particularly the
words that govern men, are a
passion and a pastime with

saucepan
there will be
about 6 cup pickle liquid .
Slice gherkins fairly thin
crosswise and tum into a
refrigerator contpiner - a
roWKI 3-cup bowl (about 5 by
3 inehes) is perfect. Bring the ·
pickle liquid, sugar, cinnamon and allspice to a boil,

'

'l'hls all has a populist ring
reminiscent of the antigovernment exhortations of
Huey Long, George Wallace,
Howard Jarvis and - on
occasion - Jimmy Carter.
And it ls the sort of talk
Brown has used since · Ills
political debut on a Los
. Angeles school board 10 years
ago.
At a December meeting
with labor leaders, which
Brown says .labOr requested,
he says he asked AI Barkan,
national political director of .
the AFL-CIO, if organized
labor would support him or
Sen. Edward Kennedy. He
said he got no commitment
frOID Barkan.
Meanwlllle. t! works away
at the' !Siiu~ ne believed can
he . Uled to challenge both

•60" CHALIS ..... -... ,_.... :............... lh OFF
•52" VELOURS ......... -............ _... _. 1f3 OFF

•

When you take these coupons to your store
you 'll instantly save 50C
on Savarin" lnstan t
.r ·''
and automatica lly
save another 25C on
Savari n Automati c
F1lter Coffee.
Which is good
news for people who

•56" WOOLS ..•..•....•.. ...... ......•.... 1/3 OFF
Table of

•60" KNJJS ......_. ..... -......... --·-·-·" 'h OFF
Table of

-,.

•45" PERM A PRESS FABRIC ......... -•. Yz OFF
WE SERVICE ALL MODEL
MACHINES &amp;
·SHARPEN SCISSORS

fABRIC SHOP
liS W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
',

prefer richer tasti ng coffee. Beca use Savarin
Instan t and Savarin AFC are made from blends of
the world's finest coffee beans. Bea ns that are deep
roasted for a richer, heartier f lavor,
So go ahead and clip ou t the coupons. They'll
leave you with a good
taste in your mouth
and some change .
in your pocket.

�.

. .

..

.

.

~

.

..
•

B-

T~e Daily

'

Sentinel. Middleport -Pomeroy. 0 .. Wodnesday , Jan . ~ U ~79

mw lor taxpayers al thi s
tim~ .

Board places 4.1 mill levy
before Gallia local vo_ters
BY LARRY EW ING
The Gallia County Local
Board of Education moved
last night to place an $18
million. 4.1 mill. building
~ r o p osa l
befor e distri ct
voters on May 24.
The plan proposed by the
Loard during the special
meeting calls for the co,n'lt ruction of four new
dc men tary sc h oo ls, th e
renovation of Addaville and
Cheshire · Kyger Elementary
Sclwols, the refurbishing of
existing high schools. and the
con,'t ruction of a $2,6 million
ac;;tdemlc center.
Last night' s decision
followed weeks of study and
"valuation by the board to
determine the most feasible
proposa l to place before
' oters of the Gallia County
Local System .
Bo a rd President James
Blevins said last night that
the proposal would serve to
meet the needs of the system
~Jild t he desires or its
residents by providing four
ne w elemen tary facilit ie s,
temporarily maintaining the

four high school concept, and
providing intensive programs
fo r students on the high
school level through the
develop ment of Acade mic
Center,
• The l•roposal would, ac·
.carding to Blevins. solve .
s" fcty problems currently
existing in the agi ng
~ el ementary
schools a nd
provide a means of resolving
academ ic problems on· the
high school level.
Fallowing the defeat of the
proposed 5.1 mill , $21 million.
on Nov . 7, the board , through
special meetings and work
seS!jons. sought information
fran\ district residents on
their feeling s con cerning the
maintenance and oper!ltion of
the system.
" Based on all infonnation
ava ilable, the board feels that
the new proposal offers the
taxpayers and students of
Gallia County the best an·
s wcr at this time to needs for
new elementary schools and
educational needs evidenced
in the co unty's testing
program in upper elementary

schoo l and high sc hool
grades," Blevins said.
The plan proposed by the
board calls for the construction of four ne w
elementary schools at Vinton ,
Bidwell-Porter, Crown City
and the Southwestern attendance area.
The school in the Southwestern area would serve
those students presently
attend ing Cadmus and
Centerville schools.
Th~
plan would fur ther
provide
for
the
renovation of Addavill e
School in the Kyger Creek
attendance area to serve
grades K-3. Cheshire Kyger
Elementary would also be
refurbished and renovated to
serve grades K-ll.
Upon completion of this
phase of the plan, all
elementary schools in the
district would house grades
K-.'1 .
In addition to the constr uction of the new
elementary schools and
renov ation of present . ones,
the Board plan also calls for

the renovation of the present
high schools.
Renovation~# would , according to the board, be done
in order to alleviate over·
crowded conditions in some
instances and t~ generally
maint a in th e school s as
QUa lity structures. The four
present high schools would
continue to ser ve th eir
present attendance areas in
the field of basic education.
However, because of an
adm itted ·jnability of the
present system to meet the
needs·of gifted and-or college
bound students, the board
proposes the construction of
an academic center to serve
those students whu cannot
schedule advanced classes in
their ,"home schools." The
board maintains that it is
impo ss ibl e. both
educat i o n a lly
and
economically, to offer the
depth
of
curri culum
necessary for students to
Jmpete in post high school
dCadennic progra01s because
enrollment at each of four
• By bringin g students

_K ent settlement challenged
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
$675,000
sett lement of
damage claims arising from
the 1970 Kent State University shootin gs ha s been
challenged in a new court
action by lawyers who
ha ndled early appeals in the

protracted case.
The appeal being filed with
the 6th U. S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Cincinnati con·
cerns the distribution of
$50,000 in legal fees from the
settlement. lawyer James. A.
Lowe said Tuesday .

Meigs' record
IContinued from page I )

U0Public
,945 · Assi&gt;'tance _ admini;iration and operation:
salaries, $!25,000: supplies,

em ployes, $5.715; supplies,
$7.500; other expenses, $500.
Total. $26,215 .
$9 ,000 ; eQuipment, $a,OOO ;
Civil Defense - Other contracts, repair , $1 ,200 ;
public assistance, $lOO,OOO ;
expenses, $500.
.
Agric ulture - grants, 'fuedical assistance, $l, 1oo;
$19 ,825;
insurance for a id for aged, $B,OOO ; food
bu ildings, $5,000 ; apiary stamps, $27 •500 : d facilities,
inspection, $600 ; cattle $17 •500 : travel an expense,
disease presentation, $500. $2., 500 : r etirement, $20,000;
Total, $25,925 .
workmen's
compensation,
Hea lth and Welfare $B,OOO; soc ial servidmces,
General Hospital and Care: $35.000; socia 1 service, a ·•
contracts, services, $1,647; $55,000 : WIN program.
Tuberculosi s ho•pital clinics $1 3,519 ; child support.
and
car'e :
salaries, salaries and travel, $2S.OOO.
$23,779.92; s upplies, $4,000; Total, $H 9,319 .
Real Estate Assessment
equipment , $2,500 ; contracts,
r epair, $400 ; contracts, Fund _ supplies $4 000 .
.
. '
• '
services. $13,000; fees and contracts, services, $20,000.
Total,
$
,ooo.
24
costs. $100; transportation,
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline
$250; travel, $2,500 ; other
ex penses, $3,198.69 . Total , Tax Fund . --: Engineer:
$49,728. 61.
sala ry , offi cial , $19,000 ;
Reg ist ra tion of Vital salan es, employes, $3B.OQO;
Statistics - $100.
supplies, $800; equipment,
Other Health - $7,500.
$2 ,500 ; contracts, repair,
County Board of Mental $200; travel , $100: expenses,
Reta rdation ~ salary. of· $1 ,500: other e&lt;penses,
•34 000
R d . 1 b
fida l, $1 5,000 ; salaries, • • ·
oa s .
a or.
employes. $9,800 ; supplies; $240,186; materials. $17,000;
$7 ,000; equipment , $500; equipment $27 000· con·
contracts, services, $16,000; tracts se'rv ice ~ . $7 000·
expenses, $500; , travel , contract s, project;,
$1,200; other expenses , $8;000. compensation and damages,
$1.000 ; advertising and
·: otal. $58,000.
printing, $250; retirement,
Charities and Correction $43,550;
workmen 's com·
Cotlnty Home : salary official,
pensation,
$8 ,700 ; other
$\\ ,971.60 ; sa laries, employes,
$1
:;oo
· bridges and
expenses
$18 ,6~6 . 44 ; supplies, $17,000;
c
ulverts~
iab~r.
$J9 ,000 ,·
equi pment . $750 ; contracts,
materials,
$24,000
;
contracts,
re pa ir. $200; co nt r acts,
sorvices ,
$6,500 ;
con· · prpjects, $40,000. Total ,
tincgency fund , $6a0; ex· $700,286.
Soil and Water Conpenses, $l.a00 ; ot her expenses, $400. Total, $55,598.04. servation · Special Fund sa laries, employes, $6,740;
Child Welfare Board supplies, $3,000; contracts, supplies, $300 ; equipment,
::crvices, $14,000; other child $100 ; service fees, $30a ;
care services, $2,6.50 ; travel, scholarships, $500; travel and
$500; other expenses. $3,500. expenses, $1 ,200; advertising
jnd printing, $50; retirement ,
· Total. $23,6.50.
Soldiers' Relief - salary, $940 ; workmen 's comoffi cia l, $2 ,1 00 ; s upplies . pensation , $225 ; other ex$700 : contracts, repair, $350; penses, $20. :rota!, $10,380.
relief allowances, $8,000:
expenses, $100 : travel , $400;
other expenses , $2,200 . Total.
SQUAD RUN
$1:1, 850.
The Pomeroy Emergency
Veterans Services
salary, official, $9,463.76; Squad was called to Lasley
buri als, $300; grave markers, St. at 7 a.m . Wednesday for
$1.600; Memorial Day ex- . Marie Custer who was taken
penses, $700 ; other expenses, to Veterans Memoria l
Hospital.
$100. Total. $12,163.76.
Public Assista nce
grants, $9,000.
Histori ca l Society
grants, $2,a00.
In s urance Pe nsion s and
Tax~s in surance on
property : county building,
(Continued from page I !
$12, 000: Workmen 's compensation, $13,000 ; official eight mounted posse membonds. $750; public em ployes ber s that donate their time on
retirement, $67,000. Total weekend s and other occasions fre e of charge.
$92,750.
One deputy ls currently
Miscella neous - ot her
enrolled
in Baste Police
expenses, $12,804.90.
Training
at
Buckeye Hills
Dog and Kenn el Fund and
five
deputies
are taking
.•alaries, employes, $3,100;
co
urses
in
Police
Science
at
supplies, $2;500; claims and
Hocking
Technical
College.
witn ess
fee s,
$1 ,500 ;
The department is also
retirement , $270; workmen's
sponsoring
Explorer Post 230
compensation. $75; other
of
the
Boy
Scouts
of America.
ex penses, $3,500. Tota l,

$45,ooo:

Annual

Th is package is ap prox imat ely $3 million
dollars less then the previous

one offer ed in November,
1971\.
The board
phasized In
proposal
'
I

......
......
RUILAND
I ~

con;1ruction daily increases
and postponement ill not only
detrimental
to
the
educational program but ·
costly.

9- ThP
Daily Sentinel,
-·
. Middleport-Pomeroy,
.
. . 0 .., Wednesday, .Jan . :11. 1!17!1
.

t':ll'l ·fully u s m~

ing knirv

Polly Cramer
unusual questi on and one tlmt

comes clean

Prices Effective Thru Sat., February Jrd

hets no set answer as far tiS I
knnw . J would disconned the
lamp and then rub either
turpentine or kerosene on t he
paint splatters. If !hey lin nu1
ruh off with a l'io!h then 1
would help t hings etlong by

DEAR POLLY - What
would be the best procedure
for removing white pain!
from a rubber or vinyl lamp
cor 1 -MARY S.

ECKRICH ALL MEAT FRANKS•••••••••• !~-.~1.59
ECKRICH PICKLE LOAF. ................ ,.~b~ ..•1.59
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD••••• ~ ........ !~·..•1.19

69$
MARGARINE ...~.~~~~~-~~ ..

BIG 40%

linoll'nm. - MRS . fl.M.
·m:~ AR POl.!. Y - Tn sofkn
flf':AH POI.I .Y - Wh ,:n stiff fl('\\' l&gt;iuP jt•;.rns I soak thP
\Vitslting gm·rnl•nt s. su('h as .i('WlS nvern ight in w;.tl t• r tl1 &lt;:~ t

Pink

5 lb. bg .

LONGHORN
CHEESE SLICED
2 lb.

.

.

10 lb. bg .

POTATOES..................... 97'·

1.79 LB.

1

1\'atiurral AerorwutiC"!i CJnd

e Pu r lrart s

S p ;;t&lt;.·t· !u.lrni n is tr.al io n
other deity ) was that • of di s d osed tentat ive plet ns to

• w c ~~ t ng.s

tr y t.u lcmd et man on thP muon

\ 'Oll n 11 1' 11 f

Jephthah : it cost him his
da ughter.
"Then shall it be lha1
whatsoever cometh forth of
the doors uf my hou se to
meet me ... shall surely be
1he Lord's OQd I will offer 11

t 'h ;Jn k. - \' it ll

for a burnt offering .. , and

ti SI ' \\ /11 •11 l 'l tOki l l)!. {' II' .

tlw ~ kin {'011\l 'S off wl1 h 11u 1
mudr trouhlt•. -M.M H.

Polf\ wil l st•nd

ADVERTISED 11 EM POLICY

W-10c off

Etch 'of thne 1dver1i.-J

49 oz. TIDE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••• $1.49

1t11m1

i5

CREAM OF CELERY SOUP. ................ 2/55~

GUARAN TEE
Every1hing you buy 11 Kroger

P'IICES GOOD SU;NDAY JAN . 21 THIU SATUIDA.v
FEI. J, 1979 IN

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

I

:

Full Cut
Round Steak

CLOVER VALLEY

Grape Jelly -

Q,.&amp;·9c

69

$

Jar

!

U.S. GOV'. GRADED CHOICE

t

KROGER

Bonel~ Top

Round Rqast _....

16-oz.
Can

Catsup

77

c

.lb.

Plastic Ctn .

Vac ·Pa
Kroger Coffee

Baking
Hens_ .... .. -.... ... .

S$

~

99

l-Ib.
Roll
liMIT 1 PKCS. WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDITIONAl PURCHASE
THISFAMIL
ITEM!'t
~-!
~
LIMIT ONEIEICIUDINC
COUPON PER

:o-P~

MACARONt &amp; CHEESE

Dinner

ROUND TOP

c

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread .. .. .. ... ..
2~·

_,
KROGER GOLDEN LOf.f

20-oz .

lvs.

OFF LABEL

Head &amp; Shoulders
.
Shampoo ........ ...... ...._8,,

57

$

11 ·01 .

A BLEND OF BEEF
TEXTURED VEGETABLE PR1DHtN

Kroger's
Pro _......__ _............

Green Giant
Green Beans .... _...

lb .

Fresh Ocean Perch Fillets
Fresh Dressed Flounder.....

: /§'.(.~·"';o/

: ~ /l,o.:S:':'AV~E:oo.
I
I

$
16·oz .
ConS

c

'"H"'EA•o•s~ Head

:

1
I
I

Fresh
Cauliflower

ON4

1

KITCHEN SLICED OR REGULAR CUT

t!MIT 4 HIIDS WITH COUPON AND S7.50 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(EICIUDINC THIS ITEM)

12

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAM ll y
COIINI ~D JU . ll TIIU UTIIU11 HI. l . lt"
SIIIECT 11 ~~~ l! C UU mn &amp;lOCI\ lUIS

Of

·'OefielJfeM~ S~etiof.3

,

_ _,

AVAILABLE ATSlOIIES WITH DILl ONLY
HOT fOODS AVAILABLIII AM -7PM

lb _

Diet Pepsi.or
Pepsi Cola

'
AVONDALE

Shortening

Fresh Made
Pizza!
Chee1e Pl,na .. . $2.19
Pepperoni fllzza . .. $2 .99
Mu1hroom1 Pizzo .. . $2 .99
Deluxe Pizza , , . $3 .69

8$
09
Pak

PLus DlPOS!T
CAPTAIN'S CHOICE
CoV TAI N'I CHOICI

Bucket·O·
,,1
h
,
FIS ' ' •' ' •' ' ••••' ' ' ' •' ' ..

IHCliJDII:

' ·" .... OihH••
" '~ ·

O

UQ

9dclkG. Ru63et 'Poftlft Sate

15 -LB.$179 10-LB.$139 5-LB_ggc
'

.

(614) 992-2117
''
'

--~·

BAG

.

. -BAG

BAG

»

~-~·
I

I .

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

lb_

175 RACE

'·

I

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOfl
AVONDALE

Can

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

I &gt; ,

COUP'VN ;oDD SUIIDU JU. ll TIIIU muun HI ll m
SIIJ(CT ro•mteuu m.n a LOCaL ruEs

PROPOSED 1980 CASP, Manual Updates
Division of General Support Services
30 East Broad St.. 32nd Floor
. Columbus, Ohio 43215

...

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER F4Mll V
cooo su•on1u 21 rm SA!UDU ru 1 t979
SUIJUT TC mlltill£ SIArf &amp; tOUt TUU

c~uPO-

Visit your local county wel fare department to review the complete Plan. To obtain a free ·c:opy send a self-addressed mailing label to;

Pojnt fi'leasant

LIMIT 6 CANS WITH COUPON ANO Sl.50 ADDITIONAl PU~CHASE
IEICIUOINC THIS ITEM J

KROGER 0.5% LOWFAT MILI&lt;. .. GAL. PLASTIC CT N. $1 .59

42-•$119

•

69

$

Poper o r

-lb.

WRITTEN COMMENTS

Date: Unique to county
Time: Contact Your Local
Place· County Welfare Department

Gal.

Lowfat Milk .. .... .

lb.

FROZEN U.S.D.A .
INSPECTED · -7-LB . AVG .

KROGER

Qt_
Btl.

Hi Nu 2%

1•-11-LB. AVG.

Whole
Fresh Hams !:

I OF
"

$

1

fillHL!6ffy Fwk S~Ded

COUNTY PUBLIC HEARINGS

-Roll
Pak

I
I
I

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinners

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CH()ICE
BONE IN

.

Written comments may be made on the Plan and sent to:
Tille XX Comments
bhlo Department of Public Wel1are
30 East Broad Street. 301h Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43215

SAVE

I
I

I

30 East Broad Street. 29th FL. AM . 2932
Columbus, Ohio

•
•'

1---- (.:~~.o/

Parkay
Margarine

MEIGS CO. WELFARE DEPT.
Gt7S-2:J11

!o-P40 White Cloud
: c~~;o~~2
Toilet Tissue
4
44c

KRAFT

NONI SOLD TO DIALU5 .

SALAD DRESSING..... ~ ...................~a!. $1.29

Place· State Off ice Tower

Hoc flic il )
109 Hig;, St .
Po m e roy

375 SHEETS PER ROll

WE IESEIVE THE IlCHT TO LIMIT Q UA N11TIU .

DEL MONTE SPINACH._.................... 2/79~

Date: February 14. 1979
Time: 9:30 A.M.

r Bo b

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

lrotorWolcomll
Your ftdtra!
food Shlmpo

COPYIIGHT lt79_; THf tt:IOGfl CO . ITfMS ~NO

TOMATO JUICE. .............. ~ .................. 73~

STATE PUBLIC HEARING

The Photo Place

One year ago: fsrael :-md

is

OBTAINING A PLAN FOR REVIEW

2119 Jackson Ave.

of th e 101 people aboilrd .

• Pa ssp u rl s •

behold his daughter came l·:gy pt n:sumed tal ks· 0 11 t he
out to meet him
•·
mili tar y luv e l ,in Cu iro,
Judges 11 :31-39
Egy pt. in the fi n,,_ formal

OYSTER STEW .............'................. 2/$1.29

PUBLIC HEARINGS

HELP YOU!

Fi ve rears ago: A Pcm

e Spc- c t.1 1 O c_ca s10 ns

Except Closed Saturd1y Midnigllt Til 9 AM Sundir
Empt Hinton &amp; White Sttlphur

•.

NESCAFE COFFEE ........................J~!. $4.59

'

Tl;e

Am c r il'fl ll jetlin e r crashed on
Am er ican Sa1 noa , killing 95

TOT AL SA TIS FACTION

required to be rNd il.,. IVIillblt fo r Nla
guarante.d fOf your total tllilfaction
in ..ch KrogM StOI'I, ucept 11
regardltll of manutecturar . If you ara
apecrficlllr noted in thi• ad . lf w11 do
u ti 1fied , Krogtr wil! raplau VO'o' L
run out of 1n ldve niled 111m, wt will , nor
item with the same branll or I com·
~lr 'f'OU your choice of 1 compar1bl11
' parable brand or refund you• purchne
item, when av1iMible, rellecting th11
rice.
ume u vtngl Of 11 rtinchllc k wh• ch will
entitle you to purch1.e the advertillld
ittm 11 the adve1'1iMd price WitMon 30

10'·• oz - Campbell's

' '

a go:

Yl'CJ r s

in May .

A HWIUMrLIS

A period lor public review and commen t on the Plan is being provided from February 1. 1979 th rough March 17. 1979.

YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS WILL ·

' s ig ni.•d

hl• r

nc wsp; rpt•r ('1.111po n t•lt pp~"; ..'i if
:-. lw
usPs
yt llt l'
f ;·l \'l tl 'i t L·
Pointl'r . Pt't' \'t' nr Prohl r•1 rr in

Tc u

PIOOUCTS
LISTED lllOW ,.UI JUU

PUBLIC REVIEW AND COMMENT

CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.

The most ramo us vow ( a
solemn promise to God or

Ho ·tn;·

LOOk POl THIS SIGN
THIOUGHOUT THE
' SJOII ,.01
fANTASTIC SAVINGS
ON ICIOGU llANO

. .

All persons in Oh io 50 years of age and older.
Migrant children in need of day care services.
Al co hol dependent perSons.
Children committed to the Ohio Youth Commission.
Developmentally disabled persons.
12 ~. Drug dependent persons.
13. Persons who are mentally re tarded.
14. Identified groups of persons in need of social services established by individual county welfare departments as shown In the

it

.\'1\'
rlr r• tn rr :rt i t· fHW(' I'." f(JtJit d it
ha rd In hold g; lrli~ · or IJII I!IllS
for pt•l'i mt: . l tr it·d s o:rk111 1 ~
lht• tn i11 \\i ii i' J' for :r f1'\ \'
111inut Ps ;mrl d i.o..;I' H\'t 'f't •d !Itt!

l'lii.J .Y

'

PIECE 11.69 lb. GRAPEFRUIT.. __ ._ ..... ;...... Sf1

7.
8.
9.
10.
11.

:s

Wedn esday

f~n· uf m u tmt i n ~o: J.we rrilla at ·
t;·wks tlrruughout th e coun trv .

nr·:I\H

OPEN
24 HOURS
A-DAY

or under $9601.

Plan.

lritrlll i, ·:•pJ wd ;utd ltr tr u' ; !l ! iJh ·
1tll t' 11 111X1 lt'iii'JI t•: 1 ~ .1 · ll'l•i'k ,. ; to

I' \TI!V

In JUlia. South V i l'l n&lt;::~ II H."st ·

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER

example : Fam ily of four with gro ss annual income not exceeding $9600.
5. P ~rson s may receive the following servi ces without re gard to family income : a) prote cti ve care /services for persons in imme·
d1ate danger of abuse. neglect exploitation (including runaways); b) information and referral; and c) fami ly planning services.
6. In come Eligible with a fee lor services listed in the Plan, provided gross annual income for a .family of four is not over $14,000

i!!!

Pn.: silie1rl Nt.: U}·cn V&lt;Jn '11l it·u
tietl u r erl martiiJI law in thl'

YEUOW ONIONS. ,.....~~--- · 45t

Lb. Blue Bonnet

.

PUT IN A
NEW KITCHEN!

str u t~! i.'tHis tht ·mwll t l~t • Lrllrir·
h{·frwt• w:ts hing. No mi1n· :&gt;l1
in~~ ·" diso-tpp{'&lt;l l'i rw in till' ~ ·; t :-: ·
in g.
l k1•pt ;1 Jlill' k il g l ' of l 't lt\ t•ll
h;.riJ.o..; on h;u rd during Ill• '

1·nnt:u·t sin('e tlw breakdown
of politil'i al ti L'/.!.Ot iations in
.ll·rusiJlrm two \\l'l'ks L'arlie r .

r1•·r •. " lit irrn \Vn t1 • 1'() / ,/ .Y 'S
l ' f i/~T F H :-; rrr t ·;r H ' pf 1/11 s
nt 'll :- p; q'~'' r

li:t ;• · r•l ' ·d·· .rl r ;ufd. ·d 11•11•..
t ll• i!II Jil ).,: l it~ · ~
:rn · -; .. rr

VACUUM SLICED BACON............... ~b~. '1A9

conference SOOn

WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DO?

!1;: •: v

•

·Growers holding

KITCHEN t;fNTER, INC.

l it;d

·

JUMBO BOUNTY TOWELS .................... 79~

DALE'S

( If'

pi tJH ~; .

dr;~wx trt fll~~ I s: lfr· l ~ p ill tht•

Chri ~ tJn:t ~ sects orr ht'(' i ti iSl' a
rnoistl'ned I'Oit on h;l] ] wi ll
pick up a ll Uw li!tk -"JW(' ks of
brokt·n f'h t·i:-:trn;r.o.; _ln'l' 1!1'tiW \\o'iiX with !Ill' Wli llt but nallwnt s. fPnlly 's Ilillt· - This
wht• n yn11 n•wax lht' floCII· it would be good all \'t&gt;;u· rowul
wi ll look like new. I h:1ve also for pi ck in ~ up ti.ny hil s of
fuund this works great on hmkPn glass. 1- BE /\

DEAR MARY - Your&gt; is an

LGJm.pcord

10 oz . In s!.
Lowe filed the appeal on Union to come in ... without
behalf of a memher of his consulting with any of the
firm . Steven A. Sindell, whom private lawyers and try to
Low e
said
worked limit their fees."
"thousands of hours" during
Lowe said about four sets of
IO•;, oz . Hi Iter
a five-year period when he private lawyers were in·
pressed the victims' claims. valved , and that under the
Lowe said Sindell "has a contingency contracts they
legal right io be paid."
were entitled to one-third of
46 oz: Hunt's
He Questioned th e authority ·any settlemeQt . . He sa id
of U. S. District Judge whatever part of th e $50,000
William K. Thomas to cancel was paid to his firm would be
contracts held by several pro-rated among the , other
15 oz.
lawyers who were involved in lawyer s, including New York
early court actions on behalf attorney Joseph Kelner, who
·1· of f our stu dents was the 1ea d'mg 1awyer for
of 1am11es
killed and nine wounded by the families in the first trial
32 oz. Kraft Miracle Whip
Ohio National Guard gunfire of the damage claims in 1975.
at Kent State.
That trial took ta weeks and
Lo
k d th · d t
ended with the· J·ur)' denym
· g
we as e
e JU ge o
delay disbursement of the the damage claims while
funds pending disposition of exonerating Gov . James A.
the appeal. Thomas set a Rhodes and the Ohio National
hearing for Tuesday.
Guard members who were
Sindell carried early ap- defendants.
peals "to the U. S. Supreme
But the familie s won an
Court and won the right for appeal to the 6th Circuit
the clients to have recovery Court. and the case was sent • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
, of damages," Lowe said, back for retrial . Of the
adding that it was "way out of $675,000 which the stat e
PROPOSED PLAN FOR SOCIAL SERVICES IN OHIO
line for the court and the agreed to pay the victims and
American Civil Libertie s families ,
$a0,000
wa s
assigned for lega ~ fees and
JULY 1,1979-JUNE 30, 1980
$25.000 for lawyers expenses.
Sanford Jay Rosen ?f San
The Plan lor Ohio has been developed in accordance with Title X)( of the Social Securit~ Act.
·
Francisco was prtmary
SociLJI
services
a'.lailablc
tor eligible persons in Ohio are described in the Pl~n . Social services In th e Pl an include:
1
· th
1· 1 dh
.
awyer tn e re ria • an e
Adoption
Foster Family - Special Service:;
Protec tive Care for Adults
was designated as trustee for
Campers hip
for Children
Protective Services for Children
Chore
Guardianship
Psychotherapeutic Services
~:~~~~~:~ !~~~:m':~er the
Counseling
Health-Related
Representative
Payee
COLUMBUS. Ohio rAP) Rosen said he felt that
Day Care for Adults
Homemaker/Home Health Aide
Residenti al Treatment for Adults
Fruit and vegetable growers ' Sindell was "ill-advised" to
Day Care for Children - Employment &amp;
Home Delivered and Congregate Meats
Residential Treatm ent for Children
Training
Home -Management
Services for Alcoholics and Drug Addicts
from Ohio will meet in
pursue the fee matter. "The
Day Care for Children - Prolective
Housing
Socialization/Development Service
Columbus Feb. 5-7 for the
case and the victims and the
Day Care for Children ,____ Special Needs
Information and Referral
tor Adults
annual meetm·g of the Ohio
·
f th' h'st ·
Day Treatment lor Children
Legal
Special Services for the Blind
Issues o
IS 1 one case
Developmental Services lor Children &amp; Youth
Mental Reta~dation Assessment Service
Special Services - Communicately
State Horticulture Society. transcend any ISsue of atEmployment and Training
Other Education Servires
Im paired
The meeting will involve t
• f " R
'd
orne~ s ~es,
osen sa• ..
Family Life Education
Placement Services tor Children
Transportation
pro gr ams on taxes and
L&lt;m e said the contmgency
Farnily Plnnnina
Foster Care fo r Adults
business, growing sweet
fee system "was developed to
com, vegetable production allow a lawyer to work on a
practices and a trade show case With the hope that he ts
WHO IS ELIGIBLE
featuring hte latest eQuip- entitled to shar; tn re~very
ment, chemicals and fer- ... The Jud ge s dtsmissal
Eligible persons w~ o may receive services as listed in the Plan are :
tilizers.
essentially extinguished th~t
1. Aid lor Dependent Children (ADC) recipients.
The meeting will be at the cordract . or !ned to. I do~ t
2. Supplemental Secu rity Income (SS I) rec i pi ~nts .
Neil House, the trade show at beheve he has any authonty
3. Medicaid Only recip ients whose gross family income is no more than the income of elig ible perso ns described in {4) and (6).
the Veterans Memorial to do that."
4. Income Eligible without a fee payment:
Auditorium.

.I

razor hl ;idc He
1tH'
1'111'&lt;1. - POl.! . Y
llP. t\11 POLl. Y - I w:u11 111
lt•ll !lit• n·udc r wlw h;J!' pa int
un ht'l' llcrnh\.'\lod flour tn ru h
till' paint sput s with ::;{Pl' l wnol
- n•gardll· ~:-; of wlwt kind of
polint it i ~ ur how long i-L has
b&lt;'l'll tlwn· . This will l'l'mov&lt;•

POLLY'S POINTERS

Phone 742-2100

Golden Isle lb . Pak

sllruv pm-

t'lll'l'fU) !HI{ {(I j) lllld llrt '

DEPARTMENT STORE

together at one c'e ntral
location . the board proposes
to meet their needs in much
the ~a me manner that the
Bu ckeye Hills Vo ca tion a l
Ce nt er now provides for
stud ent s inter est ed in
techni caJ careers.
Thi s academic cent er
would be located in the ·
gene r a l vicinity of Sta te
Routes 160 and 554. It would
be approximately one-half
the size of a full high school
· and would be built so that it
could be expanded if future
needs dictate such expansion.
The building program
proposed by the board would
cost approximately $18
million dollars. This would be
reflected in a U mill incr ease for taxpa~·c r s. The
cost for construction and
renovation of individual
schools would be broken
down as follow s( all costs are
estimate'd and approximate
at this time 1:
Elementary Schools Vinton Elementary, new
school, $2.5 million ; BidwellPorter. new sc hool. $2.5
million; Southwestern Area,
new school. $2.5 million ;
Crown City. new school, $2.a
million;
Addaville,
renovation K-8,$.5 million
Kyger,
and
Cheshire
renovation K-.'1, $.3 million.
Totals, $10.8 million.
High schools - Hannan
Trace·. ren ovat ion, $.5
million : Southwestern,
renovation, $.8 million : North
Gallia , renovation . and addition , $1.0 million and Kyger
Creek. renova ti on, $.5
million . Totals $2.8 million .
Academic Center. $2.6
million; Site acquisition, fees
and
contingencies,
$1.8
million . Totals $18.0 million.
· The board emphasized last
night that this proposal does
not full y meet the needs of the
high
school
progr!lm.
How ever, board members
stated that the plan is the
most realistically acceptable

Jliii&lt;IIIW
&lt;1

l ·" ·(•l•lllw&amp;
Mwoh ' "" le o

'IISH IAKID

Donut Holes.. .... .. ....... ..... ...... .. .
Sweet Cole Slaw .... .... .... .... ........ .

�'

.

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday. Jan. 31 1979
PUBLIC NOTICE

Not i ce Is hereby Q•ven that
on Februar y 3rd . 1979 , at
10 00 AM a p u bl•c sa le w ilt
be held at l OS Un 1on Av e nu e,

Pom eroy . Oh io . to sen for
c ash th e fo llow ing collater aL
to w it ·
197J M o nt e Carlo . ser ial No
1HS 7KJ\ 462 3 J2
Th e Fa r me r s Ba n k &amp;

S•v•ngs Com pan y, Pomero y,

or,.o , res er IJes t he r•ght to b id

at th•S sa le
( 1) jl, { 21 I. 2, 31C

Thursday, Feb . 1

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

-~---

-

-~--

GU N SHOOT ~otln£' Gun Club
hPr y Sunday 1 pm Factory

choke guns on ly
· ·r---~-------"1'1
GU N SHOO T RaCine Vo l unl e£'r
Frre Dept b .. ery Satu rday b :JO
pm ot the.r buil dtng m Bm.hon
Fac lory choke gu ns only

WANT AD
CHARGES

INCOME TA X Ser ... lcf' Federa l
ond State To• es 9q2 2272 for
appls or S@e Wa ndo Eblm ,
41 000 laurel Cl1ff Rd

I day
2 days
J days
6days

INCOME TA X S ~ r v • c e Fed eral
and Stat e Wallace Rus sell
B'rodb ury Coli 991 72'28

!5 Wol'ds or Under
C.sh
Cluocjje
100
125
1.50
1110
1.!0
2.25

3.00

375

Each word over the minimum J5
words IS 4 cenlt! per word per WI~~
Ads runnmg other tha n conse&lt;:utive
dHys will be charged at the 1 day

FRE E CANOY mok 1ng do s s at Ot ~
Ca ndy and Cok e Supplies, Sp r
mg Voll ey Plo10 446·7134 for
reg tstra1io n It' s fun and easy
You II be amaz ed a1 what you
con d o

"te
In memory , Card of Thank.!! Hnd
Obituary 6 eent.s per word ,

nurnmwn. Cash m advance.

as 00

For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

l"OAl I IMFSTONt: ~ on rl grQv~ l
colrrum chlcHui'-' fert.lt ,er dog
foorl and al l type" of so!t ~x
( r' l!&gt;ror Sal t Work s inc E Mom
St Pome1oy Qq2 j ~J91

HO MfS IH S l o1 so lq 1 ocr e and
IJP Mtddlc por t near Ru1lond

APPl ES FITZPATRICK Orchorrl
State Rt 689 Phono Wdk esv rlle
bbY 37 85
MI X ~D

CONDITIONFD hoy Very
go o d
quo ltt y
D eliver y
ovo1 lable Phone 992 7201 or
997 3309

HAY LARGI:: ROUND boles $20
Squar e boles $1 M M Corn
sheller 985 41 31 985 3537

co m1ng year

BROWNING MARK tV CB an tenna
tower 2 rotor s wotf me ter
D 104 Tweel re Br r d· m1ke
lrneor Coli l rttl e Brt Baby sw
rng 15 ' b1k e 1978 Cullo s'&gt;
Colors
ex cell en t condrt 1on
Y49 2265

'Birthday

-- - ·---

You may fm d

you rsel f mvolved tn se veral fu n
cl•que s W tden yo ur c trc le of
lnends. b ut don ' t tgn o re old
pal s

NOTICE

AN ORDINANCE
TO
MODIFY THE ORDINANCE
AQUARIUS (Jan . 10-Feb. 19) GRANTING A FRANCHISE
Unfortun ately to make yo ur TO OPERATE A COM ·
ANTENNA
po 1nts tod ay you may come on MUNITY
SERVICE
- more hars hly tha n nec essary TELEVISION
So ft words wtll work better than AND RELATED SERVICES
severe ones Ftnd out more o f
what ltes ahe ad fo r yo u tn 1979
by sendtng for yo ur co p y ot the
all-new Astra- Graph Lett er for

TO

POINTVIEW

TELEVISION

lon g self-ad dressed s tamp ed
envelope to A stra- Grap h P 0
Box 489, Radt o C tt y Statto n .
btrlh s tg n

company ( Midwest
Cor poratton D - B A PO IN TV IEW

PISCES (Feb . ZO·March 20)

C AB LE

N Y 10019 Be sure 10 s pecrly

Wh et. rnat enal s take s are at
tssue tod ay , other s may not be
as tdea lts tt c as you Be o n
gu ard so th a i you are not
decetved

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Sev·
era I pe o p le yo u may have been
dependmg upo n w on ' t be abl e
to com e thro ug h lor you today
Havtng a g ood attttude about tl
wtll he lp you lffime nsely

TAURUS (April 10-May 20) You
don I m tnd dotng lhmgs for
other s tod ay so long as tt's
your •dea , but you mtght balk at
an o th er's mstgntft c ant reques t

GEMINI (May 21-JuM 20) Alth o ugh yo u ma y be fee ltng a
ltttl e an lt soc tal today , the rea l
you WJ II s ht ne through the
mmute someone yo u ltke enter s the scene
CANCER (June 21·July 22) You
have mo re fai th tn yourself than

olh ers mrghl today Don 'I lei
them dt ssuade you Yo u ' ll be
able to aacompltsh w h at you
knew you wo uld
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There are
two Sides to your personal ity
today O ne IS a happy-go-lucky
fellow The ot her tends to be
~ggre ss t vely
argume n taltve
Choose w h1ch you prefer to be

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) ll's
mce to do people favors , but tf
you' re not careful one who
e:.:pec ts m uch wt ll have you
usmg your resource s tn add ttt o n to yo ur energies

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) Take
ltme to study the mottves for
ano ther s be havtor befo r e yo u
diSapp rove You ' ll thmk l ess
harshly of h im when yo u know
all th e fa c ts

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22) You
won ' t mmd a1lendtng to yo ur
chores to da y tf you take a little
lime to do some thtngs th a t
grat1fy yo u Th ts cre ates a
happy balan c e

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Don ' t he s tt ate to take con trol of a stt ua tl o n mvolv(ng
sever al assoCi at es 1f you know
yo u can run thtng s be tter
Th ey 'd wel com e tl.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You have a te nde nc y today to
set tm poss tb le goals If you are
rea ttslt c as to what yo u ar e able
to accomplt sh . you ' ll save
yourse lf a lot o f frus tr at ton
INFWSPA PER ENTERPRI SE ASS N 1

TV )

by

Gene Grate
Cl erk
Ke ll y
President of Counc 11
M L

Today in History
By The Associated Press
Today IS Wednesday, Jan.
3l, the 31st day of 1979. There
are 334 days left m the year.
Today 's h1ghl 1ght
m
history ·
On th1s date m 1958, the
fir st Ame ri ca n satellite,
Explorer 1, was launched into
orbit from Cape Canaveral,
F1a .
On this date:
In 1865, Gen . Robert E. Lee
was named commander-inchief of the Confederate

Tuesday ...
thru Friday

the day before publicalion
Sunday

&lt;PM

Fridll.y aft.emoon -

Pomeroy Landmark
Lost and Found

on January 24, 1979, tn th e
Me 1gs County Probate Court.
Case No
22585, John M
P tc ken s, Route 1•. Portland,
Ohio , was appotnted An ·
ci l iary Administrator of th e
est at e of Edna Mae Rhod es,
dec ea~ed, late of Rochester ,
Pennsylvanta .
Manning D . Webster
Probate J udge

Clerk

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOO D
Po les ma x .
dtometer 10" on larges t end.
$12 per ton Bun dled slob $10
per ton Delivered to Oh ro
Pollet Co
Rt 2 Pomer oy

9'12-2689

(l )

Manning 0 . Webster
Probate J udge .
Cl erk
JL ( 2) 7, 14, 3t c

doss rmgs weddtng bonds,
dram onds Gold or silver Col i
_R~g~r ~~ ~s l ey ?42 23 31
WANT TO buy old 45 and 79
phonogr aph recor ds
Ca ll
992 b370 or Con ta ct Martm Fur
nllure
WANTED TO buy old tewelry
Cot! 9q2 5262 or wrr t e Kay
(t;octl 87 S 2nd Mtddleporl

MECHANIC MUST BE EXPERIENCED.
HAVE OWN TOOLS. APPLY:

BOB HAWK CHRYSLER PLYMOUlH
ATHENS, 0.
_
28 E. -STATE STREET
593-6653
LEONARD WUES. SERVICE MGR.

FARMt:RS - NEED o lew l ormers .n
th r's areo to tr y ACCO SHD
Great sovtngs Wrr tc or co lt col
lect Stan Coakley
Rt
1
Ktllbu c k
OH
44637
11 6-276 4584

OH

.

.

12 AM FM stereo tope decks
dash $50 to $75 74131 54

m

SPLI T FIREWOOD $30 o rou nded
pt chup load 12 to 14 m unle ss
ordered Call 614 69 8 5601 co l
leeI
SJN GEN
PO RTAB LE
se wr ng
mochme
Gent e
Used 10
hours Ex cellent cond tt1op S200
t.rm 985 3q99

!.ol&lt;' Hm, &gt;P 2 bo.n s
trorl(&gt; r Lorge pond 10 ocre!l or
!:11 0 CI C'!I 742 :J5bb

3'

ceres rn Pomeroy Secl uded
wo oded oreo ~m top of hr ll
Overlook !. rrv er Water elec
tnc av orl obl e 992 3886

·

sweeps Guild
Insured

Don 't leta chimney fire put

a damper on your llle
Call. .

THE SWEEP

19th CentUry Ser11ice with
20th Century Know - How .
Specializing In '
woodstove, Oil Furnace
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone : 742·3110
Kim White, Proprietor

r

t

~ A IR V I E W

HE IGH TS 6 yea r old oil
electrrc home 3 bedroom l '1
both lovely fom1ly room wrth
wood
burrrmg stove
full
carpet ed , gorog e 1 cere Near
Mc tgs Hgrh Sc hoo l To see coli
992·6287

ADO l PH
Gru ese r
restdence located tn Out
chtown Mrners vrll e Appro~&lt;
10 acres good garden lots of
wo od two stone s w 1th Iorge
tron l porch
t',
both
2
bE&gt;drooms w1 th sleepmg enclos
ed pr oc h co untry krtdi en dtnrng r oom ltv tng room sotrm 1
., wtndow s noluror gos furnace
unfm rshed basem ent
deep
rock wa lled oper1 we ll wfJh
shel tered cove r ol "&gt;o cr ste rn
Drapes ond co rpeltng mcl uded
4 to 5 good bu 1l dmg spot s Tup
pers Plo 1ns wat er Oh to Power
Coble TV General Te lephone
Prrc e S25 000
Call W1l lrom
Ru sse ll o t 99'1 5614 Ch arle s
Grueser at 992 2111 or Wolter
Gruese r ot 992 3270
lm
med rate possessron

of htgh water tn Mtddleport

and one in Pomeroy. Both

have natural gas heat, cily
water, and e lectrtc

1.9 ACRES -

One of the

fin er older homes around ,
with d bedrooms. 2 baths,
full ba sement , and garage
tn Syracuse

ROCK SPRINGS - Only 13
yea r s old . 3 bedroom f rame
home
E nclo sed
bath,
modern kitche n, and utility
room . Real Handy for
commuter ·

2B ACRES - Lays well
wllh pasture and pl enty of

ENDRMOUS - 10 rooms in
a 5 year old home With 5
HEADQUARTERS
For all
Needs .

your

Appliance

SALE PRICES
JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

Pets for Sale
RISING STAR Ke nnel s Boardi ng
en d gr oomtng
all breeds
Cheshire 367 -0292.

-.---------

-

All WHITE full blooded German
Shepard pupptes 7 weeks o ld
304-773 5962 Clifton

- - - - - -- - - ---1976 CHRYSLER CORDOBA. lull
--

Associates

Auction

Real Estate for Sale

1978 FORD BRONCO
under
10 000

_of:e~ S_p~

__ ___ ___ _

197-4 AM JEEP
247-296 1
__ _ .:::'.'::-::-:.

George Hdl
______ _

1975 CHEVROLET MALIBU A C
P S P B hit steermg wheel '
$3400 949 711 2 after 5 30

- - - - - - - - - -- -- 1971 PINTO !o ld Ask1ng $.400
9'12 6362
1974 f 150 fOR D A

X

4. 390

eng tne P S. P 8
tool box
electrtc broke a nd trad er httch
$3500 843·.48.45

POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED - 2 famiiy
home on

good

street In

Middleport . 2 kitchens. 2
baths, all rented . Excellent
Investment ,

JU S T

$13,000.00.
NEED MORE ROOM? We have just the place, 3
bedrooms, bath, dining ,
ftreplace, full basement,
large 2 car garage and

workshop. $23,500 00
NEAR SCHOOL - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, Qalh •.
basement, 2 lots, porches,

Wanted to Rent
TWO BEDRdbM house tra iler or
apartment. pref er ably tn the
Mtddleport
o reo
with
reasonable rent. 992 781&lt;4

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33, north of Pome roy
l a rge lots Call992 -7479

- - --- -- -

.

_.

-- - -

J A ND 4 RM furn ts hed ond unf urn t shed

opts

Ph o n e

9'12·5434
TWO BEDROOM , h1 tchen furms hed. opt. Coli before 9 om

9'12·2288
TWO BEDROOM mobile home
near De xter near No 1 M ine

991-5856
FOUR ROOMS and both in
longsvt lle . Reference end
depo:stt John Sheets Box bot ,
M iddlepor t · 3' •mt fes sou th of
_M ~d~l e_P~t _o~ R_t

?. __

HOUSE 4 r ooms and bo th
furnrshc d 992-3090

"t

other features. $27,300.
LARGE LEVEL LOT Nat. gas he;it. 3 bedrooms,
balh, part besement, other
features . $11 ,000.00.
HOUSE AND MOBILE
HOME - All rented. lots of
news in the house, 2 lots .

For Rent

un ·

Teaford

Sue P. Murphy

power , AM FM stereo tope
crutse control. rear wmdow
defogger fo tr condt tr on $3200
992·6124
Custom,
miles
_30~ ·~7~· ~1 ~2 ~f ~er_ b_pr~- - - - _
1977 El CAMJNO Clo ss rs SS oulo
Irons low mtleoge excellent
cond tll on $.:1500 Co li 985 -4287

3 PERCENT DOWN PLUS
CLOSING COSTS BUYS
YOU A HOME . V.A.
NOTHING DOWN, JUST
CLOS lNG COSTS. CALL
992-3325.
G. Bruce Tea lard
Helen l

AUCT ION Fnd oy 7pm New and
used merchondt~e ol Oh10
R1 ver Auctr on, 537 Hrgh St
Mrddl eport , Ohm

1976 DODGE VA N Ex cellent con
d ttton low mileage $3500. fn
gels Furn tture Store 992 2635

n1ce bedrooms Just right
for a family. Has a large
dming and sl tdl ng glass
doors to the sundeck.
Modern kttchen and large
corner lot

Located in Middleport .
$15,500.
•
TO THE MAN WHO
PLANS TO SELL - REAL
ESToHE
IS • OUR
BUSINESS,
NOT
A
SIDELINE . MEIGS CO.'S
OLDEST FULL TIME
REAL ESTATE BROKER.
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES ,
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND

A··m

Housing
Headquarters

PETE SIMPSON

ceram•c Ttle • Formica
Counter Tops - Cetltngs

AN

OUTBURST...

.,..

'

M

- cAPTAIN EASY

after

5

after 12 noon.

-1-12-l mo.

llUT

REYNllD'S
El£CTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

1'

ACRE 12 x 60 mobde home
neor De)( fer 992 5858
1

~ 1~-.' ~

sua:t;SS

.. . IS TJ.IAT MOST~ -­

MID H-'PPI~S I~ !..I Fe,

I

\IJOI.l~ IF ~1&gt;-T'?

B!:iW M"/

COIJ'T l&lt;eAUW IT W~~IJ
1\-lf?/ fi"'\Jf:i IT.

'

PI&lt;OS~M~

~

-

-

-----

1967 TOTAt ELECTRIC mobde
home
lurntshed, 3 bedr ,
wa sher ond dryer Atr condt
Ironed 1 lo t 210ft fron tage
$12 000 Phone742 2B2b

~

....

Albany, D.
Phone 698-6173
Davl!f ,Coleman
Agent lor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
. COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
1·26·1 mo.
Washington~~ ,

•

-

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

1955 Pr orr1e Schooner 28

K

8

bdc

1965 Gener al 60 ~~: 12, 2 bdr
1968 Elcono , 52~~: 12, 2 bdr
t969 Buddy 60 x 12, 4 bdr
1970 Syl vo, 6011 12, 2 bdr
1970 Ca stle 60 x 12 2 bdr
1973 Arlmgtorr 60 x 12 2 bdr
1973 Rtdgewood 70 x 1,.4 3 bdr
1973 Ktrkwood 50 K 12. 1 bdr
B&amp; 5 MOBILEHOME SALES

N ews 8; Young &amp; The Rest less 10, Not For Women

On ly 15
3~0ays of Our L tves 3, 15, As T he World T u rns 9, 10 ,

2.0Q-()ne Llle to Live 6,13
2 2So-News II. 2 Jf&gt;-Doctors 3.15, Guiding Lrghl 8,10.
I Love Lucy 17 .
3 QO-Another World 3, 15, General Hospital6, 13, Ltlta 5

Yoga &amp; You 20: Speed Racer 17
3 3Q--I\'.ash a, J oker ' s Wild 10 , Fllntstones 17, O tc k
Cavett 20
4 . QO---Mister Car toon 3 , Holl ywood Squares 15, Merv
G r iff in 6; Porky P 1g &amp; Friends 8 ; se sam e St 20,33 ,

IMYSALE I

Batman 10. Di nah 13 : Space Giants 17.
4:3D-Bewilched 3; Gill igan's Is 8; Brady Bunch 10,
Petllcoat Junction 15; Gll lrgan 's Is 17 .

rJ

l)

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form lhe surp rrse answer, as sug ·
gested by the above car1oon

I

PT PLEASA NT , WV
675 4424

-----

1968 TRA ILER 12 x 60 os is $3500
Good condttion Ca11 742 2806

Give Away
TO GOOD home Mole dog l ong
ho tr Block ond wh1le 2 yeor s
old 992 59q2
SEVt:N WH K old pupp1es Cute
Fa th er Husky
5 mole , 3
f ema le 992·2941
·
FIVE FEMAL E puppres Hemz 57 7
weeks old 992 2779
THREE PUI'PI ES Port Ch thuo hua
ond l emer mt xed B wee k ~ old
985·3884

Real Estate for Sale
HOUSE AND lot
furntl ure
household goods 7f:IJ laur el
St , Mrddleport
"

--------~

CORNER LOT located at rntersec
tto n ol SR 12.:1 · 7 and 33 m
Pomeroy , Ohio q92-2J49 or

992 2342

OWNER MUST SELL- The owner ot th1s :
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
home for a low, low price ol $20,000.: There
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
living room w - fi~place, formal dining, eatin kitcheJ1, bath- w -shower, garage &amp; a king
sized yard . Good location on Mill St. Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolis,
446-3643.

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

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom no.use with full
basement and 2 baths. Nal gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and large storage building . Price $21,500.
TWO ACRES-A beautlful4year ald. 2 bedroom home
wlfh large eat-in krtc.hen, - ~ bedrooms, all nlcelr
carpeted , 2 baths, full basement wlfh TV room . Many
more e xlras, low heat bill with nat. gas farced air
furnace . All this and two nice acres of lend In a good
locallon. Will go quick for $35,000.
..
ACRI:AGE - with large beef barn near Pomeroy.
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL- This may be your dream
home. It has a large kitchen with lots of cabinets,
stove, refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dining
room with sliding glass doors. Large living room and
family room, and to finish this well-laid out home we
have I lve bedrooms. utility room and garage. Very low
heating bill . Red barn-like storage building. Located
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy Just off Rt. 7.
Asking S55,000.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 1'12 story house,
completely carpeledwlth 4bedrooms, dining. room and
laundry room . Also almost new 2 car heated garage.
This home Is nicely located In Parlland and PRICED
FOR QUI CK SALE at $22,500.
.
LOTS - 1 At re and up near Pomeroy .
50 ACRES FREE GAS-Good 1112 sfory house with' full
basement. Large pond stocked with fish. Priced for
quick sale. SAO,OOO
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost new
kitchen cabinets. all nicely carpeted, laundry room. all
Insulated, natural gao heat, utility building, 2 lots.
$21,500.00.
Talk to 1 local real estate agent before trylnt to sell
your home. His experience can holp you. W. nHII
mony t(pes of proJ!erty, alve 111 .1 call.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 49-2311
or-NANCY JASPERS, ASSI)CIATE MIS4

MARTIN

DROWNED " ·

Yes terdays

SHE'D HAVf"

7 Jo-Hollywood Squares 3, Bonkers 6 , M atc h Game

AllEYOOP

..-----c

Services Offered

- - -- - _,- - - -

12 G r and-

I

Wfll CARE for the elderly rn our
_h~m_:__!~o~-:._?~:_!3 14
_
WATER WELL drd ltng w
- ,-lcl-oa_m_T
G ronl 742 2879
- - - -~-- .. - - - - TREE TRIMMING an d r emo11ol
742 3167 or 742-2573

S~VE

-~

ON

L~o:::c~~::..==L=:~~_j

CARPETING

GASOUNE ALLEY

ld be keerful

DRIVE A LimE

PUll-INs EXcAVATING~ Co-,.,pl; te
Servtce Phone 992 2.:178

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

who I call a ol'fool
aroun' here. 4ounq

&amp;.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
ca nce lled? lost your operators
ltcense? Phone 992 21 43

SAVE A LOT

E-C ELECTRI CAL Contractor ser v
tng Ohto Vo lley r egt on St)(
days a wee k 2.:1 hours servtce
Emergency co il s Coli 892 2952
or 882 2305

that heap o ut

o' t.h' wa4!

fella'!

'

As Low As

4.88 sq~~

1

All WH ITE ADULT long hatred

I
1

1

Buy - r e yo~ can come In
and- whal you're teHint
- 8 d Nt.cn.na-- fiully
slOe ked.

.fTO~

U$1NGo ,.HE-

.
'

!
0

•

1

ADDIQ"'-!

furniture.
used

furniture .

3. A Iorge building full •'
bjtautiful carpet.

33
11 DO-News 3,6,6,10,13, 15; Dick Cavell 20: Over Easy
33.
11 · 3D-Johnn y Carson 3, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13,

Yesterday's Answer
19 Bogart
29 ExllnguiSh
30 Bea u
role
21 Hoad
monde
:11
Honey
hazard
22 Helat1ve
badger
of chlorine
33 Seal
36 Scoundrel
23'1.ove story
31 Mm1ster 's
2S J abbered
26 Interlaced
wlk . abbr

Mash 8, ABC Ne ws 33 , Movie " An Ame rican
Dream " 10.

12 05-Co lumbo B; 12 ·2o-Movle " Blood Al ley " 17,
12 .40--Mannix 6, 13 .
3, 1 50--News 13 ; 2 so--News 17,
3·10-Mo vte " Battle o f Rogue Riber " 17, 5 DO--Dragnet 17

~Tomorrow

BRIDGE

Dangerous ploy that paid
NORTH

EAST

had

m naval

+ A2

+ 13

¥ A6

¥K 732

unw 1ll mgness to le t he r part ncr pl a y Gtt t~~ o clubs dou-

• 8·~

• Q J 10 9 163

t

WORK IN BRAZIL ...
MANY YEARB A60.

HEM
COMPANY J .IP~-1·-'-+"'ri

'

'
••'

·'

K

+ AJ

91

+ Qi0l 632
. ....
I SOUTH
• + QJ i0 9 6

One

letter simply .!!lan ds ror anot h er In this sample A IS
u sed f or the lhrec L 's, X for t he l wo O 's, etc Smgle l etters,
apostroph es , t he l en gth and !ormation o( the words are all
hmt s Each da) th(' cod e l C'tt ers ar e d1ff crc nt

Wes t

,.

Pass
Dbl

North

Db I
3+
Pass

KDV

an

bl ed It wa s dangero us from

slcmcipum t. F our d i-

ca pe btd mtg ht well be m
troubl e A c tu HII y, she cou ld

her last t w o hea rts m
dumm y and mak e four dia ruff

monds, but South s1mp ly
"' cnt to f our ::i pad es .

East

South

Pass
2t

I+
Pa ss

4+

4+

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead +10

CRYPTOQ UOTES
ADHM

s h o wn

amonds w h1ch wa s her es·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's hon to nork it :
AXYDLBi\AXR
Is LO~GFELLOW

alr eaci ~

an oth e r

" QJ 9
t A 2
+K75

W K V H U - By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
DY
VIH
YEVEUH
YHUH
N W VI
Here IS a hand from 1937.
East
was Maggoe Stengel.
AUQC
DK
WM
Q
JEV
GDE VI
West was her Sister, the late
Helene Scranton.
FHDFZH .
DY
DZA
FUHMHKV
VIH
Maggoe, now Mrs Maggoe
Weth erbee, and He lene re-BQXHM
Y H W J Z H X Q K ally operated on their unforYesterday's Cryptoquale: ONE SWALLOW DOESN'T MAKE A tunate opponents .
Maggie's two-doamond
SUMMER BUT IT OFTEN DOES' BREAK A NEW YEAR'S
rescue
of her partner's twoRESOLUTION.-SOURCE UNKNOWN

wv

WITI-1 TI-l E

dub ov t•r call was n I'dther
Ub\.o!UU :oi bill
!Je r dwmond
suJt t:o uld almos t wa lk by
tt scl f
ll cr ne xt b td of four clu bs
w,ts safe 111 on e respect S he

WEST

• 10 B54

IWMVDUG

11-IATS RIGHT..
ASAM ININ6
SNGINE-E-1&lt; ...

I II

+ K B7 5

1-ll

• ACCORDING ID WA !'&gt;HINGIDN 1
. Ml&lt;:5. WRIGHT, YOUR HUSBAN IJ
APPLIED FOR A PA55POI&lt;T TO

-:::c---- -

_ _ O_sw
_ald Jacoby and Ala~Sontag _

32 "Oh, I cook
33 low
34 Pa lm leaf
3S Destroyer,

. Rutlana

im.AND FURNRURE
Nice S&amp;lections of

'

8f:GoMe AN

WINNIE

2.

parental
6 Fnend,
111 Nantes
13 Isolate
1 Offense
14 Assembled
MForsa ken
IS Sault 9 Arranged
Mane
16 Clo ck beetle
In fO\\o S
J7 Magtc1an 's II Grow old
IS P1tman
word
specia list .
19 Wm ~ ·:.; deli18 Philatelic
cacy fr
1lcm
20 Type of b1ke
22 Wheat
r:--r;-r.-"'l'l'p1oduct
24 Ac!ress,
Cheryl 25 Furthered
27 Frolic
2M Gardenmg

0

YO&amp;# GAR HAf

RURAND
FURNITURE

WE O~FER YOU ...
1. Two full floors of all new

10 : 30---- Be st of Groucho 20; Talkmg Walls of Pompelt

5 H a~kma n

$

ADDI,.IVf:S, ,Stft.

lAt.K-TO
Wendell or Herb Grlfe
or Gene Smith

'74z-:1211

Baskelba ll 10; Missron Impossible 17.
8 3D-Makin' II 6,1 3.
9 00;--{:)u incy 3, 15. Barn ey Mil ler 6.13; Palestine 33,
Movie " Bailie ol the Bulge" 17 ,
9:3o-Soap 6,13. 10 DO-FJmi ly 6.13. Barnaby Jones
8,10, News 20

,.F~RA~NK~~~~~----------~~--~~~--,---.-~----------------------~38Crate
•39 Italian
:t'M
AfRAID
IT'S
'T'OO
@&gt;~$ 0 00/b ocr?n~
£-ATE FOR Y'ou '1"0 •

\AII14H&gt;I1

--~

Movie " M r . H orn " P art 1 8, N ova 20,33 , College

jargon
37 F ot

Floor Cowering In Stodl

Give Away

8. $100.000 Name That Tune 10; Nashvill e On The
Road 13; Dolly 15.' Sanfocd &amp; Son 17
a·oo-C rrc us Super Heroes 3,15, Mork &amp; Mrndy 6,13,

need

9' and 12' Vinrl

7 weeks

'--~-

Rubber Back Carpet

A ND po1 nttn g

male co t gen tl e, lttter lramed
Ye llow and whrte smolll emo le
col, litter trorned Two mont /- •
old cute all block femo le kttten
M ergs
Human e
Socie ty .

qot two secon's t bacfl

All carpet )nslaOoea with
padding at no char••·
Ex...rt lnstelletlan .

MOBILE HOME repotrs Furnaces
elec tn ca l work , ptpcs sowed
_ _pl~~b~n~~~· ~B~B ____ _

FfVE FEMALE pupptes
old ~2 · 2779

Syle IS: Carol Bur nell 8. Friends 11 . Hocking

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Tolle holder
I Applaud
_ _,__ 5 Hcmge ·
2 Hodgcrs and
10 A road' s
Hart song
sehola r·1
:1 E bb
=-------,- - - - . II Zodoaca l
4 Campa1gne1,
s1gn
for short

698 7331

!9!·7b80 __

Son s 17
7 . oo--Cross Wtts 3, Newlywed G a m e 6, 13, Mar ty
Robbins' Spotlight B; New s 10, Lo ve, Amer 1can

Jumbfes DU CHY SYNOD ABU SED GLOOMY
Ans wer What th e banana plan l er th ou ght ht s worker s
were - AGOOQ BUN CH

Valley Bluegrass 20 , Wild, Wild Wor ld of Antmals

~ ~--~----.!!!:~';J.

BAT HROOMS AND Kttchens
remodeled cerom 1c Ide, plum bing , carp en try , ond general
momtenonce
13 years eMper rence 992-3695

__,_____ ---

XX X J

33

·if-

l:x

TWO ABANDONED co ts both
tong hatred , beout1ful , female.
I wh tte wtlh gray morktngs the
other bl ock wtt h o little whrle.
_ ~.'!.m~n e__So_5 1e ty

I

DIED .. ,

cavo ltn g
sepl tc system s WATER AND mtsc hou hng Coli
9'12-5858
doler backhoe d ump tru ck
f1 mes ton e, grovel
blacktop
pa ving Rt 143 Phone 1 (61 4)

-992
- -2592
-

6·DO-NewsJ.a,10,13,15; ABC News6 ; Andy Griff tlh 17.
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6·3D-NBC News 3.15: ABC News 13. Caro l Burnell &amp;
Fr iends! , CBS News8 ,1 0, Over Easy 10, My Three

(An swers tomorrow ]

HELPE D HER .

"ulO 11o rrucK
Repair
A'lsD Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

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

AND

mue oH Kr. 1 .~n:·t:...U on

OLD BARGE
HADN'T BEEN
HERE, I'D HAVE

Son B; Elec Co 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd
Couple 15, Beverly H1llbllltes 17; Doctor Who 33

o.

- - --· --..-""-----

HOWERY

COST A PREHY P6NNY
"' '1fl ROCK Y THL S
ME THI S WOMAN IS
NOTHING TO YOU ..

Print answer here: [

HM · M ·.. YES '"
AND IF YOO HAON 'T

s · ~l Dream of Jeannie 3, -Bever ly H tl lb tlli es 8,
Mister t&lt;oger s· Neighborhood 20,33, Gomer Pyle
10; Btonlc Woman 13, Brady Bunch 15 , I Dream of
Jeannie 17
5 3D--Carol Burnett &amp; Fr iends 3, News 6, Sanford &amp;

COLJLD ~E eeEFY
FEMALES.

ITOEGEA!

St. Rl. 124 towaril Rutland,

StWING MACHINE Rep01rs. ser
vrce ell makes 992 2264 The
Fabrr c Sho p
Pomeroy
Auth o r111~ d Sr nger Soles ond
Servr ce We sharpen So s sor~
I::XCAVA TING dozer loader and
backhoe wo rk dump trucks
ond lo-boy s l or hire wrll houl
ftll dtr! , to sotl , hmestone ond
grovel Colt Bob or Roger Jet
fer s, doy phon e q92 7089 mgh t
p~o~e 99_3 ~5~5 _
or_ 9?_2_ 523~. _
E:XCAVATING dozer, backhoe
ond drtcher Charl es R Hot
fte ld
Ba ch Hoe Ser vtce
Rutland Oht o Phone742 2000

WELL. IF HEt\'

All TljrS E GROCER IES

UARAGE

Sweepers , toa ster s, rro ns, ol'
smoll apph onces l awn mower
neK t to Stole Htghl.voy Gorag•
on Route 7

Tomorrow 8,10: Elec . Co 20,33 . Movie " A Man
Coul d Gel Killed" 11 .
DO-Holl ywood Sq uar e~ 3, Al l My Children 6,13,

I I I
I I

ROGER HYSEll
~

e.

Restless 8, M tdday Maaazlne 13, Love
AmeriCan Style 17; Know Your Schools 33 .
12 3D-Ryan's Hope 6, 13 ; Password 15; Search for

JETEC

Blown InsulatiOn

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

ol Ule 8,10; Sesame 51. 20. 11 :55-CBS News
House Call 10, N ews l7

~

,.,

~

•

BRADFORD
Auc honeer Com pl ete Servu::e Phone 9A9-2487
. or 949 2000 Ro cme , Ohio Cntt
Bradf ord

$20,000 Pyramid 13.

11 ·JQ--Wheel of For tune 3, 15, Family Fe ud 6, 13; Lo ve

I WAULF !
I........
(]
....... . . . . ... ... .,, .....

,, BORN LOSER

1·19·1 mo.

Busmess Serv1ces

6 ; Magazine 8, 10;

n:·oo-HIQh Rollers 3.15; Happy Days 6,13

&amp; the

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-MUTUAL AID
Mobile Homes for Sale

11
10 OD-Card Sharks 3,15, Edge ol Nrghf 6, All In The
Family B,IO; Dating Game 13; Movre " Our Very
Own" 1710 3D-A ll Star Secrels 3,15. Andy Griffi1h

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~~~ ®
by HennArnoldandBob l ee

10 Years Experience

Cell!.olosic (wood' fiber)
Therma I insul~fion·
: Save 30 pet. ta 50 pet.
.
on hutlno cost
EKperlencund
fully Insured
Free EJJ.
call991-2172
'
11 -3-1 rm!J

9 Jo--Brady Bunch 8, Hogan ' s Heroes 10, Green Acres

ltlt\i1.\.ft )e)';l W

,.

992-7S83

JIM KEESEE

13,1 5, Emergency One 6, Hogan ' s Heroes 8; Matc h

Game 10; Lucy Show 17

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one leltet 10 each square, to form
tour ordtnary words

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L

6 55-

n ·oo-Newscenter 3, Jeopardy 15; News 6,1 0, Youn g

MasOOtary W9rks

11-9-1 mo.

13,

Leave It To Beaver 17 , Sesame St 33

11 · 00----N ews 3,6,8,10,13,15 , Dtck Cavett 20 ; Hogan ' s

General Repairs

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC•

West V Irg i n ia

B 3t&gt;-Hazel 17 ; 9 DO-Merv Gr llfln 3: Phil Donahue

8,10, Vanishing Flock 33.
to·oo-Vegas 6,13 ; Kaz8,10; News20; Energy War 33
10 JD-Ral Palrol 17, Turnaboul 20.

For competitive Prices
HOme Remodeling

220 E. Moin Street,
Pamoroy,O.
Call992-7113
For Free Estimates·

6 So-Good Morning,

Hockey 17.

,.

Black Woman 10

Chuck Wh ite Reports 10: News 13.
7 DO-Today 3,15 , Good Morn ing Ameri ca 6,13;
Thursday Morning 8: Schoolles 10; Three Stooges
17, 7 15-Weafher 33.
7 Jt&gt;-Family Aflalr 10. 8 DO-Capl . Kangaroo 8.10,

9.00-Movie " Viva Knlevel! !" 3,15, Char l1 e' s Angels
6. 13; One Day At A Ttme 8,1 0 ; 9 30---Jeffersons

..

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

For You

6·Jt&gt;-Romper Room 17; 6 4So-Morn lng Report 3,

Incred ible Hulk a, 10, Great Performances 20, NHL

VOU'VE GOTTA GET
HOLD OF YOURSet..-

12-31 · 1 mo.

A New Home Built?

WJOTr
APPLIANCE li

YOU~ FATI-IE~ ~

Weekends

P . M .~

PTL Club 13, 5 55-Sunr ise Semester 10

6:DO-PTL Cl ub 15; 700 Club 6,8, 6: 1o-News 17; 6.2s-

The Judge 10, That's Hollywood 13 ; Wild Kingdom
15; Mac Nei l-Lehrer Report 20. Co ll ege Basketball
33
a.DO-Crrcus Highlights 3,15; Elghl IS Enough 6,13,

&amp;W ING ME '" I' L ~ KIL~ YOU,
OUT AND ATT"A , IF IT '~ THE
DOWN!
LAST THIN6 I DO!

!&gt;PICE '• WE KloJOW
MOW YOU ~&amp;&amp;~­
THE cAPTAIN WA5

Tyree Blvd ., Racine, Ohio,
Phone 949-2111 . Ev.nlng

PII&gt;NE 742·2328

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 1, 1979
5:4D-Worldal Large 17; 5:4s-Farm Reporll l : 5·5D-

Friends 6, CBS News 8, 11); Over Easy 20, My Three
Sons 17 .
1 no-Cross-WI1 s 3; Newlvwed Game 6. 13 . Porter
Wagoner a, News 10; love, Amertcan Sty le 15,
Footsteps 33 ; Edward the K mg 11 : Big lireen
Magazine 33 .
7 3D-Doll y 3; . Malch Game PM 6; Muppet Show 8,

SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGMS

1Suspended, Texlurel - Tile
- Floors · Paneling &amp; Trim.
Quality Work You Can
Depend On ....

WALLPAPERING
Coll 742 2328

..

Salts.

Armstrong Carpeting

1-4·1 ma. ( Pd .l

house . East end ol the
county on a good country

Yard Sale

current

contact

992-2356

NEED STORAGE? - Oul

Cllrk

Pianos. Saltl &amp; Service.
(New &amp; 1Jsed). Service on

Your HeadquarteiS For

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.

a n eat little locatton for a
small business and li ve
up st a t r s . Wonderful
opporfun•ty on Main Street
Sma ll amount down

Lower

Thinking Of Having

18 Ye•n Experience
Will Mike
service Calls

992-3325
216 E. Second Slreet
YOUR CHANCE - To own

&amp;

Orvau , Story &amp;

- Room Additions-Custom Remodeling-

~ OflMfR

road

IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer
wont to buy o r sell SQmethrng.
oe looktng for work
or
wha tever
you' l l ge t result s
fo ster wr th o Sent1 nel Won t Ad
Col1992-2156

At. TROMM OONST.

"::~~:~:;f

REAl EST ATE LOANS VA
No
money
d ow n
( elrgrb l e
Vc tNen s) FHA A s l ow as :Jv
down (all no n Ve tere ns and
general publt c) To purcha!.e
r' cof e ~ tat e o r reft nonce 30
YEARS TERMS lRH A NO MOR
TGA G ~ CO
77 E Stole Sl
Ath ens Phone 61.:1 592 3051

H1mmond

13, 3 45-Movie " Passporl1o China " 17

5 Jo-Caral Burnett &amp; Friends 3: News 6. Sanford a.
Son a. Elec Co. 20 . Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd
Couple 15; Beverly Hillblll res 17 ; Doctor Wha 33
6 00- News 3,6,8, 10, 13 ,15 Andy Grlffilh 17 ,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
·
6 3D-N BC News 3,15, ABC News 13 , Carol Burnell 8.

BVTNOT
I

1. 25- Movle ' Only Two Can Play " 17; 1 50-- Ne ws

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31,1979

WAS

.......
........
......:

11.3f&gt;-J ohnny ~ arson 3,15. Po ll ee Woman 6.1 3. l&lt;ock
ford Files B: Movie " Rio Conches" 10, Movie
" Killim with a Whip" 11
12 ·4Q-Mannl&lt; 6,13, Ko}ak a. 1 DO-To&lt;)lorrow 3.

TELEVISilJN
VIEWING

IR RATIONA_L,

~ ARM ~ OR

firewood Has a modern
double wide home and a log

WANTED TO buy Used por tabl e
sew tn g mochrne 9q2 5786 or
992.2529

-

HILP WAN11D

f iG HT FOOT truck toppe r, 36"
hrgh $135 Paul ltse Succe!.S
Hd
Ree d !.v ille ,
OH
6 t.:l 667 3544

TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce fo r stondu;g
sow h mbe r Ca ll 992 5965 or
_K':n!_ H_o~br. :· ~?_:8_?7? . __ _ TWO PIECE green lr 11mg roo m
Su1te · Very good condr110n
OLD FURNITUR E 1Cf boxe~ br o~s
Herald Osborne 985 39 15
beds, •r on beds desks etc ,
compl ete households Wrrle AP PROX 90 acres ol coo l and
MD Mtl ler , Rt 4 Pomeroy or
fore st land
Adtoc ent t o
co1 1992 7760
Pagevd ie OH Wrrt e Box 24 3
- - - - -..-------Sy1ocuse O H 45779
OlD COINS p ~cke t watc hes,

Case No . 22,319 .

On January 25, 1979, tn the
Me 1gs County Probate Court ,
Ca5e No
72.319, E l i zabeth
Ann Lucas, Rt . 1, So x 107,
Rutland, Ohio 45775 was
appotnted Adm lni strator w1th
Wlll Ann exed of the est ate of
Ral ph R carman, d eceased ,
late of Minersville , Oh ro

THRH BW ROOM framP home rn
Mrddlcpnrt Col i 99'1 :J4S7

CONDITf ONED mt:wed hoy $1 15
bale 742 2873

( 1) 31, (2) 7, 14, 3tc

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF RALPH R.
CARMEN, DECEASED

Business Services

Coli '192 7481

W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

FOUND
RACINE
l emol e
Shepard dog wecrmg coll ar
Ev1den tly obedtcnce fr amed
949 1244

Auto Sales

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10
ESTATE OF EDNA MAE
RHODES , DECEASED
case No . 22585 .
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

• notice

..

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

4P.M

( I ) J1 (2 ) 7, 2tc

armies.
In 1917, Germany served

it was beginrung a
policy
of unrestn cted
submarme warfare in World
War I.
In 1943, the turrung point
for tbe Soviet Union m World
War II came as Joseph Stalin
announced a victory over
German for ces at Stalingrad.
In 1950, President Harry
Tl'uman announced he had
ordered development of the
hydrogen bomb.
In 1967, West Germany and
communist Romania
renewed diplomatic relations
over the objections of East
Germany.

SNOW
TIRE SALE

and changing Sec lio n 12, Su b s ect •on B. to remove al l
prevtous la nguag e relatmg to

Attcsl

'

Monday
Noonon&amp;tturday

mod ifyi ng

r ates and rep l ace with the
fo llowing .
" Gr antee shall c harge
reaso nab le custom er rates,
and shall ft le a copy of such
rates Wtlh Council, such
charges to be as foll ows :
Private Residence, Single
set se r v rce
. $7 . 00 per
mont h
Se n 1or Ct t izens Se r v ic e
Home 1n wh1ch the Head of
the Ho usehol d tS 65 years or
older ... 75 percent of the
r eg ular monthl y ra te
01Sabil1ty Specta l Ser v 1ce
Hom e m w h tch the H ead of
the Household is ce rtrf ie d as
permanen l l y an d to tal ly
d1sabled , und er de finitions of
the u . s
Department of
Health ,
Educalton
and
Welfare, or IS sufferi ng from
a
serviCf · Con n ec t ed
disabilit y
exceedtng
60
percent as de ftne d by the U
S Velerans A dminrs tratio n
75 per cen t of lh e r eg ular
month l y rate
Each A ddtttona l set tn each
dwell.ng unit, si ngl e family
r esidence . Sl 00 per mont h,
per sel
Add tl •onat serv tces tor
Frequency Modulation (FM )
and ·or Stereo Radio or other
broad c asting
Sl 00 per
monlh , per set
Comm ercta l rat es, apart
ment ra tes and rates for
m ulti family dwellings and
und er gro und
will
va ry
Wtde ly , and no fixed rates a re
there fo re a ppl icabl e
Any adjustment of th e rates
set forth herem shall be only
wrth the approval of Council
Sec
II
That th rs Or
drnance is her eby determined
to be an emerg ency measure
necessary tor the tmmed tate
preserva tion of th e peace,
h ea llh , sa fety and general
welfare of the m habitants of
th e Vtl lag e and t or the reason
th at it rs necessa r y that this
legtslation
become
im
mediately effe cl i 11e . and that
ma ll other respects extst tng
rn ! hei r entirely w tthin sa rd
Ordinance ,
! hat
satd
pro11 1Sions sha ll be conlinu1ng
u nder' th e terms and con
dtt tons set forth th eretn
Sec 111
T h ts Ordrnance
sh all tak e effec t and be m
for ce from and after Jan uar y
22, l979
Passed th e 22nd d ay of
January 1979

ONE FURNACI: MASTER wood
burn er , regular $4 95 now
$400 One auto Rod• ont wood
heat er
reg
S199 95 now
$1 70 00 3 Cool Master stoves
wood or cool re gular $378 55
now S300
Gra 11e ly Troctor
Sol es , 210 Condor Pomeroy
992 2'175

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

CABLE

Be it or dained by th e
counc tl of the Vt llag e of
Mtdd lepor t as foll ows
Sec I That the existi ng
f r anc h tse
ordman c e
be
mod tf ted and changed to
tncrease the r easonable rat es
charg ed to subscribers-by the

1979 Marl $1 fo r eac h and a

WANT-AD

Heroes 17

'

THE
COMPUTER

-~--------

GHAVH 't' TRA CT OR ond mower
Hoy for sol e 949 23t.B

~'Your

DICKTRACY

. -

BIDS WANTED l o r mstol lotton at I :
I
dy
Rocrne Qentol Clmtc For on ,
MobtleHomesa ell an 1:1.rdsales
are
aceepted
only
with e11sh with
formot to n, co II Mr . Benson
order 25 cenl charge for ads carryafte r 10 om Monday thru Fndoy
Jng Box Number tn Care of The Senat OVHSF , Alhen ~ .
Oh1o
tmel
61 4-592 4457
The Publisher rclH!rves Lhe nghl
MEJGS CO
Ftsh and game
to edit or rejedany ads deemed obmeettng. ot the Club Hou se on
je\."ltofllll The Publisher will not be
February 1, 1919
Shade Rt ll'er Road Soturdoy
r~runble for more than one IncorA more-ac ttve- than-us ual sorect msertlon
nrght Februar y 3
---·--·
Phone 992-21:;&amp;
eta! sche d ule ts hkely th• s

.

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedncs&lt;IH Y.. Jan .. II , 1!17'1

'F or Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Notices

Hdene doubled She kne w
lhal her partn er 's four"Club
call ha d sho" n a vood and
Helene expected t u bea t four
spad es a tnck or so
Things worked out much
better . Th e 10 of clubs lead
was one of those ( brand new
back in 19371 sUit preference
Signa ls So after Magg oe
ruffed the club she led back
a heart to Helene's ace .
Another club ru ff fo llowed ;
then she cashed her kmg of
hearts a nd led a third heart
for He lene lo ruff The s1ster
team had five tri cks m with
the ace of trumps sllll m
reserve a nd \\- ere plus a nice
t1dy 800 points.
1N! WSPAPRH F' N1 1 ~ B PJWWASSN

(Eo• a copy ol JACOB Y MOO·
ERN . send $1 to
'Wm a t
Bridge
care of thss newspaper, P 0 Bo)( 489 Had10 Cs ty
Statton N ew Yor k N Y 100T9 )

© 1979 Klnl Features S,.ndlcote, Inc.

BARNEY

YO'RE JEST SAYIN'THAT
'CAUSE I BEAT 1./E SIX
TIMES STRAIGHT
see the Grate Family at

"

HERE'S WHERE ALL M'&lt;
MONTHS OF TRAINING
WILL COME TO USE ...

THE FIRST THING THE\'
TAU61-lT US WAS TO SEEK
COVER IN THE CLOUDS

1

YOU BEAT ME SIX
TIMES CROOKED!!

�12-The Daily Sentinel. MiHdteport-Pmn eroy , 0 ., Wt•dn•:sday, .J~n . :11 1n79 •
coal industry," Patton sairl .
He said Consolidated has
permanently laid off 719 men
in the past few years, "and
another 700to 800 jobs hang in
th e balance," awaiting the
EPA's decision.
James McEvoy , the new
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) utilities to meet strmgent new
VP.rbal fireworks erupted federal emission standards at head of the Ohio EPA, said
1uesday during U. S. their coal-burning power his stall has been meeting
w1th representatives of the
Environmental Protection plants.
Agency hearings on Ohio air
Possibilities being federal agency but have not
pollution when Jame s con sidered include allowivg reached agreement on
Friedman, an attorney for the utilities to burn low- em1ss1on levels to be required
Cleveland EUuminating Co., sulfur , non.Ohio coal, or methods to be employed.
"Our goal is to clean up tile
testified.
requiring them to b\lfn highFriedman,
a leading sullur Ohio coal and install air, " McEvoy added. " I hope
spokesman for the utilities in sc rubber!S to clean the some sort of compromise
their battle to prevent the em issionS; and requ ire solution can be reached to
EPA from forcing them to burning high-sulfur coal with accomplish this."
install scrubbers, was a combination of scrubbers
Several miriers ' wives
interrupted repeatedly by and other pollution control testified that they feared
their husbands would be la1d
shouts from the crowd o! equipment.
off
if the switch to non.Qhio
several hundred persons.
Ralph K. Patton , vice
During the day-long session president of Consolidated coal is allowed.
on cleaning up Ohio air , the Coal Co., Ohio's largest coal
utilities blamed EPA, the mining firm , urged the
miners heckled the utilities federal agency to take action
and the coa I companies quickly .
preached gloom and doom .
Patton said Consolidated
Friedman accused the EPA would lose 91.4 percent of its
of having made up its mind sales in Ohio if the utilities
long ago to require the switch to non.Ohio coal.
utilities to install the
" U you force Ohio utilities
expensive scrubbers.
to burn eastern Kentucky
The hearing was the .third coa l or southern West
called by the federal agency Virginia coal you will kill a
to hear testimony on its plans significant portion of the Ohio
to force Ohio 's seven major

Verbal fireworks
erupted Tuesday

Speed Queen

WASHER &amp;
DRYER
SPECIAL

pr .
(Not exactly as pictured)

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport. 0 .

IlTTEN II Mf.ETIN(;
.Ju~ m Wolf(·, Mrs. Onruw
.Jnl•n-;ml, M1·s .J:tr1l' Wa gnt'l".

Halph ani! ror» W&lt;'i&gt;h, and
William and (,uuist• Sh•wart.
membel's uf Rnri rH' ChaptL•r

IJ4 ,Order nf lht' F.aslern Sta r.
.altmule&lt;lthe dislrid rnt•t'ling
and st'h&lt;M&gt;l nf inslrudinn held
Tm•sday at Athens . Mrs.
Sh~ wart

was installed cts
pr ~t'SJJcht of distrid 25 (ur
1979.

SE;EK DIVORCES
Two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
common pleas court.
· Filing were William W.
Hawk, Rt. 2, Racine,.against
Winifr ed
Lynn
Hawk,
Pomeroy; Pauline Von
Freinstein, Middleport ,
against Karl Von Freinstein,
west Columbia, S. C.

1I_

HERMAN W. REES
Mrs. James Rees, Sr.,
Rlleine, returned horne Sun·
day after a month's stay in
Mayslick, Ky . due to the
len gth]~ illness and death of
her father-in -law , Herman
Winchester Rees.
Mr. Rees was born on May
27, 1899 and died Jan . 14. He
was a prominent retired
fanner and land owne r in
Mason Counly,Ky. Surviving
are his wife, Anna Clift Rees,
three sons, James Scott Rees,
Sr., Raeine ; John Clift Rees,
San Angelo, Texas; and

SELDON FLEMMING
Seldon R. Flemming, 69, 503 Kathnor
Lane, Point Pleasant, well-known
businessman and civic leader, died
Wednesday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Active in community affairs,
Flemming was chairman of the City
Planning Commission of Point Pleasant
for 20 years and was a member and
past president of the Mason County
Chamber of Commerce. He also was c&lt;r
O\VTler of the Moore's stores in Point
Pleasant, Ripley , Pomeroy and
Marietta . He was chainnan o! the
Planning Commission since its inception.
He was born JuneS, 1909, at Marietta,
0 ., the son of the late Lucy and Edwin
Flemmin~ . He was a graduate of
Marietta College and worked with the
U.S. Agriculture Marketing Service in
Ohio, New York, Philadelphia and
Boston. He served as a captain in the

THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
of Middleport in the state of Ohio, at the close of Business on December 31, 1978 published in
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
Section 161.
Charter number 8441
Nat1onal Bank Reg ion Number 4
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Cash and due from depository institutions .. . .. . . . . . .. . .. . .. .. . . . . . . . .. . .. 1,468,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ................ . .. . .... .... . . .. . ...... .. ...... 2,428,000.00
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions in the United States . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. .. . . .. . . .. .. . . . 1,963,000.00
All otber securities ...... ... .............. .. . . . , .. . .. ...... .. . ..... ...... . . 30,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income ) .... ... .. , .... •... .. . . 7,152,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses .. .. . . .............. . .. .... 82,000.00
Loans, Net .. , . . .......... .. ..... .. .. . ........ . . .. ..... , ..... ..... .. . 7,070,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises. . . . .. . .. . . . ................ . .... .. . .. . 88,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises ... .. . ............................ 1,000.00
All other assets . . . . . . . .. . .. . ................... .. ........... . . ..... .. . .. . . 7,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . ... 13.055.000.00

IU

-c
-...
II

.
1

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
and corps.. .... .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. . . . . .. . . 2,796,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals
prtnshps., and corps ...... . ................ . . ......................... 8,204,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ...... .. .. .. ..... ......... . ............ . 6,000.00
Deposits of States and political
subdivisions in the United States ............ ..... .................. .. .. . . . 468,000.00
All other deposits .. ....... : . . .. . . ... . ...... .. . ............ , ... . . , . . . ... . .. 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ......... .... . .. . . .. . .. ........ , . . .......... . .. 18,000.00
Total Deposits . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .......... .. .................... 11,497,000.00
Total demand deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .......... . 2,988,0QO.OO
Total time and savings deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . .... 8,509,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... $100,000.00
All other liabilities ................ . ........... .. ........ . ............. . .. .. 10,000.00
TOTAL UABILITIES (excluding subordinated
-:':-::-::::-:::::-::::notes and debentures ) . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. ..... 11,607,000.00

z

c

IIC

0

\ IIU
I

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness o! this statement o! resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the !J&lt;:st o! our knowledge and
belie( is true and correct.
.
·
RoseS. Reynolds
Rodney Downing - Directors
Bernard V. Fultz

.

)

hegemony or domination of State Cyrus fl . Vance rode 'lbc t wo co untrws " reafover others."
With the Chinese vice premier firm ed that they arc opposed
The communique called !rom his guest quarters at to effort s by any r:o tintr} or
ttie talks between Teng and 1 Blair House to a presidentia l group o f co untries to
helicopter waiting on the Mall estab li sh · hegemony or
Prcsid~nt Carter "cordial.
construct1ve and fruitful. " between the Washin gton •· domination over others.''
Teng was greeted at Monwnent and the Lincoln
Teng's Atlanta vi sit
Dobbins :Air Force Base, Memorial.
marked the ;tart of a crossout side Atlant a, by Gov .
The communique issued country tour as central to the
George Busbee and Atlanta by the United States and ( 'hlncsc leader' s state vts it as
Mayor Mayn~rd Jackson who C.'h ina noted the two s1des' h1s talks with Carter and key
gave him a key to the city. · "differing perspectives" on mem ber s of Congress
There will be a bit of
Teng left Washington after some int ernational areas. But
three days of high diplomacy it repeated the language often barb ecue · in Texas on
to ·see another side of used by the Chinese to in- Saturday , but Tcng won't be
America . His departure was dicate mistrust of, and op- spending a lot of time with the
muted but proper. Secretary posllon to, the Soviet Union ordinary people the &lt;lorn-

e

Repairs
eligible
deduction

Mayor's Court
Seven defendants forfeited"
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
They inctuded Jelfrey
Roush , New Haven , $370,
posted on a pharge o! driving
while intoxicated, and $500
post ed on an assault charge;
Virgil Phillips, Middleport,
$30 , illegal turn; James
McDougle, Pomeroy, $3 2,
speeding; Frank Miller ,
Zanesville, $50 disturbing the
Ilface ; $100, intoxication, and
$200, destruction of property;
Mary Bacon, Middleport, $30,
speeding ; Michael Stewart,
Cheshire, $38, speeding, and
Clifford Icenhower ,
Pomeroy, $50, driving while
under suspension.
~

•.

improvements

were

\

NO. 203

~till

the

prol etariat
Instea d. he will be seeing
captain s of in~ ustry. space
offidul s

and

newspaper

lm ~inc ~s tlt •Bl~. \~ u rth

millions

&lt;&gt;f do ll ars.
"'l11e Cluncsc intend to pay
lor cver)1hmg they bu y,"
saal a U.S . official.

Two-way trade - ~t a
publiohcf' on his trip to
Atlanta, llouston and Seattle. record $1 billion 1n 1978 - IS
He will tour plants that turn expected to spurt to an
out Ford autos, oil·dnlhng _ estim ate $1 6 billion and
eq uipm en t and jumbo perhaps even beyond as a
Jetliners befor e leavmg for . result of Tcng's tour . say U
S. orficials.
home Monda y mornmg.
The v ice pre mi er wil l
f,lc wi ll be sizing up
Amer ican assembly lines for travel about in a very unadaptation to Chinese needs. prolctari;m li mousine and
And he and his aides will be rest in fancy hoteb that
arrangmg the guidelin es of would be as unrccogmzable

•

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP) - An Ohio chemical
waste firm is expected to begin work this week to
remove more than 1,000 drwns o! hazardous materials
from a southwest Jefferson County farm. State
environmental officials have signed a contract with
Newco Chemical Waste Systems o! Ohio, Inc. to
remove 1,1116 full and empty drwns !rom the farm .
Kentucky Natural Resources Secretary Eugene
Mooney said the contract is for about $20,000,
depending on how many truckloads it takes to remove
the barrels and how long the job takes. The contract
includes 274 filled ~~rums and 832 empty ones, he said.
The firm also will remove contaminated straw and dirt
from the farm .

Darvon not that effective
WASHINGTON (AP) -A group of drug experts
says Darvon appears no more effective than common
aspirin and says abuse .of the popular prescription pain
reliever has been implicated in a number of deaths.
The Senate Small Business subcommittee. on
monopolies was to hear further vieWpoints today on the
drug, once the most popular pain reliever prescribed
by doctors.

Kidnapping never discussed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- Patty Hearst's fiance,
Bernard Shaw, says the couple have never discussed
what happened during her fugitive life after she was
kidnapped by the Syrnbionese Liberation Army in
February 1974.
"!told her I had no interest in it," Shaw, a 3().yearold policeman said Tuesday during an interview in his
parked police car. "I told her I felt she was not guilty of
anything , and that's the most important thing." .

Materials buried today
WILLIAMSBURG, Ohio (AP) - Material declared
hazardous by Kentucky officials, who ordered it out of
the state, was scheduled to be implanted in a landfill
here today amid protests from at least two sources.
However, Ronald Reinke, sales manager-chemist
for Newco Chemical Waste Systems of Ohio, said there
was no danger of contamination from the firm's
Clermont Environmental Reclamation Inc. landfill.

60 percent ·approved

WESTERN SHIRTS
•

'1595
Made with ex.tra long tail, lined collar,. box pleated front, tapered
with box sleeve opening, pointed Western flap pockets, pointed
Western double yoke - pre-shrunk: Si~es 14'12 to 17.
'

cuff~

Be sure to see all the other styles Men's Western Shirts, Men's and
Boys' Depl. - lsi Floor.

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

'

•

111

AtJ&lt;mta

Ford

•v
ACE DOORS - There are garage door s and garage
doors, but the epitome of them , or at least near the top In
Meigs County are those of Mr. and Mrs. Durward ·
Cumings, Route 3, Pomeroy . The Cumings ' garage doors

reduce wage rates ; limit
employment in a public job to
18 months, and encourage
private industry to participate more with the
government in creating new"
jobs.
"CETA's record over the
last two years has not been
unblemished ," Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall said
in presenting what he dubbed, "The New CETA."
"Any program as large,
diverse and decentralized as
CETA
will
encounter
problems," he said. "But I
strongly
believe
that
government can .- and
should ~ learn !rom its
mistakes. Particuiarly in a
time of tight budget doll~rs,
we cannot afford to continue
wasteful and ineffective
programs."

Most o! the changes were
ordered by Congress last fall
when · It approved a three-

feature pamtings which turn them into aces from a deck of
playing cards. The aces were painted free hand by
Durward with no particular idea in mind. He has ca rried
out a fa ce card "bit" on several porch boxes at the home.

Director applicants sought
"M' e1gs
County received until4 p. m. on Feb.
Commissioners announced · 9.
Forms may be obtained
today they will begin taking
applications immediately for from th e Commi ss ioners'
a
County
Welfare office and returned to the
Administrator I (Director ). commission clerk no later
Applica tions w111
be than Feb. 9.

A list of requirements for
the
position· includes
developing and implementing
eoticy
and
general
proced ures; preparing all
statistical and fiscal reports;

refl ected on the one-month-

chairman of the Ford Motor
Co . Jnd .I Paul i\usun ,
chainnan of the Coca-Coli:!

old ties with the United States
and said "the honeymoon will

C'ol . whi ch has JU St acquired
at least a temporar y
monopol) on soh drmk sales
m Chma

Pleas Judge John C. BaFon
sentenced Swearingen to a
term of 2-5 years in a proper
state penal institution.
Swearingen was rem a nded

l'ontmuc."

With President Cart er. he
signed scientific, cultural and
consula r agreements in the

East Hoom of the While

Tcng was certain to run
mto demonstrations along the
way , from support ers of
Taiwan as well as Com·

atomic part1cle accelerator

murusts who find h1rn too

for h1 gh - · energy physics

House.

Among oth er thmgs, these

w1ll allow l'hma to buy an
l Contm ued on p£tge 12 1

undoctrinatre for the1r ta st es

15 CENTS

Commissioners
hear problem
train in g

program

co mmuni ty
activities; make speeches,

to the custody of Sheriff
James J . Pro!!itt pending h1s
remova l to the Medical and
Reception Center, Columbus,
later this week.
Jur ors

were

Ca rol

F.

vot e for such an expt·ndJturc I
want to see a &lt;:o py of th e
rcq utrcment · ·

Buehl stated he wou ld
check tho tnattcr and report
back later.

County Engmcer Wesley
Buehl. who is supervising lh e
plat map project , advised the
board that 10 percent of the
grant money would have to be

Buehl and eomrnJss1oncrs
also di ~(· ussed the need for a
major d1tching proJeCt On
county roads .
' !11(' engineer agree d t hat
such a proJ ect \\as bt~d l y

spe nt for a t raining progr am

needed and that hiS depart-

for employes workin g on the
project.
Hi cha rd J ones. Commission Pres ident . sa id he
could not understand why th e

lhl' proJect thi s spnng
Bob llailey. EMS coo r-

advised

of

Ucin ~

such

a

requirement. sint:e emplo) e~
ha ve·nu w been work mg on the
progra m some th ree mo nths

ment would be undertakun:(

dtn&lt;:ltor . dJsc ussrd billings of

Sl:OJ-:MS for

I(S

contrat1

scnitcs t,o Mc1gs C ount~ .
Rn il ey \\las in structed to

contat1 th e SEOEMS office
a nd verify the Decembe r

"This is the fl r;1 t1me I

billing and inform the i.Joaru
of the outcome.

have been adv1scd of such a
reqmrement lt would seem

HenrY Well s. and Jim Housh,

At t endin g

we r e

to me that 1f some F ,500 was

CommiSSIOners. &lt;mel

t o be spent to train employes

Hobstettcr. Clerk

such traming should have
taken place before the work
developmg and implementing began , not after the program
an annual budget; direct, is approximately one-half
implement and monitoring completed," Jones sa1d.
Conlin uing Jones stated,
county welfare programs;
"
It
appears to be another
select, train and promote
burea
ucratic waste or taxpersonnel ; participate m

various

Swearinge_n found g.u ilty
After deliberating 31
minutes, a Meigs County
Petit Jury Wednesday found
Don Swearingen, 21, Ht I,
Rutland, guilty of breaking
and entering
Swearingen was charged
with the Novem ber 1978
breaking and entering of the
Ja ck E. Warner property on
Lambert Hollow Road m
Sci pio Township.
Meigs Count y Common

On Wednesday, hiS last full
day 1n Washi ngton, the 74year·old Cni nt·sc lea der

Il l,

mtsswn.

pay er s money, and before I

maintain co nta ct with
representatives of sta te
departments and county
officials.
Applicants must have
knowledge o! (I) budgeting,
(2) inventory control, (3)
management, ( 4) employee
A dinner m eeting to di se uss
training and development,
improvements
to th e po&gt;1
(5) supervision, (6) public
home
was
held
Tuesday
ni ght
relations, 17) office practices
at
Drew
Webster
Post
39,
and
procedures,
(8 )
American Legion Home.
government structure and
Some 18 directors, past
process, (9) sociology and or
commander s a nd interested
social work , ( 10) ability to
post mem bers attended the
deal with some abstract but dilUier,
pr epared by Pau l
mostly concrete variables,
Ca~i. Dramagc was con( 11) understand tec hni cal
manuals, (12) establish a sidered the number one
friendl y atmosphere and priority necessary for the
reso lve com plaints !rom home.
i\ committee composed of
angry
citizens
and Charles
Swatzel, Char les
government officials.
Hayes and Rod Karr was
M inimum
class
requirements for the position named to study solutions and

hnprovements
outlined for
Legion home

Jo11es,

Mary

Dedication
set Feb. 10
Masons of the 12th Masonic

Distri ct will put 1n a busy day
on Sa turduy. F ell 10. when
Dunicl F. Icema n. grand
master of Oh w Ma son s.
d cd il' &lt;:~tcs
the tustorica l
marker in f run t of Mornmg

Dawn Lodge 7, l:alilpolls.
The Gallia i\cadcmy band
w111 be on hand for the event

wh1ch IS open to a ll Masons
Pi erce, Kay Ryan, Sharon
and their wtves, Ga llipolis
Mtch ael , Vicki Houchins,
Mutilated child
residents and d1gnitari es. ,
Helen Swartz , Patricia s·.
At r·oo p m .. Mason s and
Pape, George II Per ry ,
th
e ir wives wi ll h osl a
succumbs today
Robert B. Burdette, Howard
reception for Mr. Iceman at
S. Stevenson, Jane Swatzel,
th e Rio Grande Co ll ege
DALLAS [AP ) - An 6- Jack L. Clark and George F.
Cafeteria . The dinner is also
year-old Dallas g1rl, severely Wolfe.
open to members of Job's
Daugh ters. the Ha inbow
Survey underway beaten in an attack that also
caused the death of her
Girls and DeMolay.
The Eastern Local Board of brother , died early today.
The Grand Master will
Education will surv ey
A spok~sma n at the Dallas
present awa rds fo r the out•"
parents in the Arbaugh County Medical Examiner's
sta ndin g Job 's lJaught er.
AddiUon near the Tuppers offi ce announced the death
Hainbow G1rl and D~Molay
Plains School regarding and sa id an autopsy will be
make recommendations
m
e mb er.
Th e
Ma so ni c
are as follows : thr"' courses
possible changes in school performed.
- ~~
Considered
the
second
Scholarship
Aw
ard
will be
in management • supervls10n
bus service.
Aimee Gray had be en
or three months experience ; prionty it e m in im- present ed
Any parent s who do not hospitalized in criti cal
Ticket s for the dinne r are
one course in public re lations provement s was t h e inreceive a survey letter should condition !rom multiple inor one month experience; one sta llation of additional $5 and reser vations should be
contact the superintendent's juries . including a skull
heating -air conditioning and made with the r espective
Sheriff James J. Proffitt course in office practices and insula
office and request that the fracture and punctur ed
tion.
secretary of each lodge 1n the
r eport s deputi es a re in - procedures or one month
survey letter be mailed to lungs.
A
post.
member,
Dr.
Clyde
four counties making up the
experience;
one
course
in
vestigating the theft of a set
them.
Clifford Cecil Gradi, 11, tlie of wrenches from a truck goverrunent or one month Ingels, was reported confin ed di st rict, Me1gs, Gallia ,
girls's brother. died Monday own ed by Clarence Atherton , experience; one course in to Holzer Medical Center.
Lawrence and Jackson.
of injuries he suffered in the !.ong Bottom.
social work and or sociology
Jan. 12 beatmgs. Police said a
The t ruck was parked at or one month experience; one
screwdriver had been di-iven Old Town Creek, the theft course in speech or one
into h1s skull through an eye. occ urred sometime between month
experience
or
Kathleen Gradi, 32, mother 2:30p.m. Tuesday and 8 a.m. equivalent.
of the children, is bemg held Wednesday.
Meigs County has
in lieu of $200,000 bond on a
without
a lull time ·
year exten!ion for CETA.
The department received a
CETA , the largest public charge of attempted murder. complaint from Ray Miller, since the resignati of
jobs program since the Great Dallas County prosecutors Portland that a 1979 15 hp Barbara Shuler, arlier thi
Depression olthe 1930s, has a went before a grand jury Evinrude motor, gas can and month . The offi is being ru
budget of $10.3 billion this Tuesday to present evidence two life jackets were taken by a veteran e ploye, Mr .
year to create 625,000 jobs in an attempt to upgrade the from his boat tied up on the Norma Louise well.
and provide other assistance charge against her.
Ohio Hiver at the John
to the unemployed.
Proffitt Landing The inThe Carter administration
• d dents are under In - Rep. James will
has hailed CETA lor helping
vestigation .
reduce the nation's jobless
Cloudy tonight and Friday,
attend session
rate. But the program also with a few flurries tonight.
'· State Representative Ron
PRICES DROP
has come under att ack !.ow near 10 and high Friday
Jam es 1D-Proctorv ill e)
HIPLEY,
Ohio
(AP)
because of Widespread in the mill 20s. Chance of
alUiounced
today that he will
Both
volume
and
prices
abuses that have mcluded • snow is SO percent tonight and
attend
a
meeting o! the
declined
in
the
la
st
full
week
theft, ernbezdement, k1ck· 2D percent Friday.
of sa les at Ohio 's only burley customers of Buckeye Rural
backs, the' hiring of ineligible
tobacco. Total sa les Wed· Electnc Cooperative Feb. 4,
people, distribution of CETA
nesday were $136,590.30, for a at 2 p. m. at Rio Grande
jobs for political and other
hundredweight average of College.
improper purposes and bad
SCHOOLS OPERATING
$126.68.
.
Hepresentative James said
management:
•
Jill
schools
of
Meigs
County
Sales for the week were he will discuss his findmgs
Although no acc urate
·estimates are available, it is were open for classes today. 956,194 pounds for $752,0 lli.53, r egarding t he continuin g
believe d that millions of However , some buses in the an average of $126.48 per , study of operations of
UNUSUAL CHARACTER - Most people make
Buckeye Rural Co-Op. All
fed eral dollars hav e been three districts were unable to hundredweight.
snowmen,
but in this case it is a ~now teddy bear. It was
make
their
entire
routes
due
customers
of
Buckeye
Rural
The
market
will
not
reopen
skinuned from local CETA
made
by
Mr.
and Mrs. Ken Jacks, Syracuse, and their two
to
additional
snow
which
fel,
l
Electric
until
Monday.
it
will
close
are
welcome
to
'programs because of fra ud
daughters, Chasily and Candy.
ovrrnig ht.
aftC'r Sfl lcs -Tucsday .
attend .

Deputies

checking

complaints

CETA overhaul announced
By OWEN ULLMAN
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGTON (AP )
The Labor Department today
announced an overhaul of its
CETA public jobs and
training program in an attempt to eliminate shoddy
management, fraud and
· other abuses that have
. plagued the $10 billion
· program.
Key changes in CETA which stands for Com·
prehenslve Employment and
,. Training Act - include a
· shakeup of top management
in Washington , improved
monitoring
or
local
· operations to spot fraud, and
new rules that speclflcially
ban nepotism, politica l
patronage and other abuses.
Other changes set tighter
: eligibility
requirements
; geared more tO' poor, long. term unemployed people ;

Henry

boa rd \\as j ust now

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The cross-country
traclorcade of protesting farmers failed to make it to
Wheeling , W. Va. Wednesday night, and spent the night
at a mall near St. Clairsville in Belmont County.
The farmers originally plalUied to spend the night
at Alderman's Airport, but local health authorities
nixed ·the idea and the' farmers were diverted to the
shopping mall ,
The farmers praised the escort service provided
by the Ohio Highway Patrol for the 9!JO.vehicle
tractorcade as it moved over Interstate 70.

WILMINt.iTON, Ohio (AP)- Consumers shouldn 't
grumble about projerted higher beef prices, a
Wilmington Colleg~ agricultural economist cencludes.
Such prices, which may start showing lip this
spring or summer, will be the indirecfresult of earlier
actions which were cheered by many consumers,
according to Dr. Donald Chafin, chairman o! the
agriculture department at Wilmington College. Chafin
explained that President carter several times eased
import ~strictions on bee!.

Blue Denim

•

Tractorcade continuing

Consumers shouldn't grumbl

ME~'S

A

WASHINGTON (AP) - Government officials,
faced with continuing shortages of Iranian crude oil, .
are considering a ban on Sunday gasoline sales and. a
variety of other measures reminiscent of the 1973-74
Arab oil embargo.
Energy Secretary James R. Schlesmger said
Wednesday the C~~~:ter arl!ninistration.will. ()ecide by
APril I whether to impose mandatory conservation
measures. But he said such actions would not be
nellded i! the public voluntarily saves fuel.

NEWPORT NEWS, Va . (AP~) - Steelworkers at
the giant Newport News shipyard have struck in a
wo~k stoppage that clim'axes a year-long dispute over
the rigbt of the United Steelworkers union to represent
17,000 blue-collar workers.
About 100 pickets from United Steelworkers Local
8888 set up picket lines in front of all the shipyard's
entrances before midnight Tuesday, the union said.

were

A

Considers ban on gas sales

Steelworkers strike yards

luncheon guct&gt;t s

scheduled

problcm lor CETfl workers
mvolv ed '"th the plat map
project was discussed at
Tuesday 's regular meeting of
the Me1gs Cou nty Com-

PLEASANTON, Calif. (AP) - · For Patricia
Hearst, today promised release from prison and the
first taste of freedom in five years- neither terrorized
by kidnappers, stalked by the law nor shackled by the
state.
.
The newspaper heiress was expected to leave the
federal prison here on the arm of her fiance, police
officer Bernard Shaw, accompanied by' her attorney
and two bodyguards. In Hillsborough, about 40 miles
away, her parents, four sisters and friends planned a
champagne brunch to celebrate the homecoming.

Dmm removal forthcoming

SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) - Sixty percent of
Rhodesia's white voters approved the new constitution
promising the black majority. eventual control of the
country.
About 66,300 o! the 94,700 registered voters cast
ballots in the referendum Tuesday, and results from 37
o! the SO districts showed 85 percent voted 'yes."
Results from the other districts were expected today.

•

Hearst released from prison

Nationwise·-

Among _ h1s

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY I , 1979

WASHINGTON (AP ) -John J. Gilligan, former
Ohio governor, has submitted his resignation effective
March 31 as administrator of the Agency for
International Deve lopment, it was announced
Wednesday.
The agency said in a statement that President
carter accepted the resignation with regret, but that
carter plans to nominate Gilligan "to an important
post in the•field of international· economic affairs" in
the next several days. No details were provided.

HIGHEST HONOR - Bill Young, right, received a
Jaycee International Senatorship Award, the highest
given by the Jaycees Saturday night when the Meigs
Jaycees held their first charter night banquet at the Meigs
inn. Making the presentation was Herb Schul, director o!
Jaycee District &amp;-B.

at honlc as a man from Mars.

en tine

at

Gilligan resigns position

ELBERFELD$

'I

VOL NO. XXIX

muni st Iemler would

Nationwise

made

MEE'f. SATURDAY
The Western Boot Citizens
Band Radio Club will meet at
7 p.m. Saturday at the
clubhouse.

--1

Carl 'v. Gheen," Jr., 19,
Pomeroy, was lined $20 and
costs on speeding charges, 40
in a 20 mile zone, when he
appeared before Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday night. Forfeiting a
$25 bond in the court, pasted
on a charge of running a red
light, · was Carolyn L.
He} nolds. 3ti. Racine.

(USPS 145-960)

Hom eowners making
structural repairs on a leaky
roof or winterizing living
quarters by installing storm
windows will be eligfble for a
state income tax credit i!

during 1978 and cost at least
$300, remmds Edgar L.
Lindl ey, Ohio Tax Com·
missioner today.
Senate Bill68, enacted July
24, provides a tax credit once
every three years for Ohio
U.S. Air Force, 35lst Bomb Group, and
homeowners making home or
was stationed in England during World
energy-saving
repairs and
War II.
improvements , so long as
Flemming was a past president o! the
they Increase or maintain the
Rotary Club and a member of the
value o! the property and are
merchants division of the Chamber of
in the tax year for
completed
Commerce, the American Legion and
whi
ch
the
dedu ction is
Minturn Masonic Lodge No. 19, and the
claimed.
Presbyterian Church of Point Pleasant.
The tax credit amounts for
He was also a member of the Mason
5
percent
of the "total cost"
County Development ~Authority board
of the "home improvement",
of directors.
but the credit may not exceed
Survivors include his wife Trl a
$65. The law also stipulates
Ffemmmg; a sister, Mrs. Florence
th at the credit not surpass the
Engle, Marietta, 0.; and several nieces
hom eo wner' s state tax
and nephews.
liability.
He was preceded in death by a
"Home improvement " has
brother, James Flemming.
been defined to include
· Arrangements will be announced by
repairs or alterations of the
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
foundation floor , walls, gutter
In lieu of flowers, the family is
or roof. It also includes the
repair of installation of
requesting donations be made to the
windows, doors, insulation ,
Memorial Fund of the Presbyterian
electrical wiring, plumbing,
Church.
hot water heaters or furnaces. Construction of a room
Hospital News
storage area or garage that IS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Irene Null , physically attached to a home
Tuppers Plams; Lisa Allen, is also considered a home
Portland; John Edwards, improvement.
But, carpeting, painting or
Pomeroy ; Charles Evans,
Pomeroy ; Patsy Hul'iey, the installation or conCheshir~ : Thomas Walker, struction of items not men·
tioned in the above list-are not
Rutland.
Discharged
Donn a eligible for credit.
Ohio Tax Commission er
Roush, David Sorrell, Paula
Derenberger, Millie Price, Edgar L. Lindley may
require docwnented evidence
Gladys Cuckler .
for the credit, mclqding
Holzer Medical Center
certificatiOn
by the county
Discharges, Jan. 30
auditor
that
the
repair was
Frances Boring, Ada ,
actually
made.
-, Marcella Ferrell, Mrs. Neil II maximum 30 day jail
Frieder and daughter,
Richard Fuller, Floyd· Gehr· sentence or a fine of up to
ing, Gregory Gibbs, Rosean- $250, or both, may be
na Gibbs, Lona Harris, assessed to any individual
Thomas Haynes, Asa Henry. found guilty o! making a false
Velma Keller, Samuel Nance. claim .
Charles Pyles, Tina Rhodes,
Mildred Russell, Sadie Stelle,
John Stivers, Rebecca Tyree,
SQUAD RUNS
Charles Williams, Ollie
Th e Mid dle port
Wiseman, Mary Woolf.
Emergency Squad went to
Births, Jan. 30
the
Village Manor ApartMr. and Mrs. William
ments
at 4:05 p.m. Tuesday
Anderson, son, Pomeroy.
lor
Vivian
Phelps who wa s
Mr. and MRs. Charles
tak
en
to
Holzer
Med ical
Orerder, daughter, Jackson .
Center.
Mr. 1 and Mrs. Jeffrey
At 9:49 p.m. the squad went
Yearian, daughter, Jackson.
to
Route l, Cheshire, for
• Mr. and Mrs . James
Patsy
Hurley, who was taken
Broome, daughter, Mid·
to
Veterans
Mem orial
dleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crace, Hospital where she was
admitted.
daughter, Vinton.'
Mr. and Mrs. James Kinnison1,daughter, Hamden. ·

Amounts' outstanding as of report date :
Time certificates of deposit in denminations of
$100,000 or more ................ . ..... . ................. , .. . ........ ·. ... 300,000.00
Average for 3D calendar days (or calendar month ) ending with report date:
Total deposits . .. .. ........................ . . .. ... , .. , , ........ , .. , ... 12,lii,OQO.(l0
I, Manning Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
belie!.
·
Manning Kloes
January 10, 1979

1

I

Clarence Collms Kees,
Mayswiek, Ky., a daughter,
Mrs. William (-Charlotte )
Schweitzer, Ashland, Ky ; 11
gra nd children, a nd
lo
greatgrandchildren .
Funeral services were held
at the Pallrner-Brell Funeral
Home in Mavswick with mternment in· the Mayswick
Cemetery
Going from here were Mr.
and Mn;. James Rees, Sr.,
Mr. and Mrs. James Rees,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Willford, Mrs. Gordon West,
Racine, and Douglas Rees,
Syracuse.

Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 2,000
,
b. No.sharesoutstandings 2,000 (par value) ....... , ............ ..... .... 100,000.00
Surplus . ........... .. .. . .................... : .. .... . ............. . .. . ... 900,000.00
Undivided profits and.,reserve for contingencies
.
and other capital reserves ............................. ._ .. : . ... .... . . . . $448,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .................... . .......... .. ............. . 1.448.000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13,055,000.00

c
Ci

organization, included, left to right, Bill Childs, banquet
speaker ; Dale Kautz, Theodore T. Reed, . Jr., Dick
Follrod, Roger Morgan , Don Mills and Virgil Brown, a
past state president.

MARIETTA, Ga. (AP) Chinese Vice Premier Teng
Hsiao-ping began his tour of
American business and
technical facilities today .
arriving on a frigid day for a
visit to an automobile plant
and a luncheon with
businessmen.
En route, spokesmen for
the Chinese and Amencan
govermnents issued a joint
press communique in which
the co untri es " rea ffirmed
that they are opposed to efforts by any country or group
of countries to establish

I

Area"Deaths

-

.-.-....

CHARTER MEMBERS - Tbese charter members of
the Meigs County Jaycees, organized in 1952, were on
hand Saturday night when the group held a charter night
banquet at Meigs Inn. The group, np longer active with the

'
.
I
--------------------------

1

REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

4lt

Vice-premier Teng tours American .businesses

!\'Irs. Gn·lta Sunp.snn. !\1rs

Weather

••

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'

•

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