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10- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 20, 1979

Three life terms ordered
N~~WARK ,

Ohio (AP ) - A
Glenford man has been sen·
tenced to three consecutive
life terms in prison after
being found guilty on three
CtJunts of aggravated murder
in connection with the soca !led ". 22-&lt;:aliber killings."
Thaddeus Lewingdon , 42,
was found guilty Monday
night on a total of seven
charges, including thr ee
counts of aggravated robbery
and one comll of aggravated
burglary.
The three-week trial in
- Lickin~ County Common

Pleas Court ended shortly
after 7 p.m. when the jury of
fo ur men and eight woman
returned their verdict. The
jury reached the decision.
after deliberating for more

convit·tions.
The cha rges against
Lewingdon stem from the
December 1977 slayings of
Joyce Vermillion , 38, and
Karen Dodrill, 33, both of
Newark, and the April 1978
than 61·2 hours.
.Judge Winston Allen imme- death of Jenkin Jones, 77, of
diately levied the three life Granville.
The three slayings were
scnte~ces . He also ordered
Lewin gdon t o serve four part of what has beCtJme
terms of 7-25 years on the known as the " ,22-&lt;:aliber
robbery
and
burglary killings" in which 10 persons
in central Ohio were ~illed
charges.
Court officials said Lewing. with a .22-&lt;:aliber pistol.
"We ask you to find the dedun instructed his attorney,
Gary Tyack, to appeal the fendant guilty of each and every one of the charges," LickIng County Prosecutor David
Lighttiser told the jury.
Calling the slayings "cold,
planned robberies and
assassinations,'' Lighttiser
C&lt;mnection said: "They took reminded the JUror s that
everyU1ing - television sets, Lewingdon "did admit full
color consoles, everything." and complete responsibility."
The owner, who declined to
During the trial, which
·be identified, said he and two · started Jan. 29 , a tape·
assistan ts were going to r ecorde d statement
spend the night in the store. Lewingdon
made
to
;'We' ve
got
enough Columbus police was played
anununition for an army. for the jury . In the statement
Machine guns. Everything ," Lewingdon told how he and
he said.
hi s brother, Gary, carried out
Shortly after the curfew the slayings with robbery as
went into eff ect, police their motive .
broadcast a report that the
Gary Lewingdon, 38, of
Ce ntral District jail, the . Kirker sv ille , is
under
largest in the city, was filled indictment on the same
with loote rs.
charges in Licking County.
"I think they declared
The brothers are also
World War m on us," said cha rg ed ·with aggravated
Officer David Buschman of murd er. in five shooting
the Western District, where deaths· in Franklin County
37 persons were arrested and one in Fairfield County.
before dark.
Gary Lewingdon is charged
Police Co mmissioner also with a loth killing, the
Donald Pomerleau donned a sixth in Franklin County.
cowboy hat, found a horse
Lighttiser said Thaddeus
and joined members of his Lewingdon had kept a pair_of
mounted police division, fingernail clippers from the
reportedly helping break up purse of one of the female
at least one looting party.
victims in Newark.
Elsewhere, police plowed
"The evidence shows three
through the snow in four- lives have been taken for $338
wheeldrive vehicles driven and a pair of nail clippers,''
by National Guardsmen.
the prosecutor said in his
closing a rgument.
Tyack, in his closing state·
ment, contended · that the
Hos pital i~ews
prosecution had tried to play
on
the jw·ors' emotions.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - ,Wanda Powell,
Racine; Joseph Rudolph ,
Albany; Debora Lawson,
Pomeroy: Maria Foster,

Police arrest looters
BALTIMORE I AP ) - Hundreds of persons have been
arrested in more than 700
reports of looting after a
record 20-inch snowfall
crippled the city.
Mayor William Schaefer
imposed a Hl-ho ur curfew
beginning a t 7 p.m, Monday
" in the interest of public
safety." About 100 Maryland
State Police helped city
police.
· By . early this morning,
police spokesman Dennis Hill
said 302 persons had been
arrested - 232 of them for
curfew violations. He added
police received nearly 1,000
reports of looting.
State's Attorney William
Swisher ·advised officers to
charge each person arrested
in looting inCidents with
breaking and entering, which
carries a maximum sentence
of 10 years in jail.
Police said liquor and grocery stores, bakeries, auto
supplies and furniture stores
had been hit .
Looters were seen lugging
a
refrigerator
down
Pennsylvania Avenue. In the
Old,town area, people carried
armloads of clothing still on
hangers through the streets,
the Baltimore Sun reported.
The looters included , two
middle-aged women hauling
a large piece of furniture, still
in its cardboard packaging.
One woman said she didn't
lmow what it was, Hbut
whatever it is, I'm going to
take it home."
The owner of The Furniture
j.

FANTASY BLAMED
CINCINNATI (AP )
Bruce Baltzer was acting out
a fantasy of his own kid·
napping when ·he held a 3year-old child for ran som last

Pomeroy;

Winnie

Neal,

Pomeroy ; Naomi ·Bissell,
Long Bottom; Sampson Hall,
Sy racuse ; Beulah Collier,
Dexter; Madeline Neece,
Middleport; Patrick
O'Connor, Racine.
Discharged - Frederick
Stobart.

Holzer Medielil Center
Discharges, Feb. 19
summer,
a
defe nse
Mrs. Terry Brannon and
psychologist contends.
daughter, Bernard Burcham,
Dr. Robert Tureen testified Joshua Ca rdwell, Flossie De·
in Baltzer's kidnapping trial ment, Tiffa ny Ha rvey·,
Monday in U. S. District Joseph Hemsley, Patil Rees,
Court that Baltzer had Mildred Ruston, Shelly Skid·
become obsessed by the . more, Terra Thompson ,
knowledge that he was Wififred Winifred Vallance,
adopted.
Jacob Weinberger.
Births, Feb. 19
Mr. and Mrs. Robin Byers,
daughter, Thunnan.
MEETING CANCELLED
Mr . and Mrs. James
The meeting of TOPS OH Zornes, daughter, McArthur .
570, Pomeroy has been
Mr . and Mrs. Steve James,
cancelled for this evening.
daughter, Ewington.

i

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

ANNA MAE TERREll.
Anrta Mac Thomas Terrell,
52, died Monday at Ucking
County Hospital in Newark.
Mrs. Terrell was born June
2, 1926 in Meigs County. She
was preceded in death by her
father, William Thomas. She
was a member of the
Columbia Center Community
Church. ·
She is survived by her
mother, Elizabeth Guess, Rt.
4, Pomeroy; two daughters,
Mrs. Bill (Ruth Ann) Spaun,Pomeroy; Juanita Terrell,
Pataskala; grandson,
Shannon Spaun, Pomeroy,
and several ni eces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Thursday at 1 p.Il'l. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Lowell Lewis officiating.
Burial will be 'irl Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call
at·'the funeral home after 2
p.m. on Wednesday .

-- ~-·--·"

-·

._

Iran oil
may· flow

returns home

in future

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) The crew of Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavl's personal
Boeing 707 jetliner flew the
plane back to Tehran from
Morocco today and delivered
it to Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini 's revolutionary
forces, a spokesman for the
new government said.
The spokesman said the
crew "hijacked" the plane
but he would give rio details.
He said the crew was escorted
to
Khomeini 's
headquarters.
The shah was at the
controls of the plane, which
he had named Shahin or
Shah's Falcon, when he and
Empress Farah left for
Egypt on Jan . 16. After a visit
to President Anwar Sadat,
the royal couple took the
plane to Morocco, where they
and the rest of their family
are now guests of King
Hassan II in Rabat.

Livestock Report

(USPS 145-960)

TEHRAN, Iran ( AP)
The new chief of the National
Iran Oil Co. said today that
petroleum exports will
resume after the ''necessary
studies "
have
been
completed.
The appointmment of
Hassan Nazih to head the
giant stateowned company
was announced by Prime
Minister Mehdi Bazargan.
Nazih did not say when the
studies would be finished or
what topics they involved.
Nazih , a former associate
of the National Front Party
that
opposed
Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, is
a htUnan rights activist and
president of the Iranian Bar
Association.
Iran had been the }VOrld's
second major oil exporter
after saudi Arabia until the
general strike called by the
Ayatollah Ruhollah khomeini
against the shah shut off the
flow on Dec. 26.
Since then Iran has
produced enough oil for
domestic use and has
exported only small amounts
of tanker fuel.
Bazargan said in a recent
interview
that
Iran's
revolutionary
goverrunent
wquld restime oil exports as
soon as.possible ''to all parts
of the world, including the
United States." But the prime
minister has said previously
that Iran would not sell oil to
Israel or to South Africa.
Before the strike, Iran produced an ayerage of 6 million
barrels a day and Bazargari
said it would be some time
before Israel would be able to
produce enough oil for
export.

sO?

TRY OUR ALL NEW
DR!VE THRU WINDOW
NOW OPEN

'
TRUDGING THROUGH WHITE STUFF - Boomer Smith, 4, and Ray Sayre, 6, are
shown making their way through a huge pile of snow while out playing Monday afternoon in
Syracuse. In all, approximately 10 inches of snow was on the ground af!er Sunday's wintry
blast.

Strike hurts· Mardi Gras

w ·EEH
FEB.17•24

PoMeroy, Ohio

In grateful acknowledgement of contributions made
to the growth of our community through guidance
of our youth, we congratulate
•

State Police troopers and
nonstrikers patrolled the city.
Officials said· the crime rate
remained low.
Garrett ' s
carefully
optimistic
report
on
negotiations was the only one
given. Both sides agreed in
advance to stop , insulting
each other in public announcements and let the
mediator do the talking.
Earlier, Mayor Ernest
Moria! took a glum view.
Announcing the cancellation
of tonight's elaborate Krewe
of Pegasus parade, he said
the realistic outlook was that
Mardi Gras itself also will
wind up canceled.
"You're talking about
$60,000 down the drain," cried
the captain of Pegasus when
told that his parade had
joined the list of strike

Youth injured

in accident
The · Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, was called
to the scene of an accident,
which is still under in·
vestigation, in Meigs County
on SR 248, four-tenths of a
mile east of SR 7, Monday at
9:30p.m.
Officers report that an east
bound auto operated by
Gregory Hayman, 17, Long
Bottom, ran off the left side of
the
roadway and struck• a
I
tree.
Hayman was transported
by a relative to St. Joseph's
Hospital in Parkersburg.
Hayman's vehicle was
demolished .

SET wEST '-

-.........Jill"~......- ®

a

• Conveniently·
sizod canisters with
decorative
mushroom motif.

·~ !:,:.a

. ..

• ·Saamloss

I

'

- ·.. ~·

~:

..

.....

I

· durable
polypropylene

.I

COVIll.
•,.

-~

1s111
.
,..

construction;

. 'i. p"'U!!!~
)
\ .

••OOLINIII't •

- --, .. .,'·~' • ·
. "• \,

aluminum

or'_,., . .,

:c-... ·•;:•••c•·....

111::•w ....

.

.. where crartsmen still eare""

Walk-Up ·Teller Window Open Friday Evl!'l)ings, 5 to 7 p.m.

&amp;b

(Continued from pa~e I l
said it would honor the peace
and friendship treaty it
signed with Vietnam· in
November.
Vietnam ' s
charge
d'affaires in Bangkok, Do
Ngoc Duong, said his
govenunent is in CtJntact with
Moscow but has not
requested Soviet troops.
Sources in Washington said
Peking had· not r~ded W
.
direct appeals from the U.S.
govenunent that it call of! its
invasion. But American
officials said they did not
expect the fighting to spread
far beyond the border. They
cited Deputy Premier Teng
Hsiao-ping's comment in
Tokyo two weeks ago that
Viebtam ''must be punished
for its actions," but that
China has "behaved with
restraint."

ELBERFELD$
CANISTER~•....._

'THE FRIENDLY BANK"

lnbens lfalional Bank·

casualties.
The costly processions,
with masked and CtJstumed
crew members riding the
floats .to fling doubloons and
other geegaws to the
imploring masses, are all
staged by private social
~&gt;krewes," a traditional misspelling.
Mardi Gras, French for Fat
Tuesday, comes up on Feb.
27. It is a splendidly boozy
street party which also ranks
as the linchpin of a $50 million
industry.
Though minus its W!ual
gaudy parades thus far,
Carnival, a party period
preceding the big basli,
staggered onward in the
Quarter
and
French
elsewhere.

Chinas
' •••

LOCAL FFA CHAPTERS

\

at y
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

•

enttne
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1979

: ,,

•·

):

Member F. D. I. C. Deposits Insurance to:_S40,DDO.

113-84)

'1695

HOUSEWARE - 1ST A.OOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Rep. Elizabeth
Holtzman departed for Hanoi today to discuss the
refugee situation and the fate of 5,000 American
dependents or passport-holders remaining in Vietnam.
The New York Democrat, chairman of the House
Subcommittee on Refugees, Immigration and
International Law, left Bangkok by commercial
airline .
,

Third suspect arrested 'NEw YORK ~ AP) - A third suspect was arrested
. early today in the $5.8 million robbery of the Lufthansa
German Airlines cargo terminal at Kennedy Atrport the largest cash robbery in the nation 's history .
FBI spokesman Quentin Urtell said Louis Werner,
46, of Queens was arrested Tuesday night as he left a
bowling alley in Lawrence, Long Island. Urtell srud
Werner offered no resistance.

Seven murder victims found
NEW YORK (AP) - The bodies of seven people,
some with their throats slashed, were discovered
Tuesday night in a three-story building in Harlem,
police said. There were unconfirmed reports the
deaths might be linked to the Rastafarian cult, which is
reportedly involved in -illicit narcOtics activities _in the
neighborhood.
.
Police said the bodies of one woman and six men
were found at about 7:20. p.m. Identities of the victims
were not immediately made public.

Court overturns judge's ban
BOSTON (AP) - A . federal appeals court
overturned on Tuesday a judge's ban on auctioning
offshore oil exploration tracts in the Georges Bank
fishing grounds of the North Atlantic.
The ruling means the U. S. Interior Department
will be able to sell rights to explore the deep-sea tracts
despite opposition from environmentalists and the
Massachusetts attorney general.
·

Thomas

applauded

PRESENTED GOLD PLAQUE - A. R. Knight,
owner of Pomeroy Motor Co., was presented a gold plaque
Tuesday by Ted Reed, president of the Farmers Bank and
Savings, on the anniversary of Knight 's Opening an
account with the bank 50 years ago, Feb. 20, 1929. The
plaque read as follows: "In appreciation of 50 years of

ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) Afte r announ c in g his
Athens County Sheriff Gary res ignation, Efaw, his
Efaw
submitted . his lawyers and the prosecutor
resignation this morning met with Athen s County
shortly before the first of six Common Pleas Judge Lowell
t rials on fel ony cha rges Howard in :m official court
session .
against him was to begin.
Co unty
Howard would have to ap·
The
Athens
Commissioners accepted the pro ve a ny plea bargaining
resignation and are expected arra ngement .
to name a temporary
The fir st trial was to deal
replacement for
Efaw with thrc&gt;e counts of theft in
sometime this afternoon.
office against the sheriff and
Efaw and his wife Betty, a a charge against his wife of
deputy sheriff; have been in- abetting one of them. The
dieted on a wide range of charges refer t o a ll eged
criminal coonts, including irregularities in the use of
theft in office. There has been sheriff's office funds.
speculation that· Efaw's
Five subsequent trial s were
resignation is part of a plea scheduled on charges against
bargaining arrangement the sh eriff of theft in offi ce ,
Continuous Business Operation of the Pomeroy Motor Co.,
worked out between defense complicity in for gery of over·
The Farmers Bank and Savings Co." Shown l-r , a re, Bill
attorneys and Athens County time records , trunpering with
Knight, a son , Mrs. A. R. Knight, Mr. Knight, Ted Reed,
Prosecutor David Frey.
evidence and eavesdropping .
Charlotte Dillard, his daughter and Vincent Knight, a son .
Deputy Robert Daugherty Mrs. Efaw, who was her husMr. aod Mrs. Knight have 15 grandchildren and two grea tis expected to be named as band's administrative aide,
' grandchildren.
EI a w's
t e m p or a r y also would be a defendant in
replacement. He would serve the forgery u·ial.
.
on an interim basis until the
Efaw admits he made miscounty's Democratic Central takes in administration but
Co mmit tee
na mes
a contends none uf t.he alleged
perma nen t replacement. abuses were done for self
at little cost to the village.
our . volunteer lire 'depart· Efaw's term in office would gain .
Presently pending with ment we have renegotiated have run through 1980.
1Contin ued on page 121
HUD is an application for aU of our flre c:nntracts so
1330,000 which would be used that a substanttal mcrease
to provide sewage service to has been made m the amount
lower Broadway St., Elm St., of money whtch ts recetved
I'
Page St. and Railroad St. by the village from fire calls
Lee McComas .and Bill
Jim Page of Fleming, Page
area.
outst&lt;lr the vtllage. Wtthtn the Childs, Middleport , were and Stult z, Engineers,
If this project is approved
next year a nc~ _ftre truck appointed to serve one year pr esented fina l design plans
by HUD, it would practically wtll t.&lt;· pu rcha~ed and patd terms on the Meigs County for the access road to the
complete the village sewage for from the flre levy and Regiona l Planning Com· multi purpose building.
system .
from the. Increased fire mission when Meigs County
Wes ley B ~eh l , count y
Also, thanks lo t he contracts. '
.
Commissioners met Tuesday engineer , also discussed the
operating levy which village
"I feel that our communtty night.
project wih the group.
residents passed, we have a can grow and unprove JUst as
The Commission received
It was decided to contact
systemati c yearly resur- much and as fast as we want just one bid for an emergency HUD to sec if additional
facing of streets which has tt to. Thts ta kes the medicalvehieleand thatwas moniescanbeobtain edon the
resulted in better roadways cooperation of all segments of from th e Hor ton Co.. project.
for our citizens to use.
vtll age government , a ll Columbus, in the amount of
The group discussed the
"I feel that maintenance Villa ge departments and the $24,612.61. The bid was tabled multi purpose building and it
and patching of streets has ctttzens wtthm the com· for further study.
was reported that the erecalso improved during the past muntty. I feel th~t I h~v e had
Scott Porterfield ·and Tom lion of steel will begin as soon
several years along cwtth thts cooperatiOn durmg lhe Lindstrom of. the Area VI as the weather breaks. All
snow· removal. " Mayor past few years and anttctpate Health Services discussed board members and Mary
Hoffman stated. Continu in g that it will continue in the possible health services and Ho bstctter , l'l e rk , we re
Hoffman said:
future to provide many mor.~ related· projects in Meigs present .
"Due to the cooperation of bcncf1ts to ou r commumty. County.

· d. I•d acy
Hoffman announces can
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today announced he
will be a candidate for the
office of mayor at this year's
June-primary election.
Hoffman has been mayor of
~in ce 1974 when
finished the tenn of the
Mayor John Zerkle 'and
was elected in 1975 to the
or&lt;eseJot term.
In armouncing his can·
didacy , Mayor Hoffman
issued
the
followin g
statement :
" During the past five
' I feel there has been
spl1endid cooperation between
the Village Council, Mayor's
office and aU other village
departments. I expect this
cooperation to continue
during the next four years
and am sure that this will
prove of great benefit to the
village."
During the past several
years many improvements
have been completed in the
village, several will be under
construction soon and several
are still in the planning

The Senate of the 113th
General Assembly of Ohio
has approved a resolution
extending congratulations to
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas on her
selection as Woman of the
Year by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
The resolution states, in
part:
"This a ward is fitting
recognition of Eleanor
Thomas's selfless devotion to
others. :,Wit~ seemingly
boundless ~ energy,
en·
thusiasm, and a wann and
BASKETBALL
Sweet·
loving heart , she has . heart · Queen
Bec·
willingly given of herself to
ky, Crow, a senior at
do whatever was necessary to
Southern Jligh, daughter of
guarantee success for the
Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Crow,
many organizations with
Racine, was crowned
which she is affiliated.
"basketball sweetheart
"The motivating force
queen" Saturday night
SQUAD CALLED
behind the establistunent of
during half-time activities
The Middleport emergency
the Meigs County Senior
of the reserve game beCitizens Center, Eleanor
tween Point Pleasant and squad answered ·a call to 628
Thomas has been responsible
Southern. Becky was Oliver St., at 1:06 a.m.
for obtaining the necessary
chosen by vote of the Wednesday for Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman who was taken to
local, state and federal
student body.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
funding to implement the
At7:49 a.m. Wednesday the
many worthwhile services
squad went to 528 S. Second
provided by the center. In
Ave. for George Hackett, Sr.,
addition, she is an officer in
who was also ,taken to
the Ohio Association of Senior
Rain ending tonight. Low
Centers, Meigs County's tonight in mid 80s .. Cloudy Veterans Memorial Hospital.
representative to Buckeye Thursday with high in low
Hills • Hocking Valley 50s. Chance of rain 50 percent
Regional Development tonight, 20 -percent Thursday.
District a trustee for the
OFFICES MOVING
Consortium for Health
Offices
of the Meigs County
Education in Appalachia
WOTING DECLINES
of Hea lth will be
Department
Ohio and a member of the
BALTIMORE (AP)
moving
next
Monday·,
.. Meigs County Regional Instances of looting have
: Planning Commission and dwindled in this heavily Tuesday and Wednesday
the ,Home Health Service guarded city, but a state of from the present quarters on
Advisory Board.
·
emergency and a curfew Mechanic St., to quarters in
'·'Eleanor Thomas's un- continued as officials clean the Meigs Community Mental
tiring and compassionate ·up after a record snowfall Health Center.
Meigs Countians having
efforts have not gone un· and widespread ransacking.
noticed by her many friends · On Tuesday, Gov. Harry business to conduct through
· and coworkers whose high HUghes declared a state of the department should do so
esteem for her as an ex· emergency and extended for · this week before the move
. traordinary individual is another night a 7 p.m. to 5 takes place or next. week
reflected In their nomination a.m. curfew imposed Monday after the move has been
of ber for this award."
by Mayor William Scha~fer. completed.

Weather

15 CENTS

Sheriff Efaw
•
resigns post

Discusses refugee situation

By BilL CRIDER
Associated Press Writer
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- A
police strike still held Mardi
Gras hostage today but a
federal negotiator saw some
progress toward a settlement
that would let the good times
roll. .
"On your first day back
into negotiations you don'\
make 100 percent progress,
but I am not disappointed,"
said mediator Ansel Garrett
after a six-hour session that
ended late Monday night.
Talks aimed at ending the
four-day walkout by some
1,100 of the department's
1,514 officers resume today .
City officials remained.
apprehensive that the
garbage
collectors
of
Teamsters Local 270 might
walk out in sympathy with
the Police Association of
Louisiana ,
which
is
Teamsters Local 253.
Mitch
Ledet,
state ·
secretarytreasurer of the
MEETS THURSDAY
Preceptor Chapter of Beta Teamsters, maintained .the
suspense, saying only that a
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet sanitation department
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the walkout was "a good
Riverboat Room of the Meigs . possibility.".
Branch, Athens County · A substitute force of 650
Savings and Loan.
National Guardsmen, 126

Middleport, o.

VOL NO'. 'XXIX NO. 217

•

It was agreed to grant a request for use of the Meigs High
School for U1e Southeast Distri ~t Oass A Girls Sectional
Basketball Tournament on ~'eb . 27, March 1and 3.
Linda Yonker was granted permission to serve as a judge
for the State VIC A Conference on April 27. The boa: d
purchased 20 servicE!' contracts for teachers to attend an
arithmetic training semimtr in June ,
"'he seminar is in conjunction with a Title IV.C fa cilitation
grant dealing with a special program for students to improve
quality of their arithmetic.
AGREEMENT TABLED
,
The board tabled an agreement with the Meigs County
Council on Aging for th e Senior Citizens Center.
During the discussion on the center - located in the former
Pomeroy Junior Higb schoo l, it was pointed out that only one
mining class is conducted in the building, but the board is
spending ' 'a bundle of money'' in expen ses at the location used
also as a center for. Senior Citizens .
Supt. Dowler will meet with represent atives of the council
as well as representatives of the Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency which is involved with the lun ch program for
Senior Citizens . The fin ancial report of the Pu blic Library
(Continued on page 12 1

Nationwise

Crow's Family
Restaurant

. U'\ee~.
~(s\'\~\~

Mrs. Bowen said project objectives are to give teachers lr&lt;!asurer , to secure an-advance draw of $250,000 and approved
mastery of teaching behaviors essential to prevent reading transfers of money at the Salisbury school which will have only
failure, Iosee that students significantly improve their reading on e account in the future.
A letter was read from the Ohio Farm Bureau announcing
achievement and to improve the attitude of students toward s
reading.
a quality education-ochool finance workshop on M~r c h 5 at Rio
The program uses time tested instructional methods, gives Grande. This will be attended by Supt. Dowler .
individual student mastery of r eading skills and provides a
The board approved the-use of fields by the Pomeroy Youth
total language arts curriculum.
Lea~ue for the StURmer baseball program. Some 200 young
Mrs. Bowen and Ms. Shultz received a week of int~fisive-jieople took part in the league's program last summer.
The board accepted Alice F. Scarberry of the Southerr,
program training . in Columbus and are now conducting
sessions for districtteachers who have now completed 43 of the Local District as a tuition student and entered into a
60 hours of lxaining.
cooperative agreement with the county office on the use of
Te~chers are now using the program in classrooms. Multi-Media d.rivers education equipment.
It was decided to table a request fr om the county board of
Taking part are Carol Evans, Salem Center; Carolyn
Mummey, Harrisonville; Rebecca Triplett, Middleport; education on testing seniors atthe end of the year .
Pauline Horton, Middleport; Helen Dais, Salisbury; Mary
This was decided after Dan Mo~ris . reported that the state
Hysell, Pomeroy; Carolyn Smith, Pomeroy; Ida Diehl, has a number of tests available and mdtcated that these should
Pomeroy; iletsy HorkY, Bradbury; JoAnn Hays , Rutland.
be looked over and also commented U1at, perhaps, students
The program can easily be continued throughout the should be tested at an ea r her grade' level so that any pr oblems
district at little expense if it is found to be successful, Mrs. • can be corrected before graduatwn.
Bowen reported .
Martha Coultrip, Kitty Cassell and Barbara Beegle were
ADVANCE WiniDRAWAL
named to the substitute teachers list and Ella Mae Southern
The board granted permission for Mrs. Jane Wagner, was-employed as a custodian for the remainder of the year.

e

AT

GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

.....,

BY !lOB HOEFUCH .
Meigs Local School District students - providing there is
not more bad weather or flooding - will be going to classes
through June 6 instead of being diSmissed the last of May.
This seems to be the apparent plan acCtJrding discussion
held at Tuesday's regular session of the Mei1:11 Local Board of
Education.
Supt. Charles Dowler reported district schools have been
closed six days over the number of calamity days allowed by
the state. He said a tentative plan calls for students to be in
classes on Good Friday which was a planned holiday. The
original school calendar was extended through June 6 to make
up the days missed.
·
Apparently there is to be no relief from the State
Legislature which last year did provide exfra calamity days.
At last night's meeting, Larry Powell was given his oath of
office as a new board member. He was named last month to fill
the vacancy created by the resignation of Wendell Hoover.
READING PROGRAM
Mrs. Jeanne Bowen and Barbara Shultz outlined aspects of
a Title IV .C program designed to improve reading skills . The
program· is being carried out through a grant secured by Dan
Morris, Director of Curriculum in the district.

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY

I

~

MeigS Local board extends 1978-79 calendar

..

A 64 oz:, Bottle of RC with the
purchase of any bucket, barrel
or family valu peik.

- -···- ---- .. ..... - .. ··-

.....--~- ..

· MRS. G. C. KNOX
. Mrs. G. C. Knox, 66, died at
the Morgan County Care
Center in McConnelsville
Sunday.
Mrs. Knox is survived by
four daughters, Mrs. Harold
Renick, Ruskin , Fla.; Mrs.
Roy Epler and Mrs. Putman
Bragg, both of McConnelsville, and Mrs. Dwight
Wallace, Middleport; three
sons, Lloyd Knox and Ernest
Knox, both of McConnelsville
and Charles Knox of Zanesville. Also surviving are 13
grandchildren, 25 great·
grandchildren and three
great. great· grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. 'wednesday at
· the Miller Funeral Home in
McConnelsville.

Shah's plane

· January retail sales tax
CINCINNATI (AP) receipts in Meigs County for Cattle 300, auction early.
January were down 2.41 Compared to last week steers
percent
compared
to $1·1.50 higher, heifers IH
January, 1976, but county higher, CtJWS steady to $1
motor vehicle sales tax lower, bulls steady; 40 per·
receipt s' were up almost 50 cent steers, 20 percent
percent for the month heifers.
compared to January, 1978,
Steers: choice and prime,
according to the report of 2-4, 1,025·1,200 lb. 66.51).67.40;
Sta te Treasurer Gertrude -choice, z.•, l,IJOO.l,l75 lb.
Donahey.
64.51).66.50; good and choice,
Retail sales tax receipts for 2-4, 975•1,100 lb. 63-65;
January,
1979
totaled standard, 1·2, 900-1,275 lb. 60$56,043.27 compared to 62.40.
receipts of $59,477 .73 for
Heifers: choice and prime,
January, 1978. Receipts for 2-4,'875-1,075lb. ~. 10, high
motor vehicle sales lor dressing 66-67.10; choice, 2-4,
January , 1979, totaled 875·1,050 lb. 6:Hi5; good and
$49,600,54 compared to choice, 2-4, 875 1,000 lb. 62-63.
receipts of $33,213.79 for
Cows: utility and com·
January , 1978, an increase of mercia!, 2-3, 1,050-1,675 51.75·
49.33 percent.
57; cutter, 1·2, 750-1,150 lb .. 4554.
Bulls: 1·2, 1,075-1,900 lb. 61·
66.50.

-

"'""

Area Deaths !

Meigs retail

sales decliile

'" " " ' - "

stages.
"I have made trips to
Chicago, Washington , and
many trips to Columbus and
Marietta to talk with state
and federal officials about
grants for projects in Mid·
dleport. Some of these have
been successful an d all
government agencies are
very much aware of Mid·
d1eport and its interest in "·
becoming a more progressive
CtJmmunity."
During the past four years
the following grants and
assistance
have
be en
received by the village as a
direct result of cooperation
and action from the Mayor's
office and Village Co uncil :
- 11,100 grant from HUD
which was used by the
Planning Commission and
Buckeye Hill s - Hoc king
Valley Regional Develop·
ment District to prepare an
update to the Middleport
Comprehensive Plan. This
document has been of great
benefit to the village in
successfully applying for
. other grants.
- $21,000 grant from EPA
to be used in the preparation
of a Step I Facilities Plan for
our sewage system. This
document is necessary in
applying for other sewage
improvement funds.
- $7,050 grant from Bureau
of Outdoor Recreation to
assist in the construction of
tennis courts at the municipal
park.
- $128,000 grant !rom
Department of Housing and
Urban ·Development to
provide sewage service to the
area on Powell Street where a
,nursing home and apartment
CtJmplex is to be constructed.
Construction on this project is
expected to be underway by
early summer.
_ $60,000 grant from Appalachian Reg ional Com:
mission to assist in the Powell
Street Project.
The Page Street reconstrl{ction will also · finally
become a reality for our
community. Through the
. CtJoperatlon of the village,
Meigs County Commissioners
and the Ohio Department of
Highways this $200,000
project is expected to /8 ·
submitted for bids in the fall ,

'

Ap•nozntTnentS
,

SNOW IGLOO - It was only natural that an igloo
would be among the snow creations of Meigs County
youngsters this winter. Pictured with thei (igloo in a yard
'

approved

on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, are I to r, Clifford
Icenbower, Ivan Carl, Jeff Ginther, Jim Snider and Rod
\ Manley.
l
l

\

•

'

�3- f!le Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 21, 1979
2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 21.1979

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

'Con eon: caution please!
WASillNGTON (NEA) -It may be a case of too little too late'
but opponents of a constitutional amendment to require a
balanced federal budget - including the White House -are
finally begiMing to mobilize.
The immediate objective is slow the stampede of state
le~islatures demanding that Congress call a constitutional
convention to write a balance-the-budget amendment.
At least 26 states, by most counts, have already petitioned
Congress to call a "con con." If eight more join them, a convention theoretically must be called -although there is a good
deal of dispute about the validity of some of the existing peti·
tions.

•

President Carter has publicly opposed the amendment
drive, but his White House staff is just now starting to seek
ways of dissuading more state legislatures from acting.
Cabinet secretary Jack Watson, who is in charge of intcrgovernf!lental relations, and political aide Anne Wexler, in
· charge of liaison with outside groups, are at the core of the
staff group grappling with the problem.
" We haven't decided on a strategy yet," one White House
souo·ce said. "We've got to be very careful that the president
isn't perceived fls opposing a balanced budget when he's been
the foremost advocate of one for so long.
"Tilis amendment business is hard to stop. It's a visceral
thing . People don't want to be confused by facts. In the early
da ys, nobody took the amendment drive seriously. Now the
momentum has built up to the point where it may be impossible to stop."
Technically, the president has absolutely no say in the constitutional amendment process. Only Congress and the state
leg islatures play a role. Yet both Carter and his wife haven't
hesitated to use their moral influence on behalf of the Eqlial
Rights Amendment; in some instances actually telephoning
key legislators in states which have not yet ratified the ERA.
Carter apparently won't go that far in trying to block a
balance-the-budget amendment for fear that voters might
nlisinteijlret his opposition.
· Other groups, however, are belatedly moving into the fray.
' AFL-CIO president George Meany last week sent a letter to
every stale federation urging union officials to launch an
educational campaign aimed at derailing further •:con con"
petitions.
The Coalition of American Public Employees, which includes groups ranging from the National Association of Social
Workers 1o the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employoes, is likewise orgaf!izlng.
. And Common Cause last week asked its state offices across
the country to lobby for more thorough, cautious consideration
of the entire issue.
That suggestion, at least, is well taken. As Common Cause
Prcsidenr David Cohen noted, in his memo to state chairmen,
in all too 1113ny states "the legislative process for considering
the balan~ed budget resolution has been shockingly irresponsible and has failed to meet even minimum standards of accountability."
A few examples prove Cohen's point. Public hearings on the
budget resolution were held in only six of the 26 states which
have passed it. Written. committee reports were prepared in
only six states. Recorded floor votes In both houses were taken
in only 12 stales -less than half.
·
That is a pretty shoddy perlormance on the part of state
legislatures whe11 the"stakes are so high. There has only been
one constitutional convention- the original one of 1787- in the
entire history of the nation.
•
To force another one, in such a casual, slap-dash fashion, is
• ·the height of recklessness. With or without cautionary
pressure from the White House, the remaining states have a
responsibility to look before they leap onto this particular
b;1ndwagon.

Names •••
in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The estranged wife of Rod Steiger
has filed suit seeking a $2.5 million settlement from the actor in
a suit similar to one fill!&lt;! against l;ee Marvin by his former
live~n lover Michelle Triola Marvin.
.
Marvin Mitchelson, attorney for Misa Marvin's suit to obtain
half lhe assets Marvin accumulated while they lived together,
filed the suit Tuesday.
Sherry Steiger, 41, seeks to overturn a pre-nuptial agreement with Steiger that prevents her from recovering propertY
accumulated in their nine-year relationship. The Steigers lived
together four years prior to their 1973 marriage. A divorce
hearing is scheduled for April.
ATLANTA (AP) -President Carter smiled when he saw his
smiling Portrait. He likes it, he says, because it's not all teeth.
'T11e portrait, painted by artist Robert Temple~n of Woodbury, Conn., was unveiled Tuesday at the state Capitol;
Ca rter, often characterized by his toothy smile, praised the
po1'trait, commissioned to hang in the state Senate where he
served from 1963 to 1967. Private donations paid the $4,500 cost
of the painting, which shows Carter seated at a desk.
" You don 't know how nice it is to see a portrait of you that
,, isn't 80 percent teeth," Carter cominented.
MOSCOW ( AP l - Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin is 75 today, still a step away from the top Kremlin job but apparently
not ye t ready to retire.
Rumors circulating in the early 1970s that be soon would
retire have subsided with Politburo circumvention of a rule
that would have forced retirement at 70.
Dissident physicist Andrei Sakharov has called him the
"most intelllgent and toughest" man in the leadership, and
educated Russians see him as the man who manages the
seemingly unmanageable I!!!Onomy.
·
Kosygin was 13 when the Russian Revolution broke out in his
home city of Leningrad. He joined the Red Army at 15, trained
as an engineer, ral! a textile mill and became mayor of
Leningrad in his climb to power.
His former mentor, the late Premier Nikita Kruschev, said
In his memoirs that be "simply can't explain" bow Kosygin
survived the Stalinist purges of the 1940s.

The Advisory Commission FY 80 budget categorical
of Int e rgovernmental programs to the states and
Relations (ACIR ) has - localities Is estimated at $64.7
recently released an update billion or a 70 percent Inof its catalog of Federal crease over FY 75.
When we broaden the
Grant-in-Aid Programs to
state and local government. analysis of Federal support to
For Fiscal Year 1978 ACIR states and local governments
has identified·492 cate~orical to include general purpose,
grant·in-aid programs bro·ad base as well as
available to state and local categorical' grants and take it
political subdivisions. This is back to FY 72, we find an
50 more programs than ACIR even ·more dramatic growth.
counted in FY 1975, an 11 In FY 1972, Federal aid
percent increase. General amounied to $34.3 billion. In
revenue sharing and five FY 1980, it will stand at $82.9
block ·grants are not included billion or an increase of 144
percent. While the Federal
in the catelog.
During this three year Government has recorded a
period 37 formula based deficit every year since 1969,
grants were enacted or im- state and local government
plemented while 13 programs has carried a surplus each
were
discontinued
or year.
What has happened then Is
replaced for a net increase of
24. Sixty-four project grant that each year the Federal
programs were enacted or Government drives itself lnto
implemented while 38 were deeper and deeper debt
dropped for a net growth of 26 (approaching $900 bllllon) by
"Pa!"
creatiog new programs for
project grants.
The ACIR has performed a and pumping more money
valuable service in Iden- into state and local governtifying these grants and their ments that cumulatively
nature,
scope
and operate in the black. Because
distribution. But the catalog It ts such a significant con·
tells only part of the story of tributor to the Inflationary
and· the United States.
remain faithful to the West. effectively confront the well- · the growth in Federal grants. budget deficits, the explosive
By GEORGE GEDDA
Khomeini and his followers organized leftist opposition In FY 1975 categorical grants growth of grant-in-aid to state
American officials who
Associated Press Writer
once derided Khomeini are were seen .as anti·American, headed by the so-called to states and localities and local government has to
WASHINGTON (AP) ilmounted to $38.1 billion: be curbed. The Federal
When Ayatollah Khomeini now hopeful his forces can anti-Semitic and incapable of People's Fedayeen.
Three
years later the figure Government simply can not
It
was
the
very
·situation
was directing the Iranian cope with the challenge posed running a modem industrialstood
at
$56.8 billion, a 49 afford to linanclally carry ·
Iran
now
.
confronts
that
protest movement from his by an array of leftist groups ized state.
percent increase. ' In other S!afes and local subdivisions
American
officials
have
disappointed
with
the
limited
But
based
on
the
brief
Parisian exile last year, he
worda, between FY 75 and FY with ever increasing doses of
was viewed here as a role given them in Iran's new period the provisional feared aU along - well before 78 increase in actual ex- aid. Nor can the states and
government has been in the shah's ouster.
medieval obscurantist government.
According to this view, a penditures was four and one localities afford to lose their
two
months
ago,
when
Just
power, officials believe a
threatening a vital American
Shah Mohammad Reza working relationship -if not continuation of the leftist-led half times greater than the autonomy and identity
interest .
growth of number of new
Now, with Khomeini's Pahlavi was still on the outright friendship - can be strikes and · &amp;\tacks on programs. In the President's through growing dependence
on Washington.
government installations,
followers in power, the throne, President Carter established with Iran.
Moreover, recent events in combined with the steady
American perception of the denounced Khomeini's
state- Iran hardly seem calculated disintegration of the Iranian
78-year old Islamic chieftain " uncontrolled
make
has taken a 18(klegree tum. ments ... that encourage to ingratiate Khomeini with military, could
leftwing forces in Iran. These conditions ripe for a leftist
Khomeini is now seen as bloodbaths and violence."
The prevailing view here elements fought shoulder to takeover.
the last , best hope for a
Thus far, Soviet actions
was
that only the shah could shoulder with Islamic
continuing cooperative
have
ensure
that
Iran
would
not been reassuring to
militants
to
oust
the
shah
but
relationship between Iran
Soviet
now have turned on officials here.
broadcasts directed at Iran
Khomeini.
·Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. .
They have urged defiance have accused the United
of government ordfl's to end States of trying to provoke a
His" lips swell, ache and it
the strikes, which have crisis in Iran to justify
·
·paralyzed the country 's American military Baldness not
takes a long time for the cold
•
sore to clear up .
economy, and to return intervention.
arc In
women
We heard that a smallpox
The result has been the
.
weapons se1zed 10 days ago
vaccination is effective in
when the constitutional most severe criSIS of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - over the previous fiscal government collapsed.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am a some people but not always.
confidence between
professional
woman in my Our doctor recommended a
A proposed constitutional biennium
except
for
These events could sharpen Washington and Moscow.
early
60s.
My
hair on the ser-ies of a full dose of five
amendment to limit state adjustments to cover the ef- one aspect of Khomeini's phi- since
Carter
the
sides
is
fairly
thick,
but it is smallpox vaccinations to be
spending is likely to go before fects of inflation.
losophy regarded here as a administration .~ took office,.
getting
a
little
thin
on top. given once a week for five
voters in November in either
An exception could be major asset for Washington·:
Washington ' and Mosocw
Please,
of two ways.
where
do
I
go
for a consecutive weeks. We are
made if the governor his anti-communism.
are facing a dangerous .
done
by afraid of the possible side efhair
transplant?
Is
it
U the legislature doesn't declared a fiscal emergency,
But the question being situation in which each
approve it for the ballot, it proposed the amount of asked here is whether believes the other is willing to a plastic surgeon?
fects from such a massive
DEAR READER - Yes, vaccination within such a
may reach the polls through additional funds needed for Khomeini
and
the sacrifice friendly relations
an iniliati ve petition drive. the emergency, and then the inexperienced leadership of for the sake of strategic plastic surgeons who do short period of time.
cosmetic surgery usually do
Rep. James E. Betts, R- legislature approved the the new government can advantage.
We've also heard there's a
hair transplants. If you have new medicine that can be usRocky River, and Sen . additional spending by a
good thick hair on the sides of ed to"cure tbe cold sores. Do
Richard H. Finan, R- three-fourths vote of each
your head, he simply takes you know of It? I would like to
Cincinnati, told a news chamber.
conference today minority
· plugs out and transplants add that my husband has
Republicans
them to the area where the tried lemon juice, alum, bakare
not
hair is thin.
optimistic of approval by the
ing sodas, spirit of camphor,
If your family doctor alcohol, Dolomite, vitamins
Democrat
controlled
FICTION PRIZE
legislature .
doesn't recommend one for and oilier medications with
By Dr. T.amar Miller·
NEW YORK (AP) - The
The issue was introduced
you, you mighi call the coun- no success.
ty medical society and ask for
last year but never got a American Academy and
DEAR READER - Thoae
hearing, they noted. Betts lnstiJute of Arts and Letters
tbe names of plastic surgeons cold sores your hlisband has
OU
College
of
~patllic
Medicine
and Finan said they expect to has announced establishment
who do cosmetic surgery in are caused by a virus that
begin a petition drive in about of the "Sue Kaufman Prize
your community. I see that lives inside the cells on the
for First Fiction."
two weeks.
you are from a large city so I lips and face area. The virus
Starting in 19110, the prize is
'··'
Although they would need
am sure there will be a is called herpes simplex. n is
CARDIO-PULMONARY RESUSCITATION
only about 287,000 valid voter to be awarde&lt;! annually to
Last week I mentioned that the Heart Association offers number In your city who do completely unrelated to tbe
signatures, Betts said 110ur "provide encouragement to courses in the life-saving techniques of cardio-pulmonary this type of work.
· virus that causes smallpox.
Baldness in women isn't all Smallpox vaccinations will
goal is to have a half million new writers, to bring them resuscitation (CPR).In today 's coiWlUl I will answer some of
notice
by the'most common questions I have been asked about CPR in ' that rare. Of course, you provide no belp whatsoever.
signatures by the middle of serious
distinguished judges and to my years of ,practice"
JW1e."
might consider other It was previously believed the
·
The Cuyahoga County Re- memorialize an American
QUESTION: Are heart attack victims the only ones CPR cosmetic aids, depending smallpoX' vaccinations might
upon how much hair you've be effective in helping reduce ,
publican said he planned for- writer who was devoted to can be used on?
mal introduction of his her craft and to her
ANSWER: Anyone who stops breathing or whose heart~ really lost. You wouldn't be cold sores but subsequent
amendment in the House colleagues in it."
stops beating Is a candidate for cardio-pulmonary the first woman who has add- research studies have proved
The award carries a resuscitation. Obviously, then , CPR techniques could be used ed extra bair to her natural this hope to be ill.founded.
later today, however.
Under the plan of the newly stipend of $1,000.
on ,any victim of drowning, electric shock or cafe coronary tresses.
At the present time, no
Sue Kaufman, who died in (food inhalation). The age group is not limited to those over 40,
formed Ohioans to Limit
Balding occurs in about 8 good treallnent is available.
State Taxation and Spending, 1977, wrote five published as many people think, but includes even very young children. percent of women. There The National Institute of
headed by Betts, the state novels, Including "Diary of a People who die in fires, for example, usually die of smoke does seem to be a familial Allergy and Infectious
could not Increase spending Mad Housewife."
inhalation, not burns, and can all be resuscitated if reached in characteristic in some in- Diseases does have a promistime. In fact, tbe chances of reviving drowning, electric shock stances. It's probably ing new anti-viral drug under
and other non-heart attack victims are much better than for related, in other cases, to the study, called Ara-A. It. has
those with actual heart attacks because these people usually changes in hormone balance been effective against Inthat occur after menopause. volvement of the brain with
otherwise healthy hearts.
,.----=-----------------, haveQUESTIONS:
Unfortunately, the situation the herpes virus. If your docIs anyone capable of being trained to
perform CPR on a person who has stopped breathing or whose can't be remedied by simply tor (not you) wants more ingiving female hormones formation, he can write to
heart has stopped?
either.
ANSWER: Every normal person by the time he or she
. NIAIS, Building 31, Room
To give you more informa- 7A32, National Institutes of
reaches the eighth grade of school is physically and mentally
capable of learning the technique. In fact, the original goal of tion on what affects your Health, Bethesda, MD20014.
the Heart Association was to teach CPR to everyone at this age hair, I am sending you The
group or older. And, I hope, eventually everyone will know how Health Letter nwnber 12-ll,
to do CPR. However, in order to do the procedure properly, Hair Care. Other readers who
formal instruction and practice is absolutely necessary since want this issue can send 50 ·. . . - - - - - - - - - . ,
. CPR can only effectively ventilate a lWTg or pump a heart at :ro cents with a long, stamped,
The Dailv Sentinel
to 35 perceni of normal iunciloniBg. Although this is enough to self-addressed envelope for
(USPS lt5-NO)
lt. Send your request to me in
sustain life, there is obviously little room for error.
QUESTION: Are an CPR courses essentially the same? care of this newspaper, P.O.
ANSWER: A greater proficiency is required of those Box 1551, Radio City.Station,
taking courses designed to train CPR Instructors rather than New York, NY 10019.
DEVOTED TO '!HE
INTEREST OF
the more common "provider" courses. On both levels, courses
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
MEIGSMAliON AllEA
taught with methods accepted by the Committee on husband suffers acutely from
ROBERT ROEFLICH
a1yltdllo&lt;
Emergency Cardiac Care of the Heart Association, or cold sores 911 his lips. They
DAVID BUSIURK
conducted by the Red Cross, are the same in terms of the show up at once wben he has
sequence, the countiog and the actual techniques. At the a cold, tbe flu or simply when
Publiahed dallY exeept Saturday1
by The Ohio \raDey l'llblWilno!
Instructor level, however, the participants must perlorm CPR I kiss him on the lips. It is Company·Multimedla,
Inc., Ill'
procedures with near perfection. The obvious reason for this is very annoying and painful. Coorl St., Pomeroy, Ohlo 4:1!11.
Business Office Phone 112- 21M.,
that since they will be certified to teach other people, any
Edltortal Phone ilfMI~~
nlistakes will be greatly magnified if passed on to students.
Second clau pootoge paid ol
Pomeroy, Ohio.
1
There is, then, a rather logical reason why a higher degree of
·" RUSTLERS
National advertising repreeenproficiency is required to obtain certification at this level.
HUSTLE
taUve Landon AMoclates. :SlOl r
LONDON (AP) - Many ' EuclldA~ve. Clevelond~Ohlo 44115. I
Incidentally, you need not he a physician or paramedic to be an
Subscri on ratn: ueUvered byi
instructor. Anyone who can perform a near perfect CPR can English farmers lost animals
carrier
re aval.llble 75 cents per·
C 1979 by NE .l.. lr~c
be certified as an Instructor.
·
ln 1978, and the farming Inweek. Qy Molor Ro~when can'leri
aervA_ P1J available, One month,
The comforting fact is that if you should ever have a dustry is taking action \O curb
$3.25.' By ,-..a In Ohio and W. Va.,.
cardio-pulmonary arrest anywhere in the country, the CPR rustling. ·
One Year $2'1.50; 81..1. monthl,'
114.50;·
months, IUO;
will be performed in an identical manner. It is a wonderful
Rewards as hi!lh as $20,000
" You don't suppose Taiwan wou,ld be inter.u.aa you; Six llUIIho
feeling for members of a family group to be able to perform are being offered for inested irr·"becoming the 51st state, do you ?,"
$11.00; -n.rM . months, $9.00.·
CPR, since it offers a sense of security, rather th;m a feeling of formatlo.n leading to the
S.b.crloll&lt;111 price lncludeo _ ,
~&amp;!nltnel.
helplessness if such a disaster should strike.
convlctlo!] oJ rustlers.

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By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauders take
to the tournament trail
Thursday night when they
travel to the Athens Sectional
AA tournament to battle the
state-ranked Nelsonville·
York Buckeyes.
In this week's final AP
By Will Grimsley
I
team
ratings, the Buckeyes of
AP Correspondent
Coach Virgil Grandy were
ranked number 17. The
The road to an Olympic gold medal is paved with sweat and contest will begin at 6:30p.m.
sacrifice, but 16-year-&lt;lld Tracy Caulkins insists the ordeal is in Athens High School.
worth every ounce of it.
Nelsonville-York finished
"If you want to reach the top, you must pay the price," says its regular season last week
the Nashville, Tenn., schoolgirl, the new wunderkind of the with a ·fine 13-5 overall
water on whom Uncle Sam is depending to crack East Germa- record.
- ny'sdomination and restore America's swimming superiority .'
The Buckeyes won the
. Take nnte of the name: Tracy Caulkins. She may be this crown of the Trl-Valley
country's most talked-about female athlete in the 18 months Athletic Conference.
leading up to and including the 1980 Olympic Games in MosThe Buckeyes play a varied
cow·.
style game but usually Coach
After tying or breaking 27 American and world records in a Grandy has his team running,
variety of events in 1978, she was elected "Woman Athlete of trying to get the ball to 6.(]
the World," beating out golfer Nancy Lopez and tennis stars g•ard Riek Penrod.
Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova. The award will be prePenros
is
one
of
sented at a New York luncheon March 8.
Southeastern Ohio's leading
Swlrruning World lJil!gazine tabbed her the year's out- cagers, averaging 33 points
standing female swimmer. The European press named her per contest. Penrod also
"the top female athlete of 1978." She was the youngest nominee leads his team in assists, so ·
for the Sullivan Award, symbol of America ~s top amateur the Marauders' main task
athlete, male or female.
"Ever since I was 6 years old, I have dreamed of winning an
Olympic gold medal," she said from her home. "My whole life
now is dedicated to it."
Her regimen is enough to break the back of a sturdy mule.
Six days a week she rises at 5 a .m., then swims two hours
Ohio High School
before rushing off to school where books get her attention until
. Basketball
3:15 p.m. Then there are three more . hours of intensive
By The Associated Press
practice, 4 to 7p.m. That doesn't include the weights.
Tuesday Night
Class AAA Tournaments'
"It is a strength-building process which we copied from the
All iance Marlingto n 61.
East Germans," Tracy says. "Originally, !'lifted weights 45 Massi
lion Jackson 54
minutes three times a day. Now I do it four times a day - 30- Amherst 59, Lorai n South view 52
minute sessions. lt has improve!) my times a lot."
Barberton Norton 60, West
Tracy, who began swimming at tbe age of 8 at·the urging of
Richfield Revere 55
her brother, is a strapping girl at f&gt;'feet-9 and 12Q pounds.
Boardman 53, Youngstown
Last summer in West Berlin, she set four world records and
Chaney 48
·
won five gold medals in the World Swinuning Championships.
Brunwick .67, Crafton Midview 57
Her greatest feat was soundly thrashing Olympic titleholder
Cincinnat i Aiken 47, CinUlrike Tauber of East Germany in the 400-meter individual cinnati
Northwest 32
medley, setting a world mark of 4:40.83.
Cincinnati Oak Hills 79, West
"The EaSt German girls are still tightly regimented but I Chester Lakota 49
found them relaxed and very comfortable around us," she Clevelarid Collinwood 60 ,
Mentor 56
said. "They are very welltrained."
Garf ield Heights 68, Mapl e
Tracy said she believes the East German domination of Heights 64
women's swimming in the 1976 Olympics- winning 11 of 13 Kent Roo sevelt 60, Stow 44
events - was due more to Intimidation than superior prepa- Madison 61 , Euclid 59
Warren Wes tern Re serve 80,
ration.
Ca nfield 46
"I think our swimmers were frightened by all they had heard
Class AA Tournaments
about the Ells! Germans," she said, " All that weight-lifting Twinsburg 54, Chardon 46
and clinic stuff. They expected tbem to be super human. Our Warrensville 54, Cleveland
Central Catholic 40
girls panicked.
Class A Tournaments
"The young kids aren't afraid of the East Germans at all." . Ashtabula St. John 68, Gales

will be to shut the speedy
·senior off.·
Meigs, meanwhile, sports a
4·14 record, but the
Marauders of Coach Ron
Logan are noted for their
tournament play.
Meigs finished the season
strong and vastly improved,
so they won't be an easy
mark for the Buckeyes.
Starting for the Marauders
will be Ray Andrews and
Steve Ohlinger at forwards
and Tom Hawley at center.
Greg Becker and freshman
Bob Ashley will be at the
guards.
Andrews had a strong
second half and Hawley and
Ohlinger have been hitting
the boards better. Becker is
always consistent, and the
freshmen Ashley has hit
double figures and shows a lot
of maturity.
All in aU, the Marauders
won't be that much of an
underdog. I'm sure Coach
Grandy has cautioned his
boys to that effect.

22 spread"
.
'fh.e Tornadoes had a big 17 competition at
Tornado junior Jack Duffy assists, with Hill having six. Hannan Trace Chillicothe.
finished its
cont(nucd his hot hand,
scoriilg 12 points in that first Tho team hit 42 of 78 shots for season at J.l6.
half to spa rk Southern. He a fine 54 percent, and sank 10
Kyger Creek (62) - \ 'on
Taylor , 6-6-18 ; Jon Thomp took scoring honors for the of II free throws"
Hannan Tra ce was forced son , 6-4-16 ; Gr eg. Smith, 4-A·
night with his 18 points, but
John Westfall , 6"3· 15 ;
South ern pla ced an un- inlc 2B turnovers, and Carlos · 12;
Bruce Gilmor.e, 0·1-1. Totals
bolievable six men in double Campbell led the rebounding 22 " 18"62.
":ilh seven.alaroms. Shaffer
Nurlh Gallia (61) - Sam
figu res.
Sm .i th , 7-0-14 ; Stacy Win ston ,
h1t
for
17
P.,ints,
and
the
Sophomore Dale Teaford
11 -3-25 ; Tim M cComas, 3·2-8;
had one of hi s best nights this Wildcats hit 11 of 16 free Joe
Peck, 2·0-4; Ste11e l-itt le.
throws.
year by netting 16 points.
5"0·.10 . Totals 28"HL
Southern now 13-5 on the
By Quarters :
Tim Brinager hit for 13,
14 18 15 15 - 62
J un
' O'B nen
. had 12, junior year, advanced to the Sec· KC
NG
10 22 15 14- 61
tiona!
finals
on
Saturday
Dave Foreman hit for 11 , and
Dwight Hill canned 10 . night again;t the winner of
Southern had 44 rebounds, led the Southwestern - Kyger
The AP Top Twen~y
Creek contest. Th e sectional
By The Associated Press
by Forman's nin e.
winner advances to district

eva-.
STEAK HOUS:E
Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

•

HEARTY HOME
BREAKFASTSt
AWAY FROM HOME.

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

0)

1, 146
3. Notre Dame
( 19"3)
&lt;1 . Nor th Carolina

'•

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,'1-

WE DO IT RIGHT.
·OR WE DON'T DO

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. - - - -v-- .

·~

IT.~

.•.

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"Where only lhe besl food Is good enough"
I

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.••••
".,••·.
...•"
,...."

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1.073
{20·

978

4)

5. Louisiana St. (21 .3)
6. Duke
7. Mi ch. St.
a. Sy r acuse
9. Marquette
10 . Arkan sas
11. Texas
12 . Io wa
12. Louisvill e
14. Ohi o Sl .
15 . Templ e
16 . Detroit
17 . Georgetown,

20.

SHAFFER DRIVES - Despite being double teamed, Hannan Trace's Paul Shaffer goes
up on a dr1vmg shot agam~t the Southern Tornadoes Tuesday at Meigs High School.
Guardmg hun are Southern s Dale Teaford ( 43) and Jonathan Rees (25). Shaffer ted
Hannan Trace With 17 pom"p:. Southern won 95-49 thus elimina ting the Wildcats from any
further compehtwn th1s year.
Hockey League.
College
Can isi u s - IEx tended t he
con tr act of Ni cl M acarchuk,
head bask etba lf coac h ,
through 1984.
Old -Dominion Na med
William R . Sch ni er spo rt s
intormation di rector .
Wes t Ches te r Stat e Named Otto Kneidinger hea d
t ootba ll co ach.

·Ohio College Basketball

40
Fort Loramie 57, Anna 52 OT
Gnadenhutten t.V . South 52,

By The Associated Press
TUesday Night
Ohio Conf. Tour,®y
Capita l 72, Ohio Wesleya n

DePaul

886
865
842
814
686
601
600
529

( 19"5)
( 18"5)

!2H )

( 19"4)
(20"4)
(20"5)
(l n )

(·2H

430

t 16·71

310
300

(20"3)
(20"4)

296

D. C.
(20"4)

18. Purdue
19. Va nder bilt

Richmond Heights

260
·258

(20"6)

79
61

( 18"6)
(18"4)

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
&lt;!nd Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
•Ball Gloves
Camping
Equipment
• •Archery
• Indoor Games
••we have Gift
CPrtificates
601 Main St.
Pt . Pleasant, W.Va .

Old Wash. Buckeye Trail 46

66

Across trom Counnouse

Lakeland 47

Heidelberg 89, O hio Nor thern 76
Mount Union 78 , Ober l in 69
Musking um54, Ma r ietta 52,
Otter bein 94, Den ison 81
Wooste r 102, Kenyon 64
Hoosier -Buckeye Conf .
Anderson 93, Wi lmington 75
Bluffton 91, Manchester 89

Open Sunday J. p .m .-6 p. m.

J~ c kson

Center
66,
Mechanicsburg 55
·
Newcomerstown 66, Freeport

ot

Pitsburg F ranklin -Monroe 71,
Xenia Wilson 31
Ra cine Southern 95 , Mer-

cerville Ha nnan Trace 49
Richmondale Southeastern
73, Chill. Zane Trace 60
Sout h Web ste r 55, Ports -

-

"

mouth East 49

Tipp City Bethel 49, Tri "
Village 47

G
B

Waynesv ille 55, A r ca num 50

Northeast.

Louisiana

c

hosts event

!

•:,.~~

The Top Twenty team s in
The Associated Press col lege
ba sketball poll , with f irst place 1101e s in parentheses.
sea son , records and t otal
point s. Points based on 20 . 19
· 18 ' 17 · 16 · 15 " 14 · 13 " 12 " 11 .

10"9 " a" 7 . 6 . 5 " • " 1.
1. UCLA
(23) (20"3) 1, 151
2. Ind ia na St.
(37) (24·

Mi lis Haw ken 49
Cheshire Kyger Creek 62,
Vinton North Gallia 61
Fa irport Haber Hardin 54,

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)
- Northeast Louisiana and
Mercer have earned the top. seed positions in the first
Trans Ameri can Athletic
Conference postseason
basketball tournament
March 1-3.
Northeast Louisiana will
host the event.
Oklahoma City was seeded
. No. 3, followed by Samford,
Houston Baptist, and HardinSimmons.
The pairings for the first
' round have Samford vs.
Houston
Baptist
and
· Oklahoma City vs. HardinSimmons. Mercer will play
the Oklahoma City-Hardin. Simmons winner whil e
Northeast Louisiana take~ on
• the Samford-Houston Baptist
winner .

•I

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11tr

ni ght for the Wildcats.
Sout hern's hot-shoot in g
guard Rick Findley hit two
long jumpers for Coach Carl
Wolfe' s Torna does, but
Hannan Trace's Pa ul Shaffer
knotted the score at 4-4 with a
jump shot
Findley hi this fifth s(raight
point, a foul shot with 6:03 to
go in the quart er, a nd
Southern from then on was
never behind.
·
Before the Wildcats could
. So uth ern had
score agam,
built a 14-4 lead, and was
ahead 22-11 at the quarter. By
halftime, the Tornadoes were
off and running, owning a 40-

Marauders hit
tourney trail

I

.,_.......·

'

outrebounded the Pirates, 3125, also a big factor.
"
Thompson had 12 and Joe
Peck seven for North Gallia.
The Pirates hit 28 of '69
shots for 41 percent. Winston
took scoring honors with his
25 markers, and Sam Smith
had 14. Steve Uttle also hit
double figures with 10. North
G U" •
a Ia s season record fell to
8·10.
Southem·HT
The Southern - Hannan
Trace result was ;"
"' doubt for
only two minutes. Ron Pack
hit two for the Wildcats with
7:20 on the clock, and that 2.(]
lead ·was the only lead of the

Tournament results

Health Review

,,

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fou r seconds left, North
GaUia had a J'ump ball. But
after . controlling the tip, a
North Gallia pass was
knocked out of bounds with
one second left, anti_ Kyger
Creek had the victory.
Taylor led the winners with
18 points, Thompson had 16
(thirteen in the second half),
John Westfall had 15, and
Greg Smith netted 12. The
team hit 22 of 49 shots for a
respectable 45 percent and
cashed
on 18 of 28 foul
shots. That hot foul shooting
was the 'big difference as,the
Pirates made good on five of
five shots. Kyger Creek also

Sports "World

Proposed spending bill
•
November
may come m

Berry's World

After one period, the
Bobcats led 14·10, and early
· h
d
m t e secon canto were
ahead as many as eight
points. Butthen the Pirates of
Co ach Ted Lehew came
storming back, and by In·
termission the score was
knotted, 32-all. The score was
also tied after three periods,
47-all. Fans really_got their
money's worth as the lead
kept exchanging hands.
·
With &gt;:10 to go in the
contest, the Pirates, led by
the scoring of Stacy Winston,
built their biggest lead of the
night, 57-52. But then Kyger's
Von Taylor hit two foul shots
and a field goal, and center
Jon Thompson hit two . tumaround jumpers, giving the
Bobcats the lead at 60-57.
With .. 23 seconds ' left,
Thompson hit two Important
foul .shots to give his team a
62-59lead. Sam Smith hit two
for the. Pirates, and with

Today's

HEALTH

l

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· .By Greg Bailey
On the basketball tournament traU the · 1
• re Is a ways
the predictable and the unpredictable. Last night at the
Class A Sectional at Meigs
High School, there was both.
The unpredictable came as
perhap!! the upset of the year,
when the Kyger Creek
Bobcats put North GaUia's
season to an end, 6 2~1. The
predictable caine in the
s;:cond. contest" when SVAC
c amplon . Southern
romped
.
t
~er one95 -lun
9 e WIMer Hannan
ace,
· .
KC·NG
Th.at Bobcat upset gave
Kyger Creek a 5-14 season
record allowing them to
advance to ·second round
action Thursday against .
Southwestern. The crew of
Coach Keith Carter put four
men In double figures with
each playing a key role
during the contest.

American perception changes

Ill

chitectural Library· at
MANuSCRIPT
NEW YORK (AP) - A Columbia University for
manuscript written· four . more than 50 years.
The university says the
centuries ago by Sebastlano
book
Is the first publication of
Serlio, known as Renaissance
the
Architectural
History
architecture's most InFoundation,
founded
as
a notfluential domestic plaMer,
organization
by
for-profit
has been published for the
Columbia
architectural
first time.
The manuscript, " On history alumna Victorla
Domest ic Architecture," has Newhouse.
been in the · Avery Ar·

Kyger Creek, Southern post tournament wins

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

TON

FREE ON BOND
CINCINNATI (AP)c-Two
University of Cincinnati
football players remain free
on 'bond while charges
against them are under
consideration
by
the
Hamilton County grand jury.
Star freshman tailback .
Allen Harvin, 19, Willingboro,
N.J., and wingback Aaron
Hagans, 21, Madison , N.J.,
were bound over to the grand
jury Tuesday on charg~s of
receiving stolen property.
They were arrested Feb. 6
by campus police. They are
accused of being in
possession of a stereo taken
from the dormitory room of
another student over the
Thanksgiving holiday .
Both pleaded innocent to
the charge.
Judge W;illiam Fellerhoff,
Hamill.on County Municipal
Court. continued their bonds.

..

PHONE
675·2988
MondayJhru Saturday
9a r- •...,Bp. m .

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INCREASE YOUR INCOME
The ·Profess ionall y Trained Ma n or
Woman always Gets Th e Promotion
and High er Income!
Accounting
Secretarial
Genera I Office
Business Admini st ration
ENROLL NOW · .
" It' s Better To Be A G BC Graduate
Than To Compete Wi th One. "
Write, Call , or Visit for Information

\I

GAlliPOLIS BUSINESS COllEGE
Spring Valley Plaza
Ph . 446-4367
Reg " No" 71·02-00328
Courses Are Approved For Veteran s Training

Stale
HAULS IT IN - Southern's Dwight Hill (15) goes high
in. the air for a rebound in Tuesday's Class A Sectional
Tournament game against Hannan Trace. Coach Carl
Wolfe's defending sectiona l champs won easily, 95-49 to
ac;lvance ~o Saturday's championship round.
·

Tu esday's
Sports Transactions
Baseball
American League
Minn eso ta Twin s - Signed
Pa ul Hart zell, pi tcher , and
Gary Ward , otJ ttielder .

Basketba ll
National
Basketball Associcition

New York Knlcks - Placed
Marv in Websl er , center . on
th e inj ur ed reserve I is!.
Signed Ron Behagen , for ward .
Portland Trait Bla zer s An no un ce d re ti remen t of
Lloyd Nea l, for ward.

Football
· National
Foolbail League

Oenver __ Broncos

I

Sioned

To m Maher , tight end,· and
Kit Lathr op, ta ckle , as free
agents .
Detroit Lions Named
T i m Rooney director ot
scout ing .
Oak land Raiders - Named
Charley Sumner and Sam
Bogoshian assistant coaches.
Canadian Football League
Toron to A r gonau t s Named For est Gregg head
•
coach.
Hockey
National Hockey Lea gue

Winter Months
Nothing To Do?

()

PUT IN
ANEW KITCHEN!

BIG 40%

Buffalo Sabres - Assigned ,

Tony McKegney, lett wing, to
Hershey of th e American
Hockey League .
St. Louis Blues - Sent Ne il
Labatte, defenseman , to Sa lt
Lake Cit v of t he Cenlrnl

,.,

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

YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS WI~L
HELP YOU! ·

2119 Jackson Ave.
675-2311

•

Point Pleasant

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5- 'nle Daby Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 21. 1979

. .§~~~~Q~, Westphal leads Suns to 117-107
Was~:::~c?'~~r~;GB ~~~~~:::~:h::il:is::n::::: victory over New york·Knicks

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, Feb. 21 , 1979

Cedarville
Stops Rio
Eric Mounts scorched the
nets with 27 points and Dan
Rccp chipped in with 23
Tuesday night to Jli!ce Coach
Da n CaHan's Cedarville
Yellow Jackets to a 95-83 MidOhio Conference victory over
visiting Rio Grande College.
It was the final game of the
regular campaign lor both
teams.
Rio, regular seaS&lt;Jn MOC
cha mpion, concluded con·
fercnce pla y with a 12-2
mark . Cedarville finished
third in loop play with a 9.,)
record. On the year,
Cedarville upped its record to
15-9. Rio dropped to 16-12 on
the year.
Post season tournament
play will begin Thursday
night . In one round, Cedarville will play at Malone.
In the .other round, Urbana will play at Rio
Grande. Both games start
at 7:30p.m. Admission is $2
for adults and $1 for
students.
After falling behind 10
· points early in Tuesday's
contest, Rio Grande bounced
back to take a 42-41 lead just
befo r e th e halftim e in termission.
_
The Yellow Jackets. broke
on top ea rly in the second half
and were never headed, ·
maintaining anywhere from
a six to 10 point advantage.
"They played real well,"
remarked Coach Art Lanham
following the contest. "We ·
failed to cut them off. They

At AGlance
By The Associated Press

"•

overs.
Rio Grande connected on 36
of 63 field goal attempts for
57.\ percent. The Redmen
were 11 of IS at the foul line
for 73.3 percent. Rio's top
rebounder was Steve i.Dnes,
with 11. The Redmen had 21
assists, nine by Vince Phelps.
Rio had 11 turnovers.
Box scofe:
. RIO GRANDE (831
Swai n, 2· 1-5; Phelps, 2-2-6;
Pu rce ll , 8-7-23 ; Lones, 11 -022 ; Bise, 6-1-13 ; Wa shington,

5-0-10 ; Clark, 2-0-4. TOTALS
36-11 -83.
CEDARVILLE (95) Hi ckman, 3-2-8; Kauffman ~
10 -2-22 ;
Baker ,
4-5- 13 ;

Mounts , 11 -5-27 ; Reep, 10-323 ;

Str ei tmatt er,

1-0-2.

Halftime score -

Rio 42

TOTALS 39-17-95.
Cedarvi lle 41.

Ohio·
Sport(ight.
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game Thursday night against Southwestern. In two
previous outings this year, North Gallia won by just
narrow margins. Other Pirates shown in this Greg Bailey
action shot are stacy Winston (21), Steve Litlie (23) and
Jim Barnes (33).

KCGALSWIN
Kyger Creek's girls
basketball team defeated
Southwestern 27·23 In a low
scoring contest Tuesday
night.
Judy Darst topped the
winners with eight points
while Jeffers led South·
western with II. The viF tory gave the second place
Bobklttens a H SVAC
record. KC hosts Hannall
Trace Thursday evening.

in new baseball season

By HAL JIOCK
Busch's beer profits over to insufficient. He is demanding
$100,000 and will go after it in
AP Sports. Writer
him to play shortstop. The
Get ready for Baseball '79. fact that his batting average arbitration this week.
- And to top it all off, ComTh e possibilities lor th e dipped from .322 to .280 last
coming season are _awesome. year and 'that he led the missioner Bowie Kuhn
Here we are in February with maj ors wiith 40 errors was, of decided that it was perfectly
U1e first ball yet to be thrown course , immaterial.
all ri ght for George
in onger and already we have
-Joel Younglood, who has Steinbrenner to turn over
had some verbal showdowns. never been a regular $500,000 of New York Yankee
Consider the developments anywhere and batted exacUy cash to Charlie Finley lor a
of the last lew weeks :
266 times last season, couple of Oakland minor
-Ca rl Yastrzemski , age 39, rejected the New York Mets' leaguers. That was only two
has to ld the Boston Red Sox salary offer of $75,000. A weeks alter Kuhn decided
that he's sorry, but a $265.,000 $25,000 raise, he said, was that it wouldn't be right lor
annual salary, to which he
Gene Autry to pay that kind
agreed just one year ago ,
of California Angel money to
Minn esota lor seven-time
won't be enough to lure him
batting · champion Rod
hack lor another summer.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP)
He'll just stay home and do
Carew.
.c. Coach Bear Bryant of ·
some fishing until the Red
The question here is Ala bam a suffered three
whether the cold and snow of broken riha instead of one in a
Sox can come up with a fatter
· winter has turned all of the fall at his home Feb. 6,
'" ·tract to replace the one
gray matter in baseball to doctors said Tuesday.
~~~ s already signed.
- Yaz's bleat hit deaf ears
slush.
Bryant was released ·from
in Fenway Park 's ~~ec uti ve
Yastrzemski
and West Alabama Hospital
suite , but did str ike a
Eckersley, both with signed Monday after 10 days of
CINCIN NATI (AP)
respondent chord with Red.
agreements for 1979, need a treatment bOt his schedule is
Sox
pitcher
Dennis "You look a~d look lor a job lesson. in the sanctity of curtailed.
Eckersley, who chimed in like this_. ~d ?,ll of ~ sudden contracts and Youngblood
Doctors at first thought
with a hearty "Me, too."
the re 1t rolS, sa1d John could use one in baseball only one rib was 'broken, but
-Rusty Staub, almost 35, ;. McNam,a!i!IJ! , )Vh? ope_n s economics. How much would they said X' ' rays taken
has planted a chef's hat on his ,.: sprm!l lJ;iiiJlll)~ Fnd;ly ,w,lth tlie Met bench hand ask for if shortly before'• his release
head at a jaunty angle and Ins ltrst ·!ilK\* team. I ve he had produced the way Yaz from the hospital ~vealed
told the Detroit Tigers that never been more ea~er tog~~ and Eckersley have?
two others alsO broken.
unle.s they guarantee hi s sta rted than 1 am thiS year.
Kuhn's action was a study in
fu ture beyond the 1980
~ut McNamara admitted conflicting decisions by the
expiration of his contract, he son the spot, replacmg the commissioner. How, he was
he ·u ·become a full time popular Sparky AnderS&lt;Jn . asked, could he discourage was a matter of judgment."
· restaurateur this summ er
" H there were no problems, the use of cash in a deal lor a
Nonetheless, the outcome
instea d of a fu ll time . l wouldn 't be here," he said . superstar like Carew, and wa s that minor leaguers
"But it is certainly a comfort- then permit half a million Bruce Robinson and Greg
designated hitter .
- Garr y Te mp leton , ing feeli ng for ':'e to kn_ow dollars change hands lor two Cochran earned $500,000 for ·
considerably younger tha n that when l walk mto tram!ng minor leaguers?
Finley while an established
either Yaz or Staub informed camp Johnny Bench IS gomg
"The Carew case was spe- star like Carew added
the St I.Duis Cardinals that to be my catcher, George cial," explained the commis- nothing to Minnesota owner
he wa~ prepared to lind other Foster and Ken Grilf~y are sioner. "I felt a deal for Calvin Griffith's bank
employment unless they gmng to be m the outfield ... Carew involving substantial account when he was
could turn more of Gussie ~ i roe
Morgan ,
Dave cash would not be good. It peddled.
• \1 ·Concepcion and Dan Driessen
are -going ·iQ be 'in the infield.
McNamara said pitchi1; g
Bl~
. will ge.~ ! top priority in
Tampa, ,, ~·l a., and he's
counting heavily on Tom
Seaver.
IN
"I know thai Bill Bonham
will have to ta ke it easy at the
POMEROY, OHIO
start, comin g ol! his
operation, and this will give
us a good chance to take a
ST. LOUIS (AP ) - To look at Paul Moskaq, Tom
replenish a Salt Lake City Hume and Mike LaCoss."
roster decimated by injuries,
McNamara
said ' his
the St. I.Duis Blues sent pitching rotation will keyed to
defensema n Neil Labatte to Seaver, Bonham and. Fred
the farm team ·on loan and Norman.
assigned two farmhands of
"Doug Bair is coming off a
the National Hockey Leag ue great season and our bullpen
club.
will be built around him," he ,
In addition to Labatte, who said.
played in eight St. Louis
He ·said denier fielder
games, defenseman Steve Cesar
Geronimo
has
HarriS&lt;Jn and center Gary recovered from the phlebitis
Murphy were sent to the that afflicted him last seaS&lt;Jn .
Golden Eagle, who own a 19- Both Geronimo and Champ
point lead in the Central Summers pla yed on the
Hockey
League. Both Dominican League team that
HarriS&lt;Jn and Murphy were McNamara managed thi s
with Port Huron of the In- winter.
ternationa l League.

Bear Bryant
suffers
rib injuries .

McNamar
·a

• •

qy Gl':QRGE STRODE·
. "This, is the key w_eek for
,\ P Sports Writer
.us. We ve got to wm both
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)· 'T ·games. I think we can do it ,"
Kelvi n Ranse y's ·shooting ' said Ransey, whose 1,300
slump is over . That may spell points alre ~dy make him
b-a-d ne-w-s for 14th ranked Ohio · Sta~~ ninth all-time
Ohio State's opponents in the scorer witli more than a full
Big
Ten '.- Conference seasqn remaining.
basketball scr,amf!le 1 ,( \
ifhe. BljCjleyes' captain Is
The 6-foot-1 junior goard 1 within range of Lucas' career
sank onl y 32 of 77 floor shots record Qlll!11,990 points. But
in four games, three of which indi vidual accomplishments
the Buckeyes lost to fall into a m·e not important to Ransey.
tie for the leag ue lead.
" My goal this year is to win
Ransey once was shooting the Big Ten title ," said the
65 percent earlier .. in the three-year reg ular . " I 'll
season, flirtin g with Jerry worry about those other
Lucas' school record of a 64.8 things later. II they happen,
percentage 17 years ago. fine. lf not, it won't be the end
Then his puzzling slump - 42 of the world. The important
percent accuracy as Ohio thing to me is that we are
State fell to Michigan Stale playing as a team and that
twice and Indiana.
wlien we play together we can
. " 1 don't think l was taking compete with any team in the
good shots. I was letting the country."
shots I missed get me down . 1
Why have the Buckeyes
""' tr.v mg to come out of it blossomed into a big title
"""' r.o w. I was pressing, " threat alter going 9-9 and
~&gt;&lt;ml ,he Toledoan, preparing fin ishi ng sixth
in th e
for invasions by' niinois and conference a year ago?
Iowa thi s we'ck.
" Maturity" was Ransey's
No sma ll pa rt of the Buck- one-word answer.
e; es' road victories over
Then he added : "Our S&lt;Jph~ J mnc sota and Northwestern omores are much improved.
was Ransev's performance They 're into the ga me more .
last week. ·
We played a better preHe sank 19 of 30 floor shots season schedule (upsetting
to pump his percentage up to Duke and Louisville). And
56 perce nt , scoring in double we've been getting a lot of
figw·e, in his 54th and 55th breaks."
straight . ga mes.
He's
averaging 21.6 points. "
SELECTS MICHIGAN
" In my book, l just had to
ZANESVILLE,
Ohio (AP)
wait until the shots started
Dan
Varano,
an
All.{)hio
falling . I've got that old
Class
AAA
tight
end
from
feeling batk now," he said.
Zanesville
High
School,
signs
Tt;msey concedes it couldn' t
ha vP come at a more a national letter of intent
' opportune time, wiU1 Illinois today to play college football
coming
to
Columbus at t he University of
Thursday night and Iowa Michigan.
Varano, 6-loot-3 and 240
Saturday afternoon. The
Buckeyes share the Big Ten pounds, heard from 60
the colleges and selected th!'
lead ( 11-3) with
over . the
Hawkeyes
with
four Wolverines
University
of
Notre
Dame.
conference games left.

hegins new
job .Friday

25_37 _.402 16'1?

,:d::.,so~i![~~~e
Boston 33 15 10 76 233 182
Toronlo 24 22 11 59 187 178
B~ffalo 23 21 11 57 180 179
Mmnesota
22 26 8 52 186 188
Norris Division
Montreal J9 9 8 86 236 136
Los Ang. 24 26 8 56 207 211
Pitts.
23 24 8 54 194 199
Wash .
ui 32 9 45 197 247
Detro it 12 31 14 38 179 220
Tuesday's Games
Atlanta 5, Washington 3
Boston s, Colorado 3
Philadelphia 3, Vancouver
3 tie
' Wednesday's Games
St. Lou rs at New York
Rangers
Detroit at Washington
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Buffalo at Chicago
Toronto at Minnesota
Boston at Los Angeles
Thursday's Games
st Loui s at New York

By ALEX SACHARE
AP Sports Writer
It was the kind of situation
Paul Westphal craves - five
minutes ·to go and the
hallgame up for grabs.
·~On this team we don 't pick
out one guy and say we're going to go to him down the
stretch," Said Westphal, the
allstar guard of the Phoenix
Suns. "We have many guys
who can score and we run
plays lor everybody. But I do
like to see the ball at that

THOMPSON WINNER - Kyger Creek's ~ senior
center Jon ThompS&lt;JO outhatties. North Gallia's Jim
Barnes (33) for a rebound in Tuesday's Class A Sectional
Tournament at Meigs High School. Thompson had some
important rebounds while scoring 16 points in the Bobcats'
thrilling 62-91 victory over the Pirates.

Colorado at Vancouver

World Hockey .
Association
w 1 I pis gl ga

Seattle at New Orleans

Edmon1on

Thursday's Game
Houston at Washington

New Eng.
Quebec
Winnipeg
Cine.
Birm.

Milwaukee at Kansas City
Indiana
at
Denver
Boston at Golden State
Kansas City at Cleveland

with a promise he said Sox
owners Haywood Sullivan
and Buddy LeRoux gave him
last week, the Globe said. The
39-year-old said they told him
they had not renegotiated
with anyone else . .
In the last lew days, he
found out that Rice's contract
was renegotiated in January.
II he doesn't get his
contract lor 1980 and 1981,
Yaz has threatened to sit out
this season until he becomes
a free agent and go with
another team.
"If I can't be satisfied on
my contract and I can't he
happy with it , then I don 't
want to put on a uniform, I
dop't even want to start the
season," he said last week
after a discouraging meeting·
with Sullivan and LeRoux at
Fenway Park. ·
A source close to Yaztrzemski told the Globe that
Yaz is good friends with Rice,
but he just "wants to get what
he feels is his lair share~· in
view of the big prices owners
have set lor other players in
the majors.

2

......

,JI\

, .

..

'".,

"'
''"

Mt. Vernon

19

19

· unmistakably

conn1e~

..'"' .'
•

5th &amp; Pearl .
PHEBE'S STO.RE

8 oz. pak.

T hursday , Feb. 22 through Feb . 24

We Gladly Accept Feci.-Food Stamps
MOnday thru Friday
9:00iil7 :00
Saturday 9:00·9: oo
CLOSED
SUNDA YS

Koo~

F lorid a

99~

.

·

ORANGES. .......... ).~~-.~~~- ~~~.~.10'
.......... "

Maine

··p·or·AmEs·

10 lb.

• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • il • • • • • • • • • • • '

99'

-

-

-

12
11

2

6

8
8

9

I:
'

' , I

·'. •'
., '

..

'

6
6 8
3 11
3 11

\

."'.'
~· I

'

.
•

56

Cedarville '95 R&gt;o Grande 83
Malone 84 Tiffin 75

Vernon

77

Ohio

Parkersburg 80 Ra\lenswood
48

Thursday's games :
, Ravenswood at Wirf

•lii::Zi:iij)l Wahama at Pt . Pleasant
-

.,I

56

Tuesday's reS;fJits :

.ALL GAMES
Team
W L P OP
Porls .
18 0 1272 932
Athens
14 4 1202 .1016
Pi. Pleas .
12 3 885 773
Gall ipolis
13 s 1101 954
Waverly
13 5 1071 857
Ironton
13 5 1250 964
Wash . CH
12 5 976 829
Rock Hill
11 7 1082 1028
Logan
7 10 1001 1018
Ravenswood 5 12 1027 1070
Wellston
s 13 1086 1331
Meigs
4 14 1025 1307
Jackson
2 1S 979 1253
Tuesday's result:

more about dressing up
than CHAPMAN SHOES .

I

TOTALS

Wherever your .special
occasion might take you ,
... because no one knows

"'' .'

Tiffin

Ohi o Dominican

Cage .
standings

I

j

S

Dressing Up
That Chapman
Shoes? No One!
CHAPMAN SHOES will see
thai you get there In style

I'
'\ •

3

Urbana at Rio Grande

About

•

.,

More

(

"DINNER AI EI&amp;Hl?''

(

Nelsonville-York vs. Meig s at
The Plains
Saturday's games:

Pt. Pleasant at BuffaloWayne
Athens vs. Logan , at Ohio

• •· I

'

vs. Gallipolis, al

. 'I

~/I

the Cleveland Cavaliers 119- ' Phoenix ahead to stay, 103- lead a balanced Golden State
109. Houston at Washington 101.
Westphal
then attack.
was postponed because of contributed three baskets and
Los Angeles was without
snow.
a pair of free throws as the center Kareem Abdul.Jabbar
The Suns led 59-48 at Suns outscored New York 19-0 lor the second straight game.
halftime and by 16 early
in the final live minutes.
Abdul-Jabbar Is side lined
the third period before a
Robinson added 23 points with a bruised right knee.
Knicks' surge saw them pull for the Suns, who outscored
BuDs 99, Bluers 97
in front 86-85 early in the final New York 27-9 from the foul
Chicago scored just 13
period. They were still ' in line. Westphal had a game- points In the final period but
front 101-98 with live minutes high 12 assists.
managed to beat the Blazers.
to play before Westphal took
Earl Monroe and Toby
A goal-tending · call
control.
Knight topped the Knicks against Tom Owens with
His laney scoop shot was with 22 points apiece.
less than two minutes
followed by athreei&gt;oint play
to go gave
Chicago
Spurs 118, Sonics 102
by Truck RobinS&lt;Jn, putting
a
sis
point
lead.
George Gervin scored 38
Baskets
by
Maurice
Lucas
points as San Antonio deal\
Seattle its fifth consecutive and Ron Brewer cut the gap
road Joss . Larry Kenon added to 99~ with 58 seconds to
23 points and IS rebounds lor play and _1/le Bulls' John
the Spurs, who led by as Brown then missed two free
throws, but Brewer's jumper
many as 24 points.
with two seconds to go
Warriors 102, Lakers 91
. Los Angeles Jed by 13 points bounced off the rim .
Hawks 119, Cavaliers 109
at halftime but scored just 33
John Drew scored six of his
points in the entire second
The Razorbacks shot a half as the Warriors ·ccame 23 points in a 1~1 fourthspectacular 79.4 percent from from behind to win their third quarter spurt that helped
the ·noor against the Red in a row, scoring 25 of the Atla nta beat Cleveland,
game's last 36 points. Sonny ending the cavs. three-game
Raiders .
SMU shook off an early Parker scored 17 points to winning streak.
scoring spree by Texas and
went on to upset the
Longhorns behind Brad
A Look At Quality - Branson's 20 points. SMU, It Costs Less In The Long Run
which lost to Texas ~2 a
month ago, outreboimded the
i.Dnghorns 47-34 and outshot
Texas from the field, 47 to 44
percent.
In other games, Vinnie
'America Trusts "Hoover
Johnson scored a career-high
It
beats as it sweeps as it
50 points to power Baylor past
c leans. Makes carpets last
TCU -109-72; John O'Connor ·
longer , all the features you
·scored 22 points and grabbed
would expect and some extra
13 rebounds to lead Holy
Cross over Providence 7!Hl5;
ones besides.
Tom Sienkiewicz hit a 13-loot
See th is limited time Special
shot , with 13 seconds
Now
remaining to lilt Villanova
11
over Pitt 75-73; Wagner
defeated Drexel 91l-75 behind
A lull size Hoover cleaner com·
Howard Thompkins' 20 poipts
plete with tools .
and 15 rebounds and Nick
Galls contributed 24 points as
Seton Hall. whipped Catholic
QUALITY FURNITURE-LOW PRICE
U. 118-M.
.
Also, Angelo Reynolds '
jump shot with 3: II left in
overtime gave Penn a 4241
victory over Princeton ; Al
Daniel and Johnathan Moore
teamed lor 33 points to pace
FUrman over VMI 1)().65 and
Chuck Mack scored 21 points
to pace Brown to a 7~
decision over Yale .

m

By I)OUG TUCKER
AP Sports Writer
MISSION, Kan. (AP) . Two
hotshot
football
prospects who mysteriously
disappeared in a private
plane lour days ago must
surely land today to sign a
national letter of intent, fig.
ures the NCM.
And the minute they show
up they'll become the first
case investigated in an
aggressive new crackdown
on recruiting violations .
"They haven't been seen
around town or around their
schools since tbey took off in
the private aircraft," NCAA
enforcement director David
Berst s.aid Tuesday, on the
eve of national letter of intent
signing day .
He declined to identify the
prospects or say where
they're from but added,
"Their families say they
don't know where they are
and their friends say they
don't know where they are.'
Significantly, the families
don't appear worried about
the missing young men and
haven't bothered to go
looking for them .
Their mysterious disappearance is one of many
"provocative things" NCAA
investigators have pickecj up
since they spread out across
the country three weeks ago
wit11 a list of the top 100 prospects. It was the first time investigators · had hit the
recruiting trail alongside

coaches and prospects for a
first-hand look at the rules
they are pledged to enforce.
"I think we've developed
some information that will
lead
to
cases
and
appearances before the
Committee on Infractions,"
Berst said. "From our point
of view, it looks like the
program is going to be a big
success." For e.ample, the
NCAA has a description of the
plane the two missing
recruits took off in.
"We intend to find out who
owns the plane, where the
kids went and who paid their
expenses·to get there," Berst
said. "There cQuld be a connection between the plane
and the school they sign
with ." To "hide" a prospect
from rival coaches just
before before national
signing date is very much
against NCM rules .
The new program, first revealed in an Associated Press
story Feb. I , has evidenUy
acted as a strong deterrent
against cheating, Berst said.
"We found out a lot of
coaches were carrying the
AP article around with them
and showing it to the
prospects," he said.
But not every lead and tip is
leading to paydirt. In one instance, investigators learned
two high school students had
witnessed a coach stuff a roll
of cash into a blue-chipper's
pocket and say, "Merry
Christmas.u

Indiana State player went to
the foul line .
An enflamed Hodges finally
jumped off the bench and got
into a shouting match with
Drake Coach Bob Ortegel.
Hodges told reporters that he
apparently surprised Ortegel
and later apologized.
Only two other Top Twenty
teams were in action Tuesday
night, with No. 10 Arkansas
defeating Texas Tech ~
and No, II Texas dropping an
81-66 decision to Southern
Methodist. .
Larry Bird, Indiana State's
leading man, scored Zl points
to move into sixth place on
the all-time NCAA scoring
list with 2,591. In addition ,
the 6-foot-9 forward collected
nine rebounds .
The
undefeated
Sycamores, winning for the
25th time this year, took a 3933 halftime lead and Jed by as
many as nine points, but
couldn't shake off the
Bulldogs until near the end.
Carl Nicks added 21 points lor
the winners.
Sidney Moncreif's HI-footer
· with one second remaining
lilted Arkansas over Texas
Tech ..Moncreilled all scorers
with 25 points as the
Razorbacks finished the
regular season in a tie with
Texas for the Southwest
Conference championship.

HOOVER

'68

INFLATION
CREATION!
Notice to homeowners:
USE
THiS SPECIAL
HOMEOWNER'S COUPON!

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,_ _ _ _ _ __ _ Stale

chunk
lb .
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TURN THE TABLES ON INFLATION

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CHEESE

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SlAB

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Skyrocketing home values create
more "borrowing power" from Capital!

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•••

RioGrande

Bill Hodges, the nation's
second-ranked team defeated
the Bulldogs 76-68 in a
Missouri · Valley Conference
game Tuesday night.
"It wasn 't overall as good a
game as' I would have liked to
have •" said Hodges • "but
they got the job done and dld
what I wanted them to do.
Hodges wasn't in such a
good frame of mind during
th e game, when the organist
played music each time an

still 'missing'

W L

Urbana 75 Walsh71
Thu{sday'o game.,
Ceda rvi lle at Malone

•I

WINTER PIPES ·

(League Only)

Malone
Cedarville
Urbana
Walsh

MI .

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
They weren't playing
Indiana State's song at the
Drake University field house,
but the Sycamores managed
to make iheir own kind of
music with the basketball
anyhow.
Despite some minor
harrassment from the
organist at hostile Veterans
Auditorium, which · greaUy
angered Sycamores Coach

24

Domin ican 62

Who

,.....'
.• '•
.. .
.....
•

Team

6

point behind the Boston
Celtics.
Phoenix, meanwhile,
climbed within one-llalf game
of first place Seattle in the
Pacific Division race. The
San Antnnio Splrs beat the
SeatUe SuperSonics 118-102,
while the Los Angeles Lakers
dropped one game off the
pace by losing to the Golden
State Warriors 10:1-91.
In other NBA games, the
Chicago Bulls edged the
PorUand Trail Blazers 99-97
and the Atlanta Hawks beat

Ir!.diana State hard-pressed
•
r,n
16-68 win over Duke

6 . 17

Tiffin

9

9
12
15

time. I respond well to
pressure ."
Westphal responded by
scoring 10 of his game-h igh 36
points In the final 4:50
Tuesday night, leading the
Suns to a 117-107 decision over
the New York Knicks, who
suffered their seventh
consecutive National Basketball Association defeat their longest losing streak
since the 196:Ml6 season.
The loss dropped New York
into last place in the Atlantic
Division , one percentage

Grid. prospects

Mt. Vernon

' •'
•
•
'

WRAP UP THOSE
.--

9

L

,..,

'

.

,· .

178
215
204
220

Wednesday's Games
New Engt·and at Winnipeg
Thursday's Game•
No games scheduled

Ohio Domin ican

Velveeta

.

196
216
200
191

Quet&gt;ec 7, Birmingham 3
Edmon1on 8, New England

wllplsglga
Y. Islanders
36 10 10 82 256 152

MOC STANDINGS
(All Games)
w
Team
Malone
18
15
Cedarvi lle
16
Rio Grande
10
Urbana
Walsh
9

DAIRY

'

58
58
5 53
29 4 46
4

6

MOC standings

(

....

LINKS SAUSAGE ....................... ..$1
.
BQILED. HAM ................... ~.~:~~-~ ....... !~:.. s1 99
Superior
•
·
.
sliced $
BOLOGNA.: ...................................~-1-~: 169
HORN CHEESE ................... ;!~·..$1 69

0 62 216 169

7 61 219 188

•,

BOSTON (AP) - Carl
Yastrzemski has stopped
working out and says he
won 't pi ck up another
baseball lor the Red Sox
again untit he gets a new contract, according to The
Boston Globe.
Traditionally , the veteran
outfielder only takes a
breather . from his rigorous
physicial training routine
from Oct . I through
.Thanksgiving, but contract
woes apparently have · af.
fected his routine.
Yastrzemski, who already
signed a colitract lor 1979,
pleaded last week lor a new
contract that would boost his
earnings - now somewhere
between $300,000 and $350,000
a year - to a reported
$700,000 a year.
The latter figure would put
him ahead of the highest paid
player on the American
League team, slugger Jim
Rice. Rice renegotiated for
$4.9 million over seven years,
or an average of $700,000 per
year.
Yaz's current beef has to do

INDUSTRIES WHEELS

39

21
19
22
25
27

Cincinnati 5, Winnipeg 2

Patrick Division

N.

31
27
27
26
24
21

Tuesday' s Games

Pro Hockey
AI A Glance
By The AsiOCialed Press
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference

.

FEATuRING APPLIANcE

1.~.?~:."

Pittsburgh at Montreal
Chicago at Buffalo

Philadelphia at Detroit

y az d emand mg
•
new agreement ~.

1

lsla~ders

Portland at Atlanta

HEADQUARTERS FOR YOUR
WHEEL AND TIRE NEEDS .

~m~key 'i;t krich

w1 c

Phoenix at New Jersey

Meigs nre Center, Inc.

by injuries.·

New Ycork

Wednesday's Games

still

plagued

'

ppd., weather

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

Verbal showdowns ·u sher

St. Louis 13 37 8 34 171 251
Colorado 12 38 8 32 161 246

Dovlsoon
36 25 .590
32 26 552 211
31 29 ··517 4112'
24 35 .407 11
~troll
22 37 .373 13
New Orleans 19 42 .311 17
We~ tern Cont~rence .
Modwest Dovosoon
Kan. City
37 21 .638
Denver
32 29.•.525 6'1&gt;
Mil!"·
26 35 .426 12 11&gt;
tnd&gt;ana
25 34 .424 12Y'
Ch•cago . . 22 ~7 .373 15 h
Patlflt Division
Seattle
36 22 .621
Phoenix
36 23 .610 . v,
Los Ang .
36 24 .600 1
Portland
29 28 .509 6112
S..n Diego
30 31 .492 7'h
Golden St.
28 32 .467 9
Tuesday's Games
Phoenix 117, New York 107
San Antonio 118, Seallle 102
Allan_la 119, Cleveland 109
Chicago 99. Portland 97
Golden State 102, Los
Angeles 91
.
Houston at Wash&gt;ngton ,

•

TIIAT DETERMINED LOOK- Tim MCcomas (41)
6-2 senior center lor the North Gallia Pirates appears to .
have a· determined look as he outjumps. Kyger Cteek's
John Westfall (21 ) during Tuesday's KC-NG game. Kyger
Creek nipped the Pirates 62.01 to advance to a second

33 22 .600 5
28 28 .500 10'12

23 34 .404 16

'

"

Phi!a·.
New Jersey
Boston

enlral
San
Ant.
Houston
Atlanta
Cleveland

,.

had great second efforts on
the boards," Lanham added.
Cedarville outrebounded the
Redmen, 44-29. Most of the
Jacket rebounds wound up in
two pointers on tap-ins.
Besides 50 points between
Mounts and Reep, Kev
Kauffman tallied 22 markers
and picked oll 14 caroms lor
the wirmers.
Dan Purcell paced Rio's
attack with 23 points. Steve
I.Dnes added 22, Dan Bise 13
and Phil Washington 10.
The Yellow Jackets hit 39 of
78 field goal attempts lor 50
percent. Cedarville was a
sizzling 17 ol l9 at the foul line
for 8~.5 percent. The Jackets
had 24 assists and 14 turn-

31 19 6 68 234 195
25 19 13 63 185 177

Phlla.

Use inflation creation! That's wh a t we
at Capital call the ever- increas in g ri se
in home values . It means th at your
"borrowing power " keeps going u p. too .
Perhaps without you even rea liz ing it !
Why not put your greater "boJrow ing
power " to work by applying now for a

Ca pita l Ho me Eq uity Loa n? Use it for
that long vacation .. ne w ca r.. exten s ive
home remod eli ng' And re me mber tha t a
Capital Home Equity Loan has absolutely
no e ffec t o n your prese nt mortgage• So
send in the coupon or give us acall.We want
to he lp you turn the tables on inflation'

I

9

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MARGARINE .·
Blue Bonnet
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$119

LOANS UP TO $25,000

'I'D LIKE TO SlE YOU IN
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~

lb. quarters

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TOWELS ..................... ~·...... ~~~~~~..~~!! .... -694

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24 oi.

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•

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- WITHOUT AFFECTING YOUR PRESENT MORTGAGE!

•

"Next to Elberfelds
..
In Pomeroy. 0 -

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
570 W. MAIN .

POMEROY, 0.

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Financi
Services
a .;ubsid iary at The Contin ental Corporation

Where you can start a loan
by coupon or ptionet

300 West Second Street, Pom8roy,. Ohlo 45769 1(992-2111)

,,

�"

6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 21,1979

save one for the top. You now

'

'

Tension rises in 'Rhodesia

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith

Terry .Vining weds
Charles Eldon Smith
RUTLAND-The Rutland baby 's breath tied with
Church of the Nazarene was yellow and white ribbons. The
the setting for the open bouquet was made by Mrs.
church wedding of Terri Lynn Esther Ki ssell, friend of the
Vining, daughter of Mr. and couple.
Miss Rita Vining, sister of
Mrs. Eldon . L. Vining ,
Rutlan(j, and Charles Eugene the bride, was maid of honor.
Smith , son of Mr. and Mrs. She wore a floor length gown
Harold E. Smith, Middleport. of yellow with floral design,
The double ring ceremony a'nd carried a single white
was performed by the Rev . · silk rose with baby's breath
Lloyd Grimm Saturday, Nov. and yellow ribbon . The grooin
wore a brown suit with a
18, at 6p.m.
Miss Vi cki Grate of yellow shirt and yellow and
Rutland presented a half- brown tie. His boutonniere
hour of nuptial music with was a yellow carnation.
Ronnie Hawkins, friend of
her selections including
theme from "I'ove Story' \ the couple, served as best
"You t-ight Up My Iife", man. He wore a light blue suit
"Evergreen", " More", ·and and his boutonniere was a
the traditional "Wedding white silk rose.
The bride's mother wore a
March." Yellow and brown
floor
length dress of pink
mums decorated the altar
polyester with a sheer pink
and the organ.
The bride was escorted to cape. The groom's mother
the altar by her father . She was in a street length dress of
wore a floor length white pink polyester with a white
gown made of lovelace with vest, and both mothers had
appliqued flowe rs. The white. carnation corsages.
bodice and sleeves of her with ribbons of rainbow colgown were of acetate with aP- ors.
Miss Cindy Smith, sister of
pliqued flowers. The bride's
the
groom, registered the
waist length veil fell from a
gQests.
A reception was held
crown of rhinestones.
The bride's dress and veil immediately following the
were fashioned by Mrs. Max- ceremony' at the Nazarene
ine Smith, Letart, W. Va., Fellowship Hall. The three
aunt of the groom. The bride tiered cake was made by
wore a silver heart-shaped Mrs. Joann Fetty of Rutland.
The new Mrs. Smith is a
necklace and she curied out
in her attire the tradition of 1978 graduate of Meigs High
"something old' something School. He is employed at
new, something borrowed · Mark V in Middleport. The
and something blue:" She couple 90w reside at the
carried a bouquet of white Village -~reen Apartments,
silk roses, yellow mums, and Pomeroy1;.

llv .JOHN EDLIN
"The situation at present is
AsM.&lt;iah•d Press Writer a tough one and is likely to get
SAJ.ISBURY·, Rhodes ia even io'ugher," Army com(AP ) _ After six years of mander Lt .-Gen. · J ohn
war , black nati onali st Hickman says, adding that
guerrillas are reinforcing th e guem'IIas "know only too
their armies inside Rhodesia well that once we have
and launching bold new completed the majority rule
strikesastheirleadersvow to process their credence must
sabotage April elections and wane and wither in the minds
topple the first black-led gov- of all those who deal in double
ernment to emerge.
standards....
The biracial transition gov- . . The April elections will be
ernment is strengthening its the first in Rhodesian history
forces too - ordering an un- Involving all adult blacks,
precedented mobilization of whose people outnumber
regular troops and reserves whites 30 to one - 6.8. m illl·o'n
for the elections.'
bla cks ·as against 250,000
All leaves have been whites, the former rulers.
canceled for the period before
Under a constitutional
and after polling. The accord reached last March by
reserves can expand the white Prime Minister Ian D.
permanent forces of about Smith and three moderate
.12,000 into an army of about black 'leaders, the elections
45,000, and the aim is to raise · will establiSh the country's
the largest force ever fielded first black-led government.
in the embattled breakaway
Smith and the black
British colony.
partners with whom he
This is happening in the shares power in the transition
face of threats from Joshua government hope that this
Nkomo and Robert Mugabe , formula will win interthe guerrilla chiefs, to blow national approval, lead to· a
up the ballot boxes _ and lifting of sanctions, and
after the 8,000 to 12,000 encourage many guerrillas to
guerrillas, scattered through , lay down their arms and
an area the size of Montana, . return home.
have been able mount several
''Most guerrillas are .tirE!Q
recent strikes that signalled of fighting and will come over
an escalation in the conflict. to our side once they see
The guerrillas· forced the bIacks at t he hea d of t he next
Closure of a popular tourist goverrimenT;''SayS!ln aide to
hotel in the eastern Inyanga the Rev . Ndabaningi Sithole,
Mountains by ordering the one of the three black
black staff to quit work. They leaders.
downed an Air Rhodesia.
Alniady, some 2,000 oneViscount airliner, killing all time
guerrillas
have
59 aboard.
accepted a year-&lt;&gt;ld amnesty
They attacked with rockets . and turned themselves over
a vital power station in the to the authorities. Most have
Rhodesian capital, blew up a volunteered as "auxiliaries"
strategic railroad bridge be- to the regular Rhodesian
tween here and the eastern forces. These units control a
garrison town of Umtali, fifth of all tribal reserves, are
stepped up ambushes · of~ ,a~n:l~~
with
captured
travellers and strikes agaihSt' ' guerrilla weapons, and are
white farmers.
directed by police liaison
On Monday , their mortars officers.
firiif:On- Salisbury's- interBut critics of what is called
the "turned terrorists" : pronational airport.
Still, military chiefs say gram claim the auxiliaries
twice as many insurgents are are really . private armies
being slain now as were being loyal to Sithole or Bishop Abel
killed two years ago - and Muzorewa, another leader In
they are confident tbey can llie transition government.
check efforts to sabotage the
The critics include the third
elections.
black leader, Chief Jeremiah
Safeguarding the elections Chirau, ":ho has no private
is a vital exercise for the army. They also claim the
Salisbury government in its presence of Qitterly rival priefforts to win international v~te arrp.,i,~~ )s a recipe for
·recognition and remove the e~vll war: ·
economic strait jacket of
"I can see a situation where
United Nations sanctions.
if the ~:~Jefimas are beaten,

the ~ ith ole and Muzorewa
auxiliaries will start battling
each other ," ' says a black
adviser to Chirau. " And I can
see the possibility of one or
oth er of the auxiliaries - or
both - linking· up with one or
other of the guerrilla groups
if they aren't beaten ."
Meanwhile, the prospect of
early victory over the insur· gents appears dim : One third
of all the total 15,000 war
victims have been killed in
tile 11 months since the
March accord. And In that
tt' me , t.he guern'l'"' s have
claimed some of their most
significant successes.
They cite constant harassmen! of communications, the
first guerrilla strikes inside
the Rhodesian capital , a
De&lt;-ember attack on a vital
oil storage depot, and the
flight of a record 2,200 whites
a month .
But the guerrillas have had
their jolts as well. More than
2,000 fighters under· training
were slain last year in a
series of Rhodesian ground
and air assaults on their
camps in Mozambique and
Zambia.
Paid
government
informers in cities, towns and
villages continue to tip off
authorities about guerrilla
movem e nts.
Under
interrogation, most captured
guerrillas continue to inform
on comrades. And the
downing of two Air Rhodesia
Viscounts, killing a total of
107, may have lost the
guerrillas some international
support. Nkomo claimed
responsibility for both,
saying the planes were
downed by missiles.
Smith says there is a
chance that the West,
outraged by the civilian
deaths, will turn its back on
the guerrillas.
But countries like the
United States and Britain
haven't indicated they will
support the new government.
And without international
recogniiion, Rhodesia faces
the prospect of a more
prolonged
war. · more
pressure on the economy. and
more flight of skilled whites.

~-------,

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · tainer that will hold foQr rolls
·uf toilet paper in . the
hathroom. -MARYw.
.• I
Polly will send you one of
her si gned thank -you
Polly Cramer
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve Problem in
out with the hands and dry on her column. Write POLLY'S
Take care
three or four parallel POINTERS in care of this
clotheslines in the shade. - newspaper.
with quilt
POLLY
•
DEAR POLLY - riease ad· DEAR POLLY ~ I recently vise the readers that they
bought an antique hand-sewn
(and very fragile ) quilt top should tear or cut with a pair
that has dark brownspots on of scissors any six-pack rings
that are going to be tossed
it.
out.
Tiny animals can be
t wonder if any of the strangled
to death in these inreaders might knol" how to
advcrtant
" tra ps. " remove these spots without
RICHARD
damaging the fabri c. It must
DEAR POLLY- If postage
be handled very carefully. I
stamps
are stuck together put
have heard such spots called
them
in
the freezer for about
linen spots. -SUSAI'l
an
hour
and
then they can be
DEAR SUSAN - Old quilts
separated
with
the glue in-are much sought after today
and should be handled with tact.
Save old socks to use as
great care. I would not
bags when you are pack ~
shoe
recommend any strong spot
ing
a
suitcase. -IRENE
removers because the fabric ·
DEAR
POLLY - I find that
might go to pieces. Such
rubbing
a sheet of fabric
quilts should not even be
softener
over one's hair
laundered unless each color
eliminates
static and ·makes
is tested for color fastness.
it
is
easier
to brush in place.
Many are made of silk, velvet
Also
it
is
a
fantastic
grooming
and non-washable materials.
aid
for
a
cat
that
is
to
be judgWhen one does want to risk
ed
at
a
cat
show.
Just
rub the
washing, never do it in the
sheet
over
the
eat's
fur
and he
washing machine but in the
looks
beautifully
groomed.
bathtub with no rubbing or
wringing - just soaking and - HARRIET
DEAR POLLY - Save
gentle working with the pabn
two-pound coffee cans
three
of the hand. Only use a
and
cut
the bottoms out of
detergent for fine washables,
two.
Stack
the three, one on
repeat two or three times and
top
of
the
other,
tape together
then rinse perhaps a half
and
cover
it
all
with pretty
dozen times. Press the water
adhesive-backed paper. Put a
2n E. MAIN· POMI!ROV
plastic lid on the pottom and

POL•v·s POINTERS

STICK PINS

~-------,

I

Social I
Calendar

I

l

ANNUAL INSPECTION of
Pomeroy Chapter 80 RAM
Wednesday 7:30p.m. Work in
the moot excellent master
degree. All companions invited to attend.
FRIDAY
BAKE SALE Friday at
Dale C. Warner Insurance
Agency; W. Main, Pomeroy,
by Forest Run United
Methodist Church.
MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters,
7:30 Monday night at the Middleport Masoni-c Temple.

•CHINO for
Spring Suit
Slacks

•SOFT .KNITS
Polyester &amp; Cotton,

•SOFT FLORAL
With coordinating
Polyester, Cotton

•HOPSAKING
•EMBROIDER

Social 1 TheSKATI!i!G
PARTY
· H'e ath United
Methodist cil~rch, will have a
1 Calendar 1 skating
party :Sunday at the

1

S~e the new
Space Saver
Cabinet!

We haveaii'Y;;';;;:'"'J
Quilling Supplies ·

Skate-a-way Rink on Route 7.
All members of the church
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Mu~zleloaders are invited and should meet
Club, 9 p.m. Wednesday at at the church at I :30 p.m. The
Jones Boys, W. Main St., skating will be from 2 to 4:30
Pomeroy; all interested p.m. Those attending are to
take money for skates.
persons welcome.

McFANN'S..
·,

,

FABRffsHoP
115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

MA~KET
'
.
.

G,ROUND

,,_,,

5/8" PARTICAL

LB.

BOARD
1

Libby's

Li
Libby)

KERNEL
CORN

CORN

303

303

size can

size can

FOR

$1

3 $1
FOR

Libby's

GREEN

·····················································

.

4 '.x8' SHEETS
ONLY

BEANS
303
size can

FOR

$1

3 lb. can
'1"
CRISCO .•••.....••..•..•..•..•....•.•••••i •••••••••••••••••••••••
,
7 Different Varieties
3 FOR •1
OOK IES

c

v

tht'S&lt;' lines. "Every Drop to were Fay Sauer , Betsy
Orink " 'filmed m London, Horky, Lee Lee, Jeanette
England , traced steps Thomas, Winifred Naas, and
necessary in the fillration ·Margaret arsons who gave
and purification before water . the invocation.
Meigs County members atis ready for the consumer.
tending
were Ruth Euler,
London'g,elaborate system of
Mildred
Hawley, J_,e I.ee,
water distribution showed the
Nan
Moore~
Geneva Nolan,
progress made since the earParsons,
Maxine
Margaret
ly part of the c'l!ntury and the
Philson Mary V. Reibel, Fay
excellent use of this utility.
not for children under 6) .
Margaret Benson presided Sauer , Emily Spragu e,
Proponents of Vitamin C at the business meeting. Rosalie Story, Rebecca Tate,
recommend dos,, . of several Thank you cards from Max- Jeanette Thomas, Anna · E.
grams a day cor the cold .. ine Philson and Esther Turner, Carol Wolfe, and
Most cold preparations Dauber were acknowledged. Dorothy Woodard.
contain less than I percent of There was a communication
that
(less
than
50 from Mrs. Martha Husted,
milligrams).
'SENTINEL' ERROR
vacationing in Florida . BarIn general, it's a good idea bara Litter and Dorothy Scott
There was no dancing at
to take no more drugs than read proposed membership the sweetheart banquet of the
neected and to consult a applications which will be Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
doctor before taking cold voted on at the March 10 Church ,held Saturday night
remedies if already taking meeting.
at the Trinity Church. The
other medications.
Hostesses for the 12:30 lun- headline on the news story
cheon preceding the meeting was in error.
BANQUET SET
The Blue and Gold banquet i(;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;::=;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::=;:::;:::;:;:;::;:;::.:·
of Middleport Cub ScpU( Pack
245 will be held Thursday,
Feb. 22 at 6 p.m. at American
Legion Post, Middleport, for :=
{
·:·:
:-:·
scouts and their families.
.·.•
Lorayne Jones, chairman
of the research cotnmittee, ,
showed a film which stressed
changes being made along

.99
EACH

Store HouJS:
Mon.-Sat.
_8 am-10 pm

The Common cold.· more common facts

, , By-KEVIN McKEAN
more of about 120 basic - ANTIHISTAMINES : ofAP Scleace Wriler
ingredients.
.
ten
clilorpheniramine,
NEWYORK(AP) -lt'san
Of these, the panel said 44 methapyrllene, pyrilamine,
intimate scene. · A young were both 'safe and effective. phenlndamlne,
thenyl·couple in bathrobes confront But 22 others were branded dlamlne, ph.e nyltoloxaus -at their IJ¥lllicine chest. asunsafeocmlslabled,and54 mine,
pheniramlne,
. The busband says he has were said to be safe but of diphenhydramine,
doxyIeverything be needs for a dubious value.
amine.
cold, and ope111 his side of the
The FDA panel added:
These relieve sneezing and
cabinet to reveal a dozen -Cold product labeling often watery eyes of hay fever and
· : ,powders, liquids and pills.
is ''overly complicated, allergies. There is some con: ' But the wife, looking smug, · vague, unsupported by troversy whether antlhista,
! says she too has everthlng scientific evidence and Iii mines have any effect on a
; 1 she needs for a cold. Her side
some cases Is misleading." cold, but they are included in
: 1 eootainl a single product that
-Advertising claims such almost every leading cold '
J ~ combines
the
active as "cold medicine," "cold product.
Caution:
IngredientS of aU the others. formula," or "for the relief of antihistamines can cause
That's cold fighting, tele- colds" should be bamed.
drowsiness.
vision-&lt;:ommercial style.
-More research is needed
_:EXPECTORANTS: often
It is the kind. of Jttcb that into how the products affect guaifeliesin (or gylceryl
' helped Jll8\le multi-Ingredient cbUdren.
gualacolate), ipecac syrup,
products perennial leaders of
The FDA is moving toward potassimn guaiacolsulflona te
the $843 million a year cough new regulations for cold or terpin hydrate. ·
,','
and cold industry, the largest products based on the panel's
These are intended to thin
, over-the-counter
drug work. But the resuJatlons are congestion in the lungs so
WALTER SHASTEEN
market.
at least a year away.
SERIOUSLY ILL
mucus can be coughed up.
··:·
·.·.
! Nobody claims these
The Romans sipped mlon However, an FDA panel said
Walter R. Shasteen, fori products cure a cold. All they troth for a cold. American it could find no evidence that merly of Pomeroy, is
WHY TEENS STILL GET PREGNANT
! do is ease the symptoms colonists relied on herbs like any of expectorants now in seriously Ill in a Tampa
DEAR
HELEN.
hospital. Cards may be sent
~ during the week or more a sage,
buckthorn
and use work very well.
With all the information available and contraceptives as
i disease bangs on.
bloodroot. Today's cold
to him at University Com-ANTICHOLINERGICS:
close
as the drugstore (or a prescription via Planned Paren: But some doctors and drug- remedies have Ingredients often atropine, belladonna munity Hospital, 3100 East
thood),
how come over 700,000 wunarried teen-age girls still
• glsis are questioning the wls- . with even more obscure preparations. ~
Fletcher Ave., Room 557,
get
pregnant
each year? ..- S. W.
: dom of the "shotgun" names; here Is a quick guide
These are intended to dry Tampa, Florida, 33612. Mr.
l 'llppro~cb to cold relief.
to tralllllating some of them. watery eyes and runny nose. and Mrs. Shasteen moved to DEARS.:
May I quote Irom my new book, "Parents' Survival Kit"
"Too"many Ingredients can
-ANALGESICS
(pain The FDA panel said it could Florida two years ago.
(brought out by Doubleday last month). In my chapter titled
· •work at cross purposes," relievers): often listed on the find no evidence these were
"Sex and What To Do About It," I've written:
Graedon, label
as
aspirin, effective either.
: says . Joe
TO
MEET
WEDNESDAy
'""··
· Teen-agers aren 'I consistent in their use of contraceptives
pharmacologist and author. acetaminophen.
- THREE OTHERS:
The
Gallia
County
Junior
for
a number of reasons:
"There's an expectorant to
These cut fever and reduce caffeine, alcohol and Vitamin
Fair
Dairy
Promotion
Fatalism:
"II happens to the other person- notto me."
get mucus out of the hmga, a aches and pains. Acetamino- C (ascorbic acid).
Committee
will
meet
WedIgnorance
or unavailability: This especially among under
cough suppressant to keep It phen, an aspirin substitute,
Caffeine, a stimulant, is
at
the
16-year-&lt;tlds.
d
In the lungs, and an provokes less stomach upset. added to offset drowsiness of nes ay, F e b. 21 '
.
'b'l'
.
. t"
Irresponst
11ty: "! f orgot ." ult was t oo mconvemen
. &lt;~J
antlhl.Urr!lne to thicken the Some doctors say aspirin antihistamines. Alcohol is Jackson Pike office of the
mucus that's there."
causes more cold virus to be used to dissolve other Ohio Valley Bank. Anyone thought it~~ my safe time&lt;" 'He said h&lt;; us&lt;;? somethin_g."'
Ro.manllctsm, !'"ss1bly llllXed w1th gmlt:
we don I plan
A U.S. Food and Drug Ad- shed In the mucus and may ingredients (the FDA panel interested in promoting the
daiu
sweepstakes
at
lhe
fair
and
JUSt
get
camed
away,
who
c~n
blame
us,;
T~s m_ay ~
ministration study panel said make a cold more contagious. said any product with more
this
year
is
welcome
to
atthe
reason
so
few
teen-agers
use
btrth
control
the
ftrst t1me.
it was "Irrational" to _:_DECONGESTANTS: of- than 10 percent arcohol was
tend
They
act
now,
t_
h
ink
later.
.
combine more than three ten phen¥1ephrine, pheRevenge. "My parents are mean. It will serve them right,"
·
classes of Ingredients nylpropanolamine,
pseuis
sometimes the burjed motive. If you wonder how anyone
because almost no one has doephedrine,
oxyme1
could
be so foolish, think of the many people who attempt
that many symptoms at once. tazoline, propylhexedrine,
f,
suicide
to "get even."
.
But the drug C01J1panles say xylometazoline, naphazolin~- _
Need.
Kids
who
lack
(or
feel
they
lack)
love
at
home
crave
the FDA Is wrong : more than - These redu.-.. swewng by
tangible proof that someone cares. "My baby will be my very
half of cold sufferers have shrinking tiny blood vessels
own
and he'll always love me and nobody's going to take him
multiple symptoms.
in the nose. Nasal sprays
away,"
a 15-year-&lt;&gt;ld cries, not realizing how poorly equipped
"Advertising only work best because they
she
is
for
motherhood.
encourages the consJDner to deliver a concentrated dose.
The annuaJ Blue and Gold ventors" and "Fresh Fish",
Hope
for
marriage. Girls who think pregnancy is a quick
try the product once. H It But because of the effect on Banquet of Syracuse Cub
were
presented
by
the
scouts
route
to
the
altar
may or may not win. But rru.ny end up losers
doesn't work, he'll stop blood vessels, some products Scout Pack 242 was held
who
also
sang
several
songs.
even
though
they
get
their weddings.
1
buying It," says George .F. warn against use by people recently at the Syracuse
During
the
meeting
plans
The
nesting
instinct.
They want a home, family, a real union,
Hoffnagle, vice president for with cardiovascular Elementary Sc~ool.
.
were
discussed
for
the
but
parents
won't
sign
for them. "If we start a baby, they'll
· scientific and reg11latory ~blems.
Blue
and
gold
carnations
pinewood
derby
and
also
for
to,"
the
reasoning
goes.It isn't mature thinking, though
have
aUairs lor Richardson-COUGH
SUPwere
used
on
the
tables
which
going
skating
at
the
Skate-aoccasionally
such
marriages
prosper. ·
Merrell, maker of Vicks.
PRESSANTS:
often co- were covered with gold
Way
Rink.
The
meeting
closForthright
talk,
with
accurate
information, at home and st
. Hoffnagle says it's cheaper deine, destromethorphan.
clothes. These W!1!:e given to ed with a living circle.
school,
is
the
best
way
to
control
the disastrous pregnancy
and ~ for a cold victim
These reduce the desire ·to the women who assisted with
were
Mr.
and
Attending
epidemic
among
teen-agers.
It
won~. as supposed by sexwho has several symptoms to cough. But coughing Is a the dinner. The pledge to the
buy one combination· remedy · reflex to rid the lungs of flag and the Lord's Prayer Mrs. Robert Deemer, Chris education foes, make unwed intercourse more prevalent - just
.
·
than to experiment with congestion
and
some led by Scott McPhail and and Kevin, Mr. and Mrs. Cor- safer when It happens.
bitt
Patterson,
Mike
and
CinAbout
my
book,
"Parents'
Survival
Kit" (sub-titled "A
different single-ingredient · physicians say If a cough is Todd Davidson opened the
dy, Mr. and Mrs. Greg Reassuring Guide to Uving Through Your Child's Teen-age
products.
productive - that Is, If it's meeting.
'
Bailey. Chris and Andy Baer, Years"). It covers everything from sex to sibling battles;
The FDA panel found that not a dry cough that brings up
Awarda presented included Mrs. Jerry Aleshire, and neatness (is it really necessary?) to instilling self-esteem
the 50,000 cold remedies It nothing _ It should not be the wolf badge to Scott
Jerry , Mrs. Allen Davidson, (yours and theirs); discipline to prejudice; single-parenting to
studied aU contained one or suppressed entirely.
McPhAil and Jerry Aleshire, Todd and Lois, Mr. and Mrs. "Mothers' Uberation." And I've tried to keep it light-touch.
the bear badge to Chris Jim Adams, Todd and Kim,
My overall premise is that parents (most of them) are doing '
Deemer and Mike Patterson, Mrs. Miller and her grand- a better job thandoomcriers would have us believe. If you stay '
advancement beads to Todd son, David Duffy, Mr. and on top of "today," enjoy two-generation fnendships, treat exDavidson, silver arrows to Mrs. Clarence Frank and cess worry with a dollop of hmnor, and never, but never ra1se,
Chris Deemer , Scott Jeff, Mrs. Gary Freeman and kids on the adversary principle (them against us), you'll
McPhail, Jerry Aleshire, and Brian, Mrs. Pete Tho.ren and discover that child-rearing is like giving birth: You bear down
Todd Davidson , and Eric, and Mr. and Mrs. Hugh hard when it's necessary, smile a~d relax between ,pains,
naturalist and outdoorsman Me Phail, Scott, Corey and knowing they won't last long. And VOJia -look wbat you ve got
•. By
A. MULLIGAN Is dismal, dingy and cluttered pins to Eric Thoren.
Heather. ·
for your effort! -H.
AP Special CorrespondeDI beyond redemption.
The skits, "The Robot InNEW YORK (AP) The National University of
Friends &lt; congratulated Mexico, the oldest in the
engineer Henry Horn!Kmel Western Hemisphere, Is a
when the Quee111boro Bridge fantasia of striking mosiacs,
across New York's East colorful murals, futuristic
River opened in 1909.
glass and concrete designs
· "It's a goddam boiler that give the Faculty of
shop," lamented the bridge Architecture its deserved
buUder, conceding the wocld wide pre-eminence.
ugliness of the black steel . But the effect is not that of
cantilever Structure that still a headloug stampede into the
darkens the sky outside the future, a wild attempt at
U.N. Building; ·
being different just foc the
History should honor the sake of being shocking rather
forgotten Hornbostel foc his than harmonious
and
candor.
pleasing. Mexico's architects
Did the architects who de- do not seem to be afraid of the
signed those atrocious past; In fact they often
hlghrlse Harvard dormitories embrace It with as much
that destroyed that lovely ingenuity as they pursue the
skyline alulg the Charles modern and the futuristic.
The Grand Hotel Ciudad de
River in Cambridge, Mass.,
similarly admit the aesthetic Mexico, on · the cathedral
IN~EL'S
blight they bad perpetrated? square In Mexico City, has
Anyhow, horse.whipping as · been built within the sheD of
FURNITURE
a prime time entertaimnent an old department store,
for the maasea should bave using tbe same beautiful
been re-Introduced In Tiffany glass skylight&amp; and
Harvard Square to handle the old wrought-iron elevator
problem as 10011 as the plans cages to enhance the striking
were unveiled.
lobby.
One wmders why so much
What is boldly new In Mesl·
of America'• architecture is ·can architecture seldom
so detenninediY ugly.
.seems to intrude oo the old:
A few weeill ago .I had the baroque old Spanish
'
occasion to travel in Mexico churches, the exquisite
and
everywhere .was delicately carved Mayan,
lmpreued With , the gaiety, Aztec and Zapotec ruins, the
the grandeur, the daring use lush parks and many
of color and dellgn in their monmnents. It seems fitting
architecture. Even their high aomehow that Paseo de La
(AtiOSS from tbe Gas Co.)
rise structure• show an Reforma, Mexico City's wide
imaginative uae of aVIIIIable main street -of startlingly
apace, eapeetaUy In the knife- modem hotela · and office ·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
edge sharp glus buDdlnga 1buUdings, was laid out by tl)e
that · th1"118t a bold triangle 'beautiful Empress Carlotta
I1Jio the corners of Mexico so she could have an
City's ' broad diagonal -.unobstructed view of her
bOulevards, wblch were laid huaband, the 'Emperor
,lilt In COIIIClolll Imitation of Maxlmllian von Hapsburg,
Paris.
riding home from the palace
Harvard, America's oldest In his famous black carriage.
llld ooce Ita loveliest college,

j

Sunday
lu am-10 pm
298 SECOND ST.

. Pnces Effective

Thru
Feb. 241 1979

Helen Help
··Us ... By Helen Bouei!:
.

'!.

B' ue'

Go/4 banquet held
by Syracuse Club Scouts

•

INGEL'S FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE

'

•

Omicron Chapter of Dellll
Theme for Saturday 's
Kappa Gamma Society Inter- meeting was " Future
national held at the Meigs Changes for a Global SocieInn.
ty."

•

ONLY

CREAM
STYLE

A program·on conserv.ation
was presented by the
research committee at the
Feb. 17 ineeting of Alpha

alJcH

BEEF

WHOLE

Delta Kappa Gamma presents conservation program

hHve a handy and pretty con-

· Today's
Topic
.
.

1::-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 21, 1979

..'
.

.'

BANANAS~$}
FlAVORITE

PINTO BEANS
LIMIT 2
1-LB. BAG

19~

Limit! per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer
ires Feb. 24, 1979

· MARDI GRAS

TOWELS
JUMBo
ROLL

4-- 9·~

Limit 1 per Customer
Good only at Powell's _
Offer
·res Feb. 24, 1979

MUEu.ERS

NOODLES
·16 oz.
PKG.

. 49~

Limit 1 per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Feb. 24, 1979

JOY LIQUID
32 oz.
gg~·
-BTL

�0.,

9- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 21, 1979

RAMP program eligibility explained
Tony Riffle
Know Your Carrier

KNOW YOUR CARRIER- Tony Riffle, 12, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Riffle, Syracuse, is a new carrier for the
Daily Sentinel. Tony attends Racine Junior High and is
interested in -all sports.

Any owner of unrcclaimed,
orphaned coal mine land in
Meigs CoWlty is eligible to
apply for assistance in
reclaiming the land Wlder the
Rural Abandoned Mine
Program {RAMP) , according to District Conservationist Boyd Ruth of the
U. S. Soil Conservation
Service (SCS).
"Signups are being acceptell now Wltil March 1," he
explained, "for voluntary
pa_rticipation . in ~AMP .
Assistance from the CSC Will
incl~d e technical
assessment, planning, and
federal cost-sharing. "
The new reclamation
program for old mine lands is
authorized liy the Federal
Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977.
Under the law, the U. S.
Department of the Interior
and state govenunents are to
Share responsibility for enforcing adequate reclamation
standards on new and future
surface mining.
The Interior Department,
the states, and the U. S.'
Department of Agriculture
(USDA ) will help Americans
in 29 states reclaim an
estimated 1.1 mmion acres
which were mined prior to
August 1977, but which .were
either not reclaimed or
inadequately reclaimed.
This reclamation will be
financed by fees charged
against current mining - 35
cents on each ton of surface
mined coal, and 15 cents per

of the rstim ~t rrf ! 07

1'1(10

:"trr roc;:

Programs run poorly
WASHINGTON (AP ) The summer jobs program
for disadvantaged youth is
poorly rWl and, in a few
in·stances, gives urba n
YOWlgsters a chance to play
for pay, . Congress has been
told .
The General Accounting
Office made the assessment
in a draft report based on an
analysis of the government's
Summer Program for
E;conomically Disadvantaged
Youth.
The report said many of the
estimated I miUion youths
enrolled in the $755 million
program last summer
received little meaningful
work.
The GAO looked into the
program at the request of
Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla.
. The draft report , released
Tuesday , said, " ... The pro-

care of the section s removed
in the House committee,''

Tranter said, referring to the
same review process the bill
faces in the Senate.
One amendment approved
by the House Judicia ry
Committee removed from the
list of capital offenses
homicides thaI occur during

the commission of another
felony, or felony-murders . .
Tranter said efforts would
be made oo the floor to
reinstate felony-murders in
the bill. About ~ of the men
on death row when Ohio's
death penalty was ruled
Wlconstitutionallast year had
committed felony murders.
Rep. William L. Mallory,
ri-Cincinnati, was expected
to
offer
a
floor
amendment that would
substitute life imprisonment without ~arole
for the death penalty. The
same amendment failed on a•
'm-1 0 commiitee vote.
In
other
legislative
business,
the
House
Commerce and Labor
Co mmittee approved two
bills for passage Tuesday
night.
One measure, spons&lt;ired by
Rep . Thomas i&gt;. Gilmartin,
D-Youngstown,
would

eliminate the one-week
waiting period for persons
eligible · to··
receive
Wlemployent compensation.
An identical bill passed both
chambers last year but was
vetoed by Gov. James A.
Rhodes.
The second bill, sponsored
by Rep. Mike Stinziano, seeks
to prohibit job discrimination
based on pregnancy.
In floor action Tuesday, the
House approved and sent to
the Senate a pair of routine
bills.
One measure corrects nonsubstantive errors in laws .
the last
enacted by
Legislature . The other
conforms
state
apprenticeship programs,
implemented
by
the
industrial relations
deparbnent, with certain new
rules and regulations of the
federal govenunent.
Hearings began in the

· d ustn•a1 b reak
Dems seek ·m

House Ways and Means
Committee Tuesday Qn Gov.
James A. Rhodes' pian to
· deal with municipal fiscal
crises.
Sponsored by Rep Harry J.
Lehman, D-Cleveland, the
measure calls for the estab-

is generally not giving many

lishment of a nine-member
commission of state and local
government officials and private experts to oversee the fi~ a ncial activitieS of any
municipality
such
as
Cleveland that gets into a
fiscai emergency.

TV ... in Review
By TOM JORY
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Don't suggest that Bill Devane might
be playing Burt Lancaster in NBC's "From Here to Eternity"
·
miniseries. To Bill Devane, that is.
· ~I saw the original when I was a kid. I haven't seen it since,"
Devane says quite finally of the Oscar-winning I953 fiim that
starred Lancaster, Frank Sinatra and Deborah Kerr.
Lancaster won a New York Film Critics Circle award for his
portrayal of Sgt. Milt Warcjen- the part played by Devane in
the NBC remake.
'~ I'm so different from Burt Lancaster,'' says Devane, ''that
it'sa waste oitimeto even talk about it."
The miniseries, which began the evening of Feb . 14, continues Wednesday night at 9 EST. The concluding chapter wiD be

Feb.28.
. m
. appearance,
'Though Devane may favor Lanca~er a b1t
SthetwoapproachedtheWardenpartfromdifferentangles.
·
·
"Burt Lancaster was a victim of the times," Devane says.
"There
was only so far you could go with a movie then.
He
said
although
GM
has
pro111ised to work closely with
By ROBERT E. MilLER
"This
is a story about men and women and war and men anc
mentioned
reopening
the
.
Zimmers' committee in
Associated Press Writer
women
getting
pushed around, and we play it that way," the
fa
cility
for
the
manufact!lre
drafting a bill agreeable to all
COLUMBUS, Ghio (AP ) actor
says.
"Here
are·three people in a bind right up to the end,
of
diesel
engines
and
light
parties.
Some majority Democrats
and
I'm
telling
you,
the acting is phenomenal."
point
in
the
trucks
at
some
Citing a report of the
want to expand a bill giving
Indeed,
Devane
spent
lour days in the company of a career
future
,
"no
one
bas
been.able
National Urban League ,
tax breaks to industries
master
sergeant
at
Fort
Ord,
an Army base in California.
which create jooo in inner to get a timetable out of Howarth said unemployment
"From
my
conversations
with
the sergeant, I learned that
,.
among black youth in such
cities to include incentives for them."
the
Army
is
practically
run
by
the
master sergeants," the
In response to ·the cities as Cleveland . and
thuse out in the suburbs and
actor
says.
"They're
the
father
confessor,
mother and
comments
of
Carney
and
Cincinnati now is up to about
counti&lt; s
problem-&amp;liver
for
all
their
men
and
sometimes
the officers.
Zimmers,
the
bill's
chief
50 percent.
Sen. 1'1 n as E. Carney, D"James
Jones
was
on
target
with
his
character
of
Warden in
sponsor,
Sen.
Wiiiiam
F.
Rhodes recently blamed
Girard, :·, erred Tuesday to
the
book.''
Bowen,
D-Cincinnati,
said
he
the bleak job picture in core
the shutdown of a major steel
In fact, Devane says he spent a month reading and repla nt
in
suburban would not oppose his bill cities for a number of other
reading
Jones' World War II classic and the script for the
being
used
as
a
vehicle
for
social ills, including an
Youngstown in iate 1977. He
miniseries.
incentives
that
would
create
increasing crime rate.
said the legislation offers
NBC announced recenUy plans for a series based on "From
He bas been. particularly
nothing to prevent or remedy and preserve jooo in areas
Here
to Eternity," and Devane has agreed to continue in the
other
than
inner
cities.
incensed
by reports that
those kinds of situations.
Warden
role for at least 18 months.
Bowen's bill received a students have been accused
Senate Ways and Means
Devane's
liim credits include "Family Plot," "McCabe and
Chairman Neai F. Zinnmers ringing endorsement from of arson in fires set aI some
Mrs.
Miller,"
"Marathon Man" and "Report to the CommisJr ., D-Dayton, whose com- GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes, junior and senior high schools
sioner."
He
recently
completed "Yanks," with Vanessa Redwho
long
has
contended
that
in the Cleveland school
mittee is hearing the legislagrave.
tion, expressed similar con- improving Ohio's business system.
Ia~ climate is the best way to
Hearings on the Bowen bill
cerns.
lure
and retain job-producing are to continue next week.
Zimmers mentioned the re·
He won passage of a
cent clos in g of General industries.
Today In History
corner for the seventh round
With
Robert
F
.
Howarth
similar bill last year in the
Motors Corp .'s Fri gidaire
By
The
Associated
Press
of a mareh in Miami Beach.
Division in the Dayton suburb Jr ., the governor's executive Senate, but it failed to get
Today
is
Sunday,
Feb.
25,
Ten years ago: North Viet"
assistant, acting as his through flle House.
of Moraine.
the
56th
day
of
1979.
Tbere
are
namese
suicide squads
spokesman, the governor
309 days left in the year.
attacked two U.S. Marine
Today 's · highlight in artillery positions in South
history :
Vietnam
near
the
On this date in 1913, the 16tl1 demilitarized zone, and 20
Amendment to the U.S. Con- marines and 35 of the
stitution went into effect, attackers were killed in handgiving Congress the authority t.Hland combat. '
HARDWARf
to levy income taxes.
Five years ago: President
On this date:
Richard Nixon told a
In · 1783,
Denmark · WaShington news conference
recognized the independence the House could not impeach
- Ac r l!i thr plan wtlh
-'the Hclplul HartfWa.r ~ Man··1M
of the United States.
him without first finding
In 1885, Germany annexed
evidence that he had violated
the African territories of criminal law.
I
Tanganyika and Zanzibar.
One year ago : The United
In 1919, Oregon became the States cautioned the Soviet
first state to Ia~ gliSOline, im- Union that U.S.-Soviet
posihg one ·cent per gallon of relations could be impaired
gas.
by continuec) Soviet military
In
1927,
the
people
of
tlle
involvement·in
the conflict in
REG. '24.95
American Virgin Islands Africa between Ethiopia and
Offer Good Now
were _
granted
U.S. Somalia.
ONLY
Thru. Feb . 14
citizenship .
Today's birthdays : Former
In 1956, Premier Nikita Beatie Qeorge Harrison is 36.
KhruShchev went before a BritiSh a:tor Tom Courtenay
Communist Party congress in is 42. Star outfielder Cesar
Moscow and denounced the Cedeno of the Houston Asb·os
iate Soviet dictator, Joseph is 28.
MEIGS PLAZA
Stalin .
Thought for today : Nothing
'
In 1964, Cassius Clay won is ev~r acrom p li~·hed by a
MIDDI..EPORT, 0.
the w1orid 's heavyweigL
rea sonetble mau - George
boxing championship when 'Bernard Shaw, British
992-3662
916 MON.-SAT. 12/6 SUN. the titleholder , Sonny Liston, wri ter , 1856-1950.
·
failed to come out of his

ACE

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•

Black powder .buffs expected

Landowners will ·be
required
to
develop
reclamation plans with SCS
assistance. Planned conservation practices should be
installed within·the first two,
years of the contract.
After the reclamation work
is completed, the land will be
under the agreement for
three additiooal years to
assure adequate establishment and maintenance of
vegetation.

CHilliCOTHE , Ohio (AP)
- Black powder buffs from
seven states are expected at
flle 8th annual Statehood
Days Muzzleloading Rifle
Sl\oot March 3-4 in this city,
Ohio's f1rst capital.
Co-sponsored by Scioto
County's Daniel Boone
Muzzleloading Rifle Club and
the Ross County Primitive
Weapons Club, the event will
be held at the Ross · COunty
· club's. range, . south of
Olillicothe off U.S. 23.
Registration begins at 9
- - _., cia)' wllb the fil'lt

'

between relays for posting Boone club.
targets. The last open relay
Paper largets wili be used
will start at l :30p.m . Sunday, for regular rifle matches and Ca th. "
A shvi ll e Teays . Valley 55 ,
March 4.
National Muzzleloading Bifle Col
umbus Ha mil ton Town Following the last relay Association rules will apply ship 54
. Aust inburg Grand River 62,
fivemember team matches · throughout the Shoot .
lvar y· Chr istian 41
will be held. .All team
"Come rain or snow) hell or Ca
Ba r nesv ill e 84, Shenandoah
matches will be Shot offhand high water, we wili Shoot ," 66
at 25 yards.
said Ri chards who is Bel l aire St . John 92, Br ill iant
The Shoot will also include manager of ~Sffiiwnee ...State Buckeye Nor th 82
a Mountain Man Aggregate Forest when he's not wearing Ber gh ol z Spring fiel d 69,
Irondale Stanton 63
- rifle shooting, tomahawk buckskins and stuffing a Bl
oomd a l e Elm wood 55,
throwing and firestarting.
frontloader. _
Eastwood 45
There will · be ~pedal
Las t year 's shoot had Cambridge 81, Brooke, W.
shooting ev~nts for both nearly 100 participants Va. 72 .
Li ma Seni or 76, Van Wert 72
n.:i l
W i nches t er
77, Mount Vern on 56, De laware
women and · children, said despit e below freez ing Ca
Am anda Clearcr eek 64
Stan Richards of the Daniel · temperatures.
Circleville Logan El m 55, ''
Norwalk St . Paul60, Danbury

.

,
"'
.••
.'

••

..''
:t'

. • I

•l

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.,

LOOtc H»W TMIIIIGN
TMitOUGHOUT THI
STORI fiOtt
PANYoUtiC 'SAYINGI
ON II:.OGII llANO
PIOOtJCTS

UITID IILOW All JUIT
A fiW UAMPLIJ

•

TOTAl SATISFACTION

'

'•
'•'

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Me Donald 47

Etch of theM tctvtnilld itema it
,rtQuinld to be~ IVUIIM for •le
tin Nc:h Kroger &amp;loft, IICCept 11
IJIICif!QIIy no'lld In thilld . If we do
run out gf •n 1dlo11 tiNG item, M will
offet you your c:hoice of 1 comparable
Item, ..,., evdlblt. rtftecting the
..ving~ or 1 ratncheck whtch will
tide you to PUrchiM me ~ctvert iled
adootniNd price within :Jl

•P ~ss p o rl s

••

•

The Photo Place

69.

•'•:~

..:,.
..
'

( Bob Hoe flich)
109 Hig;, 51.
Pomeroy

'•
'
'

GUARANTEE
Ev....;thing "you buy 11 Kroger is
gue~~teed for your total utitfaction
~rlleU of ~nufa cturllf . II you tre
not Ntitl;.d, Kroger Will "'PIICI yo ur
if4tm with the Nme bra nd or a com~rable bland or refund your purchase

:;age

•••. 24 . lt7tiN

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

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Whole

lrogorWolcaOMI
l•r Ftderel
Food Stam,•

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Parts .

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Except Closell Saturday Midnight
Til 9AM Sunday
Except Hinton And ·White Sulphur Springs

HOLLY FARMS
U.S.D.A. INSPECTID

HOLLY FARMSU.S.D.A.
INSPECTED GRADE A

•n. It THIU S:f,TURDA't ,

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ADAY

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CC)PYIIGHT lt7t • TtM kiOGEI (0. ITEMS ANO
PltCIS C00D SUNDAY,

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ALL KROGER STORES

Holly Farms chicken is packed &amp; shipped direct
to your store at 28°. Thats Freezing to people,
but not to birds. It's the optimum temperature
that keeps them fresh, flavorful and firm to the
touch. Ready to cook and serve, or safely fr.eeze
at home for future use,

at,,.

,

•••

.'

~~!~

89'---'

WI HSIIVI TM1 ltGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES .
NONI SOLD TO DIAUIS.

•••
•
'•

Polar Pak
Ice Milk

'

. ••'

'37.95

•

''

IREDWINGI·~I

SAVE

•
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!
I

HARREY'S SHOES,-- INC.

Kroger's
Pro ... .. ....................

t
•'

"Mi~dle of Upper B_lock, ,P omeroy, o."
9 a.m.-5 p.m . Mon.
thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m.-a p.m. Fri.
Closed Sund•y

•

.•,,•

lb.

t

,t''

')' :•

•

'"

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread .. .. .. .

Boneless
Boston Roll .. _.............

•
•

••
•••
•

.

Jug

99

LIMIT ON£ JUG WITH COUPON' AND $7.50 ADDITIONAl PURCHASE
(EICIUDIHG THIS ITEM)
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
t•P'Ofl ClOt SIINJ HI. II TillI S..JIINf HI. 14. U7!

I

oneless Top
Sirlo ·steak ,.

$

Clover Valley
Margarine .. __ .....

.•
•
.,•

Gal.

$

••

••

1-lb.

29

Pkg.

LIMIT TWO POUNDS WITH COUPON AND S7.50 ADDlTIONAl
PURCHASE (UCLUDINC THIS IHM)
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FA Mil V

••

CDIPGII ctOI !UDAl Ul . II TliiV UTIIOAJ HI. 14. 1171

SIIJECT TO A,Utall£ STATE &amp; lOCAL fliU

•

••

$

SPREAD~.~~.. 2.89

1 lb. Teen Queen

$

8$
POTATOES ...........~.~~ ..9
10 lb. Maine

lb:

1,:

•
•
•

••

1 lb. CARIBONE CATFISH •••••••••••••••sl.79 lb.

••
•••
••
•
•
•

MARGARINE.~~.~~~~~.~/99
el 12 oz. canned

__

.ONIONS .............~~~ ..

45

.

.

10 oz. Castlebury

HOT' OOG SA'UCE

3gt

11 oz. Campbell's

'••

••

....•
•

d

200 ct. White

PUFF TISSUES•••~:t~.:~::~ .... ~ .. ~ .......~........ &amp;5•
10 oz. Instant

MAXWELL . HOUSE COFFEE ••••••••••••• .i::•.s4.95
/

.

ORANGEMonteORIN K......................... ~ ••••••• 51•
20 oz. Del

CHUNK
PINEAPPLE •••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••• &amp;3•
0.23 oz .
.~DOL-AIDS ••• ~ •••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••• ~.6/&amp;gt

.

t

"••
•
•••
•

··"

'
•

&gt;, I

$

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola
Mayonnaise

c

09

·lb.
Bag
OF
12

LIMIT FOUR BAG. SWITH COUPON m $7.50 ADDITION.Al I
PURCHASE IUCLUDINC THIS ITEM)
'
I
LIMIT ONE COUPON PU FAMIL V
' ' •
I
CIINI-SIIIA1 rD. II flh UTIIUll[l. lt. llrt
I
· s•ncr TIIPPI,IUill sun 'lDCIL ru1s

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

-·-.. 'Defica&amp;Me. ;:)IJ(?(~

AV AllAilE AT STORfS WITH Dfll ONLY
HOT FOODS AYAILAilf 11 AM -7PM

l'lUS
DEPOSIT

a~e
FRESH lAKED (AVG. WT. 2A·OZ.)

Glazed Donuts .... .......... ... each
Cherry Pie ... ................... Each
FlESH lAKED

WASHINGTON EXTRA uo•r•
LARGE tOO SIZE

Gof~en

Delicious
Apples ...:.._...........lb .
•

'•

..
,. I

''
'

.

..
"

.''
i.

...

Round White
Potatoes

PINT RETURNABLE •n'i-T1ift
MR. PIBB,

•
•
..;•
••
•

:

9

~H...w~ Fwk SeaitWL
.-,;:Fresh Ocean Perch Fillets. lb.
·~ Fresh Dressed Flounder.... . lb .

Da•·

'
'•·
•

••
''
•
''

.

Grade A
Large Eggs ....

••
•
•

WHOLE TOMATOES•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/9gt

ctn.

I

Whole Boneless
Beef Rib Eye .. ....... ..lb.
Fresh Picnic ·
Pork Roast ............
lb.
.

KROGER

•,••

14'12 oz. Hunt's.

24 oz.

Cottage Cheese

·•

BEEF SOUP.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••• 2/69*

3~t·:$1

KROGER

•

·
I I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

.....

•'•

SPAM LUNCH MEAt ......·••••••••••••••••~a."•• 51.39

Yellow
Onions

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
10-12-LB. AVG.
.

•
.••

~

Yellow

•:·~
·

I
I
I
I
I
I
:.
1
1

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

•'•

$

3

liCU T.U£S

J5

KROGER O.S% LOWFAT MlLK ..• GAL. PLASTIC CTN. '1.65

••

c

lb.

$
Hi Nu 2%
Gal.
. M•lk
Plastic or
L0 wfat
I ...... Paper
Ctn .

'
•••

$

U.S.GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , BEEF CHUCK
ARM POT ROAST

KROGER

,•

Prices Effective Thru Sat., February 21st

34c

A BlEND OF BEEF AND HYDRA TED
TEXTURED VEGETABlE PROTEIN MIX

•

,,Phone 742-2100

32 oz. Wagner's

eSpec ia l Occasions

,•
•'·

•Weclcling s

•

-·••

CHEESE

ePortra its

i•

RUTLAND
.DEPARTMENT STORE

2 lb. Kraft Velveeta

Li be rt y

. --------...;·:

' :

Iways

-'•

'

Lakeside 53
Pa taska la Wa t kin s Memorial
68. Heath 63
Plain City Alder 58, Ma r ys.
vi lle 50
Sul liv a n Bl ack Riv er 28,
Co llins Wes t ern Reserve 27
Swanton ,45, Perr ysburg .44
Til tonsvil le Buckeye Sollt h
88, St . Clairsvi lle 75
Toledo Wh it mer 52, Toledo
Wa :te 47
Uhr i chsv i ll e Claymont 59 ,
Dover 37
We stervil le Nort h 54, Hill iard
40
Wort hi ngton 63, Wes ter ville
So uth 45
Xeni a 72, Day ton Way ne 44

;.;.;,___ _____:::::::==~ ..·''•'

Holly Farms Chicken

·':cf••
•'•
'•
"••'
..,,

IT MUST BE ARED WING
work sh_oes in stock

Suga r Gr pve Ber ne Un ion 34
Co l umbus Wh i t eha l l 67 ,
Reynoldsbu r g 50
Cuyahoga Va lley Ch r istian
82, Massi llon Chri st ian 60
Day ton
Jef ferson
57,
Hami lton Ba din 45
Delawar e Buckeye Val ley 66,
Go l~, bu s Ac~ demy 35
El yr ia Ch ri sti an 48 , Ba th Old
Trail 46
E l yr i a Lake Ri dge 45 ,
Cleveland Her itage Chr is tia n
42
Gaha nn a
68 ,
Colum bu s
Westl and 63
Granv ille 92. Ut ica 84
H eb r on
L akewood
83.
Johnstown Northridge 74

YVES GAUCHER
TORONTO (AP ) - " Yves :
Ga ucher :
A
15-yea r- ,
Perspective 1963-1978" wiU be •
on display at the Art Gallery ~
of Ontario Ma rch 17 through ;
Apr il 29.

'

Preserves

we·ve got many styles of

Regular Sea son
A dena Buckey.e Wes l 98 ,
Skyvue 31
Archbold 52, Lima Cent.

'

IF THE SHOE FITS •••
NAMED ASSISTANT
CLEVELAND (AP )- Cleveland Indians publicity
director- Joe Bick has been
named lo the newly created
post of assistant to the
_president, team officials have
announced . ,.
Bick will work closely with
Indians President Gabe Paul,
while Harry Jones , the
team's public relations
director, will incorporate
publicity into his deparbnent.
Bick, 27, has been with Ilie
Indians for the past four
years.
The Indians also announced
they have hired Bob DiBiasio,
24, as Jones' assistant. DiBiasio, a native of suburban
Lakewood, comes to the Indians from the Fremont
NewsMessenger, where he
has been assistant sports
editor since last June.

relay of sh ooting starting at
10 a.m. Shooters from Ohio
Indiana ,
Kentu c k y:
Tennessee, West Virginia ,
. Pennsylvania and Michigan
are expected to partfcipate.
Participants may sign up
and get targets for any of the
individual shooting marehes
at one time, then Shoot the
matches at any time during
the day . Unused targets may
be carried over to second day
if they are stamped at the .
registration desk . Each
shooting relay will last 20
minutes with 10 minutes

.,

gram, as presently operated,

Sponsor .voting for measure anyway
By TOM GilLEM
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) The spoosor of a new death
penalty for Ohio said he
would vote for the measure
on the House floor today,
whether or not the biil
contained tougher provisions
. taken out by committee
amendments.
Rep. Terry M. Tranter, DCincinnati, predicted a long
floor debate on the legislation
this afternoon before the
lower chamber approved it.
"There will be plenty of
places along the iine to take

" The top two priority
groups both are categorized
by concern with the publl~
health safety and welfare,
and ~obabiy only jobs In
!hose categories will be attempted in the initial stages
of the program," he said.
· First, attention will be
given to lands presenting
·extreme dangers to the
public. Second, consideration
will be to those lands causing
adverse effects to the public.
All other lands will fall into
Land restored under the third category, jobs to
RAMP may be used for restore the environment
crops, hay and pasture, or where it has been degraded.
youths the type of work ex- trees; wildlife habitat;
Meigs Soil and ~ater
perience they need to natural areas; or non· Conservation District and the
incre ase
their
future commercial recreation.
Meigs CoWliY reclamation
.employability ."
The federal Share of ap- committee will screen apIn some cases youngsters plying reclamation will range plications to place them in
received a fuil day's pay for from 25 to 100 percent. The priority groups. R\llh said
half a day's work · or less, maximum federal par- final assignment of priority of
while in others the "work" ticipation, · payment of total work statewide will be done
was nothing more than costs, will apply only to the by a state reclamation
recreation , congressional first 120 acres. Each land- · committee · including
investigators reported. They owner may have no more representatives of several
added that problems were than 320 .acres under ·RAMP. agencies.
more widespread ill urban
"The federal cost-sharing
"We have two goals under
areas than rural areas.
will be higher whim there are RAMP," Ruth said, "to
The GAO, an investigative public benefits off the mined protect people and the enand auditing agency of Con- ·land sites and the landowner vironment from the adverse
gress ,
also
cited · claims a financial burden.
effects of past coal mining
administratjve problems. It
"Although applications will and to promote the
said the Labor Department be received from any owner development of wlreclaimed
and local program sponsors of eligible land, applications lands for beneficial uses."
were to blame lor ·the · wiil be placed in priority "We hope the residents of
shortcomings. And it recom- groups to reclaim .'the most Meigs County will become
mended that Congress avoid · sever'e fir~'", Ruth said.
involved in . this program."
expanding the program until
it can be brought under·
tighter controL

ton taken from deep mines to ·of eligible land in Ohio.
"Not only orphan surface
be collectec) for the next 15
years.
mines, but also lands
District Conserva tionist damaged by deep mining
Boyd Ruth said, 'The SCS will activities will be eligible
carry out the USDA portion of under the RAMP Program."
the program and is to receive He pointed out, 11 This inup to 20 percent of the money cludes gob piles and old coai
available for abandoned mine mine waste impoundments
reclamation efforts." Meigs for which no one is responCounty has about 6,000 acres s~ble now."

Tuesday's high school scores

INCLUDES 9·PIECES FISH . l·tB . COLE SLAW
AND HUSH PUPPIES

Bucket-0-Fish .......... .... . Each

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�10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, F eb . 21, 1979
Thuraday, Feb. 22

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice oede Osol
l.d•y

2d.ys
3days
6d11ys

15 words or Under
Casll
CbartlO
1'.00
1.25
1.50
1.111
1.80
2.15
! .DO
3.1!

Severallrlends w il l play promine nt rol es in your affairs this
comlnd year. They w111 prove to
be staunch and reliable allies
whe n the chips are down.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You

In memory, Card of Thltnb and·
DbltWtry : 6 centa per word, 13.011
minimum. cutlln advance.

for gelling others out of their·
doldrums with a few witty
remark s. Sp read your sunshme
around wherever it is needed.
Find out more about yourself
by sendmg for your all-new

The Publl!her reserves the rtch1.
to edlL or reled any ads deemed 00.
jecllooal. 11w Publisher. wiU not be
respomible for more than ont lncor·

have a marvelous knack today

t979 Astra-Graph Letter. Mail $t

rect insertlon.

for each and a long , selfaddres sed, stamped envelope
to A ~tro·Graph , P 0 Box 489,

Phone9t2·2156

Radio City Stat ion , N.Y. t00t9.
Be sure to specify birth sign .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) You r

NOTICE

chances to gain an important
gGal are excellent today , especi ally 1f you have alternatives
ready if your first approach

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

you'd like .
TAURUS (April 21J..May 20) vour

the dKy befcn publlcaUoo

20)

8

Fri~y MhMmooo-

prove to be to your benefit in
the long run. ~

Help Wanted

CANCER (June 21·July 22) Your

Auction

judgment 1s quite ke en today.
You ' II balance all the facts
against what you 've learned
from your own e.~eperience .

AUCTION EVERY Sunday l pm .
E-.. ery Wed ot 7 pm . lot ~ of new
ond u~ed merchond1!.e Hart
ford Communtiy Center , Hartlord . WV, 4 miles up from
Pomeroy -Mason Bridge .

aging for you Ieday. Two separate channels may open that
could add to your resources.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Companions and associates will
appreciate your managerial
techniques today . They know
you 'll chart the r ight cou rse .

one out of the startmg gate
today, you ' re a splendid
stretch runner. Success will be

due to a strong second effort.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
you have something serious to

discuss wllh a· friend today ,
lead up to your subject gradual-

ly. Plunging '" with both feet
won't

produce

results

PROBATE COURT OF ·
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF PAUL S.
SMART, DECEASED .. .
Case No. 2:2:591

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On Feb 2, 1979, in the
Meigs County Probate court,
Case No . 22598, Frances M.
Smart , 44 Lincoln St.. Mid dleport, Ohio was appointed
Executri x of the estate of
PaulS . Smart, 'deceased, late
of Middleport , Ohio .
M~nnino

D . Webster
Probate Judge.
Clerk
(2) 7, 14, 21 : 3tc

hoped for.
•
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
21) Noble goals are attainable

PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CHARLES A.
today because of your strong WAGNER,
DECEASED

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J..Feb. 19)
Someone indebted to you may

beg in to make an effort toward
repayment at this time. The
installments w111 be small, but

steady .

Wa gner , 2630 K ingston Pike ,
Circleville , Ohio 43113, was
appointed Executri~ of the
estate of Charles W . Wagner ,
deceased , l~te of Box 126,
Racine, Oh tO.
Mann ing D . Webster
Probate Judge Clerk
(21 u, 21. 28 Jtc

!NEWSP APE R ENTERPRISE ASSN .f

Today in History
By The Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, Feb.
21, the 52nd day of 1979. There
are 313 days left in the year.
Today's highlight
in
history :
On this date in 1795, the
Dutch surreodered the Indian
Ocean island of Ceylon to the
British.
On this dare:
In 1833, Samuel Morse gave
the first public demonstration
of the relegraph.
In 1846, Sara Bagley
became the first woman
te legrapher
when
she
reporred to work at the new"
relegraph office in Lowell,

Mass.
In 1885, the Washington
Monument was dedicated in
the nation's capital.
In 1916, the longest and
bloodiest battle of World War
I, the Battle of Verdun, began
in France . More than one
million soldiers were killed in
the fighting.
In 1919, afrer World War I,
the Allies recognized the

ond
bookkeeper for Ohio Pollet Co

992·2089.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF FLETCHER R.
WELCH, DECEASED

CHIP WOOD . Poles
moM .
diameter 1o·· on largest end,
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton. Oelt-..ered to Ohto
Pal let Co., Rl. 2. Pomeroy

·· --- -- - - - · · ·

TIMBER . POMEROY Forest Products . Top price for standing
sow timber . Coli 992-5965 or
_K-:n ~ H~n_br_. :· 4__46~ ~7~. __ .
OLD FURNITURE . ice boMes , brass
beds. 1ron beds , desks, etc .,
complete househo lds. Write
M.D. M1ller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
coll992 -7760.
~
--

-

-

-

-

--

-

--~

-

OLD COINS, pocket watches .
doss rings , wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Coli
Roger Wamsley . 742 -2331 .

· - - - - - - - - - - - - --WANT TO buy ' old 45 ond 78
P._honogroph records . Call
992 6370 or ContoCf Mort in Fur·
mture .
WANTED TO buy: old jewelry .
Coil 992 -5262 or write Koy
Cecil. 87 S. 2nd. Midd leport .

OH
WANTED TO buy : limited time" on
fy Junk Battenes. 52.50 eoch .
Clean Copper . $.55 per lb .
Radiators , $.35 lb Shari Iron ,
$2 per hundred . Rider"s
Salvage. SR 124, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 9q2 5468.

Manning 0 . Webs fer
Probate Judge Clerk
(2 ) u , 21 , 28 , 31 c

IF YOU ha-..e o ser~o~ice to offer ,
wont to buy or ~ell something.
ae looking for work , . , or
whatever .. you 'll get results
foster wtth a Sentinel Wo nt Ad
Co ii9C12-21S6 .

USED TIRES. GE cosse lte recorde r .
Hea d clean er . Allen wr ~nc h es .
Wonted to rent : lroiler or opt .
.n Metgs Co . Also odd jobs .
741 'J&lt;/0'1.
BUY YOUR 1979 Gro-..ely now thrv
March I and sove up to $600.
SlOO down holds til April 15th .
Gra ve ly Tractor Soles and Ser vice. 204' Condor 51. . Pomeroy .

992-2975
Zt:NITH ALLEGRO stereo wtth AM FM radio and tope player .
Phone 992 -31 32 or 9q2 -311q
WHITMER BLACK Diamond Lini ·
ment . Rowleigh Products Al so
McNess products 1924 E. Ave ..
Gallipolis , Ohio 45631 Across
from Smith Buick go"roge .
Telephone 614 -446-q516 ,

---

-·

ROUND HAY
843 2524 .

~~~~----~r
· ~~-y~~ll

Your HeadquarteiS For
Annstrong Carpeting

bo l e~

for

------ - - - ·----- ·
1975 DATSlJN PICKUP. good con·

JOHN DEERE sprayer wilh 2 ..
noules .
Motor
recently
o-..erhouled
992-2967 after
·spm .
·--·-- -···- ---REDUCE SAFE and lost w ith
GoBese Tablets &amp; E·Vop "woter
pi l ls '~- ~e_ls5Jn_D~u~ __ _ _ _
MIXED CONDITIONED hoy V er y
good
guol i ty
Oeli~o~ery
available. Phone 992 ~ 7201 o r
992-330'1 .
REGISTERED APPALOOSA mores
to fool in March. 22 month old
registered Appaloosa coh . 10
month old .regiStered Ap·
paloosa colt. Good ccnfirmo ·
tion Would make good show
pr?~cl.: 5~3_:7~9~ . _ _ _ ~ _

COUNTRY' MOBILE Home Pork.
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
large lpts. Coll992-7.t79.

HEADQUARTERS
your

furni shed
q92-543.4 .

opts .

Phone

- . - -------- -TWO BEDROOM . l·dtch en lurni; h.

Polish govenunent of Ignace
Paderewski, the famous
pianist.

.

E&gt;d , opt. Coli before 8 om

992-2288 .

·- - --- - ·- - ~-omeroy
-- · ·.

LARGE HOME in
m 2205 before 5.

Boll.,.

FURN ISHED HOUSE in M1ddleport.
Suitable for four cons1ruc t1on
workers. Coli after b pm.

YEAH, I STARICDQ)T WITH
"'IHE PENCILS 11.1 1He COP... .-.......•11
B'Or 0\e DAY IT MIT ME-

304-882·2566 or 992·S•34 .
. - --- - - --- --

-~For -s a-le- -

1HE PENCIL~

HAY FOR sole. ht cutting , S.70 .
2nd cuffing 5.80. 985·-4271 .

· ev ERvTHI"Nc·s- "Gar·,:;.~

·c;o-:

House and lot, furniture
clothes car all my household
ilems . Drop by 760 lourel St. ,
Middleport
Equjp-...:.;;t.
6e l.,.edere First Lady, excellent
co ndition, 5 olr conditioned
hair dryers , 2 hydraulic choirs,
2 style stations , 1 wet station .
laminated Spantsh Oak finish .
Pri ced
for
qui ck
sole
614 -446-2100.
HAY. Fo-R -~;i;·, -R;Iph -· rr:-;~;11 ,
Boshon . 949 -2660.

uSED . -sHop·-

1968. GMC HALF ,-;:,n-pick'~; -i %5

.·.]

Betsy Ross Bakery truck, mode
into camper . Hoover washer
and dryer Hoover sweeper ,
Rof! -owa-y bed . 992-5789 , 2nd
house on right on Wolf Pen Rd.

-

- . - - · - ·- - - - -1200 BALES MIXED hoy . 19/b

.

F-250 Ford tru ck . Call qq2-2877
after 6pm

·- - · - · - - -

·- · -

tq65 JOHN OEEME 1010 dozer .
Diesel engine. ~rotec rlve cob
_o~~ w i nc~ --S~ . 'm-7580.

1J.9. t mo .

OWNER

porch, large 2 car gar·age• l
storage bldg ., own
Nat. gas heat, over 1 acre.

129,500.00.
LOVELY BRICK - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
wood -burning
fireplace,
nice kitchen, floors are
hardwood . and carpeting ,

covered patio. $30,000.00.
GENUINE RANCH - 3
bedrooms, bullt·in kll.
dining, large rec. room,
utility. Nat gas, own water,

(needs some work), barn,
corn crib, storage bldg. ,
ri~o~er
frontage . Owner
moved
must
sell.

S33,SOO.DO.
KEEP YOUR JOB - Make

SALE PRICES
JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992.218t

· Good location - doing · a
good business. If really
interested call now.

NEW LISTING - 1 floor
plan . 2·3 bdrm. home,
excellent

Wright

neighborhood,

Sl.,

Pomeroy,

remodeled, basement area,
garden
space.
Only

Real Estate for Sale

STROUT
REALTY,
INC.
16 ACRES 516,500. Rutland
Area on T. t7S. Tillable 6·8

$14,900 .00 .
NEED TO SELL NOW OR
IN THE FUTURE? CALL
AN EXPERT WE
OFFER YOU tS YEARS
EXPERIENCE. :
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992-2259, 992·6191, 992·2568

acres, some woods, dug
we ll, fruit trees. One floor
frame house, handyman

mNsr.

rms., bath, kit., liv. rm.,

L.P . gas heal . Bank cellar .
Some outbuildings, sepllc ."
EXTRA
NICE
NEW
HOUSE
$34,900,
SECLUDED. 3 bd. room,
bu ill-in kitchen, with plenty

Additions-Custom RemodelingTile - Formica
Counter Tops . Ceilings
t Suspended, Texture) - Tile
· Floors . Paneling &amp; Trim.
ceramic

yet. Seller will give buyer
choice, fuel oil forced air
furnace , sun deck,· wood
bu f ning fireplace, carpert,

beautiful localfon, close 1o
Forked Run Park .
6 ACRES
Beautiful
woods, extra nice 1 floor
home, 3 bedrooms, wall to
wall carpet, llv : room,

utility
room , bulll· ln
kllchen, drilled well, large
double garage, 2 utility
buildings, all e lectric
furnace heat. $43,000.
REEDSVILLE Nice
glder 2 story house, 4
bedroom.
partial
basement, 9 rooms, shower
room.

separate bath, extra

nice large level lot, W'
long. 99' deep, block garage
,.3' x40', room for barber
shop, beauty shop, exira
room

for

garage,

a good place for
a
Pop business .
Drilled well with plenty of
wttter, or you can tie Into

clly water, · forced air gas
heat . House with modern
kitchen, plenty of cabinets;
sepllc, 52 gal. hot wale~
lank , breakfast room. Only
$33,000.
Call Sheila J. Whaley
992·6189

~o'I.1HEf

SWEEP

1m c•••UrY service

A!!DUT A

wm.

Slltcloll•lnlln

1 '

· w_..stove, 011 lfl•rnact

,

:
-

AT !SOCRATE!S' EH.E!CTRON IC COMMAI&gt;JD
SIGNM., THE HUGE 5U8MAI!.IN~ R I;Et!o
MAJE!&gt;TICALL'I OUT Of THE WATER· ·

CARE TO STEP OUTSIDE-, .
GE'I&gt;ITLEMHJ .. AND !'-!HALE
THE FRE5H 5 E'A'·AIR ~

VIEW, HOWEVE~ , I
N&amp;&amp;D ONL'/ PRE55

·

THIS 8UTT0'-1-

' '~

&amp; i.FirtpiiCI ,lUll

Kl~~-:.;~,';~~~r.lw
.
. .
.
--

HU~DircD

FEETl ,,.IF YOU'D LIKE
A FULL !SEASCAPe

21th Century Knew-How.

J · :
I

2.5:1 mo.

1}!1~'-'hl

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOTOR ,,

~

··~

SHOP

'f• milo off Rl. 7 ~y-paos on
St. Rt: 124 towaril Rutland,

o.

'

'

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING
*New Home
* Add·ons "
*Remolding
992-6011

'.

' '..

2·11 ·1 mo. Pd .

I ll

PETE SIMPSON .

Phone 698-6173
·David·Coleman
Agen11or
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohio.
AUTO, HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS.
1-26·1 mo.

Phone

949-2118

_,_,. J' .

NoW arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cart oon

LriTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

eventngs

2·5·1 mo.

AND HE 'S HARDLY
A RICH
PHILANTHROPIST···

_
- .....

garage. Only $15,000.

garage.

·

NEW LISTING - Lot In
Fairview Hts. with septic
tank l!!nd water . Just $5,000.

BUSINESSES - We have
several different kinds that
you can have. Just pick

what you want. Some with
good locations and some
with real estate.

LAND AND LOTS -

In

several locations. All sizes

and prices. Want a wooded
home site?
Now islhetime tolTsTtliat
house and property with us.
we will be starting our
spring advertising soon.
coli 9'12·332S.

.

. .

CARPmNG
DRIVE AI.IT1l£

- - - ---- - - -

-

.

HOWERY
Ex·
covoting
septic sy stem s,
doze r, backhoe, dump truck ,
limestone, grovel , blacktop
pa ving , Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614)
b98 -73J l or 742 -2270 .

A GOOD SELECTION OF
·END&amp;,ROLL BALANCES.
9' 1t.11' .:.:. 1i'X12'-12'x15'

UNEII.EUM RUGS
1
12.95 &amp; UP
9' &amp; 12' aJSHIONm
R.OOR
'3.49 &amp; 13.99 sq. yd.

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled, ceramic tile, plumbing. carpentry , and general
mo1ntenance. 13 , veers eM perience. 992·3b8S .

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

--

CLERK WANTED
For
busy
electrical
construction office in New

Haven, W.
experience

Va.

t

Payroll

necesserv.

Please reply stating
experience and lralnlng to: .
CIVES CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
Electrical Division
P.O. Box t088
Auburn, M&lt;line 042t0

~~~~~!"~iii~~::J

r - - - - - - o n . - - - - - , . . . . . , - - - - - - - . . . - - -- - --...,-...,- 8 Temple item 39 O'Neil! play

WAIT, LADS! I'M SUPERSNOZ OF MQOI , HE~
"TO HE&amp;.P OUT Ji:OLKS
LIKE: '(QU :· '

OH ME , 0H MYL WHAT
HAVE' I 1)()NE ? 'THIS
BEING SUPER 15, NOT
MUCH FUN ·

9 Post ollice

inquiry
13 Work
U Please with
festivity
15 Marine
flyer
16 Theater

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Rutfiind

40 Old oath

DOWN
1 Frost ...
2 Redolence
3 Treating
well
4 Afrer jay
and kay
5 Chevron
6 Mountain
crest
7 Joke ·
10 Is regarded
as perfect
11 "- Rigby "

'

'/

·'·."'

1·-: ....

,,
'

w

'

'"

·'

·-

•

1

12 Instant 16 Compassion
19 Uncommon
21 Breastwork

26 Withdraw
28 Skunk's
relative
32 Siam
visitor

22 "Picnic"
playwright
23 Pampers
24 " - We
Got Fun'"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A slim chance beats none

33 Chief
NORTH
2·21,
+ K 10 53
.. 6
t AJ 7
+QI09 7 4

35 j\lacGraw
36 Majors

EAST
WEST
• 8742
• QJ 9
"K 9 4 3
•QJ 752
• 64 2
• 83
• J6
+A 53
SOUTH
+ A6
" A 10 B
t KQ 1095

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: E a st
West North East South
Pass I NT
Pass 2t
Pa ss 2•
Pass 3 NT Pass Pass

choice

:F:RANK::::&amp;:E:R:M:E:_--------~~------~----------------------------------------30~d
31 Fall

Pa ss

.:t

•••
•
••

fouGo,.,.

THEsE ..AS IS"
AND tNJ.IEN
% . oP'r 'I"H~M
IlOMe., TttEY
wfRE:N',.•

••
•

:•
•

H
•
•
•
••

call
34 Payment
~
discount
• 36 One and
~
only

Ope ning lead : ., 5

DAILY CRYPTOQUO'TE- Here's how to work it:
•

•

One tetter simply stands fot another. In thi s sample A is
u sed f or the three L's, X for the two ('' s, etc. Single l etters.
apostrophes, the length and formati ?n of the words are all
hints . Each d ay the code le tters are d1flerent.

CRVPTOQUOTES

..,•

VS IFXMEI

5TAN ID MAKE UP
THE SAMPLE: OF TH E
DISCO DRESS I
DESIGNEOD.

DEPARTIJ RE FRO/J\
11-1E $TIJFF M01HER

RF

USUALLY l?OE-5 !

VRCC RZQUF

Rl

SHGFE

GXRVS
CMX

· fumiture .

...-

.... •.•.'

AAU6HH!

.

' '

or even six of either
was a better contract

than three not rump. As often
happe ns in rubber bridge,
minor~suit

contracts

are

more desired notrump or
major-suit games.

North 's two clubs was a
Stayma n inquiry looking for
a major suit. Whe n South's
two diamonds denied a ma-

PBW

FM

IFBTV

QGXRWOF

3. A Iorge building lull ol
btoutlful carpet,
·

f

BT

BUSKBTVXS
VQHBI,
CRUI
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole: SOMETIMES A MAN CAN DO IN A
MINUTE WHAT IN OTHER CIRCUMSTANCES WOULD
TAKE A YEAR.- WIWAM FEATHER
©1971 King Features Syndical&gt;, Inc.

wE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two lull floors ol all new
furniture.
, 2. Nice selections of used

minor,
minor

overlooked in favor of the

IT'LL BE QUITE- A

• !. CAN'T WAIT FOR '

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
North tabled his dummy
and South felt 1ll·. It was
clear that five of either

· AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

c

WALDO'S
OUT ON
TH' FRONT
PORCH,
PAW --

HE WANTS TO
SHOW VOU HIS
NEW. REVERSIBlE
JACKET

bee ns . He deals with the
immediate problem : in this

case . mak i ng
notrump .

thre e

Declarer sa w that be had
eight top Lricks and that th e
mnth trick could be won if
hearts were divided 6-3 a nd
the defende r with six hearts
did not have Lhe club ace.
The opening lead of the
hea rt f1v e was won by East's
king , South withholding the
ace .

+K 82

'· ·.

:·See the Grafe Family at :

BRIDGE

Yesterday's Answer

..

••
•

RUilAND FURNRURE i

5:31J..-Carol Burnett 3; News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec.
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15;
Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.
6' 0&lt;1-News3,8,10,13,15; Andy Griffith 17; Hodgepodge
Loddge 20 .
6,31J..-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13: Carol Burnett 6;
CBS News 8,t0; My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20.
7:0&lt;1-Cross·WIIs 3; ; Newlywed Game 6,1 3; Marly
Robbins' Spotlight 8; News 10: Love, American
Style 15; Carol Burnett 17; Hocking Valley
Bluegrass 20; Kanawha County on the Line 33.
7:31J..-Hollywood Squeres 3; Bonkers 6 ; Match Game
PM 8; 1100,000 Name That Tune 10; Nash,llle On
The Road 13; Dolly 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8:0&lt;1-Little Women 3, 1S; Mork &amp; Mindy 6, 13; Waltons
8; Nova 20,33; College Basketball 10; Mission:
Impossible 17 .
.
.
8:31J..-Angle 6,13; 9 : ~uincy 3,15; Roots . The Next
Generations 6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0 8; World 20,33 ;
College Baskelball 11.
10:0&lt;1-Women In White 3, 15; Barnaby Jones 8,10 ; Ohio
Prolect 20; Footsteps 33. .
10 :3o-Area Showcase 33; 11:0&lt;1-News 3,6,8,10,13,15;
Dick Cevett 20; College Basketball 17: Over Easy
33.
J
11 :31J..-J,ohnny· Carson 3,15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13:
, Mash 8; ABC News 33; Movie "No Way To Treat A
Lady" 10.
12 ' 05- Columbo 8: 12 : 40-Mannix 6,13 ; l,ooTomorrow 3; Movie " The Lady &amp; the Bandit" 17 .
1 :50--News13; 2: 41J..-News17 ; 3:0&lt;1-Movle "Hercules
Agalnol Rome" 17; s ,oo-Dragnet 17 .
Wednesday, Feb. 21

ape
24 Pesrer
25
26 Harshness
27 Mirror
word for
Noah 's son
28 Continue
a subs·
cription
29 Make a

'' '

•TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smilh

742-2211

COM PLY

.'

ca um:2211

I'

LIBIDO

resort

-'
'

24 Rolls of tarpet In Stock
&amp; tOO's ol Samples to
Choose From.
BUY NOW&amp; SAVE

Natural gas forced air furnace. Plenty of garden space
on 1 acre of land. Priced right $36,000 .
CHESTER Good 5- bedroOm liO.Se with Tuii'
basement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre i

- This
be your dream
home.
lots of cabinets, .
stove,
~utlful dining
room with
living room and
family room,
I
out home we
heveflve bedrooms, uHIIIy room
garage. Very low
heating bill. Red bilrn·llke storage building. Localed
about ten minutes north of Pomeroy lust off Rt. ·7.
Asking $55,000. .
'
·
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Good 1112 story house
completely cerpetedwllh 4 bedrooms, dining room a;;'d
laundry room . Also almqst new 2 car heated garage.
This home Is nl&lt;:ely located In Portland and PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE at $22,500.
LOTS - I Acre and up ~ear ?omeroy.
50 ACRES FREE GAS- Good 1112 story house with full
basement. U.rge pond stocked wllh fish. Priced for ,
quick sale . SAO,OOO.
'
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost new
. kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room, all '
Insulated, notural g•s heat, utlllly building, 2 fob .
'
l$21 ,500.00.
Talk to 1 loco I roal eslato agent before trying to soli
your homo. His oxportonco cu. help you. We need
mony typos of P"''!trty, alva us .I call.
: · . CAU JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE949·23U
or NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATEf4f·2654

l:

5 Droop

'•

'• .J I

SAVE AlDT

---AND MARTIN

carpeted, larg e utility room and many more extras.,

la~njd~~a~ndM~~st~or~a~ge~
building. Prtc.~ S21.~.·- -- . ..
lar2e beef born near ~~o~·-

ALLEY OOP

·- '

-&amp;

--·- -

· DAUNT

He need s to get fit II he's to show a prof it -

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
37 Fashioned
..LL.......I~-.....L..LJL-...a~LLL.l...ll!!...ll. 1 Took a cab
38 Sicilian

.'

$AVE ON

EXCAVATING . dozer. backhoe
a nd dilcher . Charles R. Hot·
field
Bock Hoe Service ,
Rullond , Ohio Phone 742-2008

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumble Book No. 12,conlllnlng 110 puules,ls 8¥1illble lorl1 .75poatpafd
from Jumble, clo Ihie newap~per, Box34, Norwood, N.J.OT648. fncludeyour
n1me, ldd ... as, zip code 1nd mike cl"lech pay1ble to Newsp1~kl .

..

--

Service . We sharpen Sci ssors .

-

"(I X }{ 1 X X r

';APRO - "

--,--

backhoe work ; dump tru cks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fil l dirt , 10 soil. limestone ond
grove l Cell Bob or Roger Jef·
fer!. , day phone 992 -7089 , night
phon e 992 -3525 or qq2. 5232.

fireplace and 2 car finished

'" '"''"

~

-

I Jumbles: ARDOR
Answer

...
. .

- - - --- ----ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Has a modern balh, nice
kitchen, and lots· of

enc losed), nice family
room wlt.h wood burning

veslerday·s

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor ser-..· • • I'
,
tng Ohto Valley regi on. SI M
days a w eek . 24 hour~ ~er... i ce . . ''
Sweepers. foostcrs. trans. oil
Emergency cal l s. Col i 882-2952 ·'•~~T
_ ,.
smoll applion ces. lawn mower.or 882-2305.
. . - ,----:neKI to State Highway Garage
'
.•
MOBILE HOME repairs . Furnoces . '
on Route 7
electricol work, pipes sawed ,
SEWING MACHINE Repa1rs, ser·
_pl~~bing !9~- 5~~':·
'·
vice, all make s, 992-228-d The
''·
Fabric
Shop , Po meroy . WALLPAPERING AND pointing .
Coli
7
42
2.328
Au thorized Singer Soles and
Bradford

. .

- - -·-- -- - EXCAVATING , doter, loader and

1 YEAR ' OLD Nice
wooded 1 acre lot . Has 3
bedrooms , 2 baths ( 1

AND ON A1 111E DOC ~S
" WHI CH REMIND S ME
... CARE TO TAKE A
WAlK ?

A

~

......

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

BABY FARM - .. 112 acres
and 8 room farm house.

carpeting. Rural water and
2 car garage.

HE'S BIG AND
STRONG ···
WHY OOESH' T
HE GET A JOB?

OH, HE WORKS OFF

...

cllt)\ftG .

size kitchen, natural gas,
electric and city water.
Nice back yard and 2 car

Printanswerhere :

ORPHAN ANNIE-GOING MY WAY

Weekends

LanQsvilte, Oltio
VIRGIL B. SR. tr!~J
6t4.669-424S Evenings
. 992·332S
2 Miles-Easl
..
216- E:: Second Stroet
of Wilkesville
2-14-1
mo.
I " ' r.
NEW LISTING - Cr-pac1
•, .
home wit&gt; •
In
BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Co,.. PULiiNS EXCA VATING. Complete · ·
Por. .. at C """ .. ~ubllc
Service. Phone 992-2478.
:
plete Ser vice. Phone 949-2487
------ ----- ·
utili ~vn1y $5,000 for a
or 949-2000. Racine, Oh to, Cnfl

both. Located In Pomeroy
on Second Street. $25,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 or 4
bedrooms, 11h bolhs, nice

ODDL't' ENOUGH.

I

Service
.._

Tflliler Sales

I~ NOT APT TO ~E
IM~HFUL !N COURI1

r II

I I

:,

.. :.ales Rep. For - Sundins
Hammond Organs.
Tyree olvd . Racine, Oiilci
al1er s p.m.
al1er 12 noon.

1 :0&lt;1-Hollvwood Squares 3; Al l My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women
Only 15.
.3D-Days of Our Lives 3,15; As The World Turno 8, TO;
2:QO-One Life to Live 6,13 .
2 25-News 17; 2:31J..-Doctors 3, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10;
I love Lucy 17.
3' 0&lt;1-Another World 3, 15; General Hospltal6,13 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17.
3 .31J..-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnts1ones 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
4:0&lt;1-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah t3; Space Giants 17 .
4:30-Bewltched 3; Superman 4: Gilligan's Is. 8;
Brady Bunmch tO; Petticoat Junction 15; Gllllgen' s
Is. 17.
5:0&lt;1-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13; Brady Bunch 15; I
Or eem of Jeannie 11.

, PfANOS .

27320 Monlltomery Rd:

business, a residence or

2-11

iHI~ I&lt;INDOF LAWYER

ORGANS

MO!Itgom&amp;IJ

BRICK - 'an be used as a

D

, ~~~';"'.:.:.!:,- ~ ' - ...... '"'

&amp; Famous Name Brand .

TRACTORDRIVEN •
PTOAL TERNATORS
from 15,000 to
75,000 waHs:

quick sale.

~THAT SCR~BLED WORD GAME
byHennAn:!oldandBobL.ee

I SESMYh
I I K_J

Heroes 8; M atcn Game

on 1oth Ave ." 11.

\9 ~~ .,

Hammond

Washington St., Albany, 0 .

_.-'

rnlt

Emergency One 6; Hogan' s

10; lucy Show 17.
9,31J..-Bady Bun ch 8; Hogan' s Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10:0&lt;1-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of Nlghl 6; All In The
Fam ily 8,10; Dating Game 13; Mo,le "Trouble
Along the Way" 11.
10 :31J..-AII Slar Secrets 3,1S; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Grlffllh 6; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :0&lt;1-High Rollers J,IS; Happy D•ys 6,13; 11 :31J..Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 : Family Feud 6, 13; Love ol
Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20; Nova 33 .
11 55-CBS News 8: House Call 10; News 17.
12 :0&lt;1-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10; Jeopardy 15; Young
&amp; lhe Restless 8; Mlddey Magazine 13; love
American Syle 17 .
12 :31J..-Ryan's Hope 6,13: Password 15; S""rch lor
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 20,33; Movie " Slaughter

Unscramble these four Jumbkts ,
one letter to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

'' ,. 1'

18 Years Experience

AN
INSURAP(CE AGEN

FIVE YEARS OLD - Beautiful 4 bedroom home with
large eat·in kitchen, 2 baths, TV room, all nicely

~

I

1

Will Make
AutO&amp; Truck
Service ta lis
Quality Work You Can
·Repair
Depend On....
.
-Also Transmission
651 Beech Street
Repair
Middleport. o.
' .•
Pti)NE 742·2328
Phone 992-5682
992-2356
· ______:-:..!""!::'-~!!,-:!·"~·
1·4-1 mo. (Pd.)
..__ _ _ _ _ _,.:·1_
- 1;,:2~-1:..:m::;::o.:...J ,_
"
! L.........._____;..:..:..:.::.:.:..:..:..:.:.:._j, .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

of cabinets, carpet not In

oGn•t let I chlnintiy fire put
on your lift -

1 damper

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

~Room

Housing
Hear/quarters

Special, 5 rooms, 3 bd.

t,

,.--~-~
· -~----1·

MOVING

Large 2 story frame,
remodeled , enclosed front

t

,

Sweep• Olllld . · : :·
IRsurH
_;.:

2-7-mo.

60BE. L~:II.I.U
MAIN
- P -OMEROY, 0.

money In off hours in
running th is car wash.

All Across America

---- - ·-------- --3 AND 4 RM furn~ s hed and un-

Call9'12·7113
For Froe Eslimates-

AUTOMOBILE 'INSURANCE been
canc ell ed? Los I your operatorl icense ? Phone 992-2143 . ·

nice lot . 120,500.00.
70 ACRES - New home

Super cob with top.

Roger Starcher
James R. Frecker

-- .- .- --

1972 BACKHOE INTERNATIONAL.
949-2042

985-3979
--- -------- -- 1978 FORD PICKUP F-150. Ca~per

For Rent

-·

FIVE RIVER lots in Minersville
Phone 992-2639.

dition . Good l i re s, l ow
mileage. Ru~ good in snow .

121 21, 28 . 2tc

lroiler . Lorge pond . 10 acres or
._ _ _

82_ o:r ':s ·_7~2-_25~_. ~-

i -~

I '

CltiM ftiY

New. repair • .
gutters and
downspouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949·2862, 949-2160

Pomeroy,O,

AI. TROMM

EST ATE loons . Purchas e o nd
re finance . 30 yeor terr,n s. VA ·
No m o ney down (el1gtble
veierens). FHA - ·As low as 3
per cent down ( non --..e1erens ).
lrelond Mortgage Co... 77 E :·
Slole, AI hens. 614-592.3051

P.B . A C 742 ·2826

.

.

FARM FOR sole. Ho use 2 born s.

...'

f~

MIIIIMr •• . '

Roofing

220 E. Moln Slreel,
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile 1
home , furn 1shed , 3 bedr .,
washe r and drye r. Atr condt- .lioned . 1 lol , 110 ft fron tage
$ 1~ . 0CIO . Phon e 742 281b

-- - -- ---

1974 HUSQVARNA WR 250 cc ,
5250 . Mossberg pump sMotgun .
2 barrels Choice of 30" or full
deer barrel , $150 . 742·2408.

I H. L Wt ile sel

EU.IOTT
APPUANCE II

ftv t: PART shepard puppres . All
moles . 7 weeks old . 747-2318.

__R!l._a I Estate for Sale

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY22, 1979
7:31J..-Ho1Jywood Squares 3; Eion ki!r s 6; Matc h Game
PM 8; $100,000 Name T hat Tune 10; Nashville On
The Road 13: Doily 15 ; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Mac Ne ilLehrer Report 20,33.
8:0&lt;1-Little Women 3,15; Mork llo Mindy 6,13; Wa llons
8; Nova 20,33; College Basketball 10; M iss ion :
Impossible 11.
8' 30-Angle 6,13; 9,ro-Qulncy 3,15; Rools :The Next
Gen.troa tlons 6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0 8; World 20,33;
College Basketball 17.
10 ,0&lt;1-Women In While 3, 15; Barnaby Jones 8, 10; Ohio
Project 20; Footsteps 33 .
10 ·30-Area Showcase 33 ; li : ~News 3,6,8,10,13,15;
Dick Cavett 20; College Basketball 17 ; Over Easy
33 .
11 :31J..-Johh ny Carson Y.15; Starsky 8. Hutch 6, 13;
Mash 8; ABC News 33:Mo,le " No Way To Treat A
Lady" 10.
t2 :05- Columbo 8; 12 : 40- Mannlx 6,13 ; 1' 00Tomorrow 3; Mov ie ' "The Lady &amp; the Bandit" 11 . .
1:50--News t3 ; 2:40-Newsll, 3'0G-Movle " Hercules
Against Rome" II; 5 : 0&lt;1-Dragnet 11 .
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1979
5:35-Worldal Large17 ; 5 :45-Farm Report 13; s ·soPTL Club t3: S:5s:-:Sunrlse Semester 10.

MAY BE
THE NEXT
IARGET
OF THE

-~

~~--------~-------L--------~----~~ ~

----

f955 ~ r oirie Schoone r , 28 K 8, 1
hdr .
,
l %5 Ceneroi.60 X 12, 2bdr.
19b8 !:leona. S2 xl2. 2 bdr
1%98uddy , bO K 17, A bdr.
1970Sylvo. 60K 12, 2bdr .
1970Co st le , 6(h 12, 2 bdr.
1973 Arl in gton , 60 M 12, 2 bdr.
1973 Ridgewood. 70 x l:.t 3 bdr
1973 Kirkwood SOx 12 12bdr
B8 S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT PLEASANT WV
675-4424

---s'AN"'"K'"

'

Business Services

°

',

1979 FORD Ci.JSTOM F-150 truck ,
302 engine , 111 ton auto . P S.,

1975 GREMLIN X. P.S , P B., oulo.
$1400 Afler 5, 992- 393b

~

('.ra nt 7 tJ ') 11179

3' ', ocr e s in Pomeroy Secluded
wooded oreo on top of hill .
Overlook s r i ~o~er V;Jofe r, elecsole .
. tnc o~o~oilobie . 992 -3886

1

For all
Needs.

Notice is hereby given that
Meios Rac ing Enterprises,
Inc ., a corporation, 7.48 East
Ma in Street, Pomeroy , Ohio ,
has
been
&lt;woluntarily
dissolved .

•l

William T

RUTLAND HARDWARE , 2 doo rs
from Rutland P o~ t Office .
Phone 742 2255. 1 Sunbeam
contster -..ocuun cleaner with
power noozle ond otlochments ,
$69.95. I Sunbeam indoor, out door vacuum cleaner, 1 h .p .
· · - - -- · - - - - - - ~o tor , $39.95 . 1 laboralory THREE
BEDROOM
ran c h
stnk Ond cob1 net P:f' )! 17".
· Lorpe te d . 01r cbndilioned . Pri c·
Greber faucet with pop -up ,
ed v e ry rea sonably . In
SSb 69 Kennedy heo...y d uty
Syracuse qq2.5348.
....
tool boxes. 19" K 7 and three eiglhs inches , !i l l 99 Cor lool 79 ACR ES 614 -6qQ.2705 , Vin to n
Co.
boMes , $7.98 .

S5800. 949-2042 .

Ie

·-;,- · ·

FOR SALE for ports. 1970 Pontiac
Bonneville .455 4 bbl. Runs
perfect. $250. Phone fq2 -6270
lor mformotlon or see ol143 ' '1
Butler nut

Auto Sales

-LEGAL NOTICE-

,,~~'18111&amp;~ /J.IITH

985 3537

RISING STAR Kennels . Boordtng
and graomtng . aU breeds .
Cheshire, 367·0292.

spedol

FUNNY ·BUSINESS

W f ll rlritl ing

FROSTY 'S CH Rod to t: qu1 pmE"nt . WAHR AND mtsc. hauling Cal
YY7 5858
.
herythi ng in lwo-woy rqdio.
o nte nno o nd or ces!lor ie s . PIANO TUNING for home ono
Phone Por tland 843-2181 Open
~r hool. l onr Oonu! ls a s~ociot e
rven ings until a. Sunday 21111 b
nf flb erl£' 1d's a nd 8runir01di
Musk
Com pany ,
P h o n ~;&gt;
BROWNING MARK IV CB ontenno ,
99'1 2S8 1 or 992 -1082
tower, 2 rot ors, watt me ter.
0 -104 Tw eetie Bird mic , lmeor .
·- ·- - - ·
. _. _G_i_v_e~~ay _ -~Colllllfl t." B1t 949 -2265.

Yard Sale

Pets for Sale ·

On February 6, 1979, in the
Meigs County Probate Court ,
Ca~e No . 22,582, Earnest Lee
Welch , 37626 Walnut Drive ,
RomulUs , Michigan 46174,
was appointed Executor of
the estate of Fletcher A. .
Welch, deceased. late of
)Middleport, Meios County,
Ohio .

WA1f" ~

~

Case No. 22,511

NOTICE OF
APOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Will CA R£ lor the c&gt;klerly in ou
hnmf'l . Phone992 -7"'J I 4

TELEVISION
VIEWING

FIRST C IT Y

.,

R~AL

wanted to Buy

Case No. 2:2:591

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
recel'e In doing for others.
OF FIDUCIARY
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19)
On February 5, 1979, in the
What you learn today yo u will Meigs county Probate Court ,
be able to retam and put to Case No . 2:2591, Leopha
good use later. Be anent'ive if
you're in the p resence of one
who is wise.

SECRETARY

992·261l9.

you

desire to provide for those you
love . You r reward Is the joy you

EXPERIENCED

-- - -- -- - - · -·--

that whe n you take the helm
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)
Though you may not be the first

-

LOST GOLD wedding bond w 1th
c i r c h~ designs , ot Southern High
School. Coli Chu ck Hannahs at
991-31 19 or 9q2.3132

gurated by others . are likely to

COilditlons appear very encour-

.

FOUND SMAll pocket calculator
around lhe Pomeroy El emen ·
tory
-2261 .
. .School.
. . . 992
. . . . . . . .

SWiday
4P.M

Changes that occur today ,
even th ough th ey may be inau-

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Financial

GlJN SHOOT. Raci ne Gun Club .
Every Su nday I pm . Focl ory
choke gun ~ only .

._ ,.L=:
ostand Found

4P.M.

today . Defend them if you

COAL LIMfSTONE. sand, grov(" l .
coln um chlonrle. fNii hler dog
food and all tyr. es of soli. fx ·
u~l!o i01 Salt Wo r.O"s. Inc . f M n i n
St. , Pome-roy . 9fl2·38q l

HAY FOR sol e Round boles, $ 20 .
Square bol es $1. 98 5 3537 ,
985 4131.

GUN SHOOT. Racine Volunleer
F1re Dept . Every Soturdoy b:JO
pm at their bu tlding in Boshon .
• Fo_ct~r~ chok': g~n_$ ~n ~y ._
FREE CANOY making clan ol Di's
Candy and Coke Supplies, Spr Ing Valley Plaza . Ub-21 34 for
reg1strat ton. It's fun and ea sy .
You 'll be omcred ol what you
con do.

a:.

~e!Vices O_flered

FIREWOOD FOR sol·e 985-3505 or

NOOII•IItunlaY

must.

Z1·June

Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy

- - . ·-

-

--- -

Mllllday

Ideas or concepts are worthy
ones. They ' re eQual or. superior to those of y o ur assoc1ates

(May

GIBBS GROCERY

.

doesn ''t materialize as fast as

GEMINI

All canned goods 20
percent off, minimum
purchase $10 .
Starts Friday.
Feb ..16

......

Mobile Home ulet and v,u-d NleJ
are accepled ooly with CllAh wUh
order. 2:5 cent charll:e for adi carrylnl! Box Number In Care al The Sen·
line!.

.
For Sale

Gcing Out of
Busina Sale

Elich word over the mlnirnwn 15
words IJ 4 cen\8 per word per day.
Ads I"WUlirtM otber Ulan conseclllive
d»ys wiU be charged at the 1 dlly

Februory 22, 1979

DI(!K TRACY •

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

WANT AD
CHARGES

6:0&lt;1-Fred Flintstone &amp; Friends 4; PTL Cl ub 15; 100
Club 6,8; 6:11J..-News 17; 6 :25-For You .. Biack
Woman 10.
6 ·31J..-Romper Room 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3;
b:.lll-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13; 6 :55Chuc k White Reports 10; News 13.
7:0&lt;1-Todev 3,15; Good Morning America 6, 13;
Thursday Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges
17; 7' 15-Weather 33 .
7,30- Famlly Affair 10; 8,QO-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10;
L eave It To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :31J..-Hazei 17; 9:ot&gt;-MervGrllfln3; Phil Donahue 13;

11 - ·Tne Dallv Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, F eb . 21, 1979

jor suit, North . elected to
play the game m notrump
mslead of probing for the
best game by bidding three.
·clubs to show his suit.
A good bridge player does
not s ulk a bout mig ht-have·

Eas t re turned the heart
three, his original fourth·
best heart , and South 's 10
was won by West 's jack.
West led the two of hearts,
and when East played the
nine South knew that the
distribution at the be ginning
had been 5-4, the opening
leader having five .
Declarer had JUSt one rea·
sonable hope of making the
contract, which was that the
opening leader had the ace
of clubs and the Q J of
spades. In this event South
could make the contract bY.
running the diamond sUit
and disc arding clubs from
dummy. • .
Running diamonds forced
West to follow to the first two ,
diamonds, discard two small
clubs on the next two dia·
monds, and then commit
hari·kari on the fifth dia·
mood : He would either have
to discard his ace of clubs,
unguard his queen jack or
spades, or jettison a heart.
The first choice was im·
mediate suicide. The second
choice would give declarer
three s pade tricks. The
heart discard would allow
decarer to get. away w~th
just three heart losers m·
stead of four.
Declarer had proved an
old adage : a chance, no
matrer bow slim, is better
than none .
! NEW SPAPE R ENTER PRI SE ASSN . )

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 21,1979

Children. ha~ve father killed

/' ~--Ai_:e~-n;;~th;-1

body
w~s
EDNA G. CRUMBLEY
disc~vered Sunday ~hen hiS
MARIE w. BELL
Mrs.
Edna G. Crumbley,
relatives called pohce after · Marie Winona Bell, 48, 413
75,
1707
Clark Ave., Wellsthey were unable to contact .E. Welch Ave., Columbus,
ville,
formerly
of Pomeroy,
him:
formerly of Pomeroy, died
died
Tuesday
at
the East
D1vor~ed
from
the Tuesday in Mt. Carmel
Liverpool
City
Hospital
children s mother 10 years Hospital.
.
following
an
apparent
heart
ago, Whtte, ~~~ kept !"ree
Mrs. Bell was born Feb. 8,
attack.
B1bles ~n his hvmg room, set 1931 in Middleport, a
She was born Sept. 27, 1903
the e.en_mg . curf~w and dau~ter of the late Jolm
in Pomeroy a daughter of the
0 P~ hill chlldr~ s d~sire Kerwood. She resided in
to q~t school, pohce said.\
Pomeroy for a number of late Charles and Eva TewksNeighbors told reporters....,~ars before '!lOVing to bary R\JSS. Her husband,
Rayn.or.d P. Crumbley died
that White freq~ently took the Columbus.
Sept.
7, 1972.
,children on outmgs and_ often
Surviving are her husband,
Surviving
are· two sons,
walked them to schoolm the Thomas, a daughter, Rhonda,
Father
Raymond
(Phil)
(Continued frmn page I)
mommg, only to have them at home; a granddaughter,
Crumbley,
Jr.,
Associate
"I'm basically a street cop return home after he went to Christina; her mother, Mrs.
and , administration-wise, work ._
· Marie DeVol·, a sister, Mrs. Pastor of St. .J oseph's
I've made some mistakes and
p 01
h d
1
I'D probably make a few
tee searc _e sever a Hubert (Yolanda) Bass and a Catholic Church in Austinand Father Charles
more," said Efaw. "It's sort hfo~es for Wdatkins and tootok brother, Gilbert Kerwood, all town,
Wiliiam
Crumbley, Pastor of
our men an two w~m.en '"· of Columbus. Several nieces
St.
Williams
Church at
~he~ardyo~ J:,~~ ~n~.:"f'~ custody . for quest onmg ~ . and nephews also survive.
Champion,
and
a grand·
connecllon
wtth
his
Funeral services will be
daughter,
Miss
Cynthia
~~-~~- I'm still trying to catch whereabouts.
heiQ. at 1 p.m. Friday at the
Rutledge, Warren.
Efaw is one of several Ohio
Maeder-Quint Funeral Home, '
Mrs. Crumbley was a
sheriffs in trouble with the
Hospital News
1068 S. High St., Columbus. member of the Immaculate
courts, and the Buckeye State
Burial will he in Greenlawn Conception Church of WellsSheriffs, Association in
Cemetery.
· vll)e , and belonged to the
Columbus is concerned that
Veterans r,J'emorlaiHospilal
Friends may call at the Altar and Rosary Societies
the litigation will besmirch
ADMITTED
Edna funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. and the Lady Knights of
the public image of county Beegle, Racine; Ralph Carl, Wednesday and from 2 to 4 Columbus.
law enforcement officers in Pomeroy; Mattie Warner, and 7 to 9 p:m. Thursday.
Celebrated Mass will be
general .
Guysville; Douglas Barnett,
held 11 a.m. Friday at the
The troubles "can't help Racine ; Dana Covert,
CLINT BIRCH
Conception
Immaculate
but hurt us," said John Pomeroy; • James Pape,
Clint Birch, 84, Route I, Church in Wellsville with the
Norton, association executive Syracuse; Barbara Pierce, Portland, died Tuesday at the Rev. Father Joseph Rushton,
director. "It's a public image Racine; Betty Carpenter, O'Bieness Hospital in Athens. Bishop James Malone ,
we're fighting,"
Racine ; Avanell Bass,
Mr. Birch was a veteran of Father Raymond Crumbley
Sheriffs in Richland County Pomeroy; Leona Hubbard, World War I and member of and Father Charles Crum·
at Mansfield and Guernsey Syracuse; Teresa Smith, Drew Webster Post 39, blcy.
_
County at Cambridge also Clifton, W. Va .; .Eleanor American Legion, and the
Friends may call at the
have been indicted. Sheriffs Thomas, Pomeroy.
Meigs Chapter of the · Haugh-Roberts Funeral
DISCHARGED - Helen Disabled
American Veterans. Home in Wellsville Wedare under investigation in
Se ne ca, Cia rke • Geauga an d· Slack, Richard Burkhamer,
He was a son of the late nesday evening and on
Miami counties.
Gaye Fields, Carol Lunsford, Ellis and Susan Pierson Thursday from 3 to 5 and 7 to
Warren County Sheriff Roy Mary Derenberger.
Birch. Besides his parents he 10 p.m. There will be a prayer
Wallace was found innocent
was preceded in death by his service at 8 p.m. Thursday.
last year in Lebanon of
wife, a son, a daughter, a
charges involving the
Holzer Medical Center
step-son, a brother, four
operation of his department
IHscharges,Feb.20
sisters, a half-sister and a
NANCY C. WALKER
and campaign funds.
Susan Bailey, Gamet Boyd, grandson.
Mrs. Nancy Chaffee
Richland County Sheriff Charles Chapman, Barbara
Surviving are three
thomas Weikel was sent to Cline, Mrs. Curt Coffey and daughters , Ellen Lipps, Walker, 18, 409 O'Neal St.,
jail for 10 days for contempt son, Florence Figgins, Ertha Vincent ; Dora Upps, Uttle Belpre, fonnerly of Meigs
last week. He admitted under Hathfield, Lester Hayslip, Hocking, and Leota Birch, County, died Tuesday at St.
oath he ordered a courtroom Zelia Howell, Mrs. J. Gregory Route I, Portland; a son, Joseph Hospital in Parkersbugged electronically while Hurst and daughter, Vena Thomas Birch,, Waterford, burg following a brief illness.
Mrs. Walker was employed
motions
to
dismiss Marcinko, John Mayes, Keith eight grandchildren and five
at
Heck's in Belpre and she
indictments against him were McQuire, Ka Irina Mercer, great-grandchildren.
was
a 1978 graduate of
being argued. Weikel and 11 Angela Miller, Finnley
Funeral services will he
Eastern
High School in Meigs
deputies were charged with a Reynolds, Josephine Rice, held at I p.m. Friday at th~
County.
She was born in
total of 45 counts in con- Thelma Rollins, Krista Ewing Funeral HOI'le with
Gallipolis.
nection with alleged assaults Roush, Scott Scites, Alva the Rev. Don Walker of·
Surviving are her parents,
Shafer, Darlene Weaver., ficlating. Burial will be in
and thefts in office.
Keith
and Louise Koenig
Wolfe,
Joseph
Franklin
· At Wooster, a judge has
Cannel Cemetery. Friends
Chaffee,
Route I, Reedsville;
Wolfe.
dismissed 15 of 25. counts
may call at the funeral home her husband,
William
against Guernsey County
any time after 7 this evening.
Walker,
Jr.,
Belpre;
three
Sheriff Andrew H. Beros.
Kenneth
Chaffee,
brothers,
Beros, his wife, Mary, an.d
CLASSES RESUMING
BETHEl, COLEMAN
New Meltico; Daniel Chaffee,
two other officers were
Bato~ classes at Royal Oak
Ridgway, Ohio, and Timothy
Bethel
Coleman,
Route
I
,
named in charges alleging · Park wlli resume tonight with
Albany,
fonnerly
of
MidChaffee,
Reedsville; her
bribery, soliciting improper business meeting at 6 p.m.
paternal
grandparents,
dleport,
died
Wednesday
Mr.
compensation, falsification and other classes at their
Mrs.
Charles
Chaffee,
and
morning
at
the
Holzer
and gambling.
regular times.
Medical' Center. Funeral Reedsville; her maternal
grandfather, Harley Koenig,
r-••·~~~-~·-:;:=;~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••, completed
arrangements
being Reedsville; her paternal
Rawlingsat theare
Coats Funeral Home in great-grandmother, Mrs.
Jane Smith, Reedsville, and
Middleport.

CLEVELAND (AP) John White a strict father
who made hls two teen-agers
observe a 9 p.m. curfew,
walked into his living room
after work and came face-toface with his killer, a man
who police allege was hired
for $60 by White's children.
"He wouldn't let us do anything we wanted, like ~moke
pot," a police detective, who .
asked not to he named , ·
quoted the children as saying.
Police said the children- a
17-year-old hoy and a 14-year-.
old girl - described how they
hid their father's body in a
·back room after the sla'"ng
,.
on Feb. 9, then cashed his last
paycheck and used his credit
cards to go on a llklay spend-

;;,g spree.
They spent $2,000 on televisions video games and
other a~usements, as weD as
food and ente rtainment ,
police said.
The teen-agers did not
spend much time in their
home, but drove around in
th~ir lather's car instead,
police said. They were
arrested Monday when they
returned to thetr home m a
blue-collar neighborhood in
southwest Cleveland. They
were being held in a detention
home Tuesday, police said.
No charges have been filed
against the children, both
juveniles, " because the
investigation is still going
on,'' the detective said.
The
detective
said
investigators have no doubt
the two were involved in the
killing.
.
"You could caD It a confessio~. if you want to," he
sa1d. They told pohce the
whole story of what they did,
how it happened, how they
used the money and credit
cards. They told the ¥thole
thing."
A photo of a pa&gt;Senger
Police said each blamed
train operated by Chessie the other for hatching the
System (B&amp;O) between Pt. pl~ficers have issued an arPleasant and the Goodyear
plant at Apple Grove during rest warrant on a charge of
Ohio River flooding in early aggrava ted murder for
December 1978 appears on Gerome Watkins, 19, of .
page 18 of the March 1979 Cleveland, whom they said
issue of TrainJ Magazine, a was a friend of the White
children. He remained a
national rail p blication.
.tl·ve Tuesday. ·
The .photo shows the train fugl
Police
said the children
consisting of two former B&amp;O
coaches owned by th.e Good- paid Watkins $60 to kill their
year Company and a Chessie father.
System (Western Maryland )
Investigators said the killer
locomotive waiting between apparently was sitting in the
runs in front of Chessie's Pt. living room with a .31kaliber
revolver in his lap when
Pleasant depot.
Conrail and Chessie System White walked through the
(c&amp;O) operated a similar front door from his job ala
service between Gallipolis Ford Motor Co. plant.
and Kyger Creek power plant
The killer fired once,
near Cheshire during the missing White and breakmg a
flooding using cabooses.
window , police sa1d. Police
The trains wore needed said he fired again, striking
because flood waters covered
the normally used highway
..
routes making it difficult or
impossible for employees to
reach their jobs.
The same issue of Trains
Magazine carries stories
regarding the Chessie Steam
Special which made several
THURSDAY .
area runs during its two
seasons of operation. 1be
PRECEPTOR CHAPTER,
cover
story
concerns Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
American Electric Power p.m. Thursday at Riverboat
Company's Muskingum Room of Meigs Branch,
Electric Railroad loca ted Athens Courity Savings and
near Cumberland, Ohio.
Loan.

White in the arm as he fled.
- The .killer followed White
into the kitchen , where he
was trying to open the kitchen
door , and shot _Wh•te m the
head, pohce sa1d.
Pollee sa1d the son, nervous
about the k1ihng, left the
house, . b~t the daughte_r
waited m another r~m until
the fatal shot was f1red .

White's

Shen•££• • •

Train photo

depicted

.in publication

,------ -·,

5-ocial l
1 Calendar 1

I

l

.

Chinese-Viet Nam con zct expa.n ds

Meigs Locat
(Continued from page I)
Board was approved.
The resignation of John C. Beaver as director - of
Transportation in the district was accepted as of March J,l(nd
Leland Parker was named action director.
The board will study the position before a pennanent
appointment is made.
.
Board members Carol Pierce and Larry Powell
volunteered to serve on a committee to mlike
recommendations on the repair of buildings In the district. :
Cheryl Enyart was named a substitute teacher to tutor a
hospitalized student am a letter was read from the Fi~Jd
Representative of the Ohio ABsociation of Public Scll\)ol
Employes aMouncing that the local chapter is ready to open
negotiations for a new contract. BiDs and financial statemelits
were approved.
:
Attending the meeting were Supt. Dowler, Dan Morris,
Dwight Goins, administrative assistant; board members
Powell, Pierce, Mrs. Jemifer Sheets am Virgil King; MrsBowen , Ms. Shultz, high school principal James · Diehl;
elementary principal Robert Mbrris and treasurer, Jahe
Wagner.

By DAVID TERRY
Associated Press Wtller
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)
- 1bree Chinese infantry
dlvlslons fighting for every
mOe against tough opposition
have puahed 12 mUee Into
Vietnam's northeast corner
and may be poised to cut .a
hlghwiiY. link to Vietnamese
troope coilcenira~d in Lang
Son, intelllgence sources in
Bangkok reported today.

Moving under darkness
Wednesday night,_ the
Chinese, possibly manbering
as many as ,30,000 men and
backed by tanka, punched
into Vietnam's coastal
province of Quang Ninh and
halted within 12 mUes of
Highway 4, the sources said.
The highway links the coast
with Lang Son, a border town
50 mUes inland.
Vietnam·was rushing rein·

e

,_

(USPS 145-960)

VOL NO. XXIX

NO. 218 ·

By Vlsetsak Sanguanpong invasion front eastward to the
Associated Press Writer coast Tuesday. It said ·a
BANGKOK; Thailand (AP) Chinese division "attacked
- Vietnam claimed today the area of Than Phung, Po
that its army put more than Hen and Cao Ba Lanh" in the
3,000 Chinese troops out of coastal province of Quang
action in a major battle on the Binh, but Vietnamese forces
eastern front of their five- "lrounced three battalions
day--old border war.
and wiped out 700 Chinese
At the other end of the aggressors.
front , the Chinese captured
The
Vi e t n a me s e
LaoCai, northwest Vietnam's government took a party of
major commmunications and foreign correspondents to
railway center on the Red Lang Son Tuesday, and the
River . The invaders were garrison ~ommander there
said to be 16-12 mUes inside told them fighting was raging
Vietnamese territory at some around Dong Dang.
points, and they, .too, claimed- The commander said the
inflicting thousands o! 1 Chinese appeared to be
casualties.
regrouping after making a
Radio Hanoi reported a big partial retreat from five
battle Tuesday between Lang towns along the border they
Son, the major town in the had overrun.
northeast frontier area, and
the border village of Dong
Dang seven mUes away and
78 mUes northeast of Hanoi.
In an assault on Peak 409
Charles R. Knight, Oak
south of Dong Dang and at Hill, forfeited $150 bond in the
Marker Post '15, . 3'h mUes court of Middleport Mayor
northeast of the village, Viet· Fre,!l Hoffman Tuesday night.
namese forces "put a
The bond was posted on
company of Chinese troops charges of assault and bat·
out of action, destroyed five tery and disorderly maMer.
tanks, and captured all the ·
enemies' weapons, " the
Four defendants forfeited
broadcast said.
bonds and one was fined in
Radio Hanoi also reported the court of Pomeroy M11yor
the Chinese extemed the Clarence Andrews Tuesday
night. •
,
Forfeiting were Charles
two nieces, Kenda and Green, Dexier, $200, posted
Jennifer Chaffee. ·
on a charge of destruction of
Funeral services will be property; Robert Whitt, West
held at I p.m. Friday at the Milton, $350, driving while
White Funeral Home in intoxicated; Truman Hall,
Coolville with the Rev. Middleport, $32, speeding,
Richard Thomas officiating. and
Charles
Oliver,
Burial will be In the Christian Pomeroy, $30, failure to yield
Cemetery at Tuppers Plains. the right of way. Jolm R.
Friends may call at the Humel, Pomeroy, was fined
funeral home anytime after $50 and costs on an offensive
noon on Thursday.
language charge.

Mayor's Court

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Gov. James A, Rhodes and
legislative leaders planned
another closed-door
education summit meeting
today to continue discussions
about · school
funding
probleil!S.
Senate President Oliver
Ocasek, !}-Akron, spokesman
for the group, .says the four
meetings held so far have
been helpful tO all parties ..
The General Assembly
must detennine how much
, state aid to provide public
. schools Md how to allocate
' those funds .
The Honse Finance Committee is conducting hearings
on Rhodes' $17.7 billion
budget, in which he proposes
to allocate a reeord $3.3
billion for schools during tbe
two years beginning July I.
In the Senate, the

Education Committee began
hearings Wednesday night-on
a bill sponsored by Chainnan
Marcus A. Roberto, D·
Ravenna, that attempts to
deal with a method of
distributing the money.
As introduced, Roberto
said his proposal would
provide an increase of about
$700 million for Ohio's 616
school districts over what
they received in the 1977-1979
biemium.
The Senate j,aneJ's deliber·
ations, which will likely
continue over the next few
weeks will be tied to the
House committee's
considerations.
The House panel will
recommend how much
money it feels is available for
primary and secondary
education before Roberto's

NationwisQ--"-___,
Suspect search continues

..

CLEVELAND (AP) -The search contiriued today
for a teen-ager who has been named in a murder
warrant as the person who allegedly was hired for $60
by two other teen-agers to kiD their father .
Police say Juvenile Court charges have been filed
against the children of John T. White,. 41, who are
accused of paying to have their.father killed because
he was too strict and wouldn't let them· llllloke
marijuana.
,

Heavy rains drench Hawaii
HILO, Hawaii (AP) -Area residents on
Wednesday began to mop up damages from one of the
worst storms in the island's history, but they kept a
wary eye on cloudy skies tllat threatened even more
rain. Roads, businesses and some schools were
reopened Wednesday after a letup in the rains that
drenched the southeast section of Hawaii this week.
More than 30 inches of rain fell at Hilo airport during a
48-bour period ending early Wednesday.

ROME (AP) - Four-time premier Giulio
Andreotti gave up trying to fonn a new government
Wednesday after falling to get the Communists back
· · into supporting the patched-to-i!ether · parliamentary
majority that governed Italy for the past year.
President Sandro Pertlni announced he will ask a nonChrlsllan Democrat, Ugo La l)'laHa, 75, of the small but
influential Republican Party to try to fonn Italy's 37th
post-war government.
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Vehicle registration
·will begin March I when non-commercial vehicle,
motorcycle, motor home and house vehicle owners
may obtain llcense plate renewals from local
registration offices of the Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehi~les. Passenger car registration begins April 2.
The deadline for displaying validation stickers for all
types of vehicles is midnight May 31.

OPEN STOCK MAPLE
-

.

7 CHAIRS ..~~ ...~399

-

95

HUTCH... :............. .

(W/2 lEAFS)

..

DRIVE A Lln'LE &amp; SAVE A LOT

•

Son front.
Heavy fighting has been re_ported for s•veral days
around the border village of
Dong Dang, seven miles from
Lang Son. Foreign reporters
who visited Lang Son
Tuesday said they were told
the Chinese were holding the
hills on one side of Dong
Dang, and the Vietnamese
had the hills opposite them.
Bangkok sources believed

enttne
•

MIDDlEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Financi_n g session set

Registration begins March 1

e TABLE &amp;

nese foll owed is a river valley
stretching from China southwest -~to Vietnam. The i~­
telligenre sources descri_bed
the area as "rugged and
mountainous.''
After cutting Highway 4,
the Chinese com111anders
could decide to swing inland
and try to cut Highway I
south of Lang Son. That
highway is the lifeline
·between Hanoi and the Lang·

15 CENTS

THURSDfiY. FEBRUfiRY 22, 1979

Claims major triumph:

DINING ROOM PIECES

PINE OR OAK

"attack on Vietnam on an
even larger scale than
Saturday,'' the beginning of
the invasion, Radio Hanoi.
reported.
The sourL-es here said the
three Chinese divisions
encountered "fierce fighting,
with heavy losses on · both
sides" as they moved deep
into Quang Ninh on
Wednesday:
The invasion route the Chi·

•

Premier Andreotti gives up

PINE OR OAK

forcements up to Lang Son,
and analysts believe a major
battle was brewing around
the town . If the Chinese are
able to deal a final blow to the
Vietnamese, the analysts
say, Peking will probably
withdraw most of Its invasion
force frorp Vietnam.
In Hanoi, Vietnam's vice
foreign minister, Nguyen Co
Thach, said China is massing
forces on the border for an

'

Reg. s24goo BUNK BED•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·•SALE s1ggoo
REG. s22goo TRIPLE DRESSER ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE s18400
REG. !_2ogoo BUNK BED ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE s16JOO
REG. s1ggoo DOUBLE DRESSER ••••••••••••••••••••• SALE s16000
REG. s15goo BUNK BED•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE s12J00
REG. s15goo 6 or 8 DRAWER CHEST•••••••••••••••• SALE s12J00
REG. ·s14goo Sl NGLE .DRESSER•••••••••••••••••••••••
SALE s12()00
.
REG. s13goo 5 DRAWER CHEST•••••••••••••••••••••••SALE s11211
REG. s11goo 4 DRAWER CHEST••••••••••••••••••••••••• SALfig&amp;oo
REG. s11_goo STUDENT DESK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE sgsoo
REG. S7fP BE_D•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••• ~~:~••••••• SA_LE__~:f'
00
REG. '65 NIGHT STAND ••••••• ~······~················SALE ss21'REG. ssgoo BED•••-••••••.•••••••••••••••••••• :................ SALE s4711

ELBERFELDS IN.POMEROY

Supreme Court will decide
-WAsHINGTON (AP)- The Supreme Court said
Wednesday it will decide whether the government may
enforce tough and costly federal standards aimed at
protecting more than 600,000 workers from benzene, a
cancer-causing chemical. The justices agreed to
review a ruling that struck down the standards before
they ever took effect. Government lawyers say the
high court's eventual decision could affect working
conditions for mlllions of Americans.

Son, daugh~er face charges
CLEVELAND (AP) - Charges were filed in
Juvenile Court on Wednesday against a teenage boy
and girl accused of paying $60 to have their father
killed because he was too strict. Meanwhile, pollee
continued to search for Gerome Watkins, 19, who was
named in a murder warrant in comectlon with the
shooting death of John T. White, 41, of Cleveland.
White's 14-year--old daughter and 17-year--old son were
. charged in Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court with
· delinquency by reason of aggravated murder and ·
. robbery, said homicide U. Edward Kovacic .

. Utility seeking rate hike
TOLEDO Ohio (AP) - Toledo Edison bas .
announced th~t it will seek 11•9 percent electricity price
increase for relall customers, which the utility says is
· in line with the national wage-price guidelines. If
approved, the increase would take effect in spring 1980,
about two years since the last increase authorized by
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. The ei4!Ctrlc
company said that lower fuel chargea on bills in ·
mooths ahead, because of lower cost nuc~r fuel from
the Davis-Besse nuclear plant, will offset the Increase
when compared to .February bills this year.

committee decides how it
should he allocated.
Roberto, who outlined his
measure
before
the
Education Committee, ·said
his proposal is a p1odified
version of the "equal yield"
aid formula which currently
is under challenge before the
Ohio Supreme Court.
In a case initiated by the
Cincinnati School Board,
lower courts said the present
formula fails to distribute
state aid equally to -Ohio's 2.1
million public school pupils.
The Ohio Supreme Court is
not expected to rule until late
March on the valldity of the
" equal yield fonnula.
Roberto proposes to
increase basic per pupil aid
from $960to $1,160annuaUy in
the first year of the bieMium,
and to $1,200 in the second
year.
His bill also would
distribute an additional $40
million in special aid for
disadvantaged pupils in hard·
presse~ big city school
districts. State subsidies for
vocational and special education units programs would
he increilSed from $4,000 to
$5,000 per unit.
·R oberto's bill would
increase minimum teacher
salaries by $500 in each year
of the biennium. "It is my
best judgment ;" Roberto
said, "that the. bill would
require an additional $700
million to fUnd this biennium
over the last."

Revised
.calendar

planned
Supt. Clark Lees will
recommend a revised school
calendar for making up days
missed due to inclement
weather when the Eastern
Local School District Board
of Education meets in
regular session Tuesday
evening.
According to the plan,
students will attend classes
from March 9 through March
13, a time which had been set
aside in the school calendar
of the district for spring
break.
Eastern District schools
started a week earlier than
schools of the other two
districts in the fall to allow
for the spring break.
In addition to giving up the
spring break, students will
also be attending classes on
Saturdays including March 3,
March 17 and March 31 if
Lees' recorrunendations .are
approved.
Eliminating spring break
and the three days oi
Saturday school will make a
total of nine days with
dismissal postponed to May
31.
However, students of
Eastern High and Riverview
would have to attend classes
June I since those schools
were closed for one day more
than the Tuppers Plains and
Chester Schools because of
broken water lines.
According to Lees, Eastern
High and Riverview are 10
days over the five days
permitted by the state for
calamities while Chester and
Tuppers Plains are nine days
over.
Lees praised his bus
drivers today for the safe
driVing records they have
maintained during the dif·
ficuh winter.
Eastern ·did not have one
accident during the entire
period of ice and snow.
''We ar~all thankful," Lees
commented.

the Chinese planned to deal a
final blow to the Vietnamese.
then in three or four days
withdraw most of the forces
who poured across the
frontier Saturday with the
declared aim of putting down
border provocations.
But Japan's Kyodo news
agency said a government
official in Peking told it if
Vietnain moved regular
forces into the area to replace

the militia that ha$ been
doing most of the fighting, the
fighting would go on. Til&lt;'
Intelligence sources said
Hanoi was in fact moving
regular army reinforcements
up to the border to relieve miIilia units battered in the first
days of fighting
At the other end of the 450mile border, Vietnamese
troono. station€9 in northern
I Contmued on page 121 ·

Therapist
employed
Mrs. Paula Cochran was
employed as a speech and
hearing therapist under the
Disadvantaged
Pupils
program when the Southern
Local School District board of
Education met in regular
session Wednesday evening.
The board employ.ed Daniel'
Riffle as an assistant
mechanic and accepted bids
for two bus chassis from the
John Gibson Motor City and
two bus bodies from Edwin H.
Davis and Son Lawrence
Powell was accepted as a
tuition student and the board
entered into an agreement
with the Meigs County Board
of Education_ for use of a

multi·rnedia center to be usr
in Driver 's Education u

struction.
Plans were made lor boan
members and the superm
tendent, Bob Ord, to attend :
4j'ti.,t;
school finance scminu .
to. ,.....,~~
sponsored by the Ohio Farn
Bureau March 5 at th &lt;
Buckeye
Hills
J oint
Vocational School and the
annual Southea st Region
'
Sp ring Update at Oh io
University Inn on March 7.
""'
The board ·passed a
resolution supporting t he
proposed Racine - Syracuse
sewerage system and added
Marsha Coultrip and Patrie .a
Adleta to the substitute
teachers list.
The
treasurer
was
authorized to seek an advance draw from the county
auditor for the March 2
payroll and Ronnie Johnson
was em ployed as a part-time
custodian at the junior high
school.
Attending the meeting were
•
board members · David
Nease, president; Shirley
Johnson,
vice president: Sue
GRANT AWA!(DED - The Ohio Historical Society has awarded a renovation grant for
Grueser,
Betty Wagner and
The
mergency
unit
of
the
this historic house at 453 Grant Street in Middleport. The grant ism the amount of $1,350 and
Dallas
Hill.
Middleport Fire Department
must be matched by the owner. The grant provides funds for porch and cement waU repairs,
two calls Wedanswered
gutter and downspout replacement, some siding replacement and _some pamtmg . The
nesday
.
house, owned by Mr . and Mrs. Mike Gerlach, was once the home of Wtlham H. Grant.
At 10 :41 a.m. the unit went
to Silver Run Road for Pearl
Darst who had fallen. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hosp1tai where he was ad·
mitted.
At 11 :19 a.m., the unit went
By C'LIFF HAAS
be 9 percent this year, and progress has been made and to the VUiage Manor ApartOhio '( AP ) Associated Press Writer economi;ts for the Business the more support evolved,'! ments for Vivian Phelps who AnCOLUMBUS,
effort to place before Ohio
WASHINGTON (A P) - Council, a group of the the president said.
voters
a plan to shift the burwas
treated
II.!'
the
scene.
President Carter says his nation's leading corporate
The plan is designed to give
At
12:47
p.m.
the
fire
den
of
financing
schools from
proposal for wage insurance chairmen, predict a recession tax rebates to workers who department went to the the local property
tax to the
against ·inflation apparently toward the end of the year. comply with
Carter's Burdell McKinney resident at state was start.ed Wednesday
is picking up support in
Carter told a group of state voluntary 7 percent ·.wage 477 Sycamore St., where a by the Ohio Education
Congress.
and local officials Wednesday guideline if inflation exceeds bucket of ashes from a wood Associ alion.
His assessment comes at he hopes to have his "real 7percent. ltis one of the main burning stove had caused the
Eugene
Brund ige,
· the same time the chairman wage insurance" program elements of the president's wooden porch floor to begin president of the 80,000of the Federal Reserve Board through the House Ways and anti-inflation campaign.
smouldering. There were member teacher group, said
is telling legislators inflation Means Committee "in the
Carter said he also was minor damages. ·
the OEA filed a petition w1th
is likely to be worse this year near future."
heartened because some
th e attorney general and
than the administration
"I believe it's accw-ate to labor unions that first
secretary of state to launch
predicts.
say that the more that opposed the idea or had heen
an initiative petition drive .
G. William Miller, Federal members of Congress have cool toward · it were now
The OEA proposal would
Reserve chairman , also studied the basic principles of giving it qualified support.
fundamentally change Ohio's
Wednesday told the House this proposal, the more
method of financing primary
Banking Committee he
and secondary educa tio n,
expects the economy to grow
Brundige said.
more slowly in 1979 than
It would cut property taxes
Carter has estimated.
for
operating schools to 20
The
Commerce EXTENDED FORECAST
The new food stamp rules mills and mandate in the Ohio
Saturday
through
Department reported last
make it easier for elderly Const itution tha t schools
Monday:
Cloudy
Saturday.
month the Gross National
persons and low-incom e receive lottery funds ,
Harry E. Moshier, Jr., 33, families to qualify. Call th e personal and corporate
Product, considered the best -A chance of rain Sunday.
Welbton, is lodged in Meigs Meigs County Welfare income taxes, a sales tax
measure of the nation 's Fair Monday. Highs from
County Jail on charges of Department at 992-2117 for increase and property taxes
economic health, grew at an the lower 40s to the lower
issuing a bad check to the more infonnation.
unexpectedly strong '6.1 per- 50s Saturday and Sunday
from business and industry.
Meigs County Clerk of
cent in the fourth quarter of and in the 40s Monday.
While the new food •tamp
The educators' plan also
Lows from the upper 20s to
1978.
Courts.
program will remove some calls for an increase 1n
The check was dated Jan. 2, higher income persons from personal income taxes at
Revised GNP figures for the 30s early Saturday and
1916 in the amount of $33.68 the program, or reduce their upper income levels, an
the last quarter of 1978 were Sunday and from the mid
20s to the mid 30s Monday.
for house trailer taxes.
being released today.
benefits, it makes it easier for increase in corporate taxes
Moshier left Ohio shortly low-income familie s and and a one-cent increase in the
The
president
has
predicted that the economy .;.;:;:;::;:;.;:;:::·:::::::::;:::·:;.;·::::::::::::.:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: afterwards and was unable to elderly persons to bene!it. state sales tax .
he located until Sheriff James The new r~gulatioos become
will grow 2.2 percent in 1979,
There would also be a
SHOWERS SPREADING
Proffitt learned from Georgia effective March I.
but Miller told the House
proVision Jo protect the few
Snowshowers
spread authorities that Moshier had
panel he expects the eConomy
Low income elderly per· school districts which are
will grow between I. 75 through the Rocky Mountains returned to Ohio.
sons, who are not getting food now wellfunded from losing
Moshier was picked up by stamps because they cost too money, Brundige said.
percent and 2,25 percent this and into New Mexico and
Arizona today, auning for the the Wellston Police Depart- much, or their mcome IS JUS\
year.
A final decision on whether
Miller also said he expects Plains, while rain fell across ment before being trans- a little too high, should now the petition drive will try to
ferred to Meigs County apply
inflation to be between 7.5 southern California .
r)llace the proposal on the
Other ralnshowers fell Wednesday.
percent and 8.25 percent in
New rules removed the cost ballot June 5 or some later
1979, compared with an from southern Kansas into
of food stamps and set up date will be determined at an
administration estimate of Texas . Ram was freezing into
standard deductio~s that emerge n cy statewide
northern Kansas and into
7.5 percent.
henef1t persons o~ f1xed in- meeting of OEA leaders Feb.
However, Miller added, Nebraska. Light snow was
come. Call the Meigs County 25 in Columbus, he said.
l(we could be fortunate" and north of the rain in the
Showers, possible thun - Welfare Department at 992hit the president 's estimates. Midwest, stretching through dershowers, windy and 2117 for an appointment. ,
Final readings
Some private forecasters Nebraska and the northern warmer tonight and Friday.
Low income households
have predicted inflation will Plains.
Lows tonight between 45 and will be assigned an ap· given Wednesday
pointment, when their case is
50.
to be recertified. With
Meeting in special session
Wednesday night, Pomeroy's
d
t th
assigne appointmen s ere Village Council gave final
WORKERS NEEDED
will he no more long waiting
Workers for canvassing in periods in the food . stamp readings and approved three
ordinances.
Pomeroy, Syracuse and office.
When
residents
receive
Approved were ordinance
Rutland for the heart fund
their
appointment
cards
if
503
which provides an inMeigs County has received reimbursement of
are desperately needed , Mrs.
crease
$300 to $500
Lois Kelly, drive fund they find it necessa;y to amuaUyfrom
$7 236.85 sprnt in its voter registration program last
for the village fire
ye~r, Mrs. Jborothy M. :Johnston, director of the Meigs
chairman, said today.
change appointments
ordinance
504
AU persons who will be because of Illness, etc. ' they chief;
County Board of Elections, reports.
.
Voter registration in Meigs County was not required
willing to work in the cam- shouid call the food stamp providing for the repaving of
paign are asked to call Mrs. office at 992-2117 and a new US 33 from Butternut Ave. to
before last year and numerous registration projects
Kelly immediately at 992· appointment will be assigned. the Pomeroy-MasOn Bridge
were carried out to get as many voters. registered as
and ordinance
502, a ·d·fair
7500.
possible.
However, because of the 'ho
d.
case load, officials ask that
use or mance ._provl mg
Secretacy of State Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr.,
citizens keep the appointmi!nt ··fo_r equal housing opportumty
advised Mrs. Johnston, .via letter, of the
assigned, if at all possible. .foull residents. .
reimburse'lnent and said in part:
FREE CLINIC
Attcndmg the sess1on were
"The cheek is made payable · to the County
Afree blood pressure clinic This will enable the agency to
et
the
food
stamp
card
out
Mayor
Clarence Andrews,
Treasurer, but I wanted you to he aware of this
will he held Tuesday at the ~n schedule.
co un cil members, Betty
development. I also want to thank the members of the
town hall in Harrisonvllle
Stamp appointments B~r?mck, Larry Wehrung,
legislature from the county who were instrumental in
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. by the forFood
Ma~ch
re-certifications Wilham Young, Dr. Harold
making thi s reimbursement possible."
Senior Citizens · Club of
•
Brown, Rod Karra and Lou
have be en ma1'led.
Osborne.
Harrlsbnvillc.

l!

Middleport

fire units

kept busy

OEA starts

Proposal gaining support

voter plan

Qualification

Wellston man
jailed here

Weather

.Funds received

"'

\

made easier

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