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POMEROY-~M IDDLEPORT, OHiO

V.Ol. XXIX NO. 181

entine
..

21, both of Middleport.
Hoffman noticed several old
coins · Qn the floor of the
vehicle. The two men denied
any knowledge of the coins
when questioned, hoWever,
they did return to Pomeroy
with him.
Upon further questioning,

extraditiOn

Hoffman .reports the two men
admitted breaking and entering a ljome in Mason
earlier Sunday.
Parsons is confined to the
Middleport jail and Wilson to
the Meigs county jail
aivaitu{g extradition on th~
breaking and , enterin·g

Six victims i.d entified
CfDCAGO (AP) - They
were as young as 15 and as
Old as 20 when they dt'ed .
Some worked for J ohn Wayne
.
Gacy J r., oth ers were thetr
'I
fr Ien ds. And some stt I
needed to be squired from ·
Place to I
in the fam ilY
ca . . P ace
r.
They are .the victims so far
Ide ittlfled m an apparent
series of sex sJayings that left
bodies in· ilie cra:wl space,
bodies in the river.
.
.
Th ree of th e bod tes
from the crawl
unearthed
ben th
G
spaceld tleafl d Macyd's homde
were en e
on ay, an
poIIce· said
the 36-year~ld
t
h d d Itt d
con trae or a a m e
klllJng two of the three.

In all, six -of the 29 bodies
linked to Gacy have been
identified. He reportedly has
oold po"lice he killed 32 boys
and young men after having
sexual relations with them.
The diggina goes on today
-...
at Gacy's home near Des
Plaines, just northwe~ of
Chicago.
The three victims identified
Monday by the Cook County
Medical Examiner Dr.
Robert Stein were:
-Gregory Godzik, 17, of
Chicago, a former employee
of Gacy's who had been
missing since December 1976.
-John Szyc, 19, a friend of
Godzik who also lived in Chicago
·
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Nationwise__:____,
UFO puts plane on alert
By Aslioclated Press
AUCKLAND, New Wealand - Experts poohpoohed a TV crew's claim that it filmed UFOs but the
New Zealand air force. put a plane on the alert;to chase
any ~ore suspicious sky travelers that show up.
David Mabin, head of New Zeland's Mount John
Observatory, said the unidentified flying objects tl!e
Australian TV men said they filmed over the weekend
and another Sighting reported on the east coast of
AUstralia early today almost certainly were the planet
Venus.
.

't:lniSbnas din:ner was

less

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A hOni~ked Christmas
dinner of turkey and trimmings cost Ohioans a bit less
than the same dinner on Thanksgiving, according to a
survPrey ~f.,s~~r;·by~·'f~ AfiiiOeillted ··

eas.

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The Decemlier cl!ima- averaged $16.86 in 1.4 cities,
cunpared wi_th an 18-CJ'ty 'av.:rage of $17.50 in
November.- December figures were not available from '
Painesville, Chillicothe, Canton and Conneaut

ease has reaching effects

WASHINGTON- T~ case of a man awaiting
execution in Florida could be'\&amp; watershed in death
penalty cases, according to the NAACP Legal Defwe
Fund. "We're sutting on · the verg~ of a sigpificant
period in capltal punishment litigation," said Jack
Boger of the Fund. ·
.
· Roger says that Is the U. S. Su!X'eme Court turns
down the appeal of John Spenkelink, currently on
Florida's death row, the man very likely will be
executed. Boger said that could lead to a new legal
precedent with wide application In other death row
cases.
~kirmishes

resume today

CLEVELAND..:.. The financial skirmishes between
the· city of Cleveland and nearly everyone resumed
today after a brief pause for welcoming the 'new year.
Mayor' Dennis J . Kucinich was to make public
today a list of 400 city employees whose jobs are
thieatened if the state Police and Firemen's Disability
Pension board forces payment of money owned by the
city. Kuclnlch said those. layoffs would be effective
Jan. 5.

Emergency

units have
five calls

Weather
Snow flurries and much
colder tonight with a · low of
five td 10 .above. Partly
Cloudy and cold Wednesday
with a high of 15 to 20. Chance
of precipitation 50 percent
tonight, 20 percent Wednesday.

·
-Rich_ard Johnston, 17, of
Bensenville, who was last
· -seen in June 1976 when hi's
mother dropped him off for a
rock concert in Cht'cago.
. Police said Gacy had prevtously confessed to killing
God_zik and Szyc. They said
Johnston's name had not
be en mentioned before, '-ut ·
"'
they djd not say whether that
meant they expected the
mnumcreabeser _of known dead to

32 slayings to which Gacy
reportedly has confessed.
Re' ports of a manhunt for
·an accomplice or witness
began after a vi'ctun' of an
alleged assault involving
Gacy, Jeff Rignall, 27, said he
was convinced Gacy had an
accomplice. Rignall has said
in a polt' ce complam
· t that he
was chloroformed and raped
by Gacy last March. He was
then driven back to near his
home on the north side of
Stein said he may have Chicago and dumped from
difficulty identifying the rest the 'car ..
of the skeletons without help
"At this point in~e investifr om the relatives of rnissi'ng gati'on there I·s no hm
' g. to t'n
per' sons.
dicate that Gacy acted in con·Dental charts 0~ the vi' ctt'ms
••
cert with anyone. However,
were completed over the the police and our office
weekend. But Stein said he continue to follow up any and
has received only_12 dental all leads," said chief
charts from relatives of prosecutor Terry ' Sullivan.
missing persons.
Earlier, police identified a
Gacy is officially charged body fouil11 buried under
with one murder, that of 15- Gacy's garage as that of John
year-old Robert Piest of Des Butkovich, 18, of Lombard.
Plaines. Gacy reportedly told He disappeared · 3'h years
police he threw Piest's body ago, police said.
in the Des Plaines River, but
Two .. bodies found in the
river have also been linked to
it has not been found .
Weekend news reports said the investigation. They were
police were looking for a for- Frank Wayne Landingin, 19,
mer employee of Gacy's as a" of Chicago, and James
possible accomplice or · Mazzara, 20, of Elmwood
witness to some or all of the Park, police said.

Young man's death

Sun!lay ruled suicide
· Suicide has been ruled in
the Sunday night death of
Randy Miller, 18, Rt. I,
Bidwell.
Miller was discovered lying
on SR 554 near the Pulpwood
Preparation Plant, just
outside of Bidwell at 6:54
p.m.
Deputy Silas Hamilton of
the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department reports evidence
indicates Miller had inflicted
a wound to the chest from a
single barrel 20-gauge shotgun near an outbuilding at the
pulpwood plant.
Then,
according
to
Hamilton, the 18-year old
man apparently walked from
the plant to the highway,
where he collapsed.
Still alive when discovered,
Miller died in route to Holzer
Medical Center.
According to the report
filed with the sheriff's
department, Miller inflicted
the wound by holding the butt
of the shotgun against a post
in front of the building,
placing the barrel of the gun
against his chest, and
· pushing the trigger with a
stick.
Based upon the information
·supplied by the sheriff'.s
department
and
an
examination of the bOdy,
_Gallia County Coroner

.PRICE FIFTE_
EN CENTS .

TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1979

Middl~portmen . await
Two Middleport 'men are did not stop to answer· Hoffbeing held in local jails man's inquiries as to why no
11walting extradition to West license plate was on the car.
~irglnla on breaking and He pursued the vehicle across
'entering charges.
the bridge anjl It stopped at
Pomeroy . Patrolman the Vista station in Mason.
Kenneth Hoffman attempted . While talking to ·the two
to stop a vel\icle In Pomeroy , subjects, Richard E. ParSunday evening. The vehicle sons, 20, and Ricky Wilson,

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Uonald Warehime Sunday
night ruled suicide as the
cause of death.
Randall Eugene Miller was
born Oct. 15, 1960, in Bidwell,
the son of .Hollis Miller, and
the late Gladys Miller.
He is survived by his
father, -three sisters, and
three brothers : Mrs. Samuel
Joyce Morris, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Roger (Carolyn)
Jackson, Bidwell; Mrs. Earl
(Elizabeth ) Howell, Bidwell;
Danny Ray of California;
Rickey Lee, North Carolina,
and David, at home. One
brother preceded him in
death.
He attended the BidwellPorter school.
Services will be I p.m.
Thursday from · tile McCoyMoore Funeral Home with
Rev. Clllvin · Minnis officiating . Burial will be in
Morgan - Bethel Cemetery,
Vinton.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
on Wednesday.

MEET TONIGHT
The Southern Local Board
of Education will hold its
organizational meeting this
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the
high school cafeteria.

charge.
valued at $300.
Meanwhile, Meigs County
The sheriff advised that a
sheriff deputies received a set of speakers stolen from
report from Virginia Hollon, Eastern High School on Nov . .
Rt. 3, Albany, that at ap- 25 has been recovered.
proximately 9 p.m. Friday Charges will be filed against
someone in a passing pickup a Rt. 1 Reedsville youth. One
truck shot through the door --set of speakers is still
on the passenger's side of missing. Additional persons
Mrs. Hollon's 1967 Cadillac. will be charged. pending
The slug lodged in the completion of the in·
driver's door. The incident is vestigation the sheriff
under investigation.
reported.
. Minor Mishap
Deputies are also in. vestigating a complaint filed
Saturday at 4 p.m. a truck
by Steve Lavalley, Racine. owned by James Suttle, Rt: I,
Lav.all ey advised he had Long Bottom was struck by
parked his . truck at a an auto driven by Michael E.
residence in Syracuse Friday Wolfe, Rt. I, Reedsville.
evening and when he went
According to the report
back Saturday morning he Suttle had his truck par~ed at
discovered the tires had been Reed's store. The brakes
punctured. The tires were failed on the Wolfe vehicle
which struck the parked
-:-::-:-::-::-:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:-:-:-:- truck . There was slight
damage to both vehicles. No
SON HORN
citation was issued.
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
An accident was inNorris, Rt. 2, Racine, are
vestigated on New ' Year's
the parents of the first • Eve in Racine. According to
Meigs County baby born at
the report Ernest Triplett,
the Holzer Medical Center
Racine, backed his pickup
in 1979. The child, a boy,
truck into the side of vehicle
arrived at 10:35 a.m. today.
owned by Opal Cummins, RL
It weighed seven pounds
2, Racine. The incident oc·and six and'one-half ounces -curred at the Vista station
and· measured 19 Inches
parl\ing lot. There was slight
long.
damage. No citations were
:-::::-:-:-:-:- :-:-:· :-:-:-:-:-:-::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:,:-:-: issued.

Deputies ·have
busy.week~nd

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QUEEN INSTALLED - Dollie Rousey, Pomeroy, has
been installed as queen of Bethel 62, International Order
of Job 's Daughter. Ceremonies were held Dec. 29 , at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.

Deputies of the Galli a and two handmade canes had
County Sheriff's Department been taken during the illegal
were .kept busy over the · entry.
·
weekend investigating The breaking and entering ·
reports of criminal activi(y. of tl)e Maureen Coughlin
A warrant was issued for residence, Mill Creek Rd.,
the arrest of Virgil Booten, '!'as · investi gated by the ·
Dollie Rousey , da ughter of
Gallipolis, on charges of department Sunday.
Hugh
Rousey and grand·
physical harm following ' a According to a report filed
daughter
of Mrs. Katrine
stabQing inddent at the home by Coughlin, upon returning
1\lillikan,
Pomery,
was in·
of Cindy Booten, Van Zant to the home following a two
Rd.
•week vacation she discovered statle(! ao hcnored queen of
In a report fi!ed with the that the dwellihg had been Beth el 62," Internati onal
Order of Job 's Daughters, in
. department, Cindy Booten entered.
allelles that at I p.m . Couglin told deputies that ceremonies held Friday 'night
· Saturday, Virgil Booten cut the medicine cabinet in the at the Middleport Masonic
the telephone line at '"her home had been ransacked, . Temple.
Other elected officers inresidence, and then cut her and that approximately 200
sta
ll ed were Julie Byer '
hand With a pocket knife.
gallons of fuel oil was taken
seni
or princess ' Susanna
Following the incident, from a tank outside the Mill
Wise,
junior princess; BrenCindy Booten was trans: Creek residence.
da
Cha
ppelear, guide ; and
ported by SEOEMS to Holzer In further action, the
Theresa
Starr, marshall.
Medical Center, where she following incidents were
Appointed officers installed
was treated and released.
investigated by the departwere Ruth Blake, chaplain :
On Sunday, deputies in- inent over the weekend: ·
vestigated a breaking · and
- Ruth Roberts, Bidwell, Barbara Chapp ele a r ,
entering at Dobbins Carry reported the theft of her son's reco rd er : Jeani e Welsh,
Out, on SR 554.
' bicycle from behind Fruth's treasurer; Angie Houchins,
According to a rep&lt;irt filed Pharmacy , Jackson Pike, first messe nge r ; Cindy
Parke r , · second messenger ;
with the department, entry Sunday.
J
ennif e r Wi se , l11ir d·
had been gained to the carry ·- While ori routine patrol,
me
sse nger;
Za ndr a
out by breaking the glass and Deputy A. L. Sullivan
Vaughan,
fourth
messenger
;
entering through the front discovered Sunday that nine
Paul ey,
fifth
door.
·
windows had been broken at Kim
me sse nge r ;
Stephi e
Bttween four and five Kyger Creek High School.
cases of beer and 15 to 20
- The theft of a wheel and Houchins, librarian; Jea nna
cartons of cigarettes were the battery from a vehicle Pauley, senior ~ ustodian ;
reported taken during the owned by Lester Lewis, Amy Sisson. junior custobreaking and entering.
Bidwell, was reported .to the dian; Laura Horsley' inner
guard .
The breaking and entering department Sunday.
The installing officers, all
. of the Patrick O'Malley
- Deputies recovered a
past
honored queens of the
residence on Eagles Rd., just 1966 Chevrolet, registered to
were Jennifer Wise,
Bethel.
off SR 325, was reported to Steve Rawlins, Patriot, from
installing
offi ce r ; ,Angie
· the department"Saturday.
Symm~s Creek on Monday.
Sisson,
guide;
Merri Aul t,
O'Malley, a resident of The location of the vehicle
mars
hall
;
Diana
Carsey,
Columbus, reported to the was reported to the departdepartment thllt during the ment by Charles Richards, chaplain; Lori Wood, senior
past two weeks the home had Who discovered the vehicle custodian; Sandy Luckeydoo,
been entered.
abandoned in the creek near juni or custodian ; Twila
Childs , recorder ; Kath y
According to the report, a his home.
television, a three-speed fan,
- Rebecca Sisk, K11nauga, Johnson, musician ; Mandy
a vacuum cleaner, a pistol, reporte&lt;l that the convertible Sisson, fla g bearer,• and Lori
top of her auto had been Wood, accompanist.
Eric Scites was solQist and
slashed on Monday.
Bevel'ly Wilcox had the

Queen installed
reading for the flower
ceremony. ThP new honored
queen and other 1nP mber~
pre"\Pntetl a J'lfl
\Vt.st&lt; \\ hu

.h•n11ih·r
p: t ;,•'Jil t' ~ "

ff )

i :l t Urtl

gifts to Mary Wise, guardian,
and Bill uickel. associa te
gua rdian .
The installing offiecrs all
wore l'Orsagcs of silk violets.
lrucst.s

Wl'rt'

rt' ~Js ll"l'l1 d

bv

Mrs. Donlll11 w ,JJ .tnd Mrs.
fll•ssle f\u 1g · ··~·- ·
The purpl&lt; .u.d rrld &lt;'olors
of the new IMH!trred queen
were cilfried uut 11 1 the dining
room decurillillnS. f ake,
decorated with vwlets. flower
of the honored queen. and
centered with praying tliinds,
her emblem . was served with
punch.
The honored queen'" motto
i~

" Be of good

I'PUI'aJ.w .

he

shall strengt h&lt;•n '-"" ~' l1eart,
all ye tha t liopo 111 lht• l.•ord",
Psa lm :11, wrc&lt;' :&gt;-1
Presented dtl&lt;)~ln;: till' installati on were lllf' gnardian
council . Mr~. Wi se. guardian;
Qui ckel, associate gua_rdi~ n ;
Sue Sta rr . gua rdian
secretary: Audrey Wood,
guardian treasurer; Vickie
Houchins. directr ess of
musi c; ami the associate
gua rdian council , Carol
Sisson, promoter of sociability; Lois Pauley, l' Ustodian of
. paraphernali a: and Angie
Sisson , directo1· of epochs.
Following the insta llation,
'the Job 's Daughtt•rs were
joined by members ol' the ·
Meigs Chapter. Order of
DeMolay, and friends for a
pi zza party.

Only two p~rsons injured
in 24 weekend accidents

BUSES DIDN'T RUN
- . Five calls .:were answered
Due to high water in the
by th emergency unit of the western part of Meigs County .
Middleport lire department two Meigs Local School buses
over the holiday weekend.
did not run Tuesday mornillg,
At 4:49 p.m. Saturday the · Other students returned to
squad took Mrs. Anna their classrooms following
Margaret Russell, 493 S. their annual Christmas
'The' Gallla - Meigs Post,
Second Ave. to Veterans vacations.
'
Highway Patrol, investigated
Memorla!Hospltal. At 11: 12 ;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::.:·:·:::·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::·
twenty-four weekend acp.m. Saturday, 'Bertha
HOLIDAY TRAFFIC
·
cidents.
Wllllams, New Matamoras,
By Associated Press
An auto operated by Chris
who was .visiting In the
Traffic accidents took
Daniels, 17, Callipolis, was
Hobson area, was taken to
330
Jives durbtg the threedemolished during one of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
day New Year's weekend.
three accidents investigated
after becoming ill.
The
National
Safety
Sunday
by the Gallia-Meigs
At 4:10 a.m. Sunday, the
CouncU
estililated
before
Post,
Highway
Patrol.
unit went to 8!!2 Plum St;, for
holiday
.
began
that
the
Officers
report
that at 1(): 3&amp;
Ell Ebersbach who was taken
between
350
and
430
pera.m:
.
a
vehicle
driven by
to Veterans -Memorial
soUl might be killed on
Daniels came around a curve
Hospital and · the fire
, _streets and highways
. at an excessive rate of speed
d~rtment was called to the
on Texas Rd., two-tenths of a
,l)utto'n Drul,Store.at 3:12 p. • between 8 p •.m. Friday and
midnight Monday. ·
ml!e north of SR 588.
·m. ~iulay when smoke was
During last year's New
Auto Fishtails
noted lit the establishment. A
Year's holftlay, also a
According to the report, the
'short in ttw wiring caused the
three-day weekead, there
·auto fishtailed to the left,
'smoke an'll there was. little
were 314 trafflce deaths.
went off the right side 'of the
.damage. •
wont
New
Year's
was
The
•·
roadway sideways, crashed
• At 5:53 a.m. Tuesday, the
the three-day obtervauce
CLOSELY
DEFENSED
Meig's
Ray
Andrews
(24)·
and
Chuc&lt;
f\l!nnedy
(22)
applied
'
through a fence, flipped over
· -squad went to 379 Park St., . In .1!115 when 584 person8
pressure
defense
against
the
G&lt;olden
Rockets'
mark
Swonger
(
40
)
during
action
in
on
its side and struck' the
:for Cynthia Gohring who was
were killed.
'Saturday's
two
point
loss
at
Larry
R.
Morrison
G.Despite
placing
three
players
in
double
Corner
of a house owned by
·treated for Illness on the
figures
,
the
Marauders
lost·
62-60.
•
•
.
·
Betty
McGinniss,
&lt;;;allipolis.
.;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
ccene.

Daniels displayed visible
signs of injury, · and was
transported by the Gallia
Volunteer Sq1.1ad to Holzer
Medical Center; where he
was treated for a contusion of
the left rib cage and a right
knee sprain, and released.
Daniels was cited on
charges Ill excessive speed.
Phillip ''b. Hampton, 22,
Marysville ~ was cited on
charges of reckless operation
following a one-vehicle ac'cident on SR 141, at milepost
10, at ·1 a.m.
Officers report tl)at
Hampton went to sleep at the
Wheel of his west boUnd auto.
The vehicle went off the right
side of the roadway and
pas~ed through a fence owned
by Austin Gills, Rt. 2, Patriot.
· lfhe Hampton auto incurred
moderate damage .

A pickup truck operated by
Teddy Joe Dillard, 20,
Gallipolis, incurred severe
damage during a "&lt;me-vehicle
accident on U. S. 35 al.
milepost I, at 3 p.m.
. According to the patrol, an
east bound vehicle driven by
Dillard went out of control on
the we•.pavement, passed off
the left side of the roadway,
and struck an embankment.
. Car Demolished
An auto operated by
Kathryn Richards, 39,
Pomeroy, was demolished
during a two-vehicle accident
Sunday on SR 7 at CR 46, in
'Meigs County. Officers report
that a South · bound vehicle
operated by Richards 'failed
to stop and struck the rear of
an auto driven by Kevin L.
Bartoo, 20; Reedsville, woich

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Se~linel, MJddlepori-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, J~n . 2, 1!17,

IN

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tues&lt;iay, Jan . 2, i979

Health Review

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Despite ., having three players in- .
double figure~, Meigs loses, 62-60

By Dr. Lamar Miller

.

~

OU.College of Osteopathic Medicine

An eye on ideology

ALCOHOLISM
Although you may bave consumed an alcoholic bevera&amp;e
'
•• two on New Year'1 Eve, you probably were able to atop
WASHINGTON CNEkJ - Ideological
purity, like beauty,
when yo~ felt you bad "bad enough." Some memben of our
must l1e m the eye of the beholder judgmg from the way
society are not 110 lucky. Here Is a letler lrom oae of them
two maJor lttmus-t es!mg orga mza lions rated the U.S.
which I rec!elved recently.
Sena te last year.
OJ) the bas1s of votes on 20' se lected Jssues, the liberal
My name is Patti.l'm 25 years old, a college graduate, and
Amen cans for Democr atic Action .gloofnily concluded the
I am .an alcoholic I'm second generation; both of'Illy parents
Senate behaved hke "a n ch •11an's cl ub" in 1978 and gave
suffered from alcoholfjn, liS well as several uncles, a cousin
1ts members an average score of 42 potnts on a scale of 100
and many friends . It isn't as uncommon as people might think.
- or 4 more "conserva tive" than the 1977 average.
,
My father was a test pilot for the goverrunent, and my mother
The American Conservative Union; on the other hand,
is
a retired schoolteacher. None of us seems to fit the "typical ·
checked out the votes on 1ts own list of 30 issues and
alcoholic" stereotype. In fact, or the estimated 10 million
dcc Jded "the Senate grew more liberal m 1978. It awarded
alcoholic people in this country, only 3 percent are skid row
the members an overall 36.,.6 percent conservatlve rating,
residenL'I. We COOle from both sexes, all religions, races,
down from 38.7 percent in 1977.
The difference, of course, lles prlmartly tn the list of key
economic and social backgroiDlds, and educational levels.
ISSUes eacl) organizatiOn used as test votes. Both groups --411._
Alcoholism isn't always !bmething that happens to the "other
throw in a few "tests " that only true believers could pass ;
guy ," Sometimes it happens to your parents, children, frlendil,
ove rwhelming majorities in the Senate vote against the
coworkers, sometimes even to you.
posJtJon deemed " nght" by the ADA or ACU on these.
Often when people taU&lt; about alcoholism they look for a
One ADA test vote, for instance, involved an amendment
place
to put the blame, and usually the blame falls either on
by Se n Thomas Eagleton, 0-Mo. to slash $1.4 b1lhon from
the
alcoholic
or on his or her family members. Alcohollam
the Defense Department's budget a uthority and cut actual
really has little to do with blame. I didn't cause my condition,
Pentagon spendmg by $900 millwn . It took a "yes" vote to
"Well , wha1 did you expect after watching five straight bowl games ." . any more than the diabetic, or a person with tuberculosis
get a positive score from the ADA on that one, but the
Senate reJected the amendment by a whoppmg 70-21
causes his or her disease. And alcoholism can't be attributed to
mm·g m.
·
any one factor. My parents' alcoholism did not neceSsarily
'
The ACll had 1ts own version - an amendment by Sen.
assure mine, although 65 percent of children with alcoholic
John To\ver , R-Texas, to increase defense budget authority
parents later develop alcoholism themselves. It runs in
by $1.6 b1lhon and actual spendmg by $1. 2 billion over the
famllles and even family, members who dido 't contract the
sums recommended. "!:his onewas defeated 74-21, but only
addictive nature of the disease are affected by it. Sometimes
the senators s upportmg the amendment got cred it from the
family members get just as sick if not sicker than lithe
ACU for theJr conservatism .
The two groups dJdn 't even agree on who the most liberal
alcoholic.
"\
and most conservati ve senators we re in 1978. ADA gave its
There
is.
a
lot
of
misinformation
and
confusion
January
Mrs. Charles Blake, Hysell "man distinction" award by . averted a major ure m the aurroWJding alcoholism in our-society, and this plays a large
best scores (most libera l) tO"Sens. Howard Metzenbaum
0-0hio (100 percent ); Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. (95 Meigs Nes Hlghllgbls of 1978 Run Road, were winners of the Pomeroy Chamber of Pomeroy business section part in the attitudes we develop. We tend to frown on people
when the Ohio Power qo.
percent), D1ck Clark, D-Iowa (90 percent ) and Paul
Jan 1 - WiU1am A, Rife, The Daily Sentinel's annual Commerce.
caught
fire . Who can't "control" their drinking , without realizing that
Sarbancs, D-M d. (90 percent) ADA's worst score - zero • Bucyrus, was · killed in baby of the new year contest. Jan. 26 - Meigs County building
Equipment
,
from
the
Ben perhaps the drinking may weD be uncontrolable. This is
...... " ent to Sens Maryon Al1en , D-Ala ., a nd .James Middleport on New Year's
Jan. 12 - Kim Batey and Schools closed again due to
alCoholism, and this is a1disease. Because of tbe social stigma
McClure , R-lda ho.
'
Tom
Corp.
was
clearing
away
Kunberly Taylor prepared icy roads and bigh water.
But ACU thought the most hberal senators (zero ratings Day.
attached
to acloholism many are reluctant t("openly seek
ice
on
Pomeroy's
parking
Jan. 27- Pomeroy missed
Jan. 2 - Doug Bi~ell was · forthelrtripto Mount Vernon
on its own sca le) were Da niel Inouye and Spark Matsunatreatment.
Many more are reluctant to seek tr~tment at all.
lots.
Robert
C.
Bailey
was
ga, both Hawau Democrats, and Wendell AnderSon, D- named presid~ of the for state Junior Miss com- a flood m; Main St. by less named coordinator of tlW When alcoholism JS left untreated it results in death. A lot of
Mum. ACU gave 100 percent ratings to Sens. Carl Curtis, Eastern weal School Board. petition. It was prediCted the than on efoot .
Jan. 29 - The Ohio River Meigs County Emergency needless deaths occur bf~!ause of what people don't know. U
R-Neb., Pau l Laxa lt, R-Nev., and Jesse Helms, R-N .C.
Jan. 3 - Pomeroy Vitlage Meigs Local School District
you think you may have a problem or know someone who does,
left
piles of ice as it receded. Medical Serv~ees . •
Council approved a budget of would finish the year $100,000
learn the facts . We can't promise a magic cure, but we can
Jan.
31Pomeroy
firemen
Painful ·priority problem
more than $500,000. John M. in the red.
help.
Gloyd was at his dutJes as
Jan. 14 - Announcement
I am glad that you have had the courage to admit your
A couple of recent public opmwn polls g1ve a clue to the
pa mful political problem President Carter fa ces in seeking executive vlce president of was made of the purchase of
problem
and have taken the necessary steps to correct it. You
County
Cousins
to mcrease the defense budget next year whlle trtmmtng the PomerQy National Bank. the
the r1ght side of the roadway, have now graduated to the point where you can help others
The MW;s Loca l School Cookshoppe in Pomeroy by
specl31 program spending.
and struck a tree .
with their alcoholism probleJilll.
In the abstract , a ma jonty of Americans favor either District Board· of Education Burger Chef.
Veblcles Collide
The relationship of the fainily and alcoholism is indeed an
Jan. 15 - The county jomed
mmnta1nmg the defense budget at current levels or named Wendell Hoover as
(
Contmued
from
page
I)
Officers
were
called
to
the
important
factor in working out problems such as yours,
lncreas mg 1t as Car te r proposes, accordmg to Decembe r pres1dent.
m mourmng for the death of
although
I
should say there is still considerable debate on
had
slowed
to
turn
left
from
7.
scene
of
a
two-vehicle
polls by Lou Hams and by NBC News-Associated Press. · Jan. 4 - Women members Herbert Humphrey.
whether
or
not alcoholism is an inheritable disease.
Richards
was
cited
on
collision
on
Teens
Run
But as soon as defense is pltted agamst other priOrities became the majority on the
Jan. 17 - County schoals
wh1ch IS the way 1t works in "t eal" hfe m Congress, th~ Southern Loca l Boa rd of closed on Jan. 16 in ob- charges offailure to maintain Providence Rd. , 46 feet west
story changes abruptly Respondents to both surveys
an assured clear distance. of SR 7, at 5:30 p.m.
would cut m•lltarY spending before reducing social Education With Sue Grueser, •servance of Martin Luther There was moderate damage "The patrol reports that a
sec unty, a td to ed ucati on. veterans programs, hea 1th Betty Wagner and Shirley King Day, and remained to the Barton auto.
van operated by Francis L.
Johnson beginning their closed as four more inches of
spcnd mg or a&gt;d to the poor
The.
Gallla-Melgs
Post,
James,
33, Crown City, were
- A suburban Des Moines
NEW YORK (AP)
terms.
snow fell. The National
motel is suing former
Highway
Patrol,
mvestiga'ted
east
bound
when
both
Lauren
Bilcall
says
she
broke
Avoiding junk mail
J a n. 5 - Syracuse Village Guard was in Pomeroy to
20
accidents
Saturday.
vehicles
attempted
to
stop
for
heavyweight boxing
orr
an
engagement
to
Frank
Council orgamzed w1th E.ber help with snow removal
Richard
D.
LOngstreth,
40,
a
stop
sign
atthe
intersection
champion
Leon Spinks for
Good news for JUnk mall vtetams. The industry, worried P1ckens becommg president. problems. Charles Hamilton,
Sinatra after he "behaved
Columbus,
was
treated
for
Both
vehicles
went
out
of
about possible fed eral regulatiOn m the Iuture, Js trying to
$1,326,
saying
he never Paid
like a complete rat."
Jan. 6 - Racine Village pr~sident of the Me1gs
clea n up 1ts own act At ats annual m eeting in Washington
inJuries
sustained
during
a
control
on
ice,
and
spun
his
bill
at
the
inn.
In ·her book, "Lauren ,
aro'ltnd. The rear of the van Bacall
recently, the D1rect Ma1 l-Marketmg Association urged Council orgainzed with three Athletic Boosters, announced
Merle Hay Travelodge of
by Myself," the
new
members.
the
establishment
of
an
I one-vehicle accident at 8:40 struck the -front of the auto
member ft rms to participate in its se rvice allowing
J~n
filed suit in Polk
p.m. on TR 16, two-tenths of
actress, now 53, says she.and
Jan. 8- Heavy snow hit the athletic hall of fatne.
rec1 p1ents of junk mall to get the1r names taken off all
a
mile
west
of
SR
141.
Both
vehicles
incurred
Counfy
DiStrict
Court, saying
the S!Dger were engaged after
county with temperatures
Jan. 18- The heavy snow
commerctal ma1hng lists.
Spinks
owes
them
ftr room,
Officers
report
that
an
east
moderate
damage.
the death or her husband,
Accordin g to the Washmgton-base d " Privacy Journal ," dropping to 10 forcing all brought many rQOf problems.
restaurant,
tavern,
beverage,
bound
pickup
truck
operated
Officers
investigated
a
t~o­
'
Humphrey
Bogart.
When
assoctatJon offacers adm1tted fewer than 111 percent of its schools to oeclosed.
Emmogene Holst~in got mto
laundry
and
long
distance
by
L&lt;&gt;ngstreth
went
out
of
vehicle
accident
on
SR
775,
member firms now pa rticipate in the voluntary namenews
of
•
'le
impending
Jan. 9- Henr)C..Wells was herdutiesasnewsecretaryof
removal program. But they urged more to s ig n up, before named president of the Meigs the Pomeroy Chamber of control on tll~__gravel road- seven-tenths of a rnlle south marriage leaked out, Sinatra telephone bills Spinks and his
the government decides to pollee the industry.
way,passedofftheleftsideof of milepost 9, at 7:30p.m.
got cold feet and ignored ber. party ran up in March.
For now , anyone wtshmg to get off commercial mailing County CommiSsioners. Commerce.
road
and
struck
a
tree.
According
to
the
patrol,
a
"Actually, Frank did me a · Spinks' wife, Nova, is a Des
Jan. 19 - Announcement
lists can wn.te to Mall P reference Service, 6 East 43 St., Middleport council members
The
vehicle
was
north
bound
auto
operated
by
great favul" ,., she says in ex- Moines native.
took their oaths of office with was made on the election of
Ne w York. NY 1001 7
demolished.
Roger
L. Dent, 22, Rutland,
Spinks has said he received
cerpts to be published in
Charles Mullen being the new Bernard Fultz as chairman of
Signs
Of
Injury
went
out
of
control
in
a
curve,
$230,000
when he defeated
February's Issue of Family
member.
the board of directors of the
Longstreth
displayed
passedoffthe
right
side
of
the
champioo
world
heavyweight
Circle_magazine. "He saved
Jan. 10 - Several power Citizens National Bank in
visible
signs
of
mjury
and
roadway
and
struck
a
parked
Muhammed
Ali.
He
me from the disaster our
compahies contmued voltage Middleport with Manning
reportedly
earned
nearly
$4
was
transported
by
the
Gallia
vehicle
own~
by
Deena
J.
marriage would "bave been."
reductions because of frozen Kloes becoming a new board
million
lor
the
return
bout
in
Volunteer
Squad
to
Holzer
Baker,
19,
R1o
Grande.
_
...-.
member.
coal stockpiles.
which
Ali
regained
his
title.
Medical
Center,
where
he
Th~
Bak~
auto
had
slid
off
WS ANGELES (AP) Jan . II - The Ohio
Jan. 20 - Meigs County
Department of Natural was paralyzed by an eight was admitted for treatment the r~ght s1de of the roadway And now, here's Joonny "The
BERLIN (AP) - Rudolf
Resources approved $679,310 inch snow which fell over- of a fractured clevical &lt;Jnd and struck· a fence durmg a Banker" Carson.
fractured
ribs.
previous
accident.
Tooight
Show
host
Johnny
Hess,
ooce deputy to Adolph
m
fundin g for three night.
An" auto operated by Ruth
Olllcers C~lled Again
Carson and three other in- Hitler, has been hospitalized
Common gas pro· after a person starts adding reclamation projects on Jan. 22 - Residents spent
bran and bulk to the diet, he abandoned strip mine sites in the weekend in trying to dig A. Bostic, 35, Bidwell, was Off1cers were called to _the vestors have acquired control because of a circulatory ail·
hlt&gt;m
may have an mcrease in gas. Meigs , Lawrence and out of the hardest snow in 27 demolished 9uring a one- seen~ of a two-vemcle of the Garden State Bank in ment, a British spokesman
vehicle accident on SR 325, at colliSion at 10 :55 at 10:55 p.m. suburban Hawallan Gardens, says.
If you get through that stage Belmont Counties. Mr. and , years.
milepost
10, at 5:35 a.m .
on U.S. 35, two-tenths of a bank president Stanley HogDEAR DR. LAMB- Please and can tolerate an mcrease
The 114-year-Gid Hess Is
Jan . 23 - Middleport
The
patrol
reports
that
a
mile east of milepost 11.
tell me something abnut gas m bulk, 1t usually Improves
shead says. Carson, who is serving a life prison senlence
Co uncil mcre~sed burial
The patrol reports that now co-chairman, and his for Nazi war crimes at
gangrene. Do you have pains the overall picture ·
They usually don't 1f they are rates and purchased a new south bound auto operated by
went
out
of
control
on
autos
operated by Roy L. partners took over the bank Spandau Prison In West
Bostic
mternally and especially if
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have regular.
police cruiser.
the
icy
pavement,
passed
off
·
Gilbert,
36, Gallipolls, and with an investment of about . Berlin. He is the last lmnate
you are a diabetic ? I belch , heard many stories abnut th1s
Jan. 24 - Me1gs Local
quite a lot and pass gas.
and I am counting on you to
In a woman who is regular students attended theirt first the nght side ofthe road and Jesse J . Holbrooks, 51, $1.6 million last Octobei- at the prison, and has been
DEAR RE_ADER- You can set me straight Can a g&gt;rl the period in which she is full day of classes two weeks struck a tree.
'
Fenton, Mich., were west Hogshead said.
' there since he was convicted
stop worrying about gas ovulate during the days when :;::'J~~kely ttbh ge!.p!egnant is after a long closing due to
by the Nuremberg Tribunal
Two
vehicles
incurred
bound
on
35.
he
t
1
Y 10 e '"""ay eye1e.
severe
damage
during
an
The
Holbrook
auto
atgangrene. It's caused by a she. has
DES
MOINES,
Iowa
(AP)
in 1946.
?
r mens rua Keep in mind that !Iiese are weather conditions.
accident
in
Meigs
Co!!J»y
on
tempted
to
pass
just
as
the
bacteria that hves only Jrt an penod . If she does, what ':'re _general rul
d lth h
Jan . 25 - Mrs. Laura
envirotunent Without oxygen her chances of becommg Jrl m
es an a. aug a Bradbury, Middleport, died SR 124, three-tenths of a ~ile ' Gilbert vehicle started a left
It has nothing at all to ..do With pregnant if she should have g
ay be regular month
west of milepost 151 at 6·23 turn. The Holbrook auto pickup truck operated by rail.
the gas problem that 's so sex dunngthose days?
after month, the_very time at Veterans Memorial a.m. •
·
struck the Gilbert vehicle, Gerald D. Donohue, 24,
The.re was modera\e
common m our population.
I've also heard that if sex that you count on Jt can be the Hospital at the age of 100. Dr.
Officers
report
that
an
east
knocking it around off the Pomeroy, went out of control damage to the vehicle.
Edward
Lewis,
formerly
of
At least 10 percent of the occurs up to eight days after very month that ovulatwn ocOfficers were caUed to the
Middleport, ; was presented a bound auto operated by Gail right side of the roadway into in a curve on SR 684, at
populatJOn have gas pro- your period is over you can't curs early.
milepost 3, in Meigs County. scene or a two-auto collision
L. Arnott, 20, Rutland, went \a ditch.
.
Both vehicles incurred
out of control on the icy
blems They are usually the become pregnant. Is there
The Donohue vehicle went on SR 160, at milepost 5, at
pavement,
slid
around
and
moderate
damage.
off
the right side of the icy 4:30p.m.
result of swallowing air or any truth to _these theorr~s?
from fermentation that Your answer&gt;s extremely 1mAt 6:20p.m. on U.S. 35, one roadway and struck a tree.
struck the side of a parked
According to the patrol, 11
releases gas from undigested portant. I am sure that many r - - --___::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~-----------, vehicle owned by I::¥lbra m1le west of SR 160, an· east There was moderate damage riorth bound vehicle driven by
bound vehicle driven by N~al to the pickup.
Lambert, Rutland.
foods A good example here other girls are wondering.
Ric1iard M. Theiss, · 19,
The Lambert auto had gone Manion, 23, McArthur, mwould be an adult who can't
DEAR READER- And the
The patrol was called to the Bidwell, attempted to pass an
ollt of controi and slid off the curred moderate dama_ge scene of a one-vehicle ac- auto drlven by ' Delsa M.
tolerate milk and the un- fact that many other girls
digested milk suga r JS don 't know the answers to
roadway into a ditch prior to when it struck a dolly which cident on SR 124, three-tenths Shilot, 20, Vinton, just east as
the collision.
had fallen onto the roadway of a mile west of milepost 7, in the Shilot auto started a left
fermented releasmg gas.
these questions is one reason
If you're swalloWing a&gt;r, why there are so many
At 7:30 ·p.m., a vehicle from a west bound wrecker Meigs CoWity, at 7 a.m.
tum.
you need to be able to fmd out teenage pregnancies, The onoperated by Gary G. Folden, driven by Allan L , Wheeler,
Officers report that a west Both vehicles Incurred
th-at's what you are domg and )y sure way of not getting
17, Bidwell, incurred severe 23, \JaWpolis.
boand auto driven by James slight damage.
how to stop the hab1t. iVit's pregnant when you don't
damage during 8 one-vehicle
Officers were called to the M. Hannon, 34, Rutland,
The patrol investigated a
from foods , they need to be want to is to not engage in
accident on CR 5, five-tenths scene of a one _auto accident went out of control, )llliSed off one-auto mishap on SR 160, at
of ti mOe north of SR 141.
on SR 141, three-tenths of a the rlght side of the roadway milepost 2, at 5:30 p.m.
ellffilnated.
sexual activity .
If it is from poor colon func· The basi c rule that you're
' According to the patrol a mile east of milepost 21, at and struck a gua"rdrail.
Goes Out Of Control
lion, you need to improve the ~~bing for is that a girl
south bound auto operated'by 5:30a.m. .
Thel'e- was moderate
According to the patrol, a
function of your colon, literal- aim t always ovulates 14
Folden went out of control on
The patrol reports that an damage to the veblcle.
north bound vehicle driven by
ly gettmg rid of spastic and days before she has her
the wet pavement, pasBed off east bound vehicle driven by
At 7:~ a .m . a north bound Joann L. Wellington, 18,
·
Ronald McPherson, 42, auto operated by Mary
irritable colon problems that menstrual period. Very few
Vinton, went out of control on
Galllpolls,
went out of control Cochran, 50, Charleston, 160,
many people have. To help wo men are absolutely
1liF. nAII .Vl'\ENTINF:I.
passed off the right side
In a curve, slid off the right swerved to avoid a soQth
01':\'0TF.OTf)THF:
you understand the causes of regular all the time.
of
the
roach!:ay and struck a
INTF.RF:STOF
side of the roadway, and bound vehicle on SR 160: onegas and how to manage it, I
Once the menstrual period"
MF.Jr.S-MMlON ARF.A
ditch.
struck a ditch and an em- · tenth of a mile south of
am sending you The Health occurs, you can count back 14
ROBF.RT HOF.F'LI CH
Officers were called to the
rnv F.dltur
bankment.
Letter number 6-8, Control!- days and say that's when
Vinton.
scene
of a one-vehicle acPuhl l~hl'd IIHih t•Xtt•pt Saturda1
There was moderate
ing Gaseousness. .
• ovulation occurred. You'd
In Th~! Ohw Vallt·~ Publl~lun~
The·Cochran auto incurred cident in Meigs County, on SR
Ctll lliiHII,&lt;•M illtiJTlldllt lm .,
Ill
!~&amp;mage to the v.ehicle.
Other readers who want better not countfor••rd from
moderate damage wh~n it
nine-tenths of a mile eaat
Cl•u1·t St • PmtwJ'tiY Oh1o 45769.
The patrol investigated a passed off the left side of the 681,
this issue can send 50 cents the menstrual period though
Au ~llh'S!! o()ffw t&gt; Phont' m- 21!'16
of U.S. 33, at 5:30 p.
one-auto milbap on TR 7, two roadway and struck an
F.dtlnl Uti Pllllltt' 0l-l!5i'
with a long, stamped, self- because tile cycle may be difThe patrol reporta that an
St 'tlltlll t ins." ptt~litl!l' Pflld Ill
and three-tenths of a rnlle embankment.
addressed envelope for it. ferent that month and you
east
PuJIW I1t\, Olun
,
bound auto driven by
~est of SR 7, at 5:45 a.m.
Send your request to· me in could be wrong.
~11\ ltlllHI Hdvc111~ 11 1.: Tt'Jlrl'SCIJI
Officers Investigated a one- Bobby J. Pattenon, 22,
loll tvt• Landnn \ ~~udatt·~ . :1101
'
Veblcle Hill Tree
care · of this newspaper,
It 1ollows that it is possible
vehicle accident on CR 5, twor:'.f'i lldA\l' r!t •VI'i iiiU1.0hu • ~411J
Officers
report that a north tenths of a mile east of Slit 7, Pomeroy, went off the right
P.O.Box 1551, Radio City Sta- · for a woman to start to
Suh ~ t·rrllti PII t' :• t •· ~ f&gt;l•hvt•red IJy
of tl:le roadway and
HI rwr \\ lt'rP . ~, :uhtlllt• 75 t 't•nts pt r
bound vehicle operated by in Meigs County at 8:40 a .m, side
ovulate during a menstrual
• tion, ~w York, NY 10019.
struck
a fence.
\l l 'l' k lh i\ft l\ 01 Rulllt•\\ht•lt'('olrrlt•r
Mark A. , Sheets, 20,
Smce s)mptoms from gas pcriod"but It is unlikely. If she
According to the patrol, a
~~ I \ II I ' IIIli d ' HIIHhlt OtW IUtJil\ h ,
The
Patterson vehi~le
Galllpolis, slid offthe left side west bound auto driven by
(t 1• II} mnll II' Oln u und W V 11 1
are common because of @'"" did, herrmct menstrual period
incurred
moderate damage.
1
I IJtl' '!'t•:u• $ . • n;o SIX fll ll lllh ~ ,
of the roadway and struck a William D . Stewart, 21,
ritable or spastic colon pro- should occur in (wo weeks inStul
under
investigation Is
t j l ill
llllilllh ...
~ tl ••••
"I received two cookbooks for Christmas and
tree.
1~1 ~ / 1•t•ft ~.t' t ~ l \ l't ll :-iiX lll" ltlh1
blems, many people do better stead of four week&lt;. II follow&lt;
Rutland,
went
out
of
control
a
Saturdtry
morning
accident
I want to buy two diet books to balance .It
~· , nu. 1h•··· mhnt h ~
*'' M i
The Sheets auto incurred a on the icy pavement, passed
by increasing the amount of that it is possible for a woman
on
SR
7
Involving
a
vehicle
' Il l•&gt;&lt;~ 111 lit li t Jlrlt l' il t t l t ult ·~ Stt ttd.t~
outl"
slight !lamage.
• off the right side of the owned by Larry Willett,
bulk in "their diet. However, · to ovulate V'lry shortly •fter
run • · ~ ,,, nhr•• 1
•
At 6:15a.m., a north bound !"adway and struck a guardduring the first three weeks her menstrual periO&lt;.l as '"'II -L -- - - - - - - - - '
Marietta.

•

fly Martha Angle and Rqbert Walters

;
•
:

•

1

~

j

,

-

.

Meigs. news high.lightJ

OHLINGER JUMPER - Steve Ohlinger, sophomore gnard, for tbe Meigs Marauders
goes up fQr a jumper against two Wellston defenders, Rob Nonnan ( 42) and Mark Swonger
, (40) . Wellston won the SEOALcontest, 62-GOSaturday night.

"Devils· even
season mark

Names-in-the news •••

Berry's Wo rId

m

GAHS-Point box

,

rt······

'

.

·
Meigs Next
,
Gallipolis will host Meigs in a Southeastern Ohio League
battle Friday. Pt. Pleasant will play at Spencer Tuesday and
at Parkersburg South on Friday. Saturday, the Big Blacks wiU
host Buffalo of Wayne.

1

I

South
Alcorn St . 83, Alabama St. 80

had 15 personal fouls.

1

•

East

Mame 89 , Stena 75
Prtn ce ton 57, St Peter's 36

Pt. Pleasant had a cold night from the field, sinking .iliJy 19
or 56 attempts for 33 percent. The Big Blacks were 10 of 15 at
the foul line for 66 percent. Pt. Pleasant had 22 rebo~ven
by Jolm Bibbee. The losers had ooly 13 turnovers. Both Teams

1

.

The Associated Press
Saturd•v's Results

Bill (Big Jolm) Annstrong, who sat out 18 minutes-of the
contest becaUBe of foul trouble, returnfd4l the lineup late in
the game and sank two charity tosses with 26 seconds
remaining to give Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils
a 56-48 non-league hardwood victol-y over hoot Pt. Pleasant
Saturday night.
Annstrong's two free throws gave the Blue Devils a 50-46
leadilt the time. Coach Lennie Barnett's Big Blacks wouldn't
give up.
Brian Stepp hit a goal with eight seconds left to cut the deficit
to two. The Big Blacks, wl&gt;o pressed full-court throughout the
game, forced a GAHS,,turnover With five seconds remaining.
Shot Falls Short
. Mark Vaughn'S jumper at the top of the key with' two seconds
left feU short as the final buzzer soll)lded.
The victory left GAHS with a 4-411C8son record . Pt. Pleasant
suffered its first loss in three starts.
Gallipolis jumped off to a 7.j) lead in the first two minutes of
play before Doug Workman's goal broke the scoring ice for Pt.
Pleasant.
·
GAHS was on top 13:8 after one period. The Blue Devils, who
held a 19-10 lead (biggest of the nightfor the Ohioans) with 5:23
left in the first half, was QP top 24-18 during the halftime
. intermission following a laskecond goal by Matt Sterrett.
It appeared Gallipolis was going to pull away early in the
thil;d stanza after Jinuny Harris' goal following the second
half tip pushed the Devils ahead 26-16 at the 7:54 mark.
Point Comes Back
However, Pt. Pleasant's aggressive play forced 10 Blue
Devil turnovers in this stanza. Result was a 13-6 advantage and
31-JOiead after three periods for the Wej!t Virginians.
Ron Barnett's two free throws with 5:03 left in the third
period gave Pt. Pleasant its first lead ofthe night, 29-28.
Jim Harris popped in a long jwnper at the 4:45mark to make
it30-29, but David Raike'sgoal (3:25) putPPHS back on top 3130. Neither team scored the remainder of the third·period.
Raike's charity toss at the 7:57 mark in the final period gave
Pt. Pleasant a 32--30 lead.
lallham Gets Hot
Jeff Lanham, held scoreless the first three periods, knotted
the count at 32-all with 7:38 left.
Bamett'sdriV!Dg layup attbe 7:20mark gave the horne team
a 34-32 lead. Lanham agam knotted the score with two free
throws at the 6:08 mark.
At this point, Gallipolis' offense came alive during the next
four minutes to outsCore the Big Blacks, 12-4, pushing the
Gallians ahead to what appeared to be a comfortable 48-40 lead
with only 1:21left in the game.
The Big Blacks came storming back to cut the deficit to two
48-46, on two quick goals from the comer by Stepp and a long
jumper by Mark VaUEhn with 31 seconds left.
Then came Armstnrng 's two free-throws and the wild finish .
After tbe smoke had cleared in the final period, GAHS had
outscored the Big Blacks, 2()-17. Lanham scored eight of the
wimers' 20 markers in the final stanza.
HarrlB Paces Devils
Jimmy Harris led the Blu'e Devils atiacli with 12 points. E. V. ·
Clarke tossed in ll. GAHS hit 20 of 39 field goal attempts for 51
percent. Pt. Pleasant's tough defense limited the Gallians to
ooly 14 shots from the field in the second half.
.'
GAHS connected on 10 of 14 free throws for 71 percent. The
Gallians picked off 29 reb9unds, nine by Clarke and eight by
Jeff Call)eron.
.
· GAHS had 22 turnovers, and 12 assists. Clarke and Harris
each had three assists apiece for GAHS.
Mark Vaughn led the Big Blacks attack with 17 points eight of them coming in the second stanza. Ron Barnett added

•••

•

College
Basketball Scores

•

... .

GAHS BLUE DEVILS (SO)
PLAYER- Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Mark Smith, I
1-2 0-0 1" 1 3 2
E V Cl k I
H
3-4
2
9
0 11
· · ar e,
3-5 0-0
3
8
I
6
Jeff Cameron , c
6-11 0-2 2 3 5 12
Jim Harris, g
Bill Armstrong, g
3-6 3-4 4
4
6
9
Jell Lanhom, 1
.2-6
4-4 2 2 5 '8
MattSterrett,c
1-1, 0-0
1 1 0 2
0-2 0-0 0 1 2 0
Nate Thomas • g
20-39
10-14
15
29 22 50
TOTAL_S
PT. PLEASANT BtG,BLACKS C48l
PLAY.ER-Poo.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
2
4 17
Mark Vaughn. I
6-14 5-6 3
0
1
John B1bbee, I
0-0
1-2 2 )
1 10
Ron Barnett, c • '•
4-11 2-3
0 5
2
3
7
Doug Workman, g
3-9 1-2 I
2
4
5
David Ralke,g
2-7 1-2
5
0
0
0
Jay Minton, g
0-0
0-0
0
4
1
8
Brion Stepp, I
19_~9, 10~j~• 1: 22 13 48
.
, TOTALS
score by quarters :
Gallipolis Blue Devils
13 11 6 20-50
pt Pleasant Big Blacks
' 8 10 13 17_- -48
· oFFICIALS - Gene Carpenter and Dave Habed

'

Flor t da
St
85 ,
Ala .
Birmingham 66
Georgetown 96 , U . of D
,56
Georgta 122 , Bapt 1st, S C. 62
Howard 68, W1nston -Sa lem"'';t
Jackson St . 84, Kentucky St .

c

67

Ke ntu cky 81, Notre Dam e 76
McNeese St , 90, Morehead St .
76
Middle Ten n. 91, Davi d Ltps
comb 72
s. Alabama lll. W iS. ·
Whttewa t er 90
Vlrgtnla Te ch 77, James
Madison 60
Wak e F orest 88. Fa1 r1 e1gh
Otck .n son 59

Midwest

Ball St 80, Valpllraiso 63
Da)'ton 67 , Xavier. Ohto 66
DePau l 68, cre tQ hton 70
Indiana St . 99, Morris Harvey

63

Kentucky 71. Butler 56
Wt chita St 95 , Pan Amertcan
77
Southwest
Arkansas B2, Memph iS St . 69
SMU 121 , Te)(as we sleyan 86
T C U 70, Robert Morr is .55
Far West
A ri zona 67 N Arizona 63
Colorado St 72, Lamar 62
Con zaga 93, Great Falls 68
Long Bea ch Sf 84 , L oy o la , Ill

W

73

Montana 51 74, Por fl and St.
66
Nevada Reno 66 , Caltfornia

61

-

sa n Fra nc tsco 69, Texas 48

By Greg Bailey
now they were holding their
For the first time all OWn on the boards.
season, the Meigs Marauders _ After a bucket by Wellston,
placed three men in double Ohlmger hit two free throws
ligures, but a cold shootmg giving Meigs a 45-42 lead at
night sent the boys of Coach buzzer.
Ron Logan doWn to defeat
In that third quarter Me1gs
Saturday night 62-'0 to the surge, the Rockets of Coach
visiting Wellston Golden Rick Perdue went nearly four
Rockets.
minutes without scormg a
A second half surge by the point.
,.
Marauders sent the Me1gs
Hawley hit a jumper to
fans to theirfeet, but a bucket open the fourth period, and
by t;,e Rockets' Rob Norman ' then w1th 6:50 to go, he
with four seconds reinainmg tapped in one of his own
gave Wellston the win .
rebounds to give Meigs a
Wellston's Mark Swonger seven-point lead, 49-42, and
was tbe first to score with a Meigs had command.
jumper at the 7:30 mark of
But the game wasn't over.
the opening period. But the The Ro.ckets came storming
Marauders' Steve Ohlinger back, little by little, and with
HOT POTATO - WeUstoh's Rob Norman (42) is flanked by Meig's Chuck Kennedy (22 )
countered with a two pointer 4:40 to go were withm two, 51and an un1denbfied player durmg action in Saturday's SEOAL Contest at Larry R. MorriSOn
Gym. The ball seems to he somethmg of a hot potato in thJs Greg Ba1ley action shot
of his own to knot the score, . 49. Then Becker htt two foul
Wellston won the game, 62-60.
.
that's when the Rockets took shots, then Ohlmger did the
off. They opened up an 2-4 same, and Meigs was back
lead. Although Meigs twJce roarmg, 55-49. In the next two
cut the lead to two points m mmutes, M,eigs managed
that period, the quarter only one point while the
Wellston edges Meigs ' reserves
with ten pomts while Dave
ended with Wellston on top, Rockets got seven and the
Kennedy had e1ght. Wellston
21}-15. The two teams matched game was tied, 5&amp;-all . .
14 for the wm.
had no one 1n double lJgures.
.
By Greg Bailey
buckets the second quarter
Becker drove for two, then
Neither team could fmd the
T]le Meigs Reserves
with the ·first half ending 34- Wellston connected and went
night fought back range In the first per iod as
(J4 f - Snowdeno2-J
29. It seemed to fans to be a ahead seconds later when Saturday
Wellston took a 7-4 lead at the 7, Me1gs
valiantly,
but
fell
short
at
the
Kennedy
B; Scott 0-0-0,
ho-hllm game.
Jeff M,Qiltgomery hlt for two. WJre to VISiting Wellson, 35- buzzer By halftim e the lead Miller 0 1 I;4 0Smith
I 0 2. B
The third quarter began in Meigs tied Jt 60-00 when 34. Me1gs made one mure had gone to 16-11, but m the Swann 5-0-10, Judge 3 0-6
the same way. With the Hawley connected with :12 held goal than Wellston, r.;. third quarter Me1gs c~u ght Totals ·15.4-34 .
(35) - Potter 2.1
scoreboard showing 5:30 left rem a1nmg. Then came 14, but hit 4 of 9 fo ul shots fire and by the end of that 5 · Wellston
Lockhart 0-3-3 , Benson 4-0m the third stanza WellSton Norman's winning · basket . whJle the WIIIIlers canned 7 of per1od trailed only 27-25 At 8;
Dever 1-02; Jeffe rs 32 8 ,
still led by five , 40-35. But Meigs called time out with
one pomt the gam e was !Jed . Parsonss 1 1 3 , Co x 1 0-2
then Meigs cought fire, as 1ts two seconds remainmg, but
The fourth quarter was a Totals 14-7-Jl
defense stiffened. Greg the inbounds pass was stolen
real ba mbumer, and the wQuarters :
7 16 27 35
Becker made a foul shot, and and the gatne was over.
Me1gs crew missed three M
41 125 34
Tom Hawley hit a short
Hawley had 19 points on the ,
Weekend Sports
layufs m the closmg mmutes
Transactions
jumper to make 1t 40-38.
night, l3. m the second half to '
Botli teams were cold from
The
Associated Press
Wellston turned the ball lead the Meigs comeback.
the floor Me1gs h1t just I&gt; of
Hockey
over the next time down the Ohlinger hit for 18 and B)!cker
41 shots for 36 percent and
National Hockey League
Door, Hawley fed Ohlinger for 14 The Marauders h1t 23
VANCOUVER CA NU CKS Wellston dtd even . worse
We ' ll shclw
for two and Meigs tied the of 57 shots for JUst 40 percent, - Traded Ra nd y Ho l t , smking JUst 14 of 47 for 29
yo u how to
defen
sema
n
,
t
o
th
e
Lo
s
Iiame. Becker hit a foul shot, but sank 14 of 19 foul shots to Angeles Ki ng s for Don Kozak. percent
broaden your
and then a lay-up, and Meigs stay m the game. WellSton righ t wi ng .
Bria n Swann led Me1gs
homeowners
had its first lead, 43-40, w1th was hot for 51 percent from
PHILADELPH IA F L Y ER S
contents
1:15 to go m the quarter.
the field , 29-57, but cashed in - Recall ed AI H1ll , left w1ng .
and
P.
J
Gorence,
ng
ht
cove rage to
THIS WEEK'S SPECIA L
One 61g difference m that on four of only seven foul wlng , from th e. Mat
replacement
third quarter surge was that shots. Ted Williams led the Manners of the America n
va lue . See h o w
the
Marauders
were Rockets with 19 points. They Hock~y L eag ue R etur ned
Yves
Preston
,
left
wmg,
to
we comp are
beginning to hit the bnards. In outrebounded Meigs, 36-32.
VALUE
Mame
RATED
the first quarter and one ll,alf Meigs' next game is Fnday
College
of the game, Meigs got Only at Gallipolis. The Maraujers
OH IO
S TA TE
two offensive rebounds, bui are now 1-6 on the season.
UNIVER SIT Y
F ~r ed
USED CARS

•

Meigs-Wellston box...
Meigs Marauders {60)

Player
Ashley

Ohlinger
Hawley
Be cker
Andrews

-

Dodson

Totals
All -College Tourney
Cham ptonshlp
New Me XtCO St 63, Weber St

58

Player
Swonger
Norman

Third Place
Ok lahoma C tty B4, San ta
Cl ara 76,
Fifth Place
So MiSSISSippi 96, E Ten
ne ssee St 86
Seventh Place
So . M tssiss lp p t 96 , E . Ten nessee St 86

Settles

Championshtp
K ansas 69, Ok lahOma 53
Flflh Place
Ok la homa St 87 , Iowa St 75
Seventh Place
Kansas St . 75, Mtssourt 62

Meigs ~ffirg..;dc :- :;

Big Eight Holiday Tourney

Massie

Williams
Montgomery
Spires
Lockhart
TOTALS

Wildlife
packets
available
COLUMBUS
Land
-owners interested
in
providing additional wildlile
food and habitat cover on
their land are encouraged to
"apply for free wildlife seed
packets available from the
Division of Wildlife of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources (OSNR) . Applications for the sevenpOund seed packets w111 be
~ccepted through Feb. 1,
1979.
•
Each packet has a mixture
·of soybeans, corn, dwarf
sorghum, proso millet, buckwheat and sunflower seeds.
The seeds are sufficient to
establish a '1•-acre wildlife
food patch.
Applications are available
' from state game protectors in
.each county, and 4lb any of
f1ve wildl1fe district offices.
Those offices are at 1500
Dulbin Rd., Columbus 43215
952 Uma Ave., Findlay 45840;
912 Portage Lakes Drive,
Akron 44319; 360 E. State St .,
Athens 45701; and 1076 Old
Springfield Pike, Box 576,
Xenia 45385.
Successful applicants will
be notified by mail when and
where they can pick up their
seed packets .

FG-A FT-A
2-9
3-5
7-12 4-4
12
8 12
4-1 6 6-8
0-0
0-5
1-3
0-0
23-57 14-19
Wellston Rockets (62)
FG-A FT-A
5-Tl
0I
6-1 1 0-0
0-0
0-5
2-5
2·2
9-15 1-2
3-5 0-0
34
1-2
I 1 00
29-57 n

Score by quarters :

Th1rd Place
St

RB PF TP
1 0 7
1 18
8
2 19
8
3 14
6
8

5

I

0

32

11

RB PF
3
16
4
3
I
2
I
10
2 5
1
2
I
0
0 1
16
36

John's 69 , Duke 66
Evansv111e

Holiday Tourney
Championship

,

Cent Mi chigan 7.4 , Eva n svt llc

73

TMrd Place
Navy 77, Ark~nsas St 75
FarWestCiasstc champ1on sh1p
MtChlgan St. 74, Ind ia na .57
Tht r d Place
Oregon St 85, Oregon 62
Fifth Plac e
washing t on
st.
Was htngton 47
Se ve nth Place
sea ttle 66, wyom mg 64
·
Glacier Bowl
Champfonsh•p
lllinols 98, Alaska

60 ,

An·

ch orage 90
Third Round
W Mi chiga n 92 , Co ll ege of the
Ozarks 88
Class City Classtc
Cham plonshlp
Bowling Green 67, Vi lla nova

60

TP
10
12
0
6

19
6
7

2
62

64

Third Place
To ledo 86, St. L ouis 73

Championship
Marquette 61. UNC Charl otte

., Third Place
•
St Bonavent u r e 83, N . T exas
St 67

-

AGENCY
B1ll QuJCkel
Jea nne Starcher

"Across from th e

Courthouse, Pom eroy, o."

992-6677

N1 cc l y

.
Th1rd Place

eq uipped ,

c lean ,
Represent to ~ ·
FEDE RAL KEMP ER

20,000 mil es

Brtgh am Young 84 , Ho us ton
77
R ambow Cla ss •c
ChampiOn ShiP
Purd ue n, Ut ah 62
T htrd Place
Ar110na S t 69 , Ha wAI I 60
"'
'F1fth Pla ce
Bos ton Colleg e 74 , Te n ne sse e
72
Seventh P la ce
Fordham 71 ; Har 'Va rd 60
Roch es ter Clas siC
N Ca r ol 1na 121 , ntagara 69
Th1rd Pla ce
Dartm outh 5.4, Se ton Hal l 53
T1mes Dispatch
ln v •ta Jtona l
Champ1onsh1p
Old Domm 1on 70 , va Com
monw ealth 68
Thtrd Place
R1 chmo n d 6 4, Wtl l tam a.
Mar y 62, at
UCSB In vitatiOnal
Champion shi p
UC Santa Barbara 93 Puge t
So und 9 1, o1
Th~rd Place
U of San D iego 70 . Ca l i r vt n e
59
Vermont Class i c
Championship
Texas A&amp;M l0-4 . Ve r mont 76
Thi rd Plac e
Atr Fo rce 58, Co r nell 56
west V tr g l nia Clas5ic
Championship
D uquesne 85 , Ohio U 74

W

•

NEWPORT
SEDAN

Pill s bu ry Cla SSIC
Champ1onshtp
Mmnesot a 57, Geor g1 a T ec h

56

DAVIS
INSURANCE

1977
CHRYSLER

delens1ve
coord1natoi'
, Named
Bob Matey , an
asststant
1n
charge
of
scou ll ng , as defens1ve l rne
coach Hired Ra y Zing ler,
a ssistant coach

2

Third Plac e
Ful lerton St 84 , La Sa ll e 7.5
Lafayette Invitational
Champions hip
Dre)C el 69, Lafay ette 61
Third Place
F!a Southern BS , Buffalo 69
Las Vegas Ctas sic
Champtonship
T emple 89 , Nev La s Vegas 79
Third Place
Bay lor 101. Loyola , Calif 73
Lobo ln\lt1a110nal
Championship
Id aho St. 73, New Me xtco 67
Third Round
M 1ami , Ohio 96, Davidson n.
Maryland tnvitatlonat
Championship
Mary land 83. South er n Ca l 79
Th1rd Place
St Joseph'S (Pal 62, Hcty
Cross 58
Milwaukee Classic

57

"

0

20 14 8 20-62
15 14 16 15-60

Wellston Rockets

Cabrillo Classic
Championship
Iowa 83, Stanford 68
Third Place
Sa n Diego St 1.10, Penn 86
Connecticut Classic
Championship
Conn ect i cut 84, E caro lm a 68
Third P lace
Tulsa 77, Manhattan 7.4
ECaC Holtday Festival
ChampionshiP
Rutqers 97 , Ohio St 96, 3 ot

Woody Hayes, head footb all
-coach
.
UNIV E RS I T Y OF PITTSBURGH - A nnounced th at
Seraf ino Pazlo, linebacke r
coa ch,
woul d
b e come

·~995

INSURANCE COMPAN Y

Karr &amp; VanZandt
YOu'll Lik e Ou r ouahty

Way of Doing Bu s m ess

GMAC FINANCING

992 -5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'til6 00

Til5 p.m. S~t
KCN 360

Third Place
Vtrgm1a 73, Mar shall H
Sunday ' s Results

M1dwertt
Mich1ga n 86 , E

M1C h1 gan 73

.---

Iowa Classic

ChampionshiP
l ona 84, St . Mary 's, Ca lif 74

Third Place

'

_

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
POMEROY o. &amp;
MIDDLEPORT, 0 •.
AREA
PH. 992-215.6

Northeas t ern 73, Baltimor e
59
KOA etass1c
•
• Championship
Po r tland 77, Montana 69

0

'

I

'

'

THE DAILY

SAYRE
HARDWARE·

I

NTINEL

BETW EEN
8 AM AND 5 PM

tlew ttaven . W Va

·-

�'

.

.

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 2, 1979

..A-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Po~roy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 2, 1979

\

'· •

AP Sporti Writer
. ·'
The national championship
in college football is up for
grabs after a costly fumble
by Penn Slate in the Sugar
Bowl.
· The Nittany Lions' chances ·
for their long sought-after nationa! title quickly turned
sour in the wake of a 14-7
defeat by No. 2 Alabama
Monday.
And while the Crimson-Tide
was claiming the No . I
ranj_ting, there were other
voices heard from after the
results of New Year's Day.
Third~anked Southern Cal
put in a bid for the title with a
17-10 decision over No. 5
Michigan in the Rose Bowl,
and fourth~anked Oklahoma
hoped to move into the

much right to dalm it all any·
body."
Alabama Coach. Bear
Bryant secooded the motion.
"Yes, I fell! we're the best
in the country," he said.
" There are a couple of
reasons I would vote our
team No. 1 - they overcame
all the injuries ·and peaked
todsy, and our schedule was
extremely difficult. There
were no soft touches."
One of the tougher
opponents for Alabama this
year was Southern Cal. Tile
Trojans beat the Crimson
Tide at the start of the '
season, and it's the prtmary
reason that voters will give
them heavy consideration !IS
the nation 's top college
football team.
.,
. "I pick us No. !," said

SoUthern Cal Coach John greatest offensive team iii the
RObinson, who like Bryant counlry. · .
.
insisted that his team played
" Defense? Alabama has a
me of the toughest schedules great defensive team. Penn
inthecountry. " It'sooeofthe State also has· a _great
greatest teams in USC defensive team. But I felt all
~
''
season there are
•~'..,.ooy,
. quite a few
Oklahoma Coach Barry · · teams with a better offense .
Switzer, meanwhile, wasn't than Penn State. Whatever
exactly 'claiming a title for the final polls say, I just !lope
his team, but he . was we're recognized in' a position
promoting the posaibillty.
representative
of the
Asked who de.erved to be greatness of this team. "
No . 1 when the final
Alabama's performance
Associated Press ppll is Monday certainly measured
released Wednesday at 6:30 .up to a No. I ranking.
a.m., EST, Switier replied: Br¥ant's boys stopped Pe~n ·
"I don't know. I th'ink we are State when they had to - m
a gteat team. We've led the fact, two times within the I·'
nation in rushing and scoring ya,rd line in the final qllllrter.
and came up just a few yards Major Ogilvie ran 8 yards for
short in · leading in total the tie-breaking touchdown
offense.! belieile we.have the with 21 seconds left in the

Bowl where Pacific-10 teams·
third periodY
"We ,.beal the best team have ' won ·for five straight
we've played all year," said . yeatS. The game was pWlC·
Alahiuna running back Tony tuated by a mild earthquake.
Nathan. ''They were strong
H&lt;Usman Trophy winner
and well-eoac~~ : We just • Billy Sims and qu~erback
took it to them.
Thomas Lott scored two
That 's exactly · w'hat, touchdowns apiece
in
Soulhetn Cal did to MiChigan Oklahoma 's victory over
at the start of the Rose Bowl, Nebraska - the first 1ime
running up a 17-3 lead in th~ that the Big Eight rivals have
first half behind the met in a bowl game. the
quarterbacking of Paul victory gave the Sooners a bit
McDOnald and the rWlning of of revenge for a 17-14 loss to
Charles White . McDonllld the Comhuskers Nov. ll.
passed 9 yards foc me score
Notre Dame quarterb.Bck
and White ran 3 yards for an- Joe Montana COOlpleted an 6other to give the Pacific-10 yard TD PIISS to wide
champions all the points they receiver Kris Haines as time
needed in the Pasademr ran out and Joe Unis kicked
classic.
the vital extra point to gi~
The vil'!Iory continued the the Fighting Irish a
West's mastery in the Rose spectacular comeback

:~~~~~f~nt~edfr:: . Bo· ; A~D . not interested in Ohio

Only the Winner of the
Cotton Bowl, No. 10 Notre
Dame, was apparently out of
thetitlepicture. The Fighting
Irish beat the ninth-ranked
Houston Cougars Monday in a
35-34 thriller, · but their 9-3
reciird pales in cornparison to
the glittering ll-1 marks of
Alabama • So)lijlern. Cal,
Oklahoma anNeiUI State.
"Alabama should be No.
1," said a distressed Joe
Paterno, the Penn State
coach who lost an opportunity
for the Nittany Lions' first
national championship·
" Alabama beat an 'awfully
good football team and has as

q

The Cougars )ad built a
. seemingly safe 34-12 lead
through the first three
quarters before the Irish
staged their rally on the .
coldest day in Cotton Bowl
history, with the chill factor a
minus~ degrees.

TUESDAY,JANUARY2,1979
5: oo-Star Trek 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Roaers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10:
E mergeney One 13: Brady Bunch 15.
,
5:3D-News 6: Sanford B. Son 8: Elec. Co. 20: Mary
Tyler Moore 10: Odd Couple 15: Doctor Who33.
6:oo-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15: Zoom 20,33.
6:3D-NBC News 3,15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
• Friends 6; CBS News 8,10: Over Easy 20,~3 .
7:0()-That Nashville Music 3; Newlywed Ga'l'e 6,13;
Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Lock, Slack &amp; Barrel 20: Student Affairs
Inqu iry 33.
.
.
· 7:3D-Hollywoad Squ9res 3; Lei's Go To The Races 8:
Candid Camera 6; Price is Right 10; Donna Fargo
13; Gill igan 's ls.-15; ,MacNeii-Lehrer Report 2(),33.
8:oo-NBC News 3,15: Happy Days 6,13; Movie "The
Incredible Journey of Doctor Meg Laurel" 8,10;
Soundstage 20: City Notebook 33.
B:3D-L;averne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; When the Boa,t Comes In
JJ.
•
9:oo-Three's Company ·6. 13: Evening of Championship Skatlng-1978 20.
9:3()-Taxi 6, 13; Keyboard Sonata 33.
IO :oo-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News 20,
" 10 :3D-Like It Is 20: Area Showcase 33.
ll :oo-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Hollywood
· Television Theatre 33 .
11 : 3D-Johnny Carson 3. 15; Movie " Futureworld" 6,
13; Gun smoke 8; Movie "Once You Kiss A
St ranger" 10.
l2 :3D- News B; l:oo-Tomorrow 3: 1:3D-News 13.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY l, 1979
5.45-Parm Report 13; 5:50-PTLCiub 13; 5:55Sunrise Semester 10.
6:DO- PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8.
6:25-C hristopher Closeup 10;. 6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5D-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
While Reports 10: News 13.
·
7:0D-Today 3,1 5; CBS News 8; Schoolies 10; 7:15Wea the r 33.
7 30-:Famlly Affair 10; Zoom 33.
a,oo-Capt. Kangaroo .8,10; Sesame 'St. 33.
9:0o-Merv Gri ffin 3; ...!;,_mergency One 6; ·Hogan's

Heroes 8; Malch Gam'!. 10; Phil [\onahue 13,15.
9:3D-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10.
IO :oo-Ca rd Sharks 3,15 : Edge of Night 6 ; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13.
10 · JD-J eopardy 3,15; Andy Griffith 6: Price Is Rlght
8, 10; S20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3, 15·: Happy Days 6,13: Lowell
Thomas Re members 20.
11 3D-Wheel of Fortune 3.15: Family Feud 6.13: Love
of Life 8,10: Sesame St. 20.
11 ,ss--CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :oo-Newscenter J; News6,10; Young B. the Restless
8; Midday Magazine 13;' America Alive 15.
12:3D-R'f"n 's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8.10.
1-: Q()-Hollywood Squares 3: All My Children 6, 13;
Yo ung &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :3D-Days of Qur Lives J, 15 : As The World Turns 8,10.
2 : ~ne Life to Live 6,13; 2:3D-Doctors 3,15;
Guid ing Light B. 10.
J:OD-Another World 3. IS: General Hospltal6. 13: Lilias

3 :3:..%~s~ ;,o~~~~r·s wfid 10; Over Easy 20.
.·4,0()-Misfer Car loon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffi n 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:3D-Bewitched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8 : Brady Bunch 10;
Pett icoat Junction 15.
·
5:0()-Star Trek 3: Beverly Hlllblllles8; Mister Rogers'
' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10;
Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15 .
5: J()-News 6; Sanford B. Son B; E lee. Co. 20: M&lt;Jry
Tyler Moore 10; Odd C9uple 15: Doctor .Who 33. ·
6:oo-NewsJ, 8,10,13,15; A'BC News 6 : Zoom 20; Studio
See 33.
t·
6:JD-NBC News 3,1 5; ABC News131 Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:DO-Cross.Wits J; Newlywed Game 6,13 : Sha Na Na
8; News 10; Lov~. American Style 15 : To Be Announced 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7: 3D-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Right 8;
The JudgelOi That's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom
15: Mac!'WII -Lehrer Report' 20,33.
. . ·· .'
.
8:oo-Tony Orlando 3,15; Eight Is· E'n.ough 6,13; .Jef. fersons 8,10:. Great Performances :zd: Afrlc&amp;ns 33.
·,. · ·
8:30-Good Times 8,10. · ·
9:()().-Movle "Pleasure Cove'.' 3,15: Charlie's Angels 6:
Movie "Some Kind of Mlri!cle" 8,10; Great Performances 33;,; Colleg'e.. Basketbali 13: Prisoner 20 .
10 :0D-Vegas 6; News· 201 Great Performances 33;
10 :JD-Turnabout 20.
I I : ~News 3,6,8,101 13,15; . Ole~ Cavett 20: Lilias
Yoga 8. You 33. .
,
• 11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,!5; . Rollce Woman 6,13 :
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movlo "Queer ~
Christiana" 10.
·
12:3D- N,ews 8: 12 :AO-SWAT 6,13; .1:oo-Tomorrow 3 :
1:5011-News 13.

Promise her
ta rose garden• •
and

a14K Ro&amp;e

Gold and Yellow
·Gold Wedding
Band by

In action Sunday night, ·
Stanford scored a 25-22
victory over No. 11 Georgia in
the Bluebonnet Bowl behind
quarterback Steve Oils, who
completed three touchdown
passes in a 412-minute span in
the third period.

Art Carved

grid J·o. 6'

Weight loss-name of th.e game

life

annually.
Hayes was
benefits, exceeds
six making
flg\D'es
$45,000 a year at Qhio State.

Woody Was almost
•

.fired .first Year at
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer

Osu

cootract if you'll take the
team over for the rest of the
year."'
,
Howell said Larkins was
asked by Godfrey if uayes
had been informed and that . Larkins said no. " I work for·
Mr. Hayes. I wouldn't take it
lUlder these circumstances,''
Howell quoted the assistant
coach as saying.
So Hayes survived.
He woUld go oo to become
one of the Big Ten's all-time
coaching greats. He · guided
. two national championS and
13 of his teams won or shared
conference titles. Eleven of
them went to bowls. His 26- .

Ttein, who
along the
Michigan
manwas
now."
Buckeyes' bench at the Gator
Bowl, is another leading
candidate. The 33-year-&lt;~ld
former Ohio State halll&gt;ack
has been coaching Nortl)
Carolina State for three

seasons,leadingthemtoa3~

17 Tangerine Bo'\'1'1 victory
over Pittsburgh this. year.
If Ohio Slate officials do
want to talk with Holtz and
Rein, they likely will observe

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Only the loyalty l of an
assistant coach aPR,arently
kept Woody Hayes from
being fire&lt;( after the fourth
.
game of his opening · Ohio
State football coaching
•
season in !951.
Hayes went on to last 28
years at the Big Ten Conference school Wltll he .was d~­
Jim Schmidt dumped In 31
missed Saturday fo~ slugging
points including six during 9n
a Clemson player 'during a 17overtime to lead·'!he Ports15 Gator ·Bowl loss.
mouth
Notre
Dame
Following a 32-10 upset
Fighting
Irish
to
an
exciting
defeat at Indiana, Ohio State
82-76 victory over North
athletic director · Dick
GaUia.
Larkins wanted to buy out year record at Ohio State was
Coach Ted Lehew's Pirates
. .
Hayes' one-year cohtractand ~1-10
The 18 men who preceded . had taken an early 21·16 lead
turn the job over to · Ernie
at the end of the first stanza.
Godfrey, a Buckeye assistant Hayes at Ohio State had a NGHS led 40-34 at the half and
record of 328-156-38
coach.
. · combined
in 6! seasons.
60-51 going into the final
The proposed firing years
Howell also recalled that period oilly to see Portsmouth
ago surfaced when Fritz the Ohio State selection board Notre Dame to come on in the
Howell, The Associated
period to tie the game
Press' Ohio sports editor for picked Hayes on their second fourth
at 72·72.
33 years, telephoned his old vote after they had picked
During the overtime, Sch·
Chuck Mather .of Massillon,
bureau after Hayes' firing Ohio,
High School on their' midt had six points, Fisher
Saturday.
first ballot.
who had 29 on the night got a
Howell, 78, retired in 1964
John
Bricker,
then
an
Ohio
basket and Bill King who
and now lives in Sarasota, Slate trustee, said his group scored_IO
points had another
F1a.
wol.lld
not
approve
Mather.
two:pomter.
.
" I got the story straight
.
Howell
said
he
had
.to
lalk
·
J'.t:cComas,
6-2
semor
from Ernie. I'in not silre even
Woody knows that," Howell Hayes, then Miami of Ohio's center who scored 18 points
said. He never wrote it coach, from an early for _the m~t ha~ four pomts
from
the dunng the overtlffie.
though, for unexplained withdrawal
coaching
race.
Hayes
was
In additlon. to McCo~as,
reasons.
s\D'e
Ohio
State
would
choose
two
other Pirat~s enjoyed
Ohio State had been a twoPaul
Brown,
now
the
outstandln~ evenmgs. Sam
touchdown favorite to win .at
Indiana. · However, the Cincinnati Bengals • . owner . Smtth, semor guard, carmed
21 points and Stacey Winston
Hoosiers gave Hayes a 1-:i-1 and general manager.
"Woody
told
me
they
would
added 19. North Galha
start with the Buckeyes.
be
crazy
if
they
didn't
take
connected
on 32 of 75. floor
Howell recalled that
·
Brown.
Hayes
said
he
would
attempts
.
.
"Larkins called Godfrey in
and told him, 'We hired t~ rather withdraw voluntarily . The Pt_rates won the
wrong guy. Woody can 't than have someone picked reserve_ Ill!, 48·4? behmd
make it in the Big Ten. We're over him. He wanted me to Mark Mtller s 20 pomts. Tom
that
he
was Bowman had 30 in a losing
willing to terminate his write
withdrawing. I advised him effort. .
.
to stay in the race. So he did,"
The loss left North Gallia .
said Howell.
with a 2-3 slate prtor to
Reds to play

Hubbard of
of Illinois,
Florida A&amp;M,
Moeller
Rudy
Earl , Bruce of Iowa State,
Ralph Staub of Cincinnati and
former Colorado Coach Bill
Mallory.
Hindman was to meet with
university President' Harold
Enarson today to set. up the
steps for selecting a new
coach.
"It must !&gt;e done as quickly
as possible. The timing is terrible
for
· recruitinl(

........ Caned
,,_IIW ....... I ftlr.\ofloeiot'~·~

GOE$SLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE

ii.ii'

Court St.
0

j·th~in~thieiui'v
ru ieirisiity!. iiiiiiPoimjttjo~yj,

Person to person
health insurance

Weight loss is the name of the most weekly weight with Carol Adkins andKathy Morthe game at Slinderella Diet Rebecca Roush, Karen rison were the bi g losers
classes conducted by JoAnn Broadwater, and Janella while Ca rol Roach and
Newsome and Alma Jeffers . DaviS tying for runner-up one Geraldine Blessing tied for
received her 35 pound rib!Jon week, and Alma Jeffers and runner-up. Donna Rawson
at one of the December Janet Needs losing the most was runner-up to Mrs. Adkins
'
weight the next week.
classes.
at the cy,ening class.
At · the two Middleport ' At the Point Plea•""' ''I"" ·
'
classes, members losing the
has fond , memorie~pf the old
most weight were Maxine
ABA.
. ·.
.
Jordan, Sarah Johnson,
RECALLS niE ABA
'
l'm
ABA
all
the
way
,"
SAN
ANTONIO,
.Texas
Rhonda Roush, Freda Van In·
wagen, Edwina Scott, Dodie ( AP) - They took Doug Moe 'Moe said. "You look around
Setft;· Dixie Sayre, Katie out of the ABA but they can't the NBA today and you'll see
take theABAoutof Moe. Now that the ABA players have
Miller and Sheila Erlewine.
At the Mason class, Mitzi the coach for the San Antonio made the t~ams into
Oldaker and Carol staats lost Spurs of the NBA, Doug still winners."
11

FOR THE BEST DEALS

Mike' Sw

MASON FURNITURr

Portsmouth Notre

Dame

fllanteJI, . 3-0-6: Sch·
midt, 14-J-31 ; Fisher, 12-5-19 ;
(82) -

Schm idt, 0-4-4 ; Harr is, 1-0-2

all spring tilts
in Florida

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2119 Jackson Ave. .
Point Pleasant
675-2318

Mon ., Tues .• Wed . &amp; Silt . 8:30til 5: 00
Thursday Til 1i Noon ··

Friday Until 8 P.M.
Herman Grate

SlAT[ f ~IIM MUTUAl

~
!!!:s
it

WINTER MONTHS

OPEN:

Aulomob4t l111u1~n t e tomp1,.,
Home D!ltte
81oomlflglon ~hno' s

''lt comes from China."

KITCHEN CENTE~, INC.

TRI-STATE AREA

992-7155
149 5. Third St.
Middleport, p .

sweater, the shopkeeper tried
to conclude the· deal but
act ually lo&gt;t " customer :

DALE'S ·

IN THE '

Mason - W.Va.

.
..'rs., 99 ~
CHICKEN BREASTS
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS ................................. ~~: 89&lt;=
. ~- a·
.
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CHICKEN .THI GHS......................
..........................
9 c:
·
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WHOLE CHICKEN LEGS••••••••••••••••••••n
WHOLE. CHICKENS .........................................~~~ 5·9~
SUPERIORS POLISH SAUSAGE......................L.8: . '1 °9
SUPERIORS BRAUNSCHWEIGER....................L~~.69e
I

Friday's SVAC contest at
Southwestern.
Box Score
Norlh Gallia (76) - Smith,
7-7-21; Winston , 8-3-19 :
McComas,9-0-18 ; Peck, J-2-8:
Little, 4-0-8; Barnes, 1-0-2.
Totals 32-12-76. ·

Egyptian goods is evident.
When a foreign visitor was
considering buying what he
thought was a locally knitted

MASON FURNITURE

It can help pay
soa1lng hospital
and surgical bills.
Call me.

Pirates· lose
•
•
rn ·overtrme

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••

•••••

~

••••• •

•

.

~

oBUILDING SUPPLIES Fo
HOME IMPROVEM .
·POMEROY CEMENT

and King, 4-2- 10. Totals 34-1482.
By Quarfers :
Porls. N.D.
·16 34 51 72-82
North
Galli a 21 40 60 72 - 76

BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
Of Building
Since 1915

.

DOlT
HIVE.CHICKEI FOR

•

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PAK
CUT UP

BUN S.. ~A~;~~~t ...........~.~~~-. 49
ge
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LB.

DAIRY
y ~LLEY BELL or B~OUGHTON

¢

HOLSUM . HOT DOG

"

•

· Drive in ·to Bob Evans and take
home some finger lickin' good chicken _from the Colonel. Pick up dinner'
·after work. You'll see us on E~.rn
f'venue. Don't drive by. Drive in.

'

,

CHI-CKEN

run

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati R\lds will play .
their entire spring training
schedule in F1orida this year,
the National League baseball
team haa'annoiiiCed.
TI1e final game will he
against St. Louis April3, only
me day before the Reds meet
San Francisco in the. official
National League opener here.
The Reds begin their 25. game spring training
schedule March tO against
Toronto. Their training
schedule includes 12 different
teams.
The Reds will play 12
•· games agpinst 11 opJionents
at AI Lopez Field in Tampa,
F1a ., . their spring training
home.
The Reds finished second in
the National ,League's
Western Division last season.

By HILM!TOROS
market,' ' allhough he himself subsequent nallonalism has
CAIRO (AP ) - East is questions the "super" prefix. brought no systematic cries
East, West is West and the He sells pa cks of cubed sugar for de-Westernization .
twain mix on the facade of sti ll ca rryin g th e " s u ~ re . Even the late Gamal Abdel
Cairo.
tablettes" signs.
Nasser, the stern pan On a teeming and dustAnd the label on the local Ara ~ist , did not erase the
filled downtown alley, partly rose wine grandiosely boasts Anglo-French influence,
Ibrahim Mohammed sells "grand vin sec,'' whiie a although he ordered English
used Egyptian furniture , but discriminatin g taster can and French lan guages
the sign on his basement question both its greatness stopped in primary schools
shop boasts: "Objets. d'Art. " and dryness.
for a time.
"I love the French, their
The loca I English
Even during his era, the
~ language and culture," . he language
week ly, The intelligentsia awd upper class
says in English·,
Egyptia n Mail, found at times preferred to spel!_k
His shop, along with something wrong with th.e French among themselves,
• thousands of others in Cairo, foreign grafitti in th1s city of rather than Arabic. Many
is geared mainly for Egyp- the crusades, Mamelukes and st ill do.
·tian customers while still 1,000 minarets.
And Anwar Sadat, who
sporiing a Western sign in • It never questioned the succeeded Nasser in 1970,
addition to Arabic, refl'ecting validity of foreign signs. The provided further unpetus ~o
'
the )'rench, Briti sh and , paper chided the merchants ~?.e Wes~.ern mfluence byh1s
MEMORABILIA - This photo sent by James and Mildred Souders of Pensacola Fla ·
lately, American influence for their spelling errors in
mf1tah ( open-do~r ) j')Oitcy.
former Middleport residents, will revive memories for Middleport residents many 'year~
many seem to welcome.
French or English. Clothes
Now.the assumption 1s that
back. The home pictured was bullt by a Mt. Frankenberger on Broadway St., Middlepo~t.
Man y signs appear in . are cleaned by "steam" and anyt hmg tha t carr1es an
and he resided there. He also constructed two other cement homes similar to this home near
French, as at the shop where not "stem," a~ ope cleaner unport tag IS better than local
:the former Pythia1i Park in lower Mi~dleport . The cement structures however never
the pin-striped and bell· claimed, the paper lectured. product~.
.
.
really caught on in the c0111munity and this home as well as the others V:as razed k, make
bottomed · suits are made by · Napoleon 's
!8th-century... . Even m EJ Mmya , a Nileway for more traditional structures. After Mr. Frankenberger's death, his home was visited
"Osman and Fils, Tailleurs" foray into Egypt and Jaier the s1d~ town 150 miles so~th of
·_frequenUy during the Halloween season by youth of the communiiy who referred to the
(Osman and Sons, Tailors). long British influence were Ca1ro, the mtenstfym g
structure at the "crazy house." This photo was taken a bout 1942.
Ahmed el Shamy's grocery bound to leave imprints, but fascmatwn
With
non·
store is billed ' as "super'

•

a

"I'm nota sure
I want
it. A
lot
telling
friend'
a year
ago.
of things would have to be

'

.

•

'
....
By GEORGE STRODE
created Saturday when0hio changed.
Ed
Seaman,
sports anNCAAregulation . Itsaysa · purpo.,.," ., said ' the
AP Sports Writer
State athletic director Hugh
"Following Woody, I'm not information director at North school contacting ·a coach Btlcke~· athletic director.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ' Hinilman iired Hayes, the sure I can . get those things Carolina State, supports tile under cmtract at another
So what does the future
Lou Holtz, by the process of center of a brawl in the changed."
theory Holtz will take institution has
"moral hold for Hayes ?
ellmination,appears to be the waning moments of the
Once Hayes was fired, . command of the Buckeyes. obligation to gain permission
"I don't know what I'll do,"
man to replace Woody Hayes Buckeyes' 17-15 Gator Bowl Holtz left the door ajar on his
"When he coached here for to make that contact." ·
he said as he packed his peras Ohio State's football loss to Clemsoo.
·candidacy when he said, "I four years," Seamantold The
Parseghian, the ABC-TV sonal belongings at his tiny
coach.
· Hayes slugged a Clemson plan to stay at the University Associated Press, "Lou's ob- analyst at the Gator Bowl, · office at the. team's practi'ce
Bo Schembechler says he ptayer in . full view of a of Arkansas for as long as the vious goal in
was to told a IWlcheon he has no wish facility.
will stay at Michigan. ·•
national televisioo audience , people want·m, to."
return to Ohio and become to get back into college · However , Hayes did rule
Bo Rein has just signed a abrJiplly endlng one of the
Frank Broyles, the Razor- Ohio State's head coach."
coaching. The 55-year-old out another colleg~ coaching
multi-year contract at North game's greatest careers. He backs' athletic director; said
Qne Arkaflsas so~ce, who Parseghian, who followed job as well as professional
Carolina State.
ranked fourth on the all-time the Holtz speculation was asked not be identified, said: Hayes as Miami of Ohio's coaching or scouting.
Ara Parseghian has . no . list of winningest college premature, but added : "It's cut and dried that Holtz coach, said: "After Notre
As a professor of physical
desire to return to college coaches, with 238 victories. "We've got ··a coach . will be Hayes' ~uccessor." Dame, .what else is there? education, he has tenure even
coaching.
The 42-year-&lt;~ld Holtz and everybody wants. Now if we
The
H. y·ea r. 0 1d I'm not interested in a college though he is serving a oneThe opening at the Big Ten Hindman are close friends " can just keep hlm."
Schembechler, a Barberton, job!'
year contract. Hindman said
Conference power was and served on Hayes'
'The bottom line for Holtz, a Ohio, native and, assistant
Other names likely to draw Hayes would be' paid in full
national championship native Ohioan, switching to under Hayes, already · has conslderatlon from Ohio through the end of the current
coaching staff .10 years ago. Ohio State Is his salary.
removed his name from State are these former contract that expires June 30.
"I can have the job," Ar·
He's served two' years of a . consideration, saying, "My Hayes' players or assistants : · Neither
Enarson
or
kansas Gazette sports editor four-year . contract at college coaching career will Purdue's Jiin Young, Dave Hindman are willl.ng to
OrviJie.Henry quoted Holtz as Arkansas and, with fringe finish ,t Michigan. I'm a McClain of Wisconsin, Gary discuss another job for Hayes

TELE·VJSION .
VIEWING

..

s_ta_
te

victory over " Houston's
Southwest
Confer ence
champions.

.

Forerign signs abouiid in Egjpt

Penn .loses, national·crOWn· up for grabs
By KEN RAPI'OPORT

.

.

·

.

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10

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4
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· Everyne else has been cramming alphillbet titles dow1,
our throats, now the insurance industry comes along
with IRA, HR -10, etc. What's it ali about? ·
·

Okay . Lei's forgetthe alphabet. Of the adult population
in the United States, 82% work because of necessity ,
When the time comes to retire they need and want
retirement -income. Unfortunately, a high percentage.
of thie work: forCe either changes jobs before ~coming
eligible tor retirement or works where there is no
retirement plan . Qualified portable retirement plans
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Account) and HR ·10
· your ABC's ... plann·

.

,

REUTER-BROGA_N. INSURANCE
The InsuranCe Store
'114 E. Main

.

.

~92-5110

•

SERV1~E .

Pomeroy,O.

~THURS.

8vMW·

DRIVE IN

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT:

ONLY

,,

RC or DIET
..RITE
8 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS.

Pius Deposit

gge

DR. PEPPER .
FRIDAY ONLY ·

·8•·

BT~S:
Plus Oepos1t
i6 OZ.

SUPER MARKET . . _ OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 e;M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
.
.
Federal Food Starn ps - We Reserve The Right To Limit

ALL WEEK

79¢

99~

l,

�..
.-'

.

·-"''"":. ,.,~·.~·~·····'"-"· · ·~-..... ·~~·· G;;;;;ti~;;· R;p I ~!!.~~!, .c~'!!~r::~!.~!?f~~'((!:.l!!~.~~!~cf_
-

-

,:;

:::: p.m., t!le Salem Community Jane Ann VanMetre.
·
Church of West Columbi~
Several special re!\~ings
e ~'11 an
Ue 0 e- } held its annual Christmas werepresented.Theywereas
. program A warm Welcome follows· " The Star" a
....
·
·
·
··
' d
I'Ht: AM•UAL FF.MAI.F. COMPLAINT
was extended by the Rev. special Christmas Story rea
·ABOUT PERENNIAl. MACHO MAI.F.S
George Hoschar, pastor of by Jane Johnson to var10us
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
' the church, to all present.
members of the God's
My friends and 1 have concluded that the All-Amcriean Boy · 'J;!le program began with a . Helpers and Beginner:•
,
· sp ec ial prelude entitled classes · "Little Willies
isasexmania.c.
'
'
··
We don't sleep around and don't come on like sex objects. "Angels We Have Heard on Prayer" read by Pearl
But every time we go out, .we get more passes t-l)an O.J . Simp- High" sung by Jane Ann Handley
to
selected
son.
·
VanMatre Ellen McDermitt Christmas carols played by
'
·
'
. Why must guys "prove" their masculinity to every woman - Diana Johnson and Gewanna Arlin~ McDermitt and a
they date? ·Just once I'd like to find one who doesn't consider Johnson.
Speceial Christmas Prayer
himself Mr. Macho.
A prayer was offered by by Sandra Fowler.
Please print this to let fellows know .how a lot of women feel. Reverend Hoschar who also
The Beginner's C)ass _under
- WHOhESOME, PURE, SCARED AND UNSURE
read the traditional Christ· the direction of Mrs. Peggy ,.
DEAR WPSA~: ·
· · ' •
ma s Scripture from Luke 2: Crites and Mrs. Micky Young
presented
several
We print letters like yours, but answers come only from 1-20.
The
welcome
was · Recitations . Children 'who
wholesome, pure, (possibly scared and unsure l fellows who in·
sist they respect women , would never try anything macho, and presented by John Johnson. praticipated in this were as
This was followed by the follows : · Amy Russell,
" Please, will you send me this girl's name and address•"
So today we're direeting t~e question exclusively to those presentation of new babies to Shannon Neal, _ Matthew
church members during 1976. Russell, Mike VanMetre,
"forward passers" you describe .
At the conclusion of the Michael Mattox, Ricky
Please tell US, you overeager guys:
reading entitled, "A Baby is Miller, Christy VanMetre,
I. Do you consider a date without sex a total waste of time ?.
2. Do you believe girls expect a pass or two and mig ht be Cod's Great-est G-i ft" by· Joy Cundiff, Nancy King,
Patty VanMatre , Brenda Travis Johnson and John
di:;appointed (or think you a bit strange l if you didn't try ?
3. Is the big lover act a way of showing you know how to ~ho rt and 'Diana Johnson, - Johnson. Reader
Amanda VanMetrer 'l'ommy
A tou ching
mucical
operate?
4. Do you proceed on the "nQ.thing ventured nothing gained" Short and Bryant Johnson
LEGAL NOTICE
were held up by their mothers
theory •
,
.
Th e Public Utilities Com·
. 5. Or are you convinced most females are the "Stop -a little and a Merry Chriiitmas and a
mission of Ohio has schedHappy New Years was
more 1" type Yi~o want what you want but need persuasion •
uled for hearing Case No.
wished in their behalf to all
" We'll be waiting to hear.- HELEN AND SUE
78-1439-EL-AEM, In the
present. Special mention was
Matter of lhe Application
also made of the newest
RAP :
of the · Columbus and
I'm disgusted wi'th dirty movie theaters! I don't mean the member of the church,
Southern OhiO Electric
movies, but the places where they're shown. As you hunt for a Kimberly Annette Mattox,
Company for Temporary
seat, you're sure to step on someone's thrown-away gwn or whose mother Ann Mattox
Authority to Increase its
candy . And it's not much fun .knocking over a half-filled paper was unable to be present:
Rates. On Monday, JanThe Salem Choir under the
cup in the dark, either. The other day I sat down in a puddle : I
uary 22, 1979, a public
hope it was coke! People even leave chewed gum in the seats direction of Ralph Russell
hearing will be held . at
prese nted two numbers,
as well as under theni .
9
:00 A.M . in the lobby
And the rest rooms : Usually no towels or tissue, but lots of "Silent Night" and "I Heard
hearing
room of the State
Th e Bells On Chirstmas
mess and graffiti.
Office
Tower, 30 East
They
were
ac·
Day".
~ With admissions at $3.50 or more, can't theater owners af·
Broad
Street,
Columbus,
companied
by
Jane
Ann
ford to 1\eep their houses clean• Maybe they should use some.
Oh io.
All interested
of the huge profits made from selling popcorn, candy and soft VanMetre . . Two Christmas
parties will be afforded an
drinks at ridiculous prices. After all, this junk causes most of carols were sung by the
opportunity to present
congregation; "0 Come All
the problem. - DISGUSTED
public testimony . Subse·
Ye Faithful" and "The First
DEAR DIS :
quent day s of hearing will
Can you honestly say you aren't sometimes part of the pro· Noel".
be held at th i offices of
A special song entitled,
blem? Have you never dropped food or left your almost-empty
the Commission, 180 East
paper cup in the aisle? Multi~ this by several hundred people "Christmas All Year Round"
Broad St reet, Columbus,
at each perf onnance at a " continuous showing" (when was pr,esented by Gewanna
Ohio
.
Johnson who accompanied
janitors can 't operate) and it equals "Animal House."
As for · rest rooms: con!plain to the management, or find herself on the autoharp. A
Ry order of THE PUBLIC
another theater. They aren 't all .as bad as you describe. special duet entitled, "Star of
UTILITIES COMMISS.ION
-HELEN
.
Bethlehem" was presented
OF• OHIO, Richard L.
by Pear Handley · and the . Smith, Secretary.
Reverend Clyde Ferrell.
DIS :
Theater managers say people in general are messier [han
they used to be. And they insist women's rest rooms are consistently dirtier than are men's. Also, more kids attend _movies
without their parents these days, which adds to the problem.
'
Conunents, anyone? -SUE

..
:;

Renilda McCarthy

Achieves position as
Executive Director
ofCare Line, Inc.
Renilda Ann McCarthy,
formerly of Mason, W.Va.,
has reeently been hired as
Executive Director of Care
Line, Inc., in Parkersburg,
W.Va. Care Line is a crisis
and referral hotline service
for residents in the area. Mrs.
McCarthy replaces Sarah
Walters,
the previous
Director , who recently
moved to Point Pleasant with
'her family.
As Director of the agency,
Mrs. McCarthy will · be
responsible for coordinating
activities of approximately-50
volunteers, public relations
and speaking engagements,
training programs, in·
terfacing 'with other social
s~,rvice agencies including
Wester'n District Guidance
Clinic, and other ad·

ministrative
duties
associated with the overall
functioning
of . the
organization.
Mrs. McCarthy attended
Wahama High School, Mt.
State . Business College,
Parkersburg Coummuni!y
College and Ohio University.
she is presently completing
requirements for an Interdisciplinary Degree in
Management and P~ychology
at Marietta College.
Mrs. McCarthy is tlie eldest
daughter of Della and Harvey
Newland who reside in
Mason. She, her husband,
Mike, wl)o is ManagerQuality Engineering at
Kaiser Aluminum, daughter
Kelly, and son Casey, age 11,
reside in Parkersburg.

r-------1.
I Social I ,

I

B Y H ·1 ·

;:;:

I~

·. ·

The Junior American
The new offic~rs elected
Legion Auxiliary of Feeney· were Kim Roush, president;
Bennett Post 128, Middleport
Lenny Thomas, first ·vice
has reorganized under th~ president; Sherri Fo~. second
lea&lt;,lership of Mrs. Becky .vice :. president; Andrea .
Tyree, advisor, with Peggy Batey, chaplain; Christi
Caton and Lisa Roush, · Smith, historian ; SH\!Ilie FOll,
assistants.
sergeant at anns; Paula CWJ·

ningham, treasurer ; Lois
Roush, secretary; and Sue
Parsons, Little Miss Poppy.
Get-well cards were signed
for Marvin Kelly, D9rothy
Long, Beatrice Robson, Bill
Morris, Jim Haggerty, and
Edith Spencer with a sym-

.

.

COUNTRY FRESH

·FRYERS .
~e

.

LB.

'\

usoA CHOICE ..

meet in executive session
DEAR POLLY'-- I have a
Tuesday 5:30 p.m. to discuss new short shag carpet wall to
the Welfare Department. wall. My problem is that I put
Regular session at 6:30p.m. a runner of the same carpet
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, in the hall where there is a lot
Daugliters · of America of wear and it keeps moving
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. In- all around. I hope someone
S!allation of officers. Officers can tell me how to keep it
are to wear white.
straight. -SALLY
t;
.
LADIES AUXILIARY o{
D.EAR SALLY - You might
' ,., . the Fraternal Order i1f t.ry sewing a rubber canning
Eagles Tuesday 6 p.m. The~e jar ring on the underneath
Mr. Maynard and son will be nomination for vice corners
of the runner. If it is
president.
very long twc or three might
POMEROY CHAPTER 100: be sewn on each side too.
Order of the Eastern Star, ·POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I have
Mr. and Mrs. Ceci l 7:45 p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple.
discovered
a great way to
Maynard, Jr. of Rac ine are
THURSDAY
keep
silver
from tarnishing.
announcing the birth of their
EVANGE
LINE
CHAPTER
Clean
your
flat
silverware or
first child, a son, Jesse Ryan ,
Nov. 29 at the Holzer Medical 172, Order of the Eastern dishes as usual and then wrap
Center . He weighed, nine Star, 7:30 Thursday at the each piece separately in
aluminum toil. Be sure this is
pounds and five ounces and Middleport Masonic Temple.
done tightly. Place these
was 22 inches lung.
BETHEL Ladles Aid, I
Paternal grandparents -are p.m., with Mr~. James Davis. ''packages" in a plastic bag
and do be sure all the air is
Cecil and Fanny Maynard ,,,
out of the bag. Close with a
Racine and the maternal
MINI TIMES SQUARE
twi~ie. I did this about six
grandparents are David and
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)-It
months
ago and my silver is
Ann Zirkle, Racine, and wasn't Times Square, but the
still
as
bright
and shiny as the
Walter Hayes, Letart, W. Va. effect was equally exciting
day
I
cleaned
it. -MRS. L.S. ,
The mater ha l great- for 500 people who watched in
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
grandparents are Roberta a downpour.
Peeve is with the coat
Maynard and the late Jesse
The crowd gathered on
Maynard , New Hven Haven, Broadway In the nearby manufacturers who do Such a
W. Va . Maternal great- village of Alden late Sunday pooi' job of putting pockets in
winter coats. They are often
greatgrandpa rents are Vina for the community's fifth
Preece and the late Garfield annual New Year's Eve . made of thin ravely material
with low quality thread and
Preece, Inez, Ky .
festivities.
loose stitching that is often
People chel!red and car
not in the right place. If I find
horns reverberated, through a good quality coat for ·me or
the village as Jobn Hay
TAKINGTHECtqlE
the children I have to rein·
KANSAS CITY , Mo _ (AP) climbed a telephone poll, force the pockets or com·
- For most , a foot of snow caught a pasS from Bill · pletely . replace them . What
Wld ~ wind chill or minus 30 Morrish, waited for the good is a Winter coat without
degrees would be good reason .. crowd's countdown, and- ~i dependable pockets? l.inings,
to stay indoors. But for the the stroke of midnight ·too, are of!'en of such war
Kansas City Frogman Club, it tossed a basketball to the quality fabric that they bare·
was perfect weather for their . street below.
ly last through one winter. 22nd New Year's plunge.
LONG AND SOBER
MRS. E.J.E.
Nearly 100 spectators
NORFOLK, Va. (AP)
DEAR POLLY - When tak ·
watched as the 25 club mem- Walt ~ 31, is a Navy man who ing the band off rickrack or
bers entered Lake of the hasn't had a drink in four
Woods here, traveling nearly years and doesn't want one.
•
30 yards under the ice from To make sure· he didn't give
one hole to another ..
in to New Year's Eve
"We've been · out of the temptation, he was among
NEW YEAR'S
water since September and 200 alcoholics who celebrated
EVE
OUTING
we can 't wait until April," the a!'l'ival ·of 1979 together. ·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenny Roush,
said Jack Sherbo. " It ~et's in . It was called an Alco-thon
Pomeroy
;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Dale
yoiblood. And it's kind of a ·- a 24-hour celebration of Roush, St. Albans,
Va.:
goo way to get over a New sobriety at Ute Navy Alcohol
Mr.
und
Mrs.
Roger
Roush,
Ye 's hangover."
~·
Rehabilitation Center here.
From noon Sunday to noon Grove City, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mqnday, the celebrants I..arry·FJowers, Pickcring:lnn
were in Columbus New
On~
marint! di saster toasted each other with soft Year's Eve for an outing at
, evt.&gt;ryone could gn•et 'with drinks and coffee, passing the tlw rountrv Dinnel' Theatre
·time talking about other New
joy: a cen.sorshifJ sinki r1g.
Cluh.
·
Year's Eves.

Announce bi1th

·w.

1

biastapelputthebandunder
the tape bundle so as to have
the name and color nwnber
should I run short. Colors are
differ~:,nt even when the name
is the same.
When rolling a skein of wool
into a ball I roll the - ball
around the wrapper that was
on the skein and always have
the brand and dye lot color.JEAN.
Polly will send,you one of
her signed thank-yo u
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS ' in care of this
newspaper.

49~

45e

JERSEY ·
WORK OLOV~S
• 9-0z . brown jersey
• Knit wrisfs. Men 's sizes

77!

lilBENFRANKLIM
ll1 We bring variety to life!
POMEROY BEN FRANKUN
Pomeroy,

200 East Main

JARMAN
FLORS'HEIM
HUSH PUPPIES

o.

With both feet aboard this new year
"1979", we, at vaughn's cardinal, would
like to wish all our friends and their
families a most successful year. Full of
health and enough smiles to last until
. 1980. With love and respect to all who
· care, the one big family at Vaughn's Car·
dina!. ·

, ' .

f

,

59(
•

. ..

RICELANO

FANCY JUI CY FLORIDA

5 .;:; 99c
'·

COOKING ONI()NS .......... ....................... 3 ~:. 49&lt;
C"RISP CAll FORNIA

~:.

CARROl'S ...... .... ....................... .... ........ ]

.

•

.

'

PEPPERONI or SAUSAGE. .......................... .... .. .... ':;:· $1 19

760• s119
. -LES ... ·...........................................·.........
BU G
•
CRACKER JACKS ............................. 8 For •1.00
LIBBY$ ASST. JUICES ............... :....~'.~~ ........... 7'1
TROPICANA ORANGE............. ~;-~·:.:~~- ......~1 49

plus deposit8ls,oz.
R•'C• COLA •••••••
~.....
b Is.
·
·
·
ARMOUR CHILl W/BEANS............ ~ ...... ~~-~~. 6,9¢
DINTY MOORE BEEF STEW... ~ ..............:~.o:~.$}19

GREEN GIANT

$1 00

CHEESE PIZZA MIX ...................... ............. ......... : ~~~o·89 1

DIET RITE or

2

MUSHROOMS .....................2 ~-~· 5100

.

99e
LIMIT 2 ·

JOAN OF ARC
KIDNEY, NORTHERN or PINTO

.
BEANS.....4

oz.

ARMOUR ,CORN . BEEF

$} 00

Jumbo
Roll

ALL ... ~~~~~~~~.~!~~~~~~~.............~: .o~~ . $}19

Orleans

NE

Zc~;~:~s $100

Values to $45.00

more put together. I owe it all to my ·
spectator!
·
. -

MINUTE MAID
FRESH CHILLED

.· .

•

. ·

··

·

h PRICE

1

SHOES DISPlAYED
'
FOR EASY ·SELECTION.
.No Exchanges- No Return

SALE

~RICED

Values to $35.0!t

..

REMEMBER THE DATE
WEDNfSDA Y, JAN. 3RD

l,i'J'It

·

twf, :"Widj.•

:·}:I.

-f,

sio.oo ;,u,chUa

i=''

3/99¢
CATSUR.•.....•.......
TOMATO SAUC~ .................:~::~~ .. 79¢
'

14 oz. .

MONARCH'S

!1 •••••••••••••••••• •

..._IIi
$

·•

'

HUNTS

19

ORAIIGE JUICE ..._,_,...............................::~·:; I
K~,L!,.ELLA
' CHEES'E
4oz. 59~
MUUIUC
.........
a
oz 9 9..,.
CARDINAL'
'
· •

PURSES

~

. . . ...
. .Gal.
69¢
BLEACH. ........ .. ..... ............
. ... .
PUR EX

'

possessions with your
social securltv number .

Poit'eroy

Lb .

,LB.

NEW INST. QUAKER OATMEAL
BRAND-N-RA ISINS ............. -.-....... -.. -.......... 6 9~
BORDEN$ ~REAMORA ..................... ~:.0.': •159
TEA BAGS:..!~~~.~~.~~L ..................;~~~~:.·.~ .... 99~
• RICE ............................................. ~·············· 2 p':~. 59•

2 30J9
33029

good st.rong locks. Mark

992-7143

RED GRAPEFRUIT.. :......................... ... ...... S ••• 89~

POTATOES ........... ~ 20 99¢

~~Savings

VEGETABLE,SALE! ~~_;;;,

LS

You c~n also make it
tougher for crooks. Use

102 W Main

Lb

JOHNSON$ SCRUNGE .

strengthened

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

s •••

15%
CANS .

FOR THE MEN

crime Investigation efforts.

prevented. That's why we
say - prevention is tbe
best policy.

WHITE GRAPEFRUit ......... """"'" ····· --·· ····

FRANCO AMERICAN SPAGHETTI. .... }.5.?!·. 3/89~

up

:Jur llgency provides
financial protect _
l on and
service when crime losses
occur ... but many can be

FANCY JUICY fLORIDA

CHEF -BOY-AR -DEE PIZZA MI X

MAJ~H

SALE BEGINS JAN. 3 AT 9:00 AM

support
programs
providing stiffer penalties
for
wrongdoers
and
for

SPECIALS I

FANCY JUICY FLORIDA

, CAK.EDOIUT$ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••' Dotln

~~

One thlhg yciu can do is to

proposals

29

Food

CARDINAL

through your insurance
premiums:..

bicycles that turn
missing.

I PRODUCE

..

BRAUNSCHWEIGER ....... ~~; •. 69e

, ,. .1t.f9

for deliberately set fires

burglaries, robberies . and
car thefts
.. plus the
countless CB rad ios and

,7-,

ENGLISH CUT ROAST.....L.B~ : '1

ina I

SALE PRICED ·

by

-

'

"MIDDLE UPPER BLOCK, POMEROY, 0.''

not.

affecle~

, .

Unclassified

whether they happen to you

adversely

1
I
I

---~~-----------------------·

ORANGES .............. ........................ ,....

HARTLEY'S SHOE
.STORE
.

~f.lh ~

are

I

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12,2 to (ClOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST .. POMEROY.
'

.

SUPERIORS

GREEN GIANT

You can help cut down on

costs

· .

usDA ~OICE

crime IOS$eS ... lo~ses that
directly
Bffect
you,

Insurance

I~-----~-~--------~-------1
N. w. -COM~lON, O.D. . I
OPTOMETRIST
l
I1I
S

USDA CHOICt; BEEF.

ARM POT ROAST ...........~~·-•1,' -

AT

FOR CURRIN
CRIME LOSSES

Take the c;rime of arson.
You ' re paying an In creasingly heavy subsidy

Hand School, the Meigs County Infirinary, and the Arcadia
·Nursing Home.
Lu"ve Batey was a guest at
the reorganizational meeting.
Next meeting will be held
J a n . 10 at the haiL
Refreshments were served .

USDA CHOICE

FRYER PARTS .

Prevention is the
best policy. • •

or

reorgant~es

BONELESS BEEF RO.AST..~~·. •1 59

BUDGETPAK

LB.

·-

-.

. FRANKIES ..................... H. ~~-.89~ - -

.-

'

Pol~y Cramer .

--

Luol bci !;:!.S a ntl t'1:1vors were
prep;&lt;red fo r veterans
hospitals and the veterans at
the Athens Mental Health
Center. The juniors also
assisted with remembrances
for th e Gallia County
Chi ldren~ ijome, the Guiding

pathy card to Della Stahl.
The Christmas party was
held on Friday evening
before Christmas with the
members assisting the
legionnaires in sacking till:
candy to be given out by Santa.

~UPERIORS

POLL~ts POINTERS
.

•

. junior American LegiOn :JJ..u'xiliafy

18-0Z. CREAM STYLE CORN
12 -0Z. NIBLETS CORN
16 -o'Z. WHOLE KERNEL CORN

..Calendar ,. Shag won't
stay put
TUESDAY
' COMMISSIONERS
will

.,

B: tt J

dS

Chnstmas
e s . w~s Comes To The Hutch" was
presented by The llegmner s
resented b the God's
Class. Children .who rang ~elpersandJ'llingWorker's ''
bells in thl9 exercise were as
.
.
Ill
db
follows · J\my Russell
Classes ·Th&gt;s was o owe Y
· N 1 M ·(th ' a Manier Scene which was
Shannon. .ea '
a ew
resented by the Young
Russell, Mr.::ke Van~~trke, ~dulls Class "Christmas
M&gt;ch,ael
. attox,
!C Y
mes To Th~ Hutch" and
Miller, · Christy VanMatre, Co
J
c d'ff Na ncy Ki ng' the. -Manger
Scene were
oy un 1 •
·
·
e(l· b
Travus Johnson and John wrl(ten and du~t h thy
Johnson. Reader for the Sa~dra · FowfleMr t A 1. e
·
M
M' k
asSlstance o
rs. r me ·
exercise was
rs.
IC Y
.
.
p
•
Young. Bells were assembled McDerm_&gt;tt, Mrs.
eggy ·
and contribute·by Mrs. Harry
(Contmued on page 10) - •
•

~

7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P'omeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan . 2, 1979

•R~~m~R·D·EN~·-· .. ·· .......... Lb. 99~
COnACiE CHEESE .............................. ..1!;,·:~
VALLEY SELL BUTTERMILK •·········lh gal. 79'

· . !FREEZER VALUES

CUTioiN or ~

GREEN PEA$ ~

10•0 •

Pkgo.

.

.

0

1 -Lb, -&gt;
, C.n
'

89;

.
FRIES ..... ;................5
.

~

%

11--

,,
1

:.:

Lb. -$'

SUPPER··
.

Pkg.

SARALEE Pumpkin, peach,
apple &amp; cherry.

PIES

-

··~······· ·········

.... ·-·.....
.

JOoz .

C ARD I NALI~"

rooo sroRES

XIJteliJ 4•1:1
.,
~

%

0

9oz.
COOL WHIP.,....•.................
49~

.

~

Good at C•trlill•l Moy• l Slue s 101 11
t;;
00 l S-05 s:J

I

BANQUET ASSORTED VARIETIES

_

Lb.· • •
Bog

S' J99:~

~r--e~. 1/ &amp;/7 9

,

· Valley Bell
.
ICE CREAM SANDWICHES ..... , ... 6 for 79'
REGULAR CUT
IDA TR!AT

.,

$}59

59&lt; ~ .v

�8- 'IJle Dl!ily Sentinel, Middj~port-Pomeroy: 0 ., ofuisday : Jan. 2, 1979
Wedmioday , Jan . J

WANT AD
CHARGES
~sh

Bernice Bede Osol

1.00

ld&lt;W

CharJ.(t&gt;
1.25.

1tfuYs

!.50

:Jt.lit}'S

I.IIO_.v

2.~

(i tluys

3.00

U5

Ectdl word

IJ\'e r

~1{/r~IDlf

I. OJ

V

the :miuimum 15

l'l'urcls is 4 t't!!lb Jlt'l' wunl Jli.'l" duy .

Al!s ru nnmg tJihcr l11.a11 l~JJISt't'UllW
tt:h s wdl bt• d uu·t!L'll &lt;tl lht• l day

~tlltJlliillwv

~ anuary 3, 1979

rille .

you will
be able 10 exp ress and put to
A fortuna te year wh e re

ln ;iwmury, C~ nl of Thanks and
OllllU&lt;tr)' : 6 eents pt•r _wl!n.l, S.:l 00 •
llllllllULUil. Cas h Ill &lt;tdV&lt;tiWo'

prof 1table use your innQ\Iative

.

-

- " --Notices- - .- -

-

-~-

----

-

-Ht'IJ)Wanted
.

f

GUf'.l SHOOT Roci n r Gun Club , Nffl) SOM fONf •tn r l t&gt;on co r!&lt; ond
rlo body wo1k Arply in pP,..,on
~ very Sunday I pm . Factory
:1 42 -3154 .
r hoke 9u m. only .
GUN SHOOT . Rocine Volun i C'cr
h r r L)cpL ~very Sa tu rday h :3U
pm ol their building in tJo shon .
for lory choMP gum; on ly .

BAIL fV ' S
STO Rt
331
..
N :?nd A... e .. M iddlepor t. Ohio .
Will he clo$P.d Dec . 75 to Jon 1

COAL . liMfSTO N f . sond grovPI
calcium Chloricie . fcrtil i1er ciog
• lond . and all typP !- of !.alt f11 ·
CP l ~ ior Soli Works. I nc . f Moin
St. , PomProy . Q97 -3B91
AI1P\.I:::S FITZPATRI CK O rc hnrd .
~ta i P Rl bfJChP.honp Wi l!.. C&gt;svi ll e
M'~ · 37 !:1S ·

Bu} _=. _

---.

SNOW

TIRE SALE

Pomeroy Landmark

OH.

Yard Sale

by THOMAS •JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Fuel
I Marquis ·
for Miss
of infamy
Mennan?
5 Clark's
40 Kind of
lamb ' abbr.
.· partner
DOWN
10 Indonesian
1 Chef's
. island
creation
l1 Noted gang
2 Parallelize
leader
3 Forget it!
12 BoWldary
4 Before
13 Criminals'
5 Rich
code of
silence
fabrics
. '1 SUffix
6 Outch
.. with contest
commWle
.5 u - grown· ac- 7 Piece
. cuStomed . . 11 of advice
6 Seilss .
8 Part of
et ..al. : abbr .
the Mass ·
17 campaign
9'Flavors
matches ·
19 Likewise
20 Incessantly
21 Meat ctit
22 Less chancy
24 Clergyman 1:7--t---+lsaac
25 Inflexible
26 Imprudent
27 New, in
binations
2S Dispute
31 Mountain,

If-= YOU ha vf;' o service to o ll e r .

wont to b uy or sel l something ,
oe l oo ki n g~ for wor M
!&gt;r
wholt3've(· . •. yo u "ll g et res ult s
fos ter with o Se nti nel Want Ad .
Ca ll ~2- 2156 .

--

----~ ·

1f/"f4 OLD S Cu tla ss Supreme sto IJ~n :W~ go n: 9?'1: 7~3 . .
1971 CAMARO 350 outo .. P. S.,
P.B.. • ve ry good con dition .
61 4-J"ffl·63fl-4 .
'1 TO N FORO Pickup , 6 cyl. ,
sta nda rd . $350 .00 . 37B-b34q .

1967

__
F~
or Ren.,_
t _ __
CO UNTR Y. MOBILE Home Pork .
Ro ute 33 , nor th ol Pome r oy .
Lorge lots. Ca l l9&lt;/2 -747q.
- - .
.
. .
.
3 AND 4 RM . ' furnished ond un fu r ni s h ed
o pt s .
Ph o n e
9&lt;12 -54 34 .

TwO8mR6oM. i.. ifc he~ f~rnish­
ed, opt.

Coli

992·2188.

before E1

om

.

fH . APT . in M iddleport . Suitqble
fo r one . Kay Cecil. 992 -5162
evening s .
12 • 60 mob ile homeneo r Oe)fler .

qq2-5858 .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'~ how to work it:
AX)'DLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for a~ other·, In this sat;nple A Is
·wied for the three L's, X for the two. 0 s, etc. Single letten,
apostrophes, the length and formallon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dll!erent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
'q

are you ' ll

FHBEGCTS

FHB
KEC

lhat some lillie thing you say
doesn't h urt someone's feel-

ong s. Thi nk before you speak.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 Chances
be

very

se arching for companions .

diffi cult for you to concentrate

A T B 1 on work today ; because you're
OKAKYCGC
NLC
TJDC
apt to be los! I~ your own
dreams. Might as 'well lake a
S E B J N . ~ day oft and go shopping!
YH
WCKE
NE CC - · NLCF
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
d~y on t~ town or being with
SEKYUCG
IKEJHY
exclllng friends is what you
Saturday's Cryptoquote: MAY EVERY DAY OF mE NEW. need today . However, take
YEAR BE AN ASSET WHEN :YOU T~ STOCK OF· care lhallhis does nol Include
NINETEEN SEVENTY Nlm!.-YOUR PUZZlE FRIENDS. extravagant or frivolous spendIng .
@ I'IJ8 KiDg Feature• S,ndleat.e, loe.
SAGITTARIUS (Nor. 23·Dec.
211 As soon as you get your
mind off yourself you'll spol all
the opportunities you could be
included In today .
·

A/P AIR CLERK

(NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN.I"..

(DIVISiON OF CH~IS CRAFT INDUSTRIES)

has an ''immedtate opentng . tor an
experienced accounting cler.k with
em phasi s on handling account payabl.es and
account receivables. Salary wtll be
commensurate with experience and ability.
Please call or write: Marine Power
Corporation, Gallipolis, Oh 4~631 or phone
446·4930.

•

· . Broadway ia not ooly me of
lhe best known streets in the
world, lt is alao one of the
longest. Starting at ·the
southern tip of Manhattan, it
cootlnues 150 miles up Into
Albany, N.Y. For part of the
way It is alao called Route 9.

Bus.i ness Services ·

.·&amp;·.

bedrooms,
modern bath,

BlACK
ANL&gt; ton Germ a n
Shepard . 7 mo . old. Mole
747 -7006
~ I G HT W~ EK

old kitt en . Wt)ite
"with block and yellow spots.
Ph one 9'/F/ 689.

-- M-obileHomes
•--- - _M
___ for Sale
• -19'/U Amh erst SO )( I2 ';) BR
1470 Cho mp ion bO x 1'J 2 HR
1'165 G e nera l 60 x 17 7 8R
1&lt;,ot:1 PMC S~x 117 BR
1955 Prai rie Schooner 28x!:l l BR
l'r/3 Royal Emba ssy b811lll 3 BR
1'15t,r Sta r 5() )(10 7. 6R
1q73 Sta r b() )( 14 2 HR
JC,Ib8 Star Wx l2 2 8R •
IC,Ii'Q Sylva bOx 12 2 BR
IYbB Vi lloges 60x 11 2 BR
l9b4 Windsor 51 )f 10 '2 RR
I 970 Kirkwood 12)fb0 ~ BR
B8S MOBILE HOM~ S AL~ S
PT . PLEASANT. W.VA.

Inside Paneling &amp; Calling
Hie
Free Estimate - all work

949-2160

5

bedrooms ,

3

G. Bruce Teaford
·Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy

Assotiatl!_s __ _ _

Housing

YEARS TERMS.''IRHAND MOR·
HOU SE FOR safe . l oct'llion:
M oson, WV . f·ou r bedroom spl it
level . bu ilt in kitch en wi th
oven·. ran ge. garbage d ispo so l
ond bar . Fami ly roo m , di ni ng
room , who le "house carpeting
Full size basement . Cantrol olr
ond forced ai r gas hea"t . All
dra'pes plu !i w as her and dry.er .

Bockyord 10 ft . high ced01
fence ond (edar decks fo r
pri vacy. Heated goroge. Close
to schoo l . ~to re park ond tennl!
rourf'. Contra ct Gary l Gibbs
Colt bl.t -949 ·12-46 .

.

J ',

.

O CIE' ~

in Po m eroy . Serlu dl'rl
v1C.orled a rE'a o n top at hill ..
Overl nnk !' ri vrr Wat er elec
11 ic ovoil ob le . ~2-38861
•

•

1

.

HO,USf

:

•

'

IN '". Min er!iv lll C'
4
room . M1tchC''I
hoth ortd u tility room . N-1r p loll
• r.itf' htlH-'fnpnf &lt;1~7 · 5~1 ''
b~rlroom . li ... ing

wood stove. Olf Furnace

Fireplace Flues
Phone: 742·J110
,Kim White, Proprietor
&amp;

::

-· ........

·
m

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

Ranch
type.
t h r ee
bedrooms , carpeting ,

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

.

$27,300.00.
.
CAR WASH - Located on
St.
Route.
Bu ilding,
FRAME -

gas ' heat, lo•ely lot, part
basement .
Asking
$11,000.00. Make an offer.
FOUR LOTS - TWO·Story'
frame, natural g8s heating ,

bedrooms,

bath ,

frame , new kitchen, new
heating , carpeting, also
mobile home 10' x 45'

located on doub le lot.

m.ooo.oo.

NEWER MOBILE HOME
- 12' ~ 61' two bedrooms,
natu ra r gas -heat, located

on

own

lot, unfurnished.

$7,500.00.
WHEN YOU HAVE TO
MOVE FAST ... LET US
SELL YOUR PROPERTY.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. CLeland Jr.
A55oc;iates

Kathy Cle Ia nd
Leona Cleland
992·22S9, 992·6191

AND

ROOFING

.

-,

.J R \IUIDUII\.IMI

current

Salu.

.

Phone

949 -2118 . E,vening
•fter 5 P .M. weekends
after 12 noon .
~

were

show u&lt;,;

the route

Business Services
~A H f RO O M S

A NO Ki tchen s
remodele d. cer amic til e, plum bing . ca rp e ntry . ond genera l
mai nte na nce . 13 yean r&gt;~ .peri'!n~e . 9?2: 3~~ -

PUl llN S EXCA VA TING . Com pl ete
Service Phone 991·7&lt;l 78 .

AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
cance lled ? lost your opera tors
lire nse? Phone 997 -214 3. ~
M 8 M Horn e Improvement se nting Ga llipo lis and oreo . We
specia l ize
in
vinyl
an d
olumi nu rn sid ing . ~or lree
('r, ti mo tes , coli 614 -367 -0118 .
Gol lipoli!"o .

Real Estate for Sale
'

.

LAND FOR SALE
ME.IGS COUNTY

Referentes.AlUiila~

s LOTS - ln M iddleport - Corner' of Locust and
. sycamore - $5,000 per lot or $21,000 for all five .

11!1

,.

SAV,EOf.'
CARPETINU

I,

••
&amp;'

SAVE ALOT

...... -- --- ----- :

caipet .

3~25.

_ ~
_
. . ~ _
SPJ¥1NG MACHINE Repairs , se r-

1

'Ti'lXE HER TO TliE ISLAND WHERE. .

..

·

Rubber

Bac~ 'Carpet

'4.81

1

~ u tl~n~ . ~hio_. ~ht?n ~ ~4 ~-~
WILL do r oofing , cor;'lstruction', ·
plumbin g a nd heating . No jot:
too Iorge o r too small . Phon e
747·2348 .

h ·

coveting.
s epti c
system s.
~oter . ~ bocKhoe, dump truck_.
ltmer.tonr. grovel , blacktop ·
po'lling, Rt . 1.43 . Pho ne l (61.4)
698-733 1 '

THIS ISLAND WE1RE

7li7V MET THE REC'Lil.SE .

HMDING R:&gt;R.

NOT YET; BUT SHE:
PROMISED TO CALL ·
THE MOMENT 5f-'E:
HAD r\NY NEWS !

HAVE TO BE CI\REFUL
U\NDING . TH ERE ARE
LOTS OF CORAL
REEFS. r-----7

' ,,'

-. "
~

.:;
11 1

. _,.

-.'

~q.;:;

FRANK&amp;ERNIE

'i

(
(

·oswald Jacoby and Alan Sont ~g

'
•

:THIS 'YEM

(

JS . Off- To
A Glt!'AT
$T.ART ••.
•

'

,

--....

••

~li:i4Hm

••
•

. TALK-TO
Wendell or Herb Grefe
· or Gent .Smllh
·

• • • :t .JU.ST'
tiiANAGCP 'rO

•

GU,. MV.SfLF

!

•
0

•'

Wl'rl-fOU'r EveN
.SHAVING •
. &lt;~:

••

On being a rule-stickler

·'-

•

• 7 52
¥ A5 ·2

!•

• K

.

a2

WEST

EAST

:1
•r.QJ! iJ

•
•
•
•

. ---

SOUTH

1 ACRE LOT - On Page St. in Middleport - $380Q.

..

'~
'

•

.''

.•

AF~~~~~

••
~:
!I
'. ''

0

0

0

I

10 9 8 6 4
10 4
85 4
6 54

Af.ter recovering from the
shock of seeing the dummy ,
South came to his hand w1lh
a diamond and at that pmnt
in the ptay'decidcd to try th,e
spade finesse. South d1dn t
know a n ythi n g a b ou t
squeez es.

the RevolUtiOnary War hero
of Quebec, was born .Jan. 2, '
1727.
.
On lliis day in history.
In 1788, Georgia ratified the
U.S.
Constitution and was
· The moon is moving from a
admitted
to llie Union .
new moon toward its first
In
1959,
Moscow radio anquarter.
nounced
a
cosmic rocket had
The morning stars are .
been
launched
toward the
Mercury, Venus Saturn and moon.
__ __
Jupiter. ·
·
.
In
1968,
Dr.
Christ
iaan
The evening star is Mars . .
Barnard performed his
Those born on this date are
second
s uc cessfu l hear t
under llie sign of capricorn.
transplant
. .
British Gen. Jam es Wolfe,

The Almanac
United Press 1nterna.ttonal
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 2,
the second day of 1979 with
363 to follow.

\f ftl}i::\,{t m~

~THAT SCRAMB LED WORD GAME

So South returned to dum~ ~ ~(!1~ ®
my , led a spade and East l a
t AQJ 10976
stickler for rules) told South
Unscramble these four Jumbles .
• 73 .
one letter to each square , to !arm
that he had to play a spade
four ordin ary words.
from his own hand . South
Vulnerable: North-south
had lost the opportunity to
Dealer : West
finesse and be set. He had t,o
play his ace.
•
East
South
North
West
Pass 4 NT - Then he ran the rest of the ·
2+
Pass 7 NT ~-diamonds and Victor, who
Pass 5¥
... ..,, ,. "" .. ' .,._, ...... "
""" "" ,,.,.,
...
had to hang on to three
Pass Pass Pass
clubs, dropped hi S Iast
heart. South knew his mne
Opening lead : •K
was 'good. He cash ed it to
squeeze Victor out of the
king o! spades.
.
• AQ
• 96

~

•'
i;

He also gave South his
grand siam when he dropped
that 10. He had ca ught ~is
partner in a t hree-s Uit progr essive sq ueeze.

+A K 98

+QJ 102

'('6?, M' oot.tr ~'
P!rr... I ~~\f~ t.m
10 W~"ll:.H NJ{ ~

1-2

NORTH

+K J

•
••

RUUAND
'.FURNITURE.'

,.

I LAMBY

. CK)

byHenri Ar11oldand BobLee

I

. .,..~. [

I I K I· I

'\•,

,.

.•

t TUVIRE
I~

]

llARNE::_:Y_ _ _ _ _,

CALL 992-2342-EVE. 992-2449 ·

BRIDGE

..... .

~-' you're ..ttl"' · : •
- 0.W Rlec!IOM""- Fully
!
sllicfled.
•

All Roders in Stock
,ping ror,,w~olesale and
~ - We must sell
these to make 100111 for

..

I

over an acre ori the buSy corner of
33 and R$1'7 ~ 480' frontage . In Pomeroy .
$35,000.00.

Bill, Branch Mg[.

G05H ,
IT'S SMALL1
ISN 'T IT?

·,·,

Buy - • you c1n come 1n

•net -

~XCAVATING ,

IT~JF"~«Vi~;:;;:;-:o;;J&lt;;;;3i:rT'

•' .

9' .and 12' Vinyl
Floor eotering In smc.

EXCAVATIN G . dozer . loader ono
..backhoe wor M. dump truck s
ond lo- boy s for hire; w ill haul
fi ll dirt , to soil. limestone cind
gravel. Coli 8ob or B oge~ Jeffe rs , doy phone ~1 - 70aq , night
pho~e_99_2 - ~S?5 _or_~2 -_5333 . __

BUT A FRIEND OF THE FAMILY'S
. WAf&gt; HERE A FEW MONTI-IS
AGO AND MET A lv\AN ON

J

AlLow As

vice. all make s, q92-2184. The
Fabric
Shop .
Pom er oy
Au l horized Singe r Sales a n&lt;
Serv.i c':. ~~ s~orp~~- S~ i s_so!s ._

dozer , backhoe
and dltcher. Charles R. Hatfi el d , Bock Hoe Service ,

/f/IAV.jl,j5~i/(;9RT.~R.!! A ,qANE 70

DRIVE AlimE

ELWGbD BOW~R S REPAIR Sweepers. tOasters , Irons , a ll I All
instaiitMf with
smoll oppliances. Lown mower ,
paddlft, af no eharg •• ·
ne)(f 10 State Highway Garage
ExPert nst•ll.a tion.
on Ro ute 7. Phone (614) qf:IS- 1

MARTIN

WtNNIE

·u.s.

Rodney, Broker

.'

'"

· COMMERCIAL -

DOWNING·-.CHILDS

runninq out of
places 1

"

'
'0
r-":""'-·
..
-,....~---,; .J
' II

Business Services

~

happen~!

II

- - - - - - · -- · · ·· -

HRADFORD . Auct ioneer. Com plele SPrvice . Phone q-4Y -2487 ,
or 949-2000 . Rocin e . Ohio. Crifl ;
Bro dfo,-d .
1

AND

Heavens! This 4ear
we ma4 qo 1 He's

Grant . 742-2879 .

Phone 742-2029 .
11·16-(

· HOWERY

But it
never

of !JOUr
trip, Pop!

Will DO babysi tting in my home
on Boshon-Keno Rd .. Call
;1
949-2824 , a!ik lor Sonia,.

"G,I VEUSAli&lt;Y "
Reasonable Priceo

12·11-1 mo.

~J

-:::-....,....----::----....

WATER WELL drilling. William T.

Construction .
Maintenance
•

-

Will CARE for !he e lde rly in our
home. Phone__99_2- ?3~ 4.: __ •

Carpentry, Electrical
Painting

SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

~-

Of course,Judl.l' Every
4ear about this time
4our father qet's seriouc;
about tall.inq a trip'

qoin~ to 1----.,.-----.

service5 Offered

Co.

I

PETE SIMPSON

Tyree Blvd ., Racine, Ohio,

1

TAKE CRA 7Y CHAN CES .. · 1'HIS
SURE. DOES BEAT WALI&lt;tN ' "·

SANDY" ·

r'

'
Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
11 -17·1 mo. •

~----~~~~ ~~--~~~~-,
Hammond
&amp;
Lowery'
'
I'~~
1

I CAN SWIM l ii&lt;E AN EE '
SO CAN YOU ... AN ' WE NEVER

EH, SANOy? ,--..,·---:-::::-:--..-:

"

Pianos. sates &amp; Service.
(New &amp; Used). Service on

TAKIM ' OFF OM A RAFT IS FOOL
STU&gt;F FOR K IDS, AS A RULE~·
BUl" WE 1RE SORT OF DIF~ ERE N ~

OLD BOARD ...

THAT'S GOIN' AI'IOI&lt;R[l..

New or Repair
Glitters and
. • Downspouts

1J.9·1 mo.

Organs, Story &amp; Clark

THIS

IT'LL DO FOR A PADDLE
... OK "·All ABOARD

&amp;~HOME MAiNTENANCE I'':·
z

110 E. Moln Street,
Pomeroy,O.
Call992ml3
_
For Free Estimates

11 -J-1 mo.

..•.

H. L WRilESB.

'

APPLIANCE II

I

O N HIS SPEAR?

ROUTE"

•
'

'.,
••
••
1:..

Chester, Ohio
10·30·c

. Bo•3

For

EWOTT
.

l;L..SE!

'
'

.'

Armstrong Carpeting

PHONE 992-2772

paneling, full basement,
porches, close to school .

Hea~quarters

.

HOWL..I"'G IN MY E'AI&lt;'?
HAS A HUN"CFR FALLEN

..••

ReSidential and commerclol. con for estimate. 24
Service. Any d1y,
1 Hour
i'"inytlme.
-·
·
Phone
915-3106
'
Jock Ginther 985-3806
'
I

.

Your

H·EY; WHAT 15 ll'AT

'1}1E'5E GUY.S

REALLY SOME1'1-IIN'

SEPTIC TANK .CLEANING-

SALES REP.
-FOR
SUNDINS HAMMOND
ORGANS
•
Racine, Ohlo
Phone 949-2111
AlterS P.M.
11 ·26·1 mo.

.CELLULOSE .

2 LOTS - 50' • 152' each.

AT OXFORD!

LOOKOUT!

• •,

Mountod Bolancod Fret
• , Phone 742-2321

"

POMEROY, O.

1-AMS-oRAINSD

AFTeR I LOOK AT "Tl-IESE'
' COMIC BOOKS 1

PETE SIMPSON

t~eadquarters

MAIN ....~._...

WA5 FORTUNATE
eNOU,;H TO Ac.H IEV!i
MY &amp;ACCA1.AURI:ATJ:

,,. WHICI&lt; I'!..J. 00 RIGHT

HAMMOND &amp; LOWERY_
ORGANS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
~NEW &amp; USED I ·

Service- ~

INSULAnON
'6.50 per bag
J&amp;L INSULAnON
"'
JIM KEESEE

OH,I5AY- WHAT ~
F'OU1. LUCK! THAT~
THE ONE QUE5TIOr-1.
I WA5 HOP IN6 YOIJ
WOU1.DN'T A51&lt;.!

TRUJ:, DEAR BOY!

.r

VA 5TUPJD SWA6-0R I'LL
FEED THEJ-It:XT ONE A

CAN'T SEE FOR
SUR!: YET, cAP'N'="
.JU5T A FIN AND A
SHADOW- BUTI
DON'T THINK IT!S
BIG ENOU19Hl

~

. spoclollzlntln

. '

11-3-1

,,.... the ........ , , . ., .........
.......... the

18 ACRES - t n Pomeroy - Northern Heights. All
utilities. Beautiful home sites. $22,000.

TGAGE CO .. 77 .E Sto le Sl. .
A th ens Ph one61 4-S92 -30 51 .

fully insured
Free Elt. ·can992-2n1

I'lL 992·2114

E.

.'

CIRIUFY Know-How. .

Experience and

EXPERIENQQ
Radlator~j

Real Estate for Sale

-

111 . -·

1tth century service wllh

.,

78.8 ACRES - st. Rt. 124 ~ On l y 3 mi les tram town . . . :. .
S200 .00 per Ac r e - Better Hurry!

-

·;~

E SWEEP ·.

THEN PIPe DOWN AND .
DON'T WASTE MY TIME,

Cellulosic I wood' tiber)
Therrt:~a I insulation · ·
Savoia·pet. to so pc:t.
on heating cost

Pomeroy, 0 . ,
J. t5.tfc

196/ TOTAL ELE C TR IC mobil £"
home . furni shed . 3 brd r ..
wos her ond drye r 1 A1 r ron di ·
tionl"d . 1 lot 2 I 0 It . fro ntogr .
$11 ,0(X) Phon e 741 -282b .

THRH aEDROOM fra me home in
M iddlepor t . Col l 9&lt;11-3457 :
. . - . . - . FARM FOH so le Hou$P. . 1 barns.
troiler . Large pond . 10 acres or
87 O( res . 7112 -2506.
. - - . . . . RI:AL fSTATf lOANS. VA · No
money·
down
( e li g ibl e
Ve terens ). FHA · A s low os 3,...
dow n {o! l non -Vete ren s and
general publi c) To pur cha se
~ re o! es ta te o r rel1 nonce . 30

can ...
20th

and air, -dinlhg r_o om' _
and
modern kitchen . Spac: tous

place for a family. 5 to 6
. years old. $65,000.
A WISE RENTER WILL
SAVE BY BUYING ONE
OF
THESE,
THEN
COLLECT WHEN YO
SELL IT .. . GOET
SELLING
PROBLE
CALL 991·3325.

I

JIM KEESEE

Muffler
Brakes .
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
ln&lt;bllation Service
Ph. 992-2848

-.. ~

Blown Insulation

MOORE'S

baths, 2 tubs , central heat

Don't 1e' a chimney 11r'e put

a damper On your lift -

J&amp;L

For The Best ·
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At ,

le•el lot near town . $29,500.
21 acres - Plenty ot wood
for a stove, 2 baths with
tubs, dining r().I;Jm , bar In

rooms,

11·28·C

'·;

.· SWIIPI ~hlld . •....'"':
_.,._,
·
tn1ured

..,

,... ·cau : Tam HoskinS

kitchen, double S. S. sink,

bu l lt . ln appliances.
carpeting In all except kit., .
central air and heat. Want
$40,000, but owner says sell.
One year old.
FAMILY HOUSE - 10

_

20 Yrs·. Expertence

new nat. gas furnac:e and

shop. $9,500.00.
- MIDDLEPORT - 1 story

-- -- ~Give Away

repair.

Momltorof
Chimney

·

,

st. Rl. 124 toword Rutlllnd,0.
A.ute 11o Truck ·
Repair .
Also Transmission
\Repair
Phone 992-5682

Rooting, guHero, "!iW and

guaranteed

•

~. milo off .Rt. J ~Y-flllll .an

SERVICE

enclo se d
nice birch

the modern kilc:hen with

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE'

MAIN~NANCE

building and almost 2 acres
ot land . S.t8,500 .
.
NICE HOME - Ha~ J

basement, porChes, work ·

JACKW.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone "2·2t81

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp; HOME

basemen1. garage, util ity

4

SALE PRICES

restless

today. You 'd better mak.e plans
to do something active . Don't
Iorge! lo look at home when

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Your
quick wit and skill as a mediator
I K D C will ave.rt a family altarcatlon.
You'll have them clluckling
H S N C Y LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 11'11 be

.MARINE POWER CORPORATION

Want $25,000.
.
LARGE - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, modem kitc~n with
sto•e and dishwasher. Full

1', ACRt . 11 )f bO mobil e home
near D e~&lt;le r . 997. 5858 .

today , but you must lake •care

NLKN

Wonderful location In town.

Three bedrooms; natural

Appliances.

·--;-::-;:::--; ---:----~

VIRs;IL B. SR. ~~
. 9f2-3325
11&amp; E. Second Street
INVESTMENT - Start
your own business and live
upstairs In this building.

1112 STORY

Headquarters for all your
G.E . T.V .'s &amp; Hotpoint

'
,, .:·-

-M·~----·--

HOMfSilFS for ..,;, IP 1 orr~nrH
up . M iridlepor t n r&gt;nr Ru tlonrl
(o ii.99TI 1181 .

ground , all equipment. A
buying •price at $_15,000 .00

POMEROY
LANDMARK

AKC RI:GISTERED Boxer p uppies.
b wee ks o ld . A nice Chri stmas
Yesterday's ADIWer
gitt , $125 eo . Coli 9CI2 -2726. '
.
. .
.
...... .
11 Kind
24 Aspire
AKC REGI STERED
Doberman
of charge .
ZUtinerary
pups, 12 weeks old . Good
p todi~r~e . 7_
42_- 2 _1 2~ ..
15 Highway of 28 Iciness
Nero's day
29 Arg., Col.,
18 Egyptian
Bol. etc.
--~~uto Sales.~--­
30 Club of:
city
lQ70 CA MARO SS . Good co nditi on . 4 - spe~ d;. 9 ~2 -. 2 ~6~ .
%1 Endure
fleer: abbr.
1q77
DODGE ~ PI CKU P . S'/00 .
22 Genuine
35 Islet
7d1-2_!i51 . •
23 Small
36 DisapPO NTIAC LE Mons Sl-400.
space
pearing seat 19"/4
9tJq. 2'}')7 _

pass

NH

FIHST AND sl"con d Cu!/ing hoy .
S.""/5 and S.85 bole Tuppo1~
Pl ains Ohio . Ol4 -bb7 3Jbf:l

RISING ST AR Kenn els . Boarding
ond · groOmi ng . all breed s
Cheshire , 367-0292 .

32 Shack
33 Combat
34 Derive
36 Citrus fruit
37 Used car
deal, e.g .
38 On naval
maneuvers

AEHIJGCG

rock slon ds . . al emi te elec tron
spin balan cer . '} cosi er ond
co mbe r gouges . iiweryt hing you
need for you r own b us ir-,ess
S950
Front end al ign men T.
Brio r EqUipmen t . 741·2005 .

GUN C ABINET . hold's 1(.1 gun s. two
'}') co libe r R eming t o n ~ wi tfl
sro pe . :/47 -3113 . ·

Pets for Sale

.

-For
- ...,Sale
- -

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES ..

.

.

-R ea l Esti'te-for Sale..

-

ideas . Olher people co uld ha'lle DUf TO my retu rn 10 govf&gt;rnment
a hand in helping you brine;; ~ rr . . ice, 1 am no l onger engog
M u lnl ~ Bmnt• S&lt;tlcs ami Y:tn l ~ll· !!
un.! cu:ccpll'd only w1li1 c-.sh with
th ings about.
Pd on publi c occo~:~n t i ng nor to )(
un iN . 25 ecnt di&lt;IIW' fur &lt;ttL~ ca r ry-J
)
rpt urn prf&gt;~oro ti on .
CAPRI Co RN (Dec . 22 " an. 19
Roger ~e'idoo .
UcPm.ed QUALITY CO NOili O N~ D m ixPd
in!! Rux Numhcr In Ctm : uf The ScnA hig h ly active day w ith many
Public Acco untont . Middl e-po rt ,
_h ay . Willde liyPr ._9q'J .n OI , .
lmcl .
di ff e rent types o f p eople co uld
O hio,
RUTLA"'L&gt;
H.AHOWAR~ B:n Mai n
Tht• Pubhsht•l rcscrvt·s tht• n~ ht
be in the o il ing for you . Much
t•
tu c·dil ur rcjt:d uny w.i.i IIL'+.'If\Ctl ubof what you hea r, however , -- - --- --- --~· ---- St "f4'J .7'JS5 . We hovl' to mok f'
JCL'lwnal. Ttw Publ tshm· will Hot -~
should be tak en wi th a grai n of
Lost and Found
room for sr r•ng .mPrc hondi sf'. ~o
rt$J)OII~ t ble fur 111urc'than um; lnt'ur· h
h ·
,.. - · - - - - - - - - ....!.... -:oi l !.lock .n s tOf"f' 10 per -cent
rcl't ll1SCI I JUII
salt. Ge tt in g along Wit at ers LOS T· $100 reword Dog in vici ni ty
o ff . Thi s meon!o !&gt;Pili ng sam!'
Phtlll\' !192 -2156
"ts one Of th e Sec tion s you' II
of Cherry Ridge n P.or b81 Whil e .
mi'!rchondi!'P o i' cos t. So get
enjoy in yo ur 1979 A s tro-Graph
lf' mole wi th block spots. No me
your Chr is tma s giff !' now . Oprn
Letter. Get yo urs b y m ailing 50
o n the co ll ar . Jess Huffman .
B 9 thr u Chrislrnos . !'-Jo pnr kin 9
ce nts fareachanda long,selfPhone
30 4 - 075b l 32
or
prohlerm .
add ressed , s tamped en ve l ope
Oi'5· t~918 .
to Astro-G raph , P.O . Box 489,
PE A HAULERS CB Sa les. Equi p ·
Radio Ci ty S tatio n , N.¥ .' 10019. ~OUND · SC HNAU ZER on d Beagl e
ment now on sol e , otl in stocM .
pu ppies . In Ru tla nd . 7&lt;l2 ·230b .
Radios and accessor ie s th~ o ugh
Be su re to specify .b irth sign .
C/lris tmo s. Open rvN y day e11 •
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
rep ! Sunrfoy on d Monday
Condi tions hav1 ng an influen ce .-· - -Want!~·~ EVe nings by a pp oi ntm en t ..
on your s tatus and well-being - - - Po rtland ,
O hi o
Ph one
are favorable today , bu t no t CHIP WOOD . Po les ma x .
H43-20tJ&lt;l
Mtmdcn·
where as kmg for favors is
d1ometPr 10·· on Iorg e~ ! end . '
.
.
.
Noun un Sit tiu·tl&lt;~~·
co nce rn ed . Enjoy what comes · $12 per ton . Bundl ed slob . Sl.U PIGS FOR $die . 949-1857 alter S
along unsolic ited . •'
pe r ton . Delive,.ed to Ohi o - ·
Tht•Sdii\"
PIS.CES (Feb. 2D-March 20)
Poll et Co . Rt . .'J . Pomeroy .
lllru Fl' ui:1y
1 P.M.
Your in tention ma y be other-: . · q92 · 168q ·
th l' tluy bd11!"c pubiil·Hliml
wi se . but" yo u ' re lfke ly to goad TIMB~R POMt:ROV fo r e~ t Proothe rs 1nto com petitive s ituaducts . Top pricE! t or s1andirig
Sunt iH )
li ons with yo u tOd;!y . You ' ll do
sow timber . Call qq7 .5q-b5 or
4 P.M.
SNOW TIRES
Fnda)' ufttorn uon·
best in c r ea ti~v~ e are as where
Kent Hon_by_. 1_·44b: 85'10 .
--.I....J there i s no outside interfer- otb t:URNITURt:: . Ice bo)( es , bross
ON SALE AT
POMEROY
LANDMARK
ence .
bed$. iron beds . d es ks , etc '
SERVICE STATION .
PUBLIC NOTICE
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) You r
complete hou seh ol ds. Writ e
The
Public
U t il i t i es
head is in the clouds. today.
MD . Miller Rt . -4 . P o m.e r ~y or
commissi on of O h io hliS
You' ll have difficulty thinking
mil '197· 77b0.
determined that i t appear s
prac ticall y . E'llerything works OL D COIN S pock e t watches .
th at the proposa l s in the
appl ica t ion s in case Nos .• 78 ·
out well , h o wever , because
doss . rings . wedd in g bands .
12-H -TP -ATA an d 78 -1289 -TP ·
one loya ~ to you Is correcting
diamond s Gol d or ! il ver . Coli , .• • _Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
A TA
pertaining
to
t he
your mistakes
•
R ~ger~o~sl ~y . 7~7_- 2331
pro'llis ion
of
intrastate
. . . Phone992'·2t81 ·
TAURUS
(April
20-May
20)
WANT
TO buy · old 45 and 78
f~cilities to other common
~·There's no need to tell tales
ph c;m ogroph r ecord s. Co lt
c arriers may be unjust or
fWTtANO HARDWAR ~ . Hutlond .
unreasonable . Therefore) the
o ut ol school today in an
.992 -0370 o r Contact Morfin Fu r ·
Ohi o . New Veer 's lnv ont ory
Co mmission has set these
attempt to make a good impresniture, "t
Sol e . Al l wood and cool ~ l oves ,
c ~ses for p ub lic hearing at
sion . In fact . you have more
10 : 00 A . M . on
Monday ,
(' le d ric o nd ke r osene heot ors ,
CASH FOR iunM cars . Wreck er
appeal
when
yo
~
r
e
fra
in
from
Ja n ·u ary 29, 1979 in the o ffices
tool box e s . mec ha nical tools .
se rvice. Frye's. Rut land. O hio .
go ssi ping .
of th e Com m ission , 180 East
soc ltPt se t wrl"nch and elf'c lr ir
742·2081
.
Br oad st r eet. Col umbus ,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
applian ces Dras ti cal ly rPd u c·
·onio . Fu r th er information
Somethi ng you ' II do today will WE PICK up";unk auto bod1 es buy ·
•d .
. may be obtained by con ing junk cars . sc rap iron. bot ·
give yo u a re al se nse of
·tac ting the COmmiss ion .
te ries (and m e to ls. Rider"s J=IRfWOOD fOR ~ oi l" ..'l4"1 ·'ll'l6 or
achie'llement. However , you ' ll
THE PUBLIC UTILI T IES
'14 7 -2 190 .
Solvoge. SR ' 124 . .,omeroy.
be d isappointed il you expect
" COMMISS ION OF OHIO
992-54f&gt;B .
B y : Richard L . Smith ,
praise !rom others .
GRA"VH Y TRACTOR ond mower .
·secretary
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) WA NT ED TO buy : ol d jewelry .
Hay fo r sole. 949-2Jbll
You 'll be e xtremely popular
Coli q92 -5202 or w rite Ka y Two TURN tabl es . pro jec to r toC'
11 J 2. lt c
Cecil , 1:17 S. 2nd , Middleport ,
un it. cabinet. sc uff gouges 4

~NMWfd'

9- 'i'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Tuesday, Jan. 2, 1971!
DlCKTRACY
·

·Sentinel._______________
Classifieds
FQr Best Results Use f----,----..:.______._.__._
.
,

ASTRO·GRAPH

15 Wurlls or Um.lcr

'

•

PUT A NOTE ON
1iH' FRONT DOOR SO'S
LVINEV

I

·I

tJ

HOW NOI TO

ACI LIKE A
'' HAVE· NOT. "

1:LL

EKample: Velvet Rockers Rt:O· $199.95
OWNSR MUST SEL.L. - The owner of ihis
charming 2 story stone .h ome ill Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
home for a low, low price of 520,000. There
are 2 bedrooms ( 1 is extra large I, spacious
living room w -fireplace, formal dining ,-eat-· ·
in kitchen, tlat~ w -show.er, garage &amp; a king
.ized yard. Good loca.tion on .Mili .St, Call the
Wiseman Real Estate Agency, Gallipolls,
446-J64J.

NOW ONLY

'9800

I'VE

zz

· KJ

I
Printaoswerhere :

.I

Saturday 5

J

Now ar range the ci rcled let1ers to
form tHe surpnse answer. as sug ·
gested by the abo'lle cartoon

"m-r X XX1" •
(Ans wers tornonow)

Jumbles QU IRE BASSO DECEIT LAWFUL
Answer . Make a spe·cch _
! 'l lh an elaborate cnd tng ·•ORATE"
'
'

bit Book No 12 containing t10puules, Ia awl llabtetorS1 . 75 ~ostpald

tr~~ Jumble clo.thi Sne w!lpape r. Box34, Norwood,N.J.07648.1nc: u~ev~ur

name , addre'n , zip code and m1ke checks peyeble to ,..ewspa~er oo I.

�.
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan .?· 1979

.

.•

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

22 ,die on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
The Ohio Highway Patrol
reported at least 22 persons
were killed on Opjy's
road.,.ays over the wew
Year's holiday weekend .
The patrol's traffic death
count began at 6 p.m. Friday

-- ··"'

EXTENDED FORECAS.T
Cold throughout the
period with • chance of
snow Flrday. Highs mostly
the ZQs. Lows from five
to 15 above.

..
..

,.•

'

·.

.

•

In

a

Resting
Now ....

Charge 3,with theft

But he

'will

.,.

in '79

Annual

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

1

Area Deaths

I

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

L:ilitens ~alional Bank

£6

lran .· movingclos(3r to ciVilian

....

~-

Monday.
305 in Trumbull County.
The dead :
McCONNELSVILLE
MONDAY
Paul E. Davison , 26, of
CINCINNATI - Enna Rod· · Lowell; pedestriall struck by ::::~:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:"::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.
da, 43, of Cincinnati, in a one- ...)!_truck on Ohio 83 in Morgan
FIVE MEN BOOKED
car accident· In Cincinnati. CObnty.
NEW YORK (AP)- Five
TRUMBULL COUNTY SUN,DAY
New York-area , men have
Hazel Edick,
of Cortland, NILES- Philip Wiseman, 17, been arrested and charged
~dl·~co=n~tm~
· ~u~ed~u~ntll:,;nu:·dn:!ig~h~t-!in~a~o~n~&lt;H:~ar:,;~=:::oo~O:hi~·o~ accident
of Mineral Ridge, in one~ar with murder in connection
oo a Niles street.
with the New Year's Day
KETI'ERING - Charles stabbing death of an
Zennie, 3Q, of Cincinnati, in a
on..:Car accident on a unidentified' man on a subway
platform in Times Square,
Kettering street.
police said.
CAMBRIDGE -George F.
It was one of the most
Nichelson ,
24,
of serious in a number of crimes
·"
Summerfield, a passenger, in instimces in the Time Square
a one-car crash on a
area durin~ the traditional
Guetnsey County road.
BARBERTON - Jeffery New Year's ·celebration.
The incident followed
BowerS..x, 20, of Clinton, a
reports
of gangs of youths
•
P.ssenger, in a one~ar crash
robbing
and
assaulting theio
in Barberton .
•
way through the crowd of
PAINESVIlLE - Alman 150,000
at Times Square on
L. Bennett Jr ., 22, and
at the s~ene for further investigation by the state Fife
THREE PERSONS have been charged in connection .
New
Year's
Eve.
Carolyn J. Patrick, 31, a
Marshall 's Office. Saturday night, the vehicle was pulled
with
the
Saturday
morning
theft
of
four
tires
and
wheels
.
passenger, . both of Madison
from
the muddy ·area of the strip mines where it had
from
.a
vandalized
four-wheel
drive
vehicle
owned
by
Township, in a one~ar
MAN ARRESTED
bottomed-out,
was overturned, and the wheels and tires
Roger
D.
Camp,
Athalia.
The
Jillazer
vehicle
which
had
accitlent on a Lake County
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
been
burned
in
the
strip
mines
Friday
nig,
h
t
had
been
left
removed.
road.
(AP) - A 26-year-old tree
SATURDAy
surgeon faces a charge of
DEFIANCE - David A. first-degree murder in the
Brikles, 19, of McClure, in an slaying of a man whose
I.
accident on a Defiance severed legs, anns and head
County road.
were found in three trash
YOUNGSTOWN- Suzanne cans a week ago, police said.
Ball, 47, of Butler, Pa., in a
David .Clark, the dead
Three persOns have been of the vehicle in the strip mmes where it had bottomed· mud, turned it over on its top,
two~ar accident on U.S. 224 man's former roommate,
and stripped it of all four
in Mahonlng County. •
. was jailed Monday pending a charged in connection with mine area just off Oil Hollow out.
wheels and ~Ires.
on
Friday
.
Returning
' LEBANON . - Bill J. hearing today, police said. the Saturday morning theft of Rd., Friday.
· Within hours of the theft of
return
morning
the
vehicle
was
According to a report filed ·
Taulbee, 36, of lebanoo , in a
Clark was arrested"when he four tires and wheels from a
the
wheels, Special In·
vandalized four-wheel drive by Camp, the 1975 Blazer ba4 discovered stripped of cer·
two~ar accident on Ohio 122 · went to police headquarters
vestigalors
Robert Meade
in Warren County.
to clain his car, which had vehicle owned by Roger D. been abandoned Thursday at tain motor parts and burned. and George Plants arrested
Three investigators from
approximateiy 11 p.m., alter
SPRINGFIELD - Lori J. been seized in the in· Camp, Athalia.
the
sheriff's department were three men in connection with
several
unsuccessful
at·
'!'he
Gallia
County
Sheriff's
'Metcalf, 20, of Springfield, in vestigation of the death of
the incident.
a one&lt;ar acCident on a Clark Lynn Lizer of Lake . Worth. Department had investigated tempts to dislodge it from a at the scene on Friday.
Charged were Terry
In an effort to further in·
the Thursday vandalization muddy area of the strip
County road.
Fatley 26, VInton, Ozie
vestigate
the
incident;
Sheriff
COLUMBUS - Robert Lit·
.James Montgomery had Smith, 30, Vinton,- and Ron
ties, 54, of Columbus, a
contacted the Bureau of Pitchford, 18, Bi.dwell.
pedestrian struck by a
Crlmin!ll
Investigation and
vehicle on· a Columbus city
the
·
State
Fire Marshall's
.(Continued from page 6)
street.
I
I Office for assistance.
•
CAMBRIDGE - Frank J. Crites and Mrs. Marga~et
Investigators from the two
CHARLES LANIER
held Wednesday at I p.m. at
MEET WEDNESDAY
Haas, 64, of Cleveland, in a Riffle.
Pomeroy Lodge 164, Free
Charles W. Lanier, 84, White Funeral Home with the agencies were scheduled to
"Christmas Comes To The
one~ar accident on U.S. 22 in
Guernsey County.
Hutch" was il play about a Edgemont Dr., Gallipolis, Rev. Wesley Thatcher of· arrive in Gallia County and Accepted Masons, will
STEUBENVILLE
group of street kids wlio, died Sunday evening in ficiatiog. Burial· will be in Sattir!)ay morning. So as not meet in regul~r session at
Dorothy M. Hope, 67, of when they were not welcome Holzer Medical Center He De c a I u r Method i s t to disturb the scene, the four- 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Steubenville, a passenger, in at Northside a very lonna! was born Sept. 6, 1694, at Cemetery. Friends may call wheel drive vehicle was left temple. All master masons
are invited.
a one~ar accident on Ohio 7 . church with stained glass and Beech Hill, W.Va., son of the at t~e fun~ral home m •t the ·site of the burning.
During
the
morning,
bein Jefferson County.
stiffly starched members, late Benjamin and Ida Mae ' Coolvtlle anytune. The family
·
suggests conlrtbultons ~ay tween 2 and 8 a.m. , thieves
CHilliCOTHE -Carla Y. chose Instead to go to church Lanier.
So plan aht"ad ~ Bt" pre·
Hayes, age unavailable, of in the Hutch, a religious club
SESSION SET
He married the fanner be made to the Amertcan pulled the · Blazer from the
Chillicothe, in a on&lt;H:ar acci· house obtained for them by Francis Plants at Medina on Cancer Society.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
dent. on Ohio 772 in Ross . Sarah Wilikins, a dedicated Dec. 23, 1918. He is survived
Middleport Fire Deportment
pared for next vt•ar's
·:::: :::~:::::::::::::;:;:::::;:" ::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::::: :::·:::::::
County.
will meei at 7:30 p.m.
·young woman who seemed to by his wife, along · with one
EDNA M. RUSSELL
PORTSMOUTH - Michael have a special understanding son, Sanuny Plants, MidWednesday
at the fire station
Mrs.
Edna
M.
Russell,
00,
MIXUP
ex pen~t·s. Join our
Higgins, 16, of Lucasville, in a of their gum, music and dleport.
with
Bessie
Darst, Euvetta
North Main St., Rutland, died
In our New Year's
one~ar accident on a Scioto
casual
behavior. · The
at
Veterans · edition, there was·a mix up Bechtle, and Helen ByerB as
In addition, he is survived Sunday
Christmas Club todaY!
County road.
dedicated young missionary by two brothers and one Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
of names. On page D1, the hostess.
MOUNT GitEAD- Clifton · to the street kids was played • sister. Homer T., Gallipolis; Russell was born March 18,
name under the picture of
Debord, 26, of Mount Gilead, by Jane VanMetre. Tony, Geocrge Albert, South Side 1888 in Pomeroy, daughter of
Tome Russell should have
a pede5\rian struck . by a their Fearless leader, By · W.Va.; Mrs. Emma Moses, the late Miles and Anna May
read Russell Starcher; the
SEEK DIVORCE
vehicle on U.S. 42 in Morrow Bruce Decker, Tony's little address unknown . Three Greenler Hysell. In 1907 she ' name under Russell
Crystal
McCourt, Pomeroy
County.
sister, Debra was played by brothers and three sisters married Dayton H. Russell
Starcher should have read · filed for divorce in Meigs
. FRIDAY NIGHT
Lee Ann Nibert, her friend preceded him In death.
who preceded her in death in
Tome Russell.
County Common Pleas Court
CHIWCOTHE ..: Steven A. Millie by April · Cundiff.
Four grandchildren sur- 1949.
against Larry Wayne McDetty, 17, of Londonderry, a Barby, Tony's friend, was vive.
Surviving are a daughter, :=:=:=:= :=:=:=:-:=:-:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Court, Irondale; Ohio.
pedestrian struck by a protrilyed by Ellen Me·
Robert
(Pearle)
Mr. Lanier was a member Mrs.
vehicle on U.S. 50 in Ross Dermitt. Bub was played by , of · the Grace United Canaday, Rutland; a grimd·
Hospital News
County.
Billy Clendenin. His friend, Methodist Church, Gallipolis. daughter, Mrs. Allan (Sabra)
MEETING CONCELLED.
KETTERING - Gregory Karen, was Sharon Crites. He retired from the Gallipolis Gibson, Reynoldsburg; two
VETERANS MEMORlAL
Walk Up Teller and Auto Teller Windo\V
The Eastern Local School
Burkhalter, 19, of Xenia, in a Other loveable street kids Motor Co. in 1917 after 35 sisters, Mrs.Wayne (Hilda)
· HOSPITAL
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m.
Board
. organizational
one-car accident on a were: Ann, played by Julie years of service.
King, ·Albany, and Mrs.
Saturday Admission - meeting scheduled for this
Kettering city street.
Roush; Betty by Angie
Funeral services will he Leslie )Kathryn ) Ervin, Ronald Miller; Middleport. evening has been cancelled.
CELINA - Mary Beth Ohlinger; Jerry , played by conducted Wednesday at 3:30 Middleport; several nieces,
Saturday Discharges - The meeting will be held
Tohe, 16; of Fort Recovery, a Jason . Roush; and George p.m.
from
McCoy· nephews, and cousins. Clyde Hend-erson, Karen Thursday, Jan. 4 at 6 p.m.
passenger, in a one-car who was portrayed by Ricky Wetherholt·Moore Funeral . Besides her parents her Haines, Roy Betzing, Philip
acCident in Mercer County . Wiseman. The first act-ended Home , Gallipolis, with the husband, she was preceded in Null, Edith Welch, Velma
• •t&gt; l
with the singing of "God Rest Rev. James Clark officiating. death by three brothers and a Keller.
Ye Merry Gentlemen" sung
RETURNS HOME
Sunday Admission - Paul
Interment will be at Con· sister. Mrs. Russell was a
Christi Smith returned Sun· by the street kinds ac- cord Cemetery, Cou&lt;;h,W. Va. member of the Rutland Burton, Racine.
day from Mt. ·Gilead where companied by Jan Ann Van
Sunday Discharges Visitation is Tuesday, from Church of Christ.
.$t2(4 5
3
she had a holiday visit with Metre in her role of Sarah 7. to 9 p.m. at the funeral
Funeral services will be Donna Burson, Robert
Senior Portraits
her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Wilkins.
held at II a.m . Wednesday at Nelson.
home.
*Weddings .
. The second act ·featured a
the Walker Funeral Home in
Mrs. Dick Kanable.
Monday Admission- Max
*Passports
party for ihe Children's
Rutland with Mr. Gene Stewart, Mason; Iris Kelton,
·cANCELLATION
Underwood ' officiating. Pomeroy; Gene Yost,
Home giveq by the street
CHARLES W. MCKNIGHT
-it: Portraits
Burial will be in Miles Racine; Marvin Edwards,
Meeting of the Middleport kids with a cake tqat read,
deposits
insured
to
$40,000.
Charles
William
McKnight,
·.
Special Occasions
Literary Club scheduled for "Happy Birthday; Jesus". 48, 7604 Blacks Road, Cemetery. Friends may call Jr. , Clifton, W. Va. Margaret
Member
F.D.I.D
Member
F.D.I.C.
.__ _ _
___
__
___
_ _ ___. ed.
Wednesday has been cancell- . Partyhatsforthisscene were Pataskala, died suddenly at the funeral home anytime Fortune, Racine; •Walter
until time of services. The Robinson; Rutland.
given by Mrs. Marie Saturday.
(Bob Hoeflich)
family
will receive friends .-" Monday Discharges - • Wiseman. Members of 'l;he
Mr. McKnight was born In
109 High St .
God's Helpers Class who Carpenter in Meigs County. from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Mabel Kesterson, Robert
Pomeroy
·
'
· Curtis, Paul Smith.
(\ participated In this charming He was the son of the 'late today .
scene were: lee Ann Nibert, · David and Sarah Boring
. April Cundiff, Brian Decker, McKnight.
Wendy Nea, Ramona King,
He is survive~ by his wife,
Angie Cundiff, Scott Crites, Ruby Frazier McKnight, two
ANNA M. RUSSELL
Chris · Williams, , Tracy sons, David W. and Delmar
Mrs. Anna Margaret
Wiseman, Mary Ohlinger and o . both of Pataskala, one Russell, 62, 493 S. Second
Will Ohlinger. Songs sung daughter, Rose McKnight, Ave., Mllidleport', died
pianist was Mrs. Arline.
P~taskala, and several Mondar
at
Veterans
The third act of tl!e play nieces and nephews. He was a Memortal HoSJIIfal. Born in
was a beautiful and reverent veteran of the Korean War. Columbus, Dec. 16, 1918, she
portrayal of, the age-&lt;lld story
Funeral services will be was a daughter of the late
of the very first Christmas In held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Samuel and Adeline' Jones
full costume. Mr. Arline Ewing Chapel. Burial will be Wyl~. She was preceded in
McDermitt created white In Wells Cemetery. Friends death also by a brother,
angel wings for this scene. may call at the funeral home James Wyle, killed In World
Mrs. Oland Johnson, In her one hour prior to services.
War II.
rol_e as The Christmas Spirit,
Surviving Mrs. Russell are
was the narrator. Jane Ann
a daughter, Mrs. Mary Scott
VanMatre
provided a
JAMES M. O'NEIL
Rager, Gallipolis; a grand·
QUALITY
backgrowund of Christmas
James M. O'Neil, 28,.Rt. 1, son, Gregory Paul Rager,
music. Mary and Joseph Coolville .died Saturday . Middleport; two cousins,
FURNISHINGS
APPLIANCES
were recreated by Gewanna evening at Selby General· Mrs. Mary Neutzliilg and · ·
I
Johnson and Stephen Fowler Hospital, Marietta, following . Mrs. ,Jane Ann Warner, both
•FRIGIDAIRE
respectively. Ellzbeth, the a brief Illness.
of Middleport.
mother of John th Baptls\,
Mr. O'Neil· was born in.
Mrs. Russell was a
was played by Pam.Williams. Parkersburg. · He attended .graduate of Middleport
•ADMIRAL
•PROVINCETOWN
Tbe Angel who appeared to Decatur United Methodist School and was a inl;nber of
Joseph In a drellin was Church and was a member of the Middleport First Baptist
•CLORIC
Woodmen
of Church. She attended Ohio
Drema Joschar, !)a. The Modern
•LANE
Innkeeper and his little girl American. He was employed · University and was a teacher
were played by Ralph Russell at Sears, Robuck and Co., 'as . in several locations for a
•HOOVER
•HOWELL DINffiES .
and Amy Russell respec- · well as a part-time fanner nwnber of years. She was
ti\ely. The Shephet;da were and bus driver at Federal employed by the Gallipolis
Pine and maple round 36 inch and 42 Inch
recreated . byo
Roger Hocking ,
.
State Institute and served
tables with 4 or 6 chairs. Chrome and bronze
Hoschar, David Mattox, Joe
He is survived by ·hls wife, . part-time as an Income tax
tone metal dinettes with two, four," or six
Russell apd .Gary Short . ~ ElsJe·I.eona Engll.nid O'Neil, consultant for the public.
Spectal music was provided · one daughter, Arriy Leona at
Funeral services will be
· chairs. Drop·leat rectangular and round ·
'·
by Gewanna ~ohnson who, in home, his parents, Milto~t C. held at 2 p.m. Wednesday .at
tables with laminated plastic tqp.
•
.MIDDLEPORT,
her role as Mary, sang,
and Mary H. Rlddli!'-O'Neil, the Rawllngs-Coats Funeral
Prince of Peate" ac· Rt. 1, Cooivllle, three'siSterB, Home in Middleport with the
companying herself on .the
Florence ·L. Jacobs, Salem, Rev. Mark McClung of·
FURNITURE DEPT. 3rd FLOOR
autoharp.
.
New Hampshire; Ba.rbara A. ficiating. Burial will be in
·
·
·
The benediction was
Brown, Chesapeake, Va.Jnd Riverview Cemetery.
pronounced by the Reverend
Mary A. Schantz, Coolville. Friends may caU at the ·
1:.
Clyde F~rrell. ,.
Funeral services will be funeral home anytime. ·
. .-------~---------...-..1

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•

Pictures AnvOOe?

*

..

*

lHE PHOTO PlACE

ELB-ERFELD$.

SALE PRICES ON

ALL · DINEnE SETS

NOW IN PROGRESS
HOME

&amp;

•FLEXSTEEL

BAKER FURNITURE
q. ·

ELBERf.*"LDS IN POMEROY

By TIIOMAs ~ · .
· ·
Bahktiar was expected to announce his cabinet line'!)l on . The state r~dio reported antishah demonstrations today in
·
Aosoclated Press Writer
Thursday.
seven Cities, Including a march by 1,000 children in Hajikurd,
TEHRAN,_I~~n (AP) ~ lr~n moved another step toward the
The parliamentary formaliti es were set in motion after northwest of Tehran. It also said a 16-year-old boy . blew
return. of_.civilian govenunent today, and the prospective Bakhtiar, former depuw .chief of the anti-llhah National Front, himself up with a homemade bomb in tl1e riot-torn holy city of
prune mitpster snld Shah Mohai!Uil8d Reza Pahlavi haS inf&lt;rmed the 59-year-old monarch he had lined up a cabinet to Mashhad, and that rioters there burned down a policeman's
~~~d to name a regency ~ell and leave the country 'for a replace the two-month-old military goverrunent headed by house during 'the night and killed hiin.
'
·
Gen . Gholam·Reza Azhari, the army commander.
Howeve~ , progress was reported toward a deal to get •
Bakhtiar tol~a French TV inteviewer 'l'uesday that the shah sp-tkmg 01! workers to produce enough for domestic needs.
. ~th houses of ParHament recommended that the shah appomt Shal1&gt;our Bljkhtlar; the 62-year-old opposition polltlcU.n has "agreed to take a ll:ip abroad, to take a rest and to name a Sources said a package being worked our includes release of
. Whom the. embattl.ed ruler asked last week to try to form ·a · regency 90uncil" io .exercise the royal powers. But he did _not some pr_isoners, the return of homes seized 'rrom striking oil
govenunen.t that might be able to"~itd the U~~tionwide .crisis S.y when the shah would leave.
·
.
· · workers, back pay covering the duration of the 3'h-month-old
threatening his throne. .
. The shah won Bakhtiar away from other opposition leaders st,oppage and a commitment to cut off oil exports to Israel·and
· The vote in theSenatewa·sunanimous, but~J!pokesmansaid de!fi'l"ding his.abdication by agreeing to give up inuch of his South ·Africa for their sullllort of the shall.
..
several .members of the MajUs, th~ lower house, spoke and _power, alt~ough bow much has not been aMounced. MeanThe exod us of forei gners froin the country continued and a
voted against Bakbtiar .. Informed sources said the ·dlS$idenf while , tl)e .otl)er political and religious leaders of the nation- backlog built up by· several days of strikes at the Tehran
qeputies were offended by . his ·statement in· ~- TV speech-· . wi!l&lt;\.opposition to the mooarch continue to demand his ouster airport was clearing up. .
. ..
· ·
.. Mooday that Iran bad been suffering from corrupt goverrunent · .and denounce .Bakbtiar as a traitor to their movement
Hundreds
left
by
scheduled,
charter
and
goeerrunent
planes
for 25 vears.
•
·
Tuesday after the military took over operations ai the ai rport.
.

~

go.v~rnment

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e
VOL XXIX

NO. 182 .

.

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

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saJd.

...

. Pentagon spokesman Thomas Lalnbert said families of con:

tracwrs And ·gther An':fertcans could leave on military trans~

ports. He ~aid no special military flights have been scheduled .
but that C-5 and C-141 transports have been carrying ·
dependents out after unloading cargo.

'

elltine
· WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3' 1979

.
.
. .
Two 75-seat canadian air force transports arrived from
Turkey to begin taking out Canadians and some other foreigners:
·
·
Commercial airlines said they expected to carry out limited
service. BuLEl AI ; the Israeli airlihe, canceled its daily roundtrip flight today , saying ground serviee was inadequate. A
spokesman said the flight' would be resumed as soon as all
·
necessary services are available.
About 4,200 Americans are trying to leave Iran out of a total
35,000, and u.s. Air Force jets flew 295 AmeriClln military
dependen.t s out of Iran on Tuesday, officials in Washington

'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

StrauSs residence ·has
...

unusual decorations
BY BOB HOEFLICH
If holiday decorations are
,Your lhiNi then a stop a'l the

home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Strauss, South Third Ave.,
Middleport, is a umust."
While Mr. and Mrs. Strauss
have the 'traditional holiday
decorations, they also have
some unusual ornaments you
wouldn't believe.
'Mrs. ·Strauss credits her
husband with all of the
Involved
in
ingenuity
creating the outstanding
decorations. A beauty of the
whole thing is that Strauss
uses old bicycle chains,
sprockets and other common
. items . in creating his
masterpieces.
· In one corner of the Strauss
living room, a Christmas tree
done attractively in white,
pink and silver is featured.
The tree has four colors of
llghts which rome on, one
color at a time, as the tree
revolves.
Topped with an angel, the
artistic tree underneath is
made of mesh vo:ire lined with
~yrofoam. The large llltse on
· jbiCh the tree sits features
the pini&lt;Fwhite and ' silver
color scheme carried out on
the tree.
Another fascinating feature
of the Strauss decorations is a

Nationwise--_,
Pilot may reJpain silent
By Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. - A federal il)vestigOtor said ,
Tuesday that the pilot of a~ jet that crashed when it
apparently ran out of fuel Thursday night may never
tal~ tn Investigators.
Pete Chesney of the Federal Aviation
Administration- noted · that the pilot, Malburn
McBroom, had hired a lawyer. He said a fear of
lawsuits connected with the erash may be what is
causing the delay In Interviewing McBroom. Chesney
said t h e onal
f : 'Transportation Safety Board would
try aga · ednesday to see McBroom, 52, of Loveland,
Colo .

No tra

f 30 crew members

MIAMI - There is no trace of 30 seainen who
abandoned a burning oil tanker for the stormy
Caribbean, but four men who stayed aboard for
another 24 hours survived, the Coast Guard says.
At least one crew member drowned when the live
whO stayed aboard the burning, _JS().foot Master
Micha~ plunged into the sea Tu~sday morning to swim
for a passing ship.

Europe Jce, snow covered
Much o{ Europe,was iced-up or snowed-lit Tuesday
as people tried to get back in gear after three days of
• snow and blizzards over the bollday week~nd.
At least 41 deaths were blamed on the frigid
.weather, and forecasters predicted at least one more
day of bitterly cold temperatures. Authorities said
there were 18deathsin Britain, 12 in West Germany, 10
In France and one in Sweden.
·

Bomb owner suing police
NEW YORK ~ A man chargoo''wlth running a

QueeiiS "bomb factory" where an explosion bleyv off
his hands flied suit Tuesday blartling police because-his
several fingers were not reattached.
William Morales, 28, wbo is suspected of making
bombs for the Puerto Rican terrorist group F ALN,
asked in the suit, flied in .federal courfln Brooklyn, for
· f!.2 million damages from police ~nd correction
officials al\d Queens District Attorney John Santucci.
The suit charges that 'after the.exploslon-. Sgt. William
Valentine and two other members of the pollee Arson
and Explosion Squad found "sev~ral of plaintiff's
several fingers ... Intact" at the scene.

Hays.. ready ·for hard work
· COLUMllUS, -Qhio - Wayne L. Hays, once a
.,Owerful congressnum and now a freshman state
legislaltl", says he's ready to accept any committee job
In the 113th Ohio General Assembly.
·
&gt;
"I told the speaker to put me on any committee he
·couldn't get anybody elae to serve on," Hays said
·· Tuesday after being sworn in to represent the 99th
District In his native soulheaalern Ohio.

\

'

large scene which Is used on
an extension to the mantle.
Backed by a setting of Santa
and the reiJ!!Ieer actually
moving in ~ sky and lighted
twinkling stars, the set
features horse drawn sleighs
moving around a track
through a covered bridge and
some 22 skiers, including the
popular "Snoopy" skiing up
and down hiUs. The skiers all
move on an apparatus
similar to ~ conveyor belt.
Mrs. Strauss costumed the
skiers.
the large scene also
features a rail fence , several
small buildings, including the
home of "Mr. and Mrs.
Claus," on which the doors
open periodically, a lake
filled with ice skaters ahd
other figures about in the .
artificial snow.
Mor ·e
traditional
decoratons include a tree
done in red satin apples and
lighted with interesting red
holly lights. The same type
lights are used effectively up
the stairway with an angel
choir scene accented In blue.
Decorations will be up
another week at the Strauss
residence. Mr. and Mrs.
Strauss are happy to show the
unusual holiday creations to
all visitors.

•

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WlNTER SCENE - A winter scene featuring moving skiiers and horse pulied w..;-d sleighs is a unique creation
by Arthur Strauss made for the holiday season.
·· ·

Brown reta·i ns presidency,
.
~

.

council co~mittees named
·BY KATIE CROW
related to the costs of
Dr. · Harold Brown was operation of t~e intoxilizer.
reelected president · of Village Solicitor, Fred Crow,
Pomeroy Council · and · informed council regarding
committees were nam ed Judge Knight's report. Crow
during the first m~eting of the said he had contacted
new year Tuesday _night.
Richard Jone s, co un ty
Brown presided in the commissioner, who indicated
absence of Mayor Clarence he will discuss th e matter
·Andrews. Mayor Andrews with Sheriff Prof(i!t. Crow's
had named committees and letter stat ed "It appears
they were presented by Jane there will be an app,ropriation
Walton, clerk.
made by the county com·
Committees named were: missioners to the sheriff's
' Building - Larry Powell, office in order to pay for th e
chainnan, Betty Baroriick intoxilizer test."
and Lou Osborne.
ACTIVITY REPORT
Safety - ~etty Baronick,
Chid Jed Webster subchairman, Lou Osborne and mitted an activity report
Harold Brown.
from the police department
Finance - Lou Osborne, for the month of December.
chairman, Larry Wehrung There were 47 arrests, 29
imd Larry Powell.
accidents investigated. 4,557
Utilities ...:. Bill Young, miles were driven and
chairman, Larry Wehrung collections totaled $1,024.50
and Harold Brown .
from the· parking meters.
o·rdinance - ' Harol d
Chief Webster reported the
Brown, chairman, Lou street department Tuesday
Osborne and Larry Powell. p!IJ.ced cinders on streets and
Mobile Homes - Bill some parking meters had
Young.
..
been removed due to the high
Street - Latry Wehrung, water.
•chainnan, Bill Young and
Brown reported res ident s
Betty Baronick. Chief of on Pleasant Ridge are having
pollee; Jed Webster - Clerk, difficulty getting up and down
Jane Walton., - wat er the roadway. He ·suggested
supervisor, Reed Will.
the street department work
Mrs. Walton read a letter on the situation·.
' from the Columbia Gas
TRAFFIC PROBLEMS .
Company informing council
Council again discussed
that the Public Utilities traffic problems -on- th'e
Commission of Ohio has Pom ero y- Mason .bri~ ge
initiated an Investigation into during the early morning
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. hours and lHTh afternoon.
Council S)lggested it would
regarding aepreciation ac. crual rates to be 'determined infonn Mayor Andrews that
on a company-wide basis. A it wants Larry Wehrung to
hearing on the detei-mlnatiori ask plant officials iri West
is slated Jan. 22 at 10 a.m. at Virginia and orrieials of the
the Office of the Public Department of Trans·
Utilities, Columbus.
portation to set up .a meeting
Mrs. Walton informed ' witH Pomeroy officials to see
council Mayor Andrews had if there is a solution in
received a . letter from 'movin g traffic faster during
Charles Knight, newly the hours -mentioned. .
elected county court judge.
Mrs. ·Walton reported the
. Judge Knight, in the latter, 1 .fire departm ent had i~­
stated that in cases of DWI "-'!l&gt;rmed the mayor that 1t
the county court will no needs an additional ~500 to
lon~er collect any court costs pay n11 the new. truck. The

request was approved.
Larry Powell reported the
regional plannin g com·
miss ion ~will meet with
Pomeroy and Middleport
Chambers of Commerce at
noon on Jan . 9 at the Meigs
Inn. Council members are

invited to attend the meeting.
Bill Young reported th'
park committ ee will meet
this evening at 7:30 p.m.
Young also said . water was
sta nding on the street iii front
of U&gt;gan Monument Co. and
there is still a problem with
dogs running loose.
The meet ing was opened by
prayer by Lou Osborne.
Attending were Osborne ,
Brown, Wehrung, Powell and
Young; council mem·bers,
Mrs. Walton and Chief
Webster.

Steer
weigh-in
Saturday
The 1979 Meigs County
steer weigh-in has been
rescheduled for Satunjay at
Royal Oak Fann located near
Five Points. ·
The weigh-in was originally
slated Saturday, Dec. 30, but
had to be cancelled due to icy
road conditions.
Anyone wishing to carry a
steer as a 4-H or FFA project,
to be sold at the Meigs County
Fair, must have the steer at
the weigh-in on Saturday. The
steer will be weiglied and
freeze branded, according to
John Rice, County Extension,
Agent.

FINAL COUNT
By The Associated Press
Traffic accidents killed
355 persons o-eer the long
New Year's

weekend .

The National Safety
Council had estimated
before the holiday began at
6 p.m. Friday that between
350 an_
d 430 motorists might
be killed.
Last year there were 3U
highway deaths during the_
three-day

New

Y~a r 's

weekend. The worst such
holiday on record was in

1965 when there were 564
deaths.

UNUSUAL TREE - This beautiful tree done in white,
pink and silver is one of the unusual holiday decorations at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Strauss in Middleport.

Southern board
approv_es budget
A budget o! $1,475,242.54 for 1979 was approved and
officers were elected Tuesday night when the Southern '
Local School District Board·of Education met for its
organizational session.
The budget includes : general fund , $1,250,882.07;
bond r etirement, $119,659.27, and lunch operations,
$104,701.2().

Davie Nease was elected president succeeding
Dallas Hill and Shirley Johnson was named vice
president.
•
.
Other board ·members present were Hill, Betty
Wagner and Sue Grueser.
The board will meet at 7:30p.m. on the third TUesday
of each month except ih January.when the meeting will
he held on Jan. 23 . Meetings will he held in the high
school cafeteria.
.
It was agreed to join the Ohio School -Boards
Association and lia-bility insurance was purchased for
board members. A service fund for the board was
established.
The board agreed tn advertise for bids on two new
b~ses. Treasurer, Linda Spencer, was authorized t~
· ~ontact the county auditor in reference to an advance
draw to meet the Jan. 5 paxroll. Supt. Bobby J . Ord
was also present for 1he meeting.

Explosion
kills man
ATHEN'S, Ohio (AP)
William Schwartz Sr. of rural
Athens County was killed
Tuesday when an explosion
and fire ripped through a
gasoline serYiCe station.
Six other persons were
injured, including Schwartz'
20-year-old son, William Jr.,
and Troy Hyatt, ·40, owner of
the station.
1
The younger Schwartz and
Hyatt were taken · to
University Ho spita l in
Columbus for treatment of
burns. The othei four injured
were lreated at At hens'
O'Bicncss ,Hospital.
Authoritiies said the explosion occurred as gasoline
was being drained from a Gar
into a drum in a service bay.
The ga~o line apparently
ignited when the drum. was
.. tipped over accidentally.
· It took firefighters about 90
minutes to · extinguish the
blaze, which gutted the
building.

Weather

Partly cloudy and con·
ORGANIZE JAN. 9
The Chester Township tinuect cold tonight near zero
Trustees have set th eir. and high Thursday ,15 to 20.
org"nizational meeting for The . cha!lce ~ of snow is 10
Jan. 9. at the Chester Town percent tonight and 2() per-'
cent Thursday.
Hall.

.

Meigs hoard

EXTENDED FOREC,~ST
1Friday through Sunday 1
Gradual . warming
through the period with a
chance of rain or snow
Sunday. High in the 20s
Friday nod wannlng to 35
to 40 by Sunday. Low
Friday zero to 10 degrees.
and warmjng into the 20s
by Sunday morning.
.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:.:-:-:;:::::;.;:;:·:::::,::::;:·:::::·

Middleport unit
'

summoned twice
T h· e
Middlepor"t
Emergency Unit of the fire
department was called to
Village Hall at 6:59 p.m.
Tuesday for Jack Lan ce of
Ree~sville . . Lance
JWI
liccoihe ill while in Middleport . He . was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.
At I :44 a .m. Wednesday ihe
unit went to 379 Park St., for
Cynthia Gohring w~o had a
severe nose bleed. She ·was
t aken to Holzer Medica l
Center.

•
reorgaruzes

•

Harold Roush and Oris
Smith were "reelected
president .and vice p~csident,
respectively, when the Meigs
County Board of E11ucation
met Tuesday night for its
organizationar session.
The board agreed to meet
on the first Tuesday · of each
month at7 :3b .p.m. and voted
to continue its membership in
the Ohio School Boerds Assn.
Liability insurance was also purchased for mem hers.
The board approved bills
for payment and issued bus
drivers' certificates to
. Aarold White and Leta Hall.
, Other board meriibets are
Kuu ert Burdette, George
Perry and Harold Lohse.
Rubert Bowen, ·county
superintendent, serves as
treasurer of the county
board.

MEETS FRIDAY
There will bt• " R~a c1
meeting F riday at 7 p.m.-at ·
the :Senior. Citizens Center.
Allmembersarelo bring 1976
monitoring reports,

.CLUB IIIEETING
W"otern Boot CB Club,
Racine, will meet .Bl the club
house on Oak Grove ~load'
Saturday, Jan. 6 at 7 p.m.,
weather permitting.

.'

I

f&gt;

..

,

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